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+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
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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.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65921 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65921)
diff --git a/old/65921-0.txt b/old/65921-0.txt
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Highways and Byways in Lincolnshire, by
-Willingham Franklin Rawnsley
-
-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: Highways and Byways in Lincolnshire
-
-Author: Willingham Franklin Rawnsley
-
-Illustrator: Frederick L. Griggs
-
-Release Date: July 26, 2021 [eBook #65921]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Tim Lindell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian
- Libraries)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS IN
-LINCOLNSHIRE ***
-
-
-
-
-
-HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS IN LINCOLNSHIRE
-
- [Illustration]
-
- MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
- LONDON . BOMBAY . CALCUTTA
- MELBOURNE
-
- THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
- NEW YORK . BOSTON . CHICAGO
- DALLAS . SAN FRANCISCO
-
- THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, LTD.
- TORONTO
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: _Boston._]
-
-
-
-
- _Highways and Byways_
- IN
- _Lincolnshire_
-
- BY
- WILLINGHAM FRANKLIN RAWNSLEY
-
- WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY
- FREDERICK L. GRIGGS
-
- MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
- ST. MARTIN’S STREET, LONDON
- 1914
-
- _COPYRIGHT_
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-All writers make use of the labours of their predecessors. This is
-inevitable, and a custom as old as time. As Mr. Rudyard Kipling sings:—
-
- “When ’Omer smote ’is bloomin’ lyre
- ’E’d ’eard men sing by land and sea,
- And what ’e thought ’e might require
- ’E went and took, the same as me.”
-
-In writing this book I have made use of all the sources that I could lay
-under contribution, and especially I have relied for help on “Murray’s
-Handbook,” edited by the Rev. G. E. Jeans, and the Journals of the
-associated Architectural Societies. I have recorded in the course of
-the volume my thanks to a few kind helpers, and to these I must add the
-name of Mr. A. R. Corns of the Lincoln Library, for his kindness in
-allowing me the use of many books on various subjects, and on several
-occasions, which have been of the utmost service to me. My best thanks,
-also, are due to my cousin, Mr. Preston Rawnsley, for his chapter on the
-Foxhounds of Lincolnshire. That the book owes much to the pencil of Mr.
-Griggs is obvious; his illustrations need no praise of mine but speak for
-themselves. The drawing given on p. 254 is by Mrs. Rawnsley.
-
-I have perhaps taken the title “Highways and Byways” more literally
-than has usually been done by writers in this interesting series, and
-in endeavouring to describe the county and its ways I have followed the
-course of all the main roads radiating from each large town, noticing
-most of the places through or near which they pass, and also pointing
-out some of the more picturesque byways, and describing the lie of the
-country. But I have all along supposed the tourist to be travelling by
-motor, and have accordingly said very little about Footpaths. This in
-a mountainous country would be entirely wrong, but Lincolnshire as a
-whole is not a pedestrian’s county. It is, however, a land of constantly
-occurring magnificent views, a land of hill as well as plain, and, as I
-hope the book will show, beyond all others a county teeming with splendid
-churches. I may add that, thanks to that modern devourer of time and
-space—the ubiquitous motor car—I have been able personally to visit
-almost everything I have described, a thing which in so large a county
-would, without such mercurial aid, have involved a much longer time for
-the doing. Even so, no one can be more conscious than I am that the book
-falls far short of what, with such a theme, was possible.
-
- W. F. R.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- INTRODUCTORY 1
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- STAMFORD 7
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- STAMFORD TO BOURNE 18
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- ROADS FROM BOURNE 28
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- SOUTH-WEST LINCOLNSHIRE 39
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- GRANTHAM 52
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- ROADS FROM GRANTHAM 64
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- SLEAFORD 76
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- LINCOLN CATHEDRAL 91
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- PAULINUS AND HUGH OF LINCOLN 112
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
- LINCOLN CITY 120
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
- ROADS FROM LINCOLN, WEST AND EAST 137
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
- ROADS SOUTH FROM LINCOLN 148
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
- PLACES OF NOTE NEAR LINCOLN 165
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
- HERMITAGES AND HOSPITALS 178
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
- ROADS NORTH FROM LINCOLN 182
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
- GAINSBOROUGH AND THE NORTH-WEST 195
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
- THE ISLE OF AXHOLME 208
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
- GRIMSBY AND THE NORTH-EAST 215
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
- CAISTOR 228
-
- CHAPTER XXI
-
- LOUTH 239
-
- CHAPTER XXII
-
- ANGLO-SAXON, NORMAN AND MEDIÆVAL ART 251
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
-
- ROADS FROM LOUTH, NORTH AND WEST 262
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
-
- LINCOLNSHIRE BYWAYS 278
-
- CHAPTER XXV
-
- THE BOLLES FAMILY 285
-
- CHAPTER XXVI
-
- THE MARSH CHURCHES OF EAST LINDSEY 290
-
- CHAPTER XXVII
-
- LINCOLNSHIRE FOLKSONG 296
-
- CHAPTER XXVIII
-
- MARSH CHURCHES OF SOUTH LINDSEY 305
-
- CHAPTER XXIX
-
- WAINFLEET TO SPILSBY 323
-
- CHAPTER XXX
-
- SPILSBY AND NEIGHBOURHOOD 333
-
- CHAPTER XXXI
-
- SOMERSBY AND THE TENNYSONS 343
-
- CHAPTER XXXII
-
- ROADS FROM SPILSBY 358
-
- CHAPTER XXXIII
-
- SCRIVELSBY AND TATTERSHALL 372
-
- CHAPTER XXXIV
-
- BARDNEY ABBEY 390
-
- CHAPTER XXXV
-
- HOLLAND FEN 400
-
- CHAPTER XXXVI
-
- THE FEN CHURCHES—NORTHERN DIVISION 409
-
- CHAPTER XXXVII
-
- ST. BOTOLPH’S TOWN (BOSTON) 425
-
- CHAPTER XXXVIII
-
- SPALDING AND THE CHURCHES NORTH OF IT 441
-
- CHAPTER XXXIX
-
- CHURCHES OF HOLLAND 463
-
- CHAPTER XL
-
- THE BLACK DEATH 480
-
- CHAPTER XLI
-
- CROYLAND 483
-
- CHAPTER XLII
-
- LINCOLNSHIRE FOXHOUNDS 493
-
- APPENDIX I
-
- SAMUEL WESLEY’S EPITAPH 499
-
- APPENDIX II
-
- DR. WM. STUKELEY 500
-
- APPENDIX III
-
- A LOWLAND PEASANT POET 501
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- BOSTON _Frontispiece_
-
- ST. LEONARD’S PRIORY, STAMFORD 8
-
- ST. GEORGE’S SQUARE, STAMFORD 10
-
- ST. MARY’S STREET, STAMFORD 11
-
- ST. PAUL’S STREET, STAMFORD 13
-
- ST. PETER’S HILL, STAMFORD 15
-
- STAMFORD FROM FREEMAN’S CLOSE 17
-
- BOURNE ABBEY CHURCH 24
-
- THE STATION HOUSE, BOURNE 26
-
- SEMPRINGHAM 36
-
- THE WITHAM, BOSTON 45
-
- THE ANGEL INN, GRANTHAM 56
-
- GRANTHAM CHURCH 61
-
- WITHAM-SIDE, BOSTON 66
-
- HOUGH-ON-THE-HILL 72
-
- NORTH TRANSEPT, ST. DENIS’S CHURCH, SLEAFORD 78
-
- HECKINGTON CHURCH 81
-
- GREAT HALE 84
-
- HELPRINGHAM 86
-
- SOUTH KYME 88
-
- SOUTH KYME CHURCH 89
-
- NEWPORT ARCH, LINCOLN 92
-
- GATEWAY OF LINCOLN CASTLE 94
-
- THE ROOD TOWER AND SOUTH TRANSEPT, LINCOLN 100
-
- POTTERGATE, LINCOLN 110
-
- ST. MARY’S GUILD, LINCOLN 118
-
- THE POTTERGATE ARCH, LINCOLN 121
-
- THE JEW’S HOUSE, LINCOLN 123
-
- REMAINS OF THE WHITEFRIARS’ PRIORY, LINCOLN 124
-
- ST. MARY’S GUILD AND ST. PETER’S AT GOWTS, LINCOLN 125
-
- ST. BENEDICT’S CHURCH, LINCOLN 127
-
- ST. MARY-LE-WIGFORD, LINCOLN 128
-
- THE STONEBOW, LINCOLN 130
-
- OLD INLAND REVENUE OFFICE, LINCOLN 132
-
- JAMES STREET, LINCOLN 133
-
- THORNGATE, LINCOLN 135
-
- LINCOLN FROM THE WITHAM 138
-
- STOW CHURCH 142
-
- BRANT BROUGHTON 152
-
- THE ERMINE STREET AT TEMPLE BRUER 154
-
- TEMPLE BRUER TOWER 158
-
- NAVENBY 163
-
- WYKEHAM CHAPEL, NEAR SPALDING 180
-
- THE AVON AT BARTON-ON-HUMBER 189
-
- ST. PETER’S, BARTON-ON-HUMBER 190
-
- ST. MARY’S, BARTON-ON-HUMBER 192
-
- NORTH SIDE, OLD HALL, GAINSBOROUGH 202
-
- SOUTH SIDE, OLD HALL, GAINSBOROUGH 203
-
- GAINSBOROUGH CHURCH 205
-
- GREAT GOXHILL PRIORY 218
-
- THORNTON ABBEY GATEWAY 220
-
- REMAINS OF CHAPTER HOUSE, THORNTON ABBEY 221
-
- THE WELLAND, NEAR FULNEY, SPALDING 237
-
- THORNTON ABBEY GATEWAY 238
-
- BRIDGE STREET, LOUTH 241
-
- HUBBARD’S MILL, LOUTH 243
-
- THE LUD AT LOUTH 246
-
- ANCIENT SAXON ORNAMENT FOUND IN 1826 IN CLEANING OUT
- THE WITHAM, NEAR THE VILLAGE OF FISKERTON, FOUR
- MILES EAST OF LINCOLN. DRAWN BY MRS. RAWNSLEY 254
-
- CLEE CHURCH 266
-
- WESTGATE, LOUTH 275
-
- MANBY 279
-
- MABLETHORPE CHURCH 292
-
- SOUTHEND, BOSTON 297
-
- MARKBY CHURCH 306
-
- ADDLETHORPE AND INGOLDMELLS 308
-
- THE ROMAN BANK AT WINTHORPE 311
-
- BRIDGE OVER THE HOLLOW-GATE 330
-
- HALTON CHURCH 331
-
- SOMERSBY CHURCH 341
-
- TENNYSON’S HOME, SOMERSBY 351
-
- LITTLE STEEPING 357
-
- SIBSEY 362
-
- CONINGSBY 369
-
- TATTERSHALL AND CONINGSBY 370
-
- TATTERSHALL CHURCH 371
-
- THE LION GATE AT SCRIVELSBY 373
-
- TATTERSHALL CHURCH AND THE BAIN 381
-
- TATTERSHALL CHURCH AND CASTLE 386
-
- TATTERSHALL CHURCH WINDOWS 388
-
- SCRIVELSBY STOCKS 389
-
- KIRKSTEAD CHAPEL 391
-
- REMAINS OF KIRKSTEAD ABBEY CHURCH 396
-
- KIRKSTEAD CHAPEL, WEST END 398
-
- DARLOW’S YARD, SLEAFORD 403
-
- LEAKE CHURCH 415
-
- LEVERTON WINDMILL 417
-
- FRIESTON PRIORY CHURCH 418
-
- BOSTON CHURCH FROM THE N.E. 421
-
- BOSTON STUMP 424
-
- CUSTOM HOUSE QUAY, BOSTON 427
-
- SOUTH SQUARE, BOSTON 429
-
- SPAIN LANE, BOSTON 431
-
- THE HAVEN, BOSTON 436
-
- THE GUILDHALL, BOSTON 437
-
- HUSSEY’S TOWER, BOSTON 439
-
- THE WELLAND AT COWBIT ROAD, SPALDING 442
-
- THE WELLAND AT HIGH STREET, SPALDING 443
-
- AYSCOUGH FEE HALL GARDENS, SPALDING 445
-
- SPALDING CHURCH FROM THE S.E. 447
-
- N. SIDE, SPALDING CHURCH 449
-
- PINCHBECK 450
-
- SURFLEET 453
-
- SURFLEET WINDMILL 454
-
- THE WELLAND AT MARSH ROAD, SPALDING 458
-
- ALGARKIRK 460
-
- AT FULNEY 462
-
- WHAPLODE CHURCH 467
-
- FLEET CHURCH 469
-
- GEDNEY CHURCH 471
-
- LONG SUTTON CHURCH 473
-
- GEDNEY, FROM FLEET 482
-
- COWBIT CHURCH 484
-
- CROYLAND ABBEY 488
-
- CROYLAND BRIDGE 490
-
- MAP _At end Volume_
-
-
-
-
-HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS IN LINCOLNSHIRE
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-INTRODUCTORY
-
-
-In dealing with a county which measures seventy-five miles by forty-five,
-it will be best to assume that the tourist has either some form of
-“cycle” or, better still, a motor car. The railway helps one less in this
-than in most counties, as it naturally runs on the flat and unpicturesque
-portions, and also skirts the boundaries, and seldom attempts to pierce
-into the heart of the Wolds. Probably it would not be much good to the
-tourist if it did, as he would have to spend much of his time in tunnels
-which always come where there should be most to see, as on the Louth and
-Lincoln line between Withcal and South Willingham. As it is, the only bit
-of railway by which a person could gather that Lincolnshire was anything
-but an ugly county is that between Lincoln and Grantham.
-
-But that it is a county with a great deal of beauty will be, I am sure,
-admitted by those who follow up the routes described in the following
-pages. They will find that it is a county famous for wide views, for
-wonderful sunsets, for hills and picturesque hollows; and full, too, of
-the human interest which clings round old buildings, and the uplifting
-pleasure which its many splendid specimens of architecture have power to
-bestow.
-
-[Sidenote: MARSH AND FEN]
-
-At the outset the reader must identify himself so far with the people
-of Lincolnshire as to make himself at home in the universally accepted
-meanings of certain words and expressions which he will hear constantly
-recurring. He will soon come to know that ‘siver’ means however, that
-‘slaäpe’ means slippery, that ‘unheppen,’ a fine old word (—unhelpen),
-means awkward, that ‘owry’ or ‘howry’ means dirty; but, having learnt
-this, he must not conclude that the word ‘strange’ in ‘straänge an’ owry
-weather’ means anything unfamiliar. ‘Straänge’—perhaps the commonest
-adverbial epithet in general use in Lincolnshire—_e.g._ “you’ve bin
-a straänge long while coming” only means very. But besides common
-conversational expressions he will have to note that the well-known
-substantives ‘Marsh’ and ‘Fen’ bear in Lincolnshire a special meaning,
-neither of them now denoting bog or wet impassable places. The _Fens_ are
-the rich flat corn lands, once perpetually flooded, but now drained and
-tilled; the divisions between field and field being mostly ditches, small
-or big, and all full of water; the soil is deep vegetable mould, fine,
-and free from stones, hardly to be excelled for both corn and roots;
-while the _Marsh_ is nearly all pasture land, stiffer in nature, and
-producing such rich grass that the beasts can grow fat upon it without
-other food. Here, too, the fields are divided by ditches or “dykes” and
-the sea wind blows over them with untiring energy, for the Marsh is all
-next the coast, being a belt averaging seven or eight miles in width, and
-reaching from the Wash to the Humber.
-
-[Sidenote: THE WOLDS]
-
-From this belt the Romans, by means of a long embankment, excluded the
-waters of the sea; and Nature’s sand-dunes, aided by the works of man
-in places, keep up the Roman tradition. Even before the Roman bank was
-made, the _Marsh_ differed from the _Fen_, in that the waters which used
-to cover the _fens_ were fed by the river floods and the waters from
-the hills, and it was not, except occasionally and along the course of
-a tidal river, liable to inundation from the sea; whereas the _Marsh_
-was its natural prey. Of course both Marsh and Fen are all level. But
-the third portion of the county is of quite a different character, and
-immediately you get into it all the usual ideas about Lincolnshire being
-a flat, ugly county vanish, and as this upland country extends over most
-of the northern half of the county, viz., from Spilsby to the Humber on
-the eastern side and from Grantham to the Humber on the western, it is
-obvious that no one can claim to know Lincolnshire who does not know the
-long lines of the Wolds, which are two long spines of upland running
-north and south, with flat land on either side of them.
-
-These, back-bones of the county, though seldom reaching 500 feet, come to
-their highest point of 530 between Walesby and Stainton-le-Vale, a valley
-set upon a hill over which a line would pass drawn from Grimsby to Market
-Rasen. The hilly Wold region is about the same width as the level Marsh
-belt, averaging eight miles, but north of Caistor this narrows. There are
-no great streams from these Wolds, the most notable being the long brook
-whose parent branches run from Stainton-in-the-Vale and “Roman hole” near
-Thoresway, and uniting at Hatcliffe go out to the sea with the Louth
-River “Lud,” the two streams joining at Tetney lock.
-
-North of Caistor the Wolds not only narrow, but drop by Barnetby-le-Wold
-to 150 feet, and allow the railway lines from Barton-on-Humber, New
-Holland and Grimsby to pass through to Brigg. This, however, is only a
-‘pass,’ as the chalk ridge rises again near Elsham, and at Saxby attains
-a height of 330 feet, whence it maintains itself at never less than 200
-feet, right up to Ferriby-on-the-Humber. These Elsham and Saxby Wolds are
-but two miles across.
-
-Naturally this Wold region with the villages situated in its folds or on
-its fringes is the pretty part of the county, though the Marsh with its
-extended views, its magnificent sunsets and cloud effects,
-
- “The wide-winged sunsets of the misty Marsh,”
-
-its splendid cattle and its interesting flora, its long sand-dunes
-covered with stout-growing grasses, sea holly and orange-berried
-buckthorn, and finally its magnificent sands, is full of a peculiar
-charm; and then there are its splendid churches; not so grand as the fen
-churches it is true, but so nobly planned and so unexpectedly full of
-beautiful old carved woodwork.
-
-West of these Wolds is a belt of Fen-land lying between them and the
-ridge or ‘cliff’ on which the great Roman Ermine Street runs north
-from Lincoln in a bee line for over thirty miles to the Humber near
-Winteringham, only four miles west of the end of the Wolds already
-mentioned at South Ferriby.
-
-[Sidenote: PARALLEL RIDGES]
-
-The high ridge of the Lincoln Wold is very narrow, a regular ‘Hogs
-back’ and broken down into a lower altitude between Blyborough and
-Kirton-in-Lindsey, and lower again a little further north near Scawby and
-still more a few miles further on where the railway goes through the pass
-between Appleby Station and Scunthorpe.
-
-From here a second ridge is developed parallel with the Lincoln Wold,
-and between the Wold and the Trent, the ground rising from Bottesford to
-Scunthorpe, reaching a height of 220 feet on the east bank of the Trent
-near Burton-on-Stather and thence descending by Alkborough to the Humber
-at Whitton. The Trent which, roughly speaking, from Newark, and actually
-from North Clifton to the Humber, bounds the county on the west, runs
-through a low country of but little interest, overlooked for miles from
-the height which is crowned by Lincoln Minster. Only the Isle of Axholme
-lies outside of the river westwards.
-
-The towns of Gainsborough towards the north, and Stamford at the extreme
-south guard this western boundary. Beyond the Minster the Lincoln Wold
-continues south through the Sleaford division of Kesteven to Grantham,
-but in a modified form, rising into stiff hills only to the north-east
-and south-west of Grantham, and thence passing out of the county into
-Leicestershire. A glance at a good map will show that the ridge along
-which the Ermine Street and the highway from Lincoln to Grantham run
-for seventeen miles, as far, that is, as Ancaster, is not a wide one;
-but drops to the flats more gently east of the Ermine Street than it
-does to the west of the Grantham road. From Sleaford, where five railway
-lines converge, that which goes west passes through a natural break in
-the ridge by Ancaster, the place from which, next after the “Barnack
-rag,” all the best stone of the churches of Lincolnshire has always
-been quarried. South of Ancaster the area of high ground is much wider,
-extending east and west from the western boundary of the county to the
-road which runs from Sleaford to Bourne and Stamford.
-
-Such being the main features of the county, it will be as well to lay
-down a sort of itinerary showing the direction in which we will proceed
-and the towns which we propose to visit as we go.
-
-[Sidenote: ITINERARY]
-
-Entering the county from the south, at _Stamford_, we will make for
-_Sleaford_. These are the two towns which give their names to the
-divisions of South and North Kesteven. _Grantham_ lies off to the west,
-about midway between the two. As this is the most important town in
-the division of Kesteven, after taking some of the various roads which
-radiate from Sleaford we will make Grantham our centre, then leave South
-Kesteven for Sleaford again, and thence going on north we shall reach
-_Lincoln_ just over the North Kesteven boundary, and so continue to
-_Gainsborough_ and _Brigg_, from which the west and north divisions of
-Lindsey are named. From each of the towns we have mentioned we shall
-trace the roads which lead from them in all directions; and then, after
-entering the Isle of Axholme and touching the Humber at _Barton_ and
-the North Sea at Cleethorpes and Grimsby, we shall turn south to the
-_Louth_ and _Horncastle_ (in other words the east and south) divisions
-of Lindsey, and, so going down the east coast, we shall, after visiting
-_Alford_ and _Spilsby_, both in South Lindsey, arrive at _Boston_ and
-then at _Spalding_, both in the “parts of Holland,” and finally pass out
-of the county near the ancient abbey of _Croyland_.
-
-By this itinerary we shall journey all round the huge county, going
-up, roughly speaking, on the west and returning by the east; and shall
-see, not only how it is divided into the political “parts” of Kesteven,
-Lindsey and Holland, but also note as we go the characteristics of the
-land and its three component elements of Fen, Wold and Marsh.
-
-We have seen that the Wolds, starting from the Humber, run in two
-parallel ridges; that on the west side of the county reaching the whole
-way from north to south, but that on the east only going half the way and
-ending abruptly at West Keal, near Spilsby.
-
-All that lies east of the road running from Lincoln by Sleaford and
-Bourne to Stamford, and south of a line drawn from Lincoln to Wainfleet
-is “Fen,” and includes the southern portion of South Lindsey, the eastern
-half of Kesteven, and the whole of Holland.
-
-In this Fen country great houses are scarce. But the great monasteries
-clung to the Fens and they were mainly responsible for the creation of
-the truly magnificent Fen churches which are most notably grouped in
-the neighbourhood of Boston, Sleaford and Spalding. In writing of the
-Fens, therefore, the churches are the chief things to be noticed, and
-this is largely, though not so entirely, the case in the Marsh district
-also. Hence I have ventured to describe these Lincolnshire churches
-of the Marsh and Fen at greater length than might at first sight seem
-warrantable.
-
-[Sidenote: PERIODS OF ARCHITECTURE]
-
-It would make it easier to follow these descriptions if the reader were
-first to master the dates and main characteristics of the different
-periods of architecture and their order of sequence. Thus, roughly
-speaking, we may assign each style to one century, though of course the
-style and the century were not in any case exactly coterminous.
-
- 11th Century Norman ⎫ With round arches.
- 12th ” Transition ⎭
- 13th ” Early English (E.E.) ⎫
- 14th ” Decorated (Dec.) ⎬ With pointed arches.
- 15th ” Perpendicular (Perp.) ⎭
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-STAMFORD
-
- The North Road—Churches—Browne’s Hospital—Brasenose
- College—Daniel Lambert—Burghley House and “The Peasant
- Countess.”
-
-
-The Great Northern line, after leaving Peterborough, enters the county
-at Tallington, five miles east of Stamford. Stamford is eighty-nine
-miles north of London, and forty miles south of Lincoln. Few towns in
-England are more interesting, none more picturesque. The Romans with
-their important station of Durobrivæ at Castor, and another still nearer
-at Great Casterton, had no need to occupy Stamford in force, though they
-doubtless guarded the ford where the Ermine Street crossed the Welland,
-and possibly paved the water-way, whence arose the name Stane-ford.
-The river here divides the counties of Lincoln and Northamptonshire,
-and on the north-west of the town a little bit of Rutland runs up, but
-over three-quarters of the town is in our county. The Saxons always
-considered it an important town, and as early as 664 mention is made
-in a charter of Wulfhere, King of Mercia, of “that part of Staunforde
-beyond the bridge,” so the town was already on both sides of the river.
-Later again, in Domesday Book, the King’s borough of Stamford is noticed
-as paying tax for the army, navy and Danegelt, also it is described as
-“having six wards, five in Lincolnshire and one in Hamptonshire, but all
-pay customs and dues alike, except the last in which the Abbot of Burgh
-(Peterborough) had and hath Gabell and toll.”
-
-This early bridge was no doubt a pack-horse bridge, and an arch on the
-west side of St. Mary’s Hill still bears the name of Packhorse Arch.
-
-[Illustration: _St. Leonard’s Priory, Stamford._]
-
-[Sidenote: ST. LEONARD’S PRIORY]
-
-St. Leonard’s Priory is the oldest building in the neighbourhood. After
-Oswy, King of Northumbria, had defeated Penda, the pagan King of Mercia,
-he gave the government of this part of the conquered province to Penda’s
-son Pæda, and gave land in Stamford to his son’s tutor, Wilfrid, and
-here, in 658, Wilfrid built the priory of St. Leonard which he bestowed
-on his monastery at Lindisfarne, and when the monks removed thence to
-Durham it became a cell of the priory of Durham. Doubtless the building
-was destroyed by the Danes, but it was refounded in 1082 by the
-Conqueror and William of Carilef, the then Bishop of Durham.
-
-The Danish marauders ravaged the country, but were met at Stamford by a
-stout resistance from Saxons and Britons combined; but in the end they
-beat the Saxons and nearly destroyed Stamford in 870. A few years later,
-when, after the peace of Wedmore, Alfred the Great gave terms to Guthrum
-on condition that he kept away to the north of the Watling Street, the
-five towns of Stamford, Leicester, Nottingham, Derby and Lincoln were
-left to the Danes for strongholds; of these Lincoln then, as now, was the
-chief.
-
-[Sidenote: PARLIAMENT AT STAMFORD]
-
-The early importance of Stamford may be gauged by the facts that
-Parliament was convened there more than once in the fourteenth century,
-and several Councils of War and of State held there. One of these was
-called by Pope Boniface IX. to suppress the doctrines of Wyclif. There,
-too, a large number of nobles met to devise some check on King John,
-who was often in the neighbourhood either at Kingscliffe, in Rockingham
-Forest, or at Stamford itself—and from thence they marched to Runnymede.
-
-[Sidenote: STAMFORD TOWN]
-
-The town was on the Great North Road, so that kings, when moving up and
-down their realm, naturally stopped there. A good road also went east and
-west, hence, just outside the town gate on the road leading west towards
-Geddington and Northampton, a cross (the third) was set up in memory of
-the halting of Queen Eleanor’s funeral procession in 1293 on its way from
-Harby near Lincoln to Westminster.
-
-[Illustration: _St. George’s Square, Stamford._]
-
-[Sidenote: CITY ARMS]
-
-There was a castle near the ford in the tenth century, and Danes and
-Saxons alternately held it until the Norman Conquest. The city, like
-the ancient Thebes, had a wall with seven gates besides posterns, one
-of which still exists in the garden of 9, Barn Hill, the house in which
-Alderman Wolph hid Charles I. on his last visit to Stamford in 1646.
-Most of the buildings which once made Stamford so very remarkable were
-the work of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and as they comprised
-fifteen churches, six priories, with hospitals, schools and almshouses
-in corresponding numbers, the town must have presented a beautiful
-appearance, more especially so because the stone used in all these
-buildings, public and private, is of such exceptionally good character,
-being from the neighbouring quarries of Barnack, Ketton and Clipsham.
-But much of this glory of stone building and Gothic architecture was
-destroyed in the year 1461; and for this reason. It happened that, just
-as Henry III. had given it to his son Edward I. on his marriage with
-Eleanor of Castile in 1254, so, in 1363, Edward III. gave the castle and
-manor of Stamford to his son Edmund of Langley, Duke of York; this, by
-attaching the town to the Yorkist cause, when Lincolnshire was mostly
-Lancastrian, brought about its destruction, for after the battle of St.
-Alban’s in 1461, the Lancastrians under Sir Andrew Trollope utterly
-devastated the town, destroying everything, and, though some of the
-churches were rebuilt, the town never recovered its former magnificence.
-It still looks beautiful with its six churches, its many fragments
-of arch or wall and several fine old almshouses which were built
-subsequently, but it lost either then or at the dissolution more than
-double of what it has managed to retain. Ten years later the courage
-shown by the men of Stamford at the battle of Empingham or “Bloody Oaks”
-close by, on the North Road, where the Lancastrians were defeated, caused
-Edward IV. to grant permission for the royal lions to be placed on the
-civic shield of Stamford, side by side with the arms of Earl Warren. He
-had had the manorial rights of Stamford given to him by King John in
-1206, and he is said to have given the butchers a field in which to keep
-a bull to be baited annually on November 13, and the barbarous practice
-of “bull running” in the streets was actually kept up till 1839, and then
-only abolished with difficulty.
-
-[Illustration: _St. Mary’s Street, Stamford._]
-
-[Illustration: _St. Paul’s Street, Stamford._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE SIX CHURCHES]
-
-[Sidenote: THE CALLISES]
-
-[Sidenote: STAMFORD UNIVERSITY]
-
-Of the six churches, St. Mary’s and All Saints have spires. St. Mary’s,
-on a hill which slopes to the river, is a fine arcaded Early English
-tower with a broach spire of later date, but full of beautiful work in
-statue and canopy, very much resembling that at Ketton in Rutland. There
-are three curious round panels with interlaced work over the porch, and
-a rich altar tomb with very lofty canopy that commemorates Sir David
-Phillips and his wife. They had served Margaret Countess of Richmond,
-the mother of Henry VII., who resided at Collyweston close by. The body
-of the church is rather crowded together and not easy to view. In this
-respect All Saints, with its turrets, pinnacles and graceful spire, and
-its double belfry lights under one hood moulding as at Grantham, has
-the advantage. Moreover the North Road goes up past it, and the market
-place gives plenty of space all round it. Inside, the arcade columns are
-cylindrical and plain on the north, but clustered on the south side,
-with foliated capitals. This church is rich in brasses, chiefly of the
-great wool-merchant family of Browne, one of whom, William, founded a
-magnificent hospital and enlarged the church, and in all probability
-built the handsome spire; he was buried in 1489. The other churches all
-have square towers, that of St. John’s Church is over the last bay of
-the north aisle, and at the last bay of the south aisle is a porch. The
-whole construction is excellent, pillars tall, roof rich and windows
-graceful, and it once was filled with exceptionally fine stained glass.
-St. George’s Church, being rebuilt with fragments of other destroyed
-churches, shows a curious mixture of octagonal and cylindrical work in
-the same pillars. St. Michael’s and St. Martin’s are the other two, of
-which the latter is across the water in what is called _Stamford Baron_,
-it is the burial place of the Cecils and it is not far from the imposing
-gateway into Burghley Park. This church and park, with the splendid house
-designed by John Thorpe for the great William Cecil in 1565, are all in
-the diocese of Peterborough, and the county of Northampton. We shall have
-to recall the church when we speak of the beautiful windows which Lord
-Exeter was allowed by the Fortescue family to take from the Collegiate
-Church of Tattershall, and which are now in St. Martin’s, where they are
-extremely badly set with bands of modern glass interrupting the old.
-Another remnant of a church stands on the north-west of the town, St.
-Paul’s. This ruin was made over as early as the sixteenth century for
-use as a schoolroom for Radcliffe’s Grammar School. Schools, hospitals or
-almshouses once abounded in Stamford, where the latter are often called
-_Callises_, being the benefactions of the great wool merchants of the
-Staple of Calais. The chief of all these, and one which is still in use,
-is Browne’s Hospital, founded in 1480 by a Stamford merchant who had been
-six times Mayor, for a Warden, a Confrater, ten poor men, and two poor
-women. It had a long dormitory hall, with central passage from which the
-brethren’s rooms opened on either side, and, at one end, beyond a carved
-screen, is the chapel with tall windows, stalls and carved bench-ends,
-and a granite alms box. An audit room is above the hall or dormitory,
-with good glass, and Browne’s own house, with large gateway to admit
-the wool-wagons, adjoined the chapel. It was partly rebuilt with new
-accommodation in 1870; the cloister and hall and chapel remain as they
-were. One more thing must be noted. In the north-west and near the old
-St. Paul’s Church schoolroom is a beautiful Early English gateway, which
-is all that remains of _Brasenose College_. The history is a curious
-one. Violent town and gown quarrels resulting even in murders, at Oxford
-in 1260, had caused several students to migrate to Northampton, where
-Henry III. directed the mayor to give them every accommodation; but in
-1266, probably for reasons connected with civil strife, the license
-was revoked, and, whilst many returned to Oxford, many preferred to go
-further, and so came to Stamford, a place known to be well supplied with
-halls and requisites for learning. Here they were joined in 1333 by a
-further body of Oxford men who were involved in a dispute between the
-northern and southern scholars, the former complaining that they were
-unjustly excluded from Merton College Fellowships. The Durham Monastery
-took their side and doubtless offered them shelter at their priory of
-St. Leonard’s, Stamford. Then, as other bodies of University seceders
-kept joining them, they thought seriously of setting up a University, and
-petitioned King Edward III. to be allowed to remain under his protection
-at Stamford. But the Universities petitioned against them, and the King
-ordered the Sheriff of Lincolnshire to turn them out, promising them
-redress when they were back in Oxford. Those who refused were punished
-by confiscation of goods and fines, and the two Universities passed
-Statutes imposing an oath on all freshmen that they would not read or
-attend lectures at Stamford. In 1292 Robert Luttrell of Irnham gave a
-manor and the parish church of St. Peter, near Stamford, to the priory
-at Sempringham, being “desirous to increase the numbers of the convent
-and that it might ever have scholars at Stamford studying divinity
-and philosophy.” This refers to Sempringham Hall, one of the earliest
-buildings of Stamford University.
-
-[Illustration: _St. Peter’s Hill, Stamford._]
-
-[Sidenote: A MAZE OF STREETS]
-
-[Sidenote: STAMFORD’S GREAT MEN]
-
-A glance at a plan of the town would show that it is exactly like
-a maze, no street runs on right through it in any direction, and,
-for a stranger, it is incredibly difficult to find a way out. To the
-south-west, and all along the eastern edge on the river-meadows outside
-the walls, were large enclosures belonging to the different Friaries, on
-either side of the road to St. Leonard’s Priory. No town has lost more
-by the constant depredations of successive attacking forces; first the
-Danes, then the Wars of the Roses, then the dissolution of the religious
-houses, then the Civil War, ending with a visit from Cromwell in his
-most truculent mood, fresh from the mischief done by his soldiers in
-and around Croyland and Peterborough. But, even now, its grey stone
-buildings, its well-chosen site, its river, its neighbouring hills
-and wooded park, make it a town more than ordinarily attractive. Of
-distinguished natives, we need only mention the great Lord Burleigh, who
-served with distinction through four reigns, and Archdeacon Johnson, the
-founder of the Oakham and Uppingham Schools and hospitals in 1584, though
-Uppingham as it now is, was the creation of a far greater man, the famous
-Edward Thring, a pioneer of modern educational methods, in the last
-half of the nineteenth century. Archbishop Laud, who is so persistently
-mentioned as having been once Vicar of St. Martin’s, Stamford, was never
-there; his vicarage was Stanford-on-Avon. But undoubtedly Stamford’s
-greatest man in one sense was Daniel Lambert, whose monument, in St.
-Martin’s churchyard, date 1809, speaks of his “personal greatness” and
-tells us that he weighed 52 stone 11 lbs., adding “N.B. the stone of 14
-lb.” The writer once, when a schoolboy, went with another to see his
-clothes, which were shown at the Daniel Lambert Inn; and, when the two
-stood back to back, the armhole of his spacious waistcoat was slipped
-over their heads and fell loosely round them to the ground.
-
-This enormous personage must not be confounded with another Daniel
-Lambert, who was Lord Mayor and Member for the City of London in
-Walpole’s time, about 1740.
-
-[Sidenote: THE PEASANT COUNTESS]
-
-It is quite a matter of regret that “Burleigh House near Stamford town”
-is outside the county boundary. Of all the great houses in England,
-it always strikes me as being the most satisfying and altogether the
-finest, and a fitting memorial of the great Lincolnshire man William
-Cecil, who, after serving in the two previous reigns, was Elizabeth’s
-chief Minister for forty years. “The Lord of Burleigh” of Tennyson’s poem
-lived two centuries later, but he, too, with “the peasant Countess” lived
-eventually in the great house. Lady Dorothy Nevill, in _My Own Times_
-published in 1912, gives a clear account of the facts commemorated in
-the poem. She tells us that Henry Cecil, tenth Earl of Exeter, before
-he came into the title was divorced from his wife in 1791, owing to
-her misconduct; being almost broken-hearted he retired to a village in
-Shropshire, called Bolas Magna, where he worked as a farm servant to
-one Hoggins who had a mill. Tennyson makes him more picturesquely “a
-landscape painter.” He often looked in at the vicarage and had a mug of
-ale with the servants, who called him “Gentleman Harry.” The clergyman,
-Mr. Dickenson, became interested in him, and often talked with him,
-and used to invite him to smoke an evening pipe with him in the study.
-Mr. Hoggins had a daughter Sarah, the beauty of Bolas, and they became
-lovers. With the clergyman’s aid Cecil, not without difficulty, persuaded
-Hoggins to allow the marriage, which took place at St. Mildred’s, Bread
-Street, October 30th, 1791, his broken heart having mended fairly
-quickly. He was now forty years of age, and before the marriage he had
-told Dickenson who he was. For two years they lived in a small farm,
-when, from a Shrewsbury paper, “Mr. Cecil” learnt that he had succeeded
-his uncle in the title and the possession of Burleigh House and estate.
-Thither in due course he took his bride. Her picture is on the wall, but
-she did not live long.
-
- “For a trouble weighed upon her,
- And perplexed her night and morn,
- With the burthen of an honour
- Unto which she was not born.
- Faint she grew and even fainter,
- And she murmured ‘Oh that he
- Were once more that landscape painter
- That did win my heart from me’!
- So she drooped and drooped before him,
- Fading slowly from his side:
- Three fair children first she bore him,
- Then before her time she died.”
-
-[Illustration: _Stamford from Freeman’s Close._]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-STAMFORD TO BOURNE
-
- Tickencote—“Bloody
- Oaks”—Holywell—Tallington—Barholm—Greatford—Witham-on-the-Hill—Dr.
- Willis—West Deeping—Market Deeping—Deeping-St.-James—Richard de
- Rulos—Braceborough—Bourne.
-
-
-Of the eight roads which run to Stamford, the Great North Road which here
-coincides with the Roman Ermine Street is the chief; and this enters
-from the south through Northamptonshire and goes out by the street
-called “Scotgate” in a north-westerly direction through Rutland. It
-leaves Lincolnshire at Great or Bridge Casterton on the river Gwash; one
-mile further it passes the celebrated church of Tickencote nestling in
-a hollow to the left, where the wonderful Norman chancel arch of five
-orders outdoes even the work at Iffley near Oxford, and the wooden effigy
-of a knight reminds one of that of Robert Duke of Normandy at Gloucester.
-_Tickencote_ is the home of the Wingfields, and the villagers in 1471
-were near enough to hear “the Shouts of war” when the Lincolnshire
-Lancastrians fled from the fight on Loosecoat Field after a slaughter
-which is commemorated on the map by the name “Bloody Oaks.” Further on,
-the road passes Stretton, ‘the village on the street,’ whence a lane to
-the right takes you to the famed Clipsham quarries just on the Rutland
-side of the boundary, and over it to the beautiful residence of Colonel
-Birch Reynardson at _Holywell_. Very soon now the Ermine Street, after
-doing its ten miles in Rutland, passes by “Morkery Wood” back into
-Lincolnshire.
-
-The only Stamford Road which is all the time in our county is the eastern
-road through Market Deeping to Spalding, this soon after leaving
-Stamford passes near Uffington Hall, built in 1688 by Robert Bertie, son
-of Montague, second Earl of Lindsey, he whose father fell at Edgehill. On
-the northern outskirt of the parish Lord Kesteven has a fine Elizabethan
-house called Casewick Hall. Round each house is a well-timbered park,
-and at Uffington Hall the approach is by a fine avenue of limes. At
-_Tallington_, where the road crosses the Great Northern line, the church,
-like several in the neighbourhood, has some Saxon as well as Norman work,
-and the original Sanctus bell still hangs in a cot surmounting the east
-end of the nave. It is dedicated to St. Lawrence.
-
-South Lincolnshire seems to have been rather rich in Saxon churches, and
-two of the best existing towers of that period at Barnack and Wittering
-in Northamptonshire are within three miles of Stamford, one on either
-side of the Great North Road.
-
-_Barholm_ Church, near Tallington, has some extremely massive Norman
-arches and a fine door with diapered tympanum. The tower was restored in
-the last year of Charles I., and no one seems to have been more surprised
-than the churchwarden or parson or mason of the time, for we find carved
-on it these lines:—
-
- “Was ever such a thing
- Sence the creation?
- A new steeple built
- In the time of vexation.
-
- I. H. 1643.”
-
-[Sidenote: FORDS OF THE WELLAND]
-
-An old Hall adds to the interest of the place, and another charming
-old building is Mr. Peacock’s Elizabethan house in the next parish of
-_Greatford_, or, as it should be spelt, Gretford or Gritford, the grit
-or gravel ford of the river Glen, just as Stamford should be Stanford
-or Staneford, the stone-paved ford of the Welland. Gretford Church is
-remarkable if only for the unusual position of the tower as a south
-transept, a similar thing being seen at _Witham-on-the-Hill_, four miles
-off, in Rutland. Five of the bells there are re-casts of some which once
-hung in Peterborough Cathedral, and the fifth has the date 1831 and a
-curious inscription. General Johnson I used to see when I was a boy at
-Uppingham; he was the patron of the school, and the one man among the
-governors of the school who was always a friend to her famous headmaster,
-Edward Thring. But why he wrote the last line of this inscription I can’t
-conceive:—
-
- “’Twas not to prosper pride and hate
- William Augustus Johnson gave me,
- But peace and joy to celebrate;
- And call to prayer to heaven to save ye.
- Then keep the terms, and e’er remember,
- May 29 ye must not ring
- Nor yet the 5th of each November
- Nor on the crowning of a king.”
-
-[Sidenote: THE DEEPINGS]
-
-[Sidenote: DEEPING FEN]
-
-To return to Gretford. In the north transept is a square opening, in the
-sill of which is a curious hollow all carved with foliage, resembling
-one in the chancel at East Kirkby, near Spilsby, where it is supposed
-to have been a sort of alms dish for votive offerings. Here, too, is a
-bust by Nollekens of a man who had a considerable reputation in his time,
-and who occupied more than one house in this neighbourhood and built a
-private asylum at Shillingthorpe near Braceborough for his patients, a
-distinguished _clientèle_ who used to drive their teams all about the
-neighbourhood; this was Dr. F. Willis, the mad-doctor who attended George
-III. But these are all ‘side shows,’ and we must get back to Tallington.
-The road from here goes through _West Deeping_, which, like the manor
-of Market Deeping, belonged to the Wakes. Here we find a good font with
-eight shields of arms, that of the Wakes being one, and an almost unique
-old low chancel screen of stone, the surmounting woodwork has gone and
-the west face is filled in with poor modern mosaic. Within three miles
-the Bourne-and-Peterborough road crosses the Stamford-and-Spalding road
-at _Market Deeping_, where there is a large church, once attached to
-Croyland, and a most interesting old house used as the rectory. This was
-the refectory of a priory, and has fine roof timbers. The manor passed
-through Joan, daughter of Margaret Wake, to the Black Prince. Two miles
-further, the grand old priory church of _Deeping-St.-James_ lies a mile
-to the left. This was attached as a cell to Thorney Abbey in 1139, by the
-same Baldwin FitzGilbert who had founded Bourne Abbey. A diversion of a
-couple of miles northwards would bring us to a fine tower and spire at
-_Langtoft_, once a dependency of Medehamstead[1] Abbey at Peterborough,
-together with which it was ruthlessly destroyed by Swegen in 1013. On the
-roof timbers are some beautifully carved figures of angels, and carved
-heads project from the nave pillars. The south chantry is a large one,
-with three arches opening into the chancel, and has several interesting
-features. Amongst these is a handsome aumbry, which may have been used as
-an Easter sepulchre. The south chantry opens from the chancel with three
-arches, and has some good carving and a piscina with a finely constructed
-canopy. There is a monument to Elizabeth Moulesworth, 1648, and a brass
-plate on the tomb of Sarah, wife of Bernard Walcot, has this pretty
-inscription:—
-
- Thou bedd of rest, reserve for him a roome
- Who lives a man divorced from his deare wife,
- That as they were one hart so this one tombe
- May hold them near in death as linckt in life,
- She’s gone before, and after comes her head
- To sleepe with her among the blessed dead.
-
-At Scamblesby, between Louth and Horncastle, is another pathetic
-inscription on a wife’s tomb:—
-
- To Margaret Coppinger wife of Francis Thorndike 1629.
- Dilectissimæ conjugi Mæstissimus maritorum Franciscus
- Thorndike.
-
- L.(apidem) M.(armoreum) P.(osuit)
-
-The old manor house of the Hyde family is at the north end of
-the village. The road for the next ten miles over Deeping Fen is
-uninteresting as a road can be. But this will be amply made up for in
-another chapter when we shape our eastward course from Spalding to
-Holbeach and Gedney.
-
-[Sidenote: THE FATHER OF FEN FARMERS]
-
-In Deeping Fen between Bourne, Spalding, Crowland and Market Deeping
-there is about fifty square miles of fine fat land, and Marrat tells
-us that as early as the reign of Edward the Confessor, Egelric, the
-Bishop of Durham, who, having been once a monk at Peterborough, knew
-the value of the land, in order to develop the district, made a cord
-road of timber and gravel all the way from Deeping to Spalding. The
-province then belonged to the Lords of Brunne or Bourne. In Norman times
-Richard De Rulos, Chamberlain of the Conqueror, married the daughter of
-Hugh de Evermue, Lord of Deeping. Their only daughter married Baldwin
-FitzGilbert, and his daughter and heiress married Hugh de Wake, who
-managed the forest of Kesteven for Henry III., which forest reached to
-the bridge at Market Deeping. Richard De Rulos, who was the father of
-all Lincolnshire farmers, aided by Ingulphus, Abbot of Croyland, set
-himself to enclose and drain the fen land, to till the soil or convert it
-into pasture and to breed cattle. He banked out the Welland which used
-to flood the fen every year, whence it got its name of Deeping or the
-deep meadows, and on the bank he set up tenements with gardens attached,
-which were the beginnings of Market Deeping. He further enlarged St.
-Guthlac’s chapel into a church, and then planted another little colony at
-Deeping-St.-James, where his son-in-law, who carried on his activities,
-built the priory. De Rulos was in fact a model landlord, and the result
-was that the men of Deeping, like Jeshuron, “waxed fat and kicked,” and
-the abbots of Croyland had endless contests with them for the next 300
-years for constant trespass and damage. Probably this was the reason why
-the Wakes set up a castle close by Deeping, but on the Northampton side
-of the Welland at Maxey, which was inhabited later by Lady Margaret,
-Countess of Richmond, the mother of Henry VII., who, in addition to all
-her educational benefactions, was also a capital farmer and an active
-member of the Commissioners of Sewers.
-
-[Sidenote: THE LIMESTONE SPRINGS]
-
-We must now get back to Stamford. Even the road which goes due north to
-Bourne soon finds itself outside the county; for Stamford is placed on a
-mere tongue or long pointed nose of land belonging to Lincolnshire, in
-what is aptly termed the Wapentake of ‘Ness.’ However, after four miles
-in Rutland, it passes the four cross railroads at _Essendine_ Junction,
-and soon after re-crosses the boundary near _Carlby_. Essendine Church
-consists simply of a Norman nave and chancel. Here, a little to the
-right lies _Braceborough Spa_, where water gushes from the limestone
-at the rate of a million and a half gallons daily. This is a great
-district for curative springs. There is one five miles to the west at
-_Holywell_ which, with its stream and lake and finely timbered grounds,
-is one of the beauty spots of Lincolnshire, and at the same distance
-to the north are the strong springs of Bourne. We hear of a chalybeate
-spring “continually boiling” or gushing up, for it was not hot, near
-the church at Billingborough, and another at Stoke Rochford, each place
-a good ten miles from Bourne and in opposite directions. Great Ponton
-too, near Stoke Rochford, is said to “abound in Springs of pure water
-rising out of the rock and running into the river Witham.” The church at
-_Braceborough_ had a fine brass once to Thomas De Wasteneys, who died of
-the Black Death in 1349. After Carlby there is little of interest on
-the road itself till it tops the hill beyond _Toft_ whence, on an autumn
-day, a grand view opens out across the fens to the Wash and to Boston on
-the north-east, and the panorama sweeps southward past Spalding to the
-time-honoured abbey of Croyland, and on again to the long grey pile of
-Peterborough Minster, once islands in a trackless fen (the impenetrable
-refuge of the warlike and unconquered Gervii or fenmen), but now a level
-plain of cornland covered, as far as eye can see, with the richest crops
-imaginable. A little further north we reach the Colsterworth road, and
-turning east, enter the old town of _Bourne_, now only notable as the
-junction of the Great Northern and Midland Railways. Since 1893 the
-inhabitants have used an “e” at the end of the name to distinguish it
-from Bourn in Cambridgeshire. Near the castle hill is a strong spring
-called “Peter’s Pool,” or Bournwell-head, the water of which runs through
-the town and is copious enough to furnish a water supply for Spalding.
-This castle, mentioned by Ingulphus in his history of Croyland Abbey,
-existed in the eleventh century; possibly the Romans had a fort here to
-guard both the ‘Carr Dyke’ which passes by the east side of the town,
-and also the King’s Street, a Roman road which, splitting off from the
-Ermine Street at Castor, runs through Bourne due north to Sleaford. There
-was an outer moat enclosing eight acres, and an inner moat of one acre,
-inside which “on a mount of earth cast up with mene’s hands” stood the
-castle, once the stronghold of the Wakes. To-day a maze of grassy mounds
-alone attests the site, amongst which the “Bourn or Brunne gushes out in
-a strong clear stream.” Marrat in his “History of Lincolnshire” tells us
-that as early as 870 Morchar, Lord of Brun, fell fighting at the battle
-of Threekingham. Two hundred years later we have “Hereward the Wake”
-living at Bourn, and in the twelfth century “Hugh De Wac” married Emma,
-daughter and heir of Baldwin FitzGilbert, who led some of King Stephen’s
-forces in the battle of Lincoln and refused to desert his king. Hugh
-founded the abbey of Bourn in 1138 on the site of an older building of
-the eighth or ninth century.
-
-[Illustration: _Bourne Abbey Church._]
-
-[Sidenote: BOURNE]
-
-[Sidenote: FAMOUS NATIVES]
-
-Six generations later, Margaret de Wake married Edmund Plantagenet of
-Woodstock, Earl of Kent, the sixth son of Edward I., and their daughter,
-born 1328, was Joan, the Fair Maid of Kent, who was finally married to
-Edward the Black Prince. Their son was the unfortunate Richard II., and
-through them the manor of Bourn, which is said to have been bestowed on
-Baldwin, Count of Brienne, by William Rufus, passed back to the Crown.
-Hereward is supposed to have been buried in the abbey in which only a
-little of the early building remains. Certainly he was one of Bourn’s
-famous natives, Cecil Lord Burleigh, the great Lord Treasurer, being
-another, of whom it was said that “his very enemies sorrowed for his
-death.” Job Hartop, born 1550, who sailed with Sir John Hawkins and spent
-ten years in the galleys, and thirteen more in a Spanish prison, but came
-at last safe home to Bourn, deserves honourable mention, and Worth, the
-Parisian costumier, was also a native who has made himself a name; but
-one of the most noteworthy of all Bourn’s residents was Robert Manning,
-born at Malton, and canon of the Gilbertine Priory of Six Hills. He is
-best known as Robert de Brunne, from his long residence in Bourn, where
-he wrote his “Chronicle of the History of England.” This is a Saxon or
-English metrical version of Wace’s Norman-French translation of the
-“Chronicles of Geoffrey of Monmouth,” and of Peter Langtoft’s “History
-of England,” which was also written in French. This work he finished in
-1338, on the 200th anniversary of the founding of the abbey; and in 1303,
-when he was appointed “Magister” in Bourn Abbey, he wrote his “Handlynge
-of Sin,” also a translation from the French, in the preface to which he
-has the following lines:—
-
- For men unlearned I undertook
- In English speech to write this book,
- For many be of such mannere
- That tales and rhymes will gladly hear.
- On games and feasts and at the ale
- Men love to hear a gossip’s tale
- That leads perhaps to villainy
- Or deadly sin, or dull folly.
- For such men have I made this rhyme
- That they may better spend their time.
- To all true Christians under sun,
- To good and loyal men of Brunn,
- And specially all by name
- O’ the Brotherhood of Sempringhame,
- Robert of Brunn now greeteth ye,
- And prays for your prosperity.
-
-[Sidenote: ROBERT DE BRUNNE]
-
-Robert was a translator and no original composer, but he was the first
-after Layamon, the Worcestershire monk who lived just before him, to
-write English in its present form. Chaucer followed him, then Spenser,
-after which all was easy. But he was, according to Freeman, the pioneer
-who created standard English by giving the language of the natives a
-literary expression.
-
-[Illustration: _The Station House, Bourne._]
-
-[Sidenote: BLACKSMITH’S EPITAPH]
-
-It is difficult to see the abbey church, it is so hemmed in by buildings,
-and it never seems to have been completed. At the west end is some very
-massive work. In the churchyard there is a curious epitaph on Thomas Tye,
-a blacksmith, the first six lines of which are also found on a gravestone
-in Haltham churchyard near Horncastle:—
-
- My sledge and hammer lie reclined,
- My bellows too have lost their wind,
- My fire’s extinct, my forge decayed,
- And in the dust my vice is laid,
- My coal is spent, my iron’s gone,
- My nails are drawn, my work is done.
- My fire-dryed corpse lies here at rest,
- My soul like smoke is soaring to the bles’t.
-
-There is a charming old grey stone grammar school, possibly the very
-building in which Robert De Brunne taught when “Magister” at the abbey
-at the beginning of the fourteenth century. The station-master’s house,
-called “Red Hall,” is a picturesque Elizabethan brick building once the
-home of the Roman Catholic leader, Sir John Thimbleby, and afterwards of
-the Digbys. Sir Everard Digby, whose fine monument is in Stoke Dry Church
-near Uppingham, was born here. Another house is called “Cavalry House”
-because Thomas Rawnsley, great grandfather of the writer, was living
-there when he raised at his own expense and drilled a troop of “Light
-Horse Rangers” at the time when Buonaparte threatened to invade England.
-Lady Heathcote, whose husband commanded them, gave him a handsome silver
-goblet in 1808, in recognition of his services. He died in 1826, and in
-the spandrils of the north arcade in Bourne Abbey Church are memorial
-tablets to him and to his wife Deborah (Hardwicke) “and six of their
-children who died infants.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-ROADS FROM BOURNE
-
- The Carr Dyke—Thurlby—Edenham—Grimsthorpe Castle—King’s
- Street—Swinstead—Stow Green—Folkingham—Haydor—Silk
- Willoughby—Rippingale—Billingborough—Horbling—Sempringham and
- the Gilbertines.
-
-
-Bourne itself is in the fen, just off the Lincolnshire limestone. From it
-the railways run to all the four points of the compass, but it is only
-on the west, towards Nottingham, that any cutting was needed. Due north
-and south runs the old Roman road, keeping just along the eastern edge
-of the Wold; parallel with it, and never far off, the railway line keeps
-on the level fen by Billingborough and Sleaford to Lincoln, a distance
-of five-and-thirty miles, and all the way the whole of the land to the
-east right up to the coast is one huge tract of flat fenland scored with
-dykes, with only few roads, but with railways fairly frequent, running in
-absolute straight lines for miles, and with constant level crossings.
-
-One road which goes south from Bourne is interesting because it goes
-along by the ‘Carr Dyke,’ that great engineering work of the Romans,
-which served to catch the water from the hills and drain it off so as
-to prevent the flooding of the fens. Rennie greatly admired it, and
-adopted the same principle in laying out his great “Catchwater” drain,
-affectionately spoken of by the men in the fens as ‘the owd Catch.’ The
-Carr Dyke was a canal fifty-six miles long and fifty feet wide, with
-broad, flat banks, and connected the Nene at Peterborough with the Witham
-at Washingborough near Lincoln. From Washingborough southwards to Martin
-it is difficult to trace, but it is visible at Walcot, thence it passed
-by Billinghay and north Kyme through Heckington Fen, east of Horbling
-and Billingborough and the Great Northern Railway line to Bourne. Two
-miles south of this we come to the best preserved bit of it in the parish
-of _Thurlby_, or Thoroldby, once a Northman now a Lincolnshire name. The
-“Bourne Eau” now crosses it and empties into the River Glen, which itself
-joins the Welland at Stamford.
-
-[Sidenote: THURLBY]
-
-_Thurlby_ Church stands only a few yards from the ‘Carr Dyke,’ it is full
-of interesting work, and is curiously dedicated to St. Firmin, a bishop
-of Amiens, of Spanish birth. He was sent as a missionary to Gaul, where
-he converted the Roman prefect, Faustinian. He was martyred, when bishop,
-in 303, by order of Diocletian. The son of Faustinian was his godson,
-and was baptized with his name of Firmin, and he, too, eventually became
-Bishop of Amiens. Part of the church is pre-Norman and even exhibits
-“long and short” work. The Norman arcades have massive piers and cushion
-capitals. In the transepts are Early English arcades and squints, and
-there is a canopied piscina and a font of very unusual design. There
-is also an old ladder with handrail as in some of the Marsh churches,
-leading to the belfry. Three miles south is _Baston_, where there is a
-Saxon churchyard in a field. Hence the road continues to _Market Deeping_
-on the Welland, which is here the southern boundary of the county, and
-thence to Deeping-St.-James and Peterborough. _Deeping-St.-James_ has a
-grand priory church, which was founded by Baldwin Fitz-Gilbert as a cell
-to Thorney Abbey in 1136, the year after he had founded Bourne Abbey. It
-contains effigies of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. Shameful
-to say a fountain near the church was erected in 1819 by mutilating and
-using the material of a fine village cross. Peakirk, with its little
-chapel of St. Pega, and Northborough and Woodcroft, both with remarkable
-houses built of the good gray stone of the neighbourhood, Woodcroft being
-a perfect specimen of a fortified dwelling-house, though near, are in the
-county of Northants.
-
-[Sidenote: EDENHAM CHURCH]
-
-The Corby-Colsterworth-and-Grantham Road leaves Bourne on the west and,
-passing through Bourne Wood at about four miles’ distance, reaches
-_Edenham_. On the west front of the church tower, at a height of forty
-feet, is the brass of an archbishop. Inside the church are two stones,
-one being the figure of a lady and the other being part of an ancient
-cross, both carved with very early interlaced work. The chancel is
-a museum of monuments of the Bertie family, the Dukes of Ancaster,
-continued from the earliest series at Spilsby of the Willoughby
-D’Eresbys, and beginning with Robert Bertie,[2] eleventh Lord Willoughby
-and first Earl of Lindsey, who fell at Edgehill while leading the
-Lincolnshire regiment, 1642. The present Earls of Lindsey and Uffington
-are descended from Lord Albemarle Bertie, fifth son of Robert, third Earl
-of Lindsey, who has a huge monument here, dated 1738, adorned with no
-less than seven marble busts.
-
-Two fine altar tombs of the fourteenth century, with effigies of knight
-and lady, seem to be treated somewhat negligently, being thrust away
-together at the entrance. The nave pillars are very lofty, but the whole
-church has a bare and disappointing appearance from the plainness of
-the architecture, and the ugly coat of yellow wash, both on walls and
-pillars, and the badness of the stained glass.
-
-On the north wall of the chancel and reaching to the roof there is a very
-lofty monument, with life-size effigy to the first Duke of Ancaster,
-1723. East of this, one to the second duke with a marble cupid holding
-a big medallion of his duchess, Jane Brownlow, 1741, and on the south
-wall are equally huge memorials. In the family pew we hailed with relief
-a very good alabaster tablet with white marble medallion of the late
-Lady Willoughby “Clementina Elizabeth wife of the first Baron Aveland,
-Baroness Willoughby d’Eresby in her own right, joint hereditary Lord
-Chamberlain of England,” 1888.
-
-The font is transition Norman, the cylindrical bowl surrounded by eight
-columns not detached, and a circle of arcading consisting of two Norman
-arches between each column springing from the capitals of the pillars.
-
-The magnificent set of gold Communion plate was presented by the
-Willoughby family. It is of French, Spanish, and Italian workmanship.
-_Humby_ church has also a fine gold service, presented by Lady Brownlow
-in 1682. It gives one pleasure to find good cedar trees and yews growing
-in the churchyard.
-
-[Sidenote: GRIMSTHORPE]
-
-_Grimsthorpe Castle_ is a mile beyond Edenham. The park, the finest
-in the county, in which are herds of both fallow and red deer, is very
-large, and full of old oaks and hawthorns; the latter in winter are
-quite green with the amount of mistletoe which grows on them. The lake
-covers one hundred acres. The house is a vast building and contains a
-magnificent hall 110 feet long, with a double staircase at either end,
-and rising to the full height of the roof. In the state dining-room is
-the Gobelin tapestry which came to the Duke of Suffolk by his marriage
-with Mary, the widow of Louis XII. of France. Here, too, are several
-Coronation chairs, the perquisites of the Hereditary Grand Chamberlain.
-The Willoughby d’Eresby family have discharged this office ever since
-1630 in virtue of descent from Alberic De Vere, Earl of Oxford, Grand
-Chamberlain to Henry I., but in 1779, on the death of the fourth Duke of
-Ancaster, the office was adjudged to be the right of both his sisters,
-from which time the Willoughby family have held it conjointly with the
-Earl of Carrington and the Marquis of Cholmondeley. Among the pictures
-are several Holbeins. The manor of Grimsthorpe was granted to William,
-the ninth Lord Willoughby, by Henry VIII. on his marriage with Mary de
-Salinas, a Spanish lady in attendance on Katharine of Aragon, and it was
-their daughter Katherine who became Duchess of Suffolk and afterwards
-married Richard Bertie.
-
-Just outside Grimsthorpe Park is the village of _Swinstead_, in whose
-church is a large monument to the last Duke of Ancaster, 1809, and an
-effigy of one of the numerous thirteenth century crusaders. Somehow one
-never looks on the four crusades of that century as at all up to the
-mark in interest and importance of the first and third under Godfrey de
-Bouillon and Cœur de Lion in the eleventh and twelfth centuries; as for
-the second (St. Bernard’s) that was nothing but a wretched muddle all
-through.
-
-Two miles further on is _Corby_, where the market cross remains, but not
-the market. The station on the Great Northern main line is about five
-miles east of Woolsthorpe, Sir Isaac Newton’s birthplace and early home.
-
-I think the most remarkable of the Bourne roads is the Roman “Kings
-Street,” which starts for the north and, after passing on the right
-the fine cruciform church of _Morton_ and then the graceful spire of
-_Hacconby_, a name of unmistakable Danish origin, sends first an offshoot
-to the right to pass through the fens to Heckington, and three or four
-miles further on another to the left to run on the higher ground to
-Folkingham, whilst it keeps on its own rigidly straight course to the
-Roman station on the ford of the river Slea, passing through no villages
-all the way, and only one other Roman station which guarded a smaller
-ford at _Threckingham_.
-
-[Sidenote: STOW GREEN, ALGAR AND MORCAR]
-
-This place is popularly supposed to be named from the three Danish
-kings who fell in the battle at Stow Green, between Threckingham and
-Billingborough, in 870; but the fine recumbent figures of Judge Lambert
-de Treckingham, 1300, and a lady of the same family, and the fact that
-the Threckingham family lived here in the fourteenth century points
-to a less romantic origin of the name. The names of the Victors, Earl
-Algar and Morcar, or Morkere, Lord of Bourne, survive in ‘Algarkirk’ and
-‘Morkery Wood’ in South Wytham.
-
-_Stow Green_ had one of the earliest chartered fairs in the kingdom.
-It was held in the open, away from any habitation. Like Tan Hill
-near Avebury, and St. Anne de Palue in Brittany, and Stonehenge, all
-originally were probably assembling-places for fire-worship, for tan =
-fire.
-
-But as we go to-day from Bourne to Sleaford, we shall not use the Roman
-road for more than the first six miles, but take then the off-shoot to
-the left, and passing _Aslackby_, where, in the twelfth century, as at
-Temple-Bruer, the Templars had one of their round churches, afterwards
-given to the Hospitallers, come to the little town of _Folkingham_, which
-had been granted by the Conqueror to Gilbert de Gaunt or Ghent, Earl of
-Lincoln.
-
-He was the nephew of Queen Matilda, and on none of his followers, except
-Odo Bishop of Bayeux, did the Conqueror bestow his favours with a more
-liberal hand; for we read that he gave him 172 Lordships of which 113
-were in Lincolnshire. He made his seat at Folkingham, but, having lands
-in Yorkshire, he was a benefactor to St. Mary’s Abbey, York, at the same
-time that he restored and endowed Bardney Abbey after its destruction by
-the Danes under Inguar and Hubba.
-
-The wide street seems to have been laid out for more people than now
-frequent it. The church is spacious and lofty, with a fine roof and
-singularly rich oak screen and pulpit, into which the rood screen doorway
-opens. It was well restored about eighty years ago, by the rector, the
-Rev. T. H. Rawnsley, who was far ahead of his time in the reverend
-spirit with which he handled old architecture. The neighbouring church
-of _Walcot_ has a fine fourteenth century oak chest, similar to one at
-Hacconby. Three and a half miles further on we come to _Osbournby_, with
-a quite remarkable number of old carved bench-ends and some beautiful
-canopied Sedilia. Another Danish village, _Aswardby_—originally, I
-suppose, Asgarby, one can fancy a hero called ‘Asgard the Dane’ but
-hardly Asward—has a fine house and park, sold by one of the Sleaford Carr
-family to Sir Francis Whichcote in 1723.
-
-Four miles west of Aswardby is the village of _Haydor_ (Norse, heide =
-heath). Here, in the north aisle of the church, which has a tall tower
-and spire, is some very good stained glass. It was given by Geoffrey le
-Scrope, who was Prebend of Haydor 1325 to 1380, and much resembles the
-fine glass in York Minster, which was put in in 1338. In this parish is
-the old manor of Culverthorpe, belonging to the Houblon family. It has a
-very fine drawing-room and staircase and a painted ceiling.
-
-[Sidenote: SILK-WILLOUGHBY]
-
-We must now come back to the Sleaford road which, a couple of miles
-beyond Aswardby Park, turns sharp to the right for _Silk-Willoughby_,
-or Silkby cum Willoughby. Here we have a really beautiful church, with
-finely proportioned tower and spire of the Decorated period. The Norman
-font is interesting and the old carved bench-ends, and so is the large
-base of a wayside cross in the village, with bold representations of
-the four Evangelists, each occupying the whole of one side. Three miles
-further we reach Sleaford.
-
-One of the features of the county is the number of roads it has running
-north and south in the same direction as the Wolds. The Roman road
-generally goes straightest, though at times the railway line, as for
-instance between Bourne and Spalding, or between Boston and Burgh, takes
-an absolute bee line which outdoes even the Romans.
-
-We saw that the two roads going north from Bourne sloped off right
-and left of the “Kings Street.” That on the left or western side
-keeps a parallel course to Sleaford, but that on the right, after
-reaching _Horbling_, diverges still further to the east and makes for
-_Heckington_. These two places are situated about six miles apart, and it
-is through the Horbling and Heckington fens that the only two roads which
-run east and west in all South Lincolnshire make their way. They both
-start from the Grantham and Lincoln Road at Grantham and at Honington,
-the former crossing the “Kings Street” at Threckingham, and thence to
-Horbling fen, the latter passing by Sleaford and Heckington. Both of
-these roads curve towards one another when they have passed the fens,
-and, uniting near Swineshead, make for Boston and the Wash. The whole of
-the land in South Lincolnshire slopes from west to east, falling between
-Grantham and Boston about 440 feet, but really this fall takes place
-almost entirely in the first third of the way on the western side of “The
-Roman Street” which was cleverly laid out on the Fen-side fringe of the
-higher ground. The road from Bourne to Heckington East of the “Street” is
-absolutely on the fen level and the railway goes parallel to it, between
-the road and the Roman ‘Carr Dyke.’ Thus we have a Roman road, a Roman
-canal, two modern roads and a railway, all running side by side to the
-north.
-
-[Sidenote: RIPPINGALE]
-
-The Heckington road, after leaving the “Street,” passes through _Dunsby_
-and _Dowsby_, where there is an old Elizabethan house once inhabited by
-the Burrell family. _Rippingale_ lies off to the left between the two and
-has in its church a rood screen canopy but no screen, which is very rare,
-and a large number of old monuments from the thirteenth century onwards,
-the oldest being two thirteenth century knights in chain mail of the
-family of Gobaud, who lived at the Hall, now the merest ruin, where they
-were succeeded by the Bowet, Marmion, Haslewood and Brownlow families.
-An effigy of a deacon with the open book of the Gospels has this unusual
-inscription, “Ici git Hwe Geboed le palmer le fils Jhoan Geboed. Millᵒ
-446 Prees pur le alme.” It is interesting to find here a fifteenth
-century monument to a Roger de Quincey. Was he, I wonder, an ancestor
-of the famous opium eater? There is in the pavement a Marmion slab of
-1505. The register records the death in July, 1815, of “the Lincolnshire
-Giantess” Anne Hardy, aged 16, height 7 ft. 2 in. The Brownlow family
-emigrated hence to Belton near Grantham. They had another Manor House at
-_Great Humby_, which is just half-way between Rippingale and Belton, of
-which the little brick-built domestic chapel now serves as a church. As
-we go on we notice that the whole of the land eastwards is a desolate and
-dreary fen, which extends from the Welland in the south to the Witham
-near Lincoln. Of this Fenland, the Witham, when it turns southwards,
-forms the eastern boundary, and alongside of it goes the Lincoln and
-Boston railway, while the line from Bourne viâ Sleaford and on to Lincoln
-forms the western boundary. I use the term ‘fen’ in the Lincolnshire
-sense for an endless flat stretch of black corn-land without tree or
-hedge, and intersected by straight-cut dykes or drains in long parallels.
-This is the winter aspect; in autumn, when the wind blows over the miles
-of ripened corn, the picture is a very different one.
-
-It is curious that on the Roman road line all the way from the Welland to
-the Humber so few villages are found, whilst on the roads which skirt the
-very edge of the fen from Bourne to Heckington and then north again from
-Sleaford to Lincoln, villages abound.
-
-[Illustration: _Sempringham._]
-
-[Sidenote: A LONG TRUDGE]
-
-[Sidenote: SEMPRINGHAM]
-
-[Sidenote: MONK AND NUN]
-
-[Sidenote: ST. GILBERT]
-
-I once walked with an Undergraduate friend on a winter’s day from
-Uppingham to Boston, about 57 miles, the road led pleasantly at first
-through Normanton, Exton and Grimsthorpe Parks, in the last of which
-the mistletoe was at its best; but when we got off the high ground and
-came to Dunsby and Dowsby the only pleasure was the walking, and as we
-reached Billingborough and Horbling, about 30 miles on our way, and
-had still more than twenty to trudge and in a very uninviting country,
-snow began to fall, and then the pleasure went out of the walking. By
-the time we reached Boston it was four inches deep. It had been very
-heavy going for the last fourteen miles, and never were people more
-glad to come to the end of their journey. Neither of us ever felt any
-great desire to visit that bit of Lincolnshire again; and yet, under
-less untoward circumstances, there would have been something to stop
-for at _Billingborough_ with its lofty spire, its fine gable-crosses,
-and great west window, and at the still older small cruciform church
-at _Horbling_, exhibiting work of every period but Saxon, but most of
-which, owing to bad foundations, has had to be at different times taken
-down and rebuilt. It contains a fine fourteenth century monument to the
-De la Maine family. Even more interesting would it have been to see
-the remains of the famous priory church at _Sempringham_, a mile and a
-half south of Billingborough, for Sempringham was the birthplace of a
-remarkable Englishman. Gilbert, eldest son of a Norman knight and heir
-to a large estate, was born in 1083; he was deformed, but possessing
-both wit and courage he travelled on the Continent. Later in life he
-was Chaplain to Bishop Alexander of Lincoln, who built Sleaford Castle
-in 1137, and Rector of Sempringham, and Torrington, near Wragby. Being
-both wealthy and devoted to the church, he, with the Bishop’s approval,
-applied in the year 1148 to Pope Eugenius III. for a licence to found
-a religious house to receive both men and women; this was granted him,
-and so he became the founder of the only pure English order of monks
-and nuns, called after him, _the Gilbertines_. Eugenius III. suffered
-a good deal at the hands of the Italians, who at that time were led by
-Arnold of Brescia, the patriotic disciple of Abelard, insomuch that he
-was constrained to live at Viterbo, Rome not being a safe place for him;
-but he seems to have thought rather well of the English, for he it was
-who picked out the monk, Nicolas Breakspeare, from St. Alban’s Abbey
-and promoted him to be Papal legate at the Court of Denmark, which led
-eventually to his becoming Pope Adrian IV., the only Englishman who ever
-reached that dignity. The elevation does not seem to have improved his
-character, as his abominable cruelty to the above-mentioned Arnold of
-Brescia indicates. Eugenius, however, is not responsible for this, and
-at Gilbert’s request he instituted a new order in which monks following
-the rules of St. Augustine were to live under the same roof with nuns
-following the rules of St. Benedict. Their distinctive dress was a black
-cassock with a white hood, and the canons wore beards. What possible
-good Gilbert thought could come of this new departure it is difficult
-to guess. Nowadays we have some duplicate public schools where boys
-and girls are taught together and eat and play together, and it is not
-unlikely that the girls gain something of stability from this, and that
-their presence has a useful and far-reaching effect upon the boys,
-besides that obvious one which is conveyed in the old line
-
- “Emollit mores nec sinit esse feros;”
-
-but these monks and nuns never saw one another except at some very
-occasional service in chapel; even at Mass, though they might hear
-each other’s voices in the canticles, they were parted by a wall and
-invisible to each other, and as they thus had no communication with one
-another they might, one would think, have just as well been in separate
-buildings. Gilbert thought otherwise. He was a great educator, and
-especially had given much thought to the education of women, at all
-events he believed that the plan worked well, for he increased his houses
-to the number of thirteen, which held 1,500 nuns and 700 canons. Most of
-these were in Lincolnshire, and all were dissolved by Henry VIII. Gilbert
-was certainly both pious and wise, and being a clever man, when Bishop
-Alexander moved his Cistercians from Haverholme Priory to Louth Park
-Abbey, because they suffered so much at Haverholme from rheumatism, and
-handed over the priory, a chilly gift, to the Gilbertines, their founder
-managed to keep his Order there in excellent health. He harboured, as we
-know, Thomas à Becket there in 1164, and got into trouble with Henry II.
-for doing so. He was over 80 then, but he survived it and lived on for
-another five and twenty years, visiting occasionally his other homes at
-Lincoln, Alvingham, Bolington, Sixhills, North Ormsby, Catley, Tunstal
-and Newstead, and died in 1189 at the age of 106. Thirteen years later
-he was canonised by Pope Innocent III., and his remains transferred to
-Lincoln Minster, where he became known as St. Gilbert of Sempringham.
-Part of the nave of his priory at Sempringham is now the Parish Church;
-it stands on a hill three-quarters of a mile from _Pointon_, where is
-the vicarage and the few houses which form the village. Much of the old
-Norman work was unhappily pulled down in 1788, but a doorway richly
-carved and an old door with good iron scroll-work is still there. At
-the time of the dissolution the priory, which was a valuable one, being
-worth £359 12_s._ 6_d._, equal to £3,000 nowadays, was given to Lord
-Clinton. Campden, 300 years ago, spoke of “Sempringham now famous for
-the beautiful house built by Edward Baron Clinton, afterwards Earl of
-Lincoln,” the same man to whom Edward VI. granted Tattershall. Of this
-nothing is left but the garden wall, and Marrat, writing in 1815, says:
-“At this time the church stands alone, and there are but five houses in
-the parish, which are two miles from the church and in the fen.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-SOUTH-WEST LINCOLNSHIRE AND ITS RIVERS
-
- The Glen—Burton Coggles—Wilsthorpe—The Eden—Verdant
- Green—Irnham Manor and Church—The Luttrell
- Tomb—Walcot—Somerby—Ropsley—Castle Bytham—The
- Witham—Colsterworth—The Newton Chapel—Sir Isaac Newton—Stoke
- Rochford—Great Ponton—Boothby Bagnell—A Norman House.
-
-
-I have said that the whole of the county south of Lincoln slopes from
-west to east, the slope for the first few miles being pretty sharp. The
-only exception to the rule is in the tract on the west of the county,
-which lies north of the Grantham and Nottingham road, between the
-Grantham to Lincoln ridge and the western boundary of the county. This
-tract is simply the flat wide-spread valley of the Rivers Brant and
-Witham, which all slopes gently to the north. North Lincolnshire rivers
-run to the Humber; these are the Ancholme and the Trent; but there is
-a peculiarity about the rivers in South Lincolnshire; for though the
-Welland runs a consistent course eastward to the Wash, and is joined not
-far from its mouth by the River Glen, that river and the Witham each run
-very devious courses before they find the Eastern Sea. The Glen flowing
-first to the south then to the north and north-east, the Witham flowing
-first to the north and then to the south with an easterly trend to Boston
-Haven.
-
-[Sidenote: THE GLEN AND THE EDEN]
-
-Both these streams are of considerable length, the course of the Glen
-measured without its windings being five and thirty miles, and that of
-the Witham as much again.
-
-All the other streams which go from the ridge drain eastwards into the
-fens, and they effectually kept the fens under water until the Romans
-cut the Carr Dyke, intercepting the water from the hills and taking it
-into the river.
-
-[Sidenote: IRNHAM]
-
-To follow the “Glen” from its source in the high ground between Somerby
-and Boothby Pagnell to its most southerly point two miles below
-Braceborough, will take us through a very pleasant country. A tributary,
-the first of many, runs in from _Bassingthorpe_, whose church, like that
-of _Burton Coggles_, three miles to the south, is dedicated to St. Thomas
-of Canterbury. A beautiful little house, built here by the Grantham
-wool merchant, Thomas Coney, in 1568, has a counterpart at Ponton in
-the immediate neighbourhood, where Antony Ellys, also a merchant of the
-staple at Calais, built himself a charming little Tudor house about the
-same time. Augmented by the Bassingthorpe brook, the Glen goes on past
-_Bitchfield_, _Burton-Coggles_ and _Corby_, and on between _Swayfield_
-and _Swinstead_ to _Creeton_, where are to be seen many stone coffins,
-probably of the monks of Vaudey Abbey in Grimsthorpe Park, a corruption
-of Valdei (Vallis dei or God’s Vale). It then winds along by _Little
-Bytham_, and, passing _Careby_ and _Carlby_, gets into a plain country,
-and turns north near Shillingthorpe Hall. The last place it sees before
-entering the region of the Bedford Levels is _Gretford_. But near the
-church of _Wilsthorpe_—in which is the effigy of a thirteenth century
-knight with the arms of the Wake family, who claim descent from the
-famous Hereward the Wake—we find another stream joining the Glen to
-help it on its straight-cut course through Deeping fen. We may well
-spend an afternoon in tracing this stream from its source some sixteen
-miles away. It flows all the way through a valley of no great width,
-and, with the exception of _Edenham_, undistinguished by any villages.
-A purely rustic stream, it is known as the Eden, though it has no name
-on the maps, and its only distinction since it left its source near
-Humby is that it divides the villages of _Lenton_ or _Lavington_, where
-the author of “Verdant Green,” Rev. E. Bradley, best known as “Cuthbert
-Bede,” was once rector, and _Ingoldsby_, the village of Ingold or
-Ingulph, the Dane, which, however, has nothing to do with the well-known
-“Ingoldsby Legends.” A little to the south of Ingoldsby are the prettily
-named villages _Irnham_, _Kirkby-Underwood_, and _Rippingale_; of these
-_Irnham_ has a picturesque Tudor hall in a fine park. This was built in
-1510 by Richard Thimelby in the form of the letter L; the north wing was
-mostly destroyed by fire in 1887, but the great hall remains, and there
-is a priest’s hiding-place entered by a hinged step in the stairs in
-which was found a straw pallet and a book of hours.
-
-The manor was granted by the Conqueror to Ralph Paganel along with
-others, _e.g._, Boothby Bagnell and Newport Pagnell, and there was
-even then, in the eleventh century, a church here. This manor passed
-by marriage in 1220 to Sir Andrew Luttrell, Baron of Irnham, whence,
-through an heiress, it passed to the Thimelbys. In the church is a fine
-brass to “Andrew Luttrell Miles Dominus de Irnham,” 1390. He is in plate
-armour with helmet, and has his feet on a lion. In the north aisle,
-which is sometimes called the Luttrell Chapel, is a beautifully carved
-Easter sepulchre, the design and work being much like that of the rood
-screen in Southwell Cathedral. This was really a founder’s tomb of the
-Luttrell family, and stood east and west under the easternmost arch on
-the north side of the nave, whence it was most improperly moved in 1858
-and should certainly be put back again. Doubtless it was used as an
-Easter sepulchre, and it is of about the same date, 1370, as those at
-Heckington, Navenby, and Lincoln. In the pavement of the north aisle is
-an altar slab, with the five consecration crosses well preserved.
-
-Since the Thimelbys, who followed the Hiltons, the house has been in
-possession of the Conquest, Arundel, and Clifford families. Not more
-than two miles to the east is a fine avenue leading to an Elizabethan
-house in the form of an E, called Bulby Hall. Later the stream goes
-through its one village of Edenham, passes near Bowthorpe Park with its
-great oak, fifty feet in girth, and so joins the river Glen at Kotes
-Bridge, near _Wilsthorpe_. Though the stream, Edenham excepted, has
-nothing particular on its banks, near its source are several interesting
-churches. _Sapperton_, which still exhibits the pulpit hour-glass-stand
-for the use of the preacher to insure that the congregation got their
-full hour; _Pickworth_, with chantry chapels at each end of the south
-aisle, a rood screen and a fine old south door; and _Walcot_, with its
-curious double “squint” from the south chantry and its beautiful little
-priest’s door, evidently once a low-side window, for its sill is two feet
-from the ground and is grooved for glazing. Here the economy of the Early
-English builders is shown by their use of the caps of an earlier Norman
-arcade to form the bases of their new pillars. Hard by is _Newton_ with
-its lofty tower, _Haceby_, where once the Romans had a small settlement,
-and _Braceby_, which, with _Ropsley_ and _Somerby_, complete an octave of
-Early English churches all near together.
-
-[Sidenote: SOMERBY]
-
-_Somerby_ is within four miles of Grantham. The church contains a
-singular effigy, date 1300, of a knight with a saddled horse at his feet,
-and a groom wearing the hooded short cloak of the period, holding the
-horse’s head. Among the Brownlow monuments is the following inscription
-to Jane Brownlow, daughter of Sir Richard Brownlow of Humby, 1670,
-
- She was of a solid serious temper, of a competent
- Stature and a fayre compleaciton, whoes soul
- now is perfectly butyfyed with the friution of
- God in glory and whose body in her dew time
- he will rais to the enjoyment of the same.
-
-It is curious to find notes on stature and complexion in an epitaph,
-but it was only lately that I saw a tomb slab in the church of
-Dorchester-on-Thames, where, in the tenth and eleventh centuries, some of
-our Lindsey bishops had their Bishop-stool (_see_ Cap. XII.), on which it
-was thought worth while to record, _inter alia_, that Rebekah Granger who
-died in 1753 was “respectful to her friends, and chearful and innocent in
-her deportment”; whilst close by is a somewhat minute description of the
-nervous idiosyncrasy of Mrs. S. Fletcher, who died in 1799 at the age of
-29, ending with “She sank and died a martyr to excessive sensibility.”
-
-The feature of the church is the Norman chancel arch with double
-moulding. It is especially interesting as showing that the carving of the
-stones which form the arch was done not by plan but by eye; though the
-same pattern goes throughout, no two stones are exactly similar, and the
-pattern is larger or smaller as the mason cut it by guess, and has two
-zigzags or two and a half accordingly, and therefore the pattern in some
-places does not properly meet, but the whole effect is all right. The
-manor was held by the Threckingham family in the fourteenth century, and
-their arms are in one of the windows. In the feet of fines, Lincoln file
-86, we have an agreement between Lambert de Trikingham and Robert, son of
-Walter le Clerk, of Trikingham, and Hawysia his wife, made at Westminster
-in the second year of Edward II. (1319). The lady with this charming name
-seeming to have afterwards married Sir Henry de Wellington, for in the
-thirty-second year of Edward III. (1359) another settlement is recorded
-of a dispute about Somerby Manor between Enericus de Welyngton Miles and
-Hawysia his wife on one side, and John Bluet and Alan Rynsley (one of
-the sixteen various spellings of Rawnsley) and his wife Margaret on the
-other, by which Alan and Margaret, for conceding their claims, receive
-100 marks of silver. This and much other interesting information is to
-be found in a paper on The Manor of Somerby, by Gilbert George Walker,
-rector of the parish.
-
-In the fifteenth century John Bluet held the living, one of whose
-ancestors was probably the civilian with his feet on a fleece, whose fine
-recumbent effigy is in Harlaxton church. His daughter married Robert
-Bawde, whose brass is in the church, and their family were in possession
-till 1720. A large monument on the north wall commemorates Elizabeth Lady
-Brownlow, _née_ Freke, whose son John built Belton House. She died in
-1684. There is also a brass to Peregrine Bradshaw and his wife, who died
-in 1669 and 1673.
-
-Dr. William Stukeley, the famous antiquary, who was a Lincolnshire man,
-born at Holbeach in 1687, was, at one time, rector of Somerby.
-
-_Ropsley_, two and a half miles to the east, shows some ‘Long and Short’
-Saxon work at the north-east angle of the nave. The tower has a Decorated
-broach spire. At the south porch is the couplet,
-
- “Hac non vade via
- Nisi dices Ave Maria.”
-
-[Sidenote: BISHOP FOX]
-
-The church has also a very notable little stained glass window with
-an armed figure of Johannes de Welby. In the church a curious broad
-projection from the east window of the north aisle forms a bridge to
-the rood loft. In the eyes of a Corpus man, like the writer, Ropsley is
-sacred as being the birthplace of Bishop Fox, who held successively the
-sees of Exeter, Bath and Wells, Durham and Winchester, and founded, or
-helped to found, the Grantham Grammar School near his old home in 1528,
-and also, in 1516, the College of Corpus Christi, Oxford.
-
-The Eden, whose course we have been tracing, having joined the Glen,
-crosses the Carr Dyke a mile beyond Wilsthorpe, after which the Glen
-becomes for a time simply a fen drain. The “Bourne Eau” goes into it and
-they proceed together with many duck decoys marked in the 1828 map on
-each side of them till they come to the beginning of the great “Forty
-foot drain.” The Glen then turning east resumes more or less its river
-character, joins the Welland and goes seawards to the Wash, while the
-Forty foot going northwards parallel to and with the same purpose as the
-“Carr Dyke” but a few miles to the east of that famous work, receives the
-water from the many “Droves” which are all cut east and west and conveys
-them to the outfall in Boston Haven.
-
-[Sidenote: PRIZE-FIGHTING]
-
-We will now, without having to go outside the parallelogram of pleasant
-upland country which lies between the four towns of Stamford, Bourne,
-Sleaford and Grantham, find the sources of the river Witham and follow
-them through Grantham as far as Barkston and Marston, and thence through
-a totally different country to Lincoln. To begin at the beginning of
-things. Just at the junction of the three counties of Lincoln, Leicester,
-and Rutland, is a place near ‘Crown point’ called Cribbs Lodge. This
-commemorates the great boxing match between Molyneux, the black, and Tom
-Cribb, when, as the _Stamford Mercury_ has it, “after a severe fight
-Molyneux was beat, and a reel was danced by Gully and Cribb amidst shouts
-of applause. There were 15,000 people present.” Gully afterwards became
-an M.P.
-
-Close to this spot, but in the county of Leicestershire, is the source of
-our river Witham, which takes its name from the little village of _South
-Witham_ close by.
-
-The infant stream skirts the western side of Witham Common, which is
-something like 400 feet above sea level; nearly all its feeders come from
-still higher ground just outside the western edge of the county. A glance
-at the map will show with what remarkable unanimity all the streams which
-feed the South Lincolnshire rivers flow eastwards. Thus from Witham
-Common a brook goes through _Castle Bytham_ to join the Glen at _Little
-Bytham_. The castle, of which only huge mounds now remain, was perched on
-a hill and divided by the brook from the village which covers the slope
-of the valley and is crowned by its very early Norman church, making
-altogether a very pretty picture. The church contains a fine canopied
-tomb of the Colville family, who owned the castle in the thirteenth
-century, and also in the tower is a ladder eloquent of the Restoration,
-with the inscription “This ware the May Poul, 1660.” Middleton, first
-Bishop of Calcutta, once held this living.
-
-[Illustration: _The Witham, Boston._]
-
-[Sidenote: CASTLE BYTHAM]
-
-The castle is of considerable interest. At the time of the Conquest the
-land belonged to Morcar, Earl of Northumbria, whose name survives in
-“Mockery or Morkery Wood” near South Witham, and was given by William the
-First to his brother-in-law Drogo, who began the castle, and afterwards
-to Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, William’s half-brother, the same who gave his
-name to “Bayons Manor.” When Odo began to show signs of contumacy Henry
-III. in person fought against and took the castle, and when dismantled
-gave it to the Colvilles, but it was not completely destroyed until the
-Wars of the Roses.
-
-[Sidenote: “PRAY AND PLOUGH”]
-
-_Little Bytham_, two miles to the east, is the station for Grimsthorpe,
-which is approached by a drive of three miles through the park. The
-church is dedicated to St. Medard, Bishop of Noyon, A.D. 531, a name
-familiar to us from the “Ingoldsby Legends.” It shows some Saxon “Long
-and Short” work and a good deal of Norman, notably a doorway with a
-curious tympanum ornamented with birds in circles. There is a small
-lowside window of two lights on the west and a little Norman window high
-up on the east of this doorway, which is at the south-east angle of the
-nave. The Norman tower is surmounted by a transition upper story and
-spire. The south porch and chancel arch are Early English and all round
-the chancel runs a most interesting stone seat, broken only by a fine
-canopied recess for a tomb. A good agricultural motto is cut on the stone
-base of the pulpit, “Orate et arate,” “pray and plough.” The motto is not
-inapt, for the land about here is mostly plough land, and one wonders it
-should be as good as it is, for the limestone is very near the surface,
-indeed the Great Northern line has stone _in situ_ on each side of it
-about five feet high, which seems to have very few inches of soil above
-it, and this runs the whole way from Little Bytham to Corby, and again at
-Ponton the lines pass through it in a deeper cutting.
-
-But to return to our Witham river. This keeps due north by
-_North-Witham_, _Colsterworth_, _Easton_, _Stoke Rockford_, _Great and
-Little Ponton_ to _Grantham_, a distance of ten miles. The church at
-_North Wytham_ has a long nave, a narrow massive Norman chancel arch, and
-the floor descending to the east. In the 1887 restoration by Withers, a
-choir was formed out of the east end of the nave, and the chancel has
-been left as a monumental chapel for the Sherard family monuments of the
-seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, a decidedly clever arrangement.
-Robert Sherard seems to have been a scholar, for he occupied his thoughts
-when on his deathbed in writing twenty-six Latin elegiacs now on his
-brass and dated 1592.
-
-[Sidenote: WOOLSTHORPE. THE NEWTON CHAPEL]
-
-[Sidenote: SIR ISAAC NEWTON]
-
-From _Colsterworth_ a road runs east past Twyford Forest, twelve
-miles to Bourne. In the church, which is both Norman, Decorated, and
-Perpendicular, there is the Newton chapel, with tombs of Sir Isaac’s
-parents and grandparents. This is modern, but is on the site of the old
-Woolsthorpe Manor chapel. It contains a sundial with an inscription,
-which says that it was cut by Newton when a boy of nine. His baptism
-appears in the Register thus:—“Isaac son of Isaac and Hanna Newton Janʳʸ
-1, 1643.” She was an Ayscough, and married for her second husband the
-Rev. Barnabas Smith of North Wytham. On the left bank of the Witham, at
-a distance of half a mile, is the hamlet of _Woolsthorpe_, which must
-not be confused with the Woolsthorpe near Belvoir. The name was probably
-Wolph’s or Ulfsthorpe, and nothing to do with Wool. In Domesday Book it
-is Ulstanthorp. In Woolsthorpe Manor House Newton was born on Christmas
-Day, 1641. The window is shown from which he saw the apple fall and the
-Newton Arms—two cross-bones—are sculptured over the door. In the days of
-the Commonwealth he was at Bishop Fox’s school at Grantham, 1651-1656.
-His mother thought to make a farmer of him, but kindly fate took him to
-Cambridge when he was eighteen, and he spent more than four years there,
-taking his degree in 1665. The incident of the apple dates from 1666,
-the year of the great Plague and the Fire of London. Starting from this
-he deduced the reasons for the movement of the planets which Galileo in
-1610 and Copernicus in 1540 had noted. He had by this time accumulated
-much of the material for his great work the “Principia,” and for the next
-thirty years he worked and wrote unceasingly. He was appointed Master of
-the Mint in 1695, and President of the Royal Society in 1703, and was
-knighted in 1705. He died in March, 1727. His own view of his life’s
-work may be given in his own words: “I do not know what I may appear to
-the world, but to myself I seem to have been only like a boy playing on
-the seashore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother or
-prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all
-undiscovered before me.” After lying in state in the Jerusalem Chamber
-he was buried in Westminster Abbey, the Lord Chancellor, two dukes, and
-three earls being pall-bearers; his monument, near the entrance to the
-choir on the north side, shows a recumbent figure with the right arm on
-four folios named Divinity, Chronology, Optics, and Phil. Prin. Math.
-Above is a large globe showing the planets, etc., projecting from a
-pyramid, and on the globe the figure of Astronomy with a closed book, in
-a very pensive mood. Below is a bas-relief representing Newton’s various
-labours and discoveries.
-
-The inscription, written by Pope, is as follows:—
-
- “Isaacus Newtonius
- Quem Immortalem
- Testantur Tempus, Natura, Coelum:
- Mortalem
- Hoc Marmor fatetur.
-
- Nature, and Nature’s laws lay hid in night;
- God said let Newton be! and all was light.”
-
-His statue is also in the ante-chapel of Trinity College, Cambridge, so
-eloquently described by Wordsworth as
-
- “The marble index of a mind for ever
- Voyaging through strange seas of thought alone.”
-
-Newton is represented standing, and faces to the east, and of the other
-seated figures in the ante-chapel, which all face north or south, the
-latest addition and the finest work is Thornicroft’s statue of another
-Lincolnshire celebrity Alfred Lord Tennyson. This is an admirable
-likeness; the best view of it is from the east side.
-
-West of Woolsthorpe is _Buckminster_, just over the border, but
-remarkable for having once had a beacon on the tower. The circular
-chimney of the Watcher’s shelter still stands in the north-west angle. At
-Weldon near Kettering is a lantern fifteen feet high with a cupola put up
-200 years ago to guide folk through Rockingham Forest. It is lit now on
-New Year’s Eve.
-
-From Colsterworth and Woolsthorpe we follow the river to _Stoke
-Rockford_, which is wedged in between the parks of _Stoke_ and _Easton_.
-Both these manors were once held by the Rochfords and each had a separate
-church. Now one church serves for both and has a chapel for each manor,
-one on either side and extending the full length of the chancel. The
-Stoke Chapel has monuments of John de Neville 1320 and of the family of
-the present owners, the Turners. The Easton Chapel has a very fine one to
-the Cholmeleys, 1641, whose descendants still live in the old Elizabethan
-“Hall” with its triple avenue of limes which reach to the Great North
-Road. On the other side of the road the house at Stoke Park is also
-Elizabethan in style, but not in date, being by Salvin. It belongs to
-Christopher Turner, who also owns Panton Hall, near East Barkwith. The
-park has many fine trees and some very old thorns. In the chancel of
-Stoke Rochford is a brass to Henry Rochford, 1470, and on a brass plate
-this inscription to Oliver St. John and his wife Elizabeth Bygod, 1503:—
-
-“Pray for the soil of Master Olyr-Sentjehn Squier, sonne unto ye right
-excellent hye and mightty pryncess of Som~sete g~ndame unto ou~ sovey~n
-Lord Kynge Herre the VII. and for the soll of Dame Elizabeth Bygod his
-wiff, whoo dep~ted from this t~nsitore liffe ye XII daye of June, i~ ye
-year of ou~ Lord MCCCCC and III.”
-
-[Sidenote: THE LADY MARGARET]
-
-Thus Oliver was brother to Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Richmond, the
-mother of the King. She made a great mark on the history of her time,
-which was the fifteenth century. Daughter of the first Duke of Somerset
-and wife successively of the Earl of Richmond, who was half-brother to
-Henry VI., and of Henry Stafford, son to the Duke of Buckingham, and
-of Lord Stanley, Earl of Derby, and mother, by her first marriage, of
-Henry VII., she was a magnificent patron of learning, for she endowed
-Christ’s College and St. John’s College, Cambridge, and founded the “Lady
-Margaret” professorships of Divinity both at Cambridge and at Oxford.
-Oliver’s mother had been the wife of Sir John Bigod, who with his father
-was killed on Towton field, near Leeds, in 1461, when, after a very
-bloody fight, the throne was secured to Edward IV., 28,000 Lancastrians,
-it is said, though this is hardly credible, having been left on the
-field of battle. Oliver, whom Leland describes as a big black fellow,
-died at Fontarabia, in Spain, but was buried at Stoke Rochford. It shows
-of how little account the spelling even of proper names was in the
-fifteenth century when we find here the brass plate on his daughter’s
-tomb inscribed, “Hic jacet Sibella Seyntjohn quondam filia Oliveri
-Sentjohn.” Perhaps there is something after all in the remark I heard a
-farmer make in the train at Boston: “Well, I reckon it is a clear gift,
-is spelling. My boy John, he’s nobbut eleven, and he can spell owt, but
-I’m noä hand at it mysen, and I reckon theer’s a stränge many is makes
-but a poor job on it.” In the museum at Peterborough there is a notebook
-of The Lord Chief Justice, Oliver St. John, Chancellor of the University
-of Cambridge, dated 1649, who earned for himself the undying gratitude of
-his own and all future generations by saving Peterborough Cathedral.
-
-[Sidenote: OLIVER ST. JOHN]
-
-Henry VIII., when urged to erect a suitable monument to Queen Katherine
-of Aragon in the cathedral, had said he would leave her one of the
-goodliest monuments in Christendom, meaning that he would spare the
-cathedral for her sake, but at the time of the civil war nearly all in
-the nature of ornamentation was destroyed, including the organ, the
-windows, the reredos, and the tombs and escutcheons of Queen Katherine
-herself, and of Mary Queen of Scots. After a time Oliver St. John,
-who had married twice over into the Cromwell family, as a reward for
-political services in Holland obtained a grant of the ruined minster,
-which was actually “propounded to be sold and demolished,” and gave
-it to the town for use as a parish church. It still remained in a sad
-state, but was being gradually put into order all through the nineteenth
-century, and at last the tower, which rested on four piers, all of which
-were found to be simply pipes of Ashlar masonry filled with sand, was
-taken down in 1883 and solidly rebuilt, and the whole fabric put in
-order, the white-washed walls scraped, new stalls excellently carved by
-Thompson of Peterborough and a beautiful inlaid marble floor, the gift of
-Dean Argles, placed in the choir, which was prolonged westwards two bays
-into the nave, on the old Benedictine lines, till now the interior is
-fully worthy of the uniquely magnificent west front.
-
-At _Easton_ there was a Roman station, halfway between _Casterton_ and
-_Ancaster_. It was important as being the last roadside watering place,
-the Ermine Street passing through a waterless tract for the next twelve
-miles.
-
-[Sidenote: A NORMAN HOUSE]
-
-A mile and a half to the east, the Great Northern line tunnels under
-Bassingthorpe hill at 370 feet above sea level, and, with the exception
-of one spot in Berwickshire, this is the highest point the line attains
-between London and Edinburgh. Immediately after this the line crosses the
-“Ermine Street,” which from Stamford to Colsterworth is identical with
-“the Great North Road,” but it splits off to the right a mile south of
-Easton Park, and keeping always to the right bank of the Witham, takes a
-straight course to Ancaster, leaving Grantham three miles to the left.
-After this parting, the North Road crosses to the left bank of the river
-and runs up to _Great Ponton_. The tall tower of the late Perpendicular
-church, built in 1519 by Anthony Ellys, merchant of the staple, of
-Calais, who lived in a manor house in the middle of the village, has
-Chaucer’s phrase, “Thynke and thanke God of all,” carved on three sides
-of it.
-
-Inside is a very early font, possibly Saxon; a large square bowl
-chamfered on the under side resting on a square stone. The tower is
-unlike anything in the county, but has counterparts among the churches of
-Somersetshire. The base moulding is enriched with carving, and the double
-buttresses have canopied niches excellently worked. The belfry has large
-double two-light windows under a carved hood-mould, as at Grantham and
-All Saints, Stamford. The gargoyles are remarkably fine, one shows a face
-wearing spectacles, and the whole is finished by a fine parapet and eight
-pinnacles.
-
-_Little Ponton_ is dedicated to St. Guthlac, which implies a connection
-with Croyland. Four miles east of Great Ponton is the village of _Boothby
-Pagnell_, where the Glen rises. Here is a twelfth century manor house,
-supremely interesting as being one of the very few surviving examples of
-Norman Domestic architecture. It is in the grounds of the modern hall.
-The lower story is carried on vaulted arches and the upper rooms were
-reached by an outside staircase. These are a hall and a chamber with a
-thick partition wall; each had a two-light window in the east wall, with
-window seats on either side. On the opposite side is a fine fireplace
-with a flat arch formed by joggled stones and a projecting hood, and a
-round chimney-shaft. The lower groined story had also two rooms, possibly
-the larger was a kitchen, and the other a cellar. The barrel roof of this
-has its axis at right angles to the larger room, the heavy vault-ribs of
-which are in two bays, with low buttresses outside to take the thrust
-of the roof. The building at St. Mary’s Guild, Lincoln, the hall at
-Oakham, and a somewhat similar building at the north-eastern boundary
-of Windsor Castle are of corresponding date to this. Robert Sanderson,
-who was expelled as a Royalist, but on the restoration was made Bishop
-of Lincoln, and whose saintly life is dwelt on in “Walton’s Lives,” was
-incumbent here from 1619 to 1660. The whole building has been beautifully
-restored by Pearson, thanks to the munificence of Mrs. Thorold of the
-Hall.
-
-The course of the river between Grantham and Lincoln is through a totally
-different country and may well claim another chapter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-GRANTHAM
-
- Cromwell’s Letter—The George and the Angel—The Elections—Fox’s
- Grammar School—The Church of St. Wolfram—The Market Place.
-
-
-The usual way of reaching Grantham is by the Great Northern main line—all
-expresses stop here. It is 105 miles from London, and often the only stop
-between that and York. After the levels of Huntingdonshire and the brief
-sight of Peterborough Cathedral, across the river Nene, the line enters
-Lincolnshire near Tallington, after which it follows up the valley of the
-river Glen, then climbs the wold and, just beyond Bassingthorpe tunnel,
-crosses the Ermine Street and runs down the Witham Valley into Grantham.
-Viewed from the train the town looks a mass of ugly red brick houses with
-slate roofs, but the magnificent tower and spire soon come into sight,
-and one feels that this must be indeed a church worth visiting.
-
-Coming, as we prefer to do, by road, the view is better; for there is
-a background of hill and woodland with the fine park of Belton and the
-commanding height of Syston Hall beyond to the north-east; and to the
-left you see the Great North Road climbing up Gonerby Hill to a height of
-200 feet above the town.
-
-[Sidenote: THE MANOR AND THE GEORGE]
-
-Grantham has no Roman associations, nor did it grow up round a feudal
-castle or a great abbey; for, though a castle of some kind must once have
-stood on the west side near the junction of the Mowbeck and the Witham,
-the only proof of it is the name Castlegate and a reference in an old
-deed to “Castle Dyke.” That the town was once walled, the streets called
-Watergate, Castlegate, Swinegate, Spittalgate sufficiently attest, but no
-trace of wall now exists. The name Spittalgate points to the existence
-of a leper hospital, and I see from Miss Rotha Clay’s interesting and
-exhaustive book, “The Mediæval Hospitals of England,” that there have
-been two at Grantham—St. Margaret’s, founded in 1328, and St. Leonard’s
-in 1428.
-
-The flat pastoral valley watered by the Wytham, then called in that
-neighbourhood the Granta, as the Cam was at Cambridge, seems to have
-been its own recommendation to an agricultural people; and the fact that
-the manor was from the time of Edward the Confessor an appanage of the
-queen, and remained all through the times of the Norman kings and their
-successors down to William III. a Crown property, used as a dower for
-the queen consort of the time, was no doubt some benefit to it. Even
-when the town was bestowed, as, for instance, by King John on the Earl
-of Warren who also owned Stamford, or by Edward I., who knew Grantham
-well, on Aylmer Valence Earl of Pembroke, it was looked on as inalienable
-from the Crown to which it always reverted. In the reign of Edward III.,
-on August 3, 1359, King John of France, captured at Poictiers, slept at
-Grantham on his way from Hereford to Somerton Castle in custody of Lord
-d’Eyncourt and a company of forty-four knights and men-at-arms. In 1420
-Henry V. allotted it as a dower to Katherine of France. In 1460 Edward
-IV. headed the procession which brought from Pontefract to Fotheringay
-for burial the body of his father Richard Duke of York, who was killed at
-the battle of Wakefield. In 1461 he granted the lordship and the manor to
-his mother Cicely Duchess of York, and the grant, it is interesting to
-know, included the inn called “le George.”
-
-In 1503 Margaret Tudor, daughter of Henry VII., passed with her
-attendant cavalcade through Grantham on her way to meet her affianced
-bridegroom,[3] James IV., King of Scotland. She arrived in state, and was
-met by a fine civic and ecclesiastical procession which conducted her the
-last few miles into and out of the town, and she lay all “Sounday the 9ᵗʰ
-day of the monneth of Jully in the sayde towne of Grauntham.”
-
-[Sidenote: OLIVER CROMWELL]
-
-In 1642 the town was taken by Colonel Charles Cavendish for Charles I.,
-but his success was wiped out next year by Cromwell. Defoe in his “Memoir
-of a Cavalier,” writing of this, says “About this time it was that we
-began to hear of the name of Oliver Cromwell, who, like a little cloud,
-rose out of the East and spread first into the North, till it shed down
-a flood that overwhelmed the three Kingdoms.... The first action in
-which we heard of his exploits and which emblazoned his character was at
-Grantham.” Cromwell was with the Earl of Manchester, but was in command
-of his own regiment of horse. Where the battle actually took place is
-uncertain, but probably on Gonerby Moor. We happen to have Cromwell’s own
-account of the skirmish—see vol. I., p. 177, of ‘Cromwell’s Letters and
-Speeches,’ by Carlyle. It was written to some official, and is the first
-letter of Cromwell’s ever published in the newspapers:—
-
- “_Grantham, 13ᵗʰ May, 1643._
-
- “SIR,
-
- “God hath given us, this evening, a glorious victory over our
- enemies. They were, as we are informed, one and twenty colours
- of horse troops, and three or four of dragoons.
-
- “It was late in the evening when we drew out; they came and
- faced us within two miles of the town. So soon as we had the
- alarm we drew out our forces, consisting of about twelve troops
- whereof some of them so poor and broken, that you shall seldom
- see worse: with this handful it pleased God to cast the scale.
- For after we had stood a little, above musket shot the one body
- from the other; and the dragooners had fired on both sides,
- for the space of half an hour or more; they were not advancing
- towards us, we agreed to charge them; and, advancing the body
- after many shots on both sides, we came on with our troops a
- pretty round trot; they standing firm to receive us; and our
- men charging fiercely upon them, by God’s providence they were
- immediately routed, and ran all away, and we had the execution
- of them two or three miles.
-
- “I believe some of our soldiers did kill two or three men
- apiece in the pursuit; but what the number of dead is we are
- not certain. We took forty-five prisoners, besides divers of
- their horse and arms and rescued many Prisoners whom they had
- lately taken of ours, and we took four or five of their colours.
-
- “I rest ...
-
- “OLIVER CROMWELL.”
-
-A fortnight later he writes from Lincolnshire to the Mayor and
-Corporation of Colchester announcing the victory of Fairfax at
-Wakefield, and asking for immediate supplies both of men and money. He
-tells them how greatly Lord Newcastle outnumbers Fairfax, infantry two to
-one, horse more than six to one. And he ends with:—
-
- “Our motion and yours must be exceeding speedye or else it
- will do you no good at all. If you send, let your men come to
- Boston. I beseech you to hasten the supply to us:—forget not
- money! I press not hard; though I do so need, that I assure you
- the foot and dragooners are ready to mutiny. Lay not too much
- upon the back of a poor gentleman, who desires, without much
- noise, to lay down his life, and bleed the last drop to serve
- the Cause and you. I ask not your money for myself; if that
- were my end and hope,—viz. the pay of my place,—I would not
- open my mouth at this time. I desire to deny myself; but others
- will not be satisfied. I beseech you to hasten supplies. Forget
- not your prayers
-
- “Gentlemen, I am,
-
- “Yours
-
- “OLIVER CROMWELL.”
-
-It was six years after this that Isaac Newton went to school in Grantham.
-Since the Restoration, but for the pulling down of the market cross by
-Mr. John Manners in 1779, which he was compelled to put up again the
-following year, nothing of note happened at Grantham till the Great
-Northern Railway came and subsequently Hornsby’s great agricultural
-implement works arose.
-
-[Sidenote: PRICE OF VOTES]
-
-Grantham had been incorporated in 1463, and received the elective
-franchise four years later, in the reign of Edward IV., who more than
-once visited the town. The two families at Belvoir and Belton usually
-influenced the elections. But in 1802 their united interests were opposed
-by Sir William Manners, who had bought most of the houses in the borough.
-But the Duke of Rutland and Lord Brownlow won. There were then two
-members, and the historian makes the naïve statement, “previous to this
-election it had been customary for the voters to receive two guineas from
-each candidate; at this election the price rose to ten guineas.”
-
-[Illustration: _The Angel Inn, Grantham._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE ANGEL]
-
-The mention of “le George” inn in the grant of 1461 brings to mind the
-other ancient hostel opposite to it. The Angel stands on the site of an
-earlier inn which goes back to the twelfth century. King John is said
-to have held his court in it in 1203. On October 19, 1483, Richard III.,
-having sent to London for the Great Seal, signed the warrant for the
-execution of Buckingham “in a chamber called the King’s Chamber in the
-present Angel Inn.” This was a fine room extending the whole length of
-the front, and now cut up into three rooms. There are two oriel windows
-in this, and two more in the rooms beneath, which have all curved and
-vaulted alcoves of stone. The present front dates from 1450, the gateway
-from about 1350, and shows the heads of Edward III. and Queen Philippa on
-the hood-mould. Next to it is a very pretty half-timbered house, figured
-in Allan’s “History of the County of Lincoln,” 1830. This and the Angel
-stand on land once the property of the Knights Templars of Temple-Bruer.
-
-Among the misdeeds of the eighteenth century are the pulling down of the
-George Inn and a beautiful stone oratory or guild chapel which stood near
-it. The Free Grammar school, founded by Bishop Fox 1528, still stands on
-the north side of the churchyard; but new buildings having been lately
-erected, the fine old schoolroom has been fitted up as a school chapel.
-
-Fox endowed his school with the revenue of two chantries, which before
-the dissolution belonged to the church of St. Peter. This church is
-gone, but doubtless it stood on St. Peter’s Hill on lands which had been
-granted by Æslwith, before the Conquest, to the abbey of Peterborough.
-Close by now is a good bronze statue of Sir Isaac Newton, and once there
-was an Eleanor cross, which, with those at Lincoln and Stamford, were
-destroyed by the fanatical soldiery in 1645.
-
-[Sidenote: ST. WULFRAM’S]
-
-We now come to the great feature of the town, its magnificent church
-dedicated to St. Wulfram, Archbishop of Sens, 680. We might almost call
-this the third church, for the first has entirely disappeared though its
-foundations remain beneath the floor of the eastern part of the nave, and
-the second has been so enlarged and added to, that it is now practically
-a different building; the tower, built at the end of the thirteenth
-century, belongs entirely to number three.
-
-The ground plan is singularly simple, one long parallelogram nearly 200
-feet long and eighty feet wide, with no transepts, its only projections
-being the north and south porches and the “Hall” chapel used as a vestry.
-
-[Sidenote: THE INTERIOR]
-
-The second, or Norman, church, ended two bays east of the present tower,
-as is plain to see from the second pillar from the tower being, as is the
-case in Peterborough Cathedral, composed of a broad mass of wall with a
-respond on either side, the western respond being of much later character
-than the eastern. If the chancel was originally as it is now, it must
-have been as long as the nave, but the nave then perhaps included two of
-the chancel bays. At present the lengthening of the nave westward and the
-adding of the tower has made the nave twice the length of the chancel.
-At first the church had just a nave and a chancel, but, about 1180,
-aisles were added to the nave; to do this the nave walls were taken down
-and the eastern responds made, which we have just spoken of, and the
-beautiful clustered columns of the arcades, three on each side, set up.
-The aisles were narrow and probably covered by a lean-to roof. The arches
-springing from these columns would be round-headed, the pointed arches
-we see now being the work of a century later, when much wider north and
-south aisles were built; that on the north being on a particularly grand
-and massive scale. The westernmost bay on either side was made nearly
-twice the width of the others so as to correspond with the breadth of the
-tower, because one of the features of the church is that the two aisles
-run out westwards and align with the tower, and as the chapels on either
-side run out in the same way eastwards, as far as the chancel, we get
-the parallelogram above mentioned. As you enter the west door you are
-at once struck by the great size of the tower piers, and next you will
-notice the beauty of the tower arch, with its mouldings five deep. There
-is no chancel arch, and the church has one long roof from end to end.
-The aisles are very wide, and the pillars tall and slender, so that you
-are able to see over the whole body of the church as if it were one big
-hall. Curiously, the west window of the south aisle is not in the centre
-of the wall, and looks very awkward. Below it is a bookcase lined with
-old books. There are two arched recesses for tombs in the south wall,
-and there is a monument between two of the south arcade pillars, where
-a black marble top to an altar tomb is inscribed to Francis Malham de
-Elslacke, 1660. The east end of the north aisle is used as a morning
-chapel. A tall gilt reredos much blocks the chancel east window. When
-I last visited the church the north and south doorways being wide open
-gave the church plenty of wholesome fresh air, so different from the
-well-known Sabbath “frowst” which, in the days of high pews, and when a
-church was only opened on Sunday, never departed from the building.
-
-[Sidenote: THE TOWER]
-
-The north porch is very large, and has a passage-way east and west right
-through; it was built with the north aisle about 1280, and was extended
-and a room built over it about 1325, when the head of the north doorway
-was much mutilated to let the floor in, at the same time a Lady chapel
-was constructed on the south side of the chancel, and with a double
-vaulted crypt, entered from outside, and also from the chancel, by a
-beautiful staircase with richly carved doorway. The rood screen was also
-built now, on which was an altar served by the chaplain daily at 5 a.m.
-“after the first stroke of the bell which is called Daybelle.” It is
-said that this bell is still rung daily from Lady Day to Michaelmas, but
-whether at 5 o’clock deponent sayeth not. The Lincoln daybell rang at 6.
-To reach this rood loft there is an octagon turret with a staircase on
-the south side at the junction of the nave and chancel. The south porch
-has also a staircase to the upper chamber, and the north porch has two
-turreted staircases, probably for the ingress and egress of pilgrims
-to the sacred relics kept there. Besides this there were at least five
-chantries attached to the church; the latest of these were the fifteenth
-century Corpus Christi chapel along the north side of the chancel, and
-the contiguous “Hall” chapel which dates from the fifteenth century.
-There is a good corbel table all along the aisles outside, and the west
-front is very fine and striking.
-
-But the great glory of the building is the steeple. We have seen that
-the nave runs up to the large eastern piers of the tower, and the aisles
-run on past each side of it as far as the western piers, and so with the
-tower form a magnificent western façade, examples of which might even
-then have been seen at Newark, which was begun before Grantham, and at
-Tickhill near Doncaster.
-
-[Sidenote: LINCOLNSHIRE SPIRES]
-
-The tower, one of the finest bits of fourteenth century work in the
-kingdom, has four stages: first, the west door and window, both richly
-adorned with ballflower, reminiscent of the then recent work at
-Salisbury, to which North and South Grantham were attached as prebends.
-Then comes a stage of two bands of arcading on the western face only,
-and a band of quatrefoil diaper work all round. In the third stage are
-twin deep-set double-light windows and then come two very lofty double
-lights under one crocketed hood mould. Both this stage and the last
-show a very strong central mullion and the fourth, or belfry stage, has
-statued niches reaching to the parapet and filling the spandrils on
-either side of the window head. Inside the parapet at the south-west
-corner is a curious old stone arch like a sentry-box or bell turret. The
-magnificent angle buttresses are crowned by pinnacles, from within which
-rises the spire with three rows of lights and lines of crockets at each
-angle running up 140 feet above a tower of equal height. It seems at that
-distance to come to a slender point; but we are told that when it was
-struck by lightning in 1797 a mill-stone was set on the apex into which
-the weathercock was mortised. There are ten bells, a larger ring than is
-possessed by any church in the county but one, viz., Ewerby near Sleaford.
-
-The date 1280 is assigned to the tower and north aisle because the
-windows of that aisle reproduce in the cusped circles of their
-head-lights the patterns of windows which had just a few years before
-been inserted in Salisbury chapter-house, and the west window of the
-aisle is a reduction to six lights of the great eight-light east window
-at Lincoln; but neither Lincoln great tower nor Salisbury spire had yet
-been built, and as they are the only buildings which are admitted to
-surpass Grantham steeple—the former in richness of detail, the latter in
-its soaring spire—and as Boston was not built till a hundred years later,
-nor Louth till 200 years after Boston, it is clear that in 1300 Grantham
-for height and beauty stood without a rival. Now-a-days, of course, we
-have both Boston and Louth, and have them in the same county, and though
-Sir Gilbert Scott puts Grantham as second only to Salisbury among English
-steeples, and though in the grandeur and interest of its interior as well
-as in the profuse ornamentation of its exterior Louth cannot compete with
-it at all, yet there is in the delicate tapering lines of Louth spire
-and the beautiful way in which it rises from its lofty tower-pinnacles
-connected with their four pairs of light flying buttresses a satisfying
-grace and a beauty of proportion which no other church seems to possess;
-and when we look closely at the somewhat aimless bands of diaper work
-and arcading in the second stage of Grantham tower and then turn to
-the harmonious simplicity of the three stages in the Louth tower and
-the incomparable beauty of the belfry lights with their crocketed
-hood-mouldings which are carried up in lines ascending like a canopy to
-the pinnacled parapet, it seems to satisfy the eye and the desire for
-beauty and symmetry in the fullest possible measure.
-
-The church has not a great number of monuments; that to Richard de
-Salteby, 1362, is the earliest, and there is, besides the Malham tomb,
-one of the Harrington family, and a huge erection to Chief Justice Ryder,
-whose descendants derive their title of Harrowby from a hamlet close by.
-There are two libraries in the church, one with no less than seventy-four
-chained books. But a church forms a bad library, and many are gone and
-some of the best are mutilated, for as Tennyson says in “The Village
-Wife”:—
-
- “The lasses ’ed teäred out leäves i’ the middle to kindle the fire.”
-
-Only here it was not the lasses but the mediæval verger.
-
-[Illustration: _Grantham Church._]
-
-The bowl of the font has most interesting carved panels of the
-Annunciation, the Magi, the Nativity, Circumcision, Baptism, Blessing of
-Children, the Sacrifice of Isaac, and one other. The oak chancel screen
-and the parcloses by Scott, the reredos by Bodley, and the rest of the
-oak fittings by Blomfield, are all very good. The screen takes the place
-of the old stone screen which is quite gone. There is some excellent
-modern glass, and for those who understand heraldry, I might mention that
-in the east window were once many coats of arms of which Marrat gives a
-list with notes by Gervase Holles, from which I gather that the armorial
-glass was very fine, and that the arms of “La Warre” are “G. crusily,
-botony, fitchy, a lion rampant or.” It is pleasant to know this, even if
-one does not quite understand it.
-
-[Sidenote: THE MARKET CROSS]
-
-The extending of the church westwards encroached upon the open space in
-which stood the reinstated “Applecross,” at one time replaced by a quite
-uncalled-for stone obelisk in the market-place, opposite the Angel, with
-an inscription to say that the Eleanor Cross once stood there, which was
-not true, as that was set up in the broad street or square called “St.
-Peter’s Hill,” where now the bronze statue of Newton stands. In Finkin
-Street the town, until ten years ago, preserved a splendid chestnut tree,
-and other fine trees near the church add a beauty which towns now-a-days
-rarely possess.
-
-As at Lincoln, the Grey Friars first brought good drinking water to the
-town, and their conduit is still a picturesque object in the market
-square. It is on the south side, close to the Blue Sheep. Blue seems to
-have been the Grantham colour, for there are at least twelve inns whose
-sign is some blue thing—Bell, Sheep, Pig, Lion, Dragon, Boy, etc. Blue
-pill is almost the only thing of that colour not represented.
-
-The connection of Grantham with Salisbury is a very old one, as far
-back as 1091 the lands and endowments of the church were granted to St.
-Osmund, and by him given to his new cathedral at Old Sarum, the site of
-which is now being cleared in much the same manner as has been adopted
-at Bardney Abbey. The Empress Maud added the gift of the living and the
-right of presentation, so the prebendaries of North and South Grantham
-became the rectors; North Grantham comprising Londonthorpe and North
-Gonerby, and South Grantham South Gonerby and Braceby. Later, about 1225,
-vicars were appointed, but there was no vicarage, and the work was mainly
-done by the chaplain and the chantry priests. In 1713 the dual vicars
-were merged in one, and since 1870 the presentation has been in the hands
-of the Bishop of Lincoln.
-
-[Sidenote: THE CHANTRIES]
-
-We have spoken often of chantries. A chantry was a chapel endowed with
-revenues for priests to perform Mass therein for the souls of the donors
-or others. Hence we have in Shakespeare—
-
- “Five hundred poor I have, in yearly pay,
- Who twice a day their wither’d hands hold up
- Toward heaven, to pardon blood; and I have built
- Three Chantries where the sad and solemn priests
- Sing still for Richard’s soul.”
-
- _Henry V._ iv. i.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-ROADS FROM GRANTHAM
-
- Syston Hall—Belton—Harlaxton—Denton—Belvoir
- Castle—Allington—Sedgebrook—Barrowby—Gonerby-hill—Stubton
- —Hough-on-the-Hill—Gelston—Claypole.
-
-
-The main South Lincolnshire roads run up from Stamford to Boston, to
-Sleaford and to Grantham; here of the six spokes of the wheel of which
-Grantham is the hub, three going westwards soon leave the county. That
-which goes east runs a very uneventful course for twelve miles till,
-having crossed the Bourne and Sleaford road, it comes to Threckingham,
-and in another six or seven miles to Donington where it divides and,
-after passing many most remarkable churches, reaches Boston either by
-Swineshead or by Gosberton, Algarkirk and Kirton, which will be described
-in the route from Spalding. The Great Road north and south from Grantham
-is full of interest, and passes through village after village, and on
-both the northern and western sides the neighbourhood of Grantham is
-extremely hilly and well wooded, and contains several fine country seats.
-Belvoir Castle (Duke of Rutland), Denton (Sir C. G. Welby), Harlaxton (T.
-S. Pearson Gregory, Esq.), Belton (Earl Brownlow), and Syston (Sir John
-Thorold).
-
-[Sidenote: BELTON AND BARKSTON]
-
-_Syston Hall_, Sir John Thorold’s place, looks down upon Barkstone. It is
-grandly placed, and the house, which was built in the eighteenth century,
-contains a fine library. The greatest treasure of this, however, the
-famed Mazarin Bible, was sold in 1884 for £3,200. A mile to the south
-lies _Belton_. Here the church is filled with monuments of the Cust
-and Brownlow families, and the font has eight carved panels with very
-unusual subjects—a man pulling two bells, a monk reading, a priest with
-both hands up, a deacon robed, a monster rampant with a double tail,
-a man with a drawn sword, a naked babe and a rope, a man with a large
-bird above him, and a tree; also among the monuments is one of Sir John
-Brownlow, 1754, and one dated 1768 of Sir John Cust, the “Speaker.” In
-this a singularly graceful female figure is holding the “Journals of the
-House of Commons.” The monument of his son, the first Baron Brownlow,
-1807, is by Westmacott. The family have added a north transept for
-use as a mortuary chapel. Here, amongst others, are monuments of the
-first Earl Brownlow, 1853, by Marochetti, and of his two wives with a
-figure emblematic of Religion, by Canova. The village is always kept
-in beautiful order; adjoining it is the large park with fine avenues
-and three lakes in it. The house, built in the shape of the letter H,
-was finished from Sir Christopher Wren’s designs in 1689, and the park
-enclosed and planted in the following year by Sir John, the third Baronet
-Brownlow, who entertained William III. there in 1695. His nephew, Sir
-John, who was created Viscount Tyrconnel in 1718, formed the library
-and laid out the gardens. In 1778 James Wyatt was employed to make
-improvements. He removed Wren’s cupola, made a new entrance on the south
-side, and raised the height of the drawing-room to twenty-two feet. All
-the rooms in the house are remarkably high, and the big dining-room is
-adorned with enormous pictures by Hondekoeter.
-
-Wonderful carvings by Grinling Gibbons are in several rooms, and also in
-the chapel, which is panelled with cedar wood.
-
-[Sidenote: ON THE WITHAM]
-
-_Barkston_ is near the stream of the Witham, and is thence called
-_Barkston-in-the-Willows_; and ten miles off, on the county boundary near
-Newark, is _Barnby-in-the-Willows_, also on the Witham, which has arrived
-there from Barkston by a somewhat circuitous route.
-
-Barkston Church is worth seeing by anyone who wishes to see how a
-complete rood-loft staircase was arranged, the steep twelve-inch risers
-showing how the builders got the maximum of utility out of the minimum
-of space. The last three steps below appear to have been cut off to let
-the pulpit steps in. There is a similar arrangement at Somerby, where
-the steps also are very high. A very good modern rood screen and canopy,
-somewhat on the pattern of the Sleaford one, has been put up by the
-rector, the Rev. E. Clements. There are two squints, on either side of
-the chancel arch, one through the rood staircase. The church has a nave
-and a south aisle, and the plain round transition Norman pillars are
-exactly like those at Great Hale, but are only about one-half the height.
-The arches are round ones, with nail head ornament, and from the bases of
-these pillars it is clear that the floor once sloped upwards continuously
-from west to east, as at Colsterworth and Horkstow. The chancel arch
-is made lofty by being set on the stone basement of the rood screen.
-The transitional tower has a beautiful Early English window in the west
-front, and the Decorated south aisle has a richly panelled parapet; but
-the Perpendicular porch is not so well executed, and cuts rudely into two
-pretty little aisle windows, and a niche over the door. It has over it
-this rhyming inscription carved in stone.
-
-[Illustration: _Withamside Boston._]
-
- Me Thomam Pacy post mundi flebile funus
- Jungas veraci vite tu trinus et unus
- Dñe Deus vere Thome Pacy miserere.
-
-And under the capital of one of the doorway pillars is the line, rather
-difficult to construe, but in beautiful lettering:—
-
- Lex et natura XRS simul omnia cura.
-
-The severe three-light east window has good glass by Kempe. The spire,
-a very good one, is later than the tower, and built of squared stones,
-different in colour from the small stones of the tower. Two half figures
-incised in bold relief on fourteenth century slabs, are built into the
-north wall, opposite the south door.
-
-[Sidenote: HONINGTON AND CAYTHORPE]
-
-Keeping along the Lincoln road the next place we reach is _Honington_.
-The Early English tower of the church is entered by a very early pointed
-arch, the nave being of massive Norman work with an unusually large
-corbel table. There are the remains of a stone screen, and a canopied
-aumbry in the chancel was perhaps used as an Easter sepulchre. The
-chantry chapel has monuments of the Hussey family, and one of W. Smith,
-1550, in gown and doublet. An early slab, with part of the effigy of a
-priest on it, has been used over again to commemorate John Hussey and his
-wife, he being described on it as “A professor of the Ghospell,” 1587.
-To the south-east of the village is what was once an important British
-fort with a triple ditch, used later by the Romans whose camp at Causennæ
-on the “High Dyke” was but four miles to the east. Less than two miles
-brings us to _Carlton Scroop_, with a late Norman tower and Early English
-arcade, also some good old glass and a Jacobean pulpit. The remains of a
-rood screen and the rood loft steps are still there.
-
-A mile further on is one of the many _Normantons_, with Early English
-nave, decorated tower, fine west window, and Perpendicular clerestory.
-
-[Sidenote: FULBECK AND LEADENHAM]
-
-Two miles on we come to _Caythorpe_, which is built on a very singular
-plan, for it has a double nave with a buttress between the two west
-windows to take the thrust of the arches which are in a line with the
-ridge of the roof. This forms the remarkable feature of the church
-interior. There are short transepts, and the tower rises above the four
-open arches. Over one of these there is a painting of the Last Judgment.
-There are fine buttresses outside with figures of the Annunciation
-and the Coronation of the Virgin, and one of our Lord on the porch.
-The windows are large. The spire is lofty but unpleasing, as it has a
-marked “entasis” or set in, such as is seen in many Lincolnshire and
-Northamptonshire spires, which hence are often termed sugar-loafed.
-Before its re-building, in 1859, after it had been struck by lightning,
-the entasis was still more marked than it is now. The singularly thin,
-ugly needle-like spire of Glinton, just over the southern border of the
-county near Deeping, has a slight set in which does not improve its
-appearance. A mile to the north the road passes through the very pretty
-village of _Fulbeck_. The dip of the road, the charming old houses, grey
-and red, the handsome church tower with its picturesque pinnacles, and
-the ancestral beauty of the fine trees, make a really lovely picture.
-Fine iron gates lead to the Hall, the home of the Fanes, an honoured
-name in Lincolnshire. Many of the name rest in the churchyard, and
-their monuments fill the dark church, which has a good Norman font.
-The tampering with old walls and old buildings is always productive of
-mischief, and, as at Bath Abbey, when, to add to its appearance, flying
-buttresses were put up all along the nave, the weight began to crush in
-the nave walls, and the only remedy was to put on, at great expense,
-a stone groined roof, which is the real _raison d’être_ of flying
-buttresses, so here at Fulbeck, when they pulled down the chancel and
-built it up again with the walls further out, the consequence was that
-the east wall of the nave, missing its accustomed support, began to lean
-out eastwards.
-
-Another mile and a half brings us to _Leadenham_, where the east and
-west road from Sleaford to Newark crosses the Great North road. The fine
-tall spire is seen from all the country round, for it stands half way up
-the cliff. But this and the rest of the road to Lincoln is described in
-Chapter XIII.
-
-[Sidenote: HARLAXTON AND DENTON]
-
-If you go out of Grantham by the south-west, you should stop at a very
-pretty little village to the south of the Grantham and Melton road, from
-which a loop descends to an old gateway, all that is left of the old
-_Harlaxton_ Manor, a pretty Tudor building now pulled down, the stone
-balustrades in front of it having been removed by Mr. Pearson Gregory to
-his large house a mile off, built on the ridge of the park by Salvin in
-1845. The Flemish family of De Ligne lived in the old Hall in Jacobean
-times, and their predecessors are probably represented by the fine but
-mutilated alabaster recumbent effigies now in the northern, or Trinity,
-chapel of the church. In the north-east angle of this chapel is a very
-graceful canopied recess on a bracket, much like those at _Sedgebrook_,
-about five miles off on the border of the county.
-
-The north aisle and nave are older than the tower and south aisle; and a
-curious staircase ascends at the east of the south aisle wall, from which
-a gangway crossed to the rood loft.
-
-There are many aumbries in various parts of the church, and a tall,
-Decorated font, with grotesque faces in some panels, and in others sacred
-subjects oddly treated, such as our Lord crowned and holding a Chalice.
-In the south aisle is an old oak post alms-box resembling one at Halton
-Holgate.
-
-A doorway leads out from the south side of the east end, an entrance
-probably to an eastern chapel. The two doorways, one on each side of the
-altar, at Spalding may have led to the same, or possibly to a vestry, as
-in Magdalen Chapel, Oxford.
-
-The spire has a staircase, passing curiously from one of the pinnacles.
-A very massive broken stone coffin, removed from a garden, lies in the
-south chapel. The fine row of limes, and the ivy-grown walls of old
-Harlaxton Manor, add to the beauty of this quiet little village, and a
-group of half-timbered brick buildings, said to be sixteenth century,
-though looking more modern, which are near the church, are a picturesque
-feature.
-
-[Sidenote: BELVOIR CASTLE]
-
-_Denton Manor_, the seat of Sir C. G. E. Welby, Bart., is just beyond
-Harlaxton, and there one might once have seen a fine old manor house,
-now replaced by a large modern hall of fine proportions; the work is by
-Sir A. W. Blomfield, good in design and detail, and containing a notable
-collection both of furniture and pictures. St. Christopher’s Well, a
-chalybeate spring, is in the park, and in the restored church are a good
-recumbent effigy of John Blyth, 1602, and a figure of Richard Welby,
-1713, with angels carefully planting a crown on his wig. After this the
-road passes into Leicestershire, so we turn to the right and in less than
-four miles, halfway between the Melton road and the Nottingham road,
-and more in Leicestershire than in Lincolnshire, we come to _Belvoir
-Castle_. The mound on which it stands is over the border and is not a
-natural height, but was thrown up on a spur of the wold as early as
-the eleventh century by Robert de Todeni, who thence became known as
-Robert de Belvedeir. Certainly the pile is grandly placed, and has a
-sort of Windsor Castle appearance from all the country round. It has
-been in possession of the Manners family now for four hundred years. The
-celebrated Marquis of Granby, a name well known in all the neighbourhood
-as a public-house sign, was son of the third Duke. He was “Col. of the
-Leicester Blues” in 1745, and General and Commander-in-Chief of the
-British contingent at Minden, where the English and German forces, under
-the Duke of Brunswick, defeated the French in 1759, and he distinguished
-himself in battle in each of the three following years. The castle,
-destroyed by order of Parliament in the civil wars, was rebuilt in 1668,
-and again in 1801, but a fire having destroyed part of it in 1816 it was
-restored at the worst of all architectural periods, so that at a near
-view it does not fulfil the expectation raised by its grand appearance
-when seen from a distance. As at Windsor there is a very fine “Guard
-Room,” and many large rooms hung with tapestry or pictures, and a picture
-gallery of unusual excellence. The Duchess’s garden in spring is one of
-the finest horticultural sights in the kingdom. The greater part of the
-castle is most liberally thrown open daily to the public.
-
-Returning from Belvoir we can pass by Barrowby to join the Nottingham and
-Grantham road, which leaves the county at Sedgebrook, on either side of
-which are seen the churches of _Muston_ and _East_ and _West Allington_,
-where Crabbe, the poet, was rector 1789-1814. West Allington church
-stands in Mr. Welby’s park, and close by, a salt well is marked on the
-map. At _Sedgebrook_ is a farm house which was built as a manor-house
-by Sir John Markham in the sixteenth century, when he was Lord Chief
-Justice of the King’s Bench. He it was who received the soubriquet of
-“The upright Judge,” on the occasion of his being turned out of office by
-Edward IV., because of his scrupulous fairness at the trial of Sir Thomas
-Coke, Lord Mayor of London.
-
-From Sedgebrook to _Barrowby_ is three miles of level ground, and then
-the road rises 150 feet to the village, which commands a splendid view
-over the vale of Belvoir. Leaving this you descend a couple of miles to
-Grantham.
-
-[Sidenote: GONERBY HILL]
-
-At the outskirts of the town the road meets two others, one the northern
-or Lincoln road, and the other the north-western or Newark road. This
-is the Great North Road, and it starts by climbing the famous _Gonerby
-Hill_, the terror and effectual trial ground of motors in their earliest
-days, and described by “mine host” in _The Heart of Midlothian_ as
-“a murder to post-horses.” The hill once gained affords a fine view
-eastwards, _Foston_ and _Long Bennington_ (which has a large church with
-a handsome porch, a good churchyard cross, and a mutilated market cross),
-are the only villages, till the road crosses the county boundary near
-_Claypole_, and runs on about four miles to Newark, distant fifteen miles
-from Grantham. Long Bennington is a mile north-east of Normanton Lodge,
-where Lincolnshire, Nottinghamshire, and Leicestershire touch.
-
-_Stubton_, a couple of miles to the east, has a fine group of yew trees
-growing round the tomb of Sir George Heron, one of the family from
-Cressy Hall, Gosberton, I suppose, who built the hall now occupied by G.
-Neville, Esq.
-
-Between Stubton and the Grantham-and-Lincoln road are many winding lanes,
-by a judicious use of which you may escape the fate that overtook us of
-landing after a steep and rather rough climb from Barkstone at two farms
-one after the other, beyond which the road did not even try to go. If
-you have better luck you will reach the out-of-the-way parish church of
-_Hough-on-the-Hill_.
-
-[Sidenote: HOUGH-ON-THE-HILL]
-
-This, the last resting-place of King John, when on his journey to Newark
-where he died, has a church whose tower is singularly interesting, being
-akin to St. Peter’s at Barton-on Humber, and the two very old churches in
-Lincoln, and one at Broughton, near Brigg, and we may add, perhaps, the
-tower at Great Hale.
-
-The work of all these towers is pre-Norman, and it is not unlikely that
-the church, when first built, consisted of only a tower and two apses. At
-Hough, as at Broughton, we have attached to the west face of the tower a
-Saxon circular turret staircase, built in the rudest way and coped with a
-sloping top of squared masonry, of apparently Norman work. The tower has
-several very small lights, 12 to 15 inches high, and of various shapes,
-while the west side of the south porch is pierced with a light which
-only measures 8 inches by 4, but is framed with dressed stone on both
-the wall-surfaces. The two lower stages of the square tower, to whose
-west face the round staircase-tower clings, are all of the same rough
-stone-work, with wide mortar joints, but with two square edged thick
-string-courses of dressed stone, projecting 6 inches or more. The upper
-stage is of much later date. The Early English nave, chancel, and aisles
-are very high, and are no less than 20 feet wide, mercifully (for it was
-proposed to abolish them and substitute a pine roof) they still retain
-their old Perpendicular roofs with the chancel and nave timbers enriched
-with carving. The sedilia are of the rudest possible construction.
-
-[Illustration: _Hough-on-the-Hill._]
-
-[Sidenote: A SAXON TOWER]
-
-The staircase turret has two oblong Saxon windows, like those at Barnack,
-about four feet by one, in the west face, three small round lights on
-the north, and four on the south, one square and one diamond-shaped and
-two circular. The turret is of the same date as the tower, but appears to
-have been built on after the tower was finished; and it almost obscures
-the two little west windows of the tower, one on each side of it, and
-near the top. A round-headed doorway leads from the tower to the turret,
-inside which the good stone steps lead up to a triangular-headed door
-into the tower, where now is the belfry floor, from which another similar
-doorway leads into the nave. Close to the top of the old Saxon tower
-walls are very massive stone corbels for supporting the roof. The Newel
-post of the old tower is a magnificent one, being eighteen inches thick.
-This, where the upper stage was added, is continued, but with only half
-that thickness.
-
-There was once a porch with a higher pitched roof, as shown by the
-gable roof-mould against the aisle. On the stone benches are three of
-the solitaire-board devices, with eight hollows connected by lines all
-set in an oblong, the same that you see often in cloisters and on the
-stone benches at Windsor, where monks or chorister boys passed the time
-playing with marbles. It is a truly primitive and world-wide amusement.
-The natives of Madagascar have precisely the same pattern marked out
-on boards, seated round which, and with pebbles which they move like
-chessmen, they delight themselves, both young and old, in gambling.
-
-The church used to go with the Head-Mastership of Grantham Grammar
-School, seven miles off, and some of the Headmasters were buried
-here; one, Rev. Joseph Hall, is described as “Vicar of Ancaster and
-Hough-on-the-Hill, Headmaster of Grantham Grammar School, and Rector of
-Snelland, and Domestic Chaplain to Lord Fitzwilliam”—he died in 1814.
-
-[Sidenote: THE WAPENTAKE]
-
-It stands on a high knoll, whence the churchyard, which is set round with
-yew-trees, slopes steeply to the south. The Wapentake of Loveden takes
-its name from a neighbouring round-topped hill, and the old tower of
-Hough-on-the-Hill may well have been the original meeting-place; just as
-Barnack was, where the triangular-headed seat for the chief man is built
-into the tower wall. The term “Wapentake” means the taking hold of the
-chief’s weapon by the assembled warriors, or of the warriors’ weapons by
-the chief, as a sign that they swear fealty to him, and then the name was
-applied to the district over which a particular chief held rule. The
-native chiefs of India, when they come to a Durbar, present their swords
-to the King or his representative in a similar manner, for him to touch.
-
-Just south of Hough is the hamlet of _Gelston_, where, on a triangular
-green, is all that is left of a wayside cross, a rare thing in this
-county. Only about two feet of the old shaft is left and the massive base
-block standing on a thick slab with chamfered corners. This is mounted on
-three steps and is a very picturesque object.
-
-There are some two dozen Wapentakes within the county, some with odd
-names, _e.g._, Longoboby; of these, eight end like Elloe in _oe_, which,
-I take it, means water.
-
-[Sidenote: CLAYPOLE]
-
-From Hough-on-the-Hill the byway to the Grantham and Newark road, with
-villages at every second milestone, runs through _Brandon_, where a
-small chapel contains a Norman door with a tympanum and a rather unusual
-moulding, very like one we shall see in the old church at Stow, and then
-through _Stubton_, to _Claypole_, close to the county boundary. The
-beautiful crocketed spire of this fine church is a landmark seen for
-miles; as usual, it is Perpendicular, and on an Early English tower,
-which is plastered over with cement outside and engaged between the
-aisles inside. It is a cruciform building, and in the Early English
-south transept are three beautiful sedilia, not at all common in such a
-position. The flat coloured ceiling of the nave is old, though, since
-the restoration by C. Hodgson Fowler in 1892, the high pitch of the roof
-over it has been reverted to, both on chancel and nave. The nave is large
-with four wide bays, supported on clustered pillars, the capitals being
-all different and all ornamented with singularly bold foliated carving
-of great beauty. The chancel arch exhibits brackets for the rood beam.
-The large clerestory windows were probably in the nave before the aisles
-were added. Another set of sedilia in the chancel are of the Decorated
-period, and most of the windows have flowing tracery. On the north side
-of the chancel is a Sacristy, containing an altar slab in situ with its
-five dedication crosses. The porch has a very deep niche over it, for a
-statue, and there is another niche at the east end of the nave; the fine
-Perpendicular parapet leading to it being, like the rest of the church,
-embattled. The screen is a good Perpendicular one, and the desk of the
-well-carved pulpit was once part of it, this now is oddly supported by
-the long stem of a processional cross. The font, which is hexagonal, is
-of the Decorated period.
-
-One of the most unusual features in the church is to be found in the
-stone seats which surround the bases of the pillars in the south arcade.
-This is to be seen also at Bottesford and at Caistor.
-
-A short distance to the south-west of the church there was, until quite
-recently, a charming old stone bridge, over a small stream, but this
-has now, I regret to say, been superseded by one of those iron girder
-structures, so dear to the heart of the highway surveyor.
-
-In the church the hook for the “Lenten Veil” still remains at the end of
-the sedilia, and a staple over the vestry-door opposite.
-
-In pre-reformation days there was a regular “office” or service for the
-Easter sepulchre, in which the priests acted the parts of the three
-kings, the angel, and the risen Lord, at which time a line was stretched
-across the chancel to support the “Lenten Veil” which served as a
-stage-curtain.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-SLEAFORD
-
- Ewerby—Howell—Use of a Stone Coffin—Heckington—Great Hale—Outer
- Staircase to Tower—Helpringham—Billinghay—North and South
- Kyme—Kyme Castle—Ancaster—Honington—Cranwell.
-
-
-[Sidenote: SLEAFORD CHURCH]
-
-Six roads go out of Sleaford, and five railways. Lincoln, Boston, Bourne
-and Grantham have both a road and a railway to Sleaford, Spalding has
-only a railway direct, and Horncastle and Newark only a road. At no
-towns but Louth and Lincoln do so many routes converge, though Caistor,
-Grantham and Boston come very near. The southern or Bourne road we have
-traced from Bourne, so we will now take the eastern roads to Boston and
-Horncastle. But first to say something of Sleaford itself. The Conqueror
-bestowed the manor on Remigius, first Bishop of Lincoln. About 1130
-Bishop Alexander built the castle, together with that at Newark, which
-alone in part survives. These castles were seized by Stephen, and here
-King John, having left Swineshead Abbey, stayed a night before his last
-journey by Hough-on-the-hill to Newark, where he died 1216. Henry VIII.,
-with Katherine Howard, held a council here on his way from Grimsthorpe to
-Lincoln, 1541, dining next day at Temple-Bruer, which he gave in the same
-year to the Duke of Suffolk. He had here in 1538 ordered the execution
-of Lord Hussey. Murray’s guide-book tells us that Richard de Haldingham,
-1314, who made the famous and curious “Mappa Mundi,” now kept in Hereford
-Cathedral, was born at Holdingham close by. The church is one of four in
-this neighbourhood dedicated to St. Denis. The lower stage of the tower
-dates from 1180. The spire, a very early one, built about 1220, being
-struck by lightning, was taken down and put up again by C. Kirk in 1884.
-It is only 144 feet in height. As at Grantham and Ewerby the tower is
-engaged in the aisles; its lower stage dates from 1180. The nave has
-eight three-light clerestory windows, with tall pinnacles rising from the
-parapet. The aisles have a richly carved parapet, without pinnacles; but
-the beauty and extreme richness of the western ends of the aisles, where
-they engage with the massive tower, surmounted as they are by turrets,
-bellcots and pinnacles, and niches, some still containing their statues,
-is not surpassed in any church in England.
-
-The doorway, which is in the west end of the north aisle, cuts into the
-fine window above, and opens upon the baptistery.
-
-[Sidenote: THE NORTH TRANSEPT]
-
-The nave and aisles are all very lofty; and the grand proportions of the
-church give one the feeling of being in a cathedral. There is an outer
-north aisle, now screened off by a good modern oak screen, and fitted
-with an organ and an altar with modern painted reredos depicting the
-Crucifixion. The tracery of the big window is good, but that in the north
-transept (there is no south transept) is one of the finest six-light
-windows to be seen, and is filled with first-rate modern glass by Ward
-and Hughes. The supporting arch at the west of the north aisle has an
-inverted arch, as at Wells, to support the tower. At the end of the south
-aisle, a tall half-arch acts as a buttress to the other side of the
-tower arch. The chancel was once a magnificent one, but was rebuilt and
-curtailed at a bad period.
-
-The fine monuments on each side of the chancel arch—one having two
-alabaster recumbent figures, much blocked by the pulpit, are all of the
-Carre family; and a curious carved and inscribed coffin lid, showing just
-the face, and then, lower down, the praying hands of a man, apparently
-a layman, with long hair, is set up in the transept against the chancel
-pier. At Hartington in Derbyshire is one showing the bust and praying
-hands together, and then, lower down, the feet. An old iron chest is in
-the south aisle, and the church has a very perfect set of consecration
-crosses both inside and out.
-
-The rood screen is especially fine, in fact, the finest in the country,
-having still its ancient canopy projecting about six feet, with very
-graceful carving on the heads of the panels below it. Two staircases in
-the chancel piers still remain, opening on to the rood loft on either
-side.
-
-The west end of the church overlooks the market, where there is always a
-gay scene on Mondays—stalls and cheap-jacks and crowds of market folk
-making it almost Oriental in life and colour.
-
-The street runs along the south side of the church, across which is seen
-the excellent but not beautiful Sleaford almshouse.
-
-[Illustration: _North Transept, St. Denis’s Church, Sleaford._]
-
-[Sidenote: EWERBY]
-
-Eastwards on the Swineshead road, and within half-a-dozen miles of
-Sleaford, is a cluster of especially good churches—Ewerby, Asgarby,
-Heckington, Howell, Great Hale and Helpringham. Four of these six have
-fine spires, and are seen from a long distance in this flat country.
-_Ewerby_ is just on the edge of Haverholme Priory Park, and the building
-rooks who have chosen the trees at the village end of the park for their
-colony, gave, when we visited it, pleasant notification of the coming
-spring.
-
-The tower is at the west end, engaged in the two aisles, and, adjoining
-the churchyard, a little green with remains of the old village cross
-leaves room for the fine pile of building to be seen and admired. The
-roof line of nave and chancel is continuous, and the broach spire, a
-singularly fine one, perhaps the best in England, is 174 feet high. It
-is probably the work of the same master builder who planned and built
-Heckington and Sleaford. The tower has a splendid ring of ten bells
-(Grantham alone has as many) for the completion of which, as for much
-else, Ewerby is indebted to the Earls of Winchelsea.
-
-Internally, the walls are mostly built of very small stones, like those
-in a roadside wall. In the tower are good Decorated windows, in the lower
-of which, on the western face, is a stained glass window. This was struck
-by lightning in 1909, and all the faces of the figures were cut right
-out, the rest of the glass being intact. A lightning-conductor is now
-installed, but the faces are not yet filled in.
-
-There is a most beautiful little window at the west end of the north
-aisle. Under the tower are three finely proportioned arches, and a stone
-groined roof. The ten bells are rung from the ground. The nave pillars
-are clustered, each erected on an earlier transition-Norman base; and
-the base of the font is also Norman. The porch is unusual in having a
-triangular string-course outside the hood-moulding. Besides the Market
-Cross, there are parts of two others, in the church and churchyard.
-There is a grand old recumbent warrior, probably Sir Richard Anses,
-with fourteenth century chain mail and helmet, and gorget, but the most
-interesting thing of all is a pre-Norman tomb-cover on the floor of the
-north aisle, with a rude cross on it, and a pattern of knot-work all over
-the rest of the slab. This is covered by a mat, but it certainly ought to
-have a rail round it for permanent protection, for it is one of the most
-remarkable stones in the county. An old oak chest with carved front is
-in the vestry. The whole church is well-cared-for, but at present only
-seated with chairs.
-
-[Sidenote: HOWELL PORCH]
-
-From Ewerby, two miles bring us to _Howell_, a small church with neither
-spire nor tower, but a double bell-gable at the west end of the nave;
-the porch is Norman, and a large pre-Norman stone coffin slab has been
-placed in it. The transition pillars have huge mill-stone shaped bases;
-and there is only a nave and north aisle. On the floor of the aisle is
-a half figure of a mother with a small figure of her daughter, both
-deeply cut on a fourteenth century stone slab. It is curious to come on
-a monument to “Sir Charles Dymok of Howell, 2nd son to Sir Edward Dymok
-of Scrielsby”—whose daughter married Sir John Langton. The tomb, with
-coloured figures of the knight and his lady kneeling at an altar, was put
-up about 1610 by his nephew, another Sir Edward Dymok.
-
-There is a broken churchyard cross, the base inscribed to John Spencer,
-rector, 1448. The church is dedicated to St. Oswald. Ivy is growing
-inside the nave, having forced its way right through the wall—a good
-illustration of the mischief that ivy can do.
-
-The mention of the stone coffin in Howell church porch calls to mind a
-similar case in a Cumberland church, where the sexton, pointing it out to
-a visitor, said: “Ah think thet a varra good thing; minds ’em o’ their
-latter end, ye knaw; an’ its varra useful for umberellas.”
-
-_Heckington_ is a town-like village on the main road, and its splendid
-church, which faces you at the end of the street, as at Louth, is one of
-the wonders of Lincolnshire. It is entirely in the Decorated style, with
-lofty spire and four very high pinnacles. It owes its magnificence to the
-fact that the great abbey at Bardney, which had a chantry here, obtained
-a royal licence in 1345 to appropriate the church. Certainly it is the
-most perfect example of a Decorated church in the kingdom.
-
-The nave is remarkably high and wide, and the building of it, as in the
-case of Wilfrid’s great church at Hexham, apparently took thirty-five
-years. The dimensions are 150 feet by eighty-five, and the masonry, owing
-probably to the leisurely way in which it was built, is remarkably good
-throughout. The statue niches have a few of their figures still. The
-porch, with its waved parapet richly carved, with a figure of our Lord
-above, still has its original roof. On either side are double buttresses,
-each with its canopied niche; and the nave ends with handsome turrets.
-The transept windows are very fine, and the seven-light east window,
-a most superb one, is only surpassed in its dimensions and beautiful
-tracery by those at Selby and Carlisle. It is filled with good glass by
-Ward and Hughes, put up in memory of Mr. Little, by his wife, 1897.
-
-[Illustration: _Heckington Church_]
-
-[Sidenote: HECKINGTON]
-
-A massive timber gallery crosses the west end, above the tower arch,
-giving access to the belfry above the groined roof of the tower. The
-clock struck while we were in the church, and gave evidence of at least
-one of the peal being of unusual magnificence of tone.
-
-[Sidenote: THE EASTER SEPULCHRE]
-
-On the south side of the chancel is one window beneath which is a
-canopied credence table; and west of this, three tall and richly carved
-sedilia with figures of our Lord and the Virgin Mary and Saints Barbara,
-Katherine and Margaret; but the gem of the building is the Easter
-sepulchre on the north side, where there are no windows. This is only
-surpassed by one at Hawton, near Newark. Below are the Roman guards
-asleep, in fourteenth century armour. On each side of the recess for the
-sacred elements, which once had a door to it, are two figures of women
-and a guardian angel, and above them, the risen Christ between two flying
-angels. This is a truly beautiful thing, enshrined in a worthy building.
-
-Outside is a broken churchyard cross, and the slender chancel buttresses
-are seen to have each a niche for a figure. The magnificent great
-“Dos-D’Âne” coping-stones on the churchyard wall, both here and at Great
-Hale, are a pleasure to see.
-
-There was a church at Heckington before the Conquest, and a second was
-built about 1100. The income of this, as well as of that of Hale Magna,
-was given in 1208 by Simon de Gant and his wife Alice to support the
-church of St. Lazarus outside the walls of Jerusalem, and this endowment
-was confirmed by King John. The rector of Hale Magna in his parish
-magazine points out that the enormous amount of land which was constantly
-passing to the churches and monasteries in the Middle Ages became a
-distinct danger, and that an Act was passed to prevent it, called the
-Statute of Mortmain, under which licence had to be obtained from the
-Crown.
-
-Consequently we find that in the fourth year of Edward II. (1310)
-inquisition was taken on a certain Sunday before Ranulph de Ry, Sheriff
-of Lincoln, at Ancaster “to inquire whether or not it be to the damage
-of the King or others if the King permit Wm. son of Wm. le Clerk of St.
-Botolph (Boston) to grant a messuage and 50 acres of land in Hekyngton
-and Hale to a certain chaplain and his successors to celebrate Divine
-service every day in the parish church of Hekyngton for the health of
-the souls of the said Wm. his father, mother and heirs, &c., for ever,”
-etc. The jury found that it would not be to the damage or prejudice of
-the king to allow the grant. They also reported that Henry de Beaumont
-was the “Mesne,” or middle, tenant between the king and William Clerk of
-Boston for twenty-eight acres, and between the king and Ralph de Howell
-for the other twenty-two acres, he holding from the king “by the service
-of a third part of a pound of pepper,” and subletting to the others, for
-so many marks a year. The land apparently being valued at about 1_s._
-8_d._ an acre. From other sources we find that land thereabouts varied in
-value from 4_d._ to 8_s._ an acre yearly rent.
-
-In 1345 when the abbot and abbey of Bardney by royal licence received
-the churches and endowments of Hale and Heckington for their own use,
-the abbot became rector and appointed a vicar to administer each parish.
-The name of the abbot was Roger De Barrowe, whose tomb was found by the
-excavators at Bardney in 1909.
-
-The building of the present beautiful church was completed by Richard de
-Potesgrave, the vicar, in 1380. He doubtless received help from Edward
-III., to whom he acted as chaplain. That he was an important person in
-the reigns of both Edward II. and III. is shown by the former king making
-over to him the confiscated property of the Colepeppers who had refused
-to deliver Leeds Castle, near Maidstone, to Queen Isabella, wife of
-Edward II., in 1321; while he was selected by Edward III. to superintend
-the removal of the body of Edward II. from Berkeley Castle to Gloucester.
-His mutilated effigy is under the north window of the chancel, and in a
-little box above it with a glass front is now preserved the small chalice
-which he used in his lifetime.
-
-[Sidenote: CHURCHWARDENS’ BOOKS]
-
-The churchwardens’ account book at Heckington begins in 1567, and in 1580
-and 1583 and 1590 “VIˢ VIIIᵈ” is entered as the burial fee of members of
-the Cawdron family, whose later monuments are at Hale.
-
-[Sidenote: WHIPPING FOR TRAMPS]
-
-Another entry which constantly occurs in the sixteenth century is “for
-Whypping dogges out of Church,” and in the seventeenth century not
-“dogges” only but vagrants are treated to the lash, _e.g._:—
-
- “April 21, 1685. John Coulson then whipped for a vagrant rogue
- and sent to Redford.
-
- “Antho. Berridge (Vicar).”
-
-And in 1686:—
-
- “Memorand. that John Herrin and Katherine Herrin and one child,
- and Jonas Hay and wife and two children, and Barbary Peay and
- Eliz. Nutall were openly whipped, at Heckington, the 28th day
- of May, 1686—and had a passe then made to convey them from
- Constable to Constable to Newark, in Nottinghamshire, and
- Will Stagg was at the same time whipped and sent to Conton in
- Nottinghamshire.”
-
-A good, sound method of dealing with “Vagrom men,” but for the women and
-children one wonders the parson or churchwardens were not ashamed to make
-the entry.
-
-[Illustration: _Great Hale._]
-
-The book also shows the accounts of the “Dike-reeve” (an important
-officer) for what in another place is called “the farre fenne.”
-
-[Sidenote: HALE MAGNA]
-
-We have already spoken of _Great Hale_ or _Hale Magna_. It is very near
-Heckington, and was once a large church. Long before the abbey of Bardney
-appropriated it, in 1345, it had both a rector and a vicar, the two being
-consolidated in 1296. In 1346 the vicarage was endowed, and on the
-dissolution the rectorial tithes were granted, in 1543, to Westminster
-Abbey; but within four years they reverted to the Crown by exchange, and
-in 1607 were sold by James I., and eventually bought by Robert Cawdron,
-whose family were for many years lay rectors. Robert probably found the
-chancel in a bad state, and rather than go to the expense of restoring
-it, pulled it down and built up the chancel arch, and so it remains. But
-the great interest of the building lies at the west end. Here the tower
-arch is a round one, but the tower into which the Normans inserted it
-is Saxon, probably dating from about 950. It is built of small stones,
-and the line of the roof gable is still traceable against it outside.
-It has also a curious and complete staircase of the tenth century in a
-remarkably perfect condition, though the steps are much worn. The outer
-walls of this are built of the same small thin stones as are used in the
-tower, in the upper stage of which are deeply splayed windows with a
-baluster division of the usual Saxon type.
-
-The nave pillars are Early English and slender for their height, for they
-are unusually tall, recalling the lofty pillars in some of the churches
-in Rome. The arches are pointed. Among the monuments are those of Robert
-Cawdron, and his three wives, 1605, and of another Robert, 1652, father
-of twenty children, while a large slab with the indent of a brass to some
-priest has been appropriated to commemorate a third of the same name.
-
-The Cawdron arms are on a seventeenth century chalice. The old registers,
-which are now well cared for, are on paper, and have suffered sadly from
-damp and rough handling. The first volume begins in 1568, the second
-in 1658, and the list of vicars is complete from 1561. To antiquarians
-I consider that this is one of the most interesting of Lincolnshire
-churches. Two miles west is _Burton Pedwardine_, with fine Pedwardine and
-Horsman tombs, and a pretty little square grille for exhibiting relics.
-The central tower fell in 1862.
-
-[Sidenote: HELPRINGHAM]
-
-The road which runs south from Heckington to Billingborough and so on
-by Rippingale to Bourne, passes by Hale Magna to _Helpringham_. Here is
-another very fine church, with a lofty crocketed spire, starting from
-four bold pinnacles with flying buttresses. The tower is engaged in the
-aisles, as at Ewerby and Sleaford, and as at Ewerby it opens into nave
-and aisles by three grand arches. The great height of the tower arch into
-the nave here and at Boston and Sleaford was in order to let in light
-to the church from the great west window. The main body of the building
-is Decorated and has fine windows; the chancel with triplet window is
-Early English. The font, Early English transition, the rood screen is of
-good Perpendicular design, and the effect of the whole building is very
-satisfying, especially from the exterior. It is curious that the lord
-of the manors of Helpringham and Scredington, who since the sixteenth
-century has been the Lord Willoughby De Broke, was in the fourteenth
-century the Lord Willoughby D’Eresby.
-
-[Illustration: _Helpringham._]
-
-[Sidenote: SWATON]
-
-South of Helpringham, and situated half-way between that and Horbling,
-and just to the north of the Sleaford-and-Boston road is _Swaton_ with
-a beautiful cruciform church in the earliest Decorated style; indeed,
-looking at the lancet windows in the chancel, one might fairly call it
-transitional Early English. The simple two-light geometrical window at
-the east end with the mullions delicately enriched outside and in, form
-a marked contrast to the rich but heavy Decorated work of the four-light
-west window. At the east end the window is subordinated to the whole
-design. At the west end the windows are the predominant feature of the
-building, and nowhere can this period of architecture be better studied.
-The roof spans both nave and aisles, as at Great Cotes, near Grimsby, so
-though the nave is big and high it has no clerestory. The tower arches
-are very low. The font is a very good one of the period, with diaper work
-and ball-flower.
-
-We have dwelt at some length on Sleaford and its immediate neighbourhood,
-and not without cause, for there are few places in England or elsewhere
-in which so many quite first-rate churches are gathered within less than
-a six-mile square. They are all near the road from Sleaford to Boston, on
-which, after leaving Heckington, nothing noticeable is met with for seven
-miles, till Swineshead is reached, and nothing after that till Boston.
-
-The north-eastern road from Sleaford to Horncastle passes over a flat and
-dull country to Billinghay and Tattershall, and thence by the interesting
-little churches of Haltham and Roughton (pronounced Rooton) to
-Horncastle. The road near _Billinghay_ runs by the side of the Old Carr
-Dyke, which is a picturesque feature in a very Dutch-looking landscape.
-
-[Sidenote: KYME TOWER AND PRIORY]
-
-[Sidenote: SOUTH KYME]
-
-This road crosses the Dyke near _North Kyme_, where there is a small
-Roman camp. The Normans have left their mark in the name of “Vacherie
-House” and Bœuferie Bridge, close to which is “Decoy House,” and two
-miles to the south is the isolated village of _South Kyme_. Here is the
-keep of a thirteenth century castle, which is nearly eighty feet high,
-a square tower with small loophole windows. The lower room vaulted and
-showing the arms of the Umfraville family, to whom the property passed
-in the fifteenth century from the Kymes by marriage, and soon afterwards
-to the Talboys family, and, in 1530, to Sir Edward Dymoke of Scrivelsby,
-whose descendants resided there till 1700. The castle was pulled down
-about 1725, after which the Duke of Newcastle bought the estate and
-sold it twenty years later to Mr. Abraham Hume. The existing tower
-communicated from the first floor with the rest of the castle. The upper
-floors are now gone.
-
-Close by was a priory for Austin canons, founded by Philip de Kyme in
-the reign of Henry II., but all that now remains of it is in the south
-aisle of the church, which, once a splendid cruciform building, has been
-cut down to one aisle and a fine porch; over this is represented the
-Coronation of the Virgin. A bit of very early carved stonework has been
-let into the wall, and a brass inscription from the tomb of Lord Talboys
-1530.
-
-[Illustration: _South Kyme._]
-
-The western road from Sleaford has no interesting features, till at about
-the fifth milestone it comes to _Ancaster_, the old Roman ‘Causennæ’;
-here it crosses the Ermine Street, which is a fine wide road, but fallen
-in many parts into disuse. The Ancaster stone quarries lie two miles to
-the south of the village in Wilsford heath on high ground; the Romans
-preferred a high ridge for their great “Streets,” but at Ancaster the
-Ermine Street descends 100 feet, and from thence, after crossing it, our
-route takes us by a very pretty and wooded route to _Honington_, on the
-Great North Road.
-
-[Illustration: _South Kyme Church._]
-
-We will now go back to Sleaford and trace out the course of its other
-western road to Newark, leaving the north or Lincoln Road to be described
-from Lincoln.
-
-[Sidenote: HOUR-GLASS STANDS]
-
-This road starts in a northerly direction, but splits off at _Holdingham_
-before reaching _Leasingham_, of which Bishop Trollope of Nottingham, who
-did so much for archæology in our county, was rector for fifty years.
-The church has a fine transition tower with curiously constructed
-belfry windows and a broach spire. Two finely carved angels adorn the
-porch, and the font, of which the bowl seems to have been copied from an
-earlier one, though only the stem and base remain, exhibits very varied
-subjects, among them The Resurrection, Last Judgment, The Temptation,
-The Entry into Jerusalem, Herodias and Salome, and the Marriage of the
-Virgin. Fixed to one of the pillars is the old hourglass stand, of which
-other specimens, but usually fixed to the pulpit, are at Bracebridge near
-Lincoln, Sapperton near Folkingham, Hameringham near Horncastle, and
-Belton in the Isle of Axholme.
-
-But the Newark road holds westwards, and, leaving the tower of Cranwell,
-with its interesting “Long and Short” work, to the right, climbs to
-the high ground and crosses the Ermine Street by Caythorpe Heath to
-_Leadenham_, eight miles. Here it drops from “the Cliff” to the great
-plain, drained by the Wytham and Brant rivers, and at _Beckingham_ on the
-Witham reaches the county boundary. The Witham only acts as the boundary
-for two miles and then turns to the right and makes for Lincoln. Half way
-between this and the lofty spire of Leadenham the road passes between
-_Stragglethorpe_ and _Brant-Broughton_ (pronounced Bruton), which is
-described later.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-LINCOLN, THE CATHEDRAL AND MINSTER-YARD
-
-
-The city of Lincoln was a place of some repute when Julius Cæsar landed
-B.C. 55. The Witham was then called the Lindis, and the province
-Lindisse. The Britons called the town Lindcoit, so the name the Romans
-gave it, about A.D. 100, “Lindum Colonia,” was partly Roman and partly
-British. The Roman walled town was on the top of the hill about a quarter
-of a mile square, with a gate in the middle of each wall. Of their four
-roads, the street which passed out north and south was the Via Herminia
-or Ermine Street. The east road went to “Banovallum”—Horncastle (or the
-Bain)—and “Vannona”—Wainfleet—and the west to “Segelocum”—Littleborough.
-The Roman milestone marking XIV miles to Segelocum is now in the
-cathedral cloisters.
-
-[Sidenote: ROMAN ARCH]
-
-This walled space included the sites of both cathedral and castle, and
-was thickly covered with houses in Danish and Saxon times. We hear of
-166 being cleared away by the Conqueror to make his castle. The Romans
-themselves extended their wall southward as far as the stone-bow in order
-to accommodate their growing colony. Their northern gate yet exists. It
-is known as “Newport Gate,” and is of surpassing interest, as, with the
-exception of one at Colchester, there is not another Roman gateway in the
-kingdom. Only last October the foundations of an extremely fine gateway
-were uncovered at _Colchester_, the Roman “Camelodunum”; apparently
-indicating the fact that there were two chariot gates as well as two side
-entrances for foot passengers. The Newport Gate is sixteen feet wide, and
-twenty-two feet high, with a rude round arch of large stones without a
-key, the masonry on either side having stones some of which are six feet
-long. On each side of the main gate was a doorway seven feet wide for
-foot passengers. A fifth Roman road is the “Foss Way,” which came from
-Newark and joined the Ermine Street at the bottom of Canwick Hill, a mile
-south of Lincoln.
-
-[Illustration: _Newport Arch, Lincoln._]
-
-From the junction of these two roads a raised causeway, following the
-line of the present High Street, ran over the marshy ground to the gate
-of the walled town. This causeway, bearing in places the tracks of Roman
-wheels, is several feet below the present level, and even on the top of
-the hill several feet of debris have accumulated over the Roman pavements
-which were found in the last century where the castle now stands.
-Doubtless, as years went on, many villas would be planted outside the
-walls of the Roman city, but we know little of the history of the colony,
-except that it was always a place of considerable importance.
-
-[Sidenote: BISHOP REMIGIUS]
-
-To come to post-Roman times, Bede, who died in 785, tells us that
-_Paulinus_, who had been consecrated Bishop of York in 625, and had
-baptised King Ædwin and a large number of people at York in the church
-which stood on the site afterwards occupied by the Minster, came to
-Lincoln, and, after baptising numbers of people in the Trent, as he had
-previously done in the Swale near Richmond in Yorkshire, built a stone
-church in Lincoln, or caused his convert Blaeca, the Reeve of the city,
-to build it, in which he consecrated Honorius Archbishop of Canterbury.
-Bede saw the walls of this church which may well have stood where the
-present church of St. Paul does. William the Conqueror in 1066 built the
-Norman castle on the hill to keep the town, which had spread along the
-banks of the Witham, in order. It was about this time that Remigius, a
-monk of Fécamp, in Normandy, who had been made by William, Bishop of
-Dorchester-on-Thames in 1067, as a reward for his active help with a
-ship and a body of armed fighting men, got leave, after much opposition
-from the Archbishop of York, to build a cathedral at Lincoln on the hill
-near the castle. So, next after the Romans (and perhaps the Britons
-were there before them), it is to him that we owe the choice of this
-magnificent site for the cathedral. Remigius began his great work in
-1075, of which the central portion of the west front, with its plain rude
-masonry and its round-headed tall recesses on either side of the middle
-door, and its interrupted band of bas-reliefs over the low Norman arches
-to right and left of the tall recesses, is still _in situ_. The sixteen
-stone bas-reliefs are subjects partly monkish, but mostly Scriptural,
-concerning Adam, Noah, Samuel, and Jesus Christ. They are genuine Norman
-sculptures, and they are at the same level as Welbourn’s twelve English
-kings under the big central window, but these are of the fourteenth
-century.
-
-The church of Remigius ended in an apse, of which the foundations are
-now under the stalls about the middle of the choir. It probably had two
-towers at the west end, and possibly a central tower as well. The church
-of St. Mary Magdalene was swept away to clear the site, and a chapel at
-the north west end of the new building allotted to the parishioners in
-compensation. Like the Taj at Agra it was seventeen years in building,
-and its great founder died, May 4, 1092, a few months before its
-completion. This was in the reign of Rufus, a reign notable for the
-building of the great Westminster Hall.
-
-[Illustration: _Gateway of Lincoln Castle._]
-
-[Sidenote: LINCOLN CASTLE]
-
-[Sidenote: BISHOP ALEXANDER]
-
-The wide joints of the masonry, and the square shape of the stones, and
-the rude capitals of the pilasters are distinctive of Remigius’ work.
-_Bloet_ succeeded Remigius, and during his thirty years he did much for
-the cathedral staff, but not very much to the fabric. His successor,
-_Bishop Alexander_, 1123, was a famous builder, and besides the castles
-of Sleaford, Newark and Banbury, the first two of which Stephen forced
-him to give to the Crown, he built the later Norman part of the west
-front, raising its gables and putting in three doors and the interlaced
-arcading above the arches of Remigius. He also vaulted the whole nave
-with stone, after a disastrous fire in 1141. There had been a previous
-fire just before Alexander was consecrated Bishop in 1123, of which
-Giraldus Cambrensis, writing about 1200, says that the roof falling on
-it “broke the stone with which the body of Remigius was covered into two
-equal parts.” This richly carved and thus fractured stone you may see
-to-day, where it is placed close to the north-west arch of the nave and
-north aisle. Bishop Alexander’s work is richer than that of Remigius,
-and the shafts and capitals of his west doors are beautifully carved. In
-these, according to Norman custom, hunters are aiming at the birds and
-beasts in the foliage. This is best seen in the north-west doorway. King
-Stephen came to Lincoln in 1141, the year of the fire, and it was there
-that, after a fierce fight which raged round the castle and cathedral, he
-was taken prisoner and sent to Bristol, but in the following year terms
-were arranged between him and the Empress Maud, and he was crowned at
-Christmas in Lincoln cathedral. After that date Bishop Alexander carried
-forward his work on the cathedral without intermission till his death in
-1047, putting in the central western gable and the two gables over the
-arcading, vaulting the whole west front with stone, and adding the little
-north and south gables against the towers and the Norman stages of the
-towers, of which the northern tower was a little the highest, but looked
-less high because the south tower had its angles carried up higher than
-the walls of the square.
-
-Bishop Alexander, like St. Hugh, died of a fever, which he caught at
-Auxerre in France, where he had been to meet the Pope. Those French towns
-seem to have been pretty pestilential at all times. _Bishop Chesney_
-succeeded him, and either he or Bishop Bloet began the episcopal palace.
-He assisted at the Coronation of Henry II. in Lincoln, and founded St.
-Catharine’s Priory. He died in 1166, and, after the lapse of six years,
-_Geoffrey Plantagenet_, son of Henry II. by Fair Rosamund, held the See
-for nine years, but was never consecrated. In 1182 he resigned, and was
-afterwards made Archbishop of York. He gave many gifts to the cathedral,
-and notably two “great and sonorous bells,” the putative parents of
-“Great Tom.” _Walter de Constantiis_ followed him, but was in the very
-next year translated to Rouen, 1184, and again the See was vacant for the
-space of two years.
-
-[Sidenote: ST. HUGH]
-
-In 1185 an earthquake did great damage, and in the following year _Hugh
-of Avalon_, the famous St. Hugh of Lincoln, was appointed Bishop by Henry
-II. He widened the west end by putting a wing to each side of the work
-of Remigius, and put a gable over the central arch, and began his great
-work of making a new and larger cathedral with double transepts and a
-choir 100 feet longer and a nave ten feet wider than that of Remigius,
-starting at the east and building the present ritual choir and both the
-eastern and western transepts. In this his work was of a totally new
-character, with pointed arches, and “is famous as being the earliest
-existing work of pure English Gothic.” But Early English work, so says
-Murray, was already being done at Wells in 1174, twelve years earlier,
-and it was there that the Gothic vaulting and pointed arch was first seen
-in England. From the great transept to the angel choir is all his design,
-and it bears no trace of Norman French influence in any particular.
-The name of Hugh’s architect is Geoffrey de Noiers, his work is more
-remarkable for lightness than for strength, and in about fifty years
-Hugh’s tower fell, setting thereby a bad example which has been followed
-so frequently that Bishop Creighton’s first question on visiting a new
-church used generally to be, “When did your tower fall?”
-
-[Sidenote: BISHOP GROSTESTE]
-
-Hugh of Avalon died in London in 1200, and _William de Blois_ (1201) and
-_Hugh of Wells_ (1209) went on with the building. The latter particularly
-kept to Hugh of Avalon’s plan of intercalating marble shafts with those
-of stone. Other characteristics of St. Hugh’s work are the double
-arcading in the transept and the little pigeon-hole recesses between
-the arcade arches, a trefoil ornament on the pillar belts and on the
-buttresses, and the deep-cut base mouldings. He put in the fine Early
-English round window in the north transept called the “Dean’s eye,” which
-has plate tracery. The five lancet lights, something after the “Five
-Sisters” window at York, were a later addition. The end of his work is
-easily distinguishable in the east wall of the great transept. He also
-built the Galilee porch, which was both a porch and an ecclesiastical
-court, and the Chapter house, with its ten pairs of lancet windows, its
-arcading and clustered pillars and beautiful central pillar to support
-the roof groining. He was succeeded, in 1235, by the famous _Robert
-Grosteste_, a really great man and a fine scholar, who had studied both
-at Oxford and Paris. He opposed the Pope, who wished to put his nephew
-into a canonry, declaring him to be unfit for the post, and stoutly
-championed the right of the English Church to be ruled by English and
-not Italian prelates. In his time the central tower fell, and he it was
-who built up in its place the first stage at least of the magnificent
-tower we have now. He also added the richly arcaded upper portion of the
-great west front, and its flanking turrets crowned by the figures of the
-Swineherd of Stow with his horn, on the north, and Bishop Hugh on the
-south. _Henry Lexington_, Dean of Lincoln, succeeded him as Bishop in
-1254, and during his short episcopate of four years Henry III. issued a
-royal letter for removing the Roman city wall further east to enable the
-Dean and Chapter to lengthen the cathedral for the Shrine of St. Hugh
-after his canonisation. Then began the building of the ‘Angel Choir,’
-which “for the excellence of its sculpture, the richness of its mouldings
-and the beauty of its windows, is not surpassed by anything in the
-Kingdom” (Sir C. Anderson). Its height was limited by the pitch of the
-vaulting of Hugh’s Ritual Choir, just as the height of Grosteste’s tower
-arches had been. The Angel Choir was finished by Lexington’s successor
-_Richard of Gravesend_, 1258-1279, and inaugurated in the following year
-with magnificent ceremony under _Bishop Oliver Sutton_, Edward I. and
-Queen Eleanor both being present with their children to see the removal
-of St. Hugh’s body from its first resting-place before the altar of the
-Chapel of St. John the Baptist in the north-east transept, where it had
-been placed in 1200 when King John himself acted as one of the pall
-bearers, to its new and beautiful gold shrine in the Angel Choir behind
-the high altar.
-
-[Sidenote: JOHN DE WELBOURN]
-
-The whole cost of the consecration ceremony was borne by Thomas Bek, son
-of Baron d’Eresby, who was on the same day himself consecrated Bishop of
-St. David’s, his brother Antony being Bishop of Durham, and Patriarch
-of Jerusalem. Bishop Sutton, in 1295, built the cloisters and began the
-charming little “Vicar’s court.” He died in 1300, his successor was
-_Bishop John of Dalderby_, the same who had a miracle-working shrine of
-pure silver in the south transept, and whom the people chose to call
-_St._ John of Dalderby, just as they did in the case of Bishop Grosteste,
-though the Pope had refused canonisation in each case. He finished the
-great tower, which, with its beautiful arcaded tower stage, its splendid
-double lights and canopies above, and its delicate lace-like parapet,
-seems to me to be quite the most satisfying piece of architecture that
-this or any other county has to show. It is finished with tall pinnacles
-of wood covered with lead. The exquisite stone rood-screen and the
-beautiful arches in the aisles were put in at the same time, the work on
-the screen being, as Sir C. Anderson remarks, very like the work on the
-Eleanor’s Cross at Geddington. He died in 1320, and the lovely tracery of
-the circular window in the south transept, called “The Bishop’s eye,” was
-inserted about 1350 above his tomb.
-
-_John de Welbourn_, the munificent treasurer, who died in 1380, gave the
-eleven statues of kings beneath the window at the west end, which begin
-with William the Conqueror and end with Edward III., in whose reign they
-were set up. Among other benefactions Welbourn gave the beautifully
-carved choir stalls, and he also vaulted the towers. These were all, at
-one time, finished by leaded spires. Those of the western tower being 100
-feet high, and that on the great central or rood tower soaring up to a
-height of 525 feet. This was blown down in 1547, and the western spires
-were removed in 1807-08, a mob of excited citizens having prevented their
-removal in 1727, but eighty years later the matter made no great stir,
-and though their removal may by some be regretted, I think it is a matter
-of pure congratulation that the splendid central tower, whose pinnacles
-attain an altitude of 265 feet, should have remained as it is. The
-delicate lace-like parapet was added in 1775. It is not very likely that
-anyone should propose to raise those spires again, but dreadful things do
-happen; and quite lately one of our most eminent architects prepared a
-design for putting a spire on the central tower at Peterborough. Think of
-that! and ask yourself, is there any stability in things human?
-
-Apart from its commanding situation, the whole pile is very magnificent,
-and, viewed as a whole, outside, it has nothing to touch it, though
-the west front is not to compare in beauty with that of Peterborough.
-Inside, York is larger and grander, and Ely surpasses both in effect. But
-if we take both the situation and the outside view and the inside effect
-together, Lincoln stands first and Durham second.
-
-[Sidenote: GREAT TOM]
-
-[Sidenote: THE CENTRAL TOWER]
-
-I was once at an Archæological society’s meeting in Durham when Dean Lake
-addressed us from the pulpit, and he began by saying: “We are now met
-in what by universal consent is considered the finest church in England
-but one; need I say that that one is Lincoln?” The chuckle of delight
-which this remark elicited from my neighbour, Precentor Venables, was
-a thing I shall never forget. We will now take a look at the building,
-and begin first with the outside, and, starting at the west, walk slowly
-along the south side of the close. If we begin near the Exchequer Gate
-we see the west front with its fine combination of the massive work of
-Remigius, the fine Norman doors of Alexander (with the English kings over
-the central door), the rich arcading of Grosteste along the top and at
-the two sides, and the flanking turrets with spirelets surmounted by the
-statues of St. Hugh and the Stow Swineherd. We look up to the gable over
-the centre flanked by the two great towers on either side of it. Norman
-below, Gothic above, with their very long Perpendicular double lights,
-octagonal angle buttresses and lofty pinnacles. The northern tower once
-held the big bell “Great Tom,” and the southern (“St. Hugh’s”) has still
-its peal of eight. Lincoln had a big bell in Elizabeth’s reign, which
-was re-cast in that of James I., and christened “Great Tom of Lincoln,”
-1610. This second great bell being cracked in 1828, was re-cast in 1855,
-and the Dean and chapter of the time actually took down the beautiful
-peal of six, called the “Lady Bells,” which had been hung in Bishop
-Dalderby’s great central tower about 1311 and gave that tower its name of
-the “Lady Bell Steeple,” and had them melted down to add to the weight of
-“Great Tom,” thus depriving the minster, by this act of vandalism, of its
-second ring of bells. The third, or new, “Great Tom,” now hangs alone in
-the central tower. It weighs five tons eight hundredweight, and is only
-surpassed in size in England by those at St. Paul’s, at Exeter Cathedral,
-and Christ Church, Oxford. It is six feet high, six feet ten inches in
-diameter, and twenty-one and a half feet round the rim, and the hammer,
-which strikes the hours, weighs two hundredweight.
-
-[Illustration: _The Rood Tower and South Transept, Lincoln._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE SOUTH SIDE]
-
-From the west front we should walk along the south side, passing first
-the consistory court with its three lancet windows, and high pitched
-gable, where is the little figure of “the devil looking over Lincoln.”
-This forms a small western transept, and has a corresponding transept
-on the north side, containing the ringers’ chapel and that of St. Mary
-Magdalene.
-
-[Sidenote: THE EAST END]
-
-Going on we get a view of the clerestory windows in the nave, above which
-is the parapet relieved by canopied niches, once filled with figures.
-The flying nave buttresses now come into view, and next we reach, at
-the south-western corner of the great transept, the beautifully built
-and highly ornamented “Galilee Porch,” which was meant for the bishop’s
-entrance from his palace into the cathedral. The room over it is now the
-muniment room. From this point we get a striking view of the western
-towers with the southern turret of the west front. The buttresses of the
-transept run up to the top of the clerestory, and end in tall pinnacles
-with statue-niches and crockets. The transept gable has a delicately
-pierced parapet and lofty pinnacles. Above is a five-light Decorated
-window, and below this a broad stone frieze, and then the large round
-window, “The Bishop’s Eye,” with its unspeakably lovely tracery, a marvel
-of lace-work in stone; below this comes a row of pointed arcading. The
-eastern transept is the next feature, with another fine high-pitched
-gable. Here the work of St. Hugh ends. The apsidal chapels of St. Paul
-and St. Peter are at the east side of this transept, and then, along
-the south side of the Angel Choir, the chapels of Bishops Longland and
-Russell, with the splendid south-east porch between them. This, from
-its position, is unique in English churches, and was probably designed
-for the state entrance of the bishop after the presbytery had been
-added, in place of the Galilee porch entrance. It has a deeply recessed
-arch, with four canopied niches holding fine figures. The doorway has
-two trefoil headed arches, divided by a central shaft with a canopied
-niche above it, once containing the figures of the Virgin and Child.
-Above this, and in the tympanum, is represented the Last Judgment. The
-buttresses of the Angel Choir are beautifully and harmoniously enriched
-with canopy and crocket, and the upper windows are perfect in design and
-execution. Apart from its splendid position, it is this exquisite finish
-to the beautifully designed building that makes Lincoln Cathedral so
-“facile princeps” among English cathedrals. At the south-east buttress
-are finely conceived figures of Edward I. trampling on a Saracen, and
-his Queen Eleanor; and another figure possibly represents his second
-queen, Margaret. Coming round to the east we look with delighted eyes
-on what has been called “the finest example of Geometrical Decorated
-Architecture to be found in the kingdom.” The window is not so fine as
-that at Carlisle, and no east end competes with that at York, but York
-is Perpendicular, and Lincoln is Geometrical. Here we have not only a
-grand window, fifty-seven feet high, but another great five-light window
-above it, and over that a beautiful figure of the Virgin and Child, and
-all finished by a much enriched gable surmounted by a cross. The two
-windows, one above the other, seem not to be quite harmonious, in fact,
-one does not want the upper window, nor perhaps the windows in the aisle
-gables, but the buttresses and their finials are so extraordinarily good
-that they make the east end an extremely beautiful whole. Close to the
-north-east angle is a little stone well cover, and the chapter-house,
-with its off-standing buttress-piers and conical roof, comes into view
-at the north. The north side is like the south, but has near it the
-cloisters, which are reached by a short passage from the north-east
-transept. From the north-east corner of these cloisters you get an
-extremely good view of the cathedral and all its three towers. Steps
-from this corner lead up to the cathedral library. The north side of
-the cloisters of Bishop Oliver Sutton, unable to bear the thrust of the
-timber-vaulted ceiling, fell, and was replaced in 1674 by the present
-inharmonious pillars and ugly arches designed by Sir Christopher Wren.
-
-We must now look inside the cathedral, and if we enter the north-east
-transept from the cloisters we shall pass over a large stone inscribed
-“Elizabeth Penrose, 1837.” This is the resting-place of “Mrs. Markham,”
-once _the_ authority on English history in every schoolroom, and
-deservedly so. She took her _nom de plume_ from the little village of
-East Markham, Notts., in which she lived for many years.
-
-[Sidenote: THE INTERIOR]
-
-Passing through the north-east transept, with its stained glass windows
-by Canon Sutton, and its curious “Dean’s Chapel,” once the minster
-dispensary, and turning eastwards, we enter the north aisle of the Angel
-Choir and find the chapel of Bishop Fleming, the founder of Lincoln
-College, Oxford. In this the effigy of the bishop is on the south side,
-and there is a window to the memory of Sir Charles Anderson, of Lea, and
-a reredos with a painting of the Annunciation, lately put up in memory
-of Arthur Roland Maddison, minor canon and librarian, who died April
-24, 1912, and is buried in his parish churchyard at Burton, by Lincoln.
-He is a great loss, for he was a charming personality, and, having been
-for many years a painstaking student of heraldry, he was always an
-accurate writer on matters of genealogy, and on the relationships and
-wills of the leading Lincolnshire families, subjects of which he had a
-special and unique knowledge. Bishop Fleming was not the only Bishop
-of Lincoln who founded a college at Oxford, as William Smith, founder
-of Brasenose, Cardinal Wolsey, founder of Christchurch, and William of
-Wykeham, founder of New College, were all once bishops here. Opposite to
-the Fleming chapel is the Russell chapel, just east of the south porch
-and between these lies the Retro Choir, which contained once the rich
-shrine of St. Hugh, its site now marked, next to Bishop Fuller’s tomb, by
-a black marble memorial. Here is the beautiful monument to the reverend
-Bishop Christopher Wordsworth. This is a very perfect piece of work,
-with a rich, but not heavy, canopy, designed by Bodley and executed by
-M. Guillemin, who carved the figures in the reredos of St. Paul’s. This
-rises over a recumbent figure of the bishop in robes and mitre. The face
-is undoubtedly an excellent likeness.
-
-[Sidenote: THE CHOIR]
-
-The view from here of the perfect Geometrical Gothic east window, with
-its eight lights, is very striking; beneath it are the three chapels
-of St. Catherine, St. Mary, and St. Nicholas, and on either side of it
-are two monuments, those on the south side to Wymbish, prior of Nocton,
-and Sir Nicolas de Cantelupe; and on the north side to Bishop Henry
-Burghersh, Chancellor of Edward III., 1340, and his father, Robert. On
-each tomb are canopied niches, each holding two figures, among which are
-Edward III. and his four sons—the Black Prince, Lionel Duke of Clarence,
-John of Gaunt, and Edmund of Langley. Adjoining the chapel of St.
-Catherine, which was founded by the Burghersh family, is a fine effigy
-of Bartholomew Lord Burghersh, who fought at Crécy, in full armour with
-his head resting on a helmet. A fine monument of Queen Eleanor once stood
-beneath the great window where her heart was buried before the great
-procession to London began. The effigy was of copper gilt, but, having
-been destroyed, it has been recently replaced by a generous Lincoln
-citizen from drawings which were in existence and from a comparison with
-her monument in Westminster Abbey. A stone at the west of St. Catherine’s
-chapel shows a deep indentation worn by the scrape of the foot of each
-person who bowed at the shrine. A similar one is to be seen at St.
-Cuthbert’s shrine, Durham.
-
-In the east windows of both the choir aisles is some good Early English
-glass.
-
-[Sidenote: THE PRESBYTERY]
-
-We will now turn westwards, past the south porch, and come to the
-south-east transept; here the line of the old Roman wall and ditch runs
-right through the cathedral, the apsidal chapels of the eastern transepts
-and the whole of the presbytery, as well as the chapter-house, lying
-all outside it. Two apsidal chapels in this transept are dedicated to
-St. Peter and St. Paul. It was in St. Peter’s that sub-dean Bramfield
-was murdered by a sub-deacon, September 25, 1205, who paid the penalty
-immediately at the hands of the sub-dean’s servants. The exquisite white
-marble tomb and recumbent figure of John Kaye, bishop 1827 to 1853, by
-Westmacott, is in this chapel. Opposite to these apsidal chapels are
-the canons’ and choristers’ vestries; under the former is a crypt; the
-latter has the monks’ lavatory, and a fireplace for the baking of the
-sacramental wafers by the sacristan. Passing along the south choir-aisle
-we reach the shrine of little St. Hugh, and here the work all around
-us, in choir, aisles, and transepts, is that of the great St. Hugh. The
-whole of the centre of the cathedral, with its double transept and the
-choir between them, being his; and we must notice in two of the transept
-chapels his peculiar work in the double capitals above slender pillars of
-alternate stone and marble, and projecting figures of saints and angels
-low down in each spandrel. We now enter the choir, and pause to admire
-the magnificent work and all its beauty. On either side are the sixty-two
-beautiful and richly carved canopied stalls. They are only excelled,
-perhaps, by those at Winchester. The carving of the _Miserere_ seats
-is much like that at Boston, where humorous scenes are introduced. The
-fox in a monk’s cowl, the goose, and the monkey being the chief animals
-represented. Here, on a poppy-head in the precentor’s seat, a baboon is
-seen stealing the butter churned by two monkeys; he is caught and hanged,
-and on the _Miserere_ he is being carried forth for burial. A finely
-carved oak pulpit, designed by Gilbert Scott, is at the north-east end of
-the stalls. The brass eagle is a seventeenth century copy of an earlier
-one. We notice overhead the stone vaulting, springing from Purbeck
-shafts; notice, too, the beauty of the mouldings and carved capitals, and
-the groups of arches forming the triforium with clerestory window above,
-which, however, only show between the ribs of the vaulting; and, then,
-the length of it! For now, by taking in two from the Angel Choir, the
-chancel has seven bays. It is a very striking view as you look eastwards,
-but it has the defect of a rather plain, low vaulting, and west of it the
-nave, which is a generation later, is more splendidly arranged, while
-east of it the Angel Choir, which is nearly half a century later than the
-nave, admittedly surpasses all the rest in delicacy and beauty. The choir
-vaulting being low, caused both nave and presbytery to be lower than they
-would otherwise have been, so that it has been said that when the tower
-fell it was a pity the chancel did not fall with it, all would then have
-been built with loftier roofs and with more perfect symmetry.
-
-If we pass down the Ritual Choir eastwards, we enter the presbytery, and
-at once see the origin of the name “Angel Choir” in the thirty figures of
-angels in the spandrels. It was built to accommodate the enormous number
-of pilgrims who flocked to St. Hugh’s shrine, and is, according to G. A.
-Freeman, “one of the loveliest of human works; the proportion of the side
-elevation and the beauty of the details being simply perfect,” and it
-would seem to be uncontested that all throughout, whether in its piers,
-its triforium, its aisles, or its carved detail, it shows a delicacy and
-finish never surpassed in the whole history of Gothic architecture. One
-of its large clerestory windows was filled, in 1900, with excellent glass
-by H. Holiday, to mark the seven-hundredth anniversary of St. Hugh’s
-death.
-
-The angels sculptured in stone, and mostly carrying scrolls, fill the
-triforium spandrels in groups of three, five groups on either side. They
-are probably not all by the master’s hand. The Virgin and Child in the
-south-west bay and the angel with drawn sword in the north-west seem
-finer than the rest. The stone inscribed in Lombardic letters “Cantate
-Hic,” marks the place for chanting the Litany; this is chanted by two
-lay clerks. There are nine of these, one being vestry clerk; also four
-choristers in black gowns with white facings (a reminiscence of the
-earliest dress for the Lincoln choir, and a unique costume in England),
-eight Burghersh choristers or “Chanters” (lineal descendants of the
-Burghersh chantry of St. Catherine with its separate band of choristers),
-and some supernumerary boys and men. There are four canons residentiary,
-viz., the sub-dean, chancellor, precentor, and Archdeacon of Lincoln, and
-fifty-three prebendaries.
-
-In the first bay of the north side of the Angel Choir is a remarkable
-monument, part of which once served for an Easter sepulchre. This, like
-those of Navenby and Heckington of the same date, is richly carved with
-oak and vine and fig-tree foliage, and shows the Roman soldiers sleeping.
-Opposite, on the south side, are the tombs of Katharine Swynford of
-Ketilthorpe, Duchess of Lancaster, Chaucer’s sister-in-law, whose
-marriage to John of Gaunt took place in the minster in 1396. Like so many
-of the monuments, these are sadly mutilated, and are not now quite in
-their original position.
-
-It is on one of the pillars of the east bay, the second from the east
-end, that the curious grotesque, familiar to all as the “Lincoln Imp,” is
-perched.
-
-[Sidenote: THE NAVE]
-
-If we now turn westwards we shall come to the fine stone organ screen,
-and pass through to the tower, whose predecessor fell through faultiness
-of construction, and was rebuilt by Grosteste as far as the nave roof,
-and we shall look down the nave, which is forty-two feet wide, each
-aisle being another twenty feet in width. The planning and execution
-of the nave we owe to the two Bishops Hugh. Its great length (524 feet
-with the choir and presbytery) makes the whole building, when viewed
-from the west, look lower than it is, for it is really eighty-two feet
-high. Looking west this is not felt so much, and there is a feeling of
-great dignity which the best Early English work always gives. The piers
-may seem lacking in massive strength, but they vary in pattern, those to
-the east being the most elaborate, and so gain in interest. One curious
-thing about the nave, though not discernible to the uninitiated, is that
-the axis, which is continuous from the east end for the first five of
-the seven bays, here diverges somewhat to the north, and so runs into
-the centre of the Norman west front. The two western bays are five and
-a quarter feet less in span than the others. Probably the architect, as
-he brought the nave down westwards with that light-hearted disregard
-of a previous style of architecture which characterised the medieval
-builder and his predecessors of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries,
-intended to sweep away all the old Norman work at the west end and carry
-the line straight on with equal-sized arches, but funds failed and he had
-to join up the new with the old as best he could; and we have cause to be
-thankful for this, since it has preserved for us the original and most
-interesting work of Remigius.
-
-[Sidenote: THE TRANSEPTS]
-
-Before we leave our place beneath the tower, we must look at the two
-great transepts. These have piers, triforium and clerestory similar to
-those in the choir, and each has three chapels along the eastern wall;
-these, from north to south, are dedicated to St. Nicholas, St. Denis,
-St. Thomas; and in the south transept to St. Edward, St. John and St.
-Giles. Of these, St. Edward’s is called the chanters’ chapel, and it
-has four little figures of singers carved in stone, two on each side of
-the door. This was fitted up for use and opened in August, 1913, for
-a choristers’ chapel, the tombstone of Precentor Smith, 1717, being
-introduced for an altar. Everybody is attracted by the rose windows. That
-to the north has beneath it five lancet windows, something like those at
-York, filled with white silvery glass, but the rose above has still its
-original Early English stained glass, and is a notable example of the
-work of the period. A central quatrefoil has four trefoils outside it and
-sixteen circles round, all filled with tall bold figures and strongly
-coloured. It is best seen from the triforium. Below is the dean’s door,
-with a lancet window on either side, and over it a clock with a canopy,
-given in 1324 by Thomas of Louth. This canopy was carried off by the
-robber archdeacon, Dr. Bailey, and used as a pulpit-top in his church at
-Messingham, but was restored by the aid of Bishop Trollope.
-
-The south transept, where Bishop John of Dalderby was buried, contains
-what no one sees without a feeling of delight, and wonder that such
-lovely work could ever have been executed in stone,—the great rose window
-with its twin ovals and its leaf-like reticulations, which attract the
-eye more than the medley of good old glass with which it is filled,
-but which gives it a beautiful richness of effect. Below this are four
-lancets with similar glass.
-
-[Sidenote: THE FONT]
-
-The aisles of the nave are vaulted, the groins springing from the nave
-pillars on the inner, and from groups of five shafts on the outer side.
-Behind these runs a beautiful wall arcade on detached shafts, continuous
-in the north aisle, but only repeated in portions of the south aisle,
-with bosses of foliage at the spring of the arches. In the aisle at the
-second bay from the west is the grand old Norman font, resembling that
-at Winchester. There is another at _Thornton Curtis_ in the north-east
-of the county. Neither of the Lincolnshire specimens are so elaborately
-carved as that at Winchester, which is filled with scenes from the life
-of St. Nicholas, but all are of the same massive type, with dragons,
-etc., carved on the sides of a great block of black basalt resting on a
-round base of the same, with four detached corner pillars leading down
-to a square black base. These early basalt fonts, of which Hampshire
-has four, Lincolnshire two, the other being at Ipswich, Dean Kitchin
-conclusively proved to have all come from Tournai, in Belgium, and to
-date from the middle of the twelfth century, a time coinciding with the
-episcopacy of Bishops Alexander and De Chesney at Lincoln, and Henry de
-Blois at Winchester. The one at St. Mary Bourne is the biggest, and has
-only clusters of grapes on it and doves. The other two are at East Meon
-and at St. Michael’s, Southampton, and have monsters carved on them like
-the Lincolnshire specimens.
-
-Of brasses, in which the cathedral before the Reformation was specially
-rich, having two hundred, only one now remains, that of Bishop Russell,
-1494, which is now in the cathedral library; but in a record made in
-1641 by Sir W. Dugdale and Robert Sanderson, afterwards Bishop, is the
-following most charming little inscription to John Marshall, Canon of the
-cathedral, 1446, beneath the figure of a rose:—
-
- “Ut rosa pallescit ubi solem sentit abesse
- Sic homo vanescit; nunc est, nunc desinit esse.”
-
-which may be Englished
-
- “As the rose loses colour not kissed by the sun,
- So man fades and passes; now here, and now gone.”
-
-The ascent of the towers gives magnificent views; from the central tower
-one may see “Boston Stump” on one hand, and on the other Newark spire.
-The big bell, too, has its attractions, but the greatest curiosity is the
-elastic stone beam, a very flat arch connecting the two western towers,
-made of twenty-three stones with coarse mortar joints, which only rises
-sixteen inches, and vibrates when jumped on. Its purpose is not clear,
-possibly to gauge the settlement of the towers. The north end now is
-thirteen inches lower than the south. A gallery in the thickness of the
-wall between the great west window and the Cinquefoil above it, allows
-a wonderful view of the whole length of the cathedral. It is called Sir
-Joseph Banks’ view.
-
-[Sidenote: THE BISHOP’S PALACE]
-
-[Sidenote: THE CHANCERY]
-
-Within the Close, as we passed along looking at the cathedral, we had
-our backs to the canons’ houses. First comes the precentory and the
-sub-deanery near the Exchequer Gate, next the Cantilupe Chantry, with a
-figure of the Saviour in a niche in the gable end, and a curious square
-oriel window, and then the entrance to the Bishop’s palace opposite the
-Galilee porch. The old palace, begun about 1150 or possibly earlier,
-was a splendid building; the ruins of it are in the palace grounds.
-Through a gateway or vaulted porch, where is now the secretary’s office,
-you descend to the site of the magnificent hall, eighty-eight feet by
-fifty-eight, built by St. Hugh, for, like Vicars Court, with its steep
-flight of steps and its charming old houses, it is built on the slope of
-the hill. Succeeding bishops added to the pile in which Henry VI. and
-Henry VIII. were royally lodged and entertained, and the charges which
-cost Queen Katharine Howard her life took their origin from her meetings
-here and afterwards at Gainsborough with her relative Thomas Culpepper.
-The palace was despoiled in the days of the Commonwealth, and little but
-ruins now remain, but a part of it has been restored and utilised as a
-chapel by the late Bishop King, perhaps the most universally beloved of
-Lincoln’s many bishops. Buckden and Nettleham and Riseholme have supplied
-a residence for successive bishops, and now the bishop is again lodged
-close to his cathedral. But, in the grandiloquent language of a work
-entitled ‘The Antiquarian and Topographical Cabinet, containing a series
-of elegant views of the most interesting objects of curiosity in Great
-Britain, 1809,’ “The place where once the costly banquet stood arrayed
-in all the ostentatious luxury of Ecclesiastic greatness has now its
-mouldering walls covered with trees.” The same authority, speaking of
-Thornton Abbey, has this precious reflection, which is too good to lose:
-“Here in sweet retirement the mind may indulge in meditating upon the
-instability of sublunary greatness, and contemplate, with secret emotion,
-the wrecks of ostentatious grandeur.” The Chancery, built by Antony Bek,
-1316, faces the east end of the minster yard; it is distinguished outside
-by an entrance arch and an oriel window. Inside, there are some very
-interesting old doorways, and a charming little chapel, with a wooden
-screen of c. 1490, the time of Bishop Russell, and two embattled towers
-on the old minster yard wall in the garden, of the early fourteenth
-century. The deanery is a modern building on the north side of the
-minster.
-
-[Illustration: _Pottergate, Lincoln._]
-
-It was in the chapter house, probably, that Edward I. held his great
-Parliament in 1301, which secured the Confirmation of Magna Charta.
-Edward II. and Edward III. also each held a parliament here, and since
-their time certainly seven kings of England have visited Lincoln.
-
-[Sidenote: MINSTER OR CATHEDRAL?]
-
-The cathedral precincts of Lincoln are called the “Minster Yard,” and the
-church is called the Minster, though Lincoln was a cathedral from the
-first; the term Minster being only properly applied to the church of a
-monastery, such as York, Canterbury, Peterborough, Ripon, and Southwell;
-of these, Canterbury is not often called a Minster, but York is always.
-Lincoln was never attached to a monastery.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-PAULINUS AND HUGH OF LINCOLN
-
- Pope Gregory and St. Augustine—Calumnies against the Jews—The
- Three “St. Hugh’s.”
-
-
-Perhaps here it may be well to say something of the life of Paulinus, the
-first Christian missionary in Lincoln. And in doing so I must acknowledge
-the debt I owe to Sir Henry Howorth’s most interesting book, “The Birth
-of the English Church.”
-
-[Sidenote: PAULINUS BISHOP OF YORK]
-
-When Pope Gregory, having been struck by the sight of some fair-haired
-Anglian boys being sold as slaves in the Roman Forum, had determined to
-send a Mission to preach the Gospel in their land, he chose the prior of
-his own monastery of St. Andrew’s, which was on the site where now stands
-the church of San Gregorio on the Cælian Hill in Rome. The name of the
-prior was Augustine. With his companion monks, he set out, apparently
-in the spring of 596. They went from Ostia by sea to Gaul, but lingered
-in that country for above a year, and landed on the Isle of Thanet in
-April 597. He was well received by Æthelbert King of Kent and his wife
-Bertha, daughter of Charibert King of Paris. She was a Christian, and had
-brought her Christian chaplain with her. This made Augustine’s mission
-comparatively easy. Quarters were given him in Canterbury, and he began
-to build a monastery and was allowed to make use of the little church
-dedicated to St. Martin, where the Queen’s chaplain had officiated.
-Having then sent to the Pope for more missionaries, he received
-instructions from Gregory to establish a Metropolitan See in London
-and other Bishoprics in York and elsewhere. At the same time several
-recruits were sent to him among whom Bede particularises Mellitus,
-Justus, Paulinus, and Rufinianus. The first three became respectively
-Bishops of London, Rochester, and York, and Rufinianus Abbot of St.
-Augustine’s monastery at Canterbury. By the Pope’s command all these
-bishops were to be subject to Augustine during his life, and he was to
-be the Archbishop of Canterbury. Augustine died in the same year as St.
-Gregory, A.D. 604. A few years later, about 616, Mellitus and Justus
-both withdrew for a year to Gaul, but were recalled by King Eadbald,
-Justus to Rochester and Mellitus to become Archbishop of Canterbury after
-Laurence, a priest whom Augustine himself had selected to succeed him in
-604, and who died in 619. To this post Justus succeeded in 624, and, as
-Archbishop, consecrated Romanus to the See of Rochester. Shortly after
-this Paulinus was consecrated Bishop of York by Justus in 625, and he
-accompanied Æthelbert’s daughter Æthelberga to the Court of Ædwin King
-of Deira, who ruled from the Forth to the Thames and who had sought her
-hand, promising that she should be free to worship as she liked and that
-if on inquiry he found her religion better than his own he would also
-become a Christian. He discussed the matter with Paulinus, and after many
-months’ delay summoned a Witenagemote and asked each counsellor what he
-thought of the new teaching, which at present had no hold except in Kent.
-Coifi, the Chief Priest of the old religion, was the first to speak;
-he said he had not got any good from his own religion though none had
-served the gods more faithfully—so if the new doctrine held out better
-hopes he would advise the king to adopt it without further delay. Coifi
-was followed by another of the king’s Ealdormen. His speech was a very
-remarkable one, and is accurately rendered by the poet Wordsworth in his
-Sonnet called _Persuasion_, which runs thus:—
-
- “Man’s life is like a sparrow, mighty King!
- That—while at banquet with your Chiefs you sit
- Housed near a blazing fire—is seen to flit
- Safe from the wintry tempest. Fluttering,
- Here did it enter; there, on hasty wing,
- Flies out, and passes on from cold to cold;
- But whence it came we know not, nor behold
- Whither it goes. Even such that transient thing,
- The human Soul; not utterly unknown
- While in the Body lodged, her warm abode;
- But from what world she came, what use or weal
- On her departure waits, no tongue hath shown;
- This mystery if the Stranger can reveal,
- His be a welcome cordially bestowed!”
-
-[Sidenote: THE FIRST ENGLISH BISHOP]
-
-After this the king gave Paulinus permission to preach the Gospel
-openly, and he himself renounced idolatry, and in April 627, with a
-large number of his people, he was baptized at York in the little church
-which was the first to be built on the site of York Minster. After this
-Paulinus baptized in the river Swale, and later he came to the province
-of “Lindissi,” and spent some time in Lincoln, converting Blaecca the
-“Reeve” of the city, and baptizing in the presence of the king a great
-number of people in the Trent either at Littleborough or Torksey.
-
-He appears to have spent some time in Lincoln, and to have come back to
-it after 633, for early in 635 he consecrated Honorius the successor to
-Justus, and fifth Archbishop of Canterbury. The ceremony taking place
-probably in the little “church of stone” that he had built, possibly
-where St. Paul’s Church now stands. It was probably thatched with reeds,
-for eighty years later Bede speaks of it as being unroofed. If St. Paul’s
-church really was originally the church of Paulinus, it helps to remove
-the stigma that though Paulinus preached and baptised with effect, unlike
-Wilfrith, he founded nothing.
-
-In 633 King Ædwin and both his sons were killed after a great battle
-against Penda King of Mercia and Coedwalla King of the Britons, at
-Haethfelth near Doncaster, and Christianity in Northumbria came to an
-abrupt end; though, when Paulinus left, to escort the widowed queen back
-to Kent, his faithful deacon James remained behind him, whose memorial we
-probably have in the inscribed cross shaft with its unusual interlaced
-pattern at Hawkswell near Catterick. To York Paulinus never returned;
-but on the death of Romanus, who had been sent by Archbishop Justus on a
-mission to the Pope but was drowned in the Bay of Genoa, he took charge
-of the See of Rochester, and there he remained till his death on October
-10, 644, after he had been Bishop at York for eight and at Rochester
-for eleven years. Archbishop Honorius, who was consecrated just a year
-before the death of a Pope of the same name, ordained Ithamar to succeed
-Paulinus. He was a native of Kent and the first Englishman to be made
-a bishop. After the death of Paulinus in 644, more than four centuries
-passed before Remigius began to build the cathedral in 1075, which was
-altered and amplified so remarkably about 100 years later by Hugh of
-Lincoln.
-
-
-HUGH OF LINCOLN
-
-[Sidenote: BISHOP HUGH OF LINCOLN]
-
-[Sidenote: CANONIZED]
-
-“Hugh of Lincoln” is a title which, like Cerberus in Sheridan’s play,
-indicates “three gentlemen at once,” and it will perhaps prevent
-confusion if I briefly distinguish the three.
-
-The first and greatest is the Burgundian, usually called from his
-birthplace on the frontier of Savoy “Hugh of Avalon.” He went to a good
-school in Grenoble, and, as a youth, joined the monastery of the Grande
-Chartreuse, where he rose to be procurator or bursar. In 1175, at the
-request of Henry II. who had, with difficulty, obtained the consent of
-the Archbishop of Grenoble, he came to England to become the first prior
-of the king’s new monastery at Witham in Somerset, the first Carthusian
-house in England. In 1186, much against his will, he was, by the king’s
-decree, elected Bishop of Lincoln, and took up his residence at Stow,
-where he at once set to work to master the English tongue. His rule of
-life was ascetic, and he made a practice of going every year in harvest
-time to live as a simple monk at Witham. He was a strong man, with high
-ideals, upright, unselfish and charitable, no believer in the miracles
-of the day, and so free from prejudice that he always protected the
-hated Jews, who wept sincere tears at his funeral. He was active in his
-huge diocese, and was a maker of history, for, besides extending and
-beautifying the cathedral of Remigius, he eventually became so powerful
-that he joined the Archbishops in excommunicating their Sovereign, and in
-1197 he successfully opposed King Richard I. and his “Justiciar,” who was
-the great Archbishop _Hubert Walter_. Walter, when Bishop of Salisbury,
-had accompanied Richard to the crusade, where he was the king’s chief
-agent in negotiating with Saladin. He headed the first party of pilgrims
-whom the Turks admitted to the Holy Sepulchre, led back the English host
-from Palestine in the king’s absence to Sicily, whence he went to visit
-Richard in captivity, and repaired to England to raise the £100,000
-demanded for his ransom. He was made by the king’s command Archbishop of
-Canterbury, crowned the king a second time in 1194 at Winchester, and as
-“Justiciar” had the task of finding means to supply Richard’s ceaseless
-demands for money for his wars. Hence it was that he had summoned a
-meeting of bishops and barons at Oxford on December 7, 1197, at which he
-proposed that they should agree to the king’s latest demand and should
-themselves furnish him with three hundred knights to serve for twelve
-months against Philip of France, or give him money which would suffice
-to obtain them. This was strenuously and successfully opposed by Hugh,
-seconded by Herbert Bishop of Salisbury, and this action is spoken of by
-Stubbs as a landmark of constitutional history, being “the first clear
-case of the refusal of a money grant demanded by the Crown.” Hugh was in
-France when Henry II. died, but returned in time for the coronation of
-Richard I. He several times attended both Richard and John to Normandy,
-and when Richard died he buried him at Fontevrault in 1199, where Henry
-II. and his wife, Eleanora of Guienne, and John’s wife, Isabella of
-Angoulême, are also buried. He was back in England for John’s coronation
-on May 27, but, going again to visit the haunts of his boyhood at
-Grenoble, he caught a fever and, after a long illness, died next year
-in the London house of the Bishops of Lincoln, at the “Old Temple.” He
-was buried in his own cathedral, November 24, 1200, in the north-east
-transept, King John, who happened to be then in Lincoln, to receive
-the homage of the Scottish king, taking part as bearer in the funeral
-procession. Worship of him began at once, and was greatly augmented when
-the Pope canonized him in 1220. In 1230, when Richard of Gravesend had
-completed the angel choir, St. Hugh’s body was translated to it in the
-presence of King Edward I and Queen Eleanor and their children. This was
-ten years before Eleanor’s death at Harby, near Lincoln. The only thing
-recorded against Bishop Hugh is that he should have, upon Henry’s death,
-ordered the taking up of Fair Rosamond’s bones from Godstow Priory.
-
-The story of St. Hugh’s swan is curious but not incredible. Sir Charles
-Anderson says: “It seems, from the minute description of the bill, to
-have been a wild swan or whooper.” This swan was greatly attached to its
-master, and constantly attended him when in residence at Stow Park, where
-there was a good deal of water, and many wildfowl. It is said, also, that
-on his last visit the bird showed signs of restlessness and distress. Sir
-Charles sees no reason to withhold belief from the story, and instances
-the case of a gander, within his own knowledge, which attached itself to
-a farmer in the county, and used to accompany him daily for a mile and
-a half, when he went to look after his cattle in the meadows, waddling
-after him with the greatest diligence and satisfaction; and, whenever he
-stopped, fondling his legs with neck and bill.
-
-The “Magna Vita S. Hugonis” in the Bodleian, written by Adam, Abbot of
-Evesham soon after his death, is the chief source of our information
-about him; and a metrical life, also, in Latin, is both in the Bodleian
-and in the British Museum.
-
-[Sidenote: BISHOP HUGH OF WELLS]
-
-Nine years after St. Hugh’s death, Hugh the Second, or “Hugh of Wells,”
-was appointed bishop. He carried out the plans of his namesake, and
-completed the aisles and transepts and added the nave-chapels at the west
-end with their circular windows. He added to the episcopal palace begun
-by St. Hugh, and built that at _Buckden_—a fine brick building which
-later became the sole palace. The Bishops of Lincoln had a visitation
-palace at Lyddington, near Rockingham, in which a singularly beautiful
-carved wood frieze ran all round the large room. In the “Metrical Life of
-St. Hugh” we read that what St. Hugh planned, but left unfinished, Hugh
-of Wells completed.
-
- “Perficietur opus primi sub Hugone secundo.”
-
-[Sidenote: LITTLE ST. HUGH]
-
-He died in 1235, and is buried in the north choir aisle. His extremely
-harsh treatment of the Jews leads us to the curiously tragic events in
-the life of the third Hugh, called the “Little St. Hugh.” He was born in
-1246, and only lived nine years. That great man Grosteste, or Grostête,
-had succeeded Hugh of Wells, and died after an active episcopate of
-eighteen years, in 1254. His successor, Henry Lexington, had procured
-leave to extend the cathedral close beyond the Roman city wall in order
-to build the beautiful presbytery or angel choir for the shrine of Hugh
-I. He was still engaged on this when the persecution which the Jews had
-long endured produced such a bitter feeling that they were believed to
-be capable of kidnapping and crucifying, or by less conspicuous methods,
-putting to death a Christian boy when they had a chance. Hugh was said
-to be a chorister who disappeared, and his mother, led by a dream,
-discovered his body in a well outside the Newport Gate. A Jew called
-Jopin, or Chopin, but in a French ballad Peitevin, was accused of his
-murder, and is said to have confessed and to have been put to death with
-others of his nation with no small barbarity. He has left his memory at
-Lincoln in the name of “The Jews’ House,” which is given to the Norman
-building on the steep hill. This story was not uncommon, and told with
-much detail, as having really happened, in several places; nor is the
-belief in it yet dead. The boy’s body was given to the canons of the
-cathedral, who buried him with much solemnity in the south aisle of the
-choir, and set a small shrine over him, to which folk came to worship,
-and he received the title of “the Little St. Hugh.”
-
-[Illustration: _St. Mary’s Guild, Lincoln._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE JEWS]
-
-This story is referred to by Chaucer, who wrote a hundred years later in
-“The Prioress’ Tale”:—
-
- “O younge Hew of Lincoln sleyn also
- With cursed Jewes, as it is notable,
- For it nis but a litel whyle ago.”
-
-His story makes the murdered boy reveal himself by singing “O alma
-Redemptoris Mater” “loude and clere,” although, as he says—
-
- “My throte is cut unto my nekke-bon.”
-
-and he does not stop singing till a ‘greyn’ is taken from his tongue by
-the abbot
-
- “and he yaf up the goost ful softely.”
-
-Marlowe has a similar story in his “Jew of Malta,” and ballads constantly
-were made on this theme. Sir Charles Anderson quotes one beginning:—
-
- “The bonny boys of merry Lincoln
- Were playing at the ball,
- And with them stood the sweet Sir Hugh,
- The flower of them all.
- Whom cursed Jews did crucify,” &c.
-
-He was buried, in 1255, next to Bishop Grosteste, who had died two years
-before.
-
-The persistence of this medieval accusation against the Jews is
-singularly illustrated by a case which is reported in the papers of
-October 9, 1913, headed “Ritual Murder Trial.” The trial is at Kieff in
-Russia, of a perfectly innocent man called Beiliss, who has been more
-than two years in prison without knowing the reason, and is charged with
-the murder of a Christian boy called Yushinsky “to obtain blood for
-Jewish sacrificial rites.” _The Times_ says that ritual murder is not
-now mentioned in the indictment. But that so monstrous a charge should
-be even hinted at shows how deeply these old malignant calumnies sank
-into the medieval mind, and how prone to superstition and how ready to
-believe evil we are even in the twentieth century of the Christian era.
-The whole idea is on a par with the abominable cruelties of the days
-when defenceless old women were burnt as witches, and is a cruel and
-absolutely baseless calumny on a long-suffering and law-abiding people,
-and yet there are plenty of people to-day in Russia who firmly believe in
-it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-LINCOLN.—THE CITY
-
- The City—The Corporation—The City Swords—Tennyson’s Centenary
- and Statue—Queen Eleanor’s Cross—Brayford Pool—Afternoon Tea.
-
-
-[Sidenote: THE MINSTER YARD]
-
-The rate at which the soil of inhabited places rises from the various
-layers of debris which accumulate on the surface is well shown at
-Lincoln. In Egypt, where houses are built of mud, every few years an
-old building falls and the material is trodden down and a new erection
-made upon it. Hence the entrance to the temple at Esneh from the present
-outside floor level, is up among the capitals of the tall pillars; and,
-the temple being cleaned out, the floor of it and the bases of its
-columns were found to be nearly thirty feet below ground. Stone-built
-houses last much longer, but when a fire or demolition after a siege
-has taken place three or four times, a good deal of rubbish is left
-spread over the surface and it accumulates with the ages. Hence, in
-Roman Lincoln or “Lindum Colonia” pavements may be found whenever the
-soil is moved, at a depth of seven or eight feet at least, and often
-more. Thus the Roman West Gate came to light in 1836, after centuries of
-complete burial, but soon crumbled away; and the whole of the hill top
-where Britons, Romans, Danes, and Normans successively dwelt, is full of
-remains which can only on rare occasions ever have a chance of seeing the
-light. Still there is much for us to see above ground, so we may as well
-take a walk through the city, beginning at the top of the hill. Here, as
-you leave the west end of the cathedral and pass through the “Exchequer
-Gate” with its one large and two small arches, under the latter of which
-may be seen entrances to the little shopstalls where relics, rosaries,
-etc., were once sold, you pass along the flat south wall of St. Mary
-Magdalen’s Church, beyond which the outer Exchequer Gate stood till
-1800. The wall in which this and other gates of the cathedral close were
-inserted was built in the thirteenth or early fourteenth century, to
-protect the close and the canons. The gateways were all double, except
-the “Potter Gate,” which is the only other one now extant. It is said
-that the Romans had a pottery near it; at present the road to the Minster
-Yard goes both through it and round one side of it.
-
-[Illustration: _The Pottergate, Lincoln._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE CASTLE]
-
-Passing from the Exchequer Gate you see a very pretty sixteenth century
-timbered house, with projecting story, at the corner of _Bailgate_, now
-used as a bank. Hard by on your right is the White Hart inn, and on your
-left you have a peep down _Steep Street_ to the _House of Aaron the Jew_,
-a money lender of the reign of Henry II. Near this was once the South
-Gate of the Roman city, and some of the stones are still visible in the
-pavement. The gate was destroyed in 1775. Looking straight ahead from
-the Exchequer Gate you see the east gateway of the castle, a Norman arch
-with later semi-circular turrets corbelled out on either side of it.
-Inside is a fine oriel window, brought from John of Gaunt’s house below
-the hill. The enclosure is an irregular square of old British earthworks,
-seven acres in extent. The west gate is walled up and the Assize Court
-within the castle enclosure is near it. In the angles on either side of
-the east gate are two towers in the curtain wall, one, “the observatory
-tower,” crowns an ancient mound, and on the south side is a larger mound,
-forty feet high, on which is the keep, a very good specimen of very early
-work, in shape an irregular polygon. The castle was one of the eight
-founded by the Conqueror himself, apparently never so massive a building
-as his castle, which is now being excavated at _Old Sarum_, the walls of
-which, built of the flints of the locality, are twelve feet thick and
-faced with stone. At Lincoln the Roman walls were ten to twelve feet
-thick and twenty feet high. Massive fragments of this wall still exist in
-different places, the biggest being near the Newport Arch. Near here too
-is “The Mint Wall,” seventy feet long by thirty feet high, and three and
-a half feet thick, which probably formed the north wall of the Basilica.
-Most of the fighting in Lincoln used to take place around this spot,
-as Stephen felt to his cost. The old West Gate of the Roman city was
-found just to the north of the castle west gate. The line which joined
-the Roman East and West Gates ran straight then, and crossed the Ermine
-Street, now called here the Bailgate, near the church of St. Paulinus,
-but the result of some destructive assaults must have so filled the road
-that the street now called ‘East Gate’ was deflected from its course
-southwards and has to make a sharp bend to get back to its proper line.
-
-[Illustration: _The Jew’s House, Lincoln._]
-
-[Illustration: _Remains of the Whitefriars’ Priory, Lincoln._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE JEW’S HOUSE]
-
-[Sidenote: THE FRIARS]
-
-[Sidenote: ST. MARY’S GUILD]
-
-Getting back to the ‘Bail,’ or open space between the castle gate and the
-Exchequer Gate, we can go down that bit of the old Ermine Street called
-“Steep Street” (and I don’t think any street can better deserve its name)
-and come into the High Street of Lincoln. If we go right down this, we
-shall see all that is of most interest in the town below the hill. First
-is the “Jew’s House” where the murderer of Little St. Hugh is said to
-have lived, a most interesting specimen of Norman domestic architecture,
-and more ornate than that at Boothby-Pagnell of a similar date. The
-house has a round-headed doorway, with a chimney-breast starting
-from above the doorway arch, and showing that the upper floor had a
-fireplace. On either side the door now are modern shop windows. Between
-the stringcourses are two double light windows, with a plain tympanum
-under a round arch. Belaset of Wallingford, a Jewess, lived here in the
-reign of Edward I. She was hanged for clipping coin in 1290, the year of
-the Jews’ Expulsion. At the bottom of the street, No. 333, is another
-charming old structure called “White Friars’ House” with a projecting
-timbered front, and a passage round one end like that at the old “God
-begot” house at Winchester. All Friars, whether White (Carmelite), Black
-(Dominican), Grey (Franciscan), or Black and White (Augustinian), were to
-be found in Lincoln as well as at Stamford, and, with the exception of
-the Dominicans, at Boston too. One more bit of old domestic building is
-the hall of St. Mary’s Guild, commonly called John o’ Gaunt’s Stables.
-Here you may see a combination of the round and the pointed arch, which
-dates it as late Norman. The house is longer than the other two, and the
-upper story mostly gone, but in Parker’s “Domestic Architecture” it is
-spoken of as “probably the most valuable and extensive range of buildings
-of the twelfth century that we have remaining in England.” The house
-within has round-headed windows with a mid-wall shaft, and a fireplace.
-The house just opposite was the palace built by John of Gaunt for
-Katharine Swynford; from which the oriel window inside the castle gateway
-was taken. These old Norman houses are all small. The really magnificent
-building which was once the boast of Lincoln was a thousand years earlier
-than these; this was the Roman Basilica, or Hall of Judgment, near
-Bailgate, perhaps, the baths at the town of Bath alone excepted, the
-finest Roman building in England. Figure to yourself a building 250 feet
-long by seventy feet wide, with a triangular pediment rising from a row
-of pillars thirty feet high, something like what we still see at Milan.
-Alas! that only the pillar bases of this fine hall have been found. The
-pillars ran along the west side of Bailgate facing east.
-
-[Illustration: _St. Mary’s Guild and St. Peter’s at Gowts, Lincoln._]
-
-[Sidenote: SAXON TOWERS]
-
-[Sidenote: ST. BENEDICT’S]
-
-As we pass down the High Street we shall see on our left the Saxon towers
-of St. Mary le Wigford and of “St. Peters at Gowts.” The “gowts” or
-sluices were the two watercourses for taking the waters of the “Meres”
-into the Witham, originally there were small bridges on either side over
-each, with a ford between them for carts. These towers are tall and
-without buttresses, having the Saxon long and short work and the upper
-two-light window with the mid-wall jamb, and only small and irregularly
-placed lights below. They are in style much what you see in Italy,
-though the Italian are higher, but certainly none in England are so
-uncompromisingly plain as the towers at Ravenna and Bologna. St. Andrews
-in Scotland comes nearest, and bears a really extraordinary likeness to
-that of St. John the Evangelist at Ravenna. Near St. Mary le Wigford is
-the picturesque little remnant of a beautiful but disused church, called
-St. Benedict’s; only the ivy-clad chancel, a side chapel and the recent
-low tower are left, a very picturesque and peaceful object in the busy
-town. Its original tower held a beautifully decorated bell, called “Old
-Kate,” the gift of the Surgeon Barbers in 1585, it used to ring at 6 a.m.
-and 7 p.m., to mark the beginning and end of the day’s labour. It now
-hangs in the tower of St. Mark’s.
-
-The name of ‘le Wigford,’ Wickford or Wickenford, indicates the suburb
-south of the river. In the days when kings used to wear their crowns, an
-uneasy belief in the old saying—
-
- “The crownéd head that enters Lincoln walls,
- His reign is stormy and his Kingdom falls,”
-
-made the monarch take it off on passing from Wickford to the city,
-and certainly of all the kings who were crowned in the cathedral none
-wore the crown outside except Stephen, and he, as we have seen, soon
-had cause to repent it. It has been supposed that both these early
-Lincoln churches were built by a Danish citizen called “Coleswegen,”
-who is mentioned in Domesday Book as having thirty-six houses and two
-churches outside the city. But though Lincoln has not lost nearly so
-many churches and religious houses as Winchester has, yet, where she now
-has a dozen she once had fifty, so it must be extremely doubtful whether
-these two old ones that remain were those of Coleswegen. St. Mary’s now
-has a Perpendicular parapet, and, besides the curious tower arch, some
-interesting Early English work, and both churches have some good modern
-ironwork in pulpit, screen and rails from the Brant Broughton forge.
-
-[Illustration: _St. Benedict’s Church, Lincoln._]
-
-[Illustration: _St. Mary-le-Wigford, Lincoln._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE “CONDUIT”]
-
-[Sidenote: THE BRIDGE AND THE STONEBOW]
-
-The woodwork in St. Peter’s was done by the parish clerk, a pleasant
-feature not nearly so common now as it used to be. At the road side,
-and close to the churchyard rails of St. Mary’s, is a handsome carved
-drinking fountain, here called a “conduit,” partly made of stones from
-the demolished Whitefriars monastery founded 1269. Leland speaks of it
-as new in 1540, and it was repaired in 1672. The Grey Friars conduit and
-the High bridge conduit are supplied from the same chalybeate spring,
-which once sufficed to turn the mill at the monks’ house, now standing in
-ruins a mile to the east of the city. This was one of the good deeds of
-the Franciscans, to bring good drinking water within reach of the poor.
-A similar system of “conduits” also due to them, existed at Grantham.
-A serious epidemic, traced to the drinking water, which broke out in
-Lincoln a few years ago, caused the town to go to great expense in laying
-on a new supply which comes twenty miles in iron pipes from Elkesley,
-Notts, between Retford and Clumber, and crosses the Trent at Dunham on a
-little bridge of its own.
-
-The “High bridge” marks the spot where the Ermine Street forded the
-Witham. It is the only bridge left in England out of many which still
-carries houses on it. The ribbed arch is a very old one, twenty-two feet
-wide. The houses are now only on one side, they are quaintly timbered,
-and their backs, seen from below by the waterside, are very picturesque.
-On the other side is an obelisk, set up 150 years ago, to mark the site
-of a bridge chapel dedicated to St. Thomas of Canterbury. From here you
-get the most magnificent view that any town can boast, as you look up the
-steep street to the splendid pile which crowns the height, and see the
-cathedral in all its beauty.
-
-The length of the High Street is relieved by the “Stonebow.” There was
-always a gate here from Roman times onward, for when the Roman town was
-extended southward to a good deal more than twice its original size,
-it was here that the new wall crossed the Ermine Street. The road had
-crossed the swampy ground and forded the river, and was now about to
-enter the city and climb the hill. The mediæval gate which succeeded the
-Roman ‘porta’ was removed in the fourteenth century, and the present one
-dates from the sixteenth, and was repaired in 1887, at Queen Victoria’s
-Jubilee. It has one central and two side arches, with slender towers
-between, carried up to a battlemented parapet. On the east tower is a
-tall figure of the Archangel Gabriel, and in a niche on the other tower
-the Virgin Mary. The patroness of the city and cathedral is represented
-treading on a dragon. A long room above the arch with timbered roof is
-used as a Guildhall; in it are portraits of Queen Anne and Thomas Sutton
-of Knaith, founder of the Charterhouse. The corporation, to whom they
-belong, has had a long and distinguished existence, for municipal life in
-Lincoln began in Roman times; and when they left, and Saxons, Danes or
-Normans ruled, and the counties and towns had to adopt new names under
-each successive conqueror, Lincoln retained throughout her Roman name
-and her right of self-government. The corporation, besides their fine
-Restoration mace, have three civic swords, one apparently made up out of
-two, but said to have been presented by Richard II. when he visited the
-city in 1386, to be carried point uppermost, except in presence of the
-sovereign.
-
-[Illustration: _The Stonebow, Lincoln._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE CIVIC SWORDS]
-
-[Sidenote: THE “FOX”]
-
-The facts about the swords are these: the Charles I. sword, supposed to
-have been presented to the city at the beginning of the Civil War, in
-1642, has been mutilated to supply a new blade to the Richard II. sword.
-This was done by order of the mayor in 1734. The blade has on it the orb
-and cross mark and also the running wolf—a fourteenth century German
-mark—but so common was it on the foreign blades used in England in the
-sixteenth century that, the figure being taken for a fox—as wolves were
-not then common in England—the term “Fox” was transformed to the sword;
-hence in Shakespeare’s “Henry V.” act iv., scene 4, we have Pistol saying
-to his French prisoner on the field of battle:—
-
- “O Signieur Dew, thou diest on point of fox.”
-
-and in one of Webster’s plays we have—
-
- “Of what a blade is’t?
- A Toledo or an English fox?”
-
-The two finest churches in Lincoln were at one time St. Swithun’s and
-St. Botolph’s. The former was burnt down, but, after a century, was
-rebuilt badly, but has now been restored by the munificence of Messrs.
-Clayton and Shuttleworth to its former grandeur, and has a really fine
-tower and spire, designed by Fowler, of Louth. St. Botolph’s, near the
-south “Bargate,” had to endure a similar period of decay, but was at last
-resuscitated, the south aisle being the last gift to the town of Bishop
-Christopher Wordsworth.
-
-Lincoln’s last new building, the Carnegie Library, designed by Mr.
-Reginald Blomfield, stands in St. Swithun’s Square. It was opened on
-February 24th, 1914.
-
-[Illustration: _Old Inland Revenue Office, Lincoln._]
-
-Two other houses are interesting because of their inmates in the
-eighteenth century; one the old Jacobean mansion of the Bromheads of
-Thurlby, whose descendant, Captain Gonville Bromhead, won with Lieutenant
-Chard undying fame by the defence of Rorke’s Drift in the Zulu War, 1879.
-The other is a house called Deloraine House, in which once lived George
-Tennyson, grandfather of the poet; and we cannot quit Lincoln without
-going to see the fine bronze statue of the poet by G. F. Watts, which
-stands in the close at the east end of the cathedral.
-
-[Sidenote: THE TENNYSON STATUE]
-
-[Sidenote: THE POET’S WOLFHOUND]
-
-In the autumn of 1909 the centenary of the poet’s birth was celebrated at
-Lincoln. Dean Wickham preached an eloquent sermon to a large congregation
-in the cathedral nave, after which, the choir, leaving the cathedral,
-grouped themselves round the statue and sang “Crossing the Bar,” and
-Bishop King gave a short and memorable address. In the evening the
-writer read a paper on Tennyson to an intently listening audience of
-twelve hundred people, which is now published by Routledge & Co., in
-a little book called “Introductions to the Poets, by W. F. Rawnsley.”
-Lincoln that day showed how fully she appreciated the great Lincolnshire
-poet. The statue, a colossal one, represents him looking at a flower,
-as described in his poem, “Flower in the crannied wall,” and his grand
-wolf-hound is looking up into his face. This hound was a Russian, whose
-grandfather had belonged to the Czar Alexander II., he who freed the
-serfs in 1861, and was so basely assassinated twenty years later. The
-wolf-hound was a very handsome light brindle, with a curious black
-patch near the collar. She had a litter of thirteen, and one of these
-with the mother, “Lufra,” was given to the writer when living at Park
-Hill, Lyndhurst, in the New Forest. The puppy, “Cossack,” was Mrs.
-Rawnsley’s constant companion till he died of old age in his sleep; the
-mother went to Farringford to replace an old favourite that Tennyson had
-lately lost. Her new owner changed her name to Karenina, and she was his
-constant companion to the end. Once again, if not twice, she had a litter
-of thirteen, and the cares of her large family not unnaturally were at
-times too much for her temper. She is now immortalised with her master
-in bronze, executed with loving care by his own old friend and quondam
-neighbour in the Isle of Wight. The inscription at the back of the
-pedestal is: “Alfred Lord Tennyson, born 1809, died 1892”; and below it
-is “George Frederick Watts, born 1817, died 1904.”
-
-[Illustration: _James Street, Lincoln_]
-
-Another monument which once adorned Lincoln was the first and one of the
-very best in the list of Queen Eleanor’s crosses, designed by the famous
-“Richard of Stowe,” who carved the figures in the angel choir. Only a
-fragment of this survived what Precentor Venables calls “the fierce
-religious storm of 1645.” Before starting on its long funeral procession
-to Westminster, the Queen’s body was embalmed by the Gilbertine nuns of
-St. Catherine’s Priory, close to which, at the junction of the Ermine
-Street and Foss Way, the cross was set up, near the leper hospital of
-Remigius, called the Malandery (Fr. Maladerie) hospital.
-
-[Sidenote: THE “STUFF BALL”]
-
-Two railway stations and the many large iron and agricultural implement
-works, which have given Lincoln a name all over the world, occupy the
-lower part of the town, with buildings more useful than beautiful; for
-this industry has taken the place of the woollen factories which were
-once the mainstay of Lincoln. But a tall building with small windows,
-known as “The Old Factory,” still indicates the place in which the
-“Lincoln Stuff” was made, from which the Lincoln “Stuff Ball” took its
-name. In order to increase the production and popularise the wear of
-woollen material for ladies’ dresses, it was arranged to have balls
-at which no lady should be admitted who did not wear a dress of the
-Lincolnshire stuff. The first of these was held at the Windmill Inn,
-Alford, in 1785. The colour selected was orange; but, the room not being
-large enough for the number of dancers, in 1789 it was moved to Lincoln,
-where it has been held ever since, the lady patroness choosing the colour
-each year. In 1803 the wearing of this hot material was commuted to an
-obligation to take so many yards of the stuff. The manufacture has long
-ago come to an end, but the “Stuff Ball” survives, and the colours are
-still selected.
-
-The swamps of the Wigford suburb have also disappeared, but _Brayford
-Pool_, beloved of artists, where the Foss Dyke joins the Witham, still
-makes a beautiful picture with the boats and barges and swans in front
-below, and the Minster towers looking down into it from above. This Foss
-Dyke was a Crown property, until James I., finding it to be nothing
-but an expense, with economic liberality presented it to the mayor and
-corporation.
-
-[Illustration: _Thorngate, Lincoln._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE “GREY FRIARS”]
-
-The river was always outside of the Roman town, for the south wall,
-running east and west from the Stonebow, where are now Guildhall Street
-and Saltergate, turned up by Broadgate Street, and here, just inside its
-south-east angle, is now the interesting “Grey Friars,” a thirteenth
-century building consisting of a vaulted undercroft and long upper room,
-now used as a museum.
-
-[Sidenote: AFTERNOON TEA]
-
-I have no Lincoln notes of the eighteenth century of any special
-interest, but from this little extract it looks as if the institution of
-afternoon tea had been anticipated by a hundred years in Lincoln. The
-extract is from “A Sketch wrote Aug. 4, 1762, at Lincoln,” and deals with
-housekeeping expenses. The entries are:—
-
- “Three guineas a year for tea £3 3 0
- “Loave sugar 3 0 0
- “Tea, a quarter of an ounce each morning.
- “Sugar, half of a quarter of a pound each morning.
- “Also an allowance for sometimes in the afternoon.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-ROADS FROM LINCOLN, WEST AND EAST.—MARTON, STOW, COTES-BY-STOW, SNARFORD,
-AND BUSLINGTHORPE
-
- West—The Foss-Dyke—Marton—Stow—Cotes-by-Stow.
- East—Fiskerton—Barlings Abbey—Gautby—Baumber—Snelland—Snarford
- and the St. Poll Tombs—Buslingthorpe—Early Brass—Linwood.
-
-
-[Sidenote: PASSAGES OF THE TRENT]
-
-Of the eight roads from Lincoln one goes west, and, passing over the Foss
-Dyke by a swing bridge at Saxilby, crosses the Trent between Newton and
-Dunham into Nottinghamshire. The view of Lincoln Minster from Saxilby,
-with the sails of the barges in the foreground as they slowly make their
-way to the wharves at the foot of the hill, is most picturesque. Saxilby
-preserves some interesting churchwarden’s accounts from 1551 to 1569,
-and, after a gap of fifty-five years, from 1624 to 1790. The “Foss Dyke”
-is a canal made by the Romans to connect the Witham with the Trent and
-deepened by Henry I. The road runs alongside of it from Saxilby for two
-miles. Consequently we get glimpses now and again of the low round-nosed
-barges with widespread canvas sailing slowly past trees and hedgerows;
-then we turn north and pass by Kettlethorpe Lodge and Fenton village,
-through lanes lined with oak trees or edged with gorse, and amidst fields
-brilliant with corn-marigold, and poppy, till we come, all at once, on
-a little fleet of barges waiting with their picturesque unfurled sails
-for a passage through the lock near Torksey, a place of some importance
-in Saxon times, having two monastic houses. Two miles beyond Torksey is
-_Marton_. This place is also approached by the old Roman road, now called
-“Till bridge Lane,” which branched off from the Ermine Street ten miles
-above Lincoln, and went to Doncaster and York, crossing both arms of
-the river Till near _Thorpe-in-the-fallows_. One mile from Marton this
-road passes out of the county at Littleborough ferry, the “Segelocum” of
-the Romans. The ferry is the main means of crossing the Trent where it
-touches Lincolnshire, as there are but two bridges in twenty miles, one
-at Gainsborough, and one between Dunham and _Newton-on-Trent_, where the
-view from the cliff with the bridge below is very picturesque.
-
-[Illustration: _Lincoln from the Witham._]
-
-There is a ferry at Laneham, between Newton and Torksey; and below
-Gainsborough are half a dozen, at _Stockwith_, _Ouston_, _Althorpe_,
-_Keadby_, where a bridge is now being built, _Flixborough_, and _Burton
-Stather_, but the latter only takes foot passengers, and the others are
-all, I believe, of the same calibre. It is just the same on the Ouse,
-across which Yokefleet and Ousefleet look at each other about a mile
-apart, but to drive from one to the other is a matter of more than thirty
-miles.
-
-[Sidenote: MARTON]
-
-[Sidenote: HISTORY OF THE DIOCESE]
-
-_Marton_ is a tiny place, but has a very interesting church, with
-unbuttressed tower and heavily embattled parapet to both nave and
-chancel. The tower up to the upper stringcourse is entirely built in
-Norman “Herringbone” work, this is now plastered over outside, but you
-can trace the herring-bone through the plaster, and inside the tower it
-is plain to see, and shows courses of thin stone laid horizontally at
-frequent intervals. Above the stringcourse is the usual two light window
-with mid-wall jamb, which, like the Long-and-Short work at the angles
-of the tower, we generally describe as Saxon. Several Saxon stones with
-interlaced work, parts of a cross probably, are built into the west end
-of the south aisle at about two feet from the ground outside. I always
-want to see these very old stones inside, for their better preservation.
-Above the present nave roof, but below the mark of the earlier and
-high-pitched roof, is a door which once opened from the tower into the
-church. The chancel arch is Norman, as are the two lofty bays of the
-north arcade. The rest of the church is Early English. In the chancel
-south wall is a large niche with a pedestal, evidently intended for a
-figure, perhaps of St. Margaret, the patron saint, and there is also a
-low-side window of one light with a two-light window above it. But the
-most interesting thing in the chancel is a little stone, nine inches by
-eleven, now in the north wall, which was lately found in part of the wall
-where it had been used as building material; this has on it a very early
-attenuated figure of the crucified Saviour, clothed in long drapery. It
-might have been part of a cross-head; certainly it is a very remarkable
-figure, and of very early date. There is a tall cross-shaft and pedestal,
-now in the churchyard, but this is said to have been a market cross
-originally. The Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings were
-called in to do the work of repairing and, as usual, their work has been
-done in an inexpensive manner and on conservative lines. They found that
-the foundation of the old walls, only two feet below the surface, was
-just a trench filled with loose pebbles and sand. Three miles to the east
-of Marton stands the church which, next to the Minster, we may put at the
-head of the list of all the churches in the county. This is what Murray
-rightly speaks of as “The venerable church of St. Mary at Stow, the
-mother church of the great Minster.”
-
-[Sidenote: STOW]
-
-_Stow_ is thought to be identical with the Roman _Sidnacester_, and the
-first church was built there in 678 by the Saxon King Egfrith, husband
-of Etheldred, the foundress of Ely, at the time when Wilfrid’s huge
-Northumbrian diocese was divided. From 627, when Paulinus, Bishop of
-York, preached at Lincoln, baptized in the Trent and built the first
-stone church in Lincolnshire, to 656, the province of Lindisse, or
-Lindsey, was under the Bishop of York. From 656 to 678 it was under the
-Bishops of Mercia, whose “Bishop-stool” was at Repton, and after 669 at
-Lichfield. In 678 King Egfrith of Northumbria established the diocese
-of Lindsey, with Eadred as first bishop, with its “Bishop-stool,” and a
-church of stone built for the See at Sidnacester or Stow. This lasted
-for 192 years; then, in 870, the Danes overran Mercia and burnt Stow
-church and murdered Bishop Berktred. Then from 876, when England was
-divided between Edmund Ironside and Canute, Lincoln became an important
-Danish borough. This period is marked by the number of streets in Lincoln
-called ‘gates,’ and by the enormous number of villages in the county
-ending in the Danish ‘by,’ which we find side by side with the Saxon
-terminations ‘ton’ and ‘ham.’ The Danes held Lincoln certainly till 940,
-during which time the province had no bishop. In 958 Lindsey was united
-with Leicester, and the “Bishop-stool” was fixed at Dorchester-on-Thames
-till, in 1072, it was transferred to Lincoln, and the province of Lindsey
-became part of the diocese of Lincoln under Remigius, the first Bishop
-of Lincoln. _Stow_ being burnt in 870, remained in ruins till about
-1040, when Eadnoth, seventh Bishop of Dorchester, rebuilt it, using the
-materials of the older church as far as they would go, as may be seen
-in the lower part of the transept walls. He probably built the massive
-round-headed tower arches. Leofric, Earl of Mercia, and his wife, Godiva,
-helped liberally both with the building and the endowment. The Early
-Norman nave, and the upper parts of the transepts are probably the
-work of Bishop Remigius (1067-1093) who, we are told, “re-edified the
-Minster at Stow.” The chancel is late Norman, of the best kind, and,
-together with the rich doorways in the nave, may be assigned to Bishop
-Alexander (1123-1147) whose great west doorway at Lincoln is of similar
-workmanship. A few Early English windows, and the Perpendicular central
-tower, are all that has been added later, so that the church is of the
-eleventh and twelfth centuries. The tower rests on pointed arches, whose
-piers come down inside the angles formed by the old Norman arches, which
-remain, and are visible below and outside the pointed arches, and give
-the very remarkable appearance of double arches supporting the central
-tower.
-
-[Sidenote: COTES BY STOW]
-
-A curious loop-moulding goes round the western Norman arch, and is used
-also on a window in the south transept, and a similar moulding is found
-at _Coleby_. The chancel is surrounded by an arcade, and a stone seat
-runs all round. In restoring the church in 1864 Mr. Pearson left part
-of the north-west pier of the tower untouched, in order to show the red
-traces of the fire of 870, and in the north transept a mass of burnt
-stone is visible behind the organ. This is close to a fine and very
-early doorway which opens into the north aisle from the west side of
-the transept, while on the opposite side, in an altar recess, remains,
-fast fading, are seen of a fresco depicting scenes from the life of
-St. Thomas à Becket. The steep rood-loft steps start four feet above
-the pavement from the angle of the north-east pier close by. The stone
-groining of the chancel has been renewed on the old pattern obtained from
-several of the old stones which were found built into the walls; and in
-underpinning the walls in order to replace the groining, the bases of
-pillars were discovered, showing that a previous chancel with aisles had
-been either built or else begun and abandoned. The small windows and
-lack of buttresses give the outside a plain appearance, but the three
-Norman doorways are rich, and there is a great majesty about the Norman
-work of the spacious and lofty interior. The font, a very early one, is
-octagonal, and rests on eight circular shafts. It was late in the evening
-when we left this wonderful church, but we had only two miles to go to
-see the beautiful old rood screen at _Cotes-by-Stow_, which is half way
-between _Stow_ and the Ermine Street. It is approached by a field road,
-and stands at the entrance to a farm, but the little chapel, built of
-small, rough stones, is so shut in by trees that the top of its double
-bell-turret is the only part of it visible. Inside is a round tub font,
-with a square base, some old oak benches, four on one side and three on
-the other; and, what no one would expect in such a tiny remote chapel,
-the most beautiful of old Perpendicular rood screens, with exquisite
-carving, and with the overhang complete. Moreover, the gallery is still
-approachable by the ancient rood loft staircase. The loft is about three
-feet wide, and there is a tiny pair of keyhole windows, each about ten
-inches by two, set close together, in the south wall to light it. Of
-ordinary windows the whole south side has but two, though there are four
-of different sizes with old leaded panes on the north side. The doorway
-is Early English. The building was restored in an excellent manner in
-1884 by Mr. J. L. Pearson, who put back the original altar slab with its
-unusual number of six crosses.
-
-[Illustration: _Stow Church._]
-
-We recrossed the field, and passing between _Ingham_ and _Cammeringham_,
-climbed the hill, and, getting on to the ridge, turned to the right for
-Lincoln, distant about eight miles. As we went along we looked down on
-_Brattleby_ and _Aisthorpe_, on _Scampton_ and the _Carltons_, and passed
-through _Burton_ to the minster city.
-
-The mists were rising in the flat country westwards, and the ripening
-corn gave a colour to the fields below us, and, as the sun set at the
-edge of the horizon, it seemed to us that it would be extremely difficult
-to find any road in England more striking, or from which so fine a view
-could be seen for so many miles on end.
-
-[Sidenote: FISKERTON]
-
-Of the three eastern roads one goes by _Greetwell_ and _Fiskerton_ to
-_Gautby_ and _Baumber_. _Cherry Willingham_ lies just to the north where,
-till 1820, the vicarage was a small thatched house at the end of the
-village.
-
-_Fiskerton_ was given by Edward the Confessor to Peterborough, and the
-gift still holds. The charter was copied by Symon Gunton in his famous
-history of Peterborough, of which he was prebendary from 1646 to 1676,
-and at the same time rector of Fiskerton, where Dean Kipling was also
-rector in 1806. Only a few years ago what is either the original charter
-of the Confessor or an early copy was discovered in the cathedral
-library. The unique chronicle of the abbey and monastery called
-‘Swapham,’ and written in MS., was saved from Cromwell’s soldiers who
-were burning all the books, etc., by Gunton’s son, who tucked it under
-his arm, saying that it was exempt from destruction being a Bible, as any
-fool could see. That, too, is now one of the treasures of the cathedral
-library. The Fiskerton Register is one of the earliest, beginning in
-1559. In that book is the following entry for 1826:—
-
-“The driest summer known for the last 20 years. Conduit water taken from
-Lincoln to Boston. No rain from April Fair 20th to the 26th of June.
-The river was deepened this summer, packet went to Boston by the drain;
-prayers for rain during Hay harvest.”
-
-_Barlings Abbey_ lies three miles to the north-east, across Fiskerton
-Moor. It was founded in 1054 for Premonstratensian canons by Ralph de
-Hoya, and a grand tower, 180 feet high, was still standing in 1710.
-Half-way to Gautby we reach _Stainfield_, founded by Henry Percy at about
-the same time for Benedictine nuns.
-
-At _Gautby_ was once a hall belonging to the Vyner family, and in the
-church are monuments dated 1672 and 1673. Here, too, is a slab in memory
-of F. G. Vyner, who was one of the party so infamously murdered by Greek
-brigands in 1870.
-
-From here _Baumber_ is quickly reached. This church, whose massive tower
-base is Norman, is the burial place of the Duke of Newcastle’s family.
-Here, too, an old hall once stood, close by, in Sturton Park, just below
-a spur of the South Wold.
-
-[Sidenote: THE SNELLAND SHREW]
-
-From Baumber, going four miles south, we reach Horncastle. The
-main eastern road from Lincoln to Wragby is described later in the
-Louth-to-Lincoln route. It is the Roman road to Horncastle. At the
-seventh milestone, shortly after passing Sudbrooke Holme, the house of
-Mr. C. Sibthorpe, where the garden is one of the most beautifully kept
-and tastefully planted of any garden in the county, the road divides to
-the left for Market Rasen, by _Snelland_, _Wickenby_, _Lissington_, and
-_Linwood_; and to the right for Wragby, where it again divides for Louth
-on the left, and on the right for Baumber and Horncastle. The third of
-the roads takes a north-easterly direction by Dunholme to Market Rasen.
-All this route between Nettleham and Linwood lies in the flat strip of
-country some eight miles wide, which runs up from the Fens to the Humber,
-narrowing in width after reaching Brigg, from whence it is drained by
-the river Ancholme and the Wear dyke, which discharge into the Humber
-opposite Read’s Island, between South Ferriby and Winteringham. Half way
-across this flat-land, on the way to Market Rasen, and two miles to the
-left of the Wragby road, is _Snelland_. This place is called in Domesday
-Book Esnelent, and also Sneleslunt; and we find that land was held here
-by Thomas of Bayeux, Archbishop of York and chaplain to the Conqueror,
-while another land-holder was William de Percy, founder of Whitby Abbey
-and commander of the fleet which brought the Conqueror over. It is now
-the property of the Cust family. The following rhymed marriage entry is
-in the Snelland register for the year 1671, Mr. R. S. having presumably
-married a well-known scold:—
-
- “The first day of November
- Robert Sherriffe may remember
- That he was marryed for all the days of his life
- If God be not merciful to him and take his wife.”
-
-[Sidenote: THE ST. POLL TOMBS]
-
-North of _Snelland_ is _Snarford_, which we should visit, not so much to
-see the four inner arches of the church tower, which are Norman, as to
-inspect the wonderful tombs of the St. Poll family. The earliest is in
-the chancel, where Sir Thomas lies on an altar tomb in plate armour, with
-helmet under his head, bearing as crest an elephant and castle; he wears
-both sword and dagger, and holds in his hand a book. They seem to have
-been a literary family, for his wife, in a long flowing robe with girdle
-and a peculiar head-dress, also holds a book, and the side panels have a
-projection on each face also supporting a book. A son and a daughter are
-kneeling below; and a canopy supported on pillars and having a richly
-moulded cornice bears, over each pillar and between the pillars, kneeling
-figures—ten in all. Shields of arms enclosed in wreaths form further
-decorations, but both this, which is dated 1582, and the other large
-monument in the north chantry are much defaced, and the heavy canopies
-look as if they might fall and destroy the figures beneath them at any
-moment. It is no good shouting “police!” but where is the archdeacon?
-This north chantry has been boarded off from the church, which has an
-ugly effect. The monuments in it are first to Sir George St. Poll, 1613,
-and his wife Frances, daughter of Chief Justice Sir Christopher Wray of
-Glentworth, whom he married in 1583. This is very large, being eleven and
-a half feet in height and width. Sir George reclines on his elbow; he,
-also, is in armour, his wife is by his side; and below is their little
-daughter Mattathia, with cherubs weeping and resting their inverted
-torches on skulls. The wife, after putting up this monument, took for
-a second husband Robert Rich, Earl of Warwick; and opposite to the
-monument of herself and her first husband she re-appears as the Countess
-of Warwick, on a round tablet, with medallions of herself and the earl,
-her second husband, who died in 1618. His first wife was Lady Penelope
-Devereux, by whom he had two sons, Robert and Henry, and two daughters,
-Lettice and Essex. A brass on the south side of the chancel has a quaint
-Latin inscription, by the Snarford parson, telling us that Frances Wray,
-after marriage, was twelve years without issue, and then had a daughter
-who died before reaching her second birthday, “cut off while on her way
-to Bath.” This was a terrible loss of a most precious treasure, and he
-mentions that he had christened her Mattathia, and goes on to tell us
-that the “mother passes no day without tears of poignant anguish,” and
-ends with “How I wished, alas in vain, that I the writer, instead of
-thee, had been the subject of a funeral elegy. John Chadwick, Sept. 9th,
-1597.”
-
- “Hos tibi jam posui versus Mattathia Sct. Poll,
- Qui primum in sacro nomina fonte dedi.
- Quam vellem (at frustra), te nempe superstite, scriptor
- Essem funerei carminis ipse mihi.”
-
-[Sidenote: THE BUSLINGTHORPE BRASS]
-
-Close to the St. Poll monument in the chantry is a stone in memory of
-George Brownlow Doughty, 1743, who married a Tichborne heiress, and took
-the name in addition to his own. From Snarford, less than four miles
-brings us to _Buslingthorpe_, where is a Crusader’s effigy, which, like
-the priest at Little Steeping, had been turned upside down and used as
-a paving-stone, possibly for the sake of saving it from destruction.
-This may be Sir John de Buslingthorpe, _c._ 1250. But the great treasure
-of the church is a brass half-effigy on a coffin-lid, which also had
-been buried, and was only recovered in 1707. This represents a knight
-in armour, holding a heart and wearing remarkable scaled gauntlets. The
-inscription in Norman French is without date, but reads: “Issy gyt Sire
-Richard le fiz sire John de Boselyngthorp,” and is probably not later
-than 1290. This is earlier than the somewhat similar brass in Croft
-Church, which is assigned to 1300 or 1310, but is not so early as the
-fine brass of Sir John d’Abernoun at Stoke d’Abernon in Surrey, which is
-dated 1277. Anyhow, it is the earliest in Lincolnshire. From here, less
-than four miles brings us back on to the Market Rasen road at Linwood,
-only two miles from Rasen.
-
-[Sidenote: LINWOOD]
-
-Instead of going by _Snarford_ and _Buslingthorpe_ we might have reached
-Rasen by a more direct route from _Snelland_ through _Wickenby_ to
-_Lissington_. Here the road divides, the right hand going to _Legsby_
-and _Sixhills_, and then turning left-handed to join the Louth and Rasen
-road at _North Willingham_; or, if the day is clear, the traveller can
-go straight on from _Sixhills_ and climb the Wold, which with a rise of
-one hundred feet will give him a view and bring him to the crown of the
-same road at _Ludford_. The left-hand road from _Lissington_ will bring
-us to Rasen viâ _Linwood_. This is a pretty road just elevated above the
-flat, whence the church spire is visible for a long way. This interesting
-church, dedicated to St. Cornelius, Bishop of Rome, A.D. 251, is of the
-Early English period with Perpendicular tower. The brasses, which are
-good, have been removed from the south chantry to the north aisle and
-placed at the west end. We have John Lyndewode, wool stapler, and his
-wife, under a double canopy, date 1419. In his shield are three Linden
-leaves, which shows the name of the village to mean ‘the Linden (or
-Limetree) wood.’ There is also one to their son John, a wool stapler,
-dated 1421, and a figure of a bishop in the south chancel window,
-probably commemorates another son William, who became Bishop of St.
-David’s. A cross-legged effigy of a knight has been torn from its matrix.
-The old Lyndewode Manor once stood close to the church.
-
-Continuing northwards for two miles we find ourselves at Market Rasen.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-ROADS SOUTH FROM LINCOLN
-
- The Foss Way—The Sleaford Road and Dunston Pillar on “The
- Heath”—The Ermine Street and the Grantham Road on “The
- Ridge”—Canwick—Blankney—Digby—Rowston—Brant-Broughton—Temple
- Bruer and the Knights Templars and Hospitallers—Somerton Castle
- and King John of France—Navenby—Coleby—Bracebridge.
-
-
-Besides these three roads going east from Lincoln, there are three great
-roads which run along “the ridged wold” northwards, and two going south;
-but these two, as soon as they are clear of Lincoln, branch into a dozen,
-which, augmented by five lines of railway, all radiating from one centre
-and all linked by innumerable small roads which cross them, form, on the
-map, an exact pattern of a gigantic spider’s web. Of this dozen the three
-trunk roads southwards are the Foss Way to Newark in the flat country,
-and the Sleaford road over “the heath,” both of which roads avoid all
-villages (though the Sleaford road passes through Leasingham, described
-in Chap. VIII., about two miles north of Sleaford, and has that curious
-erection, _the Dunston pillar_, at the roadside about eight miles out
-from Lincoln, described in the chapter on Nocton); and thirdly, the
-Grantham road, on the ridge between the two, which has a village at every
-mile. Others run, one to _Skellingthorpe_, one to _Doddington_ with its
-interesting old Hall, which we will revert to shortly; one all down the
-Witham valley to Beckingham on the border, going by _Basingham_ with
-its ninth-century Saxon font, and _Norton Disney_ with its fine Disney
-tombs and remarkable brass, also to be described later; and one to _Brant
-Broughton_.
-
-[Sidenote: CANWICK]
-
-[Sidenote: ROWSTON]
-
-A sign-post in Lincoln points to this village, because, though twelve
-miles distant, there is nothing on the way; indeed you may follow up
-the valley of the Brant River another six miles to its source near
-_Hough-on-the-Hill_, and then go on another six as it curves round
-into _Grantham_, and not pass through anything but _Marston_, and
-there is nothing to see there but the old seat of the Thorold family,
-Marston Hall, now a farmhouse. All these are on the low ground to the
-west. Then on the ridge itself is “the Ermine Street,” and east of the
-Sleaford highway is a desolate road over “Lincoln Heath” to _Scopwick_,
-where a stream, crossed by several single planks, runs right through
-the village. East of this, another somewhat important road goes across
-the low and once swampy ground south of Lincoln, where the Witham gets
-through the gap in the cliff ridge to _Canwick_. Here the church, which
-has a rich Norman chancel arch and arcade, and an Early English arcaded
-reredos in the vestry, once a chantry chapel, rises, without any other
-footing, from a Roman pavement; here, too, from the grounds of Mr. Waldo
-Sibthorp’s house, Canwick Hall, where the cliff begins again, you get
-a most beautiful view of the minster about two miles distant; indeed,
-those who live near Lincoln and can see the minster may boast of a view
-which for grandeur has few equals in the land. This walk from Lincoln
-is a favourite one, and passes a well-planted cemetery of twenty-five
-acres, part of which was taken from the common, which rejoices in the
-delightfully bucolic name of “the Cowpaddle.” The road is really the
-continuation of the Wragby road, and, curving down Lindum road passes
-into Broadgate, then crossing the Witham and the Sincel dyke and the
-intersection of the Midland and Great Northern Railways, crosses yet
-two more lines before it reaches the cemetery. After Canwick the road
-goes through _Branston_ and passes, near _Nocton_, _Dunston_, and
-_Metheringham_, to _Blankney_. The hall here, the home of Mr. Henry
-Chaplin, than whom no Lincolnshire man is better known or more popular,
-is now occupied by Lord Londesborough. The church has a curious tomb-slab
-to John de Glori, with a bearded head looking out of a cusped opening,
-and a beautiful sculpture by Boehm of Lady Florence Chaplin. This is
-one of the few churches in which the ringing of the Curfew-bell still
-obtains. After _Blankney_ the road passes Scopwick and curves round
-through _Digby_, _Donnington_ and _Rushington_ to Sleaford. Of these
-villages _Digby_ is worth seeing, and so is _Rowston_, lying one mile
-north of it. At _Digby_ the village cross has been restored, but with a
-very indifferent top, and at the other end of the village is a curious
-stone lock-up, like a covered well-head, and hardly capable of holding
-more than one man at a time. Lingfield in Surrey has a larger one called
-‘Ye Village Cage’; it has two steps up inside, and is capable of holding
-a dozen people. The tower has three stages, Early English, Decorated and
-Perpendicular. The south door is transition Norman, the north arcade
-aisle and chancel Early English, the south arcade and aisle Decorated,
-and the font, screen and clerestory Perpendicular. In this the six tall
-two-light windows are distributed in pairs. _Rowston_, which is dedicated
-to St. Clement, has a spire rising from a tall tower, so little wider
-than itself that it may safely be said to cover less ground than any
-tower in England, for it measures only five and a-half feet inside; it
-is blank except for a rather heavy window in the upper stage. The first
-thing that strikes you on entering is the extraordinary loud ticking of
-the clock. It has to be stopped during service, as no one can compete
-with it. The next thing is that the thirteen windows are all filled
-with painted glass and of the same type, striking in design, though not
-of quite first-rate excellence. One window has figures of the three
-Lincolnshire saints—St. Guthlac, St. Hugh, and St. Gilbert. The church
-is in very good order, having been recently restored, and some Saxon
-stones with interlaced work have been built into the outside wall of
-the chancel. It would have been better to have put these inside. But
-there is inside a very good head of a churchyard or village cross, and
-the base and broken shaft of one, possibly the same, is just outside
-the churchyard. This head is of the usual penthouse form, with a carved
-figure on either side; it was found quite recently built into a cowshed.
-In the nave the pillars are all different. The vestry was over the burial
-chapel of the Foster family; later it was, as was so often the case, used
-for a school. A beautiful bit of an old carved oak screen separates it
-now from the north aisle. A heavy timber floor cuts across the top of the
-tall tower arch, and below a very curious pillar stands against one side
-of the arch. An Early English priest’s door, with a flat-arched lintel,
-is in the south wall of the chancel. It is impossible to walk round the
-slender tower, as a garden wall runs into it on both the north and south
-sides, leaving part of the tower in a neighbouring garden, the owner of
-which once claimed half the tower as his property, and considered that
-he had a right to pierce a door through it for easier access to his pew.
-
-[Sidenote: GRANTHAM ROAD]
-
-We have now but one road south of Lincoln to describe—for what we have
-to say about Norton Disney and Nocton can come afterwards; this is the
-Grantham road, a road curiously full of villages mostly perched on the
-western edge of the ridge, whilst the Ermine Street running so near it
-on the east has no villages at all on it, and the Sleaford road over
-“the Heath,” a little to the east of the Ermine Street, is, as we have
-said, just as bare. The number of roads in Lincolnshire which have no
-villages on them is very remarkable, though not hard to explain. We have
-already, in treating of the roads from Grantham, through the villages
-of _Manthorpe_, _Belton_, _Syston_, _Barkstone_, _Honington_, _Carlton
-Scroop_, _Normanton_, _Caythorpe_ and _Fulbeck_, brought the account
-of this road northwards as far as _Leadenham_. Here the Sleaford and
-Newark main road crosses it, and _Leadenham_ spire is a fine landmark
-for all the neighbourhood. It is to be noted that, common as the Danish
-termination ‘by’ is in all parts of the county, the Saxon ‘ton’ just
-about here and on the west side generally, is even more frequent.
-
-This spire is crocketed, but has no flying buttresses. The nave and
-arcades are lofty, with bold clustered columns, and the doorways, which
-are quite different in style, are both very good. There is some good
-Flemish glass, and a stone monument of the Beresford family has long been
-in use as an altar. _Wellbourn_, on an Early English tower, has one of
-those ugly, Perpendicular “sugar loaf” spires, with a sort of bulge in
-the middle, and that to a worse degree than at Caythorpe. The nave and
-aisles are the work of John of Wellbourn, the munificent treasurer of
-Lincoln in the middle of the fourteenth century.
-
-[Illustration: _Brant Broughton._]
-
-[Sidenote: BRANT BROUGHTON]
-
-[Sidenote: THE VILLAGE SMITH]
-
-To the right and left of Wellbourn are two places which should not be
-missed. _Brant Broughton_, with its beautiful spire, and _Temple Bruer_,
-where are the remains of a preceptory of the Knights Templars. The church
-of _Brant Broughton_ (pronounced Bruton) is a beautiful structure, and
-all in perfect order, the magnificent lofty chancel having been built
-to match the rest of the church by Bodley and Garner in 1876. To take
-the woodwork first, the tall handsome screen and the chancel stalls
-are in memory of the late rector, Canon E. H. Sutton, as is also the
-lofty carved font cover, whose doors open and display three carved and
-coloured figures, one being St. Nicholas, the patron saint, with the
-three children in a pickling tub, whom he is said to have raised to life
-after their murder by a butcher, as is so quaintly represented in the
-famous black font in Winchester Cathedral. The roof, which in the first
-instance was of a higher pitch, as seen by the string course, is an exact
-reproduction, both in shape and colour, of the old Perpendicular one
-which it replaced, and is in appearance upborne by figures of angels with
-outspread wings. The three tall arches of the aisle arcades and chancel
-are Early English, two of the pillars are octagonal. These arches are
-very high, though not so high as those in _Hough-on-the-Hill_, which
-are of about the same date. The three-light clerestory windows, five on
-each side, and the roof to the nave, were added with the upper stages
-of the tower in 1460, and the Perpendicular aisle windows are large and
-handsome, and have a transom running across the tracery in the head of
-each. They are filled with most interesting glass, good in design, and
-mostly good in colour, all of which was made in the village by the late
-Canon Sutton, who also filled several windows in Lincoln Minster. The
-ironwork in the church was also made by Mr. F. Coldron and Son at the
-village forge, where excellent work is always being done and sent to all
-parts of the country. All the work inside the church, and the chancel
-in particular, is beautifully finished in every detail, and bears the
-impress of being all the work of one mind, and as that mind was Bodley’s,
-and he took the utmost pains with it, it need hardly be said that it
-comes very near perfection.
-
-Among the things to notice are the long stone responds of light clustered
-pillars between each clerestory window, which support the roof timbers.
-This is seen in other churches in this part of the county, but is
-otherwise by no means common. Another is that at intervals on the outer
-moulding of some of the doors and windows are carved rosettes which give
-a very rich effect and are, I believe, unique. The excellent lectern
-eagle is a copy of one at Oxborough in Norfolk, and a similar one is in
-the neighbouring church of Navenby. Thus far I have spoken of the inside,
-but it is the outside of the church which gives the greatest delight,
-for it is a very perfect specimen, built of good stone, of the finest
-proportions, and richly ornamented. The nave and chancel have each an
-ornate parapet, while the nave is also embattled and pinnacled. The tower
-has the most glorious base-mouldings, and the pinnacled and crocketed
-spire soars up 175 feet. Both tower and spire date from about 1320, the
-period of the Flowing Decorated style. But the two porches, which are
-a little later, are absolute gems of architecture. They have groined
-roofs, their parapets are pierced and ornamented, thickly set with
-gargoyles, and supported by canopied buttresses. Over the entrance of the
-south porch is a figure of Christ seated, and in the north porch is an
-ornamental roof ridge of carved stone. These porches are as beautiful as
-anything can well be; altogether it would be hard to find in a country
-village anything architectural, more pleasing than _Brant Broughton_
-Church.
-
-[Illustration: _The Ermine Street at Temple Bruer._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE ERMINE STREET]
-
-We passed through the village, visited the Coldron forge, and then by a
-road constantly turning first right then left, with fields of scarlet
-poppy or brilliant yellow corn-marigold on either hand, and with a stormy
-sky which ever and anon brought us a squall of rain, we drove across
-the flat country eastwards till we crossed the railway and reached the
-ridge. Climbing this, we come to _Wellbourn_, on the Grantham road, and
-going on eastwards over Wellbourn Heath we reach the Ermine Street,
-here only a wide grassy track. This we cross and go forwards through a
-well-cultivated, but almost uninhabited plain, till we see on the left
-a farm road leading over a field to a big farmyard, in the middle of
-which stands a solitary square-built Early English tower, with windows
-irregularly placed, and steps on one side. This is all that is left of
-a Preceptory of the Knights Templars, founded early in the thirteenth
-century in the reign of Henry II. by the Lady Elizabeth de Canz at
-_Temple Bruer_.
-
-[Sidenote: THE TEMPLARS]
-
-One does not always like to confess one’s ignorance, but I am sure many
-people may read that word “preceptory” without at all knowing what
-it may mean, or what the difference is between a _Preceptory_ and a
-_Commandery_. So we may as well say something about the Templars, and the
-kindred order of the Hospitallers. And here I may say that I am indebted
-for my facts to a paper read at Lincoln by Bishop Trollope in 1857.
-
-The first, then, of these, in point of time, were the Hospitallers.
-But as they long outlived the Templars we will take the history of the
-Templars first. This famous order, half-religious and half military, was
-founded in 1118, during the first Crusade, by nine French knights, whose
-object was to protect pilgrims to the Holy Sepulchre at Jerusalem. At
-first they were bound by laws of poverty, and were termed “Poor Knights,”
-but Baldwin II., having given them lodging in a part of his palace at
-Jerusalem, the abbot of the Temple Convent, which adjoined the palace,
-gave them further rooms to live in, and from this they got the name
-“Templars.” In 1128 they adopted a white distinctive mantle, to which a
-red cross on the breast and on their banner was added in 1166. The fame
-of their feats of arms and chivalry induced many members of noble houses
-to join the society, and land and treasure were so freely offered them
-that they became known for their wealth, as at first for their poverty.
-Their head was termed “Grand Master,” and their headquarters were in
-Palestine, until they moved, in 1192, to Cyprus. In other countries each
-section or “Province” was governed by a “Grand Preceptor.” They first
-came to England in the early part of Stephen’s reign, and had a church
-in London, near Southampton Buildings, called “The Old Temple,” from
-which they migrated in 1185 to the spot where the circular Temple Church
-still stands. Their wealth was the cause of their downfall, morally
-and physically; and the monarchs, both of France and England, becoming
-jealous, Philip IV., in 1307, seized and imprisoned every Templar in his
-dominion, 200 in number, on the vague charges of infidelity, sorcery,
-and apostasy, and eventually confiscated all their property and burnt
-more than fifty of them alive, relegating the rest to perpetual seclusion
-in some monastic house. Edward II. did much the same here, except that
-there were no burnings or executions. Old Fuller, the historian, was
-probably thinking of those in France when he says in his inimitable way:
-“Their lives would not have been taken if their lands could have been
-got without; but the mischief was, the honey could not be got without
-burning the bees.” In 1312 the Pope, Clement V., who was under Philip’s
-thumb at Avignon, and had helped him to coerce Edward II., abolished the
-order, which was found to be possessed of no less than 9,000 manors and
-16,000 lordships, besides lands abroad. Grants were made to favourites,
-and also to those who had claims for some benefaction to any Templar’s
-estate. Thus Robert de Swines (Sweyne’s)-thorp was to receive 3_d._ a
-day for food, and another 3_d._ for himself and 2_d._ for his groom; and
-his daughter, Alice Swinesthorpe was to have for life (and she drew it
-for thirty years) “7 white loaves, 3 squire’s loaves, 5 gals of better
-ale, 7 dishes of meat and fish on Saturday for the week following, and an
-extra dish (interferculum) of the better course of the brethren, at Xmas,
-Easter, Whitsuntide, Midsummer, The Assumption, and Feast of All Saints,
-and 3 stone of cheese yearly and an old gown of the brethren.”
-
-[Sidenote: THE HOSPITALLERS]
-
-Twelve years later Edward granted the whole of their property to the
-similar society of “Knights Hospitallers.”
-
-This society came into existence some fifty years before the Templars,
-and originated in a band of traders from Amalfi, who got leave from the
-Caliph of Egypt to build a church and monastery for the Latins near the
-Holy Sepulchre, in order to look after the sick and poor pilgrims who
-used to come in large numbers to Jerusalem. Soon a hospital, or guest
-house, was added, and a chapel dedicated to St. John the Baptist; but
-the society did not take the distinctive name of Hospitallers, or guest
-receivers, until 1099, when Jerusalem was in the hands of the Christians.
-They then assumed a white cross as their badge, and were termed Knights
-of the Hospital, Knights Hospitallers, or Knights of St. John.
-
-In 1154 they procured a Papal bull, relieving them from payment of
-tithes, and exempting them from all interdicts and excommunications,
-and giving them other privileges, but binding them never to leave the
-order. These marks of Papal favour seem to have made them presumptuous,
-and great complaints soon arose of their insolence. They were accused
-before the Pope, but they managed to clear themselves and to keep their
-privileges. Hence we find that _Temple Bruer_, which came to them after
-the destruction of the Knights Templars, still remains exempt from
-the payment of tithe, and from episcopal jurisdiction, as being extra
-parochial.
-
-[Sidenote: KNIGHTS OF MALTA]
-
-The head of the order had the title of “Grand Prior,” and when the
-Christians were expelled from Palestine, the Knights retreated to Cyprus,
-after which they took from the Turks the island of Rhodes, which they
-held against the Sultan until 1522, when Solyman II., after a long siege,
-forced them to capitulate. A few years after that, the Emperor Charles
-V. gave them a home in Malta, and they thenceforth were commonly called
-Knights of Malta. They fortified the island, and imported soil to make
-it productive, and putting to sea with their galleys they made constant
-war upon all Turkish vessels. Solyman at length determined to drive them
-out of Malta. He despatched a fleet of 180 galleys, carrying 30,000 men.
-The Turks took the fort of St. Elmo, but with a loss of 8,000 men; and
-when the Emperor sent an army to assist the Knights, La Valette, the
-Grand Prior, a famous leader, drove the Moslems off. After this they
-remained in Malta until the order was dissolved at the close of the
-eighteenth century by order of Napoleon, when most of the Knights took
-service in the French army. Whilst the society existed it had branch
-establishments in England, where the chief or Prior took precedence of
-all the barons, and had a seat in Parliament. Their establishments were
-called “commanderies”—while those of the Templars, who were ruled by
-“Grand Preceptors,” were called “preceptories.” Of these there were three
-in Lincolnshire: at _Willoughton_, four miles south of Kirton in Lindsey;
-at _Aslackby_, two miles south of Falkingham; and at _Temple Bruer_; all
-three situated close to the Ermine Street or “High Dyke” as they call
-it, on Lincoln Heath, and it is from the heath that one of them gets its
-name _Templum de la bruère_, or the temple on the heath, shortened into
-_Temple Bruer_.
-
-[Sidenote: TEMPLE BRUER]
-
-The lands of these Knights Templars, which were handed over by Edward II.
-in 1324 to the Knights Hospitallers, were all sequestrated in England
-at the time of the dissolution of the monastic and religious houses in
-1538, and, like so many other Lincolnshire estates, granted by Henry
-VIII. to his relative, Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk. Henry, with his
-wife, Katherine Howard, dined at Temple Bruer when on his way to Lincoln
-in 1541. The buildings then were of considerable size, and the circular
-church, whose pillar bases have been laid bare, a little to the west of
-the existing tower, was fifty feet in diameter. It is modelled on the
-plan of the Holy Sepulchre at Jerusalem, having, as may still be seen in
-London, Cambridge, and Northampton, a corridor running round between the
-circular arcade of the church and the outer wall. The existing tower is
-of the Early English period, fifty feet high, and having three storeys;
-the walls of the lower storey are decorated by arcading on two sides, and
-the rising levels of the floor indicate that an altar was placed at the
-east end, so that it was probably the domestic chapel of the Grand Prior.
-The roof of this and the next storey is vaulted, and above the third
-storey was a parapet. The rooms were reached by a winding staircase in
-the north-west angle. A well nine feet in diameter, and never dry, was
-in the precincts, and another, discovered in the eighteenth century, was
-found to have in it three large bells. The Earl of Dorset, who owned this
-interesting property in 1628, sold it to Richard Brownlow of Belton,
-whose daughter and co-heiress carried it to the family of Lord Guildford,
-and he sold it to the ancestors of Mr. Chaplin of Blankney.
-
-[Illustration: _Temple Bruer Tower._]
-
-[Sidenote: KNIGHTS AT RHODES]
-
-It shows that the interest in the Order of the Knights of Jerusalem is
-not yet extinct when we read the following, which appeared in _The Times_
-of December 21, 1913:—
-
- “HOUSE OF THE KNIGHTS AT RHODES.
-
- “(FROM OUR OWN CORRESPONDENT.)
-
- ROME, _Dec. 23_.
-
- “The _Tribuna_ announces that the House of the Knights at
- Rhodes has been acquired for France by the French Ambassador at
- Constantinople, M. Bompard. The house, which is one of the most
- beautiful in the island, is a Gothic edifice dating from the
- 15th century, and was originally the residence of the French
- Priors of the Order of Jerusalem.
-
- “⁂ This appears to refer to the Auberge of the “Langue” of
- France, with its shield-adorned façade in the famous street
- of the Knights in Rhodes, which is still preserved in fair
- condition. Under the Ottoman regime no Christian was allowed
- to own a house or to sleep within the walled town of Rhodes,
- and before the revival of the Constitution foreigners were
- jealously excluded from the majority of the medieval buildings
- of the city. It is probably due to this suspicious and
- exclusive attitude that no such step as that just taken by
- France has been attempted before. It is to be hoped that the
- palace of the Grand Masters of the Order of the Hospital, which
- ruled the island from 1309 until 1522, is now no longer to be
- used as a common prison.”
-
-[Sidenote: SOMERTON CASTLE]
-
-From _Temple Bruer_ we return to the “High Dyke,” and, crossing it, make
-westward for the Grantham road; but before we go along it, by _Boothby
-Graffoe_ to _Navenby_, we must pause on the Ridge, or “Cliff,” as they
-call it there, and look down on a solitary round tower on a slight
-elevation about a mile across the flat plain which extends westward
-from the Wolds to the Trent. This tower and its grassy mounds are all
-that is left of a once fine stronghold, built, about 1281, by Antony
-Bec, Archdeacon of Durham, second son of Walter Bec, Baron d’Eresby.
-He was consecrated Bishop of Durham in the presence of Edward I., on
-January 9, 1284, and he was wise enough, a few years later, when his
-growing magnificence excited the jealousy of his sovereign, to present
-_Somerton_ to Edward I., and it remained a royal castle for some three
-centuries, passing afterwards through several families, among whom were
-the Disneys of Norton and Carlton. Edward, son of Thomas Disney of
-Carlton-le-Moorland having purchased it from Sir George Bromley, and
-being succeeded in 1595 by his son Thomas, who having lost both his sons,
-sold it to Sir Ed. Hussey. Hence we find that his son Charles, afterwards
-Sir Charles Hussey of Caythorpe, is described in his marriage licence,
-April 10, 1649, as Charles Hussey, Esq., of Somerton.
-
-After the battle of Poictiers, in 1356, John, son of Philip of Valois,
-King of France, was brought captive to London, together with his third
-son Philip. Hence, after a short residence at the Savoy Palace, they
-went to Windsor as guests of the King and Queen Philippa, and were
-subsequently sent to Hertford Castle. Edward III. soon thought it wiser
-to transfer them to Somerton, where they were placed under the custody
-of William, Baron d’Eyncourt of Blankney, during the years 1359 and
-1360. The expensive furnishing of the castle (_see_ Chap. XXXVII.) and
-the provision made for the maintenance of the large number of the king’s
-French suite, and of the officers and men who were appointed to guard the
-prisoners, and the style of life there, the tuns of French claret, and
-the enormous amount of sugar to make French bon-bons, together with the
-subsequent history of King John, who, on being set at liberty, returned
-in the most honourable way to England in 1363, because his son Louis, Duc
-d’Anjou, had broken his parole as a hostage and left England for France,
-is fully related by Bishop Trollope. King John died in 1364, at the
-palace of the Savoy.
-
-_Somerton Castle_, which we must now visit, was a fortified
-dwelling-place with outer and inner moats, and with round towers at
-each corner of an irregular parallelogram, only one remains now at the
-south-west angle. This is forty-five feet high, and has three storeys—the
-lower one vaulted, the highest covered with a conical roof and having two
-chimneys, rising well above the plain parapet, which is still perfect,
-and springs from a bold and effective moulding. Each floor is lit by
-small lancet windows, the middle one much enlarged of late years, for
-it is still inhabited, together with some building adjoining it on the
-east, as a farm house. The large earthworks around the castle, which are
-especially noticeable on the south, are very remarkable, and must be much
-earlier than the castle, which seems to have been planted inside these
-rectangular embankments, of which the northern side has been levelled,
-probably at the time of the building. The earthworks are not Roman in
-character, and are probably of very great antiquity. Outside these are at
-least two round artificial hills, which have not been as yet explained
-with certainty.
-
-[Sidenote: NAVENBY]
-
-Leaving the castle, and driving over the rough field road which leads to
-it, we regain a highway which takes us up “the cliff” to the village of
-_Navenby_. This is situated on a spur jutting out from the edge of the
-cliff, with a deep little valley sweeping round on the south side and
-breaking down into the plain. Nestling in the curve of the hill are some
-picturesque farm buildings and stacks, and above is an old windmill;
-whilst over the horizon peeps through the trees the spire of _Wellingore_
-Church. The chancel of Navenby Church, as at Heckington, is as long
-as the nave, and almost as high; indeed, this Decorated chancel is as
-fine as any to be found, no other being built on at all so magnificent
-a scale, except Hawton in Notts, and Heckington and perhaps Merton at
-Oxford. The tower, which probably had a spire, fell in the eighteenth
-century, and the whole church was restored about forty years ago, by
-Kirk of Sleaford, who made the chancel roof of too high a pitch, and
-kept the nave roof too low. The pillars in the nave, of which there are
-two on each side, have shafts clustered round a central column, four
-shafts of coursed masonry alternating with four light detached monolithic
-shafts, all united under a circular capital. But the north-west pillar is
-thicker than the others, and belongs to the latter part of the twelfth
-century. The tower arch is a low one; the fine Decorated east window
-of six lights, restored in 1876, has superb tracery, and is nearly as
-fine as that at Heckington. There are four large chancel windows, and a
-good Early English window in the south aisle. There is also a rood-loft
-staircase, and a rood-loft with canopy, or ‘hang over,’ and a modern
-rood-beam above bearing a large crucifix and two almost life-size figures
-carved and painted. An octagon panelled font stands on a pedestal
-of slender columns. The roof of both nave and aisles is painted. The
-clerestory, added later, has five three-light windows. The east window is
-filled with white glass, slightly toned, and is half hidden by a tapestry
-screen used as a reredos, by no means beautiful, and twice as high as
-it need be. The Jacobean pulpit and the fine copy of an old brass eagle
-lectern, as at Brant Broughton, are to be noticed; but the main glories
-of the church are in the chancel, where, besides the splendid windows,
-there are, on the south side, three rich sedilia and a piscina; and on
-the north, just east of the canopied arch for the founder’s tomb, in
-which is now placed a trefoiled stone with Lombardic lettering of Richard
-Dewe, priest, is a priest’s door and a very beautiful Easter Sepulchre.
-This is only surpassed by those at Heckington, Lincoln, and Hawton, near
-Newark. It has only one compartment, with three Roman soldiers, with
-mutilated heads, below the opening, and above it, amongst the delicately
-carved foliage of the canopy, are two figures of women. Few churches can
-give more pleasure to the lover of church architecture than this; and its
-fine position on the edge of the cliff, with the wide view over the plain
-westward, makes a visit to Navenby very memorable.
-
-[Sidenote: COLEBY]
-
-Going on northwards along the cliff road we pass _Boothby Graffoe_, where
-the old church was actually blown down, or, as the Wellingore register
-has it, “extirpated in a hurricane,” in 1666—and come to _Coleby_. Here
-is an early unbuttressed tower with a rude original arch over the door of
-the tower staircase, and with two keyhole windows in the south side, as
-in the early Lincoln towers or those at Hough-on-the-Hill, and Clee. Part
-of the original tower arch is visible inside the tower, which is entered
-from the nave through a very tall narrow arch supported by two very small
-pilasters with plain rectangular caps.
-
-[Sidenote: TREVENEN PENROSE]
-
-The two arches of the north arcade are Transition Norman; those on the
-south Early English, with good stiff foliage. The tall, plain porch had
-once a room over it, and retains its richly moulded Transition doorway.
-The font is of the same date, being a massive cylinder with Norman
-arcading cut on it, and with four equidistant pillars which give it a
-square appearance. The crocketed spire is a good one, Perpendicular in
-style, and of better stone than the tower. The three lancet windows at
-the east end are filled with good glass, and the seats are of oak with
-poppy-heads throughout. The fellows of Oriel College, Oxford, to whom
-the living belongs, helped in its restoration by Bodley and Garner in
-1901. The wall at the west end of the south aisle, which runs up to the
-tower and also forms the west side of the porch, as the aisle has no
-window, is one long blank face, which has a singularly ugly look outside.
-Inside, there are some good bench-ends, and there is an inscription by
-Sir John Coleridge to the Rev. Trevenen Penrose, who spent the greater
-part of a long life as vicar of the parish.
-
-[Illustration: _Navenby._]
-
-The Hall is a gabled house of 1628, built by Sir W. Lester, now the
-property of the Tempest family, and having classic temples in the
-grounds, one of them adapted from the Rotunda in the baths of Diocletian
-at Rome.
-
-_Harmston_, the next village, has a tower of the pre-Norman type, with a
-mid-wall shaft to the window of the belfry in which are eight bells. A
-brass plate commemorates Margaret Thorold who had a family of eight sons
-and eleven daughters, and lived to be eighty.
-
-[Sidenote: BRACEBRIDGE]
-
-_Waddington_ has some very good Early English work in its clustered
-columns and carved capitals. Here the string of villages, one at every
-milestone, ceases, and we go on for three miles seeing the beautiful
-minster tower in front of us on the height, and arrive at _Bracebridge_,
-a very dark church, but with some most interesting Long-and-Short work
-in the tower, in the angles of the nave, and in the south porch, and a
-Norman west door to the tower, which is a very early one with mid-wall
-shaft to the belfry window. The Norman north door is now blocked. There
-is a curious rectangular opening, twice as wide as its height, in the
-south aisle, near the porch, which allows a view between the pillars and
-through the hagioscope or “squint” on the right of the chancel arch to
-the altar. Another squint is on the left side of the chancel arch, which
-is a very narrow and early one, through a thick wall.
-
-The nave pillars, two on each side, are cylindrical with four banded
-shafts attached. The north aisle and transept are modern. A fine
-Transition Norman font is mounted on a new base, and on the pulpit is
-still to be seen the old hour-glass stand, as at _Leasingham_; though
-there and at _Belton_ in the Isle of Axholme it is attached to a pillar,
-at _Sapperton_ and _Hammeringham_ it is on the pulpit. There is also an
-old cracked Sanctus bell.
-
-The road over the heath unites with the Grantham road near _Bracebridge_,
-and runs into Lincoln by the Stonebow, and on up to the Minster Hill.
-
-So much for the roads east, west, and south. The roads north of Lincoln
-demand another chapter. But a few words about Nocton and Norton Disney
-shall come first.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-PLACES OF INTEREST NEAR LINCOLN
-
- Nocton—Norton Disney—Doddington—Kettlethorpe.
-
-
-NOCTON
-
-As an instance of what the great Roman catch-water drain the “Carr-dyke”
-effected, we may take the little village of Nocton, six miles south-east
-of Lincoln. Here is a little string of villages—_Potter Hanworth_,
-_Nocton_, _Dunston_ and _Metheringham_—running north and south on the
-edge of a moor which drops quickly on the east to an uninhabited stretch
-of fen once all water, but now rich cornland cut into long strips by the
-drains which, aided by pumps, send the superfluous water down the Nocton
-“Delph” into the Witham River. Along the extreme edge of the moorland
-runs the “Carr-dyke” and intercepts all the water which would otherwise
-discharge into the already water-logged lowlands, and so makes the task
-of dealing with the fen water a possible one.
-
-At _Potter Hanworth_ the Romans had a pottery. The church was rebuilt
-in 1857, one of the bells was re-cast in memory of the Diamond Jubilee
-of Queen Victoria, and on it were placed Tennyson’s lines from “Morte
-d’Arthur.”
-
- “The old order changeth, yielding place to new,
- And God fulfils Himself in many ways,
- Lest one good custom should corrupt the world.”
-
-On the same occasion the ringing of the Curfew bell, which had been
-continued till 1890, was given up, and a clock with four faces put up
-instead, which strikes the hours, but is not at all the same thing. Thus
-one more interesting and historic custom has disappeared, which is much
-to be regretted in this utilitarian and unimaginative age.
-
-[Sidenote: THE D’ARCY FAMILY]
-
-Domesday Book tells us that _Nocton_ was divided in unequal shares
-between two landlords, Ulf and Osulf; on the land of the former there
-was already a church with a priest in 1086. These owners had given place
-to one Norman de Ardreci, written later de Aresci, and finally D’Arcy, a
-companion of the Conqueror. Norman D’Arcy’s son granted the churches of
-Nocton and Dunston to the Benedictines of St. Mary’s Abbey, York, also
-some land to the Carthusians of Kirkstead Abbey, and himself founded a
-priory at Nocton for canons of the Orders of St. Augustine, who first
-settled in England in 1108. The buildings are quite gone, but the site
-is still called the Abbey Field, and the vicarage is called the Priory;
-the Priory well, whose water was said to be “remarkably good,” in 1727,
-was only filled up about fifty years ago. Why couldn’t they have let it
-alone, one wonders. To follow up the history of Nocton: in 1541 Henry
-VIII. and Katharine Howard slept there.
-
-The D’Arcy family and their descendants in the female line, whose married
-names were Lymbury, Pedwardine, Wymbishe and Towneley, held the property
-for three and twenty generations till the middle of the seventeenth
-century—a good innings of 600 years. But the losses which the Civil War
-brought about made it necessary for Robert Towneley, at the Restoration
-in 1660, to sell the estate to Lord Stanhope, from whom it soon passed
-by sale to Sir William Ellys, about 1676, and in 1726—by the marriage
-of Sir Richard Ellys’ widow—to Sir Francis Dashwood; after whom, in
-1767, it descended to a cousin, George Hobart, eventually third Earl of
-Buckinghamshire. He altered Nocton considerably, pulled down the church,
-which was too near the house, and set up a poor structure further off,
-where the present church stands. He also spent much in draining Nocton
-fen, and erected a windmill pump which raised the water and sent it into
-the Witham, and worked well for forty years till it was superseded in
-Frederick Robinson’s time (1834) by a forty-horse-power steam engine
-which was found to pump the water faster than the fens could supply it.
-The earl died in 1804; ten years later his daughter, Lady Sarah Albinia,
-carried the estate to Frederick John Robinson, second son of Lord
-Grantham, who became Prime Minister and was created Viscount Goodrich in
-1827, and Earl of Ripon in 1833; and, as a member of Sir Robert Peel’s
-cabinet, moved in the House of Lords the second reading of the Bill for
-the repeal of the Corn Laws in 1846. In 1834 the house at Nocton was
-burnt down, and the earl’s young son, afterwards Marquis of Ripon, laid
-the foundation stone of the present house in 1841. The earl died in 1859,
-and his widow, who survived him eight years, built in his memory the
-present fine church, which was designed by Sir Gilbert Scott. In 1889
-Lord Ripon sold the estate to Mr. G. Hodgson of Bradford.
-
-It is interesting to hear of a school being set up in 1793 at Nocton;
-first as a private school by John Brackenbury of Gedney, grandson of
-Edward Brackenbury of Raithby, near Spilsby, which was continued for
-forty-six years after her father’s death in 1813, by his daughter
-Justinia, who became Mrs. Scholey. In her time it was an elementary
-school which Lady Sarah financed and managed, the children paying a penny
-a week.
-
-[Sidenote: DUNSTON PILLAR]
-
-Another thing that was set up was a land lighthouse on Dunston Heath.
-This was a lonely tract where inhabitants had not only been murdered
-by highwaymen, but had even been lost in the storms and snow-drifts on
-the desolate and roadless moor. Here then Sir Francis Dashwood set up
-the Dunston Pillar, ninety-two feet high with a lantern over fifteen
-feet high on the top. The date on it is 1751. The fourth Earl of
-Buckinghamshire, who as Lord Hobart was Governor of Madras, took down the
-lantern on July 18, 1810, and set up in its place a colossal statue of
-George III. to commemorate the king’s jubilee.
-
-[Sidenote: NOCTON HALL]
-
-The granddaughter of the third earl, whose father (The Very Rev. H.
-L. Hobart) lived at the Priory, being, _inter alia_, vicar of Nocton
-and Dean of Windsor, and also of Wolverhampton, tells me that the mail
-coaches used to pass the pillar and leave all the letters for the
-neighbourhood at one of the four little lodges close by. She has several
-interesting specimens of the work done by the Nocton School of Needlework
-under the guidance of Justinia, whose family were remarkable for their
-Scriptural as well as “heathen Christian names,” _e.g._, Ceres and
-Damaris. Justinia herself always, as they say in Westmorland, used to
-“get” Justina. These specimens include a very clever and faithful copy in
-black silk needlework of an engraving by Hoylett from a picture by Thos.
-Espin of old Nocton Hall, which was burnt down in 1834. The needlework
-artist has done one of the trees in the picture most beautifully, but has
-given the rein to her imagination by working in two fine palm trees in
-place of the oaks of the picture. There is a sampler done at the vicarage
-by the dean’s daughter, and inscribed:—
-
- “Nocton Priory, 1839.
- Louisa C. Hobart.”
-
-And two large samplers with the usual pretty floral borders worked by
-Justinia’s daughters, signed “Alice Scholey, 1832, and Betsey Scholey,
-1848.” The latter has some rather primitive representations of the
-old Hall and its two lodges; also the Vicarage and the School, and a
-libellous portrait of Lincoln Minster. Alice Scholey was of a more
-Scriptural turn of mind and apparently fond of birds, for she has owls
-in the centre of green bushes, and pheasants or peacocks among her
-flowers; but her central picture is the temptation, where Adam and Eve,
-worked in pink silk, _au naturel_, stand on either side of a goodly tree
-covered with fruit, a gorgeous serpent twining round the trunk, and one
-remarkably fine plum-coloured apple temptingly within reach of Eve’s hand.
-
-Certainly Justinia’s school was in advance of the time, but the art
-needlework doubtless owed much to the interest taken in it by Sarah
-Albinia, Countess of Ripon.
-
-Samplers of the eighteenth century are now much sought after. I saw
-one lately of 1791, on which a little mite of seven, in days when the
-“three R’s” were taught along with the use of the needle in the good old
-sensible way, had stitched in black silk letters:—
-
- The days were long
- The weather hot
- Sometimes I worked
- And sometimes not.
-
- Seven years my age
- Thoughtless and gay
- And often much
- Too fond of play.
-
-The first stanza with its pathetic little picture is genuine enough, but
-the second was manifestly dictated by her elders.
-
-[Sidenote: SAXON ORNAMENT]
-
-Among the treasures long preserved at Nocton was an Anglo-Saxon ornament
-of great beauty (see illustration, Chap. XXII) in which three discs of
-silver with a raised pattern of dragons, &c., and with pins four inches
-long are connected by silver links so as to form a cloak-chain to fasten
-the garment across the breast. The pins have shoulders an inch from
-the sharp points to prevent their shaking loose. This for a time was in
-a museum at Lincoln, and on the dispersal of the collection was bought
-and presented to the British Museum, and is in the Anglo-Saxon room. In
-the same room are kept the very interesting finds from the Anglo-Saxon
-cemetery at _Sleaford_, consisting mainly of bronze ornaments and
-coloured beads. The cloak-chain was found in the Witham at _Fiskerton_,
-four miles from Lincoln, when the river was deepened in 1826.
-
-[Sidenote: THE MASQUERADE]
-
-Sir Charles Anderson, in his excellent Lincoln pocket guide, gives some
-notion of the gaiety which distinguished Nocton in the eighteenth century
-by quoting an account of a masquerade held there on December 29, 1767,
-which begins:—
-
-“Met at the door by a Turk, in a white Bearskin, who took our tickets.”
-
-It is curious to note the use of the word Turk for any dark-skinned
-person in a turban, for later in the list of dresses we have: “Mr.
-Amcotts, a Turk, his turban ornamented with diamonds. Mr. Cust, a Turk;
-scarlet and ermine; turban and collar very rich with diamonds. He
-represented the Great Mogul,” who would have been little pleased to be
-called a Turk, I imagine. Amongst more than seventy other dresses which
-are described we find: “Lady Betty Chaplin: a Chinese Lady, in a long
-robe of yellow taffety; the petticoat painted taffety. Her neck and hair
-richly ornamented with diamonds.”
-
-But rich jewellery was the order of the night whether it was proper to
-the costume or not, so we find “Lady Buck: a Grecian Lady, scarlet satin
-and silver gauze; her neck and head adorned with diamonds and pearls.”
-
-The host and hostess are thus described:—
-
-“Mr. Hobart: ‘Pan.’ His dress dark brown satin, made quite close to his
-shape, shag breeches, cloven feet, a round shock wig, and a mask that
-beggars all description, a leopard skin over his back fastened to his
-shoulder by a leopard’s claw. In his hand a shepherd’s pipe.”
-
-“Mrs. Hobart; First “Imoinda,” a muslin petticoat, puffed very small,
-spotted with spangles. The arms muslin puffed like a dancer. Her second
-dress “Nysa” or “Daphne.” She came in footing it, and singing a song in
-“Midas.” Muslin and blue ornaments; a white chip hat and blue ribbons.”
-
-Several dancers had two costumes. Thus “Lord George Sutton. First a
-Pilgrim; next a Peasant Dancer; pink and white.
-
-Miss Molly Peart: a Peasant Dancer; same colours as Lord George.
-
-Miss Peart: ‘Aurora’ Blue and White. The Moon setting on one side of her
-head; the Sun rising on the other.
-
-Miss A. Peart: a Dancer; pink and silver.”
-
-Mr. and Miss Hales went as a Dutchman and “a Dutchwoman, brown and pink,”
-and Mrs. Ellis as “a Polish Lady; pink and silver; a white cloak and a
-great many diamonds.”
-
-Another classic lady to match ‘Aurora’ was “Miss Manners: ‘Diana’ her
-vest white satin and silver; her robe purple lute-string; a silver bow
-and quiver: her hair in loose curls, flowing behind, and a diamond
-crescent on her forehead.”
-
-I should judge that the “Eyewitness” who wrote the account was a Mr.
-Glover because of the minute particularity with which his own costume is
-set forth, thus: “Mr. Glover: a Cherokee Chief; a shirt and breeches in
-one, puffed and tied at the knees; a scarlet mantle, trimmed with gold,
-one corner across his breast; scarlet cloth stockings; brown leather
-shoes, worked with porcupine quills and deer’s sinews; a gold belt; gold
-leather about his neck, and before like a stomacher, and over that a long
-necklace and gorget; head-dress of long black horsehair, tied in locks of
-coloured ribbons, a single lock hanging over his forehead; ear-rings red
-and blue; plumes of black and scarlet feathers on his head; a scalping
-knife tucked into his girdle; a tomahawk in his hand, and a pipe to smoke
-tea with.”
-
-Mrs. Glover went in black and yellow as a Spanish lady.
-
-Then we have Henry the Eighth, a shepherdess, “a Witch with blue gown,
-red petticoat and high crowned hat,” a friar in a mask, a Sardinian
-knight, a Puritan, a sailor, “Lord Vere Bertie a very good Falstaff,” and
-many Spaniards, among them “Dr. Willis: a Spaniard with a prodigious good
-mask.”
-
-
-THE NORTON DISNEY BRASS
-
-[Sidenote: NORTON DISNEY]
-
-_Norton Disney_ (= de Isigny, a place near Bayeux) was the home of a
-family who lived here from the thirteenth century to nearly the end of
-the seventeenth.
-
-[Sidenote: THE BRASS]
-
-The castle was in the field near the church, just across the road to the
-west, but has quite disappeared, as has also the seventeenth century
-manor-house. The church, which is well worth a visit, belonged to the
-Gilbertines of Sempringham (_see_ Chap. IV.). The manor is now the
-property of Lord St. Vincent, a title bestowed on Admiral Sir John Jervis
-when he so handsomely defeated the Spaniards near the cape of that name
-on the coast of Portugal in 1797. On opening the door you find that you
-have to descend three steps into the church. Here the arcade consists
-of two Norman arches, and one next the chancel smaller and of later
-date. There are old carved benches without poppy-heads, and a very plain
-old oak screen with rood stairs on the south side. The east window is
-filled with stained glass in memory of the Lord St. Vincent who fell at
-Tel-el-Kebir. The aisle has an old roof with carved bosses, and there is
-a very deeply carved font. Outside, the look of the church is spoilt by
-some very inharmonious additions, among these is the north chapel to the
-chancel, inside which, on a rough brick floor, are the monuments which
-give the church its interest; these are six in number, three to ladies.
-One of them is a recumbent effigy in coif and wimple of “Joan d’Iseney,”
-1300. One a curious sepulchral slab with the half-effigy of a lady at one
-end and her feet showing at the other, with Norman French inscription
-to “Joan Disney.” Another is the recumbent effigy of Hantascia Disney,
-a name of frequent use in the family. Close to this on the ground is a
-slab with the matrix of a fine brass of a knight under a canopy, while
-another knight is on an altar tomb in the chancel. These are all of the
-fourteenth century. But the most important is a brass of the sixteenth
-century. This is a thick brass plate three feet by two, now set in an
-oak frame and hinged so that one may see the reverse side on which is
-engraved a long inscription in Dutch recording the foundation of a
-chantry in Holland in 1518 by Adrian Ardenses and the Lady Josephine
-Van de Steine. The face of this brass is divided horizontally into five
-compartments, at the top is a pediment with a shield bearing the Disney
-arms impaling those of Joiner in the centre, and on either side are
-crests of the Disney and Hussey family—a lion passant regardant and a
-stag couchant under a tree. The next compartment shows the half-length
-figures with their names below of “Willm Disney Esquier” in armour
-and helmeted, and “Margaret Joiner” his wife; he in profile, she
-three-quarters face, they are kneeling at a faldstool with open books,
-their hands joined in prayer, and between them on a scroll: “Sufferance
-dothe Ease.” Behind him are four sons and behind her five daughters, all
-with hands joined in prayer and with their names engraved on labels above
-them. The next compartment shows three shields with the arms of Hussey,
-Disney and Ayscough, in which Hussey has three squirrels sitting up,
-Disney has three fleurs de lys, and Ayscough three asses coughing. In the
-compartment below these are the half-length figures of Richard Disney,
-full face in armour with very high shoulder-pieces, and his two wives who
-are three-quarter face; and below are their names engraved thus: “Nele
-daughter of Sr Wilton Husey Knyght, Richard Disney, Janne daughʳ of Sʳ
-Wilton Ayscoughe Kᵗ.” Behind the first wife are ranged in two tiers her
-seven sons and five daughters and their names were engraved above them.
-“Sara, Ester, Judeth, Judet and Susan” are still there, but the sons’
-names are gone; a bit of the brass which held them, about six inches by
-one and a half, having been cut out, in connection, it is said, with a
-lawsuit arising out of Richard Disney’s will. They can be supplied from
-Gervase Holles’ MS. as William, Humphrey, John, Daniel, Ciriac, Zachariah
-and Isaac.
-
-The lowest compartment has this inscription:—
-
-“The lyfe, conversacion and seruice, of the first above named Willm
-Disney and of Richard Disney his Sonne were comendable amongest their
-Neigbours trewe and fathefull to ther prince and cutree and acceptable to
-Thallmighty of Whome we trust they are receved to Saluation accordinge to
-the Stedfast faythe which they had in and throughe the mercy and merit
-of Christ oʳ Savior. Thes truthes are thus sette forthe that in all ages
-God may be thankfully Glorified for thes and suche lyke his gracious
-benefites.”
-
-[Sidenote: THE DISNEYS]
-
-No dates are given, but William Disney’s will was proved in 1540; Richard
-Disney’s in 1578; and that of Jane, the second wife of Richard, in 1591.
-She was the younger sister of Anne Askew, who was so cruelly burnt for
-heresy at Smithfield in 1546, because she had read the Bible to some
-poor folk in the cathedral. She had previously been married to George
-St. Poll of Snarford, by whom she had a son. Canon Cole, in his “Notes
-on the Ecclesiastical History of the Deanery of Graffoe during the 15th
-and 16th centuries,” says that “such demi figures as these are rare in
-the 16th century, and helmets are seldom seen on the heads of knights
-at this date,” and he shows an engraving of the brass, which, of course,
-cannot be earlier than 1578. Richard Disney was one of those who profited
-most largely by the dissolution of the monasteries. His first wife, Nele
-Hussey, was grand-daughter of the unfortunate John Lord Hussey, who was
-beheaded in 1537. Early in the next century one branch of the Disneys
-removed from Norton to the next parish of Carlton-le-Moorland, where
-Ursula Disney’s burial on August 22, 1615, is in the register; and her
-husband, Thomas, removed to Somerton Castle, three miles to the east, the
-lease of which he bought from Sir George Bromley, but, having no issue,
-he sold it again to Sir Edward Hussey. Canon Cole also notices that it
-was while the Disneys were at Carlton that the very unusual event in
-Elizabethan times, the rebuilding of a great part of the parish church,
-took place. Churches, as a rule, were getting dilapidated, and the
-archdeacon’s visitations, preserved in the bishop’s registry at Lincoln,
-some of which go back to the time of Henry VII., show many presentments
-for absence of service-books, decay of walls and roofs, or churchyard
-fences. For instance, at Bassingham in 1601 the churchwardens are cited
-“for that their churchyard fences toward the street are in manie places
-downe, by reason whereof their churchyard is abused by swyne and such
-unseemlie cattell.”
-
-The smiling youthful faces of the figures in this most remarkable brass,
-and the modern-looking whiskers and beard and moustache, combined
-with the helmet, give a singularly unancient look to the wearers, and
-irresistibly call to mind what one has so often seen of late in the
-twentieth-century pageants.
-
-
-DODDINGTON HALL
-
-Between the road which runs west from Lincoln to Saxilby, and the old
-Roman Foss Way from Lincoln to Newark, which went on by Leicester,
-Cirencester, and Bath to Axminster, a tongue of Nottinghamshire runs
-deep into the county. South of this and north of the Foss Way are a few
-villages of no particular importance, amongst them _Eagle_, which was
-once a preceptory of the Knights Templars. But here also, within six
-miles of Lincoln, is _Doddington_. This deserves especial mention for its
-fine Elizabethan hall, which is still very much as it was three hundred
-years ago.
-
-[Sidenote: DODDINGTON HALL]
-
-The station of Doddington and Harby is just over the border, and Harby
-village is in Nottinghamshire. A statue over the doorway in the church
-tower commemorates the fact that Here Queen Eleanor died. Edward I. was
-holding a council at Clipston in Sherwood Forest in 1290 when the queen
-was taken ill and was removed to the house of one of her gentlemen in
-attendance who lived at Harby. After her death her heart was buried in
-Lincoln Minster and her embalmed body was taken by stages to Westminster,
-a beautiful cross being subsequently ordered to be set up at each resting
-place, ten of the thirteen were either not completed or subsequently
-destroyed, all those in the county being among the number. These were
-at Lincoln, Grantham, and Stamford. The only three Eleanor crosses that
-have survived the abominable destruction of all beautiful things from
-which the country suffered, first at the hands of Henry VIII.’s minister
-Cromwell, and then from the acts of Parliament passed by the iconoclasts
-of the Reformation, and finally by the soldiery of the Civil War, are at
-Northampton, Geddington, and Waltham.
-
-[Sidenote: AND ITS OWNERS]
-
-The first owner of Doddington Manor that we know of was one Ailric, in
-Edward the Confessor’s time, who gave it as an endowment to the newly
-built Abbey of Westminster. The family of Pigot held it under the abbot,
-paying a rent of £12, and the estate remained with them till 1486, after
-which Sir John Pigot, having no heir, his widow sold it to Sir Thomas
-Burgh of the Old Hall, Gainsborough, and his family 100 years later sold
-it, in 1586, to John Savile, M.P. for Lincoln; but when, seven years
-later, he ceased to represent the town, he sold it to Thomas Taylor, for
-many years registrar to the Bishops of Lincoln. He was a wealthy man,
-and at once set to work to build the present hall, which was finished in
-1600. It is built of red and black brick with stone quoins and mullions,
-and is approached by a stone gateway with two brick storeys above it and
-three gables. It stands between two quadrangles, with gardens in that on
-the west, and with a cedar-planted lawn on the east, and the E-shaped
-house is surmounted by three octagonal brick turrets with leaden cupolas.
-It is 160 feet long and seventy-five feet deep on the wings. There is no
-superfluous ornament, all being solidly plain but harmonious outside,
-and with fine stately rooms inside. The hall is fifty-three feet by
-twenty-two, and the long gallery on the third floor ninety-six feet by
-twenty-two, the house being all one room thick. A good deal of internal
-decoration—oak panels, a staircase, and marble chimney-pieces, and heavy
-architraves over the doors—was the work of Lord Delaval about 1760. The
-pictures are numerous, mostly family portraits, one being of Lord Hussey
-of Sleaford, beheaded after the Lincolnshire rebellion, 1536. At the
-south end of the long gallery is a group by Sir Joshua Reynolds.
-
-Thomas Taylor died in 1607, and his son in 1652, when the estate devolved
-on his niece, Lady Hussey of Honington. Her husband, whose great uncle
-was the man beheaded by order of Henry VIII., was fined as a Royalist
-in 1646 in the enormous sum of £10,200, of which £8,759 was actually
-paid—half of it in his lifetime, and the rest by his widow and his
-eldest son’s widow, Rhoda, who had for her second husband married Lord
-Fairfax. The accession to her uncle’s estate at Doddington just two years
-after she had cleared this huge debt on Honington must have been truly
-welcome to Lady Hussey, but she only lived to enjoy it for six years,
-and was succeeded by her grandson, Sir Thomas Hussey, who lived till
-1706. Then his title passed to Sir Edward Hussey of Caythorpe and his
-estate to his three daughters, the last of whom, Mrs. Sarah Apreece, by
-will dated 1747, settled it on her daughter, Rhoda, the wife of Captain
-Francis Blake-Delaval, R.N., who had large estates in Northumberland,
-Seaton Delaval, Ford Castle near Flodden Field, and Dissington. The
-estate remained with the Delavals till 1814, when Edward Hussey Delaval,
-a learned man of science and an F.R.S., died, and was buried in the nave
-of Westminster Abbey. Lord Delaval held the property for nearly forty
-years and spent much on the house, but to spite his brother Edward he
-had the meanness to cut down all the timber of any value. His youngest
-daughter was the beautiful Countess of Tyrconnel who died in 1800, and to
-her daughter he left Ford Castle. He himself died at the age of eighty at
-Seaton Delaval, and was buried in the family vault in St. Paul’s Chapel,
-Westminster Abbey.
-
-His brother Edward was only one year younger, but lived to the age of
-eighty-five. Then, in 1814, Seaton Delaval went to his nephew, Sir Jacob
-Astley, but Doddington to his widow and daughter, the latter of whom
-became Mrs. Gunman. The mother survived the daughter, and in 1829 it was
-found that they had left all their property to a friend, Colonel George
-Ralph Payne Jarvis, who had served in the Peninsular War, and whose
-grandson, Mr. G. Eden Jarvis, is the present owner.
-
-
-KETTLETHORPE
-
-[Sidenote: KETTLETHORPE]
-
-The tongue of Nottinghamshire, mentioned above, runs into the county as
-far as Broadholme, near Skellingthorpe, within five miles of the city.
-The northern boundary of this tongue is the Saxilby road, between which
-and the Trent is _Kettlethorpe_, which has an interesting history, though
-the present hall was reconstructed in 1857 by Colonel Weston Cracroft
-Amcotts, father of the present Squire of Hackthorn, who dropped the
-name of Amcotts after his father’s death in 1883, and handed over the
-Kettlethorpe estate to his brother Frederick, whose widow is now lady of
-the Manors of Kettlethorpe and Stow.
-
-The name takes us back to the invasions of Ketil the Dane, and the old
-spelling of Ketilthorp is therefore the correct one.
-
-In 1283 Sir John de Kewn was the owner. Later it passed to the De Cruce
-or De Sancta Cruce or De la Croix or De Seynte Croix family.
-
-In 1356 John De Seynte Croix, son of William de la Croix, conveyed the
-manor and advowson to Sir Thomas Swynford, Knight, one of a family who
-had held land of the Darcys at Nocton in the thirteenth and fourteenth
-centuries.
-
-Sir Hugh de Swynford was employed in his wars by John of Gaunt, son of
-Edward III., and he died in 1371. His widow, Katharine, being placed in
-charge of John of Gaunt’s children, became his mistress and had four
-children by him who were afterwards legitimised, she took the name of
-Beaufort, and of her sons one became Earl of Somerset, one Duke of
-Exeter, one Bishop of Lincoln and of Winchester, and then Cardinal
-Beaufort, whilst Joan became Countess of Westmorland. Katherine Swynford
-was called “Lady of Ketilthorpe.” In 1394 John of Gaunt’s second wife,
-Constance of Carlisle, died, and in 1396 he married Katherine at Lincoln,
-and her title in Deeds of that time is “The Lady Katherine, Duchess of
-Lancaster, Lady of Ketilthorpe.” Her father was Sir Payne (Lat. Paganus)
-Roelt, and her sister Philippa is said to have been the wife of Geoffrey
-Chaucer.
-
-John of Gaunt died in 1399 at Lincoln, and Katherine, dying four years
-later, was buried on the south side of the Angel Choir, her son Henry
-being at that time Bishop of Lincoln. Later, the tomb of her daughter,
-who died in 1440, was placed near her. The tombs were defaced in the
-Civil War. The Swynfords remained owners of Kettlethorpe for 150 years;
-now only a fourteenth century gateway and a portion of the moat remain.
-
-[Sidenote: THE AMCOTTS FAMILY]
-
-Sir William Meryng was the next owner, and in 1564 it passed from the
-Meryngs to John Elwes, who in 1588 conveyed it to W. Meekley, whose
-successor sold it to Gervase Bellamy, of Luneham. He died in 1626, and
-his heirs were his two daughters, _Mary_, who married Gervase Sibthorp
-of Luneham, ancestor of the Sibthorps of Canwick, and _Abigail_, whose
-husband, Charles Hall, became owner of Kettlethorpe. His son, Thomas,
-married for his second wife the widow of Vincent Amcotts, of Harrington,
-who had died in 1686, and their son left the property to his nephew
-Charles Amcotts, of Amcotts, in the Isle of Axholme. He, in 1762,
-purchased from Lord Abingdon the manor of Stow, once the property of the
-Bishops of Lincoln. He enclosed the lordship, and, dying in 1777, his
-two sisters inherited. The husband of the survivor of these sisters,
-Wharton Emerson, of Retford, had assumed the name of Amcotts, and in
-1797 was created a baronet. He died in 1807, and his daughter Elizabeth
-married Sir John Ingilby, and their son, known as Sir William Ingilby
-Amcotts, held both the Amcotts and Ingilby baronetcies inherited from his
-grandfather Sir Wharton Amcotts, and from his father Sir John Ingilby.
-He died in 1854 and the baronetcies died with him, but the estate passed
-to his sister Augusta, wife of Robert Cracroft of Hackthorn, who took
-the name of Amcotts. His son, Weston Cracroft Amcotts, was Member of
-Parliament for Mid-Lincolnshire 1866-1874. He it was who reconstructed
-the hall which Sir William Ingilby Amcotts had allowed to get into
-disrepair, and rebuilt the tower of West Keal church, which had fallen.
-He died in 1883, and was succeeded by his eldest surviving son Edward
-Weston Cracroft of Hackthorn.
-
-For most of my facts about Kettlethorpe and Doddington I am indebted
-to the exhaustive papers by Rev. Canon Cole, Prebendary of Lincoln,
-contributed to the Lincoln Architectural Society’s Journal, to whom also
-I owe valuable information about the brass at Norton Disney, which we
-visited together, and also a pleasant and profitable hour in the minster.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-HERMITAGES AND HOSPITALS
-
-
-SPITAL-ON-THE-STREET
-
- A little lonely hermitage it was,
- Down in a dale, hard by a Forest’s side,
- Far from resort of people that did pass
- In travel to and froe: a little wyde
- There was a holy chappell edifyde,
- Wherein the hermite duly went to say
- His holy things each morne and eventyde.
-
- SPENSER, _Faerie Queene_. I. I. 34.
-
-_Spital-on-the-Street_ is an ancient hospital situated twelve miles
-north of Lincoln on the Roman Ermine Street, which had its origin in
-a Hermitage. The Hermits or “Eremites,” dwellers in the Eremos or
-wilderness, commonly placed their habitats in remote spots, though some
-stationed themselves near the gates of a town where they could assist
-wayfarers with advice and gather contributions at the same time for
-their own support; others dwelt by lonely highways in order to extend
-hospitality to benighted wayfarers. A hermitage on the “Ermine Street”
-between Lincoln and the Humber would be of the latter sort. For the
-Street runs in a bee line for two-and-thirty miles through an absolutely
-tenantless country. Villages lie pretty continuously a few miles distant
-on either side, but with the exception of Spital itself the Street passes
-through nothing till it arrives within five miles of its termination.
-The hermitage would therefore be a welcome asylum to a belated traveller
-on a stormy night and the sound of the chapel bell, or the gleam of the
-hermit’s rushlight through the darkness would be just salvation to him.
-Probably such a picture was in Shakespeare’s mind when he wrote:—
-
- How far that little candle throws his beams!
- So shines a good deed in a naughty world.
-
-The chapel attached to the hermitage was one of four churches in
-Lincolnshire dedicated to St. Edmund King and Martyr.[4] A licence was
-granted by Edward II. for land and rent to be appropriated by the Vicar
-of Tealby for the payment of the chaplain; and, by a document signed
-at Tealby in the year 1323 and witnessed by nearly all the dignitaries
-of the Cathedral of Lincoln, the foundation was placed under the
-jurisdiction of the Lincoln Dean and Chapter. Ten years later we find
-the hermitage called “_Spital_-on-the-Street,” so that its uses had
-already been enlarged, though we have no documentary evidence of this.
-All we know of, is the building of a house for the chaplain by John of
-Harrington in 1333.
-
-[Sidenote: THOMAS DE ASTON]
-
-In 1396 Richard II., “at the request of his dear cousin John de
-Bellomonte, grants to Master Thomas de Aston, Canon of Lincoln, leave
-to newly build a house adjoining the west side of the chapel of St.
-Edmund the King and Martyr at Spitell o’ the Street, for the residence
-of William Wyhom the Chaplain and of certain poor persons there resident
-and their successors,” and before the end of the fourteenth century it
-had buildings sufficient for the maintenance of these poor persons. As
-such it escaped in Henry VIII.’s time, but in the sixteenth century the
-property was seized by Elizabeth for her own use in the most barefaced
-manner and sold by her. The Sessions for the Kirton division of Lindsey
-were for many years held in the chapel, but subsequently it fell into
-disrepair and was pulled down by Sir William Wray in 1594, and a new
-sessions house built close by, on which was this Latin couplet,
-
- Hæc domus odit amat punit conservat honorat
- Nequitiam pacem crimina jura bonos.
-
-In 1660 Dr. Mapletoft, of Pembroke College, Cambridge, being appointed
-Sub-Dean of Lincoln and also Master of the Spital Hospital, at once
-rebuilt the chapel and set to work to improve the revenue, and when he
-became Dean of Ely in 1668, he retained his Mastership of Spital, and
-so well did he and his next-but-one successor, Chancellor Mandeville do
-their work, that, whereas it had sunk to a master and two poor persons to
-whom he paid 2_s._ each, they restored it to its complement of seven poor
-people and bought land for it, which so increased in value that, when
-the Charity Commissioners took the Spital in hand in the reign of Queen
-Victoria, the revenues were estimated at £959, which was nearly all of it
-being misappropriated.
-
-[Illustration: _Wykeham Chapel, near Spalding._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE NEW SCHEME]
-
-[Sidenote: MAPLETOFT’S INSCRIPTION]
-
-In 1858 a new scheme was drawn up, and now seven alms-people of each sex
-receive £20 a year, and besides other annual payments £5,500 has been
-spent out of the Spital funds on the Grammar School at Lincoln and on
-founding and maintaining a middle-class school at Market-Rasen called
-after the Spital’s founder _The De Aston School_. Of the old hospital
-at Spital only the chapel built by Mapletoft in 1662 remains; a plain
-structure with its east end to the road where the entrance door is, the
-altar being at the west end. Below the small square bell-cot is a stone
-bearing this inscription:—
-
- Fui Aᵒ Dni 1398 ⎫
- Non Fui 1594 ⎬ Domus Dei et Pauperum
- Sum 1616 ⎭
-
- Qui hanc Deus hunc destruat.
- G.P. 1830.
-
-This means:—
-
- I was in 1398 ⎫
- I was not in 1594 ⎬ The House of God and of the poor
- I am in 1616 ⎭
-
- Whoever destroys this house may God destroy him.
-
-This means that it was founded by De Aston as a chantry and hospital in
-1398,[5] pulled down by Wray in 1594 and rebuilt by Mapletoft in 1661.
-The mason who carved the date has transposed the two last figures in 1661.
-
-G.P. should be J.P. for John Pretyman, the last “Master.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-ROADS NORTH FROM LINCOLN
-
- Kirton-in-Lindsey—The Carrs—Broughton—Brigg—The North
- Wolds—Worlaby—Elsham—Saxby-All-Saints—Horkstow—South
- Ferriby—Barton-on-Humber—St. Peter’s and St. Mary’s—Greater
- care of Churches.
-
-
-Of the three roads north from Lincoln we have spoken of the road on the
-ridge which is the continuation of the Cliff road on which we travelled
-from Navenby to Lincoln. The view is the notable thing on this road, for,
-though it looks down on a series of small villages below its western
-slope, Burton, Carlton, Scampton, Aisthorpe, Brattleby, Cammeringham,
-Ingham, Fillingham, Glentworth, Harpswell, Hemswell, Willoughton,
-Blyborough and Grayingham, all in a stretch of fourteen miles, it passes
-through nothing of importance but _Kirton-in-Lindsey_. This Kirton is
-a very old place, the manor being once held by Piers Gaveston, the
-favourite of Edward II., and later by the Black Prince. The office of
-Seneschal was filled at one time by the Burgh family of Gainsborough.
-The church is an interesting one, and has a richly carved and moulded
-west doorway. Leading from the nave to the tower is a very massive double
-Early English arch, resting on a large circular pillar, and two thick
-responds. The south doorway is like the western one, richly carved with
-tooth moulding. The porch is used as a baptistry. On the north wall of
-the nave is a wall-painting representing the seven sacraments and blood
-flowing from the crucified Saviour to each.
-
-[Sidenote: “CLIFF” AND “CARR”]
-
-The road east of Ermine Street goes through any number of villages, for
-it goes on the low ground, and each parish runs up to the Ermine Street
-and has its portion of high ground or “cliff.” Normanby Cliff, Owmby
-Cliff, Saxby Cliff, etc., and from the west side each village does the
-same, so that we have in succession Brattleby, Ingham, and Hemswell
-Cliff. The winds on the ridge apparently, which “extirpated” the church
-of Boothby Graffoe, have always deterred people from building on the
-height; but none of the places on this low road which occur regularly at
-intervals of two miles are of any special importance except Glentham,
-which will be noticed later. We will therefore run along the middle
-road, the grand old Roman Street, which begins at Chichester and, as
-seen on the map, goes through the county north of Lincoln as straight as
-an arrow for over thirty miles. At the twelfth mile we pass Spital, and
-when, after eighteen miles we get to the latitude of Kirton-Lindsey on
-the cliff road, we shall find that the branch road to the right, which
-goes to Brigg, takes all the traffic, and the Ermine Street for seven or
-eight miles is disused. So, turning off, we pass _Redbourne_ Hall and
-_Hibaldstow_, the place of St. Higbald, who came to Lincolnshire across
-the Humber with St. Chad to bring Christianity to the Mercians in the
-seventh century. This parish runs up to the ridge, and in the middle of
-it is an old camp at Gainsthorpe on the “Street.” At Scawby Park, with
-its fine lakes, the property of the Sutton-Nelthorpes, we turn eastwards
-and reach Brigg. This, once a fishing place on the Ancholme River, is now
-the one market town of all this low-lying neighbourhood. Roads from the
-four villages of _Scawby_, _Broughton_, _Wrawby_ and _Bigby_ unite here,
-and the great Weir Dyke or “New River Ancholme” which runs from the river
-Rase to the Humber goes through it. It is eleven miles from Bishopsbridge
-on the Rase to Brigg, and seven from Brandy Wharf, whence boats used to
-run to meet the Humber boats at Ferriby Sluice, ten miles north of Brigg.
-Hereabouts the fens are called “carrs.” We noticed the term “carr dyke”
-for the Roman drain near Bourn, which runs from the Nene to the Witham;
-and the map along the whole course of the Ancholme, which runs north for
-twenty miles, is covered with “carrs.” The villages are at the edge of
-the Wold generally, but they all have their bit of fen and all are called
-by this name, Horkstow carrs, Saxby carrs, Worlaby carrs, Elsham carrs,
-etc.
-
-_Carr_ is a north country word, and has two distinct meanings in
-Lincolnshire.
-
-1. The moat-like places which originally surrounded the inaccessible
-islets, with which the Fenland at one time abounded; but now used chiefly
-of low-lying land apt to be flooded.
-
-2. A wood of alder, ash, &c., in a moist boggy place, _e.g._, “Keal
-Carrs,” near Spilsby.
-
-A third meaning is less common, viz., the humate of iron or yellow
-sediment in water which flows from peaty land.
-
-[Sidenote: BROUGHTON AND BRIGG]
-
-Of the four parishes above mentioned which meet at Brigg,[6] _Broughton_
-on the Ermine Street is worth a visit. The pre-Norman church and
-tower, like _Marton_, has a good deal of herring-bone work, and, like
-_Hough-on-the-Hill_, an outer turret containing a spiral staircase. There
-is a small rude doorway, and as at Barton, the tower with its two apses
-probably formed the original church.
-
-The present nave is built on the Norman foundation, and the cable
-moulding is visible at the base of two of the pillars. There is a chapel
-in the north aisle, and on the north side of the chancel a good altar
-tomb with alabaster effigies of Sir H. Redford and his wife, 1380, and
-a fine brass on the floor of about the same date. This chancel was once
-sixteen feet longer. In another meanly built chantry is a monument to
-Sir Ed. Anderson, 1660. In Broughton woods, as at Tumby, the lily of the
-valley grows wild. North of Broughton the Ermine Street becomes again
-passable, and, after running some miles through a well-wooded country,
-is crossed by the railway at Appleby Station, whence it becomes a good
-road again, but again falls into disuse when the road turns to the left
-for _Winterton_, a large village in which three fine Roman pavements were
-ploughed up in 1747. Here we have a large cruciform church with a very
-early tower. Afterwards the Street continues, a visible but not very
-serviceable track, to _Winteringham Haven_, the Roman “Ad Abum.”
-
-[Sidenote: OLD BOAT OF BRIGG]
-
-In _Brigg_ we had hoped to see the old boat which was dug out near the
-river in 1886, it is forty-eight feet long and four to five feet wide,
-hollowed out of a single tree, and could carry at least forty men over
-the Humber, though not perhaps across the sea. Its height at the stern
-was three feet nine inches, and it was six inches thick at the bottom.
-The tree trunk was open at the thick or stern end, and two oak boards
-slid into grooves cut in the sides and bottom to make a stern-board.
-It probably had bulwark-boards also, certainly it had three stiffening
-thwarts, and the stern end had been decked, as a ledge still shows on
-either side on which the planking rested. One very interesting feature
-in it was that the boat had been repaired, with a patch of oak boarding
-six feet by one foot, on the starboard side, the board being bevelled
-at the edges and pegged on with oak pins. A similar boat made out of a
-huge oak tree is in the portico of the British Museum. In this, which is
-fifty feet long and four feet wide, tapering off a little at either end,
-both the ends and two thwarts are left solid. The latter are not more
-than six inches high, but sufficient to add considerably to the strength
-of the hull. The boat is three inches thick at the gunwale and possibly
-more at the bottom, and has no keel. But this most interesting relic of
-Viking days has been removed from Brigg, for what reasons I know not, to
-the Museum at Hull, and is no longer in the county. A British corduroy
-road or plank causeway was also found below the mud from which the boat
-was dug out, and is therefore probably of greater age, though such a
-mud-bearing stream as the Humber can make a considerable deposit in a
-very short time. This fact is illustrated by the process of “warping,”
-which is described in the chapter on the Isle of Axholme.
-
-_Brigg_, without its old boat, has little to detain us, so we can pass to
-_Wrawby_, and then desert the main road, which goes east through a gap in
-the Wold to _Brocklesby_, and turn northwards to _Elsham_, where we come
-up against the most northerly portion of the “Wolds” as distinguished
-from the “Cliff” or Ridge which lies more to the west. The main road
-or highway to _Barton_ runs right up the hill and crosses the Wold
-obliquely, and, as usual, being on the high ground, exhibits no villages
-in the whole of its course, but we will turn sharp to the left and take a
-byway which goes by “the Villages” of which we shall pass through no less
-than half a dozen in the six miles between Elsham and the Humber.
-
-At _Elsham_ is the seat of Sir John Astley. The church has a rich tower
-doorway with curious sculptured stones on either side.
-
-[Sidenote: SAXBY AND HORKSTOW]
-
-Any road which runs by the edge of a curving range of hills is sure
-to be picturesque; and the continuation of the Wolds south of Elsham,
-after the Barnetby Gap, where the railway line gets through the Wolds
-without tunnelling, with the string of villages all ending in “by,”
-Bigby, Somerby, Searby, Owmby, Grasby, Clixby, Audleby, and Fonaby,
-which lead the traveller to _Caistor_, affords pleasant travelling. But
-it does not come up in varied charm to this western edge of the Wold,
-which goes farthest north, and ends on the plateau which overlooks
-the Humber near _South Ferriby_. On this route the first village from
-_Elsham_ is _Worlaby_, and whereas _Elsham_ had once a small house of
-Austin Canons founded by Beatrice de Amundeville before 1169, and given
-by Henry VIII. at the Dissolution to the all devouring Duke of Suffolk,
-_Worlaby_ had its benefactor in John, first Lord Bellasyse, who founded
-in 1670 a hospital for poor women, of which the brick building still
-exists. The twisting road with its wooded slopes and curving hollows is
-here extremely pretty. We next reach _Bonby_, and soon after come to
-_Saxby All Saints_. This is a really delightful village, and evidently
-under the care of one owner, for all the houses are extremely neat and,
-with the exception of two proud-looking brick-built houses of the villa
-type, all have tiled roofs and buff-coloured walls. That the village
-is grateful to the landlord and his agent, and is also, like Mrs. John
-Gilpin, of a thrifty mind, is quaintly testified by the inscription on
-a drinking fountain in the village, with a semicircular seat round one
-side of it which tells how it was set up “in honour of the 60ᵗʰ year of
-Queen Victoria’s reign, and of Frederick Horsley, agent for 42 years
-on Mr. Barton’s estate.” Each of these parishes extends up on to the
-Wold, and down across the fen, and the map shows this and marks Saxby or
-Elsham “Wolds” as well as Saxby or Elsham “Carrs”; and in each village a
-signpost points west “to the bridge,” which goes over the land drain and
-the Weir Dyke.
-
-In the next village of _Horkstow_, a big elm stands close to the gates
-of the churchyard and parsonage. Here the fine air and the bright breezy
-look of sky and landscape fill one with pleasure, and the snug way in
-which the churches nestle against the skirt of the wold give a charming
-air of peace and retirement. The church here is singular in its very
-sharp rise of level towards the east. You mount up six steps from the
-nave at the chancel arch, further east are two more steps and another
-arch, and again further on, two more and another arch. It looks as though
-the ground had been raised, for the capitals of the pillars on which
-these last two arches rest are only four feet and a half from the floor.
-The north arcade is transition Norman, the arches on the Norman pillars,
-instead of round, being slightly pointed.
-
-[Sidenote: QUAINT EPITAPHS]
-
-A Colonel of the sixty-third regiment, who died in 1838, has a mural
-tablet here, which tells us that “In the discharge of his publick
-duties he was firm and just yet lenient, and as a private gentleman his
-integrity and urbanity endeared him to all his friends.” This is almost
-worthy to be placed beside that of the man who on ending “his social
-career” is stated to have “endeared himself to all his friends and
-acquaintances by the charm of his manner and his elegant performance on
-the bassoon.” Curious, what things people used to think proper to put up
-in churches! One of the oddest is at Harewood in Yorkshire, where, under
-a bust of Sir Thomas Denison, who is represented in a wig, his widow
-writes that “he was pressed and at last prevailed on to accept the office
-of Judge in the Kings Bench, the duties of which he discharged with
-_unsuspected integrity_.” Doubtless she meant with an integrity which was
-above suspicion, but it reads so very much as if those who knew him had
-never for a moment suspected him of possessing the virtue mentioned. For
-other examples see Chapter V.
-
-After _Horkstow_ we come to _South Ferriby_, where a chalk road leads
-along the edge of the cliff towards a little landing stage on the water’s
-edge, giving a pretty view over the wide estuary to the Yorkshire
-continuation of the Wold, and the little village of _North Ferriby_
-opposite.
-
-The church of South Ferriby, which is dedicated, as many coast churches
-are, to St. Nicholas, the patron Saint of children and fishermen, has its
-nave running north and south, and a bit railed off at the north end for
-the altar, though that is now placed at the south end.
-
-The name suggests a ferry over the Humber, but the locality seems
-to forbid this, for in no place is the Humber wider until you have
-almost reached _Grimsby_, and from _Barton_ to _Hessle_, about three
-miles further down stream, it is only about half the width, and there,
-no doubt, there was a ferry. The reason of this great width is that
-the Humber has made inroads here and washed away a good deal of land
-which used to be between Ferriby Hall and the water. This being partly
-deposited on the “old Warp” sand bank, once the breeding place of many
-sea birds, has formed a permanent pasture there, now claimed by the Crown
-and called “Reads Island.”
-
-[Sidenote: THE BARTON HOY]
-
-A hundred years ago the ‘hoy,’ a sloop-rigged packet, used to take
-passengers from Barton Waterside Inn, just north of Barton, to Hull; and
-Sir J. Nelthorpe notes in his pocket book, under date August 9th, 1793.
-“arrived at Scawby after a very bad passage over the Humber, having been
-on the water five hours, and at last forced to run on shore in Barrow
-Haven, not being able to make Barton, owing to the negligence of the
-boatmen in not leaving Hull in time; my horses, seven in number, remained
-in the boat from four o’clock in the morning till seven at night, before
-they could be landed.”
-
-Coming back from the Cliff Edge road, we turn up the hill for
-_Barton-on-Humber_, and from the top of the Wold, which here comes to an
-end, we get a really beautiful and extended view in all directions. But
-we must now speak of Barton, with its two old churches.
-
-
-BARTON-ON-HUMBER
-
-[Sidenote: BARTON-ON-HUMBER]
-
-_Barton-on-Humber_ had a market and a ferry when Domesday Book was
-compiled, and was a bigger port than Hull. At the Conquest it was
-given to the King’s nephew, Gilbert of Ghent, son of Baldwin Earl of
-Flanders, whose seat was at Folkingham. The ferry is still used, and
-the Hull cattle boats mostly start from Barton landing-stage, but most
-of the passenger traffic is from the railway pier at New Holland, four
-miles to the east. The town is a mile from the waterside. It has two
-fine churches, of which St. Peter’s is one of the earliest in England;
-curiously one of the same type of Saxon church is also at a Barton,
-Earl’s Barton in Northants, and not far from it is another of similar
-date, at Brixworth, which is held to be the most noteworthy of all the
-early churches in England. Barnack and Wittering in the same county
-are also of the same style and of the same antiquity, and at Dover, at
-Bradford-on-Avon, and at Worth and Sompting in Sussex are others similar.
-Stow, near Lincoln, Broughton near Brigg, and Hough-on-the-Hill, and
-the two Lincoln towers and Bracebridge, are of similar age, but these
-last, like Clee and so many in the neighbourhood of Grimsby, Caistor and
-Gainsborough, have little but their tower or part of their tower left
-that can be called Saxon, while at Stow, and some of the churches in the
-other counties mentioned, there is more to see of the original building.
-
-The last restoration of St. Peter’s, Barton, in 1898, has put the church
-into good condition and left the old work at the west end much as it was
-a thousand years ago; probably the church at first was very like what we
-may still see at _Brixworth_. The tower outside is divided into panels by
-strips of stone, which go deep into the walls and project from the rubble
-masonry, as at Barnack. This has been aptly termed “Stone carpentry,” but
-cannot really be a continuation in stone of a previously existing method
-of building with a wooden framework, such as we see in the half-timbered
-houses of the south of England, because that method of building was
-later. It is possibly a method imported from Germany; certainly the
-double light with the mid-wall jamb came from Northern Italy to the
-Rhenish provinces, and may have come on to England from thence. Hence it
-has been termed “Teutonic Romanesque.”
-
-[Illustration: _The Avon at Barton-on-Humber._]
-
-[Sidenote: A SAXON CHURCH]
-
-[Sidenote: ST. PETER’S, BARTON]
-
-Of the four stages of the tower the lowest has an arcading of dressed
-stone, as there is at Bradford-on-Avon, and on the east, south and west
-sides a round-headed doorway, and on the north a triangular-headed one,
-with massive “Long-and-Short” work. The next stage exhibits triangular
-arcading with double lights and a massive baluster and capital under a
-triangular arch. The third stage has no arcading, but a similar two-light
-window. The fourth stage is not Saxon but early Norman in style. From
-the west of the tower projects a sort of annexe, fifteen feet by twelve,
-of the same width as the tower and cöeval with it, having quoins of
-“Long-and-Short” work, this is pierced with two small rude lights north
-and south, and with two circular lights on the west. These circular
-lights are of extraordinary interest, for they still have in them,
-across the top of the upper opening and at the bottom of the lower one,
-a portion of the old original Saxon oak shutter, perforated with round
-holes to let in light and air, a thing absolutely unique. A chancel,
-whose foundations have been recently discovered, projected from the tower
-eastward, and just below the floor, near the north wall, is a curious
-bricked chamber, which might have been a small tomb.
-
-[Illustration: _St. Peter’s, Barton-on-Humber._]
-
-[Sidenote: ST. MARY’S, BARTON]
-
-The tower has four doorways irregularly placed and all differing from
-each other: it is fitted up for daily morning service, for which it has
-been used intermittently for over a thousand years; for no doubt the
-original church consisted simply of the tower and the two chambers east
-and west of it. At present, from the interior of the spacious Decorated
-nave, with its added Perpendicular clerestory, when you look up at the
-west end and see the rude round-headed arches of the first and second
-stages of the tower, and the double triangular-headed light of the next
-stage, all of which come within the nave roof, you see at the same time
-two deep grooves cut in the tower face for the early steep-pitched roof.
-These start from the double light and finish by cutting through the
-upright stone strips which run like elongated pilasters up the whole
-height of the tower on either side. The tower and its annexe is of such
-absorbing interest that one hardly looks at the rest of the church, or
-stops to note its beautifully restored rood screen with a new canopy to
-it, which serves to hide the wide ugly chancel arch. But we shall perhaps
-be able to make up for this if we go on to St. Mary’s Church, which was
-the church of the people of Barton, and served by a secular priest, St.
-Peter’s being an appanage of Bardney Abbey. The churches both stand high,
-and are quite near one another. St. Mary’s was a Norman building, as
-the north arcade testifies; the south arcade was rebuilt in the Early
-English period, to which the massive tower also belongs, the parapet
-being later. Once the nave and chancel had a continuous roof till the
-clerestory was added, and were of the same width, and built of brick and
-stone intermingled and set anyhow. The four-light windows in the chancel
-are handsome. The north arcade has five round arches, and one, at the
-west end, pointed. The south arcade has only four arches, but larger and
-with slenderer columns, consisting of eight light shafts round a central
-pillar. On the south the chantry chapel extends the whole length of the
-chancel, and has beside the altar an aumbry and, what is very unusual in
-such a chapel, sedilia. The aisles are wide and out of proportion to the
-building in both churches. The east window is white, with one little bit
-of old glass in it, and on the floor is a full-sized brass of Simon Seman
-Sheriff of London, in Alderman’s gown. Some Parliamentarian soldiers’
-armour is in the vestry of St. Peter’s. There are also two fine oak
-chests, one hollowed out of a section of a large tree with the outer slab
-of the tree several inches thick as a lid. A similar, but smaller, chest
-is in Blawith church vestry, near Coniston Lake, Lancashire.[7]
-
-[Illustration: _St. Mary’s, Barton-on-Humber._]
-
-[Sidenote: INTEREST IN CHURCH HISTORY]
-
-In Barton St. Peter’s the Rector has provided a very full account of
-the history of the church, for which all who visit it must be extremely
-grateful.
-
-It is very pleasant to find that the number are so decidedly on the
-increase of clergymen who take an interest in the past history of their
-churches, and write all they can find out about them, either in their
-parish magazines or in a separate pamphlet. Some of these, too, take
-pains with their old registers, and if only the rector, or someone
-in the parish whom he could trust to do the work with skill, care,
-and knowledge, would copy the old sixteenth and seventeenth century
-registers in a clear hand, the parish would be in possession of the most
-interesting of all local documents in a legible form, and the originals
-could be safely housed in a dry place, which is by no means the case with
-all of them at present, and no longer be subjected to the wear and tear
-of rough handling and the decay from damp which has been so fatal to the
-earliest pages of most of them.
-
-The printing and placing more frequently in the church of a card,
-pointing out the salient features and giving what is known of the
-history of the building, would also be a boon to those visitors who know
-something of architecture, and would stimulate a taste for it in others,
-and a respect for old work, the lack of which has been the cause of so
-much destruction under the specious name of restoration in the earlier
-half of the past century. Things are much better now than they were
-two generations ago, but ignorance and want of means may still cause
-irreparable damage, which, if the above suggestion were universally
-carried out, would become less and less possible.
-
-[Sidenote: CHURCH PATRONAGE]
-
-Amongst those who take the greatest interest in their churches I am
-especially indebted to the Rev. G. G. Walker, Rector of Somerby near
-Grantham, the Rev. Canon Sutton, of Brant Broughton, the Rev. F.
-McKenzie, of Great Hale near Sleaford, and the Rev. C. H. Laing, of
-Bardney, who has done such good work in the excavation of the famous
-abbey. The writer, too, of letters in _The Spilsby and Horncastle
-Gazette_, on town and village life in Lincolnshire, brings together much
-interesting information. From him I gather that as far back as 668,
-when Theodore was Archbishop of Canterbury, local provision was made
-for the village clergy who were then, of course, but few in number. His
-wise arrangement, that those who built a church should have the right
-of choosing their pastor, initiated the system of private patronage
-and thereby encouraged the building and endowing of churches, so that
-it is not surprising to hear that in Domesday Book—400 years later than
-Theodore’s time—the county of Lincolnshire had no less than 226 churches.
-The original patron often gave the right of presentation to an abbey,
-which was a wise plan, as it ensured to the people a pastor, and to the
-pastor an adequate means of living, and provided for the building and
-upkeep of the church, which was often larger than the population of the
-village warranted either then or since.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-THE NORTH-WEST
-
- Winteringham—Alkborough and “Julian’s
- Bower”—Burton-Stather—Scunthorpe and Frodingham—Fillingham
- and Wycliff—Glentworth and Sir Christopher
- Wray—Laughton—Corringham—Gainsborough—The Old Hall—Lea and Sir
- Charles Anderson—Knaith and Sir Thomas Sutton—A Group of Early
- Church Towers—Lincolnshire Roads.
-
-
-It is quite a surprise to the traveller in the north of the county to
-find so much that is really pretty in what looks on the map, from the
-artistic point of view, a trifle “flat and unprofitable,” but really
-there are few prettier bits of road in the county than that by “the
-Villages” under the northern Wolds, and there is another little bit of
-cliff near the mouth of the Trent which affords equally picturesque bits
-of village scenery combined with fine views over the Trent, Ouse, and
-Humber.
-
-From _South Ferriby_ a byway runs alongside the water to _Winteringham_,
-from whence the Romans must have had a ferry to _Brough_, whence their
-great road went on to the north.
-
-In _Winteringham_ church there are some good Norman arches, and a fine
-effigy of a knight in armour, said to be one of the Marmions. The road
-hence takes us by innumerable turns to _West Halton_, where the church
-is dedicated to St. Etheldreda, who is said to have hidden here from her
-husband Ecgfrith, when she was fleeing to Ely, at which place she founded
-the first monastery, in 672, six years before the building of the church
-at Stow. Murray notes that in the “Liber Eliensis” Halton is called
-Alftham.
-
-Three miles to the south-east we find the large village of _Winterton_,
-just within a mile of the Ermine Street, and it is evident that a good
-many Romans had villas on the high ground looking towards the Humber,
-for both here and at _Roxby_, a mile to the south, good Roman pavements
-have been found, and another, four miles to the east, at Horkstow.
-Roxby church shows some pre-Norman stone work at the west end of the
-north aisle, and a fine series of canopied sedilia in the chancel, with
-unusually rich and lofty pinnacles. At _Winterton_ a Roman pavement
-was noticed by De la Pryme in 1699, and another with a figure of Ceres
-holding a cornucopia was discovered in 1797. The churchyard has an
-Early English cross, and the tower, which is engaged in the aisles, is
-of the primitive Romanesque type, with the Saxon belfry windows in the
-lower stage, and elegant Early English ones above. An early slab is
-over the west door, the nave has lofty octagonal pillars with bands of
-tooth ornament. The transepts are unusually wide and have rich Decorated
-windows. A Holy Family, by Raphael Mengs, forms the altarpiece.
-
-[Sidenote: MAZES]
-
-From here we go west to _Alkborough_, and on a grassy headland
-overlooking the junction of the Trent with the Ouse, we find a
-saucer-shaped hollow a few feet deep and forty-four feet across, at
-the bottom of which is a maze cut in the turf by monks 800 years ago.
-It is almost identical in pattern with one at Wing, near Uppingham,
-in Rutland, and unlike those “quaint mazes on the wanton green”
-mentioned in “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” which “for lack of tread are
-undistinguishable,” it has been kept cleared out, and a copy of it laid
-down in the porch, as we find to be done on one of the porch piers at
-Lucca Cathedral, and in the nave of Chartres Cathedral. These mazes
-were Christian adaptations of the Egyptian and Greek labyrinths, and
-were supposed to be allegorical of the mazes and entanglements of sin
-from which man can only get free if assisted by the guiding hand of
-Providence, or of Holy Church. Hence in a Christian Basilica in Algeria
-the words “Sancta Ecclesia” are arranged in a complicated fashion in
-the centre of the maze. Other mazes used to exist at Appleby, Louth,
-and Horncastle in Lincolnshire, and at Ripon one of the same pattern,
-but half as large again as the Alkborough maze, was only ploughed up
-in 1827. At Asenby in Yorkshire is a similar one still carefully kept
-clear. That on St. Catherine’s Hill, Winchester, is quadrangular and much
-simpler. At Leigh in Dorset is a “Miz Maze.” Northants, Notts, Wilts,
-Beds, Cambridge, and Gloucestershire, all had one at least. _Comberton_
-in Cambridge has one of precisely the same pattern, and at _Hilton_, in
-Huntingdonshire, is one called by the same name as that at Alkborough,
-“Julian’s bower.” This is thought to be a reminiscence of the intricate
-‘Troy’ game described in Virgil, _Aen._ v., 588-593, as played on
-horseback by Iulus and his comrades:—
-
- “Ut quondam Creta fertur Labyrinthus in alta
- Parietibus textum caecis iter, ancipitemque
- Mille viis habuisse dolum, qua signa sequendi
- Falleret indeprensus et irremeabilis error.
- Haud alio Teucrum nati vestigia cursu
- Impediunt texuntque fugas et proelia ludo.”
-
-And the fact that a labyrinthine figure cut in the turf near Burgh on
-the Solway by the Cumberland herdsmen was called “the walls of Troy”
-somewhat favours the interpretation. But it seems rather a far-fetched
-origin. Doubtless they served as an innocent recreation for the monks who
-lived at St. Anne’s chapel hard by, and the idea of such labyrinthine
-patterns is found in many churches abroad, for they are executed in
-coloured marbles, both in Rome and in the Early church of St. Vitale at
-Ravenna. The mazes formed of growing trees, as at Hampton Court, are more
-difficult to make out, as you cannot see the whole pattern at one time.
-
-[Sidenote: ALKBOROUGH]
-
-The church at _Alkborough_ was, like Croyland, a bone of contention
-between the monks of Spalding and Peterborough, each claiming it as a
-gift from the founder Thorold, in 1052. Tradition says that it was partly
-rebuilt by the three knights, Brito, Tracy, and Morville, who had taken
-refuge in this most remote corner of Lincolnshire, where one of them
-lived, after their murder of Becket in Canterbury Cathedral. The original
-Early tower and tower-arch remain, and a fragment of a very early
-cross is now to be seen by the north pier. One of the bells has this
-inscription:—
-
- “Jesu for yi Modir sake
- Save all ye sauls that me gart make.”
-
-[Sidenote: BURTON-STATHER]
-
-In the village is a really beautiful old Tudor house of brick, with stone
-mullions, called Walcot Old Hall, the property of J. Goulton Constable,
-Esq. The little isolated bit of chalk wold which begins near Walcot is
-but four miles long, and in the centre of it is perched the village
-of _Burton-Stather_. The church stands on the very edge of the cliff,
-and a steep road leads down to the Staithe, a ferry landing stage, from
-which the village gets its name. Here, at a turn in the road, close to
-the village pump, still in universal use by the road side, we stopped
-to admire the wide and delightful view. The Trent was just below us.
-_Garthorpe_, where the other side of the ferry has its landing place,
-was in front, across the Trent lay the _Isle of Axholme_, green but
-featureless, and beyond it the sinuous Ouse, like a great gleaming snake,
-with the smoke of Goole rising up across the wide plain, and beyond the
-river, Howden tower; while, on a clear day, Selby Abbey and York Minster
-can be seen from the churchyard. We leave the village by an avenue of
-over-arching trees, and cross the Wold obliquely, passing Normanby
-Hall, the residence of Sir B. D. Sheffield, many of whose ancestors are
-buried in Burton-Stather church, and leaving the height, descend into a
-plain filled with smoke from the tall chimneys of the _Scunthorpe_ and
-_Frodingham_ iron furnaces. To come all at once on this recent industrial
-centre is a surprise after the bright clear atmosphere and keen air
-in which we have been revelling all day. But we soon leave the tall
-chimneys behind and find that the road divides; the left passing over
-to the “Cliff” at _Raventhorpe_ near _Broughton_ on the Ermine Street,
-and continuing south past _Manton_, where the black-headed gull, “_Larus
-Ridibundus_,” the commonest of all the gulls on the south coast of
-England, breeds on land belonging to Sir Sutton Nelthorpe of Scawby, to
-_Kirton in Lindsey_, and so by _Blyborough_, _Willoughton_, _Hemswell_,
-and _Harpswell_, to _Spital-on-the-Street_; and thence by _Glentworth_
-and _Fillingham_ to Lincoln.
-
-Of these places _Blyborough_ is curiously dedicated to St. Alkmund,
-a Northumbrian Saint, to whom also is dedicated a church founded in
-the ninth century by the daughter of Alfred the Great in Shrewsbury.
-_Willoughton_ once had a preceptory of the Templars, founded in 1170.
-
-_Harpswell_ in its Early Norman, or possibly pre-Norman, tower has a
-mid-wall shaft carved with chevron ornament, similar to that in the upper
-of two sets of early double lights on the south side of the tower of
-Appleton-le-Strey near Malton in Yorkshire. It also possesses a clock
-which was given in memory of the victory at Culloden, 1746. Moreover it
-contains several fine monuments; but _Glentworth_ and _Fillingham_ are
-of more interest than all these. _Glentworth_, for its very interesting
-church, and _Fillingham_, because from 1361 to 1368 it was the home of
-the great John Wyclif, who held the living as a ‘fellow’ of Balliol
-College, Oxford.
-
-[Sidenote: WYCLIF]
-
-Wyclif was made Master of Balliol in 1360, and became rector of
-Fillingham in the same year. In 1368 he moved to Ludgershall in Bucks,
-and in 1374 to Lutterworth, where he died on December 31, 1384. He was a
-consistent opposer of the doctrine of transubstantiation, for which he
-was condemned by the University of Oxford; and he renounced allegiance to
-the Pope, who issued no less than five Bulls against him. The Archbishop
-of Canterbury persecuted him in his latter years, and forty-four years
-after his death his bones were exhumed and burnt by order of the Synod of
-Constance, and the ashes cast into the Swift. He made the first complete
-translation of the Bible into English from the Vulgate, and in this he
-was assisted by Nicolas of Hereford, who took the Old Testament, Wyclif
-doing the New. Chaucer, who died in 1400, thus describes him in his
-Prologue to the “Canterbury Tales”:—
-
- A good man was ther of religioun,
- And was a poure Persoun of a toun;
- But riche he was of holy thought and werk.
- He was also a lerned man, a clerk
- That Christes gospel trewly wolde preche.
-
- Wide was his parische, and houses fer asonder,
- But he ne lefte not for reyne ne thonder,
- In sicknesse nor in mischiefe to visite
- The ferrest in his parische, muche and lite,
- Upon his feet, and in his hand a staf.
- This noble ensample to his sheep he gaf,
- That first he wrought and afterward be taughte.
- Out of the Gospel he the wordes caughte
- And this figure he added eek thereto,
- That if golde ruste, what shal iren do?
-
- A better preest, I trowe, ther nowher non is,
- He wayted after no pompe and reverence,
- Ne maked him a spiced conscience,
- But Christes lore, and his apostles twelve,
- He taught, but first he folowed it himselve.
-
-[Sidenote: SIR CHRISTOPHER WRAY]
-
-_Glentworth_ has a typical pre-Norman tower, built of small stones with
-dressed quoins. It has the two stringcourses, the first being two-thirds
-of the way up from the ground with only thin slits for lights below it
-and with the usual mid-wall shaft in the belfry window above it, but with
-an unusual impost; a slab with a boldly-cut cross on it forms the jamb in
-the light over the west window, and the south side shows ornamentation
-similar to that which we noticed at Stow. Besides the tower, the
-chancel-arch and a narrow priest’s door are all that remains of the Early
-work. The monument to Sir Christopher Wray, who lived here from 1574 to
-1592, is a very fine one. The judge is represented in his robes and hat,
-with ruff, which his wife also wears, she having a hood and gown with
-jewelled stomacher. Four daughters are figured kneeling below, while
-the son kneels above in armour. Marble pillars with Corinthian capitals
-support the arch over the recess in which the figures lie, and it was
-once richly coloured and enclosed by a screen of wrought ironwork.
-
-The right hand road from Scunthorpe runs down the centre of the
-plain half-way between the Cliff and the Trent, through a number of
-villages. Of these _Ashby_ still maintains a Duck Decoy near the Trent.
-_Bottesford_ has a fine cruciform church, with a handsome chancel,
-having narrow deep-set lancet windows of unusual length, ornamented with
-tooth moulding, a singular arrangement of alternate lancet and circular
-windows in the clerestory, and stone seats round the Early English arcade
-pillars, as at Claypole. _Messingham_, with its stained-glass and oak
-furniture collected by Archdeacon Bailey from various churches in his
-Archdeaconry and elsewhere, as also _Scotter_ and _Scotton_, are but
-milestones on the way to _Northorpe_, where are two good doorways, one
-Norman, and one, in the south porch, Decorated, with fine carved foliage,
-and the old door still in use. The western bays of the arcade are built
-into the walls of the Perpendicular tower, which has been inserted
-between them. A sepulchral brass with inscription to Anthony Moreson,
-1648, has been inserted into an old altar slab, shown as such by its five
-crosses. Thanks to Mrs. Meynell Ingram the church of _Laughton_, three
-miles west of Northorpe, was beautifully restored by Bodley and Garner in
-1896. Here is a very fine brass of a knight of the Dalison (D’Alençon)
-family, about 1400, which, like that of Thomas and Johanna Massingberd at
-Gunby, has been made to serve again by a parsimonious Dalison of a later
-century.
-
-Roads lead both from _Northorpe_ and _Laughton_ to _Corringham_. This
-village is on the great east-and-west highway from Gainsborough to
-Market-Rasen, and here, too, the fine Transition Norman church has been
-magnificently restored by Bodley at the sole cost of Miss Beckett, of
-Somerby Hall. It now has a fine rood-screen, good modern stained-glass
-windows, and a painting of the adoration of the Magi for a reredos. There
-is here a brass in memory of Robert and Thomas Broxholme, 1631, placed
-by their brother and sister, Henry and Mary, who all had “lived together
-above sixty years and for the most parte of the time in one family in
-most brotherly concord.” A long rhymed epitaph goes on to say:—
-
- “Though none of them had Husband Child or Wife
- They mist no blessings of the married life;
- For to the poore they eva were insteed
- Of Husband Wife and Parent at their need.”
-
-[Sidenote: GAINSBOROUGH]
-
-[Sidenote: “THE MILL ON THE FLOSS”]
-
-From _Corringham_ a turn to the right brings us after four miles to
-_Gainsborough_. From this town on the extreme edge of the county four
-roads and four railway lines radiate, and the Trent runs along the edge
-of the town with a good wide bridge over it, built in 1790, for which a
-stiff toll is demanded. It is described by George Eliot in “The Mill on
-the Floss,” as “St. Oggs,” where the ‘Eagre’ or ‘bore’ is thus poetically
-referred to. “The broadening Floss hurries on between its green banks
-to the sea; and the loving tide, rushing to meet it, checks its passage
-with an impetuous embrace.” Constantly overrun by the Danes, the town
-was eventually looked on as his capital city by Swegen, who, with his
-son Canute, brought his vessels up the Trent in 1013, and died here,
-“full King of the Country,” in 1014. In the Civil War it was occupied
-first by the Royalists and afterwards by the Parliamentarians, and one of
-Cromwell’s first successful engagements was a cavalry skirmish at _Lea_,
-two miles to the south, when he routed and killed General Cavendish,
-whom he drove “with some of his soldiers into a quagmire,” still called
-‘Cavendish bog.’ The place has some large iron works and several
-seed-crushing mills for oil and oil-cake, and much river traffic is done
-in large barges. Talking of barges, Gainsborough has the credit of having
-owned the first steam-packet seen in Lincolnshire waters. This was the
-‘Caledonia,’ built at Glasgow, and brought round by the Caledonian Canal,
-to the astonishment of all the east coast fishermen, in 1815. She was a
-cargo boat, but she took passengers to Hull, and was a great boon to the
-villages on the Trent.
-
-[Illustration: _North Side, Old Hall, Gainsborough._]
-
-[Illustration: _South Side, Old Hall, Gainsborough._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE OLD HALL]
-
-River traffic below Gainsborough is somewhat hampered during the time
-of spring tides by the Eagre, which, when the in-rushing tide overcomes
-the river current and rides on the surface of the stream, rising in a
-wave six or seven feet high, rolls on from the mouth of the Trent to
-Gainsborough, a distance of more than twenty miles. The long street
-leading to the bridge is so dirty and narrow that you cannot believe as
-you go down it that you are in the main artery of the town. But when
-you have crossed the bridge and look back, the long riverside with its
-wharf and red brick houses, boats, and barges, has a very picturesque
-and old-world effect. The great sight of the town is the Old Hall,
-which stands on a grassy plot of some two acres, with a very poor iron
-railing round it, and a road all round that. In the middle of this rough
-grass-grown plot in the heart of the town is a charming old baronial
-hall, rebuilt in the times of Henry VII. and Elizabeth, after its
-destruction in 1470, and still occupied as a private residence. There was
-doubtless a building here before the time of the Conquest, and here it
-would be that Alfred the Great stopped on the occasion of his marriage
-with Ethelwith, daughter of Ethelred, and here, too, it would be that
-Swegen died, and his son Canute held his court. The present building is
-of brick and timber with a fine stone-built oriel on the north side, as
-the centre of a long frontage, and is of various patterns, having tall
-chimneys and buttresses on the west, and a brick tower on the north-east,
-and two wings on the south projecting from a magnificent central hall
-with much glass and woodwork, and a lantern. The large kitchen with its
-two huge fireplaces is at the end of this hall. Henry VIII. and Katharine
-Howard were entertained here by Lord Burgh, whose ancestor rebuilt
-the hall in Henry VII.’s time, _c._ 1480; and another of his Queens,
-Katharine Parr, was often here, being at one time the wife of Lord
-Burgh’s eldest son.
-
-[Sidenote: THE MASTER BUILDER]
-
-The wide area round the hall, with its untidy grass and the miserable
-iron fence, gives a singularly forlorn appearance to a beautiful and
-uncommon-looking building. It is supposed that the famous master-builder,
-“Richard de Gaynisburgh,” was born at Gainsborough, with whom, then
-styled “Richard de Stow,” the Dean and Chapter of Lincoln in 1306
-contracted “to attend to and employ other masons under him for the new
-work,” at the time when the new additional east end or Angel Choir
-as well as the upper parts of the great tower and the transepts were
-being built. He contracted “to do the plain work by measure, and the
-fine carved work and images by the day.” One of the Pilgrim Fathers was
-a Gainsborough man, and a Congregational Chapel has been built as a
-memorial to him.
-
-From Gainsborough, going north, we come at once to _Thonock_ Hall, the
-seat of Sir Hickman Bacon, the premier baronet of England, and _Morton_
-is just to the west, where the church has a very good new rood screen
-and five Morris windows, from designs by Burne-Jones. Between Morton
-and Thonock is a large Danish camp, called Castle Hills, with a double
-fosse. On the other side of the town the westernmost road of the county
-runs south by _Lea_, _Knaith_, and _Gate Burton_ to _Marton_, and thence
-to _Torksey_, which in early times was a bigger place than Gainsborough,
-and so on to _Newark_, but another road branches off by _Torksey_ to the
-left, for _Saxilby_ and Lincoln, twelve miles distant.
-
-[Sidenote: SIR CHARLES ANDERSON]
-
-_Lea_ church stands high, and has a chantry in which is a cross-legged
-knight, Sir Ranulph Trehampton, 1300, and some good early glass of
-about 1330. Of Trehampton’s manor-house only the site remains, but the
-hall, which is full of antiquarian treasures, was the home of that
-well-known Lincolnshire worthy Sir Charles Anderson, Bart., the county
-antiquarian, 1804-1891. He was a charming personality. The following
-story, referring to him, was told me by that delightful teller of good
-stories, the Very Rev. Reynolds Hole, Dean of Rochester. At the time when
-a railway was being cut (between Lincoln and Gainsborough probably, for
-that passes through Lea), but at all events in a part of the county in
-which Sir Charles took a great interest, he was visiting the works, when
-an insinuating Irish navvy stopped and looked at him and then said, “So
-you’re Sir Charles Anderson, are ye? Sure now there’s scores of Andersons
-where I come from; there’s one now in Sligo, a saddler. Ach! he’s a good
-fellow is that; the rale gintleman. He gives without asking.” Then, after
-a pause, “You’ve a look of ’em.” The Andersons lived in Lincolnshire from
-the days of Richard II., first at Wrawby then at Flixborough, temp. Henry
-VII.
-
-[Illustration: _Gainsborough Church._]
-
-_Knaith_ is noticeable as being the birthplace, in 1532, of Thomas
-Sutton, the founder of the Charterhouse in London, where he is buried.
-The church has what is not at all common in English churches, a
-baldacchino over the altar, but in fact it is not an ordinary church,
-being just a part of an old Cistercian nunnery, founded by Ralph Evermue,
-about 1180.
-
-[Sidenote: THE CHARTERHOUSE]
-
-Thomas Sutton was of Lincoln parents. He served in the army and was
-made inspector of the King’s Artillery. Having leased some land in the
-county of Durham, he proceeded to work the coal there, and became very
-wealthy, in fact the wealthiest commoner in the realm, and with at least
-£5,000 a year, so that he was able to give Lord Suffolk £13,000 for the
-house then called Howard House in Middlesex, which had been the original
-Charterhouse, founded in 1371 by Sir Walter Manney and dissolved in 1535.
-This was in May, 1611. He wished to do something to benefit the nation,
-but he left the details to the Crown. He died in December of the same
-year, but his charity was arranged to support eighty poor folk, and to
-teach forty boys, being, like Robert Johnson’s foundation at Uppingham,
-both a hospital and a school. The hospital remains in its old buildings
-in London, the school was moved in 1872 to Godalming, where it greatly
-flourishes.
-
-A central road runs through the middle of the flat country, half-way
-between the Lincoln-and-Gainsborough road and the Ridge. This takes us
-from _Corringham_ by a string of small villages to _Stow_, and thence
-by _Sturton_ to _Saxilby_, and so back to Lincoln. Of those villages
-_Springthorpe_ and _Heapham_ both have the early unbuttressed towers,
-described in Chapters XXII. and XXIII., the former with herring-bone
-masonry, the latter, like Marton, is unfortunately covered with stucco.
-In the next village of _Upton_ again we find herring-bone masonry; at
-_Willingham-by-Stow_, the base of the tower is early Norman; so that
-in spite of the ruthless way in which succeeding styles destroyed the
-work of their predecessors, we have a large group in this neighbourhood
-of churches whose early Norman or even Saxon work is still visible. At
-_Sturton_ is a good brick church by Pearson, reminding one of that by
-Gilbert Scott at Fulney, just outside Spalding.
-
-[Sidenote: LINCOLNSHIRE ROADS]
-
-A few years ago, when the first motor made its way into Lincolnshire,
-the road from Gainsborough to Louth was one long stretch of small loose
-stones. It had never even dreamt of a steam roller, and there were always
-ruts for the wheels, and as Lincolnshire carriage wheels were set three
-or four inches wider apart so that they could accommodate themselves to
-the cart ruts, when we brought a carriage up from Oxfordshire it was
-found impossible to use it till the axles had been cut and lengthened so
-that it could run in the ruts. But this was a great improvement on the
-days my grandmother remembered, when it took four stout horses to draw a
-carriage at foot’s pace from Ingoldmells to Spilsby (and this was only
-100 years ago), or when Sir Charles Anderson saw a small cart-load of
-corn stuck on the road and thatched down for the winter there, doubtless
-belonging to a small farmer who had but one horse, which could not draw
-the load home. Mention is made in this chapter of Scunthorpe. The iron
-workers there appear to be keen footballers, for I notice that there is
-now (December, 1913) one family there of eleven brothers between the ages
-of 18 and 43, ten of them experienced players, who challenge any single
-family anywhere to play two matches, one at the home of each team. I
-wonder if any family of eleven stalwart sons will be found to take them
-on.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-THE ISLE OF AXHOLME
-
- Epworth and the Wesleys—“Warping”—Crowle—St. Oswald—St.
- Cuthbert.
-
-
-The _Isle of Axholme_, or Axeyholm, is, as the name when stripped of its
-tautology signifies, a freshwater island, for _Isle_, _ey_ and _holm_ are
-all English, Anglo-Saxon, or Danish, for “island,” and _Ax_ is Celtic for
-water. The whole region is full of Celtic names, for it evidently was a
-refuge for the Celtic inhabitants. Thus we have Haxey, and Crowle (or
-_Cruadh_ = hard, _i.e._, _terra firma_), also _Moel_ (= a round hill),
-which appears in Melwood. Bounded by the Trent, the Idle, the Torn, and
-the Don, it fills the north-west corner of the county, and is seventeen
-miles long and seven wide. The county nowhere touches the Ouse, but ends
-just beyond _Garthorpe_ and _Adlingfleet_ on the left bank of the Trent,
-about a mile above the Trent falls. The northern boundary of the county
-then goes down the middle of the channel of the Humber estuary to the
-sea. Once a marsh abounding in fish and water-fowl, with only here and
-there a bit of dry ground, viz., at _Haxey_, _Epworth_, _Belton_ and
-_Crowle_, it has now a few more villages on Trent side, and two lines of
-railway, one going south from Goole to Gainsborough, and one crossing
-from Doncaster by Scunthorpe and Frodingham to Grimsby.
-
-[Sidenote: TWO LINCOLNSHIRE MEN]
-
-An unfair arrangement was made by Charles I. by which the Dutchman
-Vermuyden, the famous engineer who afterwards constructed the “Bedford
-Level,” undertook to drain the land, some of which lies from three to
-eight feet below high water-mark, he receiving one-third of all the land
-he rescued, the king one-third, the people and owners only the other
-third between them. This gave rise to the most savage riots; and the
-Dutch settlement at _Sandtoft_, where it is said that the village is
-still largely Dutch, was the scene of endless skirmishes, sieges, and
-attacks. A good insight into the lawlessness of the time is obtained
-from a book called “The M.S.S. in a Red Box,” published by John Lane.
-The ancestors of Thomas Mowbray Duke of Norfolk, whose banishment with
-Bolingbroke in lieu of trial by combat, is described in the opening
-scenes of Shakespeare’s “Richard II.,” had a castle in Norman times near
-_Owston_, between Haxey and East-Ferry on the Trent: so that both the
-would-be combatants were Lincolnshire men.
-
-Bolingbroke in the play is banished
-
- “till twice five summers have enriched our fields,”
-
-and Mowbray’s sentence is pronounced by the king in these words:—
-
- “Norfolk, for thee remains a heavier doom,
- Which I with some unwillingness pronounce:
- The fly-slow hours shall not determinate
- The dateless limit of thy dear exile.
- The hopeless word of never to return
- Breathe I against thee, upon pain of life.”
-
- _Richard II._, I. 3.
-
-Norfolk was banished in 1398, and died in Venice in the following year,
-and in Act IV., Scene 1 of the play, when Bolingbroke announces that he
-shall be “repealed”:—
-
- “and, though mine enemy, restored again
- to all his lands and signories.”
-
-The Bishop of Carlisle answers:—
-
- “That honourable day shall ne’er be seen.
- Many a time hath banished Norfolk fought
- For Jesu Christ; in glorious Christian field,
- Streaming the ensign of the Christian cross
- Against black Pagans, Turks and Saracens;
- And, toil’d with works of war, retired himself
- To Italy; and there at Venice gave
- His body to that pleasant country’s earth,[8]
- And his pure soul unto his Captain Christ,
- Under whose colours he had fought so long.”
-
-[Sidenote: THE WESLEY FAMILY]
-
-In the church of _Belton_ is a fine effigy of a knight in chain armour,
-an hour-glass-stand on a pillar near the pulpit, as at Leasingham, and a
-monument to Sir Richard de Belwood. _Temple Belwood_, in the centre of
-the island, was a preceptory of the Knights Templars. _Epworth_ is the
-chief town, and is famous as the birthplace of John Wesley. His father,
-Samuel, was the rector of S. Ormsby when he published his heroic poem in
-ten books on the Life of Christ, which caused him to be hailed by Nahum
-Tate, the Laureate of the day, as a sun new risen, before whom he and
-others would naturally and contentedly fade to insignificance.
-
- “E’en we the Tribe who thought ourselves inspired
- Like glimmering stars in night’s dull reign admired,
- Like stars, a numerous but feeble host,
- Are gladly in your morning splendour lost.”
-
-Queen Mary, to whose “Most sacred Majesty” the poem was dedicated,
-bestowed on him the Crown living of Epworth, to which he was presented
-in 1696, two years after her death. But, though he owed his living to
-the Whigs, rather than side with the dissenters, he voted Tory, and was
-accordingly persecuted with great animosity by high and low, thrown into
-prison for a debt, his cattle and property damaged, and in 1709 his home
-burnt down, which made a deep impression on his six-year-old son John,
-who never forgot being “plucked as a brand from the burning.”
-
-John, the fifteenth child, was the middle brother of three, who all had a
-first-rate public school and university education, getting scholarships
-both at school and college: John at Charterhouse, the others under Dr.
-Busby at Westminster, and all at Christchurch, Oxford, whence John, at
-the age of seventeen, wrote to his mother “I propose To be busy as long
-as I live.” Eventually he became a Fellow of Lincoln. The whole family
-were as clever as could be, and the seven daughters had a first-rate
-education from their father and mother at home. Mrs. Wesley was a
-remarkable woman, a Jacobite—which was somewhat disconcerting to her
-husband, who had written in defence of the Revolution—and a person of
-strong independence of spirit. Of her daughters, Hetty was the cleverest;
-and she is the only one who gives no account of the famous “Epworth
-Ghost,” which is significant, when both her parents and all her sisters
-wrote a full account of it. Hetty’s poems are of a very high standard of
-excellence, and it is more than likely that she wrote the verse part—for
-it is partly in prose dialogue—of “Eupolis’ Hymn to the Creator,” which
-is far better than anything else attributed to Sam Wesley. He died in
-1735, and John, who had been curate to him at Epworth and _Wroot_ (the
-livings went together), left the neighbourhood; and the place which had
-been the home of one of Lincolnshire’s most remarkable families for
-nearly forty years knew them no more. (_See_ Appendix I.)
-
-[Sidenote: JOHN WESLEY]
-
-Lincoln, however, saw John Wesley, for he preached in the Castle yard
-in 1780, as his father had done seventy-five years earlier, when he was
-spitefully imprisoned for debt. He was preaching at Lincoln again in
-1788, and again in July, 1790, in the new Wesleyan Chapel. Eight months
-later he died. His last sermon was preached at Leatherhead, February 23,
-1791, and his last letter was written on the following day to Dr. John
-Whitehead. He died on March 2, aged 88, having, as he said, during the
-whole of his life “never once lost a night’s sleep.” A memorial tablet
-to John and his brother Charles was placed in 1876 in Westminster Abbey.
-But there is also a fine statue of him as a preacher in gown and bands,
-showing a strong, rugged and kindly face, and at the base an inscription:
-“The world is my parish.” This is in front of the City Road Chapel, which
-he had built in Moorfields, and where he was buried, but not till 10,000
-people had filed past to take their last look at the well-known face as
-he lay in the chapel.
-
-Dean Stanley visiting this once, said that he would give a great deal to
-preach in the pulpit there, and when, to his query whether the ground was
-consecrated and by whom, the attendant answered, “Yes; by holding the
-body of John Wesley,” he rejoined, “A very good answer.”
-
-John Wesley himself had been denied access to Church of England pulpits
-for fifty years, 1738-1788. Even when he preached at Epworth in 1742, it
-was from his father’s tombstone; and in most cases his congregations,
-which were often very large, were gathered together in the open air.
-We hear of him preaching to a large assemblage in the rain at North
-Elkington, on April 6, 1759; and also at Scawby, Tealby, Louth, Brigg
-and Cleethorpes; but in June, 1788, he notes in his diary: “Preached in
-church at Grimsby, the Vicar reading prayers (a notable change this),
-not so crowded in the memory of man.” Each president of the Wesleyan
-Conference sits in Wesley’s chair on his inauguration, and has Wesley’s
-Bible handed to him to hold, as John Wesley himself holds it in his left
-hand in the statue.
-
-[Sidenote: WARPING]
-
-We have alluded to the process of _warping_ which is practised in the
-isle. The word is derived from the Anglo-Saxon _Weorpan_ (= to turn
-aside); it indicates the method by which the tide-water from the river,
-when nearly at its highest, is turned in through sluices upon the flat,
-low lands, and there retained by artificial banks until a sufficient
-deposit has been secured, when the more or less clarified water is turned
-back into the river at low tide, and the process may be continuously
-repeated for one, two, or three years. The water coming up with the
-tide is heavily charged with mud washed from the Humber banks, and this
-silt is deposited to the depth of some feet in places, and has always
-proved to be of the utmost fertility. The process is a rather difficult
-and expensive one, costing £10 an acre, but it needs doing only once in
-fourteen years or so. A wet season is bad for warping, and 1912 was as
-bad as 1913 was good.
-
-At _Crowle_ is a church of some importance, for in it is a bit of very
-early Anglian carving, probably of the seventh century. It is part of
-the stem of a cross, and has been used by the builders of the Norman
-church as a lintel for their tower arch. On it are represented a man
-on horseback (such as we see on the Gosforth cross, and on others in
-Northumbria), some interlacing work and a serpent with its tail in its
-mouth. Also two figures which I have nowhere seen accurately explained,
-but explanation is easy, for if you go and examine the great Anglian
-cross at Ruthwell in Dumfriesshire, you will find just such a pair
-of figures with their names written over them thus: “S. Paulus et S.
-Antonius panem fregerunt in Deserto.” The figures are so similar that
-they would seem to have been carved by the same hand, and the cross at
-Ruthwell can be dated on good evidence as but a year or two later than
-that at Bewcastle, whose undoubted date is 670.
-
-[Sidenote: ST. OSWALD]
-
-The church is dedicated to _St. Oswald_, not the archbishop of York
-who died in 992 and was buried at Worcester, but the sainted king of
-Northumbria who died in battle, slain by Penda, King of Mercia, at
-Maserfield, A.D. 642. His head, arms and hands were cut off, and set
-up as trophies, but were afterwards kept as holy relics, the hands at
-Bamborough, while one arm was for a time at Peterborough. The head was at
-Bamborough, and later at Lindisfarne in St. Cuthbert’s Cathedral, where
-the monks placed it in St. Cuthbert’s coffin. He had died in 687, and
-this coffin, when the Danes pillaged the cathedral, was taken away by
-the monks to Cumberland and carried by them from place to place in their
-flight, according to St. Cuthbert’s dying wish; and from 690 to 998, when
-it finally rested in the cathedral, it was kept in the coffin which is
-now in Durham Library. For 100 years, 783 to 893, it rested at Chester,
-and then passed to Ripon, and so to Durham, where it was enshrined and
-visited by hundreds of pilgrims. The marks of their feet are plain to
-see still. In 1104 the coffin was opened, and St. Oswald’s head seen in
-it. In 1542 the shrine being defaced, the body was buried beneath the
-pavement. In 1826 it was again opened, and some relics then taken out are
-now in the Cathedral Library—a ring, a cup and patten, the latter about
-six inches square, of oak with a thin plate of silver over it, and a
-stole. This was beautifully worked by the nuns at Winchester 1,000 years
-ago, and intended for Wulfstan, but on his death given by them to King
-Athelstan, and by him to St. Cuthbert’s followers.
-
-[Sidenote: ST. CUTHBERT’S TOMB]
-
-The late Dean Kitchin described to me how, in company with a Roman
-Catholic bishop and a medical man, he had opened what was supposed to
-be St. Cuthbert’s tomb about the beginning of this century. The old
-chronicler had related how he was slain in battle, how the body was
-hastily covered with sand and afterwards taken up, and for fear of
-desecration was carried about by the monks whithersoever they went, until
-at last it was laid in a tomb, and a shrine built over it in Durham
-Cathedral. He also said that the saint suffered from a tumour in the
-breast, the result of the plague in 661, which latterly had got better.
-It was known where the shrine was and the reputed tomb was close by. The
-tomb slab was removed; beneath it were bones enough to form the greater
-part of one skeleton, and there were two skulls. “What do you think of
-that?” asked the dean; the bishop at once replied “St. Oswald’s head.”
-The doctor then said, “This body has never been buried.” “How do you make
-that out?” “Because the skin has not decayed but dried on to the limbs
-as you see, as if it had been dried in sand,” just as tradition said.
-“Also,” he said, “there is a hole in the breast here which has partly
-filled up, evidence probably of a tumour or abscess which was healing,”
-again just what the chronicler stated. One of the skulls showed a cut
-right through the bone, like the cut of axe or sword, again corroborating
-the story of the death of St. Oswald in battle. The whole account seemed
-to me to be most interesting, and certainly it would be difficult to
-obtain more conclusive proof of the veracity in every detail of the old
-chronicler.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-THE NORTH-EAST OF THE COUNTY
-
- Thornton Curtis—Barrow—The Hull-to-Holland
- Ferry—Goxhill—Thornton Abbey—Immingham—The New
- Docks—Stallingborough—The Ayscough Tombs—Great
- Cotes—Grimsby—The Docks—The Church, Cleethorpes—Legend of
- Havelock the Dane.
-
-
-We will now return to the north-east of the county.
-
-From _Brocklesby_ a good road runs north by _Ulceby_, with its
-ridiculously thin, tall spire, and _Wootton_, to _Thornton Curtis_ and
-_Barrow-on-Humber_.
-
-[Sidenote: THORNTON CURTIS]
-
-_Thornton Curtis_ is a place to be visited, because it possesses one
-of the seven black marble Tournai fonts like those at Lincoln and
-Winchester. This stands in a wide open space at the west end of the
-church, mounted on a square three-stepped pedestal. The four corner
-shafts, like those at Ipswich, are of lighter colour than the central
-pillar and the top. The latter has suffered several fractures owing to
-its having been more than once moved, and the base is much worn as if it
-had been exposed to the weather. The sides are sculptured with griffins
-and monsters, and on the top at each corner is a bird. Of the church
-the groined porch has been renewed, but the doorway is old and good,
-and part of the ancient oak door remains with the original fine hinges,
-and a design in iron round the head of the door. On the floor near the
-south-west corner of the church is a sepulchral stone slab with a half
-effigy of a lady in deep relief showing at the head end. There is a fine
-wide Early English tower arch, and the handsome arches of the nave are
-borne on clustered pillars, which are all alike on the north side, but
-of different patterns on the south side, and with excellent boldly cut
-foliage capitals, the western capital and respond being especially fine.
-The north aisle is very wide, and the church unusually roomy. The pine
-roof and the oak seats were all new about thirty years ago. The light
-and graceful rood screen is also new, and has deep buttress-like returns
-on the western side, as at Grimoldby. The chancel has late twelfth
-century lancets, one with a Norman arch, the others pointed, showing the
-transition period; once the church was all Norman, but it was extended
-westwards early in the thirteenth century. There are two charming
-piscinas of the same period, with Norman pilasters and round-headed
-arches, but the western one has had a later pointed arch, apparently put
-on in more recent times.
-
-In the north aisle wall there are three arched niches for tombs, and on
-the north side of the chancel outside is a wide Norman arch with a flat
-buttress curiously carried up from above the centre of the archway, as in
-the Jews’ House at Lincoln. Near the south porch is a mural tablet carved
-in oak, with old English lettering, which reads thus:—
-
- In the yer yat all the stalles
- In thys chyrch was mayd
- Thomas Kyrkbe Jho Shreb
- byn Hew Roston Jho Smyth
- Kyrk Masters in the yer of
- Our Lorde God MCCCCCXXXII.
-
-In the churchyard is half of the shaft of a cross, octagonal, with
-rosettes carved at intervals on the four smaller sides. Like the font, it
-is mounted on a broad, square three-stepped pedestal.
-
-At _Barrow_, two miles further north, there was once a monastery,
-founded in the seventh century by St. Ceadda, or Chad, on land given by
-Wulfhere King of Mercia. This is an interesting corner of the county. New
-Holland, where the steam ferry from Hull lands you, is but three miles
-to the north, and near _Barrow Haven_ station, between the ferry pier
-and Barton, is a remarkable ancient Danish or British earthwork called
-“The Castles”—a large tumulus-topped mound with a wide fosse, and with
-other mounds and ditches grouped round it, which, when occupied, were
-surrounded by marshes and only approachable by a channel from the Humber.
-The claim that this is the site of the great battle of Brunanburh in 937
-cannot be looked upon as more than the merest conjecture. Both _Barton_
-and _Barrow_ have been claimed for it; and “Barrow Castles” might or
-might not have had some connection with the great battle, which certainly
-is referred to as near the Humber in Robert de Brunne’s chronicle, as
-follows:—
-
- “He brought the King Anlaf up the Humber
- With seven hundred ships and fifteen, so great was the number.
- Athelstan here saw all the great host,
- He and Edward his brother hurried to the coast.
- At Brunnisburgh on Humber they gave them assault,
- From Morning to Evening lasted the battle,
- At the last to their ships the King gave them chase
- All fled away, that was of God’s grace.”
-
-[Sidenote: THE HULL FERRY]
-
-The Great Northern Railway runs south from Holland pier to Ulceby, and
-then splits right and left to Brigg and Grimsby; and here let me warn
-anyone who thinks to bring a motor over by the ferry to or from Hull. The
-sloping stage at New Holland is fairly easy, though the boats’ moveable
-gangway is not provided with an inclined approach board, the simplest
-thing in the world, but each car or truck has to bump on and off it
-with a four-inch rise, and an extra man or two are required to lift the
-wheels of each loaded truck on or off—a childishly stupid arrangement
-which reflects no credit on the brains of the officers of the Central
-Railway, who own the ferry service; but on the Hull side matters are much
-worse, and I don’t think that any method of loading or unloading even in
-a remote Asiatic port can be so barbaric and out-of-date as that which
-the Central Railway provides for its long-suffering customers. To get a
-motor on board from Hull is both difficult and dangerous; after threading
-an intricate maze of close-set pillars a car has to go down a very steep
-and slippery gangway, and when at the bottom has to turn at right angles
-with no room to back, and across a moveable gangway so narrow that the
-side railing has to be taken off and a loose plank added to take the
-wheels; then, whilst the car hangs over the water on the slippery slope,
-several men lift the front part round to the left and then, with a great
-effort, drag the back wheels round to the right, and after filling up a
-yawning gap between the slope and the gang-plank by putting a piece of
-board of some kind, but with no fit, to prevent the wheel from dropping
-through or the car going headlong into the sea, the machine is got on to
-the deck; and then all sorts of heavy goods on hand-barrows are brought
-on, four men having to hang on to each down the slippery planks, and
-these are piled all round the motor, and all are taken off on the other
-side with incredible exertions before the motor has a chance to move.
-The crossing itself takes but twenty minutes, but the whole process of
-getting on, crossing and getting off, occupied us two hours, and a really
-big car would never have been able to get over at all. No one at the
-Hull Corporation pier seems to know anything about the use of a crane
-for loading purposes, and it is evident that passenger traffic with any
-form of vehicle is not to receive any encouragement from this anything
-but up-to-date railway company. Why do not the Hull Corporation insist on
-something very much better? The parallelogram between the railway and
-Humber, when it turns south opposite Hull, has a belt of marsh along the
-river side, and because it was in old times so inaccessible, it contains
-some fine monastic buildings.
-
-[Illustration: _Great Goxhill Priory._]
-
-[Sidenote: GOXHILL]
-
-[Sidenote: THORNTON ABBEY]
-
-Two miles west of Barrow is _Goxhill_. Here there is a fine church tower,
-with a delicate parapet, and a mile south is the so-called “Priory,”
-which was probably only a memorial chapel served by a hermit in the pay
-of the De Spenser family. Murray gives this entry from the bishop’s
-registers for 1368: “Thomas De Tykhill, hermit, clerk, presented by
-Philip Despenser to the chapel of St. Andrew in the parish of Goxhill, on
-the death of Thomas, the last hermit.” It is now a picturesque ruin of
-two stories, the lower one vaulted and with three large Decorated windows
-at the sides, and a large double round-headed one at the end, all now
-blocked, the building being used for a barn. Two miles from this, and
-near Thornton Abbey Station, is all that is left of _Thornton Abbey_.
-A fine gateway, second only to that at Battle Abbey, and two sides of
-a beautiful octagonal chapter-house, with very rich arcading beneath
-the lovely three-light windows. Founded in 1139, for a prior and twelve
-Augustinian canons, it became an abbey in 1149, and in 1517 a “mitred”
-abbey, the only one in the county except Croyland. And these two are now
-the most notable of all the monastic remains in Lincolnshire. One of
-its abbots was said to have been walled up alive, and Bishop Tanner, in
-his MS. account of the abbey, now in the Bodleian, says of Abbot Walter
-Multon, 1443: “He died, but by what death I know not. He hath no obit,
-as other Abbots have, and the place of his burial hath not been found,”
-and Stukeley, 1687-1765, says that on taking down a wall in his time a
-skeleton was found in a sitting posture, with a table and a lamp, but I
-am glad to think that though the tradition is not infrequent,—probably as
-an echo from the days of the Roman Vestal Virgins—there is no positive
-evidence of anyone ever being immured alive; though an inconvenient dead
-body was doubtless got rid of at times in that way.
-
-[Sidenote: THE ABBEY GATE]
-
-The principal remaining part of the abbey is the fine grey stone gateway,
-a beautiful arch flanked by octagon turrets, with a passage through
-them, and then other arches on each side, and beyond these two corner
-towers. Above the central archway there are two rows of statues in
-niches with canopies. The Virgin being crowned by the Holy Trinity is
-flanked by full-length statues of St. Antony and St. Augustine. Other
-figures are above these, but not easy to make out. Inside the gateway
-are guard rooms, and a winding staircase leading to the large refectory
-hall. An oriel in this contained an altar, as the piscina and a squint
-from an adjoining chamber testify. The approach over the ditch up to
-the gateway is by a curious range of massive brickwork, with coved
-recesses and battlements, all along on each side. The ruin is owned by
-Lord Yarborough, and is kept locked, but an attendant is always on the
-spot, as both the abbey and Brocklesby Park are favourite objects for
-excursions from Hull, Grimsby, and Cleethorpes.
-
-[Illustration: _Thornton Abbey Gateway._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE CHAPTER HOUSE]
-
-The abbey was a very magnificent one, occupying 100 acres. Henry VIII.
-was so well entertained there in 1541 that when he had suppressed the
-abbey he bestowed the greater part of the land on a new foundation in the
-same building, a college of the Holy Trinity; but a few years later,
-either in 1547 or 1553, that in turn was dissolved, and the land granted
-to the pitifully subservient Bishop Henry Holbeche. Inside the gateway
-is a large square, on the east side of which stood the chapter-house,
-a handsome octagonal building, of which two sides remain, as does also
-a fragment of the beautiful south transept, and, still further south,
-the abbot’s lodging, now in use as a farmhouse. The church was 235 feet
-long and sixty-two feet wide, the transepts being double of that. The
-architecture was mainly of the best Decorated period. There are many
-slabs with incised crosses still to be seen, one of Robert Girdyk, 1363.
-
-[Illustration: _Remains of Chapter House, Thornton Abbey._]
-
-_East Halton_ lies east of the abbey, whence the road runs through
-_North_ and _South Killingholme_, at the corner of which is a picturesque
-old brick manor-house of the Tudor period, with linen-pattern oak
-panelling and grotesque heads over the doors inside, and outside a
-remarkably fine chimney-stack and some fine old yew trees. The church has
-a very large Norman tower-arch, an interesting old roof and the remains
-of a delicately carved rood-screen. From here we go to _Habrough_ and
-_Immingham_, where some curious paintings of the Apostles are set between
-the clerestory windows.
-
-[Sidenote: IMMINGHAM DOCK]
-
-_Immingham_ village is more than two miles from the haven, and here the
-most enormous works have long been in progress. Indeed, at _Immingham_
-a new port has sprung up in the last five years, and to this the Great
-Central Railway, who so utterly neglect the convenience of passengers
-with vehicles at the Hull ferry, have given the most enlightened
-attention, and by using the latest inventions and all the most advanced
-methods and laying out their docks in a large and forward-looking
-way to cover an enormous area, have created a dock which can compete
-successfully with any provincial port in England.
-
-A deep-water channel leads to the lock gates on the north side of what
-is the deepest dock on the east coast, with forty-five acres of water
-over thirty feet deep. It runs east and west, and it is about half a
-mile long. A quay 1,250 feet long, projects into the western half of
-this, leaving room for vessels to load or unload on either side of it,
-direct from or into the railway trucks. A timber-quay occupies the
-north-west side of the dock, and the grain elevator is at the east end,
-while all along the whole of the south side runs the coaling quay. There
-are at least twenty-seven cranes able to lift two, three, five, ten,
-and one even fifty tons on the various quays, and on the coaling-quay
-eight hoists, on to which the trucks are lifted and the coal shot into
-the vessels, after which the truck returns to the yard by gravitation
-automatically. Each of these hoists can deal with 700 tons of coal an
-hour, and as each hoist has eight sidings allotted to it there are 320
-waggons ready for each. One of these hoists is moveable so that two
-holds of a vessel can be worked simultaneously. The means for quick and
-easy handling of the trucks, full and empty, by hydraulic power, and
-light for the whole dock also is supplied from a gigantic installation
-in the power-house, near the north-west corner of the dock; and this
-quick handling is essential, for the many miles of sidings can hold
-11,600 waggons, carrying 116,000 tons of coal or more, besides finding
-room for empties. The coal is brought from Yorkshire, Derbyshire, Notts,
-and Lincolnshire, and not far short of 3,000,000 tons of coal will be
-now sent out of England from this port alone.[9] It seems to the writer
-that to send away at this tremendous rate from all our big coaling
-ports the article on which all our industries virtually depend is a
-folly which no words are too strong to condemn. With coal England has
-the means of supplying all her own wants for many generations, but it
-is not inexhaustible, and when it is gone, where will England be? Will
-anything that may be found ever take its place? And, unless we are able
-to reassure ourselves on this point, is this not just a case in which a
-wise State would step in and prohibit export, and not allow the nation to
-cut its own throat like a pig swimming? Large store sheds are now (1914)
-being built for wool to be landed direct from Australia. Thus Immingham
-will compete with Liverpool, where I have seen bales so tightly packed
-that when you knock with your knuckles on the clean-cut end of one it
-resounds like a board.
-
-[Sidenote: STALLINGBOROUGH]
-
-Going on south from Immingham village we come, after three miles, to
-_Stallingborough_.
-
-[Sidenote: THE AYSCOUGH TOMBS]
-
-The old church having fallen, the present brick parallelogram, with tower
-and campanile, was built in 1780. Inside, though destitute of any touch
-of church architecture, it is beautifully clean, and if you penetrate up
-to the very end you will be rewarded by seeing what the organ absolutely
-obscures till you reach the altar rail—a really wonderful alabaster tomb
-of the Ayscoughe, Ayscugh, or Askew family, at the north-east corner,
-inside the chancel rail. Above is part of a bust of Francis, the father,
-who lived at South Kelsey, near Caister, and who so basely, in terror
-for himself, betrayed his sister Anne’s hiding-place, which resulted
-in her being first tortured and then burnt at Smithfield in 1546, her
-crime being that she had read the Bible to poor folk in Lincoln Minster.
-The whole story is too horrible to dwell upon. This cowardly brother is
-portrayed half length, in a recess, leaning his head on his left hand
-and holding in his right a spear. From this it will be seen that this is
-no ordinary sepulchral monument, but a work of art. Below him his son,
-Edward of Kelsey, 1612, lies supine in plate armour and a ruff, with bare
-head pillowed on a cushion, while on a raised platform, just behind him,
-his wife Esther, daughter of Thomas Grantham, Esq., leans on her right
-elbow; she, too, in a ruff with hair done high and with a tight bodice
-and much-pleated skirt. The faces look like portraits, and Sir Edward has
-a singularly feeble, but not unpleasant, face, with small, low forehead.
-On the wall at his wife’s feet is a painted coat of arms on a lozenge,
-with nineteen quarterings, and a real helmet is placed on the tomb slab
-below it. The slab is a very massive one, and below it is an inscription
-in gold letters on a black ground in Latin, which is from Psalm CXXVIII.
-“Thy wife shall be as the fruitful vine upon the walls of thine house,
-thy children like the olive branches round about thy table, lo thus shall
-the man be blessed that feareth the Lord”; and beneath this, on the side
-of the tomb, are the kneeling effigies of six sons and six daughters.
-The whole thing—both the effigies and the inscription—is similar to the
-Tyrwhit tomb at _Bigby_. Above the mural monument of the father is the
-Ayscoughe crest, a little grey ass coughing, and under his half-effigy
-is a later inscription, which doubtless refers to his son, and not to
-himself, the poor, unhappy cause of his sister’s dreadful sufferings. It
-runs thus:—
-
- Clarus imaginibus proavum, sed mentis honestae
- Clarior exemplis, integritate, fide.
- Una tibi conjux uni quae juncta beatas
- Fecerat et noctes et sine lite dies.
- Praemissi non amissi.
-
-And a thing called on the monument an “Anigram,” which is past the
-understanding of ordinary men, is also part of the inscription. The
-extraordinary state of preservation of the whole group is a marvel.
-
-Other inscriptions and brasses are in the church, though partly hidden
-by the organ and the altar, one to the second wife of Anne’s father, Sir
-William, along with others of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. In
-the churchyard is the stem of a cross.
-
-Four miles further south the fine broad fifteenth-century tower of _Great
-Cotes_ of rich yellow stone, attracts anyone who is passing from Goxhill
-to Grimsby, and it is a church which well repays a visit.
-
-[Sidenote: GREAT COTES]
-
-In the churchyard, after passing under a yew-tree arch, you see a
-magnificent walnut on a small green mound. There is no porch. You enter
-by a small, deeply moulded doorway at the north-west end of the north
-aisle. The pillars of the arcades are clusters of four rather thick
-shafts, some with unusually large round capitals, but others various
-in shape, and all of a bluish grey stone. There are four bays, three
-big and one a small one next the tower at the west end. There is a flat
-ceiling, both in nave and chancel, which cuts off the top of the Early
-English tower arch; hence the nave and aisles are covered, as at Swaton,
-near Helpringham, by one low, broad slate roof, reminding one of that at
-Grasmere. The chancel arch, if it can be called an arch at all, is the
-meanest I ever saw, and only equalled by the miserable, and apparently
-wooden, tracery of the east window. The chancel, which is nearly as long
-as the nave, is built of rough stones and has Decorated windows. On the
-floor is a curious brass of local workmanship probably, to Isabella,
-wife of Roger Barnadiston, _c._ 1420, and the artist seems to have
-handed on his craft, for the attraction of the church is a singular
-seventeenth century brass before the altar, to Sir Thomas Barnadiston,
-Kt. of Mikkylcotes, and his wife Dame Elizabeth, and their eight sons and
-seven daughters. The children kneel behind their kneeling parents, who
-are, however, on a larger scale, and have scrolls proceeding from their
-mouths. Above them is a picture of the Saviour, with nimbus, rising from
-a rectangular tomb of disproportionately small dimensions, while Roman
-soldiers are sleeping around. A defaced inscription runs all round the
-edge of the brass, and in the centre is the inscription in old lettering:
-“In the worschypp of the Resurrectio of o̅r Lord and the blessed sepulcur
-pray for the souls of Sir Thos Barnadiston Kt. and Dame Elizabeth his wife
-
- and of yʳ charite say a pʳ noster ave and cred
- and ye schall have a C days of p~don to yoʳ med”
-
-[Sidenote: GRIMSBY]
-
-Another six miles brings us to the outskirts of _Grimsby_, the
-birthplace, in 1530, of John Whitgift, Queen Elizabeth’s Archbishop of
-Canterbury. This is not at all an imposing or handsome town, but the
-length of the timber docks, and the size and varied life in the great
-fish docks, the pontoons which project into the river and are crowded
-with fishing boats, discharging tons of fish and taking in quantities
-of ice, are a wonderful sight. 165,510 tons of fish were dealt with in
-1902—it is probably 170,000 now; and 300 tons of ice a day is made close
-by. The old church is a fine cruciform building, with a pair of ugly
-turrets at the end of nave, chancel, and transepts. Inside it is fine
-and spacious, and in effect cathedral-like. The transepts have doorways
-and two rows of three-light windows with tooth moulding round the upper
-lights and the gables. A corbel table with carved heads runs all round
-the church.
-
-The south transept Early-English porch had eight shafts on either side,
-in most cases only the capitals now remain. The south aisle porch is
-good, but less rich. The tower arches are supported on octagonal pillars,
-which run into and form part of the transept walls. They are decorated by
-mouldings running up the whole length. The nave has six bays, and tall,
-slender clustered columns and plain capitals, with deeply moulded arches.
-Dreadful to relate, the columns and capitals are all painted grey.
-
-There is a unique arrangement of combined triforium and clerestory,
-the small clerestory windows being inserted in the triforium into the
-taller central arches of the groups of three, which all have slender
-clustered shafts. This triforium goes round both nave, chancel and
-transepts, a very well carved modern oak pulpit rests on a marble base
-with surrounding shafts. The lectern is an eagle of the more artistic
-form, with one leg advanced and head turned sideways and looking upwards.
-I wonder that this is not more common, for I see it is figured in the A.
-and N. Stores catalogue. The sedilia rises in steps, as at Temple Bruer.
-A raised tomb carries the effigy of Sir Thomas Haslerton, brought from
-St. Leonard’s nunnery; he is in chain armour with helmet. A chapel in
-the north aisle has a squint looking to the high altar. This chapel is
-entered by a beautiful double arch from the transept, with Early capital
-to the mid pillar. The proportions of the whole church are pleasing,
-and its size is very striking. The tower has an arcaded parapet, and on
-each side two windows set in a recess under a big arch, between them a
-buttress runs up from the apex of a broad and deep gable-coping, which
-goes down each side of the tower, forming the hood-mould into which the
-gables of the nave transepts and chancel fit. All the doors, curiously
-enough, are painted green outside. There is in the churchyard a pillar
-with clustered shafts and carved capital, the base of which rests on a
-panelled block, which looks like an old font. Many bits from the old
-church, which was restored throughout in 1885, are ranged on the low wall
-of the churchyard walk, some of which look worthy of a better place.
-
-The line from the docks runs along by the shore to _Cleethorpes_, where
-the Humber begins to merge into the sea. The wide, firm sands and the
-rippling shallow wavelets of the brown seawater are the delight of
-thousands of children; the air is fresh, food and drink are plentiful,
-and all things conspire to make a trippers’ paradise, while the Dolphin
-Hotel, which, like the others, looks out on the sea, is no bad place for
-a short sojourn in the off season.
-
-[Sidenote: THE CORPORATION SEALS]
-
-The corporation had in old times two seals, one the common seal, and
-one the mayor’s seal; the latter showed a boar charged by a dog and a
-huntsman winding his horn, an allusion to an ancient privilege of the
-mayor and burgesses of hunting in the adjacent woods of Bradley Manor.
-The common seal bore a gigantic figure of a man with drawn sword and
-round shield, and the name ‘Gryem,’ the reputed founder of the town;
-on his right a youth crowned, and the name ‘Habloc,’ and on his left a
-female figure with a diadem and the legend “Goldeburgh,” the name of the
-princess he is said to have married.
-
-These two interesting and distinctive old seals have, sad to say, been
-discarded for one bearing the arms of the corporation, just like what any
-mushroom town might adopt.
-
-The figures on the old seal alluded to the tradition embodied in the
-old Anglo-Danish ballad of Havelock the Dane, which was borrowed from a
-French romance of the twelfth century, called “Le lai de Aveloc,” which
-in turn was probably taken from an Anglo-Saxon original. It tells how
-Havelock, son of the Danish King Birkabeen, was treacherously put to
-sea and saved by one Grim, a Lincolnshire fisherman, who brought up the
-waif as his own. He grew to be of huge stature and strength and of great
-beauty, and, from serving as a scullion in the king’s kitchen, he became
-betrothed to the king’s daughter; and his royal descent being discovered,
-the Danish king rewarded Grim with a sum of money with which he built a
-village on the coast and called it Grim’s town or Grimsby.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-CAISTOR
-
- The Roman Castrum—The Church and the Hundon Tombs—Rothwell
- and the Caistor Groups of Early Church Towers, “Riby,”
- “Wold,” “Cliff” and “Top”—Pelham Pillar—Grasby and
- the Tennyson-Turners—Barnetby—Bigby—The Tyrwhit
- Tombs—Brocklesby—The Mausoleum—The Pelham Buckle.
-
-
-[Sidenote: CAISTOR]
-
-_Caistor_ is the centre from which roads radiate in all directions, so
-much so that if you describe a circle from Caistor as your centre at the
-distance of _Swallow_ it will cut across seventeen roads, and if you
-shorten the distance to a two-mile radius, it will still cross eleven,
-though not more than four or five of them will separately enter the old
-Roman town. For the town has grown round a Roman “Castrum,” and the
-church is actually planted in the centre of the walled camp. A portion
-of the solidly grouted core of their wall shows on the southern boundary
-of the churchyard, and bits of it still exist to the east and west just
-beyond the churchyard boundary, and also a little further from the church
-on the north. Even the well which the Roman soldiers used, one of many
-springs coming out of the chalk, for Caistor is on the slope of the Wold,
-is still in use to the south-east of the church, and was included within
-the walls of the “Castrum.”
-
-Dr. Fraser of Caistor, who takes a keen interest in the subject, kindly
-showed me a plan on which such portions of the wall as have been laid
-bare, in some half-a-dozen spots, were marked. He lives in a house
-belonging to the Tennyson family, the poet’s uncle and his brother
-Charles having both tenanted it. The place has a long history. It was
-a hill fort of the early Britons, then it was occupied by the Romans
-till late in the fourth century, and, after their departure, it was a
-stronghold of the Angles, who called it, according to Bede, Tunna-Ceaster
-or Thong-caster, which might refer to its being placed on a projecting
-tongue of the Wold, just as Hyrn-Ceaster or Horncastle is so named,
-because it is on a horn or peninsular, formed by the river. In 829
-Ecgberht, King of Wessex, defeated the Mercians in a battle here, and
-offered a portion of the spoil to the church, if a stone dug up about 150
-years ago with part of an inscription apparently to that effect can be
-trusted. Earl Morcar, who had land near Stamford, was lord of the manor
-in Norman times, and the Conqueror gave the church to Remigius for his
-proposed Cathedral.
-
-For the present church inside the Roman camp goes back to probably
-pre-Norman times. The tower has a Norman doorway, and has also a very
-early round arch, absolutely plain, leading from the tower to the nave,
-and it shows in its successive stages Norman, Early English, Decorated,
-and Perpendicular work. The lower part of the tower has angle buttresses
-and two string-courses, and, except the battlements, which are of hard
-whitish stone, the whole building is, like all the churches in the
-north-east of the county, made of a rich yellow sandy ironstone with
-fossils in it. This gives a beautiful tone of colour and also, from its
-friable nature, an appearance of immense antiquity. The north porch has
-good ball-flower decoration, but is not so good as the Early English
-south door with its tooth ornaments; here the old door with its original
-hinges is still in use. The octagonal pillars stand on a wide square base
-two feet high with a top, a foot wide, forming a stone seat round the
-pillar, as at Claypole and Bottesford. The nave arcade of four bays is
-Early English with nail-head ornament. Since Butterfield removed the flat
-ceiling and put a red roof with green tie-beams and covered the chancel
-arch and walls with the painted patterns which he loved, the seats, like
-the porch doors at Grimsby, have all been green! This, to my mind, always
-gives a garden woodwork atmosphere. In the north aisle is a side altar,
-and near it are the interesting tombs of the Hundon family, while in the
-south aisle, behind the organ, is a fine marble monument with a kneeling
-figure in armour of Sir Edward Maddison, of Unthank Hall, Durham, and
-of Fonaby, who died in his 100th year, A.D. 1553. His second wife was
-Ann Roper, sister-in-law to Margaret Roper, who was the daughter of Sir
-Thomas More, and who—
-
- “clasped in her last trance
- Her murdered father’s head.”
-
-[Sidenote: THE HUNDON TOMBS]
-
-The Hundon tombs have recumbent stone effigies under recessed arches
-in the North wall, one being of Sir W. de Hundon cross-legged, with
-shield, and clad in chain-mail from head to foot. He fought in the last
-crusade, 1270. Another, in a recess massively cusped, is of Sir John de
-Hundon, High Sheriff of Lincolnshire in 1343, and Lady Hundon his wife,
-in a wimple and the dress of the period. Sir John is in plate armour,
-with chain hauberk, and girt with both sword and dagger, and both wear
-ruffs. She has a cushion at her head, and a lion at her feet. He lies
-on a plaited straw mattress rolled at each end, and wears a very rich
-sword-belt and huge spurs, but no helmet.
-
-[Sidenote: PRE-NORMAN TOWERS]
-
-The singular cluster of very early church towers near Caistor are similar
-to those near Gainsborough, and to another group just south of Grimsby
-(_see_ Chapter XXIII.). South of Caistor is _Rothwell_, which we hoped
-to reach in a couple of miles from Cabourn, but could only find a bridle
-road, unless we were prepared to go two miles east to Swallow, or two
-miles west to Caistor, and then make a further round of three miles
-from either place. The church, which keeps the register of marriages
-taken in Cromwell’s time before Theophilus Harneis, Esq., J.P., after
-publication of banns “on three succeeding Lord’s Days, at the close of
-the morning exercise, and no opposition alleged to the contrary,” has two
-very massive Norman arches, the western bays with cable moulding. The
-tower is of the unbuttressed kind, and exhibits some more unmistakable
-“Long-and-Short” work than is at all common in the Saxon-built towers of
-Lincolnshire churches, built, that is to say, if not by Saxon hands, at
-least in the Saxon style, and in the earliest Norman days. The village is
-in a depression between two spurs of the Wold, and a road from it, which
-is the eastern one of three, all running south along the Wold, leads
-to Binbrook. The middle road is the “High Dyke,” the Roman road from
-Caistor to Horncastle, and has no villages on it. The western one goes by
-_Normanby le Wold_, Walesby, and Tealby, and joins the Louth-and-Rasen
-road at North-Willingham. From this road you get a fine view over the
-flats in the centre of the county, as indeed you do if you go by the main
-road from Caistor to Rasen. This takes you through _Nettleton_, where
-there is another of these early towers, but not so remarkably old-looking
-a specimen as some. A buttress against the south wall of the tower is
-noticeable, being carefully devised by the mediæval builders so as not
-to block the little window. _Usselby_, three miles north of Rasen, lies
-hidden behind “The Hall,” and is the tiniest church in the county. It has
-a nave and chancel of stone, and a bell-turret, and hideous brick-headed
-windows. At _Claxby_, close by, some fine fossils have been found. The
-eastern main road to Grimsby has most to show us, for on it we pass
-_Cabourn_ and _Swallow_, both of which have towers like Rothwell, as
-also has _Cuxwold_, which is half-way between Swallow and Rothwell. All
-these unbuttressed towers are built of the same yellow sandy stone, and
-generally have the same two-light belfry window with a midwall jamb.
-_Cabourn_ was the only church we found locked, and we could not see why,
-and as the absence of the rector’s key keeps people from seeing the
-inside, so the presence of his garden fence, which runs right up to the
-tower on both sides, keeps them from seeing the west end outside—a horrid
-arrangement, not unlike that at Rowston. The tower has a pointed tiled
-roof, like a pigeon cote, a very small blocked low-side window is at the
-south-west end of the chancel, and the bowl of a Norman font with cable
-moulding, found under the floor of the church, has been placed on the top
-of the old plain cylinder which did duty as a font till lately. The view
-from Cabourn hill, which drops down to Caistor, is a magnificent one. To
-the north the lofty Pelham Pillar, a tribute to a family distinguished
-as early as the reign of Edward III., stands up out of the oak woods, a
-landmark for many a mile.
-
-_Swallow_ has no jamb to its belfry window. But it has a very good Norman
-door, and round-headed windows. The south aisle arches have been built
-up. During the recent restoration two piscinas, Norman and Early English,
-were found, the former with a deep square bowl set on a pillar. The next
-church has the singular name of _Irby-on-Humber_, though the Humber is
-eight miles distant. Here we find Norman arcades of two arches with
-massive central pillars, thicker on the north side than the south, and
-Early English tower and chancel arches. An incised slab on the floor
-has figures of John and Elianora Malet, of the late fourteenth or early
-fifteenth centuries. In the south aisle there is a blocked doorway to
-the rood loft, and a piscina. The east window is of three lancets. All
-the woodwork in the church is new and everything in beautiful order.
-_Laceby_ Church, two miles further on, has a Transition tower, and an
-Early English arcade with one Norman arch in the middle. There are some
-blow-wells in the parish, as at _Tetney_. John Whitgift, Archbishop of
-Canterbury, at the end of Elizabeth’s reign, was formerly rector here.
-
-[Sidenote: LINCOLN LONGWOOLS]
-
-A mile to the left as we go from Irby to Laceby, lies the fine and
-well-wooded park of Riby Grove, the seat of Captain Pretyman, M.P. The
-Royalists won a battle here in 1645, in which Colonel Harrison, the
-Parliamentary leader, was slain. He was buried at Stallingborough. Riby
-of late years has been famous for the flocks and herds of the late Mr.
-Henry Dudding, which at their dispersal in July, 1913, realised in a two
-days’ sale 16,644 guineas. Over 1,800 Lincolnshire long-wool sheep were
-sold, the highest price being 600 guineas for the champion ram at the
-Bristol and Nottingham shows, who has gone to South America, in company
-with another stud ram who made eighty guineas, and several more of the
-best animals. But though the ram lambs made double figures, as the
-best had been secured before the sale the prices on the whole were not
-high, the sheep on the first day averaging just over £4 9_s._ Among the
-shorthorns 160 guineas was the highest price; this was given for a heifer
-whose destination was Germany. It is owing to men like Mr. Dudding that
-Lincolnshire farming and Lincolnshire flock and stock breeding has so
-great a name.
-
-About five miles further, we come to the suburbs of Grimsby, and the road
-runs on past _Clee_ to _Cleethorpes_.
-
-It is curious how different localities, though in the same neighbourhood,
-have their own special and different terms for the same thing, thus:
-alongside the ridge north of Lincoln, each village has its bit of
-“Cliff,” and from Elsham to the Humber each has its bit of “Wold,”
-while on the continuation of the Wold near Caistor from Barnetby to
-Burgh-on-Bain the same thing is called neither “Cliff” nor “Wold,” but
-“top”; and we have Somerby, Owmby, Grasby, Audleby, Fornaby, Rothwell,
-Orby, Binbrook, Girsby and Burgh “top,” etc. There is an Owmby “Cliff” as
-well as an Owmby “top,” but the words sufficiently indicate the position
-of the villages—one (near Fillingham) on the Ermine Street, and one (near
-Grasby) north of Caistor.
-
-[Sidenote: THE PELHAM PILLAR]
-
-There is no view, I think, in the county so wide all round as that from
-the top of the Pelham Pillar. It stands on one of the highest points of
-the Wold, from whence the ground falls on three sides. In front are the
-woods of Brocklesby and the mausoleum, with the Humber and Hull in the
-distance; on the right Grimsby, the Spurn Point, and the grand spire of
-Patrington in Holderness, and on the left the wide mid-Lincolnshire plain
-as far as “the Cliff.” Of the Wold villages between Caistor and Barnetby,
-where the Wold stops for a couple of miles and lets the railway and the
-Brigg-to-Brocklesby road through on the level, none affords a better
-view than Grasby. But the whole of this road is one not to be missed. As
-we pass along it we first reach _Clixby_, which shows, or rather hides,
-a tiny church in a thick clump of trees by the road side, where is a
-churchyard cross, restored after the model of Somersby. The little stone
-church has been once very dilapidated, and is now renewed with a double
-bell-turret in brick—no wonder it hides itself in the trees. There is
-also a remarkable modern graveyard cross of dark stone, of a very early
-primitive shape, such as is seen on some of the incised grave stones of
-Northumbria. North of _Clixby_ is _Grasby_. This church was the home
-for over forty years of the poet’s brother Charles Tennyson-Turner, the
-author, with Alfred, of the “Poems by Two Brothers,” and afterwards of
-many sonnets written at Grasby. It would be difficult to surpass the
-charm of one called ‘Letty’s Globe’:
-
- LETTY’S GLOBE.
-
- When Letty had scarce passed her third glad year,
- And her young artless words began to flow,
- One day we gave the child a coloured sphere
- Of the wide earth, that she might mark and know,
- By tint and outline, all its sea and land.
- She patted all the world; old empires peeped
- Between her baby fingers; her soft hand
- Was welcome at all frontiers. How she leap’d
- And laugh’d and prattled in her world-wide bliss,
- But when we turned her sweet unlearned eye
- On our own isle, she raised a joyous cry,
- ‘Oh! yes, I see it, Letty’s home is there!’
- And while she hid all England with a kiss,
- Bright over Europe fell her golden hair.
-
-[Sidenote: CHARLES TENNYSON TURNER]
-
-A white marble tablet of chaste design on the wall of the nave shows a
-couple of sprays of bay or laurel beneath the Christian monogram, bending
-to right and left over the inscription, on the left to “Charles Tennyson
-Turner, Vicar and Patron of Grasby, who died April 25, 1879.
-
- True poet surely to be found
- When truth is found again.”
-
-and on the right to “Louisa his wife, died May 20, 1879.
-
- More than conquerors through him that loved us.
-
-They rest with Charlotte Tennyson in the cemetery at Cheltenham.”
-Charlotte was his brother Horatio’s first wife; his wife Louisa was
-the sister of Lady Tennyson, the two brothers having married two Miss
-Sellwoods, nieces of Sir John Franklin. Tennyson’s grandfather had
-married Mary Turner of Caistor, and Charles succeeded his uncle Sam
-Turner.
-
-The church, with its low broached spire, has a nave and a north aisle,
-but has little of the old left in it, except the south doorway and some
-Early English clustered pillars, and a curious plain font set on four
-little square legs mounted on steps. The church was rebuilt, and the
-schools and vicarage built _de novo_ by the Tennyson-Turners, for until
-his time the vicar had lived at Caistor. Under the east window outside is
-a stone let into the wall with three dedication crosses on it.
-
-We must follow this Caistor and Brigg highway along the edge of the Wold
-to Bigby, where it turns to the left, and only a byway runs north to
-_Barnetby le Wold_ which looks down on _Melton Ross_, so named from the
-Ros family to whom Belvoir came by marriage with a d’Albini heiress in
-the thirteenth century. Sir Thomas Manners—Lord Ros—was created Earl of
-Rutland in the sixteenth century.
-
-[Sidenote: THE TYRWHIT TOMBS]
-
-_Barnetby_ Church has a most ancient appearance; it stands high in
-a field by itself, the village lying below. A long, high wall of
-brick and stone, grey with lichen, a low tower and a flat roof and
-windows irregularly placed, make up a building of undoubted antiquity.
-Inside, and lately recovered from the coal-hole, is a Norman lead
-font, thirty-two inches across. This is unique in Lincolnshire, though
-twenty-eight others are known in other counties, the best being that
-at Dorchester-on-Thames. From Barnetby we must retrace our steps for a
-couple of miles to see _Bigby_, which is well placed on the edge of the
-Wold. The church has corbels all round, as at Grantham, under a parapet
-of later build and of a lighter-coloured and harder stone. The old thick
-tower is of the yellow stone, with a good two-light window to the west.
-The porch is of oak with panelled sides. The nave has an Early English
-arcade of three bays, with slender octagonal pillars. The tower arch is
-low, the chancel arch lofty. Here we find two fonts, not superimposed,
-as at Cabourn, but one in each aisle. One is low and formed of grey
-marble, the other has an old carved stone bowl of _nine_ panels on a new
-pedestal. This number of sides is unique. Near it is placed an incised
-slab showing the figure of a lady of the Skipwyth family, 1374, and
-another lady of the same name has a recumbent effigy in the chancel, _c._
-1400. The nave and chancel roof are one,[10] and in the chancel are some
-more interesting monuments. On the floor a brass of Elizabeth Tyrwhit,
-wife of William Skipwyth of Ormsby, _c._ 1520. On the north side a large
-altar tomb with alabaster effigies of Sir Robert Tyrwhit of Kettelbie,
-1581, and his wife. He is on a plaited mattress rolled at each end for
-his head and feet, and below his feet a wild man or “Wode-howse” on all
-fours and covered with hair. Two of these support the feet of Ralph Lord
-Treasurer Cromwell in the fine brass at Tattershall, and the Willoughby
-chapel at Spilsby shows one. His wife lies nearest the wall, with a lion
-at her feet and a cushion for her head; both wear ruffs, and he is in
-armour, but without helmet. In many respects the monument resembles the
-tomb of Sir John and Lady Hundon at Caistor, but is still more like the
-Ayscoughe tomb at Stallingborough.
-
-On the two ends and front of the tomb are figures of their children,
-twenty-two in number, two or three infants in cradles, the rest all
-kneeling, and above them is the old metrical version of the 128th Psalm,
-running round three sides of the tomb. The front or middle portion bears
-the following lines:—
-
- Like fruitful vine on thy house side
- So doth thy wife spring out.
- Thy children stand like Oliveplantes
- Thy table round about.
- Thus art thou blest that fearest God,
- And he shall let thee see
- The promiesed Hierusalem and his felicitie.
-
-Inside the chancel rails is a mural monument with life-size figures of a
-man and his wife kneeling, but the lady’s head is gone. The man is Robert
-Tyrwhit, who made a runaway match with Lady Bridget Manners, maid of
-honour to Queen Elizabeth, who was highly incensed at it, and doubtless
-used language appropriate to the occasion. At the back of the sedilia two
-or three little brasses have been inserted, one to Edward Nayler, rector
-1632, with wife and seven children. He is described as “a painefull
-minister of God’s word.”
-
-From Bigby four miles brings us to Brigg, passing near _Kettleby_, the
-home of the Tyrwhits, who kept up a blood feud with the Ros family
-till the beginning of the seventeenth century—not a very neighbourly
-proceeding—and as they only lived four miles apart their combats and
-murders were perpetual.
-
-[Sidenote: BROCKLESBY]
-
-The road which runs north from Caistor goes along the top of the Wold
-as far as “Pelham’s Pillar,” where the real High Wold stops. It is then
-460 feet above sea level. Caistor itself, on the western slope, is only
-150 feet up, but the High Wold keeps rising south of Caistor till it
-attains its highest point between Normanby-le-Wold and Stainton-le-Vale,
-at about 525 feet. From “Pelham’s Pillar” the road forks into three,
-and runs down into the flat at _Riby_, _Brocklesby_, and _Kirmington_,
-where there is a church with a bright green spire sheathed with copper.
-_Brocklesby_, Lord Yarborough’s seat, has a deer park more than two miles
-long. It is entered on the west side through a well-designed classical
-arch, erected by the tenantry in memory of the third lord. Extensive
-drives through the woods planted by the first lord, who married Miss
-Aufrere of Chelsea, and was created Baron Yarborough in 1794, reach as
-far as the “Pelham Pillar,” some six miles from Brocklesby. On the pillar
-it is recorded that twelve and a half million trees were planted. The
-planter, who rivals “Planter John,” he who laid out the many miles of
-avenue at Boughton near Kettering, was an Anderson, whose grandmother was
-sister of Charles, the last of the Pelhams, hence the family name now is
-Anderson-Pelham.
-
-[Illustration: _The Welland, near Fulney, Spalding._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE KOH-I-NOOR]
-
-The mausoleum on the south side, designed by Wyatt in 1794 in memory of
-Sophia, first Countess of Yarborough, is in the classical style, with a
-flat dome rising from a circular balustrade supported on twelve fluted
-Doric columns. It stands on an ancient barrow, in it is a monument by
-Nollekens, of the Countess. The house, part of which was rebuilt after a
-fire in 1898, has the appearance of a brick and stone Queen Anne mansion.
-In it are some of the exquisite wood carvings by Wallis of Louth, some
-of whose work was admired in the first “Great Exhibition” of 1851,
-attracting almost as much attention as the Koh-i-noor Diamond, then in
-its rough form, as worn by “Akbar the Great,” by Nadir Shah, and by “The
-Lion of the Punjab,” Runjeet Sing. It is now in the crown of the Queen of
-England, and, being re-cut, is much smaller, but far more brilliant. In
-addition to a fine hall and staircase there is a picture gallery built in
-1807 to take the paintings and sculptures which had been collected by Mr.
-John Aufrere of Chelsea, father-in-law of the first Lord Yarborough. The
-gem of this collection is the antique bust of Niobe, purchased in Rome by
-Nollekens the sculptor, who has himself contributed a fine bust of the
-first earl’s wife. In a conservatory are portions of another once famous
-collection of antiques, tombs, altars, and statues, made by Sir Richard
-Worsley and kept as a kind of classical museum till 1855 at Appuldurcombe
-in the Isle of Wight.
-
-[Sidenote: THE PELHAM BUCKLE]
-
-Religious houses abounded here. Thornton Abbey is only five miles off,
-and here, outside the park to the north-west, is Newsham Abbey, 1143,
-perhaps the earliest Premonstratensian house in England. On the east was
-the Cistercian nunnery of Colham, and just at the south of the park, in
-the village of Limber, was an alien priory belonging to the Cistercian
-house of Aulnay in Normandy. Newsham abbey, which was worth twice what
-the other two were, became part of the spoil which was absorbed by
-Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk. The gardens have some fine cedars,
-and the church with its curious tower and small spire is in the garden
-grounds. There are some Pelham monuments in it of the sixteenth and
-seventeenth century: one to Sir John and one to Sir William and Lady
-Pelham and their seventeen children. At her feet is the head of a king
-and the Pelham “Buckle,” commemorating the seizure by a Pelham of King
-John of France, at the battle of Poictiers.
-
-[Illustration: _Thornton Abbey Gateway._]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-LOUTH AND ITS NEIGHBOURHOOD
-
- Louth Church—“The Weder-Coke”—The Pilgrimage of Grace—Letter
- read in Lincoln Chapter-House from Henry VIII—“The Lyttel
- Clause”—The Blue Stone—Turner’s Horse-fair—The Louth
- Spire—Louth Park Abbey—Kiddington—Roads from Louth—Cawthorpe
- and Haugham—Dr. Trought’s Jump—Well Vale—Starlings.
-
-
-[Sidenote: LOUTH]
-
-Louth spire is one of the sights of Lincolnshire; it is a few feet higher
-than Grantham, which it much resembles, and in beauty of proportions and
-elegance of design one feels, as one looks at it, that it has really no
-rival, for Moulton, near Spalding, though on the same lines, is so much
-smaller.
-
-The way in which it bursts upon the view as the traveller approaches
-it from Kenwick, which lies to the southward, is a thing impossible
-to forget. Taking the place of originally a small Norman, and later a
-thirteenth century building, the present church of St. James dates from
-the fifteenth century. Louth once had two, if not three, other small
-churches, dedicated to St. John, St. Mary, and St. Herefrid; but no
-certain traces of these remain, and only the north and south doorways
-of the thirteenth century church are now visible. Excavations made at
-the last restoration in 1867 revealed the pillar bases of this church
-and some fragments of eleventh century moulding of the earlier one. The
-present building has nothing of interest inside—it is only the shell
-from which the living tenant has long been absent. Once its long aisles
-were filled with rich chapels, and the chancel arch was furnished with
-a rood-loft and screen, and the church was unusually rich in altars,
-vessels, vestments, and books, of which only the inventory remains. In
-the vestry an oak cupboard has medallions carved in the panels of Henry
-VII. and Elizabeth of York; and that is all. The steeple, with its large
-belfry windows, was doubtless built for its clock and bells; there were
-at first but three, which in 1726 were increased to a full peal of eight,
-but the clock and its chime was there as early as 1500. The spire was not
-completed till 1815; the weathercock was fixed then, but no lightning-rod
-until 1844 after the spire had been struck and damaged three times, in
-the sixteenth, seventeenth and nineteenth centuries; in the eighteenth it
-escaped.
-
-The first of the Louth churchwardens’ books has an ill-written entry of
-the year 1515-16, the time of the second (or thirteenth century) church,
-which tells us that one Thomas Taylor, a draper, bought a copper basin in
-York and had it made at Lincoln into a “Wedercoke” for the church. This
-is very interesting, for the basin had been part of the spoil taken from
-the King of Scots at Flodden.
-
-[Sidenote: THE KING’S LETTER]
-
-Twenty years later the vicar of Louth was hanged with others, at Tyburn,
-for his part in the Lincolnshire rebellion, when 20,000 men took up arms
-in defence of the pillaged monasteries. Concerning this rebellion, there
-is a graphic account of the receipt of Henry VIIIth’s letter in response
-to the people’s petition, which was read in the chapter-house at Lincoln,
-on October 10, 1556. Moyne tells how, when they thought to have read the
-letter secretly among themselves in the chapter-house, a mob burst in
-and insisted on hearing it: “And therefore,” he goes on to say, “I redd
-the Kynges letter openly and by cause there was a lyttyl clause therein
-that we feared wolde styr the Commons I did leave that clause unredd,
-which was persayved by a Chanon beying the parson of Snelland, and he
-sayde there openly that the letter was falsely redd be cause whereof I
-was like to be slayn.” Eventually they got out by the south door to the
-Chancellor’s house, while the men waited to murder them at the great
-West door, “And when the Commons persayved that wee were gone from theym
-another way, they departed to ther lodgings in a gret furye, determynyng
-to kill us the morowe after onles wee wolde go forwards with theym.”
-
-[Illustration: _Bridge Street, Louth._]
-
-The “lyttyl clause” referred to as likely to “styr the Commons,” was
-wisely omitted, for it is that in which the king expresses his amazement
-at the presumption of the “rude commons of one shire, and that one of
-the most brute and beastly of the whole realm and of least experience,
-to take upon them to rule their prince whom they were bound to obey and
-serve.”
-
-This rebellion, which was called the Pilgrimage of Grace, brought
-disaster on many Lincolnshire families. Over sixty of all conditions
-were put to death for it in Louth alone, and others at Alford, Spilsby
-and Boston, and at all the monasteries, and the vicars of Cockerington,
-Louth, Croft, Biscathorpe, Donington and Snelland and some others, as
-well as John Lord Hussey at Sleaford, suffered for their religion and
-were canonized as martyrs by the Pope. A list of more than one hundred
-victims is given in “Notes and Queries,” III., 84.
-
-The town has a museum of some interest, and outside of it may be seen a
-large boulder of some foreign stone, probably brought by an icefloe from
-Denmark or Norway. This used to stand at a street corner in the town, but
-was afterwards removed to the inn-yard at the back, and painted blue, and
-was known for many years as the blue stone. Speaking of stone, we have a
-record that a good deal of the stone for building the church spire in the
-sixteenth century was landed at Dogdyke, and drawn thence on wheels or
-carried on pack horses on flag pavements across the fen. The stone is of
-good quality and adapted for carving.
-
-There is notably good openwork on the east gable of the church, much
-resembling that at Grimoldby and Theddlethorpe-in-the-Marsh, a few miles
-to the east of Louth. Turner’s picture of the horse fair at Louth shows
-the spire, which was no doubt the motive of the picture, and until one
-has seen it, both from a distance and from the street of Louth itself,
-one can have no notion how beautiful a thing a well-proportioned spire
-can be, one is never tired of looking at it.
-
-An old statue of Edward VI. over a doorway in the Westgate indicates
-the grammar school where Alfred and Charles Tennyson spent a few
-uncomfortable years. The school seal shows a boy being birched, with the
-motto “Qui parcit virgam odit filium,” and date 1552. Among other pupils
-were Governor Eyre, one of the victims of British sentimentality, and
-Hobart Pasha. Thomas of Louth gave a clock to Lincoln Minster in 1324,
-and William de Lindsey, Bishop of Ely, 1290, who has there a beautiful
-monument, was also a Louth native.
-
-[Illustration: _Hubbards Mill, Louth._]
-
-[Sidenote: LOUTH PARK ABBEY]
-
-Louth Park Abbey, about a mile and a half to the east of the town, was
-built on a site belonging to the Bishops of Lincoln, and was given to the
-Cistercian colony from Fountains Abbey, who found Haverholme too damp for
-comfort, by Bishop Alexander in 1139. The Cistercians built themselves a
-large church, 256 feet long and sixty-one feet in width, with transepts
-which more than doubled this; parts of these and the chancel, also a
-portion of the west front and one nave pillar, are all that is left
-of it, but the ground plan has been excavated, which shows that there
-were no fewer than ten bays to the nave, and massive circular piers.
-There was a cloister on the south, surrounded by monastic buildings,
-and east of these a chapter-house with groined roof springing from six
-pillars. A very large gateway stood at the south-west, and outside was a
-double moat to which the water from St. Helen’s Spring was conducted by
-what is still known as “the Monk’s Dyke.” It flourished greatly at the
-beginning of the fourteenth century, having then sixty-six monks and 150
-lay brethren. The Louth Park Abbey Chronicle, though very valuable, is
-not exactly contemporaneous with the things it mentions, for it was all
-written by a scribe in the fifteenth century. It covers the years from
-1066 to the death of Henry IV. in 1413.
-
-Near the abbey, but on the other side of the canal, is _Keddington_,
-where the arch of the organ chamber is made of carved stones, no
-doubt brought from the abbey. The church, which is built of chalk and
-greensand, is older than any in the immediate neighbourhood, and has a
-Norman south door. It has a remarkable lancet window on the south side,
-in the upper part of which is a carved dragon, and has also what is very
-rare, a wooden mediæval eagle lectern.
-
-[Sidenote: ROADS FROM LOUTH]
-
-Half-a-dozen main roads radiate from Louth, one might call it eight, for
-two of the half-dozen divide, one within a mile, and one at a distance of
-two miles from the town. They go, one north to Grimsby, twenty miles of
-level road along the marsh, and one west to Market Rasen, by the Ludfords
-and North Willingham, fifteen and a half miles. One mile out, this road
-divides and goes west and then south to Wragby by South Willingham,
-sixteen and a half miles. Both of these roads, as well as that which runs
-south-west to Horncastle, fourteen and a half miles, cross the Wolds and
-are distinctly hilly, rising and falling nearly four hundred feet. The
-fifth road, which goes due south to Spilsby, sixteen miles, though seldom
-as much as 250 feet higher than Louth, which stands about seventy-five
-feet above sea level, affords fine views, and is a very pleasant road
-to travel. But all these highways must be dealt with in detail later.
-The sixth road from Louth runs south-east to Alford, and keeps on the
-level of the marsh, and the seventh and eighth roads run eastwards across
-the marsh to the sea, one branching off the Alford road at Kenwick and
-avoiding all villages, comes to the coast at Saltfleet; the other,
-starting out from Louth by Keddington and Alvingham, loses itself in many
-small and endlessly twisting roads which connect the various villages and
-reaches the sea eventually at Donna Nook and Saltfleet, places five miles
-apart, with no passage to the sea between them—nothing but mud flats,
-samphire beds and sea birds. There is a charm about “the waste enormous
-marsh,” and also about the high and windy Wolds, which never palls, but
-before we journey along either of the highways from Louth I should like
-to introduce one of those byways which form the chief delight of people
-who love the country.
-
-[Sidenote: SOME BYWAYS]
-
-We will leave Louth, then, by the Spilsby road, and when we reach the
-second milestone, 147 miles from London, turn and look at the beautiful
-spire of Louth Church rising from a group of elms in the middle distance
-of a wide panorama. From our height of 300 feet we look across the whole
-marsh to the sea, ten miles to the east, and far on beyond Louth we look
-northwards towards Grimsby and the Humber, the perpetually shifting
-lights and shades caused by the great cumulus clouds in these fine level
-views, the many farmsteads and occasional church towers—
-
- “The crowded farms and lessening towers”
-
-of our own Lincolnshire poet—all combine to make a very satisfactory
-picture to which the wonderfully wide extent which lies unrolled before
-us, lends enchantment; and always the eye reverts to rest with delight on
-that perfect spire standing so high above the trees by the banks of the
-river Lud.
-
-At length we turn and pursue our way, but soon quit the Spilsby road and
-go down the hill to the left, past the entrance to Kenwick Hall, till
-we reach the Alford road, and, turning to the right, come to the pretty
-little village of _Cawthorpe_.
-
-[Sidenote: DR. TROUGHT’S JUMP]
-
-This is not a bad centre for country walks. You can walk on a raised
-footpath all along the side of the curious water-lane, and if you go out
-in the opposite direction the road to _Haugham_ takes you through two
-miles of as pretty a road as you could desire; it is called “Haugham
-Pastures,” but it is really a road through a wood, without hedges,
-reminding one of the New Forest or the “Dukeries.” On the right, going
-from Cawthorpe, the trees extend some distance with oak and fern and all
-that makes the beauty of an English wood; on the other side it is only a
-belt of trees through which at intervals a grassy tract curves off from
-the road and leads to the fields; and as we passed in September we could
-see the corn-laden waggons moving up towards us or the teams going afield
-among the sheaves. No county could supply a prettier series of pictures
-of simple pastoral beauty than this byway through “Haugham Pastures.” A
-deep lane near the little brick-built manor-house is noticeable as the
-site of a famous jump. The roadway is about fifteen feet wide, with steep
-sides and a low hedge, the top of which is nine or ten feet above the
-roadway. Over these Dr. Trought of Louth, on a famed hunter, once jumped
-for a wager, flying from field to field, a distance of some twenty feet.
-
-[Illustration: _The Lud at Louth._]
-
-One of the charming peculiarities of Cawthorpe is that here the “Long
-Eau” stream runs between hedge-banks over a level sand and gravel bed
-and forms a water street, which extends for about a furlong. There is a
-similar thing at Swaby, six miles to the south, where the “Great Eau”
-runs along a street or road through the village. At Cawthorpe the water
-is always running and usually about six inches deep. The village lies
-in a hollow with curiously twisting little roads in it, and is very
-picturesque with its farms and trees and quaint little brick manor-house
-standing near the church at the three cross ways.
-
-[Sidenote: A BEAUTIFUL ROAD]
-
-Rising from the hollow, the small byway runs with here and there
-beautiful trees and often on the right a tall hedge or narrow strip of
-plantation, reminding one of the roadside “shaws” in Hampshire, while
-on the left there is always a view down over cornfields and beyond the
-tops of the Tothill oak woods right across the fertile belt of the marsh
-to the shining line of the distant sea. With many a twist the byway
-runs on through _Muckton_ village to _Belleau_, where it crosses the
-above-mentioned Swaby or Calceby beck and looks down on the picturesque
-church, standing in the grassy meadows, and on the brick turret and
-groined archways of the old Manor-house, and so on to _South Thoresby_,
-where the broken ground and the fine trees tell of an old mansion which
-stood there till last century; and past _Rigsby_, till it meets the
-Spilsby and Alford highway just below Miles-cross-Hill, whence it runs
-on through the avenue of elms to _Well_. And all the way, as it has run
-along the top of the eastern escarpment of the Wold, it has afforded us
-an outlook over a wide expanse of the marsh such as none of the other
-roads on the high wolds can equal. True, the Lincoln cliff road gives
-a finer view and runs further, but I don’t think there is any prettier
-ten-mile stretch in the county than this ‘Middle road’ from Well to Louth.
-
-At the entrance gate of Well Vale Hall the road divides, either route
-ending at Alford. _Well Vale_, a fine sporting estate and also a famous
-stronghold for foxes, the residence of Mr. Walter H. Rawnsley, is, I
-venture to think, the prettiest spot in the county. For a mile or more a
-grassy track descends from the top of Miles-Cross-Hill through a wooded
-valley where fine beeches stretch out their long arms, and pines and
-larch crown the chalky turf-clad sides, till the mouth of the Vale opens
-out into a park, whose rolling slopes are studded with handsome trees,
-and as you near the mansion, the front of which looks out across its
-brilliant flower-beds and quaint pinnacled gateway upon the little church
-flanked by branching elms on the summit of a grassy hill, you see a fine
-sheet of water fed by a copious chalk stream which passes the house and
-is then conducted to a still larger lake on the garden side, stretching
-with a double curve from the giant cedars on the lawn to a vanishing
-point, of which glimpses only are caught through the stems of the Scotch
-firs and oaks in the distance. The history of Well goes back to Roman
-times, and has been told fully by the Rev. E. H. R. Tatham, Rector of the
-neighbouring parish of _Claxby_, where the site of a Roman camp is still
-visible, another being at _Willoughby_, two miles off eastwards in the
-levels, where the marsh begins.
-
-[Sidenote: HISTORY OF WELL]
-
-The name was derived in Saxon times from the strong spring which wells
-out from the chalk and feeds the lakes on either side the house. The
-names Burwell and Belleau in the immediate neighbourhood are of similar
-origin, though the latter is a Norman name. At the time of the Conquest
-_Well_ and _Belleau_ were both bestowed on Gilbert de Gaunt, the
-Conqueror’s nephew, and were let by him to one Ragener, whose family
-took the addition “de Welle” and lived here for four centuries. In the
-thirteenth century we hear of a church at Well, and William de Welle
-(the third of the name) in 1283 obtained a licence for a market and fair
-at Alford. His son Adam was summoned to Parliament as a baron in 1299.
-In the fifteenth century the name was changed from Welle to Welles, and
-Leo Lord Welles fell at Towton in 1461. The title was now combined with
-that of Willoughby d’Eresby, and Leo’s son, Richard, who took it _jure
-uxoris_, he having married the Willoughby heiress, was the Lord Welles
-who was so basely put to death in 1470 by Edward IV. for complicity in
-the Lincolnshire rebellion, together with his son-in-law, T. Dymoke, and
-his son Robert. _See_ Chap. XXXIII.
-
-Leo, who fell at Towton, had married for his second wife, Margaret
-Duchess of Somerset, and her son John joined Henry VII., and after the
-battle of Bosworth the king restored to him the Welles estate which had
-been forfeited after Robert’s execution, made him a viscount, and gave
-him the hand of Cicely, daughter of Edward IV. and sister to his own
-queen, in marriage. It is interesting to read in Mr. Tatham’s paper that
-“This lady carried the heir-apparent, Prince Arthur, at his baptism at
-Winchester in 1486.” She subsequently married one of the Kyme family of
-Kyme Tower near Boston. John Viscount Welles died in 1499, and the male
-line of the Welles became extinct, but the Willoughby line went on, for
-Cicely, the sister of the unfortunate Richard Welles, had married Sir R.
-Willoughby, and her grandson William succeeded to that title as the ninth
-Lord Willoughby. He was the father of Catharine Duchess of Suffolk and
-subsequently wife of Richard Bertie, whose monument occupies so large a
-space in the Willoughby chapel at Spilsby. The Welles estate remained
-with the Willoughbys (who in 1626 were created Earls of Lindsey) till
-1650, when the extortionate fines levied on Royalist families by the
-Parliament made it necessary for Belleau and Welle to be sold. Belleau
-went to Sir H. Vane, and Well to W. Wolley, who sold it about 1700 to
-Anthony Weltden, a man who had a romantic career in the early days of the
-Hon. East India Company. From him Well passed to James Bateman, one of
-whose sons became Lord Bateman. Another, James, succeeded to the estate
-and built the present house about 1725, a wing of which was pulled down
-about 1845. This James married Anne, daughter of Sir Robert Chaplin of
-Tathwell, who also came to live and die at Well. Bateman’s daughter
-and heiress married a Dashwood in 1744—probably it was he who planted
-the Vale (he died in 1825)—and in 1838 the estate was purchased by Mr.
-Christopher Nisbet Hamilton, whose daughter, Mrs. Hamilton Ogilvy, has
-just sold it to Mr. Walter H. Rawnsley.
-
-[Sidenote: WELL VALE]
-
-The following lines were written on the gate at the top of Well Vale by a
-traveller taking his yearly tramp from Horncastle for a dip in the sea at
-Mablethorpe, a good twenty miles.
-
- Some say “All’s well that ends well,”
- But here Well begins well.
- They say too “Truth is in a well,”
- But here there is in truth a Well.
- Welcome then Well! since I well come along to her,
- For well I’ve known Well and the charms that belong to her
- Passing well to the view looks the Vale of fair Well,
- And I, passing Well too, must bid her farewell
- ’Till again I’m this way; or perhaps for aye.
- Farewell then (or ‘vale’) to fair Well Vale.
- Farewell! Fair Well!
-
-This is more than a mere assemblage of puns—there is some poetry in the
-old fellow, and the penultimate line has an added pathos from the fact
-that only a few months later the poet bid his final farewell to life, on
-November 10, in the same year, at the age of seventy-six.
-
-[Sidenote: THE STARLINGS]
-
-Speaking of Well Vale, I think I have seen and heard more starlings
-collected together in a young larch plantation there than I ever came
-across at once elsewhere. The only multitude of birds at all comparable
-to it was the army of cranes I have seen covering half a mile or more of
-sandbank in the Nile, near Komombos, while clouds of them kept dropping
-from the sky. They have black wings and white bodies, so that aloft they
-looked black, but standing on the sandbank as close as they could pack
-they looked all white.
-
-But to return to our starlings. It is a very curious thing this massing
-of countless thousands of these birds amongst the osiers[11] in the fenny
-parts of the county, or in some of the plantations in the Wolds. If you
-take your stand about sunset near one of these, when the wood pigeons,
-after much noisy flapping of their wings, have settled down to rest,
-a loud whirring noise will make you look up to see the sky darkened
-by a cloud of these birds, which will be only the advance portion of
-the multitudes that will quickly be converging from all sides to their
-roosting quarters. They have been feeding in many places, often at a
-considerable distance; but each night they assemble, and for a quarter
-of an hour or more the noise of their chattering and fluttering as each
-successive flight comes in will be indescribable. If a disturbing noise
-is made, myriads will rise with one loud rush, but nothing will prevent
-their return and, when the noise and movement has at length subsided,
-the trees will be black with their living load, which will sleep till
-sunrise, and then again disperse for the day in quest of food, returning
-every night for several weeks, till the call of spring scatters them for
-good.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
- Anglo-Saxon, Norman and Mediæval Art—Fonts.
-
-
-When we talk of Anglo-Saxon art it is not to be implied that no artistic
-work was done before Saxon time in Britain. But if we speak of churches,
-though doubtless British churches were once to be found here, there are
-certainly none now existing, and we cannot get back beyond Saxon times.
-The British churches were built probably of wattle, or at the best of
-stones without mortar, and so were not likely to be long-lived. Still,
-Stonehenge is British work, and domed huts, like beehives, similar to but
-smaller and ruder than those to be still seen in Greece, were made by the
-ancient Britons. It was the Romans who first introduced architecture to
-our land. They had learnt it from those wonderful people, the pioneers of
-so much that we all value, the Greeks, who in turn had got their lessons
-from Egypt and Assyria. That takes us back eight thousand years, and we
-still profit by the art thus handed down through the centuries. When the
-Romans left us, all the arts at once declined in our islands, and notably
-the art of building.
-
-In speaking of the churches in the south of the county, I drew attention
-to the number in which traces of Saxon work were still visible and
-spoke of the two remarkable specimens only three miles over the border
-at Wittering and Barnack. It is pleasant to hear so good an authority
-as Mr. Hamilton Thompson say that Lincolnshire is more rich than any
-other county in churches which, though only in few instances of a
-date indisputably earlier than the Conquest, yet retain traces of an
-architecture of a distinctly pre-Norman character. We do not vie with
-Kent and Northumbria, for we cannot show anything which can be referred
-to the first century of Anglo-Saxon Christianity associated with the
-name of Augustine, nor had St. Ninian, St. Kentigern, St. Oswald, St.
-Cuthbert, or St. Wilfrid any work to do in Lincolnshire. St. Paulinus
-alone, by his visit to Lincoln, connected the province of Lindsey, which
-was part of his diocese of York, with the religious life of Northumbria.
-But the only existing trace of this is the dedication of the church in
-Lincoln to St. Paul, _i.e._, St. Paulinus.
-
-[Sidenote: SAXON TOWERS]
-
-Still, Saxon architecture was a real thing in the two centuries preceding
-the Norman invasion, and we have in Lincolnshire an unusually large
-number of churches (I can mention no less than thirty-eight at once),
-which represent a late state of Saxon architecture carried out probably
-by Saxon workmen for Norman employers and bearing traces of Norman
-influence. At Stow, near Lincoln, is some very fine Saxon work, but there
-the Norman overlies the Saxon more decidedly than it does in the notable
-church of Barton-on-Humber; both of these have been discussed in previous
-chapters. But we may here draw attention to the less magnificent Saxon
-remains in the county, and notice how often the churches with Saxon work
-still visible, lie in groups. Thus, quite in the north we have Barton,
-Winterton, and Alkborough, with Worlaby not far off. Then in the course
-of ten miles along the road from Caistor to Grimsby we have Caistor,
-Cabourn, Nettleton, Rothwell, Cuxwold, Swallow, Laceby, Scartho, and
-Clee; with Holton-le-Clay and Waith just to the south on the road to
-Louth. On the west, near Gainsborough, we have a group of five close
-together at Corringham, Springthorpe, Harpswell, Heapham, and Glentworth;
-and Marton and Stow are not far away, one by the Trent and the other on
-the central road between the Trent and the ‘Cliff.’
-
-[Sidenote: “LONG-AND-SHORT” WORK]
-
-Lincoln has its two famous church towers of St. Mary-le-Wigfords and
-St. Peters-at-Gowts. Near it, to the south, are Bracebridge, Bramston,
-Harmston and Coleby, the two latter close together, and all with traces
-of “Long-and-Short” work; and if we continue our way southwards, we shall
-pass Hough-on-the-Hill between Grantham and Newark, with its interesting
-pre-Conquest stair turret, and so finish our Saxon tour by visiting three
-churches on or near the river Glen, at Boothby-Pagnell, Little Bytham and
-Thurlby. This is not an exhaustive list, for Great Hale near Heckington
-must be included, and Cranwell near Sleaford and Ropsley near Grantham,
-both show “Long-and-Short” work. But the more closely the churches
-mentioned are examined, the more clear it becomes that, though the dates
-of the building, when we can get at them, mostly point us to the eleventh
-century, the art is of a pre-Conquest type, and could only have been
-executed before the general spread of Norman influence which that century
-witnessed. We are therefore quite justified in speaking of this work as
-Saxon.
-
-Here, perhaps, the term “Long-and-Short” work should be explained.
-
-It is often said that the Saxon architecture was the development in
-stone of the building which had previously been done in timber and
-wattle, and thus in Barnack, and Barton, and at Stow, but nowhere else
-in Lincolnshire, parallel strips of stone run up the tower at intervals
-of a couple of feet, as if representing the upright timbers. This
-theory, perhaps, will not bear pressing; still, though the arch over
-a window is often triangular, made by leaning two slabs one against
-another, not unfrequently a square-ended stone projects from the top of
-a rounded arch, which seems to be a reminiscence in stone of the end
-of a wooden beam. This may be seen at Barnack on the south side of the
-tower. The towers have no buttresses, and though the stones between the
-upright strips are small and rubbley, the stones at the angles of the
-tower are fairly large and squared. When these are long-shaped, but set
-alternately perpendicular and horizontal, this is called “Long-and-Short”
-work, and is definitely “Saxon,” even though built by Norman hands.
-The herring-bone work, as seen at Marton, is Romanesque and a sign of
-Norman builders. They also copied the Romans in facing a rubble core with
-dressed stone, whereas the Saxons only used dressed stones at the angles.
-
-[Illustration: _Ancient Saxon Ornament found in 1826 in cleaning out the
-Witham, near the village of Fiskerton, four miles east of Lincoln._]
-
-[Sidenote: SAXON ORNAMENTS]
-
-The enormous activity of the Norman builders in every part of the kingdom
-has thrown previous architectural efforts into the shade; but the Normans
-found in England a by no means barbarous people. Anglo-Saxon or Anglian
-art had exhibited developments in many directions, in metal work and
-jewellery, in illumination of MSS., in needlework, in stone-carving, as
-well as in architecture; and when Augustine landed in 597 it was not to
-a nation of barbarous savages, but to people quite equal in many ways to
-those he had lived among in Italy or conversed with in Gaul, that he
-had to preach the tenets of Christianity. As proof of this we can point
-to the beautiful carved stonework of the Anglians of Northumbria on the
-great crosses of Bewcastle and Ruthwell, and the cross of Bishop Acca of
-Hexham, now in the Durham library, all of the seventh century; and to the
-Lindisfarne Gospels of St. Wilfred’s time which was only some fifty years
-later; whilst to show the continuity of Anglo-Saxon art we have the St.
-Cuthbert stole in the Durham Cathedral library, a triumph of needlework
-by the nuns of Winchester in the days of Athelstan; and, besides the
-celebrated Alfred Jewel, a silver trefoil brooch[12] found at Kirkoswald
-in Cumberland, which, for purity of design, richness of ornamentation
-and beauty of execution, it would be difficult to match in any age or
-country, and the cloak chain, found at Fiskerton, described in Chapter
-XIV.; all these are quite first-rate in their different lines, and should
-make us speak with respect of our Saxon ancestors.
-
-Having already noted the Gainsborough group (Chap. XVII.) and the Caistor
-group (Chap. XX.), we will now make our way towards a third group of
-pre-Norman towers to be seen on the Louth and Grimsby road.
-
-[Sidenote: NORMAN DWELLINGS]
-
-In Norman times strongholds and churches were built all over the country,
-and doubtless many domestic houses which did not aspire to be more than
-ordinary dwelling-places. It is curious how almost entirely these have
-vanished; one at Boothby Pagnell and three in Lincoln are among the
-very few left. In Lincoln ‘The Jews’ House,’ ‘Aaron’s House,’ and ‘John
-of Gaunt’s Stables’ or ‘St. Mary’s Guild’ go back to the beginning of
-the twelfth century. They none of them would satisfy our modern notions
-of comfort, but neither do the much later houses, such as the mediæval
-merchant’s house called “Strangers’ Hall,” in Norwich, which is so
-interesting and so obviously uncomfortable. When King John of France was
-confined at Somerby Castle in the fourteenth century he had to import
-furniture from France to take the place of the benches and trestles which
-was all that the castle boasted, and to hang draperies and tapestries on
-the bare walls; and though some of these were supplied him by his captor,
-comfortable furniture seems to have been not even dreamt of at that time
-in England.
-
-[Sidenote: ROOD-SCREENS]
-
-For the churches the Normans did surprisingly well, as far as the
-building and stonework went, but the beautiful woodwork, which is the
-glory of our Lincolnshire marsh churches, is mostly the work of the
-men of the fifteenth and early sixteenth century. We see this mediæval
-workmanship sometimes in the bench ends and stalls and miserere seats,
-but most notably in such of the rood screens as have escaped the
-successive onslaughts made on them in the sixteenth and seventeenth
-centuries, whilst the shameful neglect of the eighteenth and the shocking
-ignorance of both clergy and laity in that and the first part of the
-nineteenth century, have swept away much that was historically of the
-utmost interest, and which the better informed and more responsible
-guardians of the churches to-day would have preserved and treasured. This
-mediæval woodwork is found most frequently in the more remote parts of
-the country. The best rood loft I have ever seen is in a little church
-in Wales, near Towyn, and some of the finest rood screens with canopies
-are in the churches of Devon; of these, Mr. Hubert Congreve, in his
-paper contributed to the Worcester Archæological Society, notes that at
-_Stoke-in-Teignhead_ there is one of the fourteenth century, carved in
-the reign of Richard II. From this the loft has been removed, and it
-was generally the case that when this was taken away as idolatrous, the
-screen itself was not objected to.
-
-Many of these screens in the Devon churches have an extremely rich and
-deep cornice, and they often extend right across the nave and both
-the aisles. Perhaps the finest of these is in the famous parson Jack
-Russell’s church at _Swymbridge_. This is of the fifteenth century. From
-the same source we learn that _Bovey Tracey_ has a similar screen, but
-it has had to be greatly restored since the Commonwealth destruction,
-and that _Atherington_ has a lovely screen in the north aisle, with
-fan-shaped coving springing from figures of angels holding shields. The
-cornice is delicately carved, and there is some fine canopy work over the
-parapet, with niches which once held figures of the saints. This screen
-was originally in the chapel at Umberleigh Manor, and is perhaps the only
-screen in the county which has never been painted. When I visited lately
-the quaint little town of _Totnes_ I saw what is most uncommon—a stone
-screen. This dates from 1479, and richly and beautifully carved, much
-after the pattern of the screen in the Lady Chapel at Exeter Cathedral.
-
-All this fine mediæval work suffered terribly from the ultra-Protestant
-mania for iconoclasm which exhibited itself in the reign of Edward VI.,
-in 1547, and again under Elizabeth in 1561. Finally, under the Parliament
-both in 1643 and 1644, was issued “An ordinance of the Lords and Commons
-assembled in Parliament for the utter demolishing, removing and taking
-away of all Monuments of superstition and idolatry.”
-
-This Act provided specifically for the taking away of all altar rails and
-the levelling of the “Chancel-ground” and the removal of the Communion
-table from the east end, and the destruction of all stone altars, so that
-it is always noticeable when we find one such, either in a side chapel or
-in the pavement, with its five and occasionally six dedication crosses
-cut on the stone. Norwich has one in which a small black slab bearing the
-crosses is let into the large altar slab.
-
-[Sidenote: ICONOCLASM]
-
-All images, “representative of the persons of the Trinity or of any
-Angell or Saint” were to be “utterly demolished,” and all vestments
-“defaced”; with the quaint proviso that the order should “not extend to
-any image, picture or coat-of-arms set up or graven onely for a Monument
-of any King, Prince or Nobleman, or other dead person _which hath not
-been commonly reputed or taken for a saint_.”
-
-
-FONTS.
-
-In our English churches the most noticeable bit of mediæval work is in
-many cases the font, which has often escaped when all the rest of the
-building inside and out has been defaced by neglect or destroyed by
-restoration. Much destruction followed on the Reformation, and even in
-Elizabeth’s reign, in spite of a royal mandate to preserve the old form
-of baptism “at the font and not with a bason,” attacks were constantly
-made on the fonts, and especially on the font-covers, which makes the
-preservation of the _Frieston_ font-cover with a figure of the Virgin
-Mary on the top very remarkable. We have in the churchwardens’ accounts
-in various places this contemptuous entry:—
-
- “Item. For takynge doune _ye thynge ower the funt_ XIIᵈ.”
-
-Parliamentarian soldiers went to greater lengths and broke up the font
-itself in very many churches. The bowls were often cast out or buried in
-the churchyard. At _Ambleston_ in Wales the font pedestal was only ten
-years ago found in use by a farmer as a cheese-press, and the bowl on
-another farm doing duty as a pig-trough.
-
-Still many have escaped with the loss of their carved covers, and how
-great the loss is can be judged when we see the beauty of such work as
-the cover which we still have at Ufford in Suffolk, eighteen feet high,
-or the similar ones at _Grantham_ and _Fosdyke_ and _Frieston_ in our
-own county, or at _Ewelme_ (Oxon), and _Thaxted_ (Essex), and again in
-Suffolk at _Sudbury St. Gregory_ and _Hepworth_, and one at _Thirsk_ in
-Yorkshire which rises to the height of twenty-one feet. Sometimes the
-cover takes the form of a canopy, as at _Swymbridge_ in Devon, and more
-beautifully in that erected by Bishop Cosin at _Durham_ in 1663. The
-_Sudbury_ font-cover has doors in it, as we see in the Jacobean cover
-in _Burgh-le-Marsh_ church, and in the beautiful modern cover at _Brant
-Broughton_, both in Lincolnshire.
-
-[Sidenote: FONTS, SAXON AND NORMAN]
-
-There were at one time many Saxon fonts, most of which were swept away
-and replaced in a different form by the Normans. One of the earliest we
-have is in _St. Martin’s Church, Canterbury_, the lower part of which,
-built of twenty-eight wedge-shaped stones, is Saxon or Romano-British,
-the upper part being Norman put on to heighten it, with the old Saxon
-rim crowning it, though by some this is called Transitional. This font
-was inside the church when King Ethelbert was baptised by St. Augustine
-in the ninth century. But we get back still further when we find runic
-inscriptions, as on the wonderful square tub font at _Bridekirk_,
-Cumberland, and on the little low hollowed stone at _Bingley_, Yorkshire,
-attributed to the eighth century, and having three lines of runes which
-are read thus:—
-
-“Eadbert, King, ordered to hew this dipstone for us, pray you for his
-soul.” He reigned 737 to 758, when as Æthelred King of Mercia in 675, had
-done at Bardney Abbey in the previous century, he resigned the crown and
-took the tonsure. _Mellor_, in Derbyshire, has a Saxon font, but without
-inscription.
-
-The remarkable font at _Bag Enderby_, Lincolnshire (_see_ Chap. XXX.),
-with its Scandinavian myth, is unique among fonts, though it has
-counterparts on many of the pre-Norman crosses in Northumbria. The font
-at _Deerhurst_, Gloucestershire, is also a very early one, and covered
-with Celtic scroll-work, this, though of the same kind, is bigger than
-the usual plain little stone tubs which, as a rule, mark the Saxon period.
-
-The Norman fonts also are mainly of tub form, but often ornamented with
-cable moulding and arcading, as at _Silk Willoughby_, Lincolnshire.
-
-[Sidenote: LINCOLNSHIRE FONTS]
-
-The lead fonts, twenty-nine of which are in existence, are all Norman;
-most of these have arcading all round and figures within the arches;
-perhaps the best is at _Dorchester_, Oxon, showing the apostles. But at
-_Brookland_, in Romney Marsh, there is a double row of arcading with
-the signs of the Zodiac above, and figures cleverly emblematic of the
-months below. At _Childrey_, Berks, the figures are without arcading and
-represent bishops with crosiers, all quaintly of the same attenuated
-shape, and in very high relief. Berkshire and Oxon have several of these
-lead fonts, and Gloucestershire exhibits six, all cast in the same mould;
-Lincolnshire has only one at _Barnetby-le-Wold_, which is noticeable,
-however, as being the largest of them all, thirty-two inches in diameter;
-that at _Brookland_ being the deepest with sixteen inches.
-
-The _Tournai_ group of black marble or basalt with thick central pedestal
-and four corner shafts, of which that at Winchester is the best, are
-described under Lincoln, in Chap. XIX. This form of support is pretty
-general through the thirteenth century, often with much massive carving
-and ornamentation on bowl and shafts, until the shafts developed, in some
-cases, into an open arcade round the central pillar, as best seen at
-_Barnack_, Northants. The tallest fonts and finest in design are of the
-fifteenth century, and are mostly octagonal pedestal fonts and frequently
-mounted on steps as in the churches of the Marsh near Boston, _e.g._,
-_Benington_ and _Leverton_. Some bowls are found with seven panels as
-at _Hundleby_, six as at _Ewerby_, _Heckington_ and _Sleaford_, nine as
-at _Orleton_, in Herefordshire, and at _Bigby_, in Lincolnshire, thus
-giving eight panels for figures, and allowing one to be placed against a
-wall or pillar; and ten, twelve, fourteen, and sixteen are not unknown.
-In our own county we have mentioned the font in nearly every case when
-describing a church, and will only now recall a few instances of the
-best. In addition to the _Tournai_ font at _Thornton Curtis_ and that
-of lead at _Barnetby_, the finest specimens of Early English will be
-found at _Thorpe St. Peter’s_ near Wainfleet—a very chaste design; the
-supporting shafts are gone, but the capitals show heads of bishop, king,
-and knight, and a knot of flowers supporting the bowl; and at _Weston_,
-near Spalding, where is one of singularly graceful form, standing on
-steps with a broad platform for the priest. At _Thurlby_, near Bourne,
-is a tub of Barnack stone which has pilasters all round it, and curious
-carved work dividing the panels, the whole being set on four square stone
-legs.
-
-Of Decorated fonts, _Ewerby_ is remarkable; hexagonal, with sides
-going straight down from the bowl, each panel representing a window
-with tracery, tending in design to Perpendicular, so that it probably
-dates from the end of the fourteenth century. The windows are filled
-with diaper work, and surrounded by a border of quatre-foils and
-flowing foliage. Other good Decorated fonts are at _Strubby_ and
-_Maltby-le-Marsh_ and _Huttoft_, all near Alford. The Perpendicular
-period is best seen at _Covenham St. Mary_, _North Somercotes_, _Bourne_,
-_Pinchbeck_, _Leverton_, and _Benington_.
-
-It is on the panels of the handsome fifteenth century fonts that the
-seven sacraments are carved, leaving one panel for any appropriate
-subject, and these panels are often real pictures of the methods of the
-time, and form most valuable records; the pedestal usually has its panels
-filled with Apostolic figures.
-
-[Sidenote: EAST ANGLIAN FONTS]
-
-It is curious that nearly all the thirty “seven sacrament fonts” in
-the kingdom are found in East Anglia; those of _Walsoken_, _Little
-Walsingham_, _East Dereham_, and _Great Glenham_ in Norfolk, and
-_Westall_ in Suffolk, are specially fine. And the churchwarden’s accounts
-for _East Dereham_ show that no expense was spared on the making; the
-total of £12 14_s._ 2_d._, being equivalent to over £200 of our money.
-
-The sacraments depicted are Baptism, Confirmation, Penance, The
-Eucharist, Holy Orders, Holy Matrimony, and Extreme Unction. But to
-return to our own county.
-
-_Utterby_, near Louth, has an open channel to drain the water off from
-the font into the churchyard—a very uncommon feature.
-
-_Wickenby_, near Wragby, retains the old bar and staple to secure the
-font cover, at the time when the fonts were all ordered to be locked
-to prevent possibility of the water being tainted by magic. “Water
-bewitched” is a familiar expression for weak tea. I wonder if it comes
-from this.
-
-Of later fonts the quaintest is in _Moulton_ church, near Spalding, and
-now disused. It represents the trunk of a tree carved in stone, the
-branches going round the bowl and the serpent round the trunk, with Adam
-and Eve, rather more than half life size, discussing the apple. It dates
-from 1830, and seems to be a copy of one in the church of St. James’,
-Piccadilly, said to have been carved in marble by Grinling Gibbons.
-
-Mr. Francis Bond, in his charming book on porches and fonts, says that
-some of the fonts in our most ancient Lincolnshire churches, _Cabourn_,
-_Waith_, _Scartho_ and _Clee_, look older than they are by reason of
-their coarse workmanship. He notes that the cover of the _Skirbeck_ font
-belonged to a larger one destroyed by the Puritans, the present font
-having been put up in 1662.
-
-[Sidenote: WOODEN FONTS]
-
-The material of all the fonts described above is either stone or lead.
-We have very few of any other material, but of these by far the most
-interesting are those made of solid oak, of which specimens are extant
-at _Dinas-Mawddwy_ (pronounced Mouthy) and _Evenechtyd_ in Wales. But
-one might go on long enough talking about fonts, and I would only urge
-readers to go themselves and study them, and if they would pick out a
-few of the finest they should visit the fonts and font covers we have
-mentioned, and especially such typical fonts as are to be found at
-_Winchester_ and _Durham_, at _Walsoken_ in Norfolk, at _Fishlake_ in
-Yorkshire, and _Bridekirk_ in Cumberland, whenever they happen to be in
-those neighbourhoods.
-
-The worst of fonts is that they are so easily removable. Even in such
-out-of-the-way places as _Crowle_ the font has not remained, though the
-Norman south wall with its beautiful doorway is in quite good repair.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-ROADS FROM LOUTH, NORTH AND WEST
-
- The Grimsby Group of Pre-Norman
- Towers—Waith—Holton-le-Clay—Scartho—Clee—Humberstone—Tetney
- —Ravendale—Ashby-cum-Fenby—Roads to Lincoln and
- Horncastle—Hainton—Glentham—West Rasen—The Pack-horse
- Bridge—Toft-next-Newton and Newton-by-Toft—Gibbet-posts—Middle
- Rasen—The Labourer—Market Rasen—North Willingham—Tealby
- and Bayons Manor—Bishop Odo—South Elkington—Road from
- Horncastle—The South Wolds—Tathwell—Jane Chaplin.
-
-
-[Sidenote: JUNE FLOWERS]
-
-The road from Louth to Grimsby, in its first part, is described
-elsewhere; but north of Ludborough it passes through a succession of
-small villages in each of which is a very early church tower. These are
-all somewhat similar to the two primitive churches in Lincoln and to the
-famous one at Barton-on-Humber, but they have no “Long-and-Short” work
-which is distinctive of the _Saxon_ towers, and so the term _Romanesque_
-perhaps best describes them. They are certainly pre-Norman. Similar
-groups have been described near Caistor and Gainsborough in Chaps. XVII.
-and XX., and others mentioned in Chap. XXII. It was a bright and breezy
-morning early in June when we set out from Well to visit this remarkable
-group. The trees were at their best, chestnuts and may trees still in
-bloom, and in the wayside gardens the laburnum with its “dropping-wells
-of fire” was a joy to see. As we passed along the wind brought the strong
-scent of the mustard fields and the delicious perfume of the beans, not
-badly described by the Barber to his wife as “just like the very most
-delicious hair-oil, my dear.” The pastures were golden with buttercups,
-but the most wonderful sight of all was the profusion of chervil,
-or cow-parsley (_Anthriscus_), which, with its lace-like flowers, at
-times filled the space of grass between the road and the hedge with
-mile upon mile of its delicate white blossom, and in places lined every
-hedge, showing above the ordinary low-cut Lincolnshire fence, or, where
-the hedge was higher, whitening the lower half in lines of flowery
-loveliness. It nowhere encroached on the cultivated land, but every hedge
-and ditch and roadside was marked out by it in a profusion of soft white
-blossoms which was quite astonishing. We note that the “tender ash” is
-still, as our Lincolnshire poet has it, delaying ‘to clothe herself when
-all the woods are green,’ but a few days of such balmy sunshine will woo
-even her leaves from out the bud, and full summer will be with us. The
-red cattle are feeding in little herds, and the sheep, white from the
-hands of the shearer, are dotted about the fields. The labourers seem,
-most of them, to be at the same work, weeding the corn; but as we get
-further on to the heavy lands whence _Holton-le-Clay_ so aptly gets its
-name, we see teams of four horses abreast harnessed to the “Drags,” by
-which the great clods are broken up.
-
-The first of the group of towers we look at is _Waith_, a small cruciform
-building in a churchyard thickly planted with trees, two fine cedars
-among them. There are some Early English arcades to the nave, but
-outside, the tower alone is ancient. This originally was just the width
-of the nave, and has no openings in the north and south walls. It is
-also built, not of rubble with quoins, but of dressed stones throughout,
-solidly but roughly built, with a tiny opening low down; and above the
-invariable string course, a double light of two small round-headed arches
-supported by a stout mid-wall shaft with heavy impost. Coming away, we
-note on a tombstone the curious and possibly Roman surname ‘Porcass.’ Two
-miles south-west is _Grainsby_ where, as at Clee and Scartho, the stones
-bear the red marks of Danish fire, and where, inside the tower, is an old
-boulder stone. Two miles north, on the Grimsby road, is _Holton-le-Clay_,
-where the tower of the church is of similar antiquity, all but the top
-storey above the string-course. The west side has only one very small
-window, but it has on the east side a good tall Romanesque tower-arch,
-and there is an Early Norman or Saxon font. The rest of the church is of
-the poorest in all respects.
-
-[Sidenote: SCARTHO]
-
-As we proceed, the tall windmill with six sails shows above the _Waltham_
-woods on our left, and we pass a roadside inn with the sign of “The Old
-Pop Shop.” Three miles more and we reach _Scartho_, a village which is
-beginning to take the overflow of Grimsby and is full of new buildings.
-This is the only living in the north or east of England which belongs
-to Jesus College, Oxford. The church is very interesting on account of
-its tower, which is Saxon in all but the absence of “Long-and-Short”
-work. The stones of the tower are of all shapes and kinds, the quoins
-alone being of hewn stone. Below are only the tiny windows common to all
-Saxon towers, and above, the belfry has two-light windows with the usual
-mid-wall shaft. In the west of the tower is a doorway with a round head
-of large stones and massive imposts.
-
-There is a deep, narrow archway from the nave into the tower, with a
-little window looking into the nave, and there have been originally tall
-arches in both the north and south walls, narrow of necessity so as to
-leave wall enough at each angle for the tower to stand on. A charming
-original font is there, but hideously placed on a modern inverted stone
-bowl. The tower and the font are the only things worth looking at, but
-both of these are of unusual interest. The parapet is Perpendicular and
-built of different stone, and it is easy to see from the red appearance
-of many calcined stones used in the tower that it has been rebuilt from
-the old materials after a former church had been burnt by that scourge
-of Lincolnshire—the Dane. The principal entrance is now through a big
-doorway, but in the thirteenth century was in the south wall of the tower.
-
-Leaving _Scartho_ we quickly reach the outskirts of Grimsby, and, turning
-to the right on the Cleethorpes road, we come in a couple of miles
-to the church of _Clee_. This is the best of the group we have been
-visiting. It is one of the earliest churches in the county, and is highly
-interesting, not only for the venerable antiquity of its tower, but for
-the fine and varied early Norman and Transition architecture in the body
-of the church. As a rule there is nothing left of any antiquity in these
-pre-Norman churches but the tower.
-
-[Sidenote: CLEE]
-
-There is a narrow western doorway and a much taller one of similar
-character opening into the nave; each has Voussoirs set in double
-rows. Just above the belfry on the west face is a keyhole light made
-of top and side stones, and a circular light in the south face. Mr.
-Jeans, in Murray’s “Lincolnshire,” notes that they have all similar
-characteristics—“Rubble walling with large quoins, a bold string-course
-dividing them into stages, tall, narrow doorways with rude imposts and
-coupled belfry windows with a massive mid-wall shaft.” All this we find
-at _Clee_, and the red calcined stones in the wall tell of the Danish
-fire here as at Scartho. The early Norman arcade in the north of the nave
-has square piers with shafts at the corners, one of them twisted, like
-the work in Durham Cathedral. All are different in their structure and in
-the carving of their capitals. The south arcade has thick round columns
-of later Norman work with chevron, billet, and very thick cable moulding.
-The arches are round, and the stones of the moulding, as at Somerby,
-being cut by various hands and without plan or drawing, fit together, but
-are hardly any two of them of the same sized pattern. This is quite usual
-in Norman arch mouldings. I noticed it lately over the west doorway of
-the fine tower of New Romney, Kent. The arches at the east of each aisle
-which give upon the transepts are pointed, but with Norman mouldings,
-and the transept arches are the same; the transepts themselves and the
-low central tower and the chancel are all modern. The old tower is, as
-usual, at the west end. On the shaft of one of the south arcade pillars
-is a very interesting record of two notable Bishops of Lincoln. It is in
-Latin, cut on a small tablet of marble about six inches by eight, and
-let in flush with the pillar. It says that “the Church was dedicated
-in honour of the Holy Trinity and the blessed Virgin by Hugh Bishop of
-Lincoln in the year 1192, in the time of King Richard and re-dedicated
-after restoration by Bishop Christopher Wordsworth in 1888.” 1192 was the
-same year in which Bishop Hugh began the choir at Lincoln, which is pure
-Early English, but doubtless the nave at Clee was built some years before
-it was dedicated. The font is a massive Norman one, and a portion of the
-shaft of an early cross stands just inside the door.
-
-[Illustration: _Clee Church._]
-
-[Sidenote: PRE-NORMAN TOWER]
-
-[Sidenote: ASHBY-CUM-FENBY]
-
-The pathway to the church is lined on either side with tall fuschias,
-not a usual sight near the east coast. This church is the old parish
-church of _Cleethorpes_, which is the most crowded of the Lincolnshire
-watering-places, the goal of endless excursions from all the neighbouring
-counties, but not a place of any attraction for residents. Six miles
-due east across the river Humber is the revolving light of the Spurn
-Head lighthouse, plainly seen from the hill above Alford, thirty miles
-away. Between the Louth and Grimsby main road and the sea another road
-runs south from Clee by Humberstone and Tetney, thence to Covenham
-and Alvingham and so to Louth. _Humberstone_ is a parish which goes
-with Holton-le-Clay, though they are about three miles apart. It is
-remarkable for its fine avenues of trees, and has a good Perpendicular
-tower. But in this respect it is surpassed by the extremely well-built
-and well-designed tower at the next village of Tetney. This, unlike the
-body of the church, is entirely of good, hard, grey Yorkshire stone.
-Some “Blow Wells,” which are circular pits of very blue water 100 feet
-deep, are in a field half a mile to the south-east of the church. There
-are others at _Laceby_ and _Little Cotes_, both in the valley of the
-Freshney river, six miles off. The water comes through faults in the
-limestone ridge four or five miles to the west. A stream also flows
-through Tetney, which comes out of the Croxby pond near _Hatcliffe_, the
-only piece of water in the neighbourhood. The roads we have been writing
-of are all entirely in the flat ground, but from the Louth and Grimsby
-main road a branch goes off to the left, after crossing a fourteenth
-century bridge with ribbed arches, at _Utterby_, which runs north along
-the western edge of the Wold past Brocklesby to Barrow on Humber. This,
-when it is opposite to Waith, has on its left a place called Ravendale,
-and, on its right, a little hidden away village, called Ashby-cum-Fenby.
-At _Ravendale_ there was once a priory belonging to a Premonstratensian
-abbey in Brittany. It was seized by the Crown with other alien priories
-in 1337 to form part of the dowry of Joan of Navarre, Queen of Henry IV.
-_Ashby-cum-Fenby_ has very pretty Early-English two-light windows in the
-belfry, set round with dog-tooth moulding. A Crusader effigy of 1300 is
-at the west end of the tower, and two fine monuments to two sisters of
-the Drury family are in good preservation; one to Sir F. and Lady Wray
-closely resembles the Irby monument at Whaplode, and, as the families
-are related, probably the work is by the same sculptor. That of Susannah
-Drury in the chancel is a good piece of sculpture, but the whole has
-literally been whitewashed, which does not improve it. The churchyard is
-for the most part deplorably neglected, and a few sheep would greatly
-improve it. A row of almshouses with tiny gardens, made like the
-Workmen’s row at Tattershall, adjoins the west side of the churchyard.
-
-The road after this passes nothing of importance near it, till it reaches
-Brocklesby.
-
-Close to the bell ropes in the tower at Tetney is a neat little brass
-which aptly commemorates a fine old parishioner as follows:—
-
- Matthew Lakin
- born 1801 died 1899 One of the regular bellringers of
- Tetney for 84 years and sometime Clerk and Sexton.
-
-The highway which goes out of Louth on the west, after passing Thorpe
-Hall, within a mile of the town, soon splits into two, the one going
-up the hill to the right has, at first, a north-easterly course, but
-after passing through South Elkington leaves North Elkington on the
-right and goes on due east to Market Rasen and Gainsborough, and is the
-great east-and-west road of North Lincolnshire: the only other roads
-which take that direction being the Boston-Sleaford-and-Newark and the
-Donington-and-Grantham roads in the southern part of the county, and the
-great Sutton-Holbeach-Spalding-Bourne-and-Colsterworth road. But none of
-these run so straight.
-
-[Sidenote: HAINTON]
-
-The other road from the foot of South Elkington hill goes on at first
-due west till, passing Welton-le-Wold on the right and Gayton-le-Wold on
-the left, it drops into the picturesque little village of Burgh-on-Bain
-(pronounced Bruff). So far we have had a wide Wold view, but no blue
-distances over fen or marsh; but _Grimblethorpe_ and _Burgh-on-Bain_ are
-in two parallel little valleys, and when the road turns here, at seven
-miles distance from Louth, to the south-west, a quite different type of
-country is entered, beginning with the woods of _Girsby_, the seat of Mr.
-J. Fox, quondam joint Master of the Southwold Hounds, and _Hainton_ Hall
-and park, where the Heneage family have been seated since the time of
-Henry III. The church tower has some of the characteristics of the early
-Norman or pre-Norman groups, and both church and chantry-chapel are rich
-in monuments of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and brasses of
-still earlier date. The altar tombs of 1553 and 1595 are magnificent, and
-the kneeling effigies of 1559 and 1610 are in excellent preservation.
-The helmets and spurs over the effigy of John (1559), and the gilded
-armour of Sir George (1595), are especially noticeable, as also are the
-varied spellings of the name—in 1435 Henege, in 1530 Hennage, and in 1553
-Henneage.
-
-[Sidenote: GLENTHAM]
-
-From here a road leads to the left to _South Willingham_ and
-_Benniworth_, but the main road runs through _East and West Barkwith_,
-with those fine grass borders, each wider than the road, which are
-characteristic of the Wold highways, for five miles to _Wragby_, eleven
-miles from Lincoln. Near East Barkwith Station is Mr. Turnor’s residence,
-Panton Hall, and from West Barkwith a road goes to the _Torringtons_.
-Here Gilbert of Sempringham was rector, and established one of his
-Gilbertine houses. The road on either side of the rather town-like
-village of _Wragby_ is uninteresting, till suddenly, at a distance of
-eight miles, the towers of Lincoln Minster appear, not in front, but away
-to the left, and then again disappear from view. But the road turns, and
-after four miles, lo! again the Minster, straight in front; and as you
-approach from the north-east you see all three towers at the end of the
-long road, getting ever finer as you approach and are able to make out
-the details of the architecture. Only too quickly you come to the top of
-the hill, and gaze at the splendid upper windows of the great bell tower,
-now close on your right, then sweep down the curve and, passing through
-the Minster yard by the Potter and Exchequer gates, go out northwards by
-the old Roman Ermine Street. We soon reach the turn to Riseholme, where
-from 1830, when Buckden was given up, the bishops resided, until Bishop
-King built the present house in the Old Palace grounds in Lincoln, and
-where in the churchyard are the tombs of her much-revered Bishops Kaye
-and Wordsworth, though their monuments are in the cathedral. After this
-we pass nothing, the road running straight on for over thirty miles,
-and on much the same level all the way. But we will only go to the
-thirteenth milestone and turn to the right at _Caenby_ Corner, where
-the Gainsborough and Louth road crosses the Ermine Street, and so make
-our way back by Market Rasen. The first village we shall come to is
-_Glentham_, which contains in chancel and chantry several monuments
-of the Tourney family from 1452. It is believed that the church was
-originally dedicated to “Our Lady of Pity,” hence, over the porch is a
-beautiful little carving of the Virgin holding the dead Christ, and the
-Tourney arms below it. A brass to Ann Tourney has the following play on
-words:—
-
- “Abiit non obiit, preiit non periit.”
-
-Till the early part of last century, a rent charge on some land in the
-village provided a shilling each for seven old maids every Good Friday
-for washing the recumbent effigy of a lady of the Tourney family which
-is under the gallery, with water from “The New Well.” This singular
-survival of the custom of washing an effigy of the dead Christ for a
-representation of the entombment is now abandoned, as the land was sold
-in 1852 without reservation of the rent charge on it. The effigy was
-known as “Molly Grime,” a corruption of “Malgraen,” which means in some
-ancient tongue or dialect the ‘Holy-Image-Washing.’ (“Lincs. Notes and
-Queries.” I., 125.)
-
-The church is rather a curiosity, being seated throughout with box pens
-and having a gallery at the west end. Even the font is painted, and is a
-cheese-shaped stone on three legs placed on a round block. The door is
-old and has an unmistakable sanctuary ring on it, as at Durham, and the
-porch has a pretty little two-light window on each side.
-
-[Sidenote: THE TOURNAYS]
-
-The Tournays of Caenby are one of the genuine old county families, having
-held land in it certainly since 1328. John Tournay, in the sixteenth
-century, married a Talboys co-heiress, and was brother-in-law to Sir
-Christopher Willoughby and Sir Edward Dymoke.
-
-The manor of Caenby-cum-Glentham, given in the thirteenth century
-to Barlings Abbey, and at the dissolution, along with so many other
-things, bestowed by Henry VIII. on Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk, was
-purchased by Edward Tournay in 1675, but he had inherited another manor
-in Caenby, or Cavenby through a long line of ancestors from the family
-of Thornton, of whom one Gilbert de Thornton was Lord Chief Justice of
-the King’s Bench, 1289-1295. The present representative of the Tournays,
-or Tornys, who, to suit both spellings, have a tower for a crest and
-a chevron between three Bulls for their coat of arms, is Sir Arthur
-Middleton of Belsay Castle, Northumberland, who parted with the property
-at Caenby in 1871.
-
-Three miles beyond Glentham we reach “Bishops’ Bridge” inn. Here a
-fourteenth century bridge crosses the stream at the junction of the River
-Rase with the Ancholme. Thence, after several turns, the road reaches
-_West Rasen_, where there is a most picturesque and interesting Pack
-Horse Bridge of the same date, with three ribbed arches, placed at right
-angles to the present road. The church has heavy embattled turrets and
-some curious carved figures in the chancel.
-
-[Sidenote: THE ‘GOOD OLD DAYS’]
-
-Going south from here, a roundabout road takes you to _Buslingthorpe_,
-passing by the two oddly-named villages of _Toft-next-Newton_ and
-_Newton-by-Toft_, each apparently, like Tweedledum and Tweedledee,
-leaning for support on the other. Two miles to the west, on the Normanby
-road, is Gibbet-posthouse. The name Gibbet-post or Gibbet-hill is not
-uncommon, but I doubt if a single post remains. Eighty years ago some
-still held their ghastly record. My uncle, Edward Rawnsley, who was born
-in 1815, told me once that he had passed one with a skeleton hanging in
-chains, as he rode from Bourne to Wisbech. The Melton Ross gallows was
-renewed in 1830.
-
-Only two miles east of West Rasen we reach _Middle Rasen_, which has an
-interesting church. It once had two, one on each side of the stream; the
-existing one, which belonged to Tupholme Abbey, has a very fine Norman
-south door and Norman piers to the chancel arch, and a deeply moulded
-Early English arcade, on which is a singular beaded moulding. There is
-also a low-side window and a beautiful Perpendicular rood screen, also a
-fourteenth-century effigy of a priest with vestments and chalice. In the
-churchyard is the font of the other church.
-
-In the days of toll-bars there were two at Middle Rasen; usually they
-were let to the highest bidder, and the man who took the main road gate
-in the year 1845 is still living, at the age of eighty-nine, in 1912. A
-toll-bar keeper in the days before railways, when all the corn went to
-market by road, had little rest at night, as waggons full or empty passed
-through at all hours. In his early days food was dear—tea eight shillings
-a pound—and wages were low, and bread and water and barley-chaff dumpling
-were the common fare. He is now a rate-collector and, of course, can
-read and write, but he never went to school, and at eight years of age
-he began to earn a little by “scaring crows.” At fifteen he was mowing
-and using the flail at his native village of Legbourne. In a field, near
-where the station now is, he remembers a man mowing wheat for six days on
-bread and water, and the crop yielded six quarters to the acre. A woman
-of ninety-three, now living in the Wolds, remembers when flour was 4_s._
-6_d._ a stone, and a loaf cost 11½_d._ instead of 2½_d._ They mixed rye
-with wheat flour and baked at home; and a labourer who earned enough to
-buy a stone of flour a day thought he could live well.
-
-Only the other day I heard of a labouring family living just between
-the Wold and the Marsh, seven sons of a retired Crimean soldier. The
-clergyman used to make them a present at the christening if he might
-choose the name, and he gave them grand historic names for them to
-live up to, _e.g._, Washington and Wellington, and the plan certainly
-answered, for they all took to the land and by steadiness, hard work and
-good sense raised themselves first to a foreman’s position and then to
-that of small occupiers, with the result that the family now farms three
-or four hundred acres between them. Yet they, as children, had had a
-hard struggle, and never knew either luxury or comfort. Their cottage
-had but two rooms, and half the family having gone to bed with the sun,
-habitually got up when night was but half over and came and sat round
-the fire whilst the other half went to bed. The conditions of life have
-improved since then, but the men of to-day can’t have more of the right
-stuff in them.
-
-Another instance of the same kind which goes to prove that no walk of
-life is without its chances, if only the man is strenuous and sober and
-gifted with good sense, is that of a family in the Louth neighbourhood,
-three grandsons of a labouring man, who in two generations have raised
-themselves to such purpose that they now farm between them some
-10,000 acres. Of course the great factors in such successful careers
-are steadiness and industry, and that shrewd good sense which is so
-characteristic of the best Lincolnshire natives.
-
-Not many years ago I talked with a small farmer in Hampshire, whose
-wages as a labourer used to be ten and sixpence a week, when a pair of
-boots cost eighteen shillings; but then, he said, they did wear well.
-The family lived, year in year out, on hot water with barley in it and a
-sprinkling of salt. And yet, incredible as it may seem, he and his wife
-had brought up a family of ten. There was some grit in those people.
-
-[Sidenote: MARKET RASEN]
-
-From _Middle Rasen_ it is little more than a mile to _Market Rasen_. Men
-still living there can recall the Shrove Tuesday football, when the whole
-male population of the village, aided by friends from outside, spent some
-strenuous hours in trying to get the ball into Middle Rasen. The windows
-were boarded up all along the road, and the struggle of hundreds of rough
-fellows was more concerned in pushing their opponents into the beck by
-the roadside than in keeping on the ball.
-
-The town has an unusual number of schools in it. The De Aston School,
-founded 1401 at Spital, was set up here in 1862 as a middle-class school,
-and has been most successful; and the church school and still larger
-Wesleyan school between them can accommodate nearly 400 children.
-
-From Market Rasen three miles of low country brings us to _North
-Willingham_. The Hall, the home of Mr. Wright, was for over a hundred
-years the residence of the family of Boucherett, whose former mansion
-stood a couple of miles to the west. The present house with its pretty
-bit of water faces the road. In the village we may see a blacksmith who,
-at the age of ninety, can still shoe a horse. We are now twelve miles
-from Louth; a road to the left goes to Tealby and Bayons Manor, and to
-the right by _Sixhills_ to Hainton; and here, instead of going right on
-up the sweep of the hill, we will make the round by Tealby and come back
-to the high road at Ludford Parva.
-
-[Sidenote: BAYONS MANOR]
-
-_Tealby_ is quite an ideal village, with beautiful trees, a fine and
-well-placed church, a stream and bridges and picturesque cottages. One
-road leads from it up the steep “Bully hill,” a 300 feet rise, another
-road takes us to _Bayons Manor_, the seat of the Tennyson d’Eyncourt
-family. Originally there was an old eleventh or twelfth century fortified
-dwelling about a hundred yards up the hill, traces of which may still
-be seen in bank or dyke. This was replaced about the sixteenth century
-by a fairly large house, at one time thatched; part of this remains as
-the nucleus of the present castellated mansion built in the romantic
-era of the Waverley novels and completed with drawbridge and barbican
-in the middle of the last century by Charles Tennyson, M.P., uncle of
-the poet, who, after the death of his father, George Tennyson, took the
-name of d’Eyncourt. His grandson, E. Tennyson d’Eyncourt, now lives
-there. The house has a fine open-roofed hall, and is replete with
-interesting mementoes of the Tennysons as well as of the ancient family
-of d’Eyncourt. The site is good, with a charming garden sloping to the
-park, in which is a fine piece of water. The name Bayons is derived from
-its first Norman possessor, Odo, Bishop of Bayeux. He was half-brother
-to William the Conqueror on the mother’s side, and he was so exalted a
-personage that he was called “Totius Angliae Vice-dominus, sub rege.”
-Thus he was on occasions the king’s representative, and seems to have had
-as much land in Lincolnshire and elsewhere granted to him by William, as
-Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk had under Henry VIII., for we hear that
-he held seventy-six manors in the county and 463 in other parts.
-
-It is interesting to know that Bulwer Lytton in 1848, when he was trying
-to recover his seat for Lincoln, wrote his historical romance “Harold”
-here, making good use of his friend Mr. Tennyson d’Eyncourt’s fine
-collection of early English chronicles.
-
-A little north of Tealby is the temporarily disused church of _Walesby_,
-where once Robert Burton (1577-1640), author of the “Anatomy of
-Melancholy,” was rector, before he went to Segrave in Leicestershire. It
-is hoped that this church may soon be in use again.
-
-One of the many roads across the Wolds from Rasen to Grimsby passes
-through _Walesby_ to _Stainton-le-Vale_ and _Thorganby_, another goes
-through _Tealby_, _Kirmond-le-Mire_, and _Binbrook_, once a market town,
-and near to _Swinhope_, the ancestral seat of the Alingtons. Both roads
-after this unite and pass by _East Ravendale_, _Brigsley_, _Waltham_ and
-_Scartho_.
-
-A clear stream flows north through a narrow valley from Kirmond top
-through Swinhope, Thorganby, Croxby pond, Hatcliffe, and almost to
-Barnoldsby, and thence east to Brigsley, and so across the marsh to
-Tetney Haven.
-
-[Sidenote: SOUTH ELKINGTON]
-
-Leaving Tealby, we climb to the top of the Ludford ridge, and, turning
-to the right, come to the Market Rasen and Louth highway at Willingham
-Corner, thence, to the left, by _Ludford Magna_ with its cruciform church
-on the infant ‘Bain.’ To the right we notice Wykeham Hall, further on
-to the left the church of _Kelstern_, standing solitary in a field, and
-soon we reach the singularly beautiful and well-wooded approach to Louth
-by _South Elkington_, the seat of Mr. W. Smyth. The church here, whose
-patronage goes with the Elkington estate, was given about 1250 to the
-convent at Ormsby, which presented to it until the dissolution, when it
-fell to the Crown, and was given, in 1601, by Queen Elizabeth to the
-famous John Bolle of Thorpe Hall. This Hall we now pass on our approach
-to Louth, and a splendid picture awaits us when we see that lovely spire
-of Louth church, standing up out of a grove of trees, and eventually
-presenting itself to our eyes, in its full height and beautiful
-proportions, as we come into the town by the west gate.
-
-[Sidenote: LOUTH SPIRE]
-
-The highway from Louth to Horncastle is best traversed the reverse way.
-Starting from Horncastle with its little river—the Bain—its cobble-paved
-streets and its pretty little thatched hostel, the King’s Head, the Louth
-road brings us soon to West Ashby. Then, at a distance of four miles
-from Horncastle, we come suddenly on the unpretending buildings of the
-Southwold Hunt kennels. These are in the parish of _Belchford_, which
-lies half a mile to the right.
-
-[Illustration: _Westgate, Louth._]
-
-We now climb 300 feet up Flint Hill, a name which tells us that we are
-on an outlier of the chalk wolds, and a fine view opens out on the
-left which we can enjoy for a mile, after which the road turns to the
-right and discloses a totally different scene. In front lies the snug
-village of _Scamblesby_, and behind it the south-eastern portion of the
-South Wolds, sweeping round from Oxcombe’s wooded slope in a wide curve
-to Redhill, behind which the Louth and Lincoln railway emerges near
-_Donington-on-Bain_. It is a fine landscape.
-
-We descend to the village, and passing in the wide valley the turn to
-Asterby and Goulceby on the left, set ourselves to climb the main ridge
-of the Wolds by _Cawkwell_. On the top of the hill we pass a cross road
-which runs for many miles right and left without coming to anything in
-the shape of a village; and naturally so, for the road like the Roman
-streets in the Lake District, keeps sturdily along the highest ground,
-and who would care to live on a wind-swept ridge?
-
-[Sidenote: TATHWELL]
-
-To the right the Wold runs up to nearly 500 feet, but our road only
-crosses it, and after little more than a mile we see the level of the
-marsh and the tall spire of Louth five miles ahead of us. The road
-here forks, and forsaking the direct route by Raithby we will take the
-right-hand road and in a couple of miles find ourselves dropping to the
-village of _Tathwell_. This we circle round and arrive at the lane which
-leads to the church.
-
-This little church, dedicated to St. Vedast, who was Bishop of Arras
-and Cambray (_circa_ 500), was once a Norman building, but the Norman
-pilasters supporting the round tower-arch of the eleventh century are
-all that is left of that period, unless the four courses nearest the
-ground of large stones of a hard, grey, sandstone grit can be referred
-to it. Upon these now is built a structure of brick with a broad tower
-at the west and an apse at the east; but the charm of the place is its
-situation, on a steep little hill overlooking a good sheet of clear
-chalk-stream water. You look westwards across this to a pathway running
-up the slope opposite which is fringed with a fine row of beeches, and
-just below you at the edge of the little graveyard you see the thatched
-roof of a primitive cottage, whilst beyond it the ground is broken into
-steep little grass fields, the whole most picturesquely grouped.
-
-We leave the secluded little village, and turning to the right, pass
-between the Danish camp on Orgarth Hill and the six long barrows on Bully
-Hill (the second hill of the name, the other being near Tealby). These
-are all probably of the same date; the latter in a field adjoining the
-road. A mile more and we turn to the left at Haugham, where is another
-and larger tumulus, after passing which, on the left, we soon come to the
-main Louth and Spilsby road.
-
-The number six seems to have been a favourite one with the Vikings.
-Eleven miles to the west of Bully Hill is “Sixhills,” between Hainton and
-North Willingham, and another place of the same name near Stevenage in
-Hertfordshire shows a fine row of six tumuli close to the road side.
-
-[Sidenote: JANE CHAPLIN]
-
-On October 25 there was a funeral in the Tathwell churchyard, when, in
-presence of her surviving grand-children and great-grandchildren Jane
-Chaplin was laid to rest beside the husband who had died forty years
-before. She was not only of a remarkable age—it is seldom that a coffin
-plate bears such an inscription:—
-
- “Jane Chaplin, born 24th June, 1811, died 21st October, 1913”—
-
-but during all that long life she was always cheerful and kindly and full
-of interest, and up to the very last, within two hours of her death,
-she was bright and happy, lively with talk and merriment, and in full
-possession of all her faculties. On her 102nd birthday she received her
-relatives and delighted them with her reminiscences of the days before
-they were born, telling the writer how she remembered Alfred Tennyson
-asking her to dance at the local ball, and adding that she was still
-able to read and to paint, though she had of late years given up reading
-by candlelight for fear of trying her eyes, and saying how thankful she
-was that she felt so well and had no pains and was, in fact, much better
-than she used to be fifty years ago. She had left Lincolnshire and lived
-of late years at Bournemouth and then at Cheltenham, where she literally
-‘fell on sleep’ and passed from this life to the next, without any
-illness or struggle, in the happiest possible manner. Truly, we may say
-with Milton—
-
- Nothing is here for tears, nothing to wail
- Or knock the breast.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-LINCOLNSHIRE BYWAYS
-
- Willoughby and Captain John Smith—Grimoldby—South
- Cockerington—Sir Adrian Scrope’s Tomb—Alvingham—Two Churches
- in one Churchyard—Yarborough—The Covenhams—Hog-back
- View—Milescross Hill to Gunby—Skendleby—South Ormsby and
- Walmsgate—Belchford—Thorpe Hall—The Elkingtons.
-
-
-The Romans had a road from the sea probably by Burgh and Gunby and then
-on the ridge by Ulceby cross-roads to Louth, and so on the east edge of
-the Wold north to the Humber.
-
-It is not a particularly interesting route, but if at Gunby we turn to
-the right we shall pass _Willoughby_ with its old sandstone church in a
-well-kept churchyard, a somewhat rare thing on this route. The church
-(St. Helen’s) has some Saxon stones in the south wall of the tower, and
-a double arch on the north side of the chancel, a Norman arch in front
-of a fourteenth century one. Here, in 1579, was born the redoubtable
-Captain John Smith, president of Virginia and the hero of the famous
-Pocahontas[13] story, a man whose life was more full of adventure than
-perhaps any in history. The interest which Pocahontas created when she
-came to England is evinced by the number of inn signs of “The belle
-Sauvage.” The church has a singular slab with the head and shoulders of a
-man, name unknown, in relief cut on it at one end—his feet showing at the
-other, something after the fashion of a “sandwich-man.” The huge belfry
-ladder is also noteworthy, being made of two trees, whole, with stout,
-rough timber spiked to them for steps.
-
-[Sidenote: GRIMOLDBY]
-
-From _Willoughby_ to _Alford_ and on by _Saleby_, _Withern_,
-_Gayton-le-Marsh_, _Great_ and _Little Carlton_, and _Manby_, the road
-is not remarkable; but, after crossing the main road from Horncastle
-to Saltfleet, which has come over the Wold _viâ_ Scamblesby, Cawkwell
-and Tathwell, it arrives at _Grimoldby_. Here the church is noteworthy
-for the size and excellence of its gargoyles. Outside it has heavy
-battlemented parapets, a good gable-cross with pent-house over it, as on
-the Somersby cross, and the entire shaft of a churchyard cross. Inside,
-the nave is whitewashed, but the fine old roof remains, and on one of
-the beams is the pulley block for the rood light, as at Addlethorpe and
-Winthorpe. The door is old and has been enriched with carving and there
-is the lower part of a good rood screen with three returns, possibly for
-lights, projecting twelve inches westwards. This arrangement is also
-found in the rood screen at Thornton Curtis. In the north porch is a fine
-holy water stoup.
-
-[Illustration: _Manby._]
-
-For the next six miles churches are to be found at every mile.
-
-[Sidenote: SIR ADRIAN SCROPE]
-
-_South Cockerington_ has a little holy water stoup just inside the door.
-Part of a handsome rood screen is stowed away under the tower, the rest
-being in _Manby_ Church. The church has had a profusion of consecration
-crosses—a dozen have been noticed, some of which still remain cut in the
-stone and filled with dark cement. Nearly all the churches about here
-are in two styles—Decorated and Perpendicular; and though _Grimoldby_
-exhibits only one style, it is the transition between these two. The
-most noticeable thing in the church is the alabaster altar tomb to Sir
-Adrian Scrope, with effigies of his five sons over whom is the legend
-‘similis in prole resurgo,’ and two daughters and an infant, over whom is
-written ‘Pares et impares.’ Does this mean “Like in face but different in
-character,” or “Like their father but not so good-looking”? The knight
-is represented armed and half reclining on one elbow, with his helmet
-behind him and his mailed glove by his knee, the head and face very
-life-like, the hands and fingers extremely delicate. On a brass plate he
-is described as the thrice honourable Adrian Scrope, Kt., etc., and this
-verse follows:—
-
- Tombs are but dumb day-books, they will not keepe
- There names alive who in these wombes doe sleepe,
- But who would pen the virtues of this knight
- A story not an epitaph must write.
-
-It was not easy to find the way to _South Cockerington_ as the road to
-it literally forms a square, and then passes on from the churchyard gate
-right through a farm; but to reach _North Cockerington_ you seem to go
-round at least five sides of a square or squares, then cross the Louth
-River, and then a bridge just above a water mill, and passing by two
-gates through a farmyard you arrive in a grass field, in which, devoid of
-any sort of fence on the north and west sides, the plain-looking church
-of _Alvingham_ stands; a gate leads to the south door, near which a few
-yards of grass is mown, but the rest of the churchyard is a tangle of
-long grass and tall nettles; and amongst them, within a stone’s throw,
-stands a second and larger church of _North Cockerington_, in which no
-service is held. “There _is_ some wildernesses!” was the apt remark of
-our driver as we reached the churchyard gate.
-
-Two churches in one churchyard are to be found at Evesham in
-Worcestershire, and at Reepham in Norfolk. These I have seen; others are
-at Willingate in Essex, and at Trimley in Suffolk. At Evesham there is
-even a third tower for the bells. This is of stone, but in a few other
-places, as at Brookland in Romney Marsh, the bell tower is a separate
-timber erection. The reason for two here was that Alvingham, dedicated
-to St. Adelwold, is the parish church, but there was once a Gilbertine
-priory for monks and nuns close by, to which the other church served as a
-chapel. This was also the parish church of North Cockerington at a very
-early date, mention being made of it in a charter of about 1150.
-
-The Alvingham Cartulary or priory book, once in possession of F. G.
-Ingoldby, Esq., is now in Louth Museum, and among the charters is a
-curious entry of an agreement between the joint occupiers of a meadow
-that their men should meet on a certain day at Cockerington Church and
-there fix a day for beginning to mow.
-
-[Sidenote: YARBOROUGH WEST DOOR]
-
-The next village is one which gives his title to Lord _Yarborough_.
-The church, like so many in this neighbourhood, Grimoldby and South
-Cockerington being honourable exceptions, is locked, but the chief point
-of interest is to be seen outside. This is a beautiful example of a
-richly carved doorway. The mouldings of the square head are good and set
-with little ornaments, and very bold and original carvings run round the
-arch of the doorway. The space between the arch and the outer square
-head mould is filled with shallow carved work representing on the left,
-the fall, with Adam, Eve, the Serpent, and much good foliage carving;
-and on the right the Lamb and the emblems of the Passion. An old English
-inscription runs round the arch of the doorway, but is only in part
-decipherable; the stone is a white hardish sandstone, and the surface a
-good deal worn, but the whole design is most elegant and unusual.
-
-A mile more brings us to the two churches of _Covenham_, within a
-quarter of a mile of each other, and both locked. Covenham _St. Mary_
-seems to be built of a hard chalk. There are mason-marks high up on each
-pilaster of the porch. The other church, of _St. Bartholomew_, was once a
-cruciform building. It is made of the same white material, but the tower
-is now covered with Welsh slate, and one transept is gone. The fonts
-in both churches are good. That in St. Mary’s is, for beauty of design
-and boldness of execution, the best in the neighbourhood, but they do
-not compare for beauty and size with those in the Fen churches, which
-are lofty and set on wide octagonal basements of three or four steps.
-Here, the brass to Sir John Skipwyth, who died at, or in the year of,
-Agincourt, 1415, is in exceptionally good condition. He is armed and has
-both the long dagger and sword, the latter suspended from his left arm by
-a strap. The tail of the lion on which he stands is erect between the leg
-of the knight and his sword.
-
-The rest of the route by _Fulston_, _Tetney_ and _Humberston_ to
-Grimsby is not of any interest until we come to _Clee_, which, with its
-interesting Saxon church tower, we have already described.
-
-[Sidenote: A ROMAN ‘HOG’S BACK’]
-
-In the Wold country the main roads usually run along the ridges of the
-Wolds and afford views on either side. One of the best of these, “Hog’s
-Back” views is obtained from one of the byways which starts from the
-Spilsby and Alford road at the top of Milescross hill, and runs south
-till it reaches Gunby. It skirts the wooded belt of the Well Vale estate,
-and drops into the village of _Ulceby_ which, like most of the tiny Wold
-villages, lies on the bank of a small stream in a wooded hollow, where
-the church and farm and a few cottages form a pleasing picture of rural
-retirement.
-
-Mounting again, the road turns to the left and goes straight ahead on
-what is evidently a portion of a Roman “street,” giving on the left a
-view of the “Marsh” towards Mablethorpe, with its grey shimmering line
-which denotes “the bounding main,” and on the right a still more distant
-prospect over the flat “fen” lands in the direction of Boston, whose
-columnar tower rises far up into the sky. The blue haze of the marsh, the
-purple distance over the fens, with, in the autumn, the long, drifting
-lines of grey smoke from the burning “quitch,” or “twitch” as they
-usually call it here, make a delightful impression; and then if we turn
-fenwards we drop into the leafy hollow of _Skendleby_ village, where once
-the Conqueror’s friend, Gilbert de Gaunt, resided, and to which William
-of Waynfleet, the famous Bishop of Winchester, was presented as vicar by
-the convent of Bardney in 1430. It is a pretty village with its church
-and manor-house, and thatched, white-washed cottages bright with flowers,
-and its well-stocked farm. A tall windmill crowns the next height; this
-is Grebby Mill, and it is interesting to find that there has been a
-windmill there for 600 years.
-
-For _Grebby_ is old enough to be mentioned in Domesday Book, and in 1317
-we have mention of a windmill there belonging to Robert de Willoughby and
-Margaret his wife.
-
-[Sidenote: THE FLOODED FEN]
-
-From the windmill one looks down to the old brick tower of _Scremby_
-church, which is the last building on the edge of the slope from which
-the endless levels of the fen begin and run south till they reach
-Crowland and Peterborough. From whence the great cathedral, with its
-splendid west front, looked out in the disastrous August of 1912 over
-miles and miles of corn-land where the tall sheaves stood up out of a
-vast expanse of water, the result of the abnormal rains and the burst
-dyke which made Whittlesea Mere once more resume its ancient appearance.
-
-Below Scremby the road runs to the left to _Candlesby_, and so rejoins
-that starting-place of so many byways—_Gunby_.
-
-There was a church at Scremby in Norman times; at the dissolution the
-manor came to the all-acquiring Duke of Suffolk. Now-a-days the handbook
-dismisses it as “of no special interest,” but eighty-five years ago it
-was thought worth while to mention that “at the west end of the nave is a
-neat and commodious singing-gallery.”
-
-Those who wish to see the beauties of the country must leave the high
-ridge every here and there and make a round into the little villages
-which lie at the foot of the Wolds, mostly on the western slopes where
-they escape the strong sea winds.
-
-From the Spilsby-and-Louth road a byway branches westwards, close to
-_Walmsgate_, which will illustrate this, for it quickly drops into the
-pretty village of _South Ormsby_, and, skirting the park on two sides,
-runs on to the village of _Tetford_ with its red roofs and grey-green
-church tower nestling under the hill. Thence the white line of road goes
-north over Tetford hill to _Buckland_ and _Haugham_, and so rejoins the
-main road again about four miles north of Walmsgate.
-
-But before leaving Tetford we should take a look at the fine grassy
-eminence of “Nab hill” with its entrenched camp, behind which lie the
-kennels of the Southwold hounds at _Belchford_.
-
-The road from Alford to Louth, by _Belleau_ and _Cawthorpe_, which runs
-along the eastern edge of the South Wold and gives such a fine view over
-the marsh, is interrupted at Louth, and you must go out for the first
-four miles on the Louth and Grimsby main road, but on reaching Utterby
-a turn to the left will bring you to a road which goes all the way to
-Brocklesby without passing through any village but _Keelby_ in the whole
-sixteen miles. This solitary road begins better than it ends for when it
-gets opposite to _Barnoldby-le-Beck_, which is just half way, it sinks to
-the level of the marsh.
-
-[Sidenote: FOTHERBY TOP]
-
-There are plenty of roads between Louth and Caistor, to the north-west,
-along the Wolds, which are here some eight miles wide; and it would be
-well worth while for the sake of the view over the marsh to take a little
-round from Louth, starting out on the Lincoln road by Thorpe Hall, the
-interesting home of the Bolles family, the ffytches, and, later, of
-some of the Tennysons. By this route you soon come to the parting of
-the ways to Wragby and Market Rasen, and taking the right hand road by
-_South Elkington_, the charming residence of Mr. W. Smyth, you climb
-up to a height of 400 feet, and taking the road to the right by _North
-Elkington_—whose church has a fine pulpit copied from one still to be
-seen at Tupholme Abbey, near Bardney—reach _Fotherby top_, from which
-for a couple of miles you can command as fine a view of the marsh from
-Grimsby to Mablethorpe as you can desire. Then leaving the height you can
-go eastward by _North Ormsby_, and, joining the Grimsby-and-Louth road
-at _Utterby_, run back to Louth. All approaches to Louth are rendered
-beautiful by the splendid views you get of that marvellous spire; and as
-the road drops steeply into the town you will hardly know whether the
-approach from this northern side or from Kenwick on the south forms the
-most striking picture.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-THE BOLLES FAMILY
-
-
-The byway which runs west from the Spilsby and Alford road, at the foot
-of Milescross hill near Alford station, after passing Rigsby, comes to
-a farm with an old manor-house and tiny church in a green hollow to the
-left. A deep sort of cutting on this side of the church has, along its
-steep grassy brow, a line of very old yew trees, not now leading to
-anything. This is all there is of the hamlet from which an ancient and
-notable family derived its title, the Bolles of Haugh.
-
-_Haugh_ church is a small barn-like building of chalk; the nave
-twenty-four feet, and the chancel twenty-one feet long, with an
-enormously thick, small, round-headed arch between them. The chancel is
-floored with old sepulchral slabs and stone coffin tops, several with
-Lombardic lettering, and all apparently of the Bolle or Bolles family who
-lived partly at Haugh in the old manor close to the church, and partly at
-Thorpe Hall, Louth.
-
-[Sidenote: SIR JOHN BOLLES]
-
-[Sidenote: COLONEL BOLLES AT ALTON]
-
-The family of Bolle seemed to have lived at Bolle Hall, Swineshead, from
-the thirteenth century till the close of the reign of Edward IV., 1483,
-when, by an intermarriage with the heiress of the Hough family, the elder
-branch became settled at Hough or Haugh, near Alford, and one of the
-younger branches settled at Gosberkirke (Gosberton) and spelt their name
-Bolles. The men of both branches were active both in civil and military
-positions. Sir George of Gosberton succeeded to the manor of Scampton,
-near Lincoln, from his father-in-law, Sir John Hart, Lord Mayor of
-London, 1590. He too became Lord Mayor in 1617, both men being members of
-the Grocers’ Company. He was knighted by James I., after withstanding
-his majesty in the matter of travelling through the city of London on
-a Sunday, on which occasion his conduct somewhat recalls that of Judge
-Gascoigne in Shakespeare’s “Henry IV.” He died in 1621, and his monument
-is in St. Swithin’s church, London. His son John was made a baronet by
-Charles I., and _his_ son George is commemorated on a monument opposite
-to that of his grandfather, in a pretty Latin inscription beginning—
-
- Nil opus hos cineres florum decorare corollis;
- Flos, hic compositus qui jacet, ipse fuit.
-
-We hear of a Sir George Bolle being killed at Winceby in 1643, fighting
-against Cromwell; certainly George’s brother, Sir Robert of Scampton,
-was one of the jury in 1660 for trying the regicides, and at the death
-of his son, Sir John, in 1714 the title became extinct. The distinctions
-of the elder branch, who settled at Haugh, were more military than
-civil. Their name also has passed away, their lineal descendants being
-named Bush, Ingilby, Bosville and Towne. The earliest monument to this
-branch is on a brass plate in Boston Church to Richard Bolle of Haugh,
-1591, son of Richard Bolle of Haugh and Maria, daughter and heiress of
-John Fitzwilliams of Mablethorpe. He was thrice married, and his only
-son Charles died a year before him, 1590, and is commemorated at Haugh.
-His daughter Anne married Leonard Cracroft, the others married John and
-Leonard Kirkman of Keel. His son Charles, whose mother was a Skipworth of
-South Ormsby, had four wives, his first wife a daughter of Ed. Dymoke of
-Scrivelsby, and his fourth a daughter of Thomas Dymoke of Friskney. His
-only son, John, was the son of number two, Brigitt Fane; and his daughter
-Elizabeth of number three, Mary Powtrell. To this son John, there is also
-in Haugh Church a well-preserved monument, which shows him kneeling with
-his wife, attended by their three sons and five daughters, in the usual
-Jacobean style; date 1606, Aet. suæ 46. Sir John built Thorpe Hall, and
-was a famous Elizabethan captain. He was at the siege of Cadiz under
-Essex, 1596, and had custody of the young lady of high position who goes
-by the title of the Spanish Lady or the Green Lady, and whose story is
-told in Percy’s “Reliques” in the ballad of “The Spanish Lady’s love for
-an Englishman.” Sir John Bolle is the hero of the story. The lady fell
-in love with him, but on hearing that he had a wife at home, she retired
-to a nunnery and sent rich presents to his wife of tapestry, plate and
-jewels, and her picture in a green dress. The jewels are now in the hands
-of many of Lady Bolle’s descendants, the necklet of 298 pearls being,
-it is said, in the Bosvile family at Ravensfield Park, Yorkshire. The
-last warden of Winchester College was called Godfrey Bolles Lee, and
-was related to the Bosviles; and, curiously enough, in the Cathedral of
-Winchester is a brass plate giving an account of the death of Colonel
-John Bolles. It seems that Charles, the elder of the three sons whose
-effigies are on Sir John’s monument in the quaint little church of Haugh,
-was a Royalist, living at Thorpe Hall, Louth, where he raised a regiment
-of foot, which was commanded by his brother John, a soldier of unusual
-gallantry. Charles once saved his life when pursued, by hiding under the
-bridge at Louth. The regiment was engaged at Edgehill and other places,
-and finally cut to pieces in a most bloody engagement inside Alton Church
-in Hampshire. Clarendon tells us that Sir William Waller, finding that
-Lord Hopton’s troops lay quartered at too great distance from each other,
-had, by a night march, come suddenly upon the Royalist forces at Alton.
-The horse made good their escape to Winchester, and Colonel Bolles,
-who was in command of his own regiment of 500 men, being outnumbered,
-retired with some four score men into the church, hoping to defend it
-till succour arrived. But the enemy, as he had not had time to barricade
-the doors, entered with him, and some sixty of his men were killed
-before the rest asked for quarter; this was granted, but Colonel Bolles
-refused the offer, and was killed fighting. Alton is seventeen miles from
-Winchester, and the little brass plate on the eastern pillar of the north
-arcade of the nave in Winchester Cathedral, just where the steps go up to
-the choir, has a counterpart in Alton Church. The inscription on it was
-composed almost fifty years after the event by a relative who describes
-himself M.A., but he does no credit to the learning of the time, for it
-is full of errors, both of spelling and of facts; for instance, he calls
-the gallant Colonel, Richard instead of John, and gives the date of the
-fight as 1641 instead of December, 1643; but it is too quaint a thing not
-to be transcribed in full.
-
-[Sidenote: THE WINCHESTER BRASS]
-
- A Memoriall.
-
- For this renowned Martialist Richard Boles of ye Right
- Worshipful family of the Bolleses in Linkhornsheire; collonell
- of a ridgment of Foot of 1300 who for his gratious King Charles
- ye first did Wounders att the Battell of Edgehill: his last
- action, to omit all others, was at Alton in this County of
- Soughthampton, was sirprised by five or six thousand of the
- Rebells, which caused him there Quartered, to fly to the
- church, with near fourscore of his men, who there fought them
- six or seven houers, and then the Rebells breaking in upon
- him he slew with his sword six or seven of them, and then was
- slayne himselfe, with sixty of his men about him.
-
- 1641
-
- His Gratiouse Souveraigne, hearing of his death, gave him
- his high comendation in ye pationate expression. Bring me a
- Moorning Scarffe; i have Lost one of the best Comanders in this
- Kingdome.
-
- Alton will tell you of that famous Fight
- Which ye man made and bade this world goodnight,
- His Verteous life feared not Mortalyty,
- His body might, his Vertues cannot die.
- Because his blood was there so nobly spent
- This is his Tombe, that church his Monument.
- Ricardus Boles Wiltoniensis in Art Mag:
- Composuit Posuitque dolens
- An Dom 1689.
-
-A somewhat similar bit of spelling is this from a private diary:—
-
-“The iiii day of Sept 1551 ded my lade Admerell wyffe in Linkolneshire
-and ther bered.”
-
-The third brother, Edward, died and was buried at Louth, 1680 A.D., at
-the age of seventy-seven. He left £600 to purchase land, the rents “to
-be divided among the poorest people of Louth at Christmas, Easter and
-Whitsuntide for ever, and to be disposed of ‘in other charitable and
-pious uses for the good of the said Toune.’” The income of the bequest is
-now worth £85 a year.
-
-[Sidenote: THE GREEN LADY]
-
-Sir Charles, the elder brother, had a son and a grandson called John, the
-last of the name. This John’s half-sister, Elizabeth, whose mother was a
-Vesci, married Thomas Bosvile, rector of Ufford, and was buried at Louth
-in 1740; their daughter Bridget also marrying a Bosvile. The children
-of Bridget’s elder sister Elizabeth married into the families of the
-Ingilbys and the Massingberds, while another sister, Margaret, married
-James Birch, James Birch’s daughter married a Lee, and his grandson,
-Captain Thos. Birch, assumed the name of Bosvile and sold Thorpe Hall.
-He died in 1829. Sir Charles also had a daughter Elizabeth, who married
-Thomas Elye of Utterby, whose granddaughter Sarah married Richard Wright
-of Louth, whence are descended the Wrights of Wrangle. Canon Wright, her
-great great grandson, has a picture of this Sarah Elye in which she is
-represented as wearing a ring which was one of the Spanish jewels, some
-of which are in possession of the Canon’s family now. The picture of the
-Green Lady was unfortunately sold at the Thorpe Hall sale, and it is said
-that another small picture of her, painted in the corner of a portrait of
-Sir John Bolles by Zucchero, was lost when the picture was restored and
-considerably cut down, in the last century.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
-THE MARSH CHURCHES OF EAST LINDSEY
-
- West Theddlethorpe—Saltfleetby—All Saints—Skidbrook—South
- Somercotes—Grainthorpe—Marsh Chapel.
-
-
-THE PLAGUE-STONE
-
-An inconspicuous little byway starts from near Alford station and runs
-parallel with the line about a mile northwards to _Tothby_, where it
-bends round and loses itself in a network of lanes near _South Thoresby_.
-At Tothby, under a weeping ash tree on the lawn in front of the old Manor
-House farm, is an interesting relic of bygone days. It is a stone about a
-yard square and half a yard thick, once shaped at the corners and with a
-socket in it. Evidently it is the base of an old churchyard, wayside, or
-market cross of pre-reformation times. And it has been put to use later
-as a plague-stone, having been for that purpose placed on its edge and
-half buried probably, and a hole seven inches by five, and two and a half
-inches deep, cut in the upper side. This was to hold vinegar into which
-the townspeople put the money they gave for the farm produce brought from
-the country in times of plague.
-
-The great desire was to avoid contact with possibly plague-stricken
-people. So the country folk brought their poultry, eggs, etc., laid
-them out at fixed prices near the stone and then retired. Then the town
-caterer came out and took what was wanted, placing the money in the
-vinegar, and on his retiring in turn, the vendors came and took their
-money, which was disinfected by its vinegar bath. The buyers, of course,
-had to pay honestly or the country folk would cut off the supplies, and
-_they_ probably appointed one of their number as salesman.
-
-[Sidenote: THE PLAGUE-STONE]
-
-On the whole the plan is said to have answered well enough, and the
-stone is an interesting relic of the time. There is one _in situ_ at
-Winchester, not so big as this, and now built in as part of the basis
-to the Plague Monument outside the West Gate of the city. It is, I
-believe, plain to distinguish, being of a darker colour than the rest
-of the monument; but you cannot now see the hole in it any more. That
-stone was used in 1666, the year after the great plague in London. The
-Croft register speaks of 1630 as the plague year, but a plague seems to
-have visited Partney in 1616; at Louth 754 people died in eight months
-in 1631. At Alford the plague year was 1630. On the 2nd of July in that
-year the vicar, opposite the entry of Maria Brown’s burial has written
-“Incipit pestis” (the plague begins), and between this date and the end
-of February, 1631, 132 out of a population of about 1,000, died, the
-average number of burials for Alford being 19 per annum, so that the
-rate was 100 above normal for the nineteen months; indeed, for the rest
-of 1631 only eight burials are registered in ten months. July and August
-were the worst months, six deaths occurring in one family in eleven days.
-It has been said that the stone was placed on the top of Miles-Cross
-hill, whence the folk from Spilsby and the villages of the Wolds, when
-they brought their produce, could look down on the plague-stricken town
-from a safe distance. But that would be a long pull for the poor Alford
-people, and it is more likely that it was placed near where the railway
-now crosses the high road; certainly the Winchester stone was barely 100
-yards from the Gate.
-
-We can now go back to Alford and start again on the Louth road. To get
-to the fine Marsh churches of the east Lindsey district, four miles out
-we turn off to the right near Withern, and pass two little churches on
-the border of the district called _Strubby_ and _Maltby-le-Marsh_. Each
-of these has, like _Huttoft_, a remarkable font, but that at _Maltby_
-is extraordinarily good—angels at each corner are holding open books,
-and their wings join and cover the bowl of the font, below an apostle
-guards each corner of a square base. There is in this church, too, a
-cross-legged effigy of a knight. In _Strubby_ are some good poppy-head
-bench ends and a fourteenth century effigy without a head, and on the
-south wall near the door a curious inscription in old English letters
-hard to decipher. There is also a small re-painted Jacobean monument
-with effigies of Alderman W. Bailett, aged ninety-nine, his two wives and
-nine children.
-
-[Illustration: _Mablethorpe Church._]
-
-[Sidenote: MABLETHORPE]
-
-The whole of the region between the Alford-and-Louth road and the coast
-is a network of roads with dykes on either side, which never go straight
-to any place, but turn repeatedly at right angles, so that you often have
-to go right away from the point you are aiming at. That point is always a
-church steeple standing up with its cluster of trees from the wide extent
-of surrounding pasture-land. The only direct road in the district is that
-which runs north-east to _Mablethorpe_, close on the sea. This is quite
-a frequented watering-place. Here, as at Trusthorpe and Sutton, the sea
-has swallowed up the original church, but the present one, half a mile
-inland, has some sixteenth century tombs and brasses; one notable one of
-Elizabeth Fitzwilliam, 1522, which represents her with long, flowing
-hair as in that of Lady Willoughby in Tattershall Church, and Sir Robert
-Dymoke at Scrivelsby. There is here a seaside open-air school for invalid
-children.
-
-[Sidenote: THEDDLETHORPE]
-
-Three miles north is _West Theddlethorpe_ (All Saints), one of the
-largest and finest of all the Marsh churches. Here, as elsewhere,
-the green-sand, patched with brick, on which the sea air favours the
-growth of grey lichen, gives a delightful colour to the tower. The
-battlemented parapets are of Ancaster stone, and were once surmounted at
-short intervals by carved pinnacles, and the nave gable, as at Louth,
-is beautifully pierced and worked, with carved bosses and rosettes set
-in the lower moulding. There are five two-light clerestory windows on
-either side, and inside are many good bench ends, both old and new,
-and a Perpendicular chancel screen with doors, and two chantries, each
-still keeping its altar slab in position, and having good oak screens
-ornamented with rich and unusual Renaissance carved open-work panels. In
-one of these chantries is a shallow recess with a beautiful carved stone
-canopy which once held a memorial tablet. A list of the vicars from 1241
-to 1403 gives first the name of William Le Moyne (the monk), and in 1349
-we have Nicholas de Spaigne on the nomination of Edward III. An important
-little brass of Robert Hayton, 1424, shows, as Mr. Jeans tells us, the
-latest instance of “Mail Camail.” In the churchyard is a most singular
-tombstone to Rebecca French, 1862, the stump of a willow carved in stone
-about four feet high with broken branches and—symbol of decay—a large
-toadstool growing from the trunk.
-
-Three miles further north, and still close by the sea bank, we come to
-the church of _Saltfleetby-All-Saints_. A most provoking habit prevails,
-possibly with reason, but none the less trying to those who come to
-see the churches, of keeping the keys of the locked-up church at some
-distance off, even when there is a cottage close at hand. The church is
-in a sadly ruinous condition, and the picturesque porch literally falling
-to bits. On it is a shield bearing a crucifixion. The tower, which leans
-badly to the north-west, has two Early English lancet lights to the west
-and double two-light windows above. The gargoyles are very fine, and
-cut, as usual, in Ancaster stone. In the north aisle are two beautiful
-three-light windows with square heads and embattled transoms. There are
-some Norman pillars and capitals, also a good rood screen and a handsome
-Decorated font set on a reversed later font. This church, like so many
-in the Marsh, is only half seated, though even so it is too big for the
-population, as probably it always has been.
-
-Within a mile to the north-east we pass _Saltfleetby-St.-Clements_,
-a church which has been moved from a site two fields off, and very
-carefully rebuilt in 1885, and shows an arcade of five small arches
-beautifully moulded resting on massive circular columns. It has also a
-good font on a central shaft with clustered columns round it, and in
-the vestry, part of a very early cross shaft. Hence we soon reach the
-sea at _Saltfleet_ on a tidal channel, as the name indicates. Here is a
-remarkable old manor-house.
-
-The parish church of Saltfleet is at _Skidbroke_, which stands in the
-fields a mile inland. In the churchyard is a tall granite cross in memory
-of Canon Overton of Peterborough. The church is of Ancaster stone which
-has a much longer life than the green-sand, but the parapets of the nave
-are of brick now, with stone coping. The belfry of all these churches is
-approached by rough and massive ladders. In the west of the tower is a
-good doorway. The chancel is a poor one.
-
-Two miles through the rich meadows brings us to _South Somercotes_,
-remarkable as having a spire, but of later date than the tower. Here the
-chancel is absolutely bare, with painted dado and red tiled floor and
-no fittings of any kind. It looks something like a G.N.R. waiting-room,
-without the table. There is a very elegant rood screen, and an
-exceptionally tall belfry ladder or “stee,” also, as in the two churches
-just visited, ancient tablets in memory of the family of Freshney. The
-family still flourishes; and at the Alford foal show, September 1912,
-a Freshney of South Somercotes carried off several prizes. Unlike
-Skidbrooke, the church has houses and even shops close to it. We saw
-here a fell-monger’s trolley drive up with a strange assorted cargo from
-the station of Saltfleetby-St.-Peters. There were several packages and,
-sitting amongst them, several people all huddled together. It stopped at
-the village corner to deliver a long parcel draped in sacking—it was a
-coffin.
-
-[Sidenote: THE GRAINTHORPE BRASS]
-
-A few miles north is _Grainthorpe_, the old roof lately renovated. The
-whole church well cared for, and in the chancel a mutilated but once
-very beautiful brass, with a foliated cross, probably in memory of
-Stephen-le-See, who was the vicar about 1400. The stem is gone, the head
-shows some very delicate work, and the base stands on a rock in the sea
-with five various fishes depicted swimming. It was once seven feet high;
-and, if perfect, would be the most beautiful brass cross extant.
-
-[Sidenote: THE HARPHAM TABLET]
-
-Three miles north we reach the fine church of _Marsh Chapel_. This
-was once a hamlet of _Fulstow_, four miles to the west on the road
-to Ludborough. It is Perpendicular from the foundation. Here, as at
-Grainthorpe, is a rood screen partly coloured, the lower part being new.
-The church is seated throughout in oak, and evidently used by a large
-congregation. The capitals of both arcades are battlemented. On the
-chancel wall is an exquisite little alabaster tablet put up in 1628,
-representing Sir Walter Harpham, his wife and little daughter—quite a
-gem of monumental sculpture. The parents died in 1607 and 1617. The
-lofty tower has a turret staircase with a spirelet—a rare feature in
-Lincolnshire, though common in Somersetshire—and the church is all built
-of Ancaster stone.
-
-Going north we reach _North Cotes_ and Tetney lock, where we can see
-part of the Roman sea bank, though Tetney haven now is almost two miles
-distant. The Louth river, which is cut straight and turned into the Louth
-Navigation Canal, runs out here.
-
-The by-road we have been following from the south ends here; but a branch
-running due west passes to _Tetney_ village and thence joins the Louth
-and Grimsby highway at Holton-le-Clay.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII
-
-LINCOLNSHIRE FOLKSONG
-
- Dan Gunby and The Ballad of the Swan.
-
-
-There is no great quantity of native verse in this county, and children’s
-songs of any antiquity are by no means so common with us as they are in
-Northumbria, but there is _The Lincolnshire Poacher_ with its refrain,
-“For ’tis my delight of a shiny night in the season of the year,” the
-marching tune of the Lincolnshire Regiment; and there is an old quatrain
-here and there connected with some town, such as that of Boston, and that
-is all.
-
-It was my luck, however, to know, fifty years ago, a man who wrote
-genuine ballad verses, some of which I took down from his lips. They
-have never been printed before, but seem to me to be full of interest,
-for the man who wrote them was a typical east-coast native, a manifest
-Dane, as so many of these men are—unusually tall, upright, with long nose
-and grey eyes, and a most independent, almost proud, bearing. He was a
-solitary man, and made his living, as his earliest forefathers might have
-done, by taking fish and wild fowl as best he could; and, for recreation,
-drinking and singing and playing his beloved fiddle. It seemed as if the
-runes of his Scandinavian ancestors were in his blood, so ardently did
-he enjoy music and so strongly, in spite of every difficulty, for he had
-had little education, did he feel the impulse to put the deeds he admired
-into verse.
-
-[Sidenote: R. L. NETTLESHIP]
-
-It is something to be thankful for that, in spite of railways and Board
-Schools, original characters are still to be found in Lincolnshire. They
-were more abundant two generations ago, but they are still to be met
-with, and one of the most remarkable that I have personally known was
-this typical east-coaster, whose name was Dan Gunby. It was in September,
-1874, when I was a house master at Uppingham, under the ever-famous
-Edward Thring, that my dear friend, R. L. Nettleship, then a fellow of
-Balliol, came to our house at Halton, and after a day or two there, we
-passed by Burgh over the marsh to Skegness, eleven miles off.
-
-[Illustration: _Southend, Boston._]
-
-We were making for the old thatched house by the Roman bank, for this
-belonged to our family, and here, with one old woman to “do” for us,
-and with the few supplies we had brought with us and the leg of a
-Lincolnshire sheep in the larder, we felt we could hold out for a week
-whilst we read, unmolested by even a passing tradesman. Sundays we spent
-at Halton, walking up on Saturday and down again on Monday, after which
-we took off our boots for the rest of the week.
-
-[Sidenote: DAN GUNBY]
-
-One night about ten o’clock, as we were sitting over our books, a step
-was heard on the plank bridge, and a loud knock resounded through the
-house. I went to the door and opened it. It was pitch dark, and from the
-darkness above my head, for Dan was a tall man, came a voice: “Ah’ve
-browt ye sum dooks. Ye knaw me, Dan Gunby.” We gratefully welcomed them
-as a relief from the sheep, and after a talk we agreed to go over and see
-Dan in his home at Gibraltar Point, where the Somersby Brook, “a rivulet
-then a river,” runs out into Wainfleet haven. Accordingly, on the 12th
-of September, 1874, we set off, going along on the flat dyke top for
-four miles till we came to what seemed the end of the habitable world.
-Here the level, muddy flat stretched out far into the distant shallow
-sea, groups of wading shore-birds were visible here and there, and an
-occasional curlew flew, with his melancholy cry, overhead, or a lonely
-sea-gull passed us—
-
- “With one waft of the wing.”
-
-We came to a small river channel with steep, slimy banks; just beyond
-it was an old boat half roofed over, and, sitting on it, was our friend
-Dan mending a net. We shouted to ask how we were to get to him, and he
-said, “Cum along o’er, bottoms sound.” We pulled off our boots and got
-down without much difficulty, but to get up, “Hic labor, hoc opus est.”
-But Dan shouted encouragement: “Now then, stick your toäs in, and goo
-it.” We did ‘goo it,’ and soon landed by the old boat, and sitting on it,
-we asked him if he always slept there, and what he did for a living. He
-answered “Yees, this is my plaäce, an’ it’s snug, an all. Ye see I hev a
-bit of a stoäve here.”
-
-“Is that your duck-shout (the name for a sort of canoe for duck shooting)
-and gun?”
-
-“Yees, ye sees I’m a bit of a gunner, an’ a bit of a fisherman, an’ a bit
-of a fiddler.”
-
-“And a bit of a poet, too, aren’t you, Dan?”
-
-“Well, I puts things down sometimes in the winter evenings like.”
-
-“About your shooting, isn’t it?”
-
-“Yees, moästlins.”
-
-“And you have got tunes to them?”
-
-“Yees. It’s easy to maäke the tunes up o’ the fiddle, but the words is a
-straänge hard job oftens.”
-
-“Well now, will you let us hear one of them?”
-
-“To be sewer I will,” and he took his fiddle and sat on the gunwale,
-while we listened to the following:—
-
-It was in the iambic metre—which befits a ballad—with occasional anapæsts.
-
-[Sidenote: THE SWAN]
-
-[Sidenote: YOUNG JIM HALL]
-
-“It’s called The Swan this ’ere un,” he said, and, with a preliminary
-flourish on the fiddle, he went off.
-
-I should say that we got the words in his own writing afterwards spelt as
-I give them.
-
- THE SWAN.
-
- Now it Gentel men hall cum lisen to me,
- And ile tell you of a spre,
- When Sam and Tom Gose in there boats,
- Tha never dise a Gre.
-
- CHORUS.
-
- For the Halls they are upon the spre,
- Tha’ll do the best tha can,
- Am when tha goä to seä my boys
- Tha meäns to shoot a Swan.
-
- Then a storking down clay-’ole,[14]
- And laying as snug as tha can,
- For it’ Slap Bang went both the guns
- And down come the Swan.
-
- Now Sam and Tom ’as got this Swan,
- Tha do not now repent;
- Tha will pull up to Fosedyke Brige,
- And sell him to Hary Kemp.
-
- Now Sam and Tom they got a shere
- Tha dow not see no Feer,
- Tha will call too the Public-house,
- An git a Galling of Beer.
-
- Sam says to Tom here’s luck my lad,
- We will drink hall we can;
- And then wele pull down Spalding sett
- To loke for another Swan.
-
- There’s young Jim Hall he has a fine gun
- Tha say it weighs a ton,
- And he will pull down Spalding Set
- To have a bit of fun.
-
- CHORUS.
-
- For the Halls they are upon the spre,
- Tha’ll do the best tha can,
- And when tha goä to seä my boys
- Tha means to shoot a swan.
-
- And when tha hev got side by side
- Tha moastly scheme and plan,
- Tha meän to shoot either duck or goose
- Or else another swan.
-
- Jim, Bill an Tom was storking
- At thousands of geese in a line,
- Tha fired three guns before daylight
- An killed ninety-nine.
- (My eye! they did an’ all.)
-
- The old man larned the boys to shoot
- Without any fere or doubt,
- And young Jim Hall he was the man
- Who made the Gun and Shout.[15]
-
- There’s young Ted Hall he’s fond of life,
- His diet is beäf and creäm
- He cares nothing about shooting
- He’d rayther goä by steäm.
-
- Captain Rice, he’s deäd an gone,
- We hope he is at rest,
- All his delight was guns and boäts,
- And he always did his best.
-
- He was a hearty old cock
- As ever sailed on the sea.
- He has paid for many a galling of ale
- When he was in company.
-
- CHORUS.
-
- For the Halls tha are upon the spre,
- Tha’ll do the best tha can,
- An when tha goä to seä my boys
- Tha meäns to shoot a swan.
-
-[Sidenote: CAPTAIN RICE]
-
-Dan paused for some time after he had finished the ballad, and then said
-with much feeling in look and voice, “Captain Rice, poor chap, he died
-after I’d gotten yon lines finished, and I had to alter them, ye knaw. It
-took me three weeks to get ’em altered.”
-
-The captain was well remembered; he had “paid for many a galling of ale.”
-But the family that Dan most admired were the Halls, the old man and his
-three eldest sons—Jim, Bill and Tom. Young Ted he despised; he cared
-nothing about shooting, he would rather sit in a train!
-
-He tells in two other short ballads of how they hunted the seal on the
-bar or on the long sand, and there is a poetic touch in the way he makes
-the seals talk, and in the description of their eyes and teeth.
-
-But “The Swan” is Dan’s great achievement, and is a real good folk song,
-and has lines with the true ballad ring. “Down come the swan” is a fine
-expressive line, and “He was a hearty old cock, As ever sailed on the
-sea” has a ring in it like _Sir Patrick Spens_.
-
-When Dan came to the astonishing kill of ninety-nine he never failed to
-make the ejaculation I have given above; the geese were Brent geese and
-were feeding in a creek or wet furrow. There was a big gun used in the
-“Gruft holes” or deep channels in the sands going seaward, where the
-gunner sat waiting for the “flighting” of the ducks. This was called a
-“raille,” and was fired from the shoulder. The gun which weighed a ton is
-a poetic exaggeration; but the old duck-shout guns were more than one man
-would care to lift, and about six to eight feet long. The man lay on a
-board to sight and fire this miniature cannon or demi-culverin, which was
-loaded to the muzzle, and the rusty piece of ordnance shot back with the
-recoil underneath him; had it been made fast to the canoe or duck-shout
-it would have torn the little boat to bits.
-
-[Sidenote: THE SEALS]
-
-The ballads of the seals are as follows:—
-
- SEALS ON THE BAR.
-
- 1.
-
- There is two seäls upon the bar,
- Tha lay like lumps of lead.
- When tha see Sam and Tom coming
- Tha begins to shaäke their head.
-
- CHORUS.
-
- For the Halls tha are upon the look out
- Tha love to see a seäl,
- An when tha git well in my boys
- He’s bound to taäste a meäl.
-
- 2.
-
- The owd seäl said unto his wife,
- Yon’s sumthing coming sudden,
- We must soon muster out o’ this
- Or we shall get plum-pudden.
-
- CHORUS.
-
- For the Halls they are upon the look out
- Tha love to see a seäl,
- An when they git well in my boys
- He’s bound to taäste a meäl.
-
- SEÄLS ON THE LONG SAND.
-
- 1.
-
- Bill and Jim was shoving down the North
- And keepin close to the land,
- Jim says to Bill, we’ll pull across,
- Right ower to the Long Sand.[16]
-
- CHORUS, _after each verse_.
-
- For the Halls tha are upon the look out,
- Tha love to see a seäl,
- An when tha git well in my boys,
- He’s bound to taäste a meäl.
-
- 2.
-
- And when tha hed got ower
- Tha hed a cheerful feel.
- Bill says to Jim “What greät heäd’s yon?”
- It must be a monstrous seäl.
-
- 3.
-
- For his eyes like fire they did shine
- An his teeth was long an white,
- Then slap bang went boäth the guns,
- An he wished ’em boäth good-night.
-
- 4.
-
- Well done, my lad! We’ve hit ’im hard,
- He’ll niver git ashore,
- For I knaw his head will ake to-day
- And ’twill be very sore.
-
- CHORUS.
-
- For the Halls tha are upon the look out,
- Tha love to see a seäl,
- An when tha git well in my boys
- He’s bound to taäste a meäl.
-
-Seals are more common on this coast than one would think. Only this
-autumn, 1913, great complaints have been made by the fishermen of the
-destruction of soles, etc., in the ‘Wash’ by the increased number of
-these unwelcome visitors.
-
-[Sidenote: NORTH COUNTRY HUMOUR]
-
-[Sidenote: NATURE’S POETS]
-
-Dan Gunby, in spite of his fiddling and attendance at all the dances in
-the neighbourhood, was not of a jovial nature. His life was hard and his
-outlook on it was always serious, and any humour which he had was of the
-dry order, which is so frequent in the northern counties. Terse remarks
-with a touch of humour, sly or grim, he doubtless showed at times, but a
-real hearty laugh he would seldom allow himself. We find this same almost
-unconscious habit of saying a biting thing in a sly way frequent in the
-counties north of Lincolnshire, as for instance, when in Westmorland
-a man meeting a friend says, “I hear Jock has gotten marriet” and the
-rejoinder, which expresses so much in so few words, both about the man in
-question and the subject of matrimony generally, is “Ah’m gled o’ that,
-ah niver liked Jock.” Another time, a man meets a ‘pal’ and for a bit
-of news says, “We’m gotten a chain for oor Mayor,” and the answer, “Han
-yo? We let yon beggar of ourn go loose” is far more funny than was ever
-intended. But Gunby and his likes, of whom there are more in the regions
-of the hills and fells than elsewhere, have not only the seriousness
-of those who live solitary and have leisure to do a deal o’ thinking,
-but dwelling apart in places where they can commune with Nature and the
-stars they get the poetic touch from their surroundings. The mountain
-shepherd goes up on to the heights and spends long hours with his dog
-and sheep. He marks the great clouds move by, and listens to the voice
-of the streams. He knows “the silence that is in the starry sky;” the
-great constellations are his companions; he sees the rising moon, and the
-splendours of the dawn and sunset. Those sights which fill us with such
-delight and wonder when beheld now and then in a lifetime, are before his
-eyes repeatedly. Now he watches the storm near at hand in all its fury,
-the thunder echoing round him from crag to crag; soon the clouds roll
-off and disclose the brilliant arch of the rainbow across the glistening
-valley, each perfect in its different way. At one time he must be out
-on the slopes sparkling with snow, at another his heart gladdens at the
-approach of spring, and he feels himself one with it all. And so the
-changing seasons of the year cannot fail to touch him more than most
-men, and what the heart feels the lips will strive to utter. In the same
-way Dan Gunby used to watch the wide sunsets across the marsh, and see
-the floods of golden light on the shore, and the ebbing and flowing of
-the far-spread tide about his anchored cabin. He saw, at one time, the
-ripples crested with gold by the sun’s last rays, at another the red orb
-rising from the sea on a clear morning; or, in the mist which closed him
-in, he listened to the cries of the sea-birds sweeping by invisible.
-At times, when the wind was up and the tide high, he heard the roar of
-the waves dashed on the sand; or, upon a calm night, he looked out on
-a gently moving water led by the changing moon. There were always some
-voices of the night, and usually some visions both at eve and morn; and
-with his observant eye and ear, and his leisure to reflect, while Nature
-was his one companion, how could he fail to be in some sort a poet?
-
-I lately heard of a shepherd or crofter who was quite a case in point;
-but as he was not a Lincolnshire native but lived in the Scotch Lowlands,
-I put the account of him and his poetry, which, by the help of a Scotch
-lady, I have succeeded in collecting, small in quantity but some of
-it very good, I think, in quality, into an appendix at the end of the
-volume.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII
-
-THE MARSH CHURCHES IN SOUTH LINDSEY
-
- Alford—Markby—Hogsthorpe—Addlethorpe—Ingoldmells—Winthorpe—Skegness—The
- Bond Epitaph—Croft—The Parish Books—Burgh-le-Marsh—Palmer
- Epitaph—Bratoft—The Armada—Gunby—The Massingberd Brasses.
-
-
-Starting from _Alford_, a little town with several low thatched houses in
-the main street, and a delightful old thatched ivy-clad manor, we will
-first look into the church which stands on a mound in the centre of the
-town, to see the very fine rood screen. Before reaching the south porch
-with its sacristy or priests’ room above, and its good old door, we pass
-an excellent square-headed window. Inside, the bold foliage carving on
-the capitals at once arrests the eye. The pillars, as in most of these
-churches, are lofty, slender and octagonal. The steps to the rood loft
-remain, and a squint to the altar in the north aisle chapel. On the other
-side is a carved Jacobean pulpit of great beauty, east of which is a
-low-side window, and east of that again a tomb with recumbent alabaster
-figures of Sir Robert Christopher and his wife, date 1668, in perfect
-condition.
-
-From Alford a road goes north to Louth, branching to the right three
-miles out, to run to Mablethorpe, the favourite seaside resort of the
-Tennysons when living at Somersby. But we will follow the road to
-_Bilsby_, where Professor Barnard keeps his unapproachable collection of
-Early English water-colours. From here we can reach _Markby_, a curious
-thatched chapel standing inside a moat, and now disused. Then we can
-look in at _Huttoft_ to see the extremely fine font which resembles that
-at Covenham St. Mary, and Low Toynton, near Horncastle; after which,
-passing by _Mumby_, we will make for the first of the typical Marsh
-churches at _Hogsthorpe_.
-
-Markby vicarage goes with _Hannah-cum-Hagnaby_ rectory. Once there was
-an Austin or Black Friars priory at Markby, and at Hagnaby—a hamlet in
-Hannah or Hannay—an abbey of Premonstratensian or White Canons, which
-was founded in 1175 by Herbert de Orreby and dedicated to St. Thomas the
-Martyr.
-
-[Illustration: _Markby Church._]
-
-The registers at _Markby_ are among the earliest in the kingdom,
-beginning in 1558, those in Hannay dating from 1559. The first year of
-their institution was 1838.
-
-[Sidenote: THE HUTTOFT FONT]
-
-The _Huttoft_ font is of the fourteenth century, and is four feet eight
-inches high, so it needs a step like those at Wrangle, Benington, and
-Frieston, and that at Skendleby. On the bowl are represented the Holy
-Trinity, the Virgin and Child, the Virgin holding a bunch of lilies, and
-the Child an apple. On six of the panels are the Apostles in pairs, as at
-Covenham St. Mary. The under part has angel figures all round supporting
-the bowl. The shaft has eight panels with figures of popes, bishops, and
-holy women, and at the base are symbols of the four evangelists. The
-string-courses show three different roofs to the nave.
-
-[Sidenote: HOGSTHORPE]
-
-_Hogsthorpe_, like most of the churches in the neighbourhood, is built
-of the soft local green-sand, which is found near the edge of the marsh
-where the Wolds die away into the level. The tower shows patches of
-brickwork which give a warm and picturesque appearance. The south porch
-is here, as is the rule, built of a harder stone, and is handsome and
-interesting. A pair of oblong stones of no great size are built in on
-either side above the arch with an inscription in old English letters,
-beginning, oddly enough, both in this church and in one at Winthorpe a
-few miles off, with the right hand stone and finishing on the left. The
-words are, “Orate pro animabus Fratrum et Sororum Guilde Sᶜᵗᵃᵉ Mariæ
-hujus Ecclesiæ quorum expensis et sumptibus fabricata est haec porticus.”
-The church has had its roof renewed in pine wood. It also has the worst
-coloured window glass I have ever seen, an error of local piety.[17] The
-registers begin in 1558.
-
-[Sidenote: ADDLETHORPE]
-
-From here the road, with countless right-angled turns, runs between the
-reedy dykes to the Perpendicular church of _Addlethorpe_ (St. Nicolas).
-Here the south porch is unusually good, with figures of angels on the
-buttresses and beautiful foliage work carved on the parapet. On the apex
-is a well-cut crucifix and, as at Somersby, on the back is a small figure
-of the Virgin and Child. A large holy-water stoup stands just within the
-door. There is a window in the porch, also a niche and a slab with the
-following inscription:—
-
- The Cryst that suffered
- Grette pangs and hard
- hafe mercy on the sowle
- of John Godard
- That thys porche made
- and many oder thynges dede
- There-for Jsu Cryst
- Qwyte hym hys mede.
-
-Over the buttresses of the north aisle are gargoyles holding scrolls; one
-has on it “Of Gods saying comes no ill,” another—
-
- God : for : ihs : m’̅c̅y : bryng : he̅ : to : blys :
- Yᵗ : ha̅ : p̅d̅ : to : ys :
-
-Cut with a knife on the western pilaster of the porch is—
-
- “January 1686
- Praise God.”
-
-The glory of this church is its wealth of old wood work, in which it is
-not surpassed by any in the county, though its neighbour, Winthorpe, runs
-it hard.
-
-[Illustration: _Addlethorpe and Ingoldmells._]
-
-The chancel here, as at the older Decorated church of Ingoldmells, which
-is within half a mile, has been pulled down, and the rood screen acts
-as a reredos. There are two extremely good parclose screens, and old
-benches with carved ends throughout the church. Another fine oak screen
-goes across the tower arch, inscribed, “Orate pro animabus Johannis
-Dudeck Senior et uxor̅ ejus.” The noble roof is the original one.
-The pulley-block for lowering the rood light is still visible on the
-easternmost tie-beam but one, as it is also at Winthorpe and Grimoldby.
-A new rafter at the west end has painted on it, “Struck by fireball June
-27, 1850.”
-
-The Boston wool trade is alluded to in the epitaph “Hic jacet Ricardus
-Ward qdm. Mr̅ctor Stapali Calais MCCCCXXXIII.”
-
-A slab in the north aisle to Thomas Ely, 1783, has a singular inscription
-on it:—
-
- “Plain in his form but rich he was in mind,
- Religious, quiet, honest, meek and kind.”
-
-Evidently a real good fellow though he _was_ plain.
-
-[Sidenote: CHURCHWARDEN’S ACCOUNTS]
-
-The following extracts from the churchwarden’s accounts between the years
-1540 and 1580 are curious.
-
- Itm payde to the Scolemʳ (Schoolmaster) of Allforde
- for wryting of Thoms Jacson Wylle iiijᵈ
- Itm payde unto Thoms Wryghte for dressynge
- the crosse ijᵈ
- Itm payde for a horsse skyne for bellstryngs ijˢ iᵈ
- Itm payde to the players iiijᵈ
- Itm reseuyd (received) for ye Sepuller lyghte
- gatheryd in ye cherche iiˢ iᵈ
- Itm reseuyd for ye wyttworde[18] of Rycharde Grene xijᵈ
- Itm Receuyd of Anthony Orby for his wyffs yereday[19] xijᵈ
- Itm payde un to Wyllm Craycrofte for the rente
- of ye Kyrke platte ijˢ vᵈ
- Itm payde for washing the corporaxys[20] iiijᵈ
- Itm payd for a ynglyghe sultʳ [an English
- psalter] xxᵈ
- Receuyd of Thomas Thorye for o̅n̅ thrughestone iijˢ iiijᵈ
- Itm payde for the Sepulcre xˢ
- Itm for a paire of Sensors xˢ iiijᵈ
- Receuyd of John Curtus for his Wyff lying in ye
- churche viˢ viijᵈ
- Receuyd[21] of ye said John for o̅n̅ thrughstone xxᵈ
- It Recd for ye sowll of John Dodyke xiiiˢ
- It Recd for ye sowll of Syr Gregory Wylk viᵈ
- Impmus [In primis] payd for certeffyenge of
- ye Rodloffe xijˢ
- Itm payd for dyssygerenge [_query_ dressing] of
- ye Rod loffte iijˢ iiijᵈ
- It given to ye men of mumbye chappelle for
- carryinge of ye lytle belle to Lincolne xijᵈ
- It Layde oute for a lytle booke of prayer for
- Wednesdays and frydayes iijᵈ
-
-The church has six bells.
-
-From the account of the charities left in Addlethorpe we find that in
-1554 a gift of land was sold for £4 an acre, but in 1653 an acre situated
-in Steeping let for 15_s._
-
-[Sidenote: INGOLDMELLS]
-
-The adjoining parish with its mellifluous name of _Ingoldmells_,
-(pronounced Ingomells), has had its suffix derived from the Norse _melr_,
-said to mean the curious long grass of the sandhills. It might perhaps
-be more correctly considered as the same suffix which we have on the
-Norse-settled Cumbrian coast at Eskmeals, or Meols, where it is said
-to mean a sandy hill or dune, a name which would well fit in with the
-locality here. Thus the whole name would mean the sand-dunes of Ingulf,
-a Norse invader of the ninth century. A farmer we met at Winthorpe, next
-parish to Ingoldmells, alluded to these sandhills when he said, “It is a
-sträange thing, wi’ all yon sand nobbut häfe a mile off, that we cant hav
-nowt but this mucky owd cläy hereabouts: not fit for owt.” But the Romans
-found the clay very useful for making their great embankment along the
-coast.
-
-_Ingoldmells_ church, though good, is not so fine as Addlethorpe; but
-it has a very interesting little brass, dated 1520, to “William Palmer
-wyth ye stylt,” a very rare instance of an infirmity being alluded to on
-a brass. The brass shows a crutched stick at his side. The porch has a
-quatrefoil opening on either side, and a niche; and a curious apse-like
-line of stones in the brick paving goes round all but the east side
-of the fine front. Round the base of the churchyard cross is a later
-inscription cut in 1600, J. O. Clerk. “Christus solus mihi salus,” and
-figures run round three sides of the base, beginning on the north 1, 2,
-3; and on the east 4, 5, 6; none on the south, but on the west 5, 6,
-7, 8, 9, at the corner 10; and again on the north, 11, 12. Doubtless
-it was a form of sundial, the cross shaft throwing its shadow in the
-direction of the figures. Of the four bells one has fallen and lies on
-the belfry floor. One has on it, according to Oldfield, “Wainfleet and
-the Wapentake of Candleshoe, 1829,” “Catarina vocata sum rosa _pulsata_
-mundi” (I am called Catherine, the beaten rose of the world); and on
-another is the rhyme—
-
- “John Barns churchwarden being then alive
- Caused us to be cast 1705:”
-
-At Partney a bell has the same Catarina legend, but with _dulcata_ (=
-sweet) instead of _pulsata_. S and C are often interchanged, and I think
-the ‘p’ is really a ‘d’ upside down on the Ingoldmells bell, especially
-as the bell is of about the same date and was also cast by the same
-man—Penn of Peterborough. I must admit, however, that _pulsata_ on a bell
-with a clapper has something to be said for it; still, _dulcata_ (sweet)
-is the obviously proper epithet for rose.
-
-[Illustration: _The Roman Bank at Winthorpe._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE SEA BANKS]
-
-[Sidenote: RICH OAK CARVING]
-
-From this church the road runs to the sea bank near Chapel, and gets
-quite close to it. You can walk up the sandy path amongst the tall
-sand-grass and the grey-leaved buckthorn, set with sharp thorns and a
-profusion of lovely orange berries, till from the top you look over to
-the long brown sands and the gleaming shore, where a retiring tide is
-tumbling the cream-coloured breakers of a brown sea. Returning to the
-road we go for some distance along the old Roman bank, which we leave
-before reaching Skegness in order to get to _Winthorpe_ (_St. Mary_).
-This Decorated church was restored in 1881 by the untiring energy of
-“Annie Walls of Boothby,” but not so as to spoil its old woodwork, which
-is remarkably fine. In the body of the church all the seats have their
-old carved fifteenth century bench ends, and in the chancel are four
-elaborately carved stall-ends. In one of these, amidst a mass of foliage,
-St. Hubert is represented kneeling, as in Albert Dürer’s picture, before
-a stag who has a crucifix between his antlers, from which the Devil, who
-appears just behind him, in human shape but horned, is turning away. The
-poppyhead above this panel is exquisitely carved with oak leaves and
-acorns, and little birds, with manikins climbing after them. The old
-roof, with the rood-light pulley-block visible on one of the tie-beams,
-still remains, and the rood screen, too, though its doors have been
-foolishly transferred to another screen at the west end, and ought to be
-put back in their place; and at the end of each aisle, as at Addlethorpe,
-are good parclose screens. Within one of these, the roof of the north
-aisle has a painted pattern on the rafters and good carved bosses once
-painted and gilt.
-
-The seventeen steps to the rood loft are all there, also an aumbrey; and
-we are told that one of the chantries was founded and endowed by Walter
-De Friskney, 1316, and dedicated to St. James.
-
-In the south wall of the tower is a singular fireplace, originally used
-for baking the wafers.
-
-In the north chantry is an altar slab with three consecration crosses
-on it, and a sepulchral slab to “Ricardus Arglys (Argles?), Presbyter,
-De Bynington” (near Boston) who died on the 20th of November, 1497; and
-there are, in the nave, brasses to Richard Barowe with his wife Batarick
-and their three children, 1505, and to Robert Palmer, 1515, doubtless a
-relative of “W. Palmer with ye stylt” in Ingoldmells.
-
-The inscription on the former is “Richard Barowe sumtyme marchant of
-the stapyll of Calys, and Batarick his wyfe, the which Richard decissyd
-the XX day of Apryle the yere of owre Lord A.MCCCCC and fyve, on whose
-soullys Ihu̅ have mercy Amen for charitie.”
-
-The Barrows were an old and notable family, one of them was Master of
-the Rolls and Keeper of the Great Seal, 1485. They were long settled at
-Winthorpe, and in 1670 Isaac Barrow was Bishop of St. Asaph, and his
-nephew was well known to history as the Master of Trinity, 1672-1677, and
-a celebrated divine.
-
-[Sidenote: WINTHORPE]
-
-One of Robert Palmer’s descendants, Elizabeth of Winthorpe, married
-George Sharpe, who was Archbishop of York in 1676, so Winthorpe furnished
-a bishop and an archbishop’s wife in the same decade.
-
-William Palmer was apparently part donor of the south porch of Winthorpe,
-which is very like those at Addlethorpe and Hogsthorpe, having a gabled
-and crocketed parapet carved with graceful flowing foliage; and on the
-two stones, lettered in Early English as at Hogsthorpe, are the lines:—
-
- Robert Lungnay and Wyll’ P
- alm’: thay payd for thys
- God in hys mercy
- bryng them to his blys.
-
-Over the east gable of the nave is a sanctus bell-cot, and in the tower
-are four good bells, three of which are thus inscribed:—
-
- 1. 1604 I sweetly tolling do men call
- to taste of meat that feeds the soul.
-
- 2. Jesus be our speed.
-
- 3. Antonius monet ut Campana bene sonet.
-
-In the west of the south aisle is the well-carved head of the churchyard
-cross, of which, as usual, only half of the shaft remains. On the head is
-a crucifixion, and on the other side the Virgin and Child. This head was
-found in 1910 a mile and a quarter from the church. It closely resembles
-that still standing intact at Somersby.
-
-Opposite, in the west end of the north aisle, are two bases of columns
-belonging to a former church of the thirteenth century, which church is
-first mentioned in the donation of it by William de Kyme to the abbey of
-Bardney, 1256.
-
-The registers of the church begin in 1551.
-
-From the foregoing it will be seen how extremely interesting these Marsh
-churches are, and these four are not the only ones in this part of the
-Marsh, _Croft_ and _Burgh_ being both within three or four miles of
-_Winthorpe_. _Theddlethorpe_, north of these, is a finer building, as is
-_Burgh-le-Marsh_; but I doubt if any other church has such a wealth of
-old carved woodwork as Addlethorpe or Winthorpe. There is, cut on the
-south-east angle of Winthorpe tower, a deep horizontal line with the
-letters “H.W. 1837.” This indicates the level of high-water mark on the
-other side of the sea bank, and as the mark on the tower is eight feet
-nine inches from the ground, though the 1837 tide was an exceptionally
-high one, it gives some idea of what this part of the Marsh must at times
-have been in the days before the Romans made their great embankment. A
-plan for improving the drainage of the land at Winthorpe was made as
-early as 1367, and a rate was exacted of 1_s._ an acre.
-
-[Sidenote: SKEGNESS HOUSE]
-
-_Skegness_, now, next to Cleethorpes, the best known and most frequented
-by excursion “trippers” of all the east coast places, used to be fifty
-years ago only a little settlement of fishermen who lived in cabins built
-on the strip of ground between the road and the ditches on each side. A
-lifeboat shed and an old sea-boat set up on its gunwale for a shelter,
-with a seat in it, and a flagstaff close by, used chiefly for signalling
-to a collier to come in, were on the sea bank. Behind it was an hotel,
-and one thatched house just inside the Roman bank, built by Mr. Edward
-Walls about 1780. This was cleverly contrived so that not an inch of
-space was wasted anywhere. It was only one room thick, so that from the
-same room you could see the sun rise over the sea and set over the Marsh.
-It was here that Tennyson saw those “wide-winged sunsets of the misty
-marsh” that he speaks of in “The Last Tournament,” and took delight in
-their marvellous colouring.
-
-The house rose up from the level behind and below the bank, and the back
-door was on the ground floor, with a porch and hinged leaves to shut out
-the terrific wind from N. and E. or N. and W. as required, but on the
-sea front, access was obtained by a removable plank bridge from the bank
-top which landed you on the first floor. Here was the summer home of all
-our family—a children’s paradise—when you ran straight out bare-foot on
-to the sandy bank and so across the beautiful hard sands and through the
-salt-water creeks down to the sea. This at high water was close at hand
-with tumbling waves and seething waters, but at low tide, far as eye
-could reach was nothing but sand, with the fisherman’s pony and cart, and
-his donkey and boy at the other end of the shrimp net, moving slowly
-like specks in the distance along the edge of the far-retreating sea.
-
-This enchanting desolation is now the trippers’ play ground, with stalls
-and donkeys and swings and sham niggers and a pier and lines of shops.
-It must be admitted that it has all its old health-giving breezes, and
-also a fine garden and a cricket field and golf links of the very best. A
-new line from Lincoln has just been opened (July 1st, 1913), which runs
-through Coningsby, New Bolingbroke and Stickney, to join the old loop
-line between Eastville and Steeping, and for a shilling fare will bring
-thousands from Lincoln, Sheffield and Retford, to have a happy day of
-nine hours at what the natives call “Skegsnest.”
-
-We have seen that the Romans had a bank all along this coast to keep
-out the sea, and besides their five roads from Lincoln, one of which
-went to Horncastle, they had a road from Horncastle to Wainfleet; and a
-road, part of which we have noticed, from Ulceby to Burgh and Skegness.
-Skegness lies midway between Ingoldmells, which is the most easterly
-point of the county, and _Gibraltar Point_, from which the coast sweeps
-inland and forms the northern shore of the Wash. Across, on the further
-side of this, was the Roman camp at Brancaster (Branodunum), and here
-at Skegness there seems to have been a Roman fort which has now been
-swallowed up by the sea.
-
-[Sidenote: OLD POTTERIES]
-
-Near Ingoldmells, about fifty years ago, the sea, at low water, laid bare
-some Roman potteries, so called, from which the Rev. Edward Elmhirst got
-several specimens of what were called “thumb bricks.” These were just
-bits of clay the size of sausages, but twice as thick, some as much as
-two and a half inches thick and four inches high, which had been squeezed
-in the hand, the impress of the fingers and thumb being plainly visible;
-the extremities, being more than the hand could take, were rather bigger
-than the middle. They were flat enough at each end to stand, and had
-doubtless been used to place the pottery on when being burnt in the kiln.
-
-It is more than probable that these potteries were pre-Roman. They are
-about a quarter of a mile south of the Ingoldmells outfall drain, and
-half way between high and low-water mark. They are only exposed now and
-then, and appear to be circular kilns about fifteen feet in diameter,
-with walls two feet thick, and now only a foot high. The reason of their
-existence is found in a bed of dark clay which underlies all this coast.
-
-The only pot found has been a rough, hand-made jar with rolled edge and
-marks of the stick or bone with which the outside had been scraped and
-trimmed. Now, doubtless the Romans used the wheel. Moreover, these kilns
-are far outside the Roman bank, and not likely, therefore, to be for
-Roman use. Tree roots are found in the walls and inside the circle of the
-kilns, of the same sort as those of which at one time a perfect forest
-existed, the stumps of which are sometimes visible at low tide. At the
-time the Romans made their sea bank the sea must have come right over
-this forest, so that we may perhaps say that those thumb-bricks bear the
-impress of the fingers of the earliest inhabitants of Britain, and are
-therefore of extraordinary interest.
-
-On the eastern side of South Lindsey the running out of the roads, from
-Burgh and Wainfleet, to the coast always seemed to point to the existence
-of some Roman terminus near Skegness. Some years after he had noted this
-as probable, the Rev. E. H. R. Tatham, who has made a study of Roman
-roads in Lincolnshire, discovered that in the court rolls of the manor of
-Ingoldmells, the mention is made of a piece of land called indifferently
-in a document dated 1345, “Chesterland,” or “Castelland”; and again
-in 1422, four acres of land in “Chesterland” are mentioned as being
-surrendered by one William Skalflete (Court Rolls, p. 248), this land
-is never mentioned again, and the presumption is that it was swallowed
-by the sea. And in 1540 Leland mentions a statement made to him, that
-Skegness once had a haven town with a “castle,” but that these had been
-“clene consumed and eaten up with the se.”
-
-[Sidenote: ROMAN CASTRUM]
-
-These terms “Chester” and “caster” point to a Roman fort or “castrum,”
-and the fact that the names “Chesterland” and “Castelland” exist in
-medieval documents dealing with the land in the immediate neighbourhood
-seems to go a long way towards confirming Mr. Tatham’s conjecture of
-the existence of a Roman fort near Skegness, over which the sea has now
-encroached.
-
-[Sidenote: AN EARLY BRASS]
-
-[Sidenote: CROFT]
-
-From Skegness we will now turn inland, and after about four miles reach
-_Croft_ (All Saints) by a road which keeps turning at right angles
-and only by slow degrees brings a traveller perceptibly nearer to the
-clump of big, shady trees which hide the church, parsonage and school.
-Large trees grow in all parts of the forlorn churchyard, and the church
-when opened has a musty, charnel-house smell, but one soon forgets
-that in amazement at the fine and spacious fourteenth century nave and
-clerestory, its grand tower and its large and lofty fifteenth century
-Perpendicular chancel and aisles. The wide ten-foot passage up the nave
-between the old poppy-head seats fitly corresponds to the large open
-space round the font, which rises from an octagonal stone platform as big
-as that of a market cross. There is a quantity of old woodwork besides
-the seats. A good rood-screen—though like all the others, minus its
-coved top and rood-loft—shows traces yet of its ancient colouring; birds
-and beasts of various kinds are carved both as crockets above and also
-in relief on the panels below, and two good chantry screens fill the
-eastern ends of the aisles. A very fine Jacobean pulpit and tester was
-put up by Dr. Worship, the vicar from 1599 to 1625, in memory of his wife
-Agnes, whom he describes in a brass on her tomb, dated 1615, as “a woman
-matchless both for wisdom and godlyness.” The two greatest treasures in
-brass are the extremely fine eagle lectern, its base supported by three
-small lions, which was found in the moat of the old Hall, the seat of the
-Browne family, flung there probably for safety and then forgotten; and a
-notable half-effigy, head and arms only, of a knight in banded mail, with
-a tunic over the hauberk, and hands joined in prayer. The legend round
-him is in Norman French, but his name is lost; the date is said to be
-1300, so that this is, next to that at Buslingthorpe, the earliest brass
-in the county.
-
-The Browne family are perpetuated in the chancel, where on the north wall
-are two similar monuments of kneeling figures facing each other, both
-erected about 1630. The first is to Valentine Browne, a man with a very
-aquiline nose, and his wife Elizabeth (Monson), with effigies in relief
-of their fifteen children. He is described as “Treasurer and Vittleter
-of Barwick, and Dyed Treasurer of Ireland.” Barwick is “The March town
-of Berwick-on-Tweed.” The tomb was erected _c._ 1600 by his second son
-John who lived at Croft, and whose effigy is on the other tomb along with
-his wife Cicely (Kirkman), of whom we are told “she lived with him but
-20 weeks and dye without issue ætatis 21 Ano Domini 1614,” just a year
-before Agnes Worship, the vicar’s wife. Another monument, a marble slab
-eighteen inches square, has this inscription:—
-
-“Here lyeth Willyam Bonde Gentleman, whoe dyed An̅o Dom̅ 1559 leaving two
-sonnes, Nicolas Docter in Divinitie, and George Docter in physicke, the
-elder sonne, who dyed the ____ et etatis ____ and here is buryed. THE
-which in remembrance of his most kynd father haith erected this lytle
-moniment”
-
- Bondus eram Doctor Medicus nunc vermibus esca,
- Corpus terra tegit, spiritus astra petit,
- Ardua scrutando, cura, morbis, senioque
- Vita Molesta fuit: Mors mihi grata quies.
-
-The guide-books say that this was erected by Nicolas, D.D., who
-afterwards became president of Magdalen College, Oxford. But clearly
-it was by George the M.D., and he left spaces for his own death date,
-which were never filled; perhaps he is not buried at Croft, but he must
-have been near his end when he wrote the Latin lines which are all about
-himself, and may be thus translated—
-
- I was Bond a Physician, now I am food for worms,
- The earth covers my body, my spirit seeks the stars,
- From difficult studies, anxiety, diseases and old age
- Life was a burden; death is a welcome rest to me.
-
-There is a note in the church accounts to the effect that the old bell
-was (re-)cast at Peterborough by Henry Penn in 1706 and inscribed
-“prepare to die.”
-
-This church is, for spaciousness and for the amount of good old woodwork,
-and for its monuments, one of the very best. As we leave it we notice
-carved on the door, “God save the King 1633.”
-
-I believe that Bishop Hugh-de-Wells who was appointed Bishop of Lincoln
-in 1209, but who, mistrusting King John, did not take up the work of his
-See till 1218, when John was dead, was a native of Croft.
-
-The parish books of _Croft_ show “The dues and duties belonginge and
-appertaininge unto the office of the clarkes of Crofte. A.D. 1626.”
-
-He collected the Easter gratuities of the neighbours in the parish; he
-got twenty shillings a year for looking after the clock, “to be paid by
-the churchwards.”
-
- “For skowringe and furbishinge the eagle or ‘brazen lectorie’
- 2/6 by the yeare. Sixpence for ‘evry marriadge,’ fourpence ‘for
- the passinge bell ringeinge for every inhabitant &c. that are
- deceased.”
-
- And “Item the privilege of makeinge the graves for the deceased
- before any other yf he will take the paines and canne doe yt.”
-
-[Sidenote: THE PARISH CLERK]
-
-Evidently the clerks were old men and not always capable of wielding the
-spade and pick; and now comes an entry which lets one into the secret
-of why the registers were often so ill-kept. Instead of the entries
-being made by the parson at the time, the clerk put them down “from time
-to time,” and they were copied from his notes once a year. Under this
-system, of course, there were both mistakes and omissions, often for many
-months and even years together.
-
-This is the entry:—
-
- “Itm for the Register keepinge from tyme to tyme of all
- Christnings Marriadges and burialles from Ladyday to Ladyday
- until they be ingrossed: two shillings and sixpence a year.”
-
-Possibly “from tyme to tyme” may mean on each occasion, but it sounds
-precarious.
-
-His fixed salary, besides fees, was, in 1773, thirty shillings and two
-strikes (—4 bushels) of corn out of the two quarters (—sixteen bushels)
-which was given from the glebe every Easter to the poor by the parson.
-
-The Sexton’s wages at the same date were given thus:—
-
- as Sexton 2. 10. 0.
- for dogs wipping 0. 7. 6.
- Dressing church round 0. 2. 0.
- For oyle 0. 2. 4.
- For ringing the bell at 8 and 4 1. 0. 0.
- -------------
- 04. 01. 10.
-
-The “Parish Clerk” in Lincolnshire was, as a rule, a rougher-looking
-individual than he appears in Gainsborough’s splendid picture in the
-National Gallery, but he was generally an original character, both in
-word and deed. I heard of one in Ireland who announced, “There will
-be no sarmon this afternoon as the Bishop has been providentially
-prevented from praching,” and many a quaint saying is recorded of
-those Lincolnshire clerks of the last century. Boys were their special
-aversion. In the old days at Spilsby the clerk kept a stick, and during
-the sermon would go down to the west end of the building, and the sound
-of his weapon on the boys’ heads quite waked up the slumberers in the
-seats nearer the pulpit. One hears of a clerk putting a stop to what he
-considered an unnecessary afternoon service and saying to the clergyman,
-“We ha’en’t no call to hev sarvice just for you and me, sir.” “Oh, but I
-thought I saw some people coming in.” “Just a parcel of boys, sir; but I
-soon started they.” But it is not the clerks only who show an intelligent
-interest in the parson and the services, though from generations of
-somewhat slovenly performance, the churchgoers had difficulty at first
-in appreciating the high-church ritual which here and there they saw for
-the first time. One kindly old woman on seeing in one of the Fen churches
-some unexpected genuflexions and bows, said afterwards, “I _was_ sorry
-for poor Mr. C., he was that bad of his inside that he couldn’t howd
-hissen up.” And another I knew of who, when asked how they got on with
-the new ritualistic clergyman, and whether he hadn’t introduced some new
-methods, replied, “Oh, yis, he antics a bit; but we looves him soä we
-antics along wi’ him.”
-
-[Sidenote: BURGH-LE-MARSH]
-
-From Croft we turn north to _Burgh-le-Marsh_ (SS. Peter and Paul) whose
-fine lofty tower, with its grand peal of eight bells, stands on the
-extreme edge of the Wold and overlooks the marsh, and, like “Boston
-Stump,” is visible far out to sea, The exterior is very fine, and the
-church, like Croft, has retained its chancel, so ruthlessly destroyed
-in the case of Addlethorpe and Ingoldmells. The nave is wide and lofty,
-but the pillars poor. It is all Perpendicular, and has much interesting
-screen work which has been a good deal pulled about, even as late as
-1865, the year in which similar destruction was wrought at Ingoldmells.
-The rood screen now stands across the tower arch, and the chancel screen
-is a patchwork. There are two porches, north and south, the latter of
-brick, a good pulpit and a canopied font-cover which opens with double
-doors, dated 1623. On the north aisle wall is a plain brass plate with
-the following dialogue in Latin hexameters:—
-
- Quis jacet hic? Leonardus Palmerus Generosus.
- Quae conjux dilecta fuit? Catherina. Quis haeres?
- Christopherus (cui nupta Anna est). Quis filius alter?
- Robertus. Gnatae quot erant? Tres, Elizabetha
- Ac Maria, ac Helena. An superant? Superant. Ubi mens est
- Defuncti? Rogitas. Dubio procul astra petivit.
- obiit Die Martis octavo
- Anno Domi 1610.
- ætatis suæ 70.
-
- Who lies here? Leonard Palmer, Gentleman.
- Who was his beloved wife? Catherine. Who his heir?
- Christopher (whose wife was Anna). Who was his second son?
- Robert. How many daughters were there? Three, Elizabeth
- and Mary and Helen. Are they living? Yes. Where is the spirit
- of the departed? You ask. Doubtless it has sought the stars.
- He died Mar. 8, 1610, aged 70.
-
-[Sidenote: BRATOFT]
-
-At Burgh the straight road from Skegness to Gunby turns to the left to
-pass through _Bratoft_. This church with picturesque ivy-clad tower has a
-good font, a chancel and parclose screens, and the rood-loft doorway. It
-has been well restored in memory of C. Massingberd, Squire of Gunby, and
-contains a very curious painting on wood which now hangs in the tower;
-it was once over the chancel arch, and by its irregular shape it is
-clear that it was originally made to fit elsewhere. It is signed Robert
-Stephenson. The Armada is shown as a red dragon, between four points of
-land marked England, Scotland, Ireland and France with the following
-lines:—
-
- Spaine’s proud Armado with great strength and power
- Great Britain’s state came gapeing to devour,
- This dragon’s guts, like Pharoa’s scattered hoast
- Lay splitt and drowned upon the Irish coast.
- For of eight score save too ships sent from Spaine
- But twenty-five scarce sound returned again non Nobis Domine.
-
-Bratoft Hall, the residence of the Bratofts and Massingberds, was built
-in a square moated enclosure of two acres, which stood in a deer park of
-two hundred acres. It was taken down in 1698, and the Hall at Gunby built
-about the same time. The bridge over the moat of two brick arches was
-standing in 1830 intact.
-
-[Sidenote: GUNBY]
-
-The twisting byeways lead from here back into the Skegness, Burgh, and
-Spilsby road. The Hall at _Gunby_[22] is a fine brick mansion, the home
-of the Massingberds. A pretty little church stands in the park, in which
-are two very valuable brasses of the Massingberd family, one dated 1405,
-of a knight, Sir Thomas, in camail and pointed Bascinet, and his lady
-Johanna, in a tight dress and mantle. The other of William Lodyngton,
-Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, in his judicial robes, 1419. The
-Massingberd brass has had its incised inscription beaten out, and, with
-a new inscription in raised letters, has been made to serve for another
-Thomas and Johanna Massingberd in 1552, the figures, costumed as in
-1400, serving for their parsimonious descendants of 150 years later. A
-precisely similar case of appropriation by two Dallisons with dates 1400
-and 1546 and 1549, may be seen in Laughton church near Gainsborough; and
-again on a stone slab of the Watson family in Lyddington, Rutland. About
-1800 Elizabeth Massingberd, sole heiress of Gunby, married her neighbour,
-Peregrine Langton, son of Bennet Langton, the friend of Dr. Johnson, who
-on marriage took the name of Massingberd. Their grandson was the Algernon
-Massingberd, born 1828, who left England in 1852, and since June, 1855,
-was never again heard of. In 1862 his uncle, Charles Langton Massingberd,
-took possession of the estate.
-
-From Gunby various small by-roads lead literally in all directions; you
-can take your choice of eight within half a mile of the park gates, and
-Burgh station, on the Boston and Grimsby line, is only just outside the
-boundary.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX
-
-CHURCHES IN SOUTH LINDSEY
-
- Spilsby to Wainfleet—Little
- Steeping—Tomas-de-Reding—Monksthorpe—The Baptists—Thomas
- Grantham—Firsby—Thorpe—Churchwarden’s Book—The
- “Dyxonary”—Wainfleet—William of Waynflete—Halton Holgate—Sire
- Walter Bec—Village Carpentry.
-
-
-The record of the churches in the marsh land of the South Lindsey
-division would not be complete without some mention of Wainfleet. The
-Somersby brook, which, winding “with many a curve” through Partney
-and Halton, becomes at last “the Steeping river,” is thence cut into
-a straight canal as far as Wainfleet, and then, resuming its proper
-river-character, goes out through the flats at Wainfleet Haven, near that
-positive end of the world, “Gibraltar Point.”
-
-_Little Steeping_ has just undergone a most satisfactory restoration in
-memory of its once rector, Bishop Steere, who succeeded Bishop Tozer of
-Burgh-le-Marsh as the third missionary bishop in Central Africa, and
-there did a great work as a missionary, and also built the first Central
-African cathedral in what had previously been the greatest slave market
-of the world—Zanzibar. The restorers have had a most interesting find
-this year (1912), for the chancel step, when taken up, proved to be the
-back of a fine recumbent effigy of a fourteenth century rector. Doubtless
-the monument was taken from the arched recess in the north wall of the
-chancel and thus hidden to save it from destruction in the sixteenth or
-seventeenth century. The masons who fitted it into its new bed had no
-scruple in knocking off the inscribed moulding on one side, and a bit of
-the carved stone got broken off and was found in the rectory garden.
-
-[Sidenote: LITTLE STEEPING]
-
-The figure represents a robed priest, with feet curiously clothed in what
-look like socks. The face is good and in excellent preservation. The
-work was probably local, for the ear is of enormous size. The mutilated
-inscription read originally: “Tomas de Red_ing priez qe Dieu pour sa
-grace_ de sa alme eyt merci.” The letters in italics are missing. Thomas
-de Reding was presented to Little Steeping in 1328. There is a very good
-font, and the south porch outer arch is remarkable for the very unusual
-depth of its hollowed moulding on both of the outer porch pilasters. The
-canopied work over the head of the inner doorway is good, but quite of a
-different character, and the wide projection of the north arcade capitals
-is noticeable. A stone on the outer wall marked “1638 W P & R G” gives
-the date of a destructive restoration, when tomb slabs were cut up for
-window-sills and some ruthless patchwork put in on the north side of
-both aisle and chancel. A good rood screen with canopy has been put in,
-old work being used where possible, and a new churchyard cross erected
-on the old base, with figures of St. Andrew and the Crucifixion, under a
-canopy like that at Somersby. The octagonal font in rich yellow stone has
-figures difficult to make out, and a small niche over the north-east pier
-of the nave arcade is to be noted; probably it contained some relic or
-image. The stone brackets for the rood loft remain, but there is no trace
-left of the staircase. The seats and pulpit of dark stained deal are
-interesting, as they were all made by Bishop Steere himself. The tower is
-patched with the old two-inch bricks, which always look well, and with
-some of the larger modern kind, which seldom do.
-
-Our best way now is to return to the Spilsby-and-Firsby road at _Great
-Steeping_, which will take us past _Irby_ to _Thorpe-St.-Peter_ and
-_Wainfleet_.
-
-[Sidenote: THE BAPTISTS]
-
-The hamlet of _Monksthorpe_ in Great Steeping parish indicates by its
-name the fact that Bardney Abbey had an estate here. No trace now remains
-of the manor built by Robert de Waynflete, when he retired in 1317 from
-the abbey and had the proceeds of the estates in Steeping and Firsby and
-two cells in Partney and Skendleby assigned to him for the maintenance
-and clothing of himself and family. But part of the moat is visible,
-and one may see here in a chapel enclosure a baptist’s pool bricked
-and railed round on three sides with one end open and sloping to the
-water, for the Baptists walked into the pool and did not believe in the
-efficacy of infant baptism. This was doubtless one of the places which
-was ministered to by the famous leader of the “General Baptist Church”
-who suffered such shameful and repeated persecution in the days of
-Cromwell and Charles II., Thomas Grantham, for he was a native of Halton,
-where the name still exists, and throughout a long life showed himself
-a man of a truly religious and eminently courageous heart, of whom his
-native village may well be proud. He died in 1692, aged seventy-eight, at
-Norwich, and was buried inside the church of St. Stephen, as a memorial
-to him set up therein states, “to prevent the indecencies threatened to
-his corpse,” such as, we read on a tombstone in Croft churchyard, had
-been perpetrated on the body of his friend and fellow-Baptist, Robert
-Shalders, whose body was disinterred on the very day of his funeral by
-inhabitants of Croft, and dragged on a sledge and left at his own gates.
-Doubtless the clergyman was privy to this, so hot was the feeling for
-religious persecution in those days, and took credit to himself for it,
-for in the parish book of Croft we may read as follows:—
-
- “Dec 20th, 1663. These persons here underwritten, viz. Roger
- Faune, Gent., Robert Shalders, Anne Montgomerie, Cicilie
- Barker, Alice Egger, were excommunicated in the parish church
- of Croft the day and year above written,
-
- “per me R. Clarke Curate Ibid
- Philip Neave ⎫
- John Wells ⎭ Churchwardens.”
-
-[Sidenote: THORPE]
-
-[Sidenote: CHURCHWARDEN’S BOOK]
-
-Two miles east of Steeping a good road to the right goes to _Firsby_,
-where is a small church built by Mr. G. E. Street to show how an entirely
-satisfactory building adapted to the needs of quite a small parish could
-be put up at a very small cost. The whole church cost under £1,000,
-and was built in less than six months, and opened November 5, 1857. In
-_Thorpe_ we find a graceful font, a well-carved Perpendicular screen and
-a good Jacobean pulpit. The place belonged after the Conquest to the Kyme
-family. The Thorpe churchwardens’ book commences in 1545, and in 1546
-contains such items as these about the rood light and the light in the
-Easter Sepulchre:
-
- “Anᵒ regᵒ regˢ Hen. VIII, xxxvij.
-
- “By thys dothe ytt appr what Symon Wylly̅son & Roger
- Hopster hath payᵈ & layd for the cherche cocernyng the
- rode lyght & ye Sepulture lyght in ye xxxvj yere of ye rene
- off ower Soffera̅t lorde king He̅r̅y ye viij.
- fyrst payd by yᵉ hands off yᵉ forsayd Rogʳ for
- one powd waxe makyng and a half agenst
- lent j½d
- Item payd to Gu̅rwycke Wyffe for brede and
- ale to ye waxe makyng for yᵉ supulture lyght xiiijd
- Item payd for j powde waxe maykyng for the
- rode lyght aga̅s̅t estʳ jd
- Item payd to yᵉ clark for kepping off yᵉ sepulture
- lyght ijd.”
-
-In the reign of Edward VI the churchwardens seem to have had a jumble
-sale of all the odds and ends in the church, which they called the
-“offalment” or rubbish.
-
- “Anᵒ Reg E. VIᵗⁱ Vᵗᵒ.
-
- “Howffulment in the church soulde & delyvered by ye hands of
- John Greene & Robert Emme cherche masters.”
-
-Amongst the various items of metal and woodwork, vestments, chests,
-books, &c., we have:—
-
- “Item off John Wolbe yᵉ elder for an Albe and an old
- pantyd cloth iiijˢ
- Item to John Wolbe all yᵉ boks in yᵉ cherche ijˢ iiijᵈ
- Item sowlde to Wᵐ Keele ij altar clothes, a robe vˢ
- Item sowlde to Sir John Westmels curate, ij robes iiijˢ
- Item Sowlde Wᵐ Sawer ij corporaxs[23] wᵗ otre ofelment iijˢ vijiᵈ”
-
-They were probably restoring their church, for we have two years later:—
-
- “Itᵐ pᵈ for a wayn and iiij beasts for sand to the cherche viijᵈ”
-
-This was in the first and second year of Queen Mary, and they were then
-busy putting back what they had sold in Edward’s reign, making side
-altars, etc., hence we find:—
-
- “Itᵐ pᵈ for yᵉ clothe yᵉ roode was paynted on xiiijᵈ
- Itᵐ pᵈ for paentyng off the roode ijˢ viijᵈ
- Itᵐ pᵈ to yᵉ man that mayd the syd aulters in wageys xijᵈ
- Itᵐ pᵈ to Thomas hymlyn Wyffe for meat & dryncke too them
- that mayd the saide aulters ijˢ viijᵈ
- Itᵐ pᵈ to yᵉ man that makg. the Roode in prte of paementt xijᵈ”
-
-Other interesting items are—
-
- “Itᵐ payd to yᵉ players off ca̅dylmesse day viijᵈ
- Itᵐ payd in yᵉ same year to yᵉ players whytche playd off yᵉ
- Sonday next after Sant Mathyes day vjᵈ”
-
-One might make quite an amusing “story of a dictionary” from the various
-entries in the Thorpe churchwardens’ book about an Elliott’s Dictionary
-which, in the middle of the sixteenth century the vicar bequeathed to
-his successors _in perpetuo_. It is described as “one boke called a
-dyxonary,” and evidently exercised both vicar and wardens a good deal
-until one vicar bethought him of the device of “delivering” it to the
-parish to be kept along with various volumes of homilies, and expositions
-and the paraphrases of Erasmus.
-
-But it is time to leave Thorpe; and two miles will bring us to
-_Wainfleet_ which, as its name declares, though now a couple of miles
-from the sea, was once a haven for sea-going ships, for “Fleet” means
-a navigable creek. This little place gave its name in the fifteenth
-century to a great man, William of Wainfleet, or Waynflete, Headmaster
-of Winchester, and first headmaster and Provost of Eton, successor to
-Cardinal Beaufort as Bishop of Winchester and Lord Chancellor of England
-under Henry VI. He was a great builder, for he possibly planned, and
-certainly completed, Tattershall Castle, built Tattershall church, and
-founded Magdalen College, Oxford, in 1457, the first college to admit
-commoners, a wise and far-seeing innovation of Waynflete’s; and in his
-native town erected in 1484 the Magdalen College School, a fine brick
-building seventy-six feet by twenty-six with its gateway flanked by
-polygonal towers recalling the entrance to Eton College. In the south
-tower is a remarkable staircase, and in the north a bell.
-
-[Sidenote: WAINFLEET]
-
-His adoption of St. Mary Magdalen as the patron of his school at
-Wainfleet and his college at Oxford may have originated in his having
-been appointed by Cardinal Beaufort to the mastership and chantry of St.
-Mary Magdalen hospital on Magdalen Down outside Winchester.
-
-The bishop lived to the reign of Richard III., and died in 1486. He
-erected a monument to his father, Richard Patten. The son is called
-either Patten or Barbour, for he bore both names indifferently, though he
-soon discarded them both for the name of his birthplace, as was commonly
-done from the eleventh to the sixteenth century; his brother also taking
-the name of Waynflete. This monument was in the original church of All
-Saints, for the second church of St. Thomas had long been destroyed. But
-All Saints’ church, built cruciform and with a light wooden spire on
-account of the soft nature of the soil on which it stood, was destined to
-the same fate, for the foolish inhabitants having, in 1718, put a heavy
-brick tower to it, with five bells in it, the weight brought a great part
-of the building to ruin. Subsequently it was pulled down, and the present
-church was set up at some distance from the old site in 1820, when the
-inhabitants added vandalism to their folly and wantonly demolished this
-fine tomb. The broken bits were collected and placed in the Magdalen
-School, and later were, by the intervention of the rector of Halton
-Holgate, Rev. T. H. Rawnsley, obtained for the President and Fellows of
-the Bishop’s College at Oxford, and are now on the north side of the
-altar in the College Chapel. The figure has its feet resting on a bank of
-flowers and its head on a cushion and pillow supported by his two sons,
-John the Monk and William the Bishop. The face of the latter resembles
-the father, but is not so broad or so old as that of John. It is to be
-noted that Lincolnshire has produced two Bishops of Winchester, each of
-them the founder of a college at Oxford—Bishop Fox and Bishop Waynflete.
-
-The town is older than Boston and existed in Roman days, possibly under
-the name of Vannona, and apparently a Roman road ran from Doncaster to
-Wainfleet, passing through Horncastle and Lusby. Certainly “Salters
-road,” which crosses the East Fen, was a Roman road, and the Romans made
-a good deal of salt from the sea-water in the immediate neighbourhood of
-Wainfleet. In the charter rolls of Bardney Abbey (_temp._ Henry III.) we
-read that Matthew, son of Milo de Wenflet, paid annually “to God, Saint
-Oswald and the Monks of Bardney 4 shillings and eighteen sextaires of
-salt by the old measure” for the land he held in the village of Friskney.
-
-Later we find that (_temp._ Edward II.) Hugh le Despencer held lands in
-Wainfleet in 1327, and we know that a Robert le Despencer did so in Burgh
-in the time of Edward I. In the reign of Edward III. Wainfleet furnished
-two ships and forty seamen for the invasion of Brittany.
-
-_Wainfleet St. Mary’s_ lies one and a half miles to the south. The church
-is a massive structure with five arches on the north and four on the
-south of the nave.
-
-We have now completed the round of the Marsh churches, and in so doing,
-on leaving Gunby, we struck into the Spilsby and Wainfleet road, just
-where the Somersby brook, there called the Halton river, is crossed by
-an iron bridge. This we did not cross, but keeping always to the left
-bank we followed the stream to Wainfleet. We must now go back and cross
-this iron bridge, and trace the road thence for four miles and a half
-to Spilsby. This will take us on to the Wold. We shall only pass one
-village, but this is one of infinite charm.
-
-[Sidenote: HALTON HOLGATE]
-
-[Sidenote: THE HOLLOW-GATE BRIDGE]
-
-_Halton Holgate_ stands on the very edge of the Wold, where the
-green-sand terminates, and looks far across the Fen to Boston. The name
-of the village is always properly pronounced by the natives Halton
-Hollygate, _i.e._, hollow gate or way; for the descending road has been
-cut through the green-sand rock, and where the cutting is deepest a
-pretty timber footbridge is thrown over it, leading from the rectory to
-the churchyard. The garden lawn has, or had, two fine old mulberry trees.
-These were once more common—for in the reign of James I. an order went
-out for the planting of mulberry trees in all rectory gardens with a view
-to the encouragement of the silk trade by the breeding and feeding of
-silkworms, whose favourite diet is the mulberry leaf. From the garden,
-“Boston stump” is visible eighteen miles to the south. The church is a
-particularly handsome one with massive well-proportioned tower, and large
-belfry windows, eight three-light clerestory windows on either side and a
-fine south porch of Ancaster stone. The rest is built of the beautifully
-tinted local green-sand, with quoins of harder Clipsham stone. Inside it
-is spacious, with lofty octagonal pillars. It is seated throughout with
-oak, and has several good old oak poppy-heads and some large modern ones
-copied from Winthorpe and carved by a Halton carpenter. Here it is worth
-notice that for the last hundred years Halton has never been without
-wood-workers of unusual talent.
-
-[Illustration: _Bridge over the Hollow-Gate._]
-
-[Sidenote: HALTON CHURCH]
-
-South of the chancel two tall blocked arcades, leading to a Lady chapel
-long pulled down, were opened by the Rev. T. Sale, rector in 1894, who
-had reseated the chancel and filled the east window with good stained
-glass. The chapel, which now holds the organ, was rebuilt in memory of
-the two previous rectors, Rev. T. H. Rawnsley (1825-1861) and R. D.
-B. Rawnsley (1861-1882), and their wives Sophia Walls and Catharine
-Franklin. The fine effigy of a Crusader, called Henry de Halton, had
-been buried for safety and forgotten, like that of the priest at Little
-Steeping, and the sepulchral slab with Lombardic lettering, of Sir Walter
-Bec, of the late twelfth or early thirteenth century, is the oldest
-monument in the neighbourhood. The inscription is: “Sire Walter Bec jist
-ici de ki alme Dieu ait merci.” There is a fine peal of six bells, and a
-“tingtang,” a thing very common in Lincolnshire, and reminiscent of the
-pre-Reformation Sanctus bell.
-
-We have so often seen, owing to the negligence of church authorities,
-damp church walls, and wet streaming down from gutter or stack-pipe,
-which is blocked with growing grass or sparrows’ nests, to the great
-detriment of the building, that it is pleasant to record the useful
-activity of the Halton churchwardens, of whom one has carved, and the
-other put together, a fine oak screen, with the names and dates of all
-the known rectors, churchwardens and clerks of the parish.
-
-[Illustration: _Halton Church._]
-
-In the north wall of the chancel is a priest’s door, which has always
-been in constant use. It is a beautiful bit of Perpendicular work with
-an exceptionally good hood-moulding and lovely carving of waved foliage
-in the spandrels. These north side doors are sometimes called “Devils’
-doors,” as they were not only to let the priest in but also to let the
-Devil out, being left open at baptisms to let him fly out when the infant
-renounces the Devil and all his works, and becomes the child of grace.
-The idea that the north was the Devil’s side had possibly something to
-do with the repugnance, hardly yet quite overcome, to a burial on that
-side of the churchyard.
-
-[Sidenote: LOCAL WORKMANSHIP]
-
-An avenue of elms, planted by the Rev. T. H. Rawnsley about 1830,
-starting from the “Church Wongs,”[24] leads past the tower at the west
-to the Hollow-gate road, close to where a pit was dug by the roadside
-to get the sandstone for repairing the tower; and to-day, as we pass
-along to Spilsby, we shall see a wall of sandstone rock exposed on the
-right of the road, and a lot of blocks cut out and hardening in the
-air preparatory for use at Little Steeping, and we shall naturally be
-reminded of the words of Isaiah, “Look unto the rock whence ye are hewn,
-and to the hole of the pit whence ye are digged.”
-
-We have said that the restoration of Halton Holgate church was carried
-out by the Rev. T. H. Rawnsley about 1845, and it is remarkable that
-it was done so extremely well; for at that particular time the art of
-architectural restoration was almost at its lowest. As far as they went
-there were no mistakes made by the restorers at Halton, and the carved
-work for the seats was copied from the best models to be seen in any
-Lincolnshire church, and executed under the eye of the rector and his
-son, Drummond Rawnsley, by a Halton carpenter. That is just as it should
-be, and just as it used to be, but it is not often possible of attainment
-now.
-
-Jesus College chapel at Cambridge underwent a much needed restoration at
-the same bad period, _i.e._, in 1849, and here too, by the genius of the
-architect, excellent work was done, some good old carving being preserved
-and very cleverly matched with new work well executed, and by a very
-curious coincidence, the shape of some of the poppy-heads and the plan
-of the panel carving is almost identical with that which was executed at
-Halton, after the Winthorpe pattern.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX
-
-SPILSBY AND ITS BYWAYS
-
- Spilsby Market-town—The Churches and Willoughby Chapel—The
- Franklins—The Talk of the Market—Lincolnshire Stories and
- Others—Byways—Old Bolingbroke—Harrington Church—The Copledike
- Tombs—The Hall—Bag-Enderby—Remarkable Font—Somersby—The
- Churchyard Cross—The Brook—Ashby Puerorum.
-
-
-[Sidenote: SPILSBY CHURCH]
-
-Spilsby is the head of a petty-sessional division in the parts of
-Lindsey. The name is thought by some to be a corruption of Spellows-by,
-to which the name of Spellows hill in the neighbourhood gives some
-colour. The old gaol, built in 1825, had a really good classic portico
-with four fluted columns and massive pediment. Most of the buildings
-behind this imposing entrance were pulled down after fifty years, and
-all that it leads to now is the Sessions House and police station. The
-long market-place is interrupted in one place by a block of shops, and
-in another by a mean-looking Corn Exchange; but at one end of it still
-stands an elegant, restored market cross, and at the other a bronze
-statue by Noble of Sir John Franklin, the most famous of Spilsby’s sons,
-the discoverer of the “North West Passage.” His hand rests on an anchor,
-and on the pedestal are the words: “They forged the last link with their
-lives.” Just beyond the town a fine elm-tree avenue leads to Eresby, the
-seat whence the Willoughby family take their title. In Domesday Book,
-1086, Spilsby and Eresby are said to belong to the Bishop of Durham. His
-tenant Pinco, or one of his sons, the Fitz Pincos, acquired it; and about
-1166 a Pinco heiress married Walter Bec, whose grandson has a sepulchral
-slab in Halton church, _c._ 1243. In 1295 a John, the son of Walter,
-was created Baron Bec of Eresby, the younger brothers being Antony,
-Bishop of Durham, and Thomas, who was consecrated Bishop of St. David’s
-at Lincoln in 1280. Lord Bec died in 1302, in which year Sir William of
-Willoughby (near Alford), who had married his daughter and heiress Alice,
-obtained a charter for a market at Spilsby every Monday. Their son Robert
-was the first Baron Willoughby De Eresby, who died in 1316. His son John
-fought at Crécy 1346, and in 1348 founded the College of the Holy Trinity
-at Spilsby, and the chantry which, when he and his successors in the
-fourteenth and sixteenth centuries with their huge altar tombs filled
-up the chancel of the old church, even blocking up the entire chancel
-arch with the stone screen of the Bertie monument, became eventually the
-chancel of the parish church. For the old church consisted of a nave and
-chancel into which the west door opened direct; it had probably a narrow
-north aisle, and certainly a large south aisle was added with the Trinity
-chapel at the east end of it. This aisle and chapel are now the nave and
-chancel of the church, which was restored in Ancaster stone in 1879, and
-a new south aisle added, the tower alone remaining of green-sand with
-lofty hard-stone pinnacles. In this the bells have just been re-hung,
-in December, 1913. John, second Baron Willoughby (1348), also the third
-(1372), who fought at Poictiers, and the fourth, with his second wife,
-Lady Neville, at his side (1380), have huge altar tombs with effigies in
-armour; he died 1389. A brass commemorates his third wife (1391), and
-another fine one, said to be Lincolnshire work, the fifth baron and his
-first wife (1410). Both these ladies being of the family of Lord Zouch.
-The gap between the fifth and the tenth Lord Willoughby is accounted for
-thus:—
-
-[Sidenote: WILLOUGHBY D’ERESBY]
-
-The sixth Lord was created Earl of Vendome and Beaumont and died 1451.
-His second wife was Maud Stanhope, co-heiress of Lord Cromwell of
-Tattershall. The seventh and eighth, best known by their other title
-of Lord Welles, were both put to death for heading the Lincolnshire
-rebellion against Edward IV., the father by an act of bad faith on the
-king’s part, who had taken him, together with Dymoke the Champion, out of
-the Sanctuary in Westminster; and the son because, in revenge, joining
-Sir Thomas de la Launde, he had fought the Yorkists and been defeated
-at the battle of Loose-coatfield near Stamford, 1470. The ninth lord
-was William, who was descended from a younger son of the fifth Baron
-Willoughby, since Richard Hastings, whom Joan, the sister and heiress of
-the eighth Lord Welles, had married, left no issue. There is a monument
-in Ashby church near Spilsby, though in a very fragmentary condition, to
-William and also to Joan and Richard Hastings. William married Katherine
-of Aragon’s maid-of-honour, Lady Mary Salines, for his second wife, and
-by a will, dated Eresby 1526, desired to be buried and have a monument
-erected to himself and his wife at Spilsby, but this was never done. The
-stone screen with its supporting figures of a hermit, a crowned Saracen,
-and a wild man, erect, set up in 1580, is in memory of his daughter and
-heiress, Katherine Duchess of Suffolk, and her second husband, Richard
-Bertie, her first husband being that Charles Brandon who obtained so huge
-a share of the estates confiscated by Henry VIII. in Lincolnshire. They
-lived at Grimsthorpe, on the west side of the county, which the king had
-given to Katherine’s parents; and thenceforth that became the chief seat
-of the Willoughby family, and the series of monuments is continued in
-Edenham church. But there is one more monument, in what is now called the
-Willoughby chapel at Spilsby. This is to a son of the duchess, Peregrine
-Bertie, tenth Baron Willoughby; he died at Berwick in 1601, and was
-buried at Spilsby as directed in his will; his daughter, Lady Watson,
-died in 1610, and, as she wished to be buried near her father, Sir Lewis
-Watson of Rockingham erected a monument to both father and daughter, the
-latter reclining on her elbow, with the baby, which caused her death, in
-a little square cot at her feet. Peregrine was so named because he was
-born abroad, his parents having fled from the Marian persecutions. His
-wife was the Lady Mary Vere who brought the office of chamberlain into
-the Willoughby family. It was claimed by her son Robert, the eleventh
-baron, who in 1630 was made Earl of Lindsey, and thus the barony became
-merged in the earldom, the fourth earl being subsequently created Duke of
-Ancaster.
-
-Eresby Manor was burnt down in 1769, and only the moat and garden wall
-and, at the end of the avenue, one tall brick-and-stone gate-pillar
-surmounted by a stone vase remain. At the suppression of the college and
-chantries the Grammar School was founded on the site of the college, just
-to the north of the church, Robert Latham being the first master, in
-1550.
-
-At the south-west end of the church are three tablets to three remarkable
-brothers born in Spilsby towards the end of the eighteenth century.
-
-[Sidenote: THE FRANKLINS]
-
-Major James Franklin, who made the first military survey of India, and
-contributed a paper to the Geological Society in 1828, died in 1834. Sir
-Willingham Franklin who, after a distinguished career at Westminster and
-Oxford, died, with wife and daughter, of cholera, 1824, at Madras, where
-he was judge of the Supreme Court. And Sir John Franklin, the famous
-Arctic navigator, who fought at Trafalgar and Copenhagen, and died in
-the Arctic regions on June 11, 1847, before the historic disaster had
-overtaken the crews of the _Erebus_ and _Terror_. His statue stands in
-his native town, and also in Hobart Town, where he lived for a time as
-Governor of Tasmania, and is one of the two statues in London which
-were set up by the nation. On his monument in Westminster Abbey are the
-beautiful lines by his friend and neighbour, and relative by marriage,
-Alfred Tennyson.
-
- Not here! the white North has thy bones; and thou,
- Heroic sailor-soul,
- Art passing on thy happier Voyage now
- Towards no earthly pole.
-
-The other brother, Thomas Adams Franklin, raised the Spilsby and Burgh
-battalion of volunteer infantry in 1801. Major Booth followed his good
-example and raised a company at Wainfleet to resist the invasion by
-Napoleon, and the men of the companies presented each of them with a
-handsome silver cup. Five Franklin sisters married and settled in the
-neighbourhood; and Catharine, the daughter of Sir Willingham, married
-Drummond, the son of the Rev. T. H. Rawnsley, vicar of Spilsby. Thus
-quite a clan was created, insomuch that forty cousins have been counted
-at one Spilsby ball. Drummond succeeded his father as rector of Halton,
-and very appropriately preached the last sermon in the old church at
-Spilsby at the closing service previous to its restoration, speaking from
-the pulpit which his father had occupied from 1813 to 1825. His sermon,
-a very fine one, called “The Last Time,” was from 1 St. John ii. 18, and
-was delivered on Trinity Sunday, 1878.
-
-[Sidenote: LINCOLNSHIRE STORIES]
-
-The time to visit Spilsby is on market day, when, round the butter cross,
-besides eggs, butter and poultry, pottery is displayed “on the stones,”
-stalls are set up where one may buy plants and clothes, and things hard
-to digest like “bull’s eyes,” as well as boots and braces, and near
-“the Statue” at the other end, are farm requisites, sacks, tools, and
-the delightful-smelling tarred twine, as well as all sorts of old iron,
-chains, bolts, hinges, etc., which it seems to be worth someone’s while
-to carry from market to market. It is here that the humours of the petty
-auctioneer are to be heard, and the broad Doric of the Lincolnshire
-peasant. In the pig market below the church hill you may hear a man
-trying to sell some pigs, and to the objection that they are “Stränge
-an’ small,” he replies, “Mebbe just now; but I tell ye them pigs ’ull
-be greät ’uns,” then, in a pause, comes the voice from a little old
-woman who is looking on without the least idea of buying, “It ’ull be
-a straänge long while fust,” and in a burst of laughter the chance of
-selling that lot is snuffed out, or, as they say at the Westmorland dog
-trials, “blown off.”
-
-[Sidenote: MORE STORIES]
-
-There is an unconscious humour about the older Lincolnshire peasants
-which makes it very amusing to be about among them, whether in market,
-field or home. My father never returned from visiting his parish without
-some rich instance of dialect or some humorous speech that he had heard.
-Finding a woman flushed with anger outside her cottage once, and asking
-her what was amiss, he was told “It’s them Hell-cats.” “Who do you call
-by such a name?” “Them Johnsons yonder.” “Why? What have they been
-doing?” “They’ve been calling me.” “That’s very wrong; what have they
-been calling you?” “They’ve bin calling me Skinny.” At another time a
-woman, in the most cutting tones, alluding to her next-door neighbours
-who had an afflicted child, said, “We may-be poor, and Wanty [her
-husband] says we _are_ poor, destitutely poor, and there’s no disgraäce
-in being poor, but _our_ Mary-Ann doant hev fits.” Another time, when
-my sister was recommending a book from the lending library describing a
-voyage round the world, and called “Chasing the Sun,” a little old woman
-looked at the title and said, “Naäy, I weänt ha’ that: I doänt howd wi
-sich doings. Chaäsing the Sun indeed; the A’mighty will soon let ’em know
-if they gets a chevying him.” In the same village I got into conversation
-one autumn day with a small freeholder whose cow had been ill, and asked
-him how he had cured her, he said, “I got haafe a pound o’ sulphur and
-mixed it wi’ warm watter and bottled it into her. Eh! it’s a fine thing
-I reckon is sulphur for owt that’s badly, cow or pig or the missis or
-anythink.” Then, with a serious look he went on, “There’s a straänge
-thing happened wi’ beans, Mr. Rownsley.” “What’s that?” “Why, the beans
-is turned i’ the swad” (= pod). “No!” “Yees they hev.” “How do you mean?”
-“Why they used to be black ends uppermost and now they’r ’tother waay
-on.” “Well, that’s just how they always have been.” “Naay they warn’t. It
-was ’81 they turned.” They _do_ lie with the attachment of each bean to
-the pod, just the way you would not expect, and having noticed this he
-was convinced that up to then they had really lain the way he had always
-supposed they did, so difficult is it to separate fact from imagination.
-The similes used by a Lincolnshire native are often quite Homeric, as
-when an old fellow, who was cutting his crop of beans, the haulm of
-which is notoriously tough, resting on his scythe said, “I’d rayther
-plow wi two dogs nor haulm beans.” Then they have often a quiet, slow
-way of saying things, which is in itself humorous. I remember a labourer
-who was very deaf, but he had been much annoyed by the mother of a man
-whose place he had succeeded to. He was working alongside of his master
-and _apropos_ of nothing but his own thoughts, he said, “Scriptur saäys
-we should forgive one another; but I doänt knoä. If yon owd ’ooman fell
-i’ the dyke I doänt think _I_ should pull her out. I mowt tell some ’un
-on her, but I doänt think I should pull her out howiver.” There is some
-kindliness in that, though in quantity it is rather like the Irishman’s
-news: “I’ve come to tell you that I have nothing to tell you, and there’s
-some news in that.” But the Lincolnshire native is a trifle stern; even
-the mother’s hand is more apt to be punitive than caressing. “I’ll
-leather you well when I gets you home, my lad,” I have heard a mother say
-to a very small boy, and I have heard tell of a mother who, when informed
-that her little girl had fallen down the well, angrily exclaimed, “Drat
-the children, they’re allus i’ mischief; and now she’s bin and drownded
-hersen I suppose.”
-
-In Westmorland it is the husband who _will_ take too much at market
-on whom the vials of the wrath of the missis are outpoured, and they
-generally know how to “sarve” him. One good lady, on being asked
-“How_ever_ did you get him ower t’wall, Betty?” replied “I didna get him
-ower at a’—I just threshed him through th’ hog-hole” (the hole in the
-wall for the sheep, or hoggetts, to pass through).
-
-Speaking of tippling, there is no more delightful story than this from
-Westmorland, of a mouse which had fallen into a beer vat and was swimming
-round in despair, when a cat looked over, and the mouse cried out, “If
-ye’ll git me oot o’ this ye may hev me.” The cat let down her tail and
-the mouse climbed up, and shaking herself on the edge of the vat, jumped
-off and went down her hole, and on being reproached by the cat as not
-being a mouse of her word, answered, “Eh! but ivry body knaws folks will
-say owt when they’re i’ drink.”
-
-[Sidenote: OLD BOLINGBROKE]
-
-There are several pretty little bits of country near Spilsby, but the
-most interesting of the by-ways leads off from the Horncastle road
-at Mavis Enderby, and, going down a steep hill, brings us to _Old
-Bolingbroke_, a picturesque village with a labyrinth of lanes circling
-about the mounded ruins of the castle, where, in 1366, Henry IV. “of
-Bolingbroke” was born. It was built in 1140 by William de Romara, first
-Earl of Lincoln, and was, till 1643, when Winceby battle took place, a
-moated square of embattled walls, with a round tower at each corner. Here
-Chaucer used to visit John of Gaunt and the Duchess Blanche of Lancaster,
-on whose death, in 1369, he wrote his “Book of the Duchess.” The castle,
-after the Civil Wars, sank into decay, and the gate-house, the last of
-the masonry, fell in 1815. The road onwards comes out opposite Hagnaby
-Priory. William de Romara, who three years later founded Revesby Abbey,
-had for his wife the second Lady Lucia, the heiress of the Saxon
-Thorolds, an honoured name among Lincolnshire families. She brought him,
-among other possessions, the manor of Bolingbroke. Her second husband was
-the Norman noble, Ranulph, afterwards earl of Chester. The Thorolds were
-descended from Turold, brother of the Lady Godiva. There apparently were
-two _Lady Lucias_, whose histories are rather mixed up by the ancient
-chroniclers. The earlier of the two was, it seems, the sister of the
-Saxon nobles, Edwin and Morcar, and of King Harold’s queen Ealdgyth. Her
-hand was bestowed by the conqueror upon his nephew, Ivo de Taillebois (=
-Underwood), who became, according to Ingulphus and others, a monster of
-cruelty, and died in 1114.
-
-[Sidenote: HARRINGTON]
-
-There are several by-ways to the north-west of Spilsby, which all
-converge on _Harrington_. Here the church contains several monuments of
-interest. At the east end of the nave, a knight in chain armour with
-crossed legs and shield is said to be Sir John Harrington (_circa_
-1300); and against the chancel wall, but formerly on the pavement, is
-the brass of Margaret Copledike (1480). Her husband’s effigy is missing.
-Under the tower window is the monument to Sir John Copledike (1557),
-and in the chancel south wall a canopied tomb with a brass of Sir John
-Copledike (1585). Opposite is a Jacobean monument, which testifies to
-the illiteracy of the age with regard to spelling, to Francis Kopaldyk,
-his wife and two children (1599). In the time of Henry III. it was spelt
-Cuppeldick. A Perpendicular font with the Copledike arms stands against
-the tower arch.
-
-Close to the church is Harrington Hall, with its fine old brick front
-and projecting porch. Hanging over the doorway is a large dial with
-the Amcotts arms, a curiously shaped indicator, and the date 1681. On
-either side of the porch which runs up the whole height of the house, are
-twelve windows, under deep, projecting, corbelled eaves. Inside is an old
-oak-panelled room, most richly carved. The house is the property of the
-Ingilby family, and at present the residence of E. P. Rawnsley, Esq., who
-has been for many years Master of the Southwold Hunt.
-
-Somersby is but two miles off, and we may without hesitation turn our
-thoughts to the terraced garden of this delightful old hall when we read
-in Tennyson’s “Maud”:—
-
- “Birds in the high Hall-garden
- When twilight was falling,
- Maud, Maud, Maud, Maud,
- They were crying and calling.”
-
-The poet loved to tell how, when he was reading this and paused to ask,
-“Do you know what birds those were?” a lady, clasping her hands, said,
-“Oh, Mr. Tennyson, was it the nightingale?” though in reading it he had
-carefully given the harsh caw of the rooks.
-
-[Sidenote: BAG ENDERBY]
-
-To get from here to _Somersby_ you pass through _Bag Enderby_, where
-there is a fine church, now in a very ruinous state. The very interesting
-old font, which stands on two broken Enderby tombstones, has some unusual
-devices carved on it, such as David with a viol, and the Virgin with the
-dead Christ. One, the most remarkable of all, is a running hart turning
-back its head to lick off with its long tongue some leaves from the tree
-of life growing from its back. This symbolism is purely Scandinavian; and
-that it could be used on a Christian font shows how thoroughly the two
-peoples and their two religions were commingling.[25] The large number
-of villages about here ending in “by”—Danish for hamlet—is sufficient
-evidence of the number of settlers from over the North Sea who had taken
-up their abode in this part of the county.
-
-[Illustration: _Somersby Church._]
-
-The green-sand, which underlies the chalk, and of which almost all the
-churches are built, crops out by the roadside in fine masses both here
-and at Somersby and Salmonby, as it does too at Raithby, Halton, Keal,
-all in the immediate neighbourhood of the chalk wolds. Inside the church,
-slabs on the floor of the chancel retain their brass inscriptions to
-Thomas and Agnes Enderby (1390), and Albinus de Enderby, builder of the
-tower (1407); and on the wall is a monument to John and Andrew Gedney
-(1533 and 1591). The latter represented in armour and with his wife and
-family of two sons and two daughters. The wife, whose name is spelt first
-Dorithe, then Dorathe, “died the 7th of June 1591 and Andrew ____” the
-blank being left unfilled.
-
-The knives and scourges of Crowland Abbey (_see_ Chap. XLI.) are seen
-in the old glass. The custom of giving little knives to all comers at
-Crowland on St. Bartholomew’s Day was abolished by Abbot John de Wisbeche
-in the reign of Edward IV. In the tower is a fine peal of disused bells.
-
-[Sidenote: SOMERSBY CROSS]
-
-Dr. Tennyson held this living with _Somersby_. This is a smaller
-building, but it retains in the churchyard a remarkable and perfect
-cross, a tall, slender shaft with pedimented tabernacle, under which are
-figures, as on the gable cross at Addlethorpe and on the head of the
-broken churchyard cross at Winthorpe—the Crucifixion is on one side and
-the Virgin and Child on the other.
-
-From Somersby there are two roads to Horncastle—each passes over the
-brook immortalised in “In Memoriam” and in the lovely little lyric, “Flow
-down cold rivulet to the sea,” and branching to the left, one passes
-through Salmonby, where Bishop William of Waynflete is said to have been
-rector. This is doubtful, but probably he was presented to the vicarage
-of Skendleby by the Prior of Bardney in 1430. The other and prettier
-road goes by _Ashby Puerorum_ and _Greetham_, and both run out into the
-Spilsby and Horncastle road near _High Toynton_. Ashby Puerorum (or
-Boys’ Ashby) gets its name from an estate here bequeathed to support the
-Lincoln Minster choir boys. At this place, and again close by Somersby,
-the hollows in the Wold which this road passes through are among the
-prettiest bits of Lincolnshire.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI
-
-SOMERSBY AND THE TENNYSONS
-
- Tennyson’s Poetry descriptive of his home—Bronze Bust of the
- Poet—Dedication Festival—A Long-lived Family—Dialect poems.
-
-
-This little quiet village, tucked away in a fold of the hills, with
-the eastern ridge of the Wolds at its back and the broad meadow valley
-stretching away in front of it and disappearing eastwards in the
-direction of the sea, had no history till now. It was only in 1808 that
-Dr. George Clayton Tennyson came to Somersby as rector of Somersby and
-Bag Enderby, incumbent of Beniworth and Vicar of Great Grimsby. He came
-as a disappointed man, for his father, not approving, it is said, of his
-marriage with Miss ffytche of Louth (a reason most unreasonable if it
-was so) had disinherited him in favour of his younger brother Charles,
-who became accordingly Charles Tennyson d’Eyncourt of Bayons Manor near
-Tealby.
-
-Dr. Tennyson’s eldest son George was born in the parsonage at Tealby,
-in 1806, but died an infant. Frederick was born at Louth in 1807, and
-the other ten children at Somersby. Of these, the first two were Charles
-(1808) and Alfred (1809).
-
-They were a family of poets; their father wrote good verse, and their
-grandmother, once Mary Turner of Caister, always claimed that Alfred got
-all his poetry through her. Her husband George was a member of Parliament
-and lived in the _old_ house at Bayons Manor.
-
-[Sidenote: THE TENNYSONS]
-
-From the fourteenth century the Tennysons, like their neighbours the
-Rawnsleys, had lived in Yorkshire; but Dr. Tennyson’s great-grandfather,
-Ralph, had come south of the Humber about 1700 to Barton and Wrawby
-near Brigg, and each succeeding generation moved south again. Thus,
-Michael, who married Elizabeth Clayton, lived at Lincoln, and was the
-father of George, the first Tennyson occupant of Bayons Manor. He had
-four children: George Clayton, the poet’s father; Charles, who took the
-name of Tennyson d’Eyncourt; Elizabeth, the “Aunt Russell” that the poet
-and his brothers and sisters were so fond of; and Mary, the wife of John
-Bourne of Dalby, of whom, though she lived so near to them, the Somersby
-children were content to see very little, for she was a rigid Calvinist,
-and once said to her nephew, “Alfred, when I look at you I think of the
-words of Holy Scripture, ‘Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting
-fire.’” At Somersby, then, the poet and all the children after Frederick
-were born in this order: Charles, Alfred, Mary, Emilia, Edward, Arthur,
-Septimus, Matilda, Cecilia, Horatio. They were a singularly fine family,
-tall and handsome, taking after their father in stature (he was six feet
-two inches) and after their mother (a small and gentle person, whose
-good looks had secured her no less than twenty-five offers of marriage)
-in their dark eyes and Spanish colouring. She was idolised by her eight
-tall sons and her three handsome daughters, of whom Mary, who became Mrs.
-Ker, was a wonderfully beautiful woman. Frederick, who outlived all his
-brothers, dying at the age of ninety-one after publishing a volume of
-poems in his ninetieth year, alone of the family had fair hair and blue
-eyes. Matilda is alive still at the age of ninety-eight.
-
-[Sidenote: DR. KEATE AND WELLINGTON]
-
-The three elder sons all went to the Grammar School at Louth in 1813,
-when Alfred was but seven. Frederick went thence to Eton in 1817, and to
-St. John’s, Cambridge, in 1826; Charles and Alfred stayed at Louth till
-1820, and they left it with pleasure for home teaching. Few could have
-been better qualified to teach than the Doctor. He had a good library
-and he was a classical scholar; could read Hebrew and was not without
-a knowledge of mathematics, natural science and modern languages; also
-he was a rigid disciplinarian, and, like all good schoolmasters, was
-held in considerable awe by his pupils. I should like to have heard him
-had anyone in his day outlined to him as the method of the future the
-Montessori system. This power of terrifying a whole class and causing
-each one of a set of ordinarily plucky English lads to feel for the space
-of half an hour that his heart was either in his mouth or in his shoes,
-would be incredible, were it not that there are so many English gentlemen
-now living who have experience of it. How well I remember the terrible,
-if irrational, state of funk which the whole of any class below the
-upper sixth was always in, when going up for their weekly lesson to that
-really most genial of men, Edward Thring, and it was the same elsewhere,
-and given the same sort of circumstances, the grown-up man could feel as
-frightened as the boy; witness this delightful story of the Iron Duke.
-No one could call him a coward, but on his return from Waterloo he went
-down on the fourth of June to Eton, and first told some one in his club
-that he meant to confess to Keate that he was the boy who had painted the
-Founder’s Statue or some such iniquity, the perpetrator of which Keate
-had been unable to discover. His friend extracted a promise that after
-his interview he would come and report at the club. He came, and being
-questioned by a group of deeply interested old Etonians, he said, “Well,
-it was all different, not at all like what I expected. I seized the
-opportunity when Keate came to speak with me by the window and said, “You
-remember the Founder’s Statue being defaced, sir?” “Certainly. Do you
-know anything about it?” he said sharply. “_No, sir._” “You don’t mean
-to say you said that?” “Certainly I do, and what is more, every one of
-you would, in the circumstances, have said just the same,” and then and
-there they all admitted it; so difficult is it to shake off the feelings
-of earlier days. And yet he was not naturally terrible, and I who write
-this, never having been under him, have, as a small boy, spoken to Keate
-without a shadow of fear.
-
-This reminds me of a remark of Gladstone’s, who was giving us
-some delightful reminiscences of his days at Eton, and, speaking
-enthusiastically of Alfred Tennyson’s friend, Arthur Hallam, when on my
-saying that I had spoken with Keate, he turned half round in his chair
-and said, “Well, if you say you have seen Keate I must believe you, but
-I should not have thought it possible.” He had forgotten for the moment
-that Keate, after retiring from Eton, lived thirteen years at Hartley
-Westpall (near Strathfieldsaye), where my father was curate.
-
-To return to Somersby. We read in the memoir of the poet an amusing
-account, by Arthur Tennyson, of how the Doctor’s approach when they were
-skylarking would make the boys scatter.
-
-[Sidenote: EARLY VOLUMES]
-
-In 1828 Charles and Alfred went up to Trinity, Cambridge. Frederick was
-already a University prize-winner, having got the gold medal for the
-Greek ode, and Charles subsequently got the Bell Scholarship, and Alfred
-the English Verse prize. The boys’ first poetical venture was the volume
-“Poems by Two Brothers,” published in 1826 by Jackson of Louth, who
-gave them £20, more than half to be taken out in books. To this volume
-Frederick contributed four pieces, the rest were by Charles and Alfred.
-The latter used very properly to speak with impatience of it in later
-years as his “early rot.” And it is quite remarkable how comparatively
-superior is the work done by Alfred as a boy of fourteen, and how little
-one can trace in the two brothers’ volume of that lyrical ability which
-in 1830 produced _Mariana_ and _The Arabian Nights_, _The Merman_, _The
-Dying Swan_ and the _Ode to Memory_. The majority of these poems were
-written at Cambridge, but there is much reference to Somersby in at least
-two of them, and the song, “A Spirit haunts the year’s last hours,” was,
-we know, written in the garden there with its border of hollyhocks and
-tiger-lilies. In the _Ode to Memory_ he invokes her to arise and come,
-not from vineyards, waterfalls, or purple cliffs, but to
-
- “Come from the Woods that belt the grey hill side,
- The seven elms, the poplars four
- That stand beside my father’s door,
- And chiefly from the brook that loves
- To purl o’er matted cress and ribbèd sand.
- ...
- O! hither lead thy feet!
- Pour round mine ears the livelong bleat
- Of the thick fleecèd sheep from wattled folds,
- Upon the ridgèd wolds.”
-
-This is reminiscent of Somersby.
-
-Then again, Memory calls up the pictures of “the sand-built ridge of
-heaped hills that mound the sea” at Mablethorpe, and the view over “the
-waste enormous marsh.”
-
-In 1831 Dr. Tennyson died, aged fifty-two, and his sons left Cambridge.
-His widow lived on for thirty-four years, dying at the age of
-eighty-four, in 1865. They stayed on in the Somersby home till 1837,
-and a new volume came out in 1832, with a whole array of poems of rare
-merit, showing how much the poet’s mind had matured in that last year
-at Cambridge. This volume, like the Louth volume, is dated for the year
-after that in which it was really published. It carried Alfred to the
-front rank at once, for in it was _The Lady of Shalott_, _The Palace of
-Art_, _The Miller’s Daughter_, _Œnone_, _The May Queen_, _New Year’s
-Eve_, _The Lotus Eaters_, _A Dream of Fair Women_, and the _Lines to
-James Spedding_, on the death of his brother Edward. Only think of all
-these wonderful poems in a thin book of 162 pages written before he was
-twenty-three.
-
-[Sidenote: THE LINCOLNSHIRE COAST]
-
-To Mablethorpe and Skegness on the Lincolnshire coast we find frequent
-allusions in many poems, _e.g._, he speaks in _The Last Tournament_ of
-“the wide-winged sunset of the misty marsh,” and when the Red Knight in
-drunken passion, trying to strike the King overbalances himself, he falls—
-
- “As the crest of some slow arching wave,
- Heard in dead night along that table shore,
- Drops flat, and after, the great waters break
- Whitening for half-a-league, and thin themselves,
- Far over sands marbled with moon and cloud,
- From less and less to nothing.”
-
-A most accurate picture of that flat Lincolnshire coast with its
-“league-long rollers,” and hard, wet sands shining in the moonlight. In
-another place he speaks of “The long low dune and lazy-plunging sea.”
-
-In his volume of 1832 there are many pictures drawn from this familiar
-coast, _e.g._, in _The Lotus Eaters_, _The Palace of Art_, _The Dream of
-Fair Women_; and in his 1842 volumes he speaks of
-
-“Locksley Hall that in the distance overlooks the sandy flats And the
-hollow ocean ridges roaring into cataracts.”
-
-A relative of mine was once reading this poem to the family of one
-of those Marsh farmers who had known “Mr. Alfred” when a youth, and
-who lived in the remotest part of that coast near the sandy dunes and
-far-spread flats between Skegness and “Gibraltar Point”; but she had not
-got far when at the line—
-
- “Here about the beach I wandered, nourishing a youth sublime,
- With the fairy tales of science——”
-
-she was stopped by the farmer’s wife. “Don’t you believe him, Miss,
-there’s nothing hereabouts to nourish onybody, ’cepting it be an owd
-rabbit, and it ain’t oftens you can get howd of them.”
-
-[Sidenote: IN MEMORIAM]
-
-_In Memoriam_ has many cantos descriptive of Somersby, both of the happy
-summer evenings on the lawn, when Mary
-
- “brought the harp and flung
- A ballad to the bright’ning moon,”
-
-or of the walks about home with Arthur Hallam—
-
- by “Gray old grange or lonely fold,
- Or low morass and whispering reed,
- Or simple stile from mead to mead,
- Or sheepwalk up the windy wold.”
-
-Or the winter nights when
-
- “The Christmas bells from hill to hill
- Answer each other in the mist.”
-
-And nothing could be more full of tender feeling than this farewell to
-the old home in Canto CI., beginning—
-
- “Unwatched, the garden bough shall sway,
- The tender blossom flutter down,
- Unloved, that beech will gather brown,
- This maple burn itself away.”
-
-And in Canto CII.—
-
- “We leave the well-beloved place
- Where first we gazed upon the sky;
- The roofs that heard our earliest cry
- Will shelter one of stranger race.
-
- We go, but ere we go from home
- As down the garden walks I move,
- Two spirits of a diverse love
- Contend for loving masterdom.
-
- One whispers ‘here thy boyhood sung
- Long since its matin song, and heard
- The low love-language of the bird
- In native hazels tassel-hung.’
-
- The other answers, ‘yea, but here
- Thy feet have strayed in after hours
- With thy lost friend among the bowers,
- And this hath made them trebly dear.’
-
- These two have striven half the day,
- And each prefers his separate claim,
- Poor rivals in a loving game,
- That will not yield each other way.
-
- I turn to go: my feet are set
- To leave the pleasant fields and farms;
- They mix in one another’s arms
- To one pure image of regret.”
-
-[Sidenote: ARTHUR HALLAM]
-
-Other sections speak of Arthur Hallam, and as each Christmas comes round,
-or each birthday of his friend, the poet’s feelings are voiced in such a
-way that, if we read it with care, the poem gives us a good deal of the
-author’s own life history.
-
-Arthur Hallam died on September 15, 1833, at Vienna, and his remains
-were brought home at the end of the year and interred at Clevedon in
-Somersetshire on January 4, 1834.
-
- “The Danube to the Severn gave
- The darken’d heart that beat no more;
- They laid him by the pleasant shore
- And in the hearing of the wave.”
-
-Immediately after his death Tennyson had turned to work as the one solace
-in his overwhelming grief, although, but for those dependent on his aid,
-such as his sister Emily who was betrothed to Hallam, he said that he
-himself would have gladly died. He wrote the fine classic poem _Ulysses_,
-in which he voiced the need he felt of going forward and braving the
-struggle of life, and then, before it had reached England, he wrote the
-first section of _In Memoriam_ No. 9 addressed to the ship with its sad
-burden.
-
- “Fair ship that from the Italian shore
- Sailest the placid ocean plains
- With my lost Arthur’s loved remains,
- Spread thy full wings and waft him o’er.”
-
-At some later time, possibly many years later, for _In Memoriam_ was
-sixteen years in the making, he added section 10—“I hear the noise about
-thy keel”—which carries on the subject, and also alludes to Somersby
-church
-
- “where the kneeling hamlet drains
- The chalice of the grapes of God.”
-
-For the time he wrote no more sections, but busied himself with _The
-Two Voices_, only towards the end of 1834 he wrote section 30, which
-he afterwards prefaced by sections 28 and 29, all describing the sad
-first Christmas of 1833, the first since Arthur’s death. In 28 he hears
-the bells of four village steeples near Somersby rising and sinking on
-the wind. He had more than once wished that he might never hear the
-Christmas bells again, but the sound of church bells had always touched
-him from boyhood, just as the words “far, far away” which always set him
-dreaming. In section 29 he bids his sisters, after decorating the church,
-make one more wreath for old sake’s sake, to hang within the house.
-
-Then section 30 tells how they wove it.
-
- “With trembling fingers did we weave
- The holly round the Christmas hearth;”
-
-After this we hear how they made a “vain pretence”
-
- “Of gladness with an awful sense
- Of one mute Shadow watching all.”
-
-They attempt the usual Christmas games, but they have no heart for them,
-and all pause and listen to the wind in the tree-tops and the rain
-beating on the window panes. Afterwards they sit in a circle and think of
-Arthur, they try to sing, but the carols only bring tears to their eyes,
-for only last year he, too, was singing with them. After this Alfred sits
-alone and watches for the dawn which rises, bringing light and hope.
-
-[Sidenote: LEAVING SOMERSBY]
-
-Section 104 brings us to another Christmas. Four years have elapsed
-since that last described. The Tennysons have left Somersby, with what
-regret they did so is beautifully told in the four sections immediately
-preceding this. And now, listening as of old for the Christmas bells, he
-hears not “four voices of four hamlets round,” but only
-
- “A single peal of bells below,
- That wakens at this hour of rest
- A single murmur in the breast,
- That these are not the bells I know.”
-
-The following section continues the subject. They are living at High
-Beech in Essex “within the stranger’s land.” He thinks of the old home
-and garden and his father’s grave. The flowers will bloom as usual, but
-there, too, are strangers,
-
- “And year by year our memory fades
- From all the circle of the hills.”
-
-The change of place
-
- “Has broke the bond of dying use.”
-
-They put up no Christmas evergreens, they attempt no games and no
-charades. His sister Mary does not touch the harp and they indulge in no
-dancing, though it was a pastime of which they were extremely fond. But
-as of old Alfred looks out into the night and sees the stars rise, “The
-rising worlds by yonder wood,” and receives comfort. All this points to
-the sad year 1837, when they left the well-beloved place of his birth.
-And now in section 106 we have a New Year’s hymn of a very different
-character. It has a jubilant sound, and was certainly written some years
-after its predecessors. In 1837 he was in no mood to say “Ring happy
-bells across the snow.” But there is no allusion in this splendid hymn
-to Arthur Hallam at all, and in the following section they keep Arthur’s
-birthday, not any more in sadness, but
-
- “We keep the day, with festal cheer,
- With books and music, surely we
- Will drink to him, whate’er he be
- And sing the songs he loved to hear.”
-
-But to return to Somersby.
-
-[Illustration: _Tennyson’s Home, Somersby._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE OLD HOME]
-
-The quaint house with its narrow passages and many tiny rooms, the
-brothers’ own particular little western attic with its small window
-from which they could see the ‘golden globes’ in the dewy grass which
-had “dropped in the silent autumn night,” the dining-room and its tall
-gothic windows with carved heads and graceful gables, the low grey tower
-patched with brick, just across the road, (for the “noble tall towered
-churches” spoken of in _The Memoir_ are not in this part of the county,)
-and the pre-Reformation (not “Norman”) cross near the porch, all these
-may still be seen much as they were one hundred years ago.
-
-[Sidenote: THE CHURCH RE-OPENED]
-
-True, the church has been lately put in good repair, and a fine bronze
-bust of the poet placed in the chancel. This was unveiled, and the
-church re-opened on Sunday, April 6, 1911, being the fulfilment of the
-plan projected on the occasion of the centenary celebration two years
-previously. On that Sunday the little church was more than filled with
-neighbours and relatives who listened to sermons from the Bishop of
-Lincoln and the Rev. Canon Rawnsley. Next day was Bank Holiday, and
-in a field near the rectory hundreds of Lincolnshire folk of every
-kind—farmers, tradespeople, gentry, holiday makers—assembled to do honour
-to their own Lincolnshire poet, and for a couple of hours listened
-intently to speeches about him and laughed with a will at the humours of
-the “Northern Farmer” read in their own native dialect, just as the poet
-intended; whilst the relatives of the poet and those who were familiar
-with his works looked with glad interest upon a scene of rural beauty
-which brought to the mind the descriptions in _The Lady of Shalott_,
-seeing on the slopes before them the promise of crops soon to “clothe
-the wold and meet the sky,” while far away to the left stretched the
-valley which pointed to Horncastle, the home of the poet’s bride, and
-on the right was the churchyard where the stern “owd Doctor” rests, and
-the church where for five and twenty years he ministered. The whole
-was a remarkable assemblage and a remarkable tribute, and the setting
-was a picture of quiet English rural life, one which the poet himself
-must often have actually looked out upon, and such as he has himself
-beautifully described in _The Palace of Art_:—
-
- “And one an English home—gray twilight pour’d
- On dewy pastures, dewy trees,
- Softer than sleep—all things in order stored,
- A haunt of ancient Peace.”
-
-[Sidenote: A LONG-LIVED FAMILY]
-
-The spirit of the poet seemed still to be a haunting presence in the
-place, and as then, so now and for all time his works speak to us. But
-three-quarters of a century have passed since a Tennyson has had his
-home in Somersby. They left in 1837, and though Mary went back at times
-to see the “beloved place,” Alfred never set eyes on it again. Charles
-married in that year Louisa Sellwood, whose mother was a sister of Sir
-John Franklin, and thirteen years later Alfred married her sister Emily.
-They left Somersby; but Lincolnshire still kept possession of Charles,
-who took the name of Turner in addition to his own, and ministered
-happily at Grasby near Caistor, being both vicar and patron of the
-living; and he and his wife both died there in the spring of 1879, at the
-comparatively early age, for a Tennyson, of seventy-one, for the family
-have been a remarkably long-lived one.
-
- The Mother died in 1865, aged 84
- Charles ” ” 1879 ” 71
- Mary ” ” 1884 ” 74
- Emilia ” ” 1889 ” 78
- Alfred died on October 6, 1892 ” 83
- Emily Lady Tennyson died in 1896 ” 83
- Frederick ” ” 1898 ” 91
- Arthur died in June, 1899 ” 85
- Horatio died in October, 1899 ” 80
- Cecilia died in 1909 ” 92
-
-Matilda, who was born before Cecilia and Horatio, still survives. I
-went to see her in the summer of 1913. I found her well and full of
-early memories. She was a girl in the schoolroom when she first saw
-Arthur Hallam, an event of which she had a vivid recollection. I said,
-“I suppose you get out every fine day for a drive.” “Oh,” she said, “I
-go out for a walk every day and take the dog.” I thought that rather
-wonderful at her age. “Yes, I am ninety-seven,” she said, “and I mean
-to live to be 105.” I told her how Queen Victoria, who was always
-looking forward to reunion with the dear departed—but ever a ceaseless
-worker—used to say, “my dear, you should always act as if you were going
-to live for ever.”
-
-[Sidenote: THE MASTER’S OPINION]
-
-Alfred, who succeeded Wordsworth as Poet Laureate in 1850, was raised to
-the Upper House in 1884. He is buried in Westminster Abbey side by side
-with his great contemporary, Robert Browning, and on his grave was laid
-a wreath of bay-leaves from a tree derived from the bay which flourishes
-over Virgil’s tomb near Naples, and on the wreath were Tennyson’s
-own magnificent lines, written at the request of the Mantuans for the
-nineteenth centenary of their poet’s death (1881).
-
- “I salute thee, Mantovano,
- I that loved thee since my day began,
- Wielder of the stateliest measure
- Ever moulded by the lips of man.”
-
-[Sidenote: THE POET’S RANGE OF KNOWLEDGE]
-
-The recent appearance (October, 1913) of a notable volume of Tennyson’s
-poems, introduced by a Memoir and concluding with the poet’s own notes,
-may well serve as the text for some remarks on his poems generally. The
-volume bound in green cloth is priced at 10_s._ 6_d._ The Memoir is
-somewhat abbreviated from the two interesting volumes published by his
-son in 1897, which appeared again as the first four volumes of Messrs.
-Macmillan’s fine twelve-volume edition of 1898. There are, however, a
-few additions, notably a letter from the Master of Trinity, Cambridge,
-telling how he once, years ago, asked Dr. Thompson, the Master, whether
-he could say, not from later evidence, but from his recollection of
-what he thought at the time, which of the two friends had the greater
-intellect, Hallam or Tennyson. “Oh, Tennyson,” he said at once, with
-strong emphasis, as if the matter was not open to doubt. This is very
-high praise indeed, for Gladstone said that Hallam was far ahead of
-anyone at Eton in his day, and Monckton Milnes thought him the only man
-at Cambridge to whom he “bowed in conscious inferiority in all things.”
-The Notes first appeared in the very pleasant “Annotated Edition”
-edited also by Hallam Lord Tennyson within the last five years. The
-present generation can never know the delight of getting each of those
-little green volumes which came out between ’32 and ’55, and sequels to
-which kept following till ’92. But for general purposes it is far more
-convenient to have a one-volume edition, such as we have had for some
-time now. This new edition, however, with its Memoir, gives us what,
-as the years go by, is more and more valuable, enabling us to read
-the poet in his verses and to know what manner of man he was, and how
-his environment affected him at the different stages of his life. The
-Notes add an interest, and though it is seldom that in any but the _In
-Memoriam_ Cantos any explanation is needed to poems that are so clear
-and so easily intelligible, one gains information and finds oneself here
-and there let into the author’s secrets, which is always pleasant. The
-book runs to over a thousand pages, and is so beautifully bound that it
-lies open at any page you choose. There is an interesting appendix to the
-Notes, giving the music to “The Silent Voices,” composed by Lady Tennyson
-and arranged for four voices by Dr. Bridge for Lord Tennyson’s funeral
-at the Abbey, October 12, 1892. Also a previously unpublished poem of
-his later years, entitled “Reticence.” She is called the half-sister of
-Silence, and is thus beautifully described:—
-
- “Not like Silence shall she stand,
- Finger-lipt, but with right hand
- Moving toward her lip, and there
- Hovering, thoughtful, poised in air.”
-
-Then comes a facsimile of the poet’s MS. of “Crossing the Bar,” finally,
-besides the usual index of first lines, the book ends with an index to
-_In Memoriam_, and, what we have always wanted, an index to the songs.
-
-Undoubtedly in the future this new edition will be the Tennyson for the
-library shelf, and a very complete and compact volume it is. Personally,
-I like the little old green volumes, but if I were now recommending an
-edition not in one volume, I would say, “Have the Eversley or Annotated
-Edition in nine volumes, which exactly reproduces the page and type of
-those old original volumes with the added advantage of the Notes.” It
-is hardly to be expected that the spell with which Tennyson bound all
-English-speaking people for three generations should not in a measure be
-relaxed, but though we have a fuller chorus of singers than ever before,
-and an unusually appreciative public, the attempt so constantly made to
-decry Tennyson has no effect on those who have for years found in him a
-charm which no poet has surpassed, and, indeed, it will be long before a
-poet arises who has, as Sir Norman Lockyer observes, “such a wide range
-of knowledge and so unceasing an interest in the causes of things and the
-working out of Nature’s laws, combined with such accuracy of observation
-and exquisite felicity of language.” Let me give one more criticism, and
-this time by a noted scholar, Mr. A. Sidgwick, who speaks of his “inborn
-instinct for the subtle power of language and for musical sound; that
-feeling for beauty in phrase and thought, and that perfection of form
-which, taken all together, we call poetry.” That perfection was the
-result of labour as well as of instinct. He had an ear which never played
-him false, hence he was a master of melody and metre, and he was never
-in a hurry to publish until he had got each line and each word right. “I
-think it wisest,” he wrote to one of his American admirers, “for a man
-to do his work in the world as quietly and as well as he can, without
-much heeding the praise or dispraise.” He was a lover of the classics,
-and in addressing Virgil on the nineteenth centenary of his death, as
-quoted above, he himself alludes to this. Without being what we call a
-great scholar, in his classic poems he is hard to beat, while in his
-translations of Homer he certainly has no equal. Then in his experiments
-in classic metres, whether in the “Metre of Catullus” or in the Alcaics
-in praise of Milton, his perfect accuracy is best understood if we turn
-to the similar experiments by living poets, who never go far without a
-blunder, at least none that I have ever read do.
-
-[Sidenote: THE DIALECT POEMS]
-
-To the Lincolnshire folk, his dialect poems, written in the dialect
-which was current in his youth at Spilsby and in the country about it
-(and still used there, I am glad to say, though not so universally or
-so markedly as of yore), give genuine pleasure, and are full of humour
-and of character, and it is a tribute to his accurate ear and memory
-that, after an absence of some twenty-seven years, he should have got
-the Lincolnshire so correct. He did it all right, but for fear he might
-have forgotten and got wrong, he asked a friend to look at it and
-criticise; unfortunately the friend lived in the north of the county and
-knew not the dialect of “Spilsbyshire,” so he altered it all to that
-which was spoken about Brigg, which is more like Yorkshire, and it had
-to be put back again. But some of the northern dialect has stuck, and
-in “The Northern Farmer Old Style” the ‘o’ is seen in ‘moind,’ ‘doy,’
-‘almoighty,’ etc., where the Spilsby sound would be better rendered by
-using an ‘a.’ This ‘o’ is never found in any of his subsequent dialect
-poems, and in a note to the text in the “Northern Cobbler” the poet
-points out that the proper sound is given by ‘ai.’
-
-[Sidenote: FAMILIAR QUOTATIONS]
-
-One sign of the remarkable way in which our Lincolnshire poet has made
-himself the poet of the English-speaking race is the extraordinary number
-of familiar quotations which he has given us. For the last fifty years in
-book and newspaper, in speech and sermon, some line or some phrase of his
-has constantly occurred which the user felt certain that his hearer or
-readers would recognise, until our literature has become tessellated with
-Tennysonian expressions, and they have always given that satisfaction
-which results from feeling that in using his words we have said the thing
-we wished to say in a form which could not be improved upon. In this
-respect of “daily popularity and application,” I think Shakespeare alone
-excels him, though Pope and Wordsworth may run him close.
-
-[Illustration: _Little Steeping._]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII
-
-ROADS FROM SPILSBY
-
- Road to Louth—Partney—Dr. Johnson—His letter on Death of
- Peregrine Langton—Dalby—Langton and Saucethorpe—View from Keal
- Hill with Boston Stump—“Stickfoot Stickknee and Stickneck”—The
- Hundleby Miracle—Raithby—Mavis Enderby—Lusby—Hameringham—The
- Hourglass Stand—Winceby—Horncastle—The Horse Fair—The
- Sleaford Road—Hagnaby—East Kirkby—Miningsby—Revesby
- Abbey—Moorby—Wood Enderby—Haltham—Tumby
- Wood—Coningsby—Tattershall—Billinghay—Haverholme Priory.
-
-
-The four roads from Spilsby go north to Louth, and south to Boston, each
-sixteen miles; east to Wainfleet, eight miles; and west to Horncastle,
-ten miles. The Wainfleet one we have already described and two-thirds
-of that from Louth. The remaining third, starting from Spilsby, only
-goes through two villages—Partney and Dalby. _Partney_ lies low in the
-valley of Tennyson’s “Cold rivulet,” and those who have driven across
-the flat meadows between the village and the mill after sundown know how
-piercingly cold it always seems.
-
-The place has a very long history. Bede, who died in 725, writing twelve
-hundred years ago and speaking of the Christianising of Northumbria by
-Paulinus, who was consecrated Bishop of York in 625, and his visit to
-the province of Lindissi, _i.e._, “the parts of Lindsey” and Lincoln in
-particular, says that the Abbot of Peartaney (= Partney, near Spilsby,
-which was a cell of Bardney) spoke to him once of a man called Deda,
-who was afterwards, in 730, Abbot of Bardney and a very truthful man,
-“presbyter veracissimus,” and said that Deda told him that he had talked
-with an aged man who had been baptised by Bishop Paulinus in the presence
-of King Ædwin, in the middle of the day, and with him a multitude of
-people, in the River Treenta, near a city called in the language of the
-Angles, Tiovulfingaceaster; this was in 627. Many have taken the place to
-be Torksey, though that in the Anglo-Saxon chronicle is Turcesig. Green
-suggested it was at the ford of Farndon beyond Newark, but it was far
-more likely to be at Littleborough Ferry, two miles north of Torksey,
-where the Roman road (“Till bridge Lane”) from Lincoln crossed the river.
-But certainly Torksey is the nearest point of the river to Lincoln, and
-the Fossdyke went to it, as well as a road, so that communication was
-easy and inexpensive, and on the whole I should be inclined to say that
-Torksey was the place of baptism.
-
-[Sidenote: PARTNEY]
-
-But to return to Partney. In addition to its being a ‘cell’ of Bardney
-Abbey, we know there was a very fine hospital at Partney, dedicated to
-St. Mary Magdalene, before 1138, and among the tombs recently uncovered
-at Bardney is one of Thomas Clark, rector of Partney, 1505. It appears
-to have been a market town when Domesday Book was compiled, at a time
-when Spilsby was of no account; but the Black Death in 1349 or the plague
-in 1631, when Louth registered 500 deaths in two months, and in the
-Alford neighbourhood Willoughby also suffered, severely decimated the
-place, and tradition has it that some clothing dug up eighty years after
-burial caused a fresh and violent outbreak. Whenever it happened, for
-no records exist, the consequence was that the glory of Partney as the
-next market town to Bolingbroke departed, and Spilsby grew as Partney
-dwindled. Of course the healthy situation of Spilsby had much to do with
-it. Yet Partney still retains the two sheep fairs on August 1 for fat
-lambs and September 19 for sheep, and they are the biggest sheep fairs
-in the neighbourhood. Two other fairs take place, on August 25 and at
-Michaelmas, and it is noticeable that three of the four are held on the
-eve of the festivals of the Virgin Mary and Mary Magdalen. In 1437 we
-find that Matilda, wife of Thomas Chaucer, the eldest son of the poet,
-had a share of an eighteenth part of the Partney market tolls. Fine
-brasses to her and her husband exist in Ewelme church, near Oxford. On
-fair days sheep are penned all along the streets and in adjoining fields,
-and “Beast” on the second day are standing for half a mile down the
-Scremby road.
-
-The church is dedicated to St. Nicolas, the most popular of all church
-patrons, who was Bishop of Myra in Lycia in the fourth century. As patron
-of fishermen he has many sea coast churches, and he is also the peculiar
-saint of children, who know him by his Dutch name of Santa Klaus. One
-of the oldest oaks in England is in the churchyard. The chiming church
-clock, put in in 1869, is a monument to the skill of a clever amateur,
-Sidney Maddison, Esq., who fitted it with “Dennison’s three-legged
-escapement,” which was then a new and ingenious invention of the late
-Lord Grimthorpe.
-
-[Sidenote: DR. JOHNSON]
-
-In 1764 Dr. Johnson walked over from _Langton_ with his friend, Bennet
-Langton, to see Bennet’s Uncle Peregrine. He died two years later aged
-eighty-four, and the doctor wrote to his friend: “In supposing that I
-should be more than commonly affected by the death of Peregrine Langton
-you were not mistaken: he was one of those I loved at once by instinct
-and by reason. I have seldom indulged more hope of anything than of being
-able to improve our acquaintance to friendship. Many a time have I placed
-myself again at Langton, and imagined the pleasure with which I should
-walk to Partney in a summer morning, but this is no longer possible. We
-must now endeavour to preserve what is left us, his example of piety and
-economy. I hope you make what enquiries you can and write down what is
-told you. The little things which distinguish domestic character are soon
-forgotten: if you delay to enquire you will have no information: if you
-neglect to write, information will be in vain. His art of life certainly
-deserves to be known and studied. He lived in plenty and elegance upon an
-income which to many would appear indigent, and to most, scanty. How he
-lived, therefore, every man has an interest in knowing. His death I hope
-was peaceful: it was surely happy.”
-
-After Partney the road goes up the hill to _Dalby_. Here the old house
-where Tennyson’s aunt, Mrs. Bourne, lived, was burnt down in 1841, and
-the thatched barn-like church swept away in 1862. The charm of the
-present house lies in its beautiful garden.
-
-Having got on to the chalk wold a fine view opens over the wide vale
-to the left as far as the next ridge, which stretches from Spilsby to
-Hagworthingham. About a mile further on, a road goes sharply down to the
-left into Langton, and across a watersplash to Colonel Swan’s residence
-at _Sausthorpe_, where again we find cross-roads near the pretty little
-church built by Gilbert Scott, with a crocketed spire, the only spire in
-the neighbourhood. The roads lead back to Partney, on to Raithby over the
-stream, to Horncastle and to Harrington, all by-ways. But to return to
-our Spilsby and Louth highway. From the turn to Langton we keep rising
-and see some tumuli on our left, and then another left turn to Brinkhill,
-where, from a steep and curiously scarped hillside, roads descend right
-and left to Ormsby and Harrington; but we will keep on the highway for
-another mile till we find that the Louth road by Haugh goes off to the
-left, and the Roman road to Burgh to the right, and the way straight
-forward comes to Well Vale and Milecross hill, and so drops into Alford.
-The rest of the road to Louth we have described in the Louth chapter.
-
-[Sidenote: KEAL HILL]
-
-The other roads from Spilsby are, south to Boston and west to Horncastle.
-The Boston road is noticeable for the wonderful view of the fen, with the
-“Stump” standing far up into the sky, which you get from Keal Hill, where
-the green-sand ends and the road drops into a plain which is without a
-hill or even a rise for the next fifty or sixty miles. After Keal the
-road passes by _Stickford_, _Stickney_ and _Sibsey_—the last having a
-very handsome transition Norman tower, and a ring of eight bells—and
-comes into Boston by Wide Bargate. The road is uninteresting throughout,
-and so monotonous that a story is told of someone driving in a coach in
-years gone by, when roads were deep and miry, who put his head out and
-asked the name of each place they came to. “What is this?” “Stickford,
-sir.” “And this?” “Stickney, sir.” “Stick-foot! Stick-knee! we shall come
-to Stick-neck next; you had better turn back.”
-
-[Illustration: _Sibsey._]
-
-[Sidenote: WESLEY’S CHAPEL]
-
-[Sidenote: LUSBY]
-
-The Horncastle road from Spilsby goes out along the green-sand by
-_Hundleby_, from the tower of which I remember a man falling to the
-ground and receiving no hurt at all, the nearest approach to a miracle
-any one need wish to experience. Much of the money for the re-building of
-the church was raised by the untiring industry and beautiful needlework
-of Mrs. Ed. Rawnsley of Raithby; for _Raithby_, with its pretty broken
-ground and ornamental water and its beautifully kept church filled with
-good modern glass, was for half a century the home of the Rev. Edward
-Rawnsley. The old stable adjoins the churchyard, and by an anomalous
-arrangement the loft over the stable is fitted up as a Wesleyan chapel,
-the use of it for that purpose having been granted _in perpetuo_ to John
-Wesley by his friends, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Carr Brackenbury. The road
-goes on straight from here by _Hagworthingham_ or turns to the left to
-_Mavis Enderby_, and so strikes a parallel route, both of them unite at
-the top of the hill which runs down by High Toynton into Horncastle. The
-name _Mavis_ was originally Malbyse, a name more characteristic than
-complimentary, for it means evil beast. The word byse, or bys, exists in
-Bison, and the name of the unpleasant one is found again in the village
-of Acaster Malbis, near York. There is nothing of special interest on the
-“Hag” road, but the Mavis Enderby road leads us to Lusby and Winceby;
-of these _Lusby_ has a most interesting little church, thoroughly well
-restored, with a good deal of Norman work and some unmistakable Saxon
-work in it. There are two blocked doorways on the north-west, one with
-Norman zigzag moulding in green-sand showing how durable a material it
-is when properly laid and not exposed to wet. Some singular arcading
-of a very early type is seen on the west of the walls on either side
-of the round-headed chancel arch, which is not in the centre of the
-wall. It has been renewed in green-sand of various colours. This work
-may have been Saxon, for there was a church here when Domesday Book was
-written, and there is certainly a definite bit of “Long and Short” work
-on the right hand side of the blocked south doorway, and a fragment of
-a Saxon stone inside, closely resembling the Miningsby Stone, but it
-is difficult to speak with certainty, as the early Normans made use of
-Saxon ornamentation. Outside there are two courses of big basement stones
-running on both sides of the nave—one bevelled and set back a little.
-Inside is a low-side window, two or three aumbreys, two arched recesses
-for tombs, a niche near the chancel arch, and a very good stone head
-of a queen projecting from the south-east window in the nave. There is
-also a remarkable little “Keyhole” window high up in the north wall of
-the chancel. The masonry is rough and amorphous, but very solid. The
-old rood-screen of three arches is very handsome. Under the Communion
-table is a sepulchral slab with an inscription in old lettering, mostly
-obliterated, from which the brass tablet has been removed and put up on
-the wall. It is singular, being a dialogue between a deceased wife and
-her husband:—
-
- [SHE] My fleshe in hope doth rest and slepe
- In earth here to remain;
- My spirit to Christ I give to kepe
- Till I do rise againe.
-
- [HE] And I with you in hope agre
- Though I yet here abide;
- In full purpose if Goddes will be
- To ly doune by your side.
-
-Going on two miles along the Roman road to Horncastle we come to
-_Hameringham_. Here, as at _Lusby_, there is no tower, but a little
-slated bell-turret. Two large arches and one beautiful little pointed
-arch at the west end on small octagonal pillars divide the nave from the
-aisle. The western pillar is of the local green-sand, and dates from
-the thirteenth century. The other pillar is of whitish stone, and the
-small eastern respond is of the same. These date from the fourteenth
-century, and have boldly foliaged capitals. Close together on the abacus
-are two distinct marks of bullets which must have come in through
-the aisle window. There is a good fifteenth century font, and on the
-Jacobean pulpit is the original hour-glass stand, and with an old church
-hour-glass in it. These stands are still to be seen at Bracebridge,
-Leasingham, Sapperton and Belton in the Isle of Axholme. The traces of
-a blocked priest’s door are visible on the north side. Oddly enough the
-dressings of the porch, etc., are of red sandstone from Dumfries. It is
-a good hard stone, but there is much to be said for always, if possible,
-using the stone of the country.
-
-[Sidenote: WINCEBY FIGHT]
-
-[Sidenote: HORNCASTLE]
-
-The next village is _Winceby_, where “Slash Lane” commemorates the place
-of Cromwell’s cavalry-battle in 1643. In the south chapel of _Horncastle_
-church, some four miles on, we shall see a goodly array of scythes on
-long straight handles, which are said to have been used with deadly
-effect in this fight. This church has five three-light clerestory windows
-on each side of the nave, but in the chancel, six on the south and only
-five on the north side, the eastmost one being larger than the rest.
-There is an outside belfry staircase with a cone to it built against
-the middle of the south wall of the tower. Inside, the pilasters of the
-tower arch die away into the arch moulding without capitals. The brass
-in the north wall, to Lionel Dymoke, is remarkable (date 1519); and
-in the north chapel a tomb to Sir Ingram Hopton “who paid his debt to
-Nature and duty to his King and Country in the attempt of seizing the
-arch rebel in the bloody skirmish near Winceby, October 6, 1643.” This
-should be October 11. The arch rebel was Cromwell, who was unhorsed and
-nearly taken prisoner by Sir Ingram. He afterwards slept at Horncastle
-in a house in West Street. This battle secured Lindsey and the Wolds
-for Cromwell, Boston and the Fens were never Royalist. The River Bain,
-which rises in Kelston near the Louth and Rasen road, gave its name
-to the Roman station of Banovallum. It flows through Gayton-le-Wold,
-Biscathorpe, Donington-on-Bain and Goulceby to Horncastle, and out by
-Coningsby and Tattershall to the River Witham, and it makes a peninsula
-at Horncastle, whence the name of Hyrn-ceaster, = the camp at the horn or
-bend. Portions of a Roman wall still exist near the market-place, and at
-the south-west corner of the churchyard. The manor was sold in 1230 to
-the Bishop of Carlisle for the use of the see; it served as a refuge when
-border invasions made the diocese of Carlisle undesirable as a peaceful
-home, and during the fourteenth century was the usual episcopal residence.
-
-The celebrated horse fair is not what it used to be. Lincoln fair is
-more accessible, and is now the more important of the two. But it still
-affords two or three days of wild excitement, with horses tearing about
-the streets. At one time the fair lasted three weeks. August was a
-thirsty month, and the number of beer-houses had to be increased _pro.
-tem._ to meet the need of both buyers and sellers; so five-shilling
-licenses were issued called bush or bough licenses, a bush being hung
-out for a sign, a custom once common in England and still prevalent on
-the Continent. Hence, the proverb, “Good wine needs no bush,” _i.e._, no
-advertisement. The Hon. Edward Stanhope of Revesby, who was Minister for
-War in 1868, has a statue in the market-place, near the house in which
-the Sellwoods lived, two of whom, Louisa and Emily, married Charles and
-Alfred Tennyson.
-
-Leaving the market-place for the Lincoln road you pass what is an unusual
-feature in a town—an elm tree overhanging the street, and having in it
-several rooks’ nests. It is near the “Fighting Cocks” inn. There is a
-similar tree loaded with nests in the town of Staines.
-
-When the river was used for navigation there was a high arched bridge
-with a towing-path under it, and the bridge, though now flat, is still
-called “the bow bridge.”
-
-At that time the church was filled with box pews and lofts, and the front
-row of pews in the lofts were sold to different families by auction and
-would fetch as much as £80, the second row reaching £40. But though
-there were ardent churchgoers in the town, the villages around were very
-indifferently served, having in quite a dozen instances in that one
-neighbourhood no parsonage house and consequently no resident parson.
-
-It is interesting to know that a good deal of the carving in the church
-was done less than fifty years ago by a carpentry class of young men who
-took lessons for the purpose from a clever carver called Thomas Scrivener.
-
-But we have one other road to speak of, which is the way from Spilsby to
-Sleaford.
-
-The Boston road from Spilsby, after it reaches the edge of the
-green-sand, where it suddenly breaks down at West Keal into the level
-fen, divides at the foot of the hill, and the right-hand road goes
-westwards by Hagnaby, East Kirkby, Revesby, Coningsby, Tattershall and
-Billinghay to Sleaford. This is all a level road. _Hagnaby Priory_, two
-miles from West Keal, is the residence of Mrs. Pocklington Coltman. The
-house is modern, in fact, there never was a priory here, but near Alford
-there was once an abbey of Hagnaby, so the name is suggestive of Priors.
-
-[Sidenote: EAST KIRKBY]
-
-Another two miles brings us to _East Kirkby_; the turn to the right takes
-us to the church which, having been entrusted to the capable hands of
-Mr. W. D. Caröe, is a model of what church restoration should be. He has
-put square-headed clerestory windows in the chancel with good effect.
-The tower has a beautiful two-light early Decorated window. The piers
-of the nave are remarkably slender. There is a good font, and the early
-Perpendicular rood screen is a very graceful one. In the north wall of
-the chancel is a two-light low-side window and a curious recess, possibly
-an Easter Sepulchre. It is covered with diaper work, and with wild
-geranium, oak leaves and acorns excellently carved in stone, and below
-this, some half-figures of the three Maries, each holding a heart-shaped
-casket, of spices perhaps for embalming. A basin projecting from the
-front is thought to have been a receptacle for the Easter offerings. A
-similar basin, as Mr. Jeans in Murray’s Guide points out, is attached
-to the tomb of Edward II. at Gloucester. A little further on is the
-tiny church of _Miningsby_, only to be approached by footpaths over
-grass fields. It has in it a pre-Norman slab of very uncommon character
-with figure-of-eight intertwined knot work and a herring-bone border. A
-fragment with similar figure-of-eight work is in Mavis Enderby church,
-on a coped stone which has been cut to make a door-step, and a smaller
-bit like it is in Lusby church—probably all the work of the same Saxon
-mason. In a house near the church is a stone with the initials “L. G.,
-1544,” which must refer to the Goodrich family; for East Kirkby was the
-birthplace of Thomas Goodrich, Bishop of Ely, 1534, Lord Chancellor,
-1550, and coadjutor in the first Communion Office with Cranmer.
-
-[Sidenote: REVESBY]
-
-The next place on the Spilsby and Sleaford road is _Revesby Abbey_
-(Hon. R. Stanhope), a fine deer park with a modern house, built by J.
-Banks-Stanhope, Esq., 1848. The previous house had been the residence
-of the great naturalist, Sir Joseph Banks, P.R.S., who died in 1820,
-and took part with Rennie in devising and carrying out the drainage
-of the East Fen. The abbey, founded in 1143 by W. de Romara, Earl of
-Lincoln, was colonised from Rievaulx, and was itself the parent of Cleeve
-Abbey in Somerset. The abbey was a quarter of a mile south-east of the
-present church, in which are preserved the few fragments now extant of
-a building which was once 120 feet long and sixty feet wide. The Hon.
-Edward Stanhope in 1870 discovered the tombs and bodies of the founder
-and his two sons. The founder, who had become a monk, had requested to
-be buried “before the high Altar,” and his tomb was inscribed, “Hic
-jacet in tumba Wiellielmus de Romare, comes Lincolniae, Fundator istius
-Monasterii Sancti Laurentii de Reivisbye.” The site of his re-burial is
-marked by a granite stone. Among the abbey deeds is one by which the
-Lady Lucia’s second husband, Ranulph Earl of Chester, gives to the abbey
-“his servant Roger son of Thorewood of Sibsey with all his property and
-chatells.” I don’t suppose that Roger found the abbey folk bad to work
-for; they certainly did much for the good of the neighbourhood, notably
-in keeping up the roads and bridges, which was one of the recognised
-duties of religious houses; but all this came to an end when in 1539,
-like so many other Lincolnshire estates, it was granted by Henry VIII. to
-his brother-in-law the Duke of Suffolk. The Duke died in 1545, and was
-buried at Windsor; his two sons both died in one day, July 16, 1551, in
-the Bishop of Lincoln’s house at Buckden.
-
-The road past the park gates is very wide, with broad grass borders on
-either side, and a fine row of wych elms bordering the park, at each end
-of which are some model farm buildings of the best Lincolnshire kind;
-and, to take us more than a thousand years back, we have two large tumuli
-quite close to the road. There were three, but one, after being examined
-by Sir Joseph Banks in 1780, was levelled in 1892; later the existing two
-were explored and one was found to contain a clay sarcophagus, which
-possibly once contained the remains of a British king.
-
-[Sidenote: MOORBY]
-
-Just past the tumuli is the inn, at the four cross-roads. That to the
-left runs absolutely straight for eleven miles to Boston; to the right
-is the Horncastle road through Moorby and Scrivelsby, with the barn-like
-church of _Wilksby_ in a grass field behind Moorby. Both these churches
-have good fonts; that at _Moorby_ is the later of the two, having
-two crowned and two mitred heads at the four corners, and with very
-remarkable figures of the Virgin and Child learning, with open book
-and scourge; the sun and moon being depicted on either side looking on
-complacently, evidently they had never heard of the Montessori system,
-also there are six kneeling figures and two angels watching the dead
-body of the donor. A stone in the vestry, about fourteen inches by
-eight, exhibits two women and a man vigorously dancing hand in hand to
-the bagpipes, all in fifteenth century head-dresses and costumes. Moorby
-is in the gift of the Bishop of Manchester, it having been assigned
-presumably by Carlisle when the new see was carved out of parts of older
-ones. How Carlisle came to have patronage here may be briefly told.
-On St. George’s Day, April 23—a day memorable as the birth and death
-day of Shakespeare, and the death day of Wordsworth—in the year 1292,
-John-de-Halton, who may well have come of the family who gave the name to
-Halton Holgate near Spilsby, being then Canon of Carlisle, was elected
-bishop. Within a month, a fire having destroyed the cathedral and all the
-town, he set to work and rebuilt the cathedral, and encouraged others
-to rebuild the town; and by the year 1297 Robert Bruce swore fealty to
-the king in his presence in the newly risen pile. He was a man of mark,
-and was mediator between Edward I. and John of Balliol in the claim to
-the Scottish throne. He planned Rose Castle, the palace of the Bishops
-of Carlisle. In 1307 he received at his cathedral, from the sick king’s
-hands, the horse-litter which had brought him to the north; and within
-a few days saw the king, who had bravely mounted his charger at the
-cathedral door, borne back a dead man on the shoulders of his knights
-from Burgh Marsh (pronounced Berg) on the Solway shore. In 1318 he was
-driven from his diocese by Robert the Bruce, and came to the manor of
-Horncastle, which, as mentioned above, had belonged to the see since
-1230, and got the Pope to attach the living of Horncastle and with it
-that of Moorby and probably some others to his see as a means of support
-for him whilst in exile and poverty, and up to the middle of last century
-Horncastle so remained, whilst Moorby is now in the gift of the Bishop of
-Manchester. John de Halton died in the year 1324.
-
-[Illustration: _Coningsby._]
-
-[Sidenote: WOOD ENDERBY AND HALTHAM]
-
-[Sidenote: CONINGSBY]
-
-If we went west from Moorby we should pass by _Wood Enderby_, the only
-church in this neighbourhood with a spire, as Sausthorpe is in the
-Spilsby neighbourhood, and should reach _Haltham_ on the road from
-Horncastle to Coningsby. Here the small church with its old oak seats
-has an early Norman doorway with a quaintly carved tympanum. Going north
-from Moorby we should pass Scrivelsby, but this must have a chapter to
-itself, so we will get back to the main road at Revesby and go through
-_Mareham-le-fen_ to _Coningsby_, passing _Tumby_ Wood, the home of the
-wild lily-of-the-valley and the rare little smilacina or _Maianthemum
-bifolium_, which also grows near Horncastle. Across the entrance to
-Coningsby, the Great Northern Railway Company have just built a new line
-from Lincoln to Skegness, by which tens of thousands of “trippers” will
-be taken for a shilling and turned out to enjoy the sea shore and the
-splendid expanse of hard sand. Skegness, once a delightful solitude, is
-now disfigured by all that appertains to those who cater for the hungry
-multitudes.
-
-[Illustration: _Tattershall and Coningsby._]
-
-[Sidenote: HAVERHOLME PRIORY]
-
-From the bridge over the Bain at the other end of Coningsby village a
-pretty picture of water and willows is crowned by the view of Tattershall
-church and castle, both of which are described later. _Coningsby_ church,
-built, like Tattershall, all of Ancaster stone, has a singular tower
-which stands on tall arches and allows free passage under it from three
-sides. In the west of this tower is a large circular window. Passing
-through _Tattershall_ village with its open space and market cross,
-near which three roads meet, and where the Horncastle canal unites the
-Bain and Witham, we cross the Lincoln and Boston railway, and also the
-River Witham which, from the next station of Dogdyke, was cut straight
-by Rennie, and runs like a great dyke to Langrick, and then with only
-two bends to Boston. At Dogdyke is a bit of undrained swamp, the home
-of several good bog-plants, such as the bladderwort, water-violet,
-meadow-rue (Ophelia’s “Herb o’ Grace”) and the bog-stitchwort. The
-road on to Sleaford, across the fen for fourteen miles, is quite
-uninteresting, except for the very Dutch appearance of the village of
-_Billinghay_ on the banks of a large drain called the Billinghay Skirth,
-near which, at _North Kyme_, we pass alongside the old Roman Carr Dyke,
-and, crossing it, arrive at _Anwick_, which has a pretty church with
-broach spire and good Early English doorway. Here, on our left, on the
-River Slea, is _Haverholme Priory_ (Countess of Winchelsea), founded 1137
-by Bishop Alexander, who afterwards moved the rheumatic Monks to Louth
-Park, and gave the priory to his chaplain Gilbert, founder of the order
-of Gilbertines, who had also a priory at Alvingham near Louth. There is
-nothing left of the priory, in which it is said that Archbishop Thomas
-à Becket once took refuge from Henry II. Four more miles bring us to
-Sleaford, whose spire has long been visible across the flats.
-
-[Illustration: _Tattershall Church._]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII
-
-SCRIVELSBY, DRIBY, TUMBY AND TATTERSHALL
-
- The Hereditary Grand Champion of England—History of
- the Dymokes—Siward the Saxon—Simon de Dryby—The Abbot
- of Kirkstead—Robert de Tateshalle—John and William de
- Bernac—Ralph, Baron Cromwell builds the brick Castle and
- founds the College and Almshouses at Tattershall—The Carved
- Mantelpieces—Bishop Waynflete’s brick buildings—Esher
- Place—Tattershall Church—Stained Glass Windows—The Brasses—The
- Castle safe at last.
-
-
-SCRIVELSBY.
-
-The manor which carried with it the title for its possessor of
-“Hereditary Grand Champion of England,” was a very interesting old house
-till the year of the Coronation of George III., when it was destroyed
-by fire. An arched gateway remains near the house, where once a moat,
-drawbridge, and portcullis protected the courtyard. The picturesque Lion
-Gateway at the entrance to the park from the Horncastle road, opposite
-to which under some trees are seen the village stocks, was set up by
-Robert Dimoke about 1530. It is built of rough stones but has a fine
-stone lion, passant and crowned, above it, and a rebus of an oak tree
-(Dim oak) carved at the side of the archway. The manor with this peculiar
-privilege attached was given by the Conqueror to his steward “Robert the
-Dispenser,” Lord of Fontenaye and ancestor of the De Spencers and the
-Marmions.
-
-Sir Walter Scott speaks of the Marmion of his poem, though he was an
-imaginary character and of much later date, as—
-
- “Lord of Fontenaye
- Of Lutterward and Scrivelbaye
- Of Tamworth tower and town.”
-
-[Sidenote: MARMIONS OF SCRIVELSBY]
-
-[Sidenote: DYMOKES OF SCRIVELSBY]
-
-In the Scrivelsby parish church of St. Benedict is a mutilated recumbent
-stone figure clad in chain-mail with sword and shield, and by his side
-a lady in the severe costume of the time, with muffled chin and plain
-head-dress. The warrior is Philip Marmion, the last of the Marmions
-of Scrivelsby, who died 1292, the family having acted as champions
-from the time of William the Conqueror to Henry III. Together with the
-championship, Philip Marmion had the right of free-warren and gallows at
-his manor at Scrivelsby.
-
-[Illustration: _The Lion Gate at Scrivelsby._]
-
-Philip having no son, his estates were divided among his four daughters.
-His second daughter, Mazera, married a Ralph Cromwell, ancestor of the
-Lord Cromwell who built Tattershall Castle, and the Scrivelsby estate
-fell to Joan, the youngest, who married Sir Thomas Ludlow. His son,
-Thomas, left one daughter, Margaret, who married Sir John Dymoke and
-brought the Championship in 1350 into the family, which has held it now
-for upwards of 560 years. It was probably their son John who married the
-daughter of Sir Thomas Friskney, whence descended the Dymokes of Friskney
-and Fulletby.
-
-At the coronation of Edward II., 1307, and Edward III., 1327, the
-Championship appears to have been in commission, but at that of Richard
-II., 1377, Sir John Dymoke claimed it in right of his wife. Baldwin
-Freville counter-claimed as Lord of Tamworth, but the office was awarded
-to Sir John.
-
-There are many Dymokes buried both in the church and churchyard, the most
-notable monument being an altar tomb in the chancel with a brass on it
-of Sir Robert Demoke. Edward IV. had beheaded his father along with Lord
-Welles after he had taken them under pledge of safety out of sanctuary
-at Westminster, and he tried to make amends by heaping favours on the
-son, who lived in five reigns—Edward IV., Edward V., Richard III., Henry
-VII., and Henry VIII.; and acted as Champion at the coronation of the
-last three, in 1483, 1485, and 1509. The brass presents him in armour and
-spurred, but bareheaded and with short neck, long flowing hair, and a
-huge beard; he stands on a lion, and the inscription runs thus:—
-
- “Here liethe the body of Sir Robert Demoke of Scrivelsby Knight
- and Baronet who departed out of this present lyfe the XV day
- of April in ye yere of our Lord God MDXLV upon whose sowle
- almighte god have m’ci Amen.”
-
-The words “Knight and Baronet” have puzzled many, but in spite of the
-fact that Sir Brien Stapilton at Burton Joice, Notts., and Sir Thomas
-Vyner at Gautby, Lincolnshire, 1672, are described as Knight and Baronet,
-and though they may have been first Knights and then Baronets, in this
-case of Sir Robert Dymoke, of 1545, it can hardly have been so, for the
-title baronet was not in use until after 1603, and we must suppose that
-the words were originally “Knight Banneret,” a distinction which was
-conferred on Sir Robert by Henry VIII., and that the present wording was
-probably a correction by an ignorant restorer in the seventeenth century,
-after damage done in the civil wars. The eldest son of the Champion who
-had been so unjustifiably put to death by Edward IV., was Lionel, who
-died before his father, and whose brass in Horncastle church represents
-him kneeling on a cushion in full armour, holding a scroll in his hand,
-date 1519. The figure is kneeling in a stiff attitude, armed and spurred,
-and bareheaded, a scroll from his mouth says:—
-
- “_S’cta Trinitas Unus Deus Miserere nob_:”
-
-The inscription on the brass is:—
-
- “_In honore S’cte et individue Trinita̅s orate p’ ’aia Leonis
- Dymoke milit’ q’ obijit xvij die Me’se Augusti ao D’ni
- M’cccccxlx: cui ai’e p’ piciet’ DE’ Amen._”
-
-Below on either side were figures of two sons and three daughters. The
-sons are now missing.
-
-[Sidenote: THE CHAMPION]
-
-Lionel’s brother Robert was only ten when he obtained the title. He was
-succeeded by his son Edward, who performed the office of Champion for the
-three children of Henry VIII. His son Robert, though never acting at any
-coronation, deserves mention as a martyr, in Elizabeth’s reign, to his
-religious convictions. This queen, always dreading a Romish reaction in
-favour of her rival, Mary Queen of Scots, allowed a Puritanical bishop
-to persecute any Catholic in his diocese, and Robert, though in feeble
-health, was stout of heart and kept firm to his faith and died a prisoner
-at Lincoln, 1580.
-
-The mother of Edward Dymoke who was Champion to Charles II. was buried
-at Leverton in 1640. Sir Edward was summoned in 1660 before the
-Parliamentarians at Westminster and accused of “delinquency” because
-he bore the Royalist title of King’s Champion. He was fined £7,000,
-an enormous sum for the time, and he had to pay between four and five
-thousand. Hence the impoverishment of the Dymoke family. He lived to see
-the Restoration, and officiated for Charles II. in 1660, dying in 1663.
-He was knighted in 1661 “for his loyalty and great sufferings both in
-person and estate.”
-
-A brass plate commemorates his son, Sir Charles Dymoke, who died in
-1686. He officiated at the coronation of James II. in 1685, and getting
-off his horse in order to walk up to kiss the king’s hand he fell full
-length. Whereupon the queen said, “See, love, what a weak Champion you
-have!” He was buried at Scrivelsby, November, 1686.
-
-[Sidenote: WESTMINSTER HALL]
-
-Of other memorials there is a marble bust to Lewis, the Champion to
-George I. and II., in 1714 and 1727, who died in 1760, Ætat. 90. His
-widow Jane endowed a school at Hemingby “to teach the children of the
-poor of the parish to read, write, spin and card wool.” Finally, there
-is a memorial to John, Champion in 1761 to George III. Henry Dymoke who
-acted for his father, a clergyman, on the accession of George IV., 1821,
-was the last who rode into Westminster Hall in bright armour and flung
-down his glove and dared to mortal combat any who disputed the right and
-title of the king. Then, having backed a little, he turned his horse and
-rode out, holding in his hand the gold cup in which the king had pledged
-him and he had in turn drunk to the health of his majesty. Since then the
-quaint historic ceremony has fallen into abeyance, but the title of “the
-Hon. the King’s Champion” remains, and at the coronation of Edward VII.
-he was appointed to carry the royal banners. _Sic transit gloria mundi._
-
-[Sidenote: THE CEREMONY]
-
-The following is a description of the championship ceremony at the
-banquet in Westminster Hall written at the time of the coronation of
-George IV., 1821, and taken from Allen’s History of the County:—
-
- “Before the second course was brought in the deputy appointed
- to officiate as King’s Champion (this was the son of the
- champion, who was himself disqualified, being a clerk in holy
- orders), in his full suit of bright armour, mounted on a horse
- richly caparisoned, appeared under the porch of the triumphal
- arch, at the bottom of Westminster Hall. Everything being in
- readiness, the procession moved in the following order:—
-
- “Two trumpeters with the Champion’s arms on their banners,
-
- “The Sergeant Trumpeter with his mace on his shoulder,
-
- “Two Sergeants-at-Arms with their maces on their shoulders,
-
- “The Champion’s two Esquires, in half armour, one on the right
- hand bearing the Champion’s lance, the other on the left hand
- with the Champion’s target and the arms of Dymoke depicted
- thereon.
-
- “A Herald, with a paper in his hand, containing the Challenge.
-
- “The Deputy Earl Marshall (Lord Howard of Effingham) on
- horseback, in his Robes and Coronet, with the Earl Marshall’s
- staff in his hand, attended by a page.
-
- “The Champion (Henry Dymoke, Esq.) on Horseback, in a complete
- suit of Bright Armour, with a Gauntlet in his hand, his Helmet
- on his head, adorned with a plume of feathers.
-
- “The Lord High Constable (The Duke of Wellington), in his Robes
- and Coronet and Collar of his Order, on Horseback, with the
- Constable’s Staff, attended by two pages.
-
- “Four Pages richly apparelled, attendants on the Champion.
- At the entrance into the Hall, the Trumpets sounded thrice,
- and the passage to the King’s table being cleared by the
- Knight Marshall, the Herald, with a loud voice proclaimed the
- Champion’s Challenge, in the words following:—
-
- “‘If any person of what degree soever, high or low, shall deny
- or gainsay our sovereign Lord King George the fourth, of the
- United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Defender of the
- Faith, son and next heir to our Sovereign Lord King George the
- third, the last King, deceased, to be the right heir to the
- Imperial Crown of this United Kingdom, or that he ought not to
- enjoy the same, here is his Champion, who saith that he lieth,
- and is a false traitor, being ready in person to combat with
- him, and in the quarrel will adventure his life against him on
- what day soever he shall be appointed.’
-
- “Whereupon the Champion threw down his gauntlet: which having
- lain a short time upon the ground, the Herald took it up, and
- delivered it again to the Champion. They then advanced to the
- middle of the Hall, where the ceremony was again performed in
- the same manner.
-
- “Lastly they advanced to the steps of the throne, where the
- Herald with those who preceded him ascended to the middle of
- the steps, and proclaimed the challenge in the like manner;
- when the Champion having thrown down his gauntlet and received
- it again from the Herald, made a low obeisance to the King:
- Whereupon the Cupbearer, having received from the officer
- of the Jewel-house a Gold Cup and Cover filled with Wine,
- presented the same to the King, and his Majesty drank to the
- Champion, and sent to him by the Cupbearer the said Cup,
- which the Champion (having put on his gauntlet) received, and
- having made a low obeisance to the King drank the Wine; after
- which, making another low obeisance to his Majesty and being
- accompanied as before, he departed out of the Hall, taking with
- him the said Cup and Cover as his fee.”
-
-
-DRIBY, TUMBY, AND TATTERSHALL.
-
-[Sidenote: NORMAN ACTIVITY]
-
-The amount of work done by the Normans in England has always astonished
-me. Not only did they build castles and strongholds, but in every county
-they set up churches built of stone, and not here and there but literally
-everywhere. They apportioned and registered the land, measured it and
-settled the rent, and, though hard task masters, they showed themselves
-efficient guardians, nor was any title or property too small for the king
-and his officers to inquire into. Hence, in quite small out-of-the-way
-places in the county we find monuments in little and almost unknown
-churches which attest the activity of our Norman forefathers and which,
-when examined by the aid of documents from the Public Record Office or
-the abbey or manor rolls, old wills and all the early parchments in
-which the industrious bookworm revels, often unfold chapters of early
-history of extraordinary interest, if not for the general public, at
-least for students and for the local gentry who still haunt the places
-where once the armed heel of the knight rang and the monastery dispensed
-the unstinted doles of a period which would have held up both hands
-in astonishment at the luxury of our poor laws, the excellence of our
-roads and the enormity of our rates and taxes. Take, for instance, the
-little village of _Driby_ in the Lincolnshire wolds, a village the
-early denizens of which my old friend, the late W. C. Massingberd, has
-taken the trouble to make acquaintance with, and to whose labours I am
-indebted for what little I know about it. He tells us how even in Saxon
-times a notable man lived at Driby, one Siward, not perhaps the great
-Northumbrian Thegn mentioned in _Macbeth_, but a later Siward who helped
-Hereward and his fenmen to oppose the Normans at Ely. Whoever he was,
-he held Scrivelsby and a large acreage in the Wolds. Next we find the
-great Lincolnshire Baron, Gilbert de Gaunt, succeeding Siward at Driby,
-holding, as Domesday Book (1086) shows, direct from the king.
-
-[Sidenote: THE ABBOT OF KIRKSTEAD]
-
-Early in the next century Simon de Driby comes before us; and his
-son Robert—the eldest son was nearly always alternately Simon or
-Robert—grants some lands in _Tumby_ to the abbey of Kirkstead. Robert’s
-father is called sometimes Symon de Tumbi and sometimes Simon de Driby,
-and it seems that he had obtained disposal of this land in Tumby by a
-grant from Robert, son of Hugh de Tattershall, just as his forefather
-had held land in Driby by the grant of Gilbert de Gaunt. On February 25,
-1216, a Simon de Driby made his submission to King John at Lincoln, and
-Ralph de Cromwell, whose descendant of the same name eventually married
-the heiress of the Simon de Dribys and held the castle of Tattershall,
-also submitted at Stamford on the 28th and gave his own eldest daughter
-as a hostage for his good behaviour. The submissive Simon died in 1213,
-and his son, the inevitable Robert, made an agreement with Hugh, the
-Abbot of Kirkstead, by which the abbot was allowed to have his big cattle
-and sheep dogs, mastiffs they were termed, in the warren of Tumby at all
-times of the year, but no greyhounds or lurchers (_leporarios vel alios
-canes preter mastivos_), and if the latter turned riotous and chased game
-they were to be removed and others put in their place.
-
-Robert’s son Simon obtained by marriage additional lands near Driby,
-at _Tetford_, _Bag Enderby_, _Stainsby_, and _Ashby Puerorum_ on the
-wolds, as well as some of the rich marsh land at _Wainfleet_. Henry III.
-granted to Robert Tateshalle license to crenelate his house at Tateshall,
-“quod possit kernelare mansum suum” in 1239; and we may here note that
-Tattershall Castle in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries and half
-of the fifteenth was a stone building. Just at the close of the reign of
-Edward I. a Robert de Driby married Joan, one of the three co-heiresses
-of Robert de Tateshale or Tattershall, the last male representative of
-the family, and Joan tried to settle the castle and manor of Tattershall
-on her youngest son, Robert, instead of on the rightful heir. Until the
-heir was of age Edward had granted them to his wife, Queen Margaret, a
-sign that the property was valuable. She, moreover, when a widow, had the
-manor of Tumby for her dower house.
-
-When the third Edward was on the throne one of the parsons who served
-Driby was a fellow of Merton College, Oxford, William Merle by name, who
-is worthy to be remembered because he was the first Englishman to keep
-a diary of the weather. He was appointed in 1330, and at that time one
-Gilbert de Bernak was the parson at Tattershall, whose relative William
-de Bernak, Kt., married Alice, the daughter of Robert de Driby and Joan
-Tattershall, and, her three brothers dying without issue, Alice came into
-possession of the manor of Driby. Their son, Robert de Bernak, presented
-a man of the same name to Driby in 1347, who died probably of the Black
-Death, for he presented again two years later. Robert in some way made
-himself unpopular, and in 1369 we hear of his being spoiled and beaten
-at Driby, with many of his men grievously wounded, and his reeve and his
-butler both killed.
-
-In 1374 he founded a chantry in Driby church endowed _inter alia_ with
-rents from land in Driby and Friskney. His wife is called in his will
-Katherine de Friskney. This Robert de Bernak was the only one of the name
-who held the manor of Driby, for his elder brother John appears not to
-have done so, and to have died in 1346.
-
-[Sidenote: MATILDA DE BERNAK]
-
-The uncle of these de Bernaks, John de Driby, shortly before his death
-had granted the castle of Tattershall and the manors of Tattershall and
-Tumby away from his sister Alice to John de Kirton, who was knighted by
-Edward II., and summoned to Parliament in the sixteenth year of Edward
-III., 1343; so none of the de Bernaks ever held Tattershall, and it was
-through the direct interposition of the king that the descendants in the
-female line of the Driby and Bernak families got the property back. The
-way it came into the female line was this: The John de Bernak, eldest son
-of William de Bernak and Alice de Driby, had married Joan, the daughter
-of John Marmion of Wintringham, and had two sons and a daughter Matilda,
-who eventually was his sole heiress. She married Ralph second Baron
-Cromwell, and the presentation to her uncle, Robert de Bernak’s, chantry
-at Driby was left to her and to her son Robert Cromwell after her.
-
-Then, at her mother’s death in 1360, she succeeded to her mother’s
-property in Norfolk, Tumby Manor and Tattershall Manor and Castle
-reverted to her on the death of John de Kirton in 1367 and Driby Manor
-with Brynkyl on her uncle, Robert De Bernak’s, death in 1387; so she held
-Driby, Tumby, and Tattershall, as well as property in Norfolk.
-
-[Sidenote: MARRIES RALPH CROMWELL]
-
-In 1395 and 1399 we find her husband, Ralph Cromwell, presenting to the
-chantry of the Holy Trinity in the church at Driby. They were large
-landholders, for, in addition to the manor of Cromwell and his other
-lands in Notts., he and his wife held the manor of ‘Kirkeby in Bayne’
-with what are called the appurtenances to those various manors, _i.e._,
-lands in many parts of the wolds and marsh.
-
-[Illustration: _Tattershall Church and the Bain._]
-
-Matilda died in 1419. Her son, Ralph Cromwell, was baptised on July
-15, 1414, a day memorable for a very high tide on the Lincolnshire
-coast which inundated all the land about Huttoft. He only lived to
-be twenty-eight, and was succeeded by his cousin, Ralph third Baron
-Cromwell, the grandson of Matilda.
-
-[Sidenote: HER GRANDSON LORD HIGH TREASURER]
-
-This Ralph Lord Cromwell had been appointed Lord High Treasurer of
-England under Henry VI. in 1433. He married Margaret, daughter of John
-fifth and last Baron d’Eyncourt, but had no issue. He it was who replaced
-the old castle by the splendid brick building which was, and is, the
-finest in England. He presented to Driby in 1449, and was the founder of
-the college and the almshouse at Tattershall, for which he obtained leave
-from the Crown to turn the parish church into a collegiate church in
-1439, when he rebuilt it from the ground and endowed it with[26] several
-manors, Driby being one, so in 1461 and until 1543 the warden of the
-college of Tattershall was the patron of Driby. The almshouse has still
-an endowment of £30. He died in 1455, as the brass in Tattershall church
-records, and his nieces, the daughters of Sir Richard Stanhope, succeeded
-to his estates, but Driby remained with the warden of Tattershall. The
-nieces were Joan Lady Cromwell (for her husband Humphrey Bourchier,
-son of the first Earl of Essex, was summoned to Parliament as Baron
-Cromwell _jure uxoris_) and Matilda Lady Willoughby d’Eresby. One of
-his executors, William of Waynflete, the famous Bishop of Winchester,
-held the manor of Candlesby in 1477 for the use of this Lady Matilda,
-and soon afterwards obtained a grant of it to his newly founded college
-of Magdalen, Oxford, with whom it remains. Matilda Lady de Willoughby
-presented to Candlesby in 1494, eight years after the bishop’s death.
-Since then the living has been in the gift of the college.
-
-At the dissolution of the monasteries, in 1545, Driby was granted to
-the Duke of Suffolk, then it passed to Sir Henry Sidney of Penshurst,
-who sold it to the Prescotts, a Lancashire family, about 1580, with
-appurtenances of lands and rents in “Brynkhill, Belchford, Orebye,
-Grenwyke, Ingolmells, Bagenderbie, Asbie Puerorum, ffulletsbye, West
-Saltfletby alias Sallaby, Sallaby Allsaints, Golderbye, Tathwell, Thorpe
-next Waynflet, Sutterbye and Scamlesbye.” There are two small brasses
-in the church to James Prescott and his wife, who was a Molineux of
-Lancashire. They died in 1581 and 1583. In 1636 Sir W. Prescott sold the
-manor of Driby to Sir John Bolles, and in 1715 it was bought by Burrell
-Massingberd and still goes with the Ormsby estate of that family.
-
-[Sidenote: BUILDS TATTERSHALL]
-
-[Sidenote: THE CASTLE]
-
-A few words must be added about _Tattershall_. The great brick building
-which rises so magnificently out of the flat is one of the most
-impressive things in this or any country. I have walked all day partridge
-shooting on the estate, and however far you went you never seemed able
-to get away from the immediate presence of the magnificent pile; you
-only had to look round and it was apparently just at your shoulder all
-day long. Then if you enter it and go up, for even the first floor is
-several feet above the level of the quadrangle, you are astonished at
-the size of the great chambers one above the other, thirty-eight feet
-by twenty-two, and seventeen feet high; and finally you come on the
-second, third, and fourth story to the most beautiful brick vaulting
-and mouldings in the small rooms and galleries running round the big
-central rooms in the thickness of the walls. The whole is of exquisite
-workmanship, and finished by very deep and handsome machicolations and
-battlements. The bricks are apparently Flemish, thinner and of finer
-quality than the English bricks; similar ones were used in building
-Halstead Hall, Stixwould. The windows are dressed with stone, these
-are large and arched, having mullions and the heads filled with stone
-tracery like church windows. This shows how the nobleman’s castle was
-changing into the nobleman’s palace or mansion. The building is at one
-corner of a quadrangle, and is itself a parallelogram, and, including the
-turret bases, eighty-seven feet long by sixty-nine wide, and 112 feet
-high to the parapet of the angle turret. The walls, which are built on
-massive brick vaulting, are immensely thick, being fifteen feet above,
-and even more on the ground floor. The windows of the basement chambers
-are close on the water of the moat, for several small chambers were made
-in the thickness of the walls, in which, too, are the four chimneys.
-The spiral staircase is in the south-east turret, and has a continuous
-stone handrail let into the brick wall, very cleverly contrived, and
-giving a firm and easy grasp. Each turret is octagonal, going up all
-the way from the ground and being finished with a cone. In each turret
-is a fireplace—a comfort to the warders, and useful at a pinch for
-heating the supplies of oil and lead which could be poured down through
-the machicolations on the heads of a too assiduous foe. From turret
-to turret, and projecting somewhat over these machicolations, runs
-a loopholed gallery, and here, too, the vaulting and the rich brick
-mouldings are better than anything else of the kind in England, with
-the exception of the smaller but elaborately enriched wall surfaces
-of Barsham, near Walsingham in Norfolk. There are little rooms in the
-turrets, on each floor, and the galleries on the second and third are
-divided into rooms, so that in the whole building there were some
-forty-eight rooms. The large central rooms would be hung with tapestry,
-the lowest being used for an entrance-hall, meals being served in the
-fine banqueting hall adjoining, the second for a hall of audience or
-withdrawing room, and the third for the state bedroom. The fireplaces
-are, in the large rooms, of great width, and the restored mantelpieces,
-the barbarous removal of which lately caused such a stir, show a
-number of most interesting coats-of-arms of the families who have been
-connected with Tattershall down to the time of Henry VI. The treasurer’s
-purse figures alternately with the shields, which bear the arms of the
-Cromwells, Tattershalls, and d’Eyncourts, of Marmion, Driby, Bernak, and
-Clifton; and on the second floor one panel represents the combat between
-Hugh de Neville and a lion. Neville and Clifton were the second and third
-husbands of Matilda Lady Willoughby, which points to the fact that these
-mantelpieces were not carved until after the Lord Treasurer’s death,
-1455, when Bishop Waynflete was in charge of the work. Sir Thomas Neville
-was killed at the battle of Wakefield, 1460, and Sir Gervasse Clifton at
-Tewkesbury in 1471.
-
-[Illustration: _Tattershall Church and Castle._]
-
-[Sidenote: ESHER PLACE]
-
-[Sidenote: TATTERSHALL CHURCH]
-
-There are three other brick buildings, which always strike me as being
-worthy to rank along with Tattershall. The first, but following _longo
-intervallo_, is the Bishop of Lincoln’s palace at Buckden in Hunts.,
-built by Bishop Hugh of Wells about 1225. Another is the beautiful old
-Tudor manor-house already alluded to at Barsham, near Walsingham, which
-Lord Hastings has just advertised for sale (November, 1913). This has
-more exquisite brick diaper work and mouldings on the outside of both
-house and gate-house than Tattershall Castle has even in the passages
-and vaulted rooms on the upper floor inside, and is a miracle of lovely
-brick building. But it is not nearly so big as Tattershall. The other
-bit of fine bricklaying which is of the same rather severe character as
-Tattershall and Magdalen School at Wainfleet, is the gate-house of Esher
-Place, occupied by Cardinal Wolsey October, 1529, to February, 1530. It
-belonged to the Bishops of Winchester, and Wolsey then held that see
-together with York. Waynflete, who was bishop 1447-1486, and finished
-Tattershall about 1456, a year after the Lord Treasurer Cromwell’s death,
-had partly re-built Esher Place in his inimitable brickwork, about
-seventy years before. He used bricks for the lintels and mouldings, and
-even put in the same sunk spiral handrail, which we have noticed as so
-clever and remarkable a device in the turret staircase at Tattershall.
-Waynflete’s arms, the lilies, so familiar to us at Eton and Magdalen,
-were found by the Rev. F. K. Floyer, F.S.A., only last year (1912), when
-some plaster was removed, on the keystone of the curiously contrived
-vaulting over the porch. It is noticeable that Henry Pelham, who bought
-the house in 1729, has introduced also his family badge, the Pelham
-buckle, which is cut on the stone capitals of the door. This badge we
-have spoken of in the chapter on Brocklesby. So we have two Lincolnshire
-families of note, each of which has left his cognisance on the gateway of
-the once proud Esher Place, the “Asher House” in that magnificent scene
-of Act III. in Shakespeare’s “Henry VIII.”
-
- _Norfolk._ “Hear the king’s pleasure, cardinal; who commands you
- To render up the great seal presently
- Into our hands: and to confine yourself
- To Asher-house, my lord of Winchester’s,
- Till you hear farther from his highness.”
-
-Tattershall had a double moat, the outer one reaching to the River Bain.
-Over both of them the entrance would probably be, as it certainly was
-over the inner one, protected by a drawbridge and portcullis. This was
-still to be seen in 1726 at the north-east corner of the quadrangle.
-All that is now left is this one great pile of the Lord Treasurer’s
-and one guard-house of the fifteenth century. The original castle was
-begun 200 years earlier, when Robert, the direct descendant of Hugh
-Fitz Eudo—founder in 1138 of the Cistercian abbey of Kirkstead, who had
-received the estate from William the Conqueror—obtained leave from Henry
-III. to build a castle there. We have seen how the castle became the
-property of Joan who married Sir Robert Driby, whose daughter Alice
-consigned it at her marriage to Sir W. Bernak, and their daughter Matilda
-married Lord Cromwell, whose grandson was the High Treasurer to Henry
-VI. He built the brick castle, but died soon after doing so, leaving
-his collegiate church to be finished by his executors. The college he
-had founded was to consist of a warden, a provost, six priests, six lay
-clerks, and six choristers, and the almshouse was for thirteen poor of
-either sex. The original building for this still exists, and is of very
-humble appearance, having, it is said, been put up to serve first as a
-lodgment for the masons engaged on the castle and church. Of these the
-latter is singularly well built, as any building supervised by Bishop
-William of Waynflete was sure to be, and evidently of very good stone;
-and the two buildings being close together are striking specimens of the
-secular and ecclesiastical architecture of the period.
-
-[Sidenote: THE BRASSES]
-
-The Treasurer’s wife, who was sister and coheir of William fifth Baron
-d’Eyncourt, died a year before her husband. They are buried in the
-church, and two very fine brasses once marked the spot. He was a K.G.,
-and this shows him with the Garter and Mantle of his Order, but the brass
-is sadly mutilated now; while her effigy is, sad to say, lost entirely.
-
-Two other fine brasses of this family are in the church. One, of the
-Treasurer’s niece, Joan Stanhope, who married first Sir Humphrey
-Bourchier, son of the Earl of Essex, who was made fourth Baron Cromwell
-in her right in 1469; and secondly, after her first husband had been
-slain at the battle of Barnet, 1471, Sir Robert Ratcliffe. She died in
-1479, and was succeeded in the property by her sister Matilda, who had
-married Lord Willoughby d’Eresby. Her brass has also been a particularly
-fine one. She died in 1497, and ten years before this the Tattershall
-estate had passed to the Crown. The inscription on her brass is filled
-in by a later and inferior hand, and no mention is made of her two next
-husbands.
-
-[Sidenote: THE WINDOWS]
-
-There is a very fine brass also of one of the last provosts or wardens
-of the college, probable date between 1510 and 1520. In 1487 Henry VIII.
-granted the manor to his mother, Margaret Countess of Richmond, and,
-the Duke of Richmond having no issue, Henry VIII., in 1520, granted it
-with many other manors in the neighbourhood to Charles Duke of Suffolk.
-This grant was confirmed by Edward VI. on his accession in 1547, but the
-duke and his two sons having died, he granted it, in 1551, to Edward
-Lord Clinton, afterwards Earl of Lincoln. The Clintons held it till
-1692, when it passed, through a cousin Bridget, to the Fortescue family
-under whom both church and castle have suffered severely. Amongst other
-vandalisms, Lord Exeter, when living at Revesby, was allowed to remove
-the fine stained glass windows to his church of St. Martin’s in Stamford,
-in 1757. He paid £24 2_s._ 6_d._ to his steward for white glass to be
-put in in their stead, but the glass was not put in, and for eighty
-years the church was open to the wind and rain. The removal at all was
-a disgraceful business, and no wonder the Tattershall folk threatened to
-kill the glazier who was employed to take the windows out.
-
-[Illustration: _Tattershall Church._]
-
-The castle is now (1912) the property of Lord Curzon, who is putting
-it into repair. The story of its sale quite recently to a speculator,
-and the ruthless tearing out by his creditors of the fine historic
-mantelpieces is one which reflects little credit on any concerned in it.
-They are now replaced.
-
-[Sidenote: THE KEEP RESTORED]
-
-But “All’s well that ends well,” and Lincolnshire may congratulate
-herself that the finest old brick building in the country is in such
-good hands, and that the needed restoration is being carried out so
-admirably. It was no easy task to find oak trees to supply the beams
-which carry the floors, as each had to be twenty-four feet long and
-eighteen inches square.[27] The floors are now in, and the roof, which
-had been off for 250 years, reinstated. In the inner ward the ground plan
-of the kitchen has been laid bare; this was close outside the south-east
-angle of the keep and connected with it by a covered passage leading from
-the staircase turret. The turrets and parapets are repaired, and the
-floors and roof being again in place and the moat refilled with water,
-though not what one would call a comfortable residence, it will be a
-most interesting place to visit, and never again, we trust, be likely
-to fall into the neglect which it has suffered for the last two hundred
-years. Enough pottery and metal has been found to form the nucleus of a
-collection which will be preserved for visitors to see. But no collection
-will ever be half as interesting as the sight of this magnificent brick
-building itself, and the close examination of all its structural details.
-
-[Illustration: _Scrivelsby Stocks._]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIV
-
-BARDNEY ABBEY
-
- The Excavations—The Title
- “Dominus”—Barlings—Stainfield—Tupholme—Stixwould—Kirkstead
- Abbey—Kirkstead Chapel—Woodhall Spa—Tower-on-the-Moor—Charles
- Brandon Duke of Suffolk.
-
-
-The fens were always a difficulty to the various conquerors of England,
-and, probably owing to the security which they gave, they, from the
-earliest times, attracted the monastic bodies. Hence we find on the
-eastern edge of the Branston, Nocton, and Blankney fens, and just
-off the left bank of the Witham river when it turns to the south, an
-extraordinary number of abbeys. For Kirkstead, Stixwould, Tupholme and
-Bardney, with Stainfield and Barlings just a mile or two north of the
-river valley, are all within a ten mile drive. Of these, Kirkstead was
-Cistercian, and Stixwould and Stainfield were nunneries. They were
-all most ruthlessly and utterly destroyed by Thomas Cromwell at the
-dissolution, so it is only the history of them that we can speak about.
-
-[Illustration: _Kirkstead Chapel._]
-
-Stixwould and Kirkstead were originally as much in the fen as Bardney;
-but since the “Dales Head Dyke” was cut parallel with the Witham and
-about a mile to the west from “Metheringham Delph” to “Billinghay
-Skirth,” the land between it and the river is known as the “Dales.”
-
-[Sidenote: ST. OSWALD]
-
-[Sidenote: A ROYAL ABBOT]
-
-By far the oldest and the biggest and most interesting of the group
-was the great Benedictine Abbey of Bardney. This was founded not later
-than the seventh century. Some of the chronicles say by Æthelred, son
-of Penda, the pagan king of Mercia; but it may have been by his brother
-Wulfhere, who reigned before him. Æthelred’s Queen Osfrida, niece of
-the sainted Oswald, the Northumbrian king who had defeated Cædwalla at
-Hevenfield in 635 and was himself killed in battle by Penda at Maserfield
-in 642—had before her marriage brought the relics of her uncle in 672
-to Bardney, where they became the centre of attraction for pilgrims,
-and St. Oswald’s name as patron was added to those of St. Peter and
-St. Paul to whom the abbey was dedicated. Osfrida herself having been
-murdered by the Danes in 697, was buried here, and Æthelred, who in 701
-founded Evesham Abbey, following the example of half-a-dozen Anglian
-and Saxon kings, gave up his throne after a reign of thirty years and
-entered Bardney as a monk in 704. In the quaint words of the chronicle
-he “was shorn a religious,” i.e., adopted the tonsure, and died twelve
-years later, after ruling for four years as Abbot of Bardney. One of the
-frescoes in Friskney church represents him resigning his crown to become
-a monk. St. Oswald’s arm, which had been preserved in St. Peter’s church
-at Bamborough, and which never withered, was afterwards transferred to
-Peterborough Abbey, according to Gunton, a little before the Conquest. A
-monk of the period wrote the following lines about it:—
-
- “Nullo verme perit, nulla putredine tabet
- Dextra viri, nullo constringi frigore, nullo
- Dissolvi fervore potest, sed semper eodem
- Immutata statu persistit, mortua vivit.”
-
-In which the monk, as usual, made a “false quantity.” In 870 Hingvar
-and Hubba, the Danes, in spite of its fancied security, utterly
-destroyed the abbey and put some 300 monks to death. They also destroyed
-Peterborough, Croyland, Ely, Huntingdon, Winchester, and other fine and
-wealthy monastic houses in the same barbarous manner. Bardney after
-this lay desolate for 200 years; after which, Gilbert De Gaunt, on whom
-the Conqueror had bestowed much land in mid-Lincolnshire, with the aid
-of the famous Bishop Remigius of Lincoln, restored it, and endowed it
-with revenues from at least a dozen different villages, amongst them
-Willingham, Southrey, Partney, Steeping, Firsby, Skendleby, Willoughby,
-Lusby, Winceby, Hagworthingham, Folkingham, and Heckington. This would
-be about 1080. In 1406 we read of Henry IV., our Lincolnshire king,
-spending a Saturday-to-Monday there, riding from Horncastle with his two
-sons and three captive earls of the Scots, Douglas, Fyfe, and Orkney,
-and a goodly company. The Bishop of Lincoln “with 24 horses” and the
-“venerable Lord Willoughby” came to do homage in the afternoon. The abbey
-stood on slightly rising ground, with a moat and deep ditch lined with
-brick, as at Tattershall, and enclosing twenty-four acres. It was half a
-mile from the present church. On the east side of the abbey is a large
-barrow on which was once a handsome cross in memory of King Æthelred, who
-is supposed to have been buried there, and it is quite possible that he
-was. The name of a field close by “Coney garth” is no doubt a corruption
-of Koenig Garth, which is much the same as the “King’s Mead fields” near
-Bath Abbey, immortalised in Sheridan’s “Rivals,” as the place of meeting
-between Captain Absolute and Bob Acres, and where Sir Lucius O’Trigger
-inhumanly asks Acres “In case of accident ... would you choose to be
-pickled and sent home? or would it be the same to you to lie here in the
-Abbey? I’m told there is very snug lying in the Abbey.”
-
-[Sidenote: BARDNEY ABBEY]
-
-The site of the abbey when excavations were begun in 1909 was apparently
-a grass field with a moat; but since then the whole of the great monastic
-church has been laid bare to the floor pavement, which was about four
-and a half feet below the surface. The Norman bases of the eight chancel
-columns and twenty pillars of the nave are now visible, and also of the
-four large piers which supported the tower arches; these must have been
-very beautiful, each nave pillar having round a solid core a cluster of
-twelve, and the tower piers of sixteen, columns. All down the church,
-which is 254 feet long and over sixty-one feet wide, tombs were found
-_in situ_, with inscriptions, the earliest being that of Johanna, wife
-of John Browne of Bardney, merchant, 1334, and the handsomest that of
-Richard Horncastel, abbot, 1508, which measures eight feet by four, is
-seven inches thick, and weighs three tons. This had been already moved,
-and it is now fixed against the south wall of Bardney church. Adjoining
-the south side of the nave is the cloister; and the chapter-house,
-parlour, dormitory, dining-hall, cellar, kitchen, well and guest-house
-are all contiguous. A little way off are the infirmary-hall and chapel,
-with three fireplaces and some tile paving. Not much statuary was found,
-but various carved heads and iron tools, pottery, etc., one headless
-figure three feet high of St. Laurence and, most interesting of all, the
-reverse of the abbey seal which was in use in 1348, showing St. Peter and
-St. Paul beneath a canopy and the half figure of an abbot with crozier
-below. We know that the obverse had on it a figure of St. Oswald, but
-that has not yet been found. It is made of bronze or latten.
-
-The huge extent of the buildings and the beauty of the column bases and
-the plan of this, the earliest of English monasteries, with its moat
-enclosing the whole twenty-five acres, and its king’s tumulus, make a
-visit to the site very interesting, and the vicar, Rev. C. E. Laing, has
-worked hard with his four men each year since 1909, and with the help of
-kind friends has managed to purchase three acres, but is greatly hampered
-by want of funds, which at present only reach one quarter of the sum
-required.
-
-[Sidenote: THE TITLE “DOMINUS”]
-
-Mr. Laing has published a little shilling guide to the excavations at
-Bardney, with photographs, which explain the work very clearly and show
-the tombs with their inscriptions. From this it will be noticed that
-Abbot Horncastel is called on his tomb “Dompnus,” _i.e._, Dominus, and
-Thomas Clark, rector of Partney, has this title “Dns.,” and also Thomas
-Goldburgh, soldier, has the same. This is the same name as that on the
-old Grimsby Corporation seal of the princess, who is said to have married
-Havelock the Dane (_see_ Chap. XIX.). Dominus is a difficult title to
-translate, for if we call it ‘Sir,’ as the old registers often do, it is
-misleading, as it has no knightly significance, and it probably meant no
-more than “The Rev.,” or in the case of a soldier “Esq.” or “Gent.” It
-certainly does not imply here that the owners of the title belonged to
-“the lower order of clergy,” and yet that is the recognised meaning of
-it in many old church registers, _e.g._, in the list of rectors, vicars,
-and chantry priests of Heckington, taken from the episcopal records at
-Lincoln. Some of the vicars and most of the chantry priests are called
-“Sir,” and this generally implies a non-graduate. So also in the chapter
-on the clergy with the list of rectors and curates given in Miss Armitt’s
-interesting book, “The Church of Grasmere” (published 1912), pp. 57-60
-and p. 81, we find that the tythe-taking rector is termed “Master,”
-and bears the suffix “Clerk”; while “Sir” is reserved for the curate,
-his deputy, who has not graduated at either university. This view is
-upheld in Dr. Cox’s “Parish Registers of England,” p. 251. The Grasmere
-book speaks of “_Magister_ George Plumpton,” who was son of Sir William
-Plumpton, of Plumpton, Knight, and rector of Grasmere, 1438-9. In 1554
-Gabriel Croft is called rector, and his three curates for the outlying
-hamlets are put down as—
-
-“Dns. William Jackson, called in his will ‘late Curate of Grasmer.’”
-
-“Dns. John Hunter.
-
-“Dns. Hugo Walters.”
-
-This entry is followed by—
-
-“_Sirre_ Thomas Benson curate” who witnesses a will in 1563; and in 1569
-we have “_Master_ John Benson Rector.” In 1645 we have a “Mr. Benson”
-doing the duty as rector during the Commonwealth, and in 1646 we have
-“Sir Christopher Rawling,” who had probably served as curate for some
-years, as he is, at his child’s baptism in 1641, styled “Clericus.”
-Clearly this word “Sir” is here the translation of the Latin “Dominus,”
-and the previous entries bear out the statement that the prefix ‘Sir’
-here betokens the lower order of clergy who had not graduated at either
-university. But that this was not a plan universally followed is made
-quite clear from the monuments at Bardney, where we find a rector and an
-abbot and a soldier all called “Dominus.” Perhaps in neither of these
-cases is it necessary to translate the word by ‘Sir,’ why not leave it
-at “Dominus”? From a letter in _The Times_, May, 1913, I gather that
-this word “Dominus” is responsible for the title “Lord Mayor.” The words
-“Dominus Major” are first found among the City of London Records for
-1486, in an order issued for the destruction of unlawful nets and coal
-sacks of insufficient size. The words only meant “Sir Mayor,” but in
-course of time they came to be translated “The Lord The Mayor,” which
-easily passed into “The Lord Mayor,” a title which did not come into
-general use till 1535.
-
-[Sidenote: BARLINGS ABBEY]
-
-_Barlings Abbey_ stood a mile west of the Benedictine nunnery of
-_Stainfield_, which was founded by Henry Percy in the twelfth century.
-The abbey was founded about the same time by Ralph de Hoya for
-Premonstratensian canons. This term is derived from the “_Premonstratum_”
-Abbey in Picardy, _i.e._, built in a place “pointed out” by the Blessed
-Virgin to be the headquarters of the Order. This was in 1120, and the
-Order first came to England in 1140. At the dissolution they seem to
-have had thirty-five houses here, Tupholme Abbey being one of them. The
-canons lived according to the rule of St. Augustine, and wore a white
-robe. In the revolt against the suppression of the smaller houses, known
-as “the Lincolnshire Rebellion,” or “the Pilgrimage of Grace,” in 1537,
-the prior of Barlings, Dr. Matthew Makkerell, a D.D. of Cambridge, took a
-prominent part, and under the name of Captain Cobbler, for he took that
-disguise, he led 20,000 men. They were dispersed by Charles Brandon, Duke
-of Suffolk, and the prior was hanged at his own gate.
-
-The abbey is sometimes called Oxeney, because the founders removed the
-canons from Barling Grange to a place called Oxeney in another part of
-the village, but the name followed them and Oxeney became Barlings.
-
-_Barlings_ and _Stainfield_ are both near Bardney to the north, and
-_Tupholme_ and _Stixwould_ just as near on the south. _Tupholme_, like
-Barlings, has a Premonstratensian house, founded 1160. A wall of the
-refectory with lancet window, and a beautiful stone pulpit for the reader
-during meals is all that is left. It is close to the road from Horncastle
-to Bardney.
-
-[Illustration: _Remains of Kirkstead Abbey Church._]
-
-[Sidenote: KIRKSTEAD ABBEY]
-
-_Stixwould_ is three miles to the south, and was, like Stainfield, a
-nunnery. It was founded by Lucia the first, the wife of Ivo Taillebois.
-Nothing is left of it; but in the parish church are some stone coffins,
-a good parclose screen, used as a reredos, and a remarkable font, whose
-panels, bearing emblems of the Evangelists and of the first four months
-of the year, are divided by richly carved pinnacles with figures of
-lions and flowers. Near by is _Halstead Hall_ (“Hawstead”), a fifteenth
-century moated house of the Welby family, from which Lincoln, Boston, and
-Heckington are all visible.
-
-[Sidenote: KIRKSTEAD CHAPEL]
-
-_Kirkstead_ is three miles further south, and here is one of the most
-beautiful little thirteenth-century buildings in the county. It is near
-the ruin of the abbey, of which only a gaunt fragment remains. This
-chapel of St. Leonard is a real gem of Early English architecture. It
-is an oblong chamber with vaulted roof adorned with tooth and nail-head
-ornament, springing from bosses low down in the wall. The wall is arcaded
-all round, and the capitals exquisitely carved. Bishop Trollope speaks
-of the western door as “one of the most lovely doorways imaginable, its
-jambs being first enriched by an inner pair of pillars having caps from
-which spring vigorously and yet most delicately carved foliage, and then,
-after a little interval, two more pairs of similar pillars carrying a
-beautifully moulded arch, one member of which is worked with the tooth
-moulding. Above this lovely doorway, in which still hangs the cöeval
-delicately ironed oak door, is an arcade of similar work, in the centre
-of which is a pointed oval window of beautiful design. The inside is
-still more beautiful than without.”
-
-Inside, part of a rood screen with lancet arcading is earlier than
-anything of the kind in England, except the plain Norman screen in the
-room above the altar in Compton Church, Surrey. A mutilated effigy of a
-knight with a cylindrical saucepan-shaped helmet and a hauberk of banded
-mail, shows a rare instance of thirteenth-century armour. It is thought
-to be Robert, second Lord of Tattershall, who died about 1212.
-
-The ruinous state of this lovely little building, which was used for
-public worship until Bishop Wordsworth prohibited it, as the building
-was unsafe, has long been a crying scandal; the owner always refusing
-to allow it to be made safe by others, and doing nothing to prevent its
-imminent downfall himself. The present Act of 1913 has, it is devoutly
-hoped, come in time to enable proper and prompt measures to be taken to
-put it into a sound condition.[28]
-
-Quite near to Kirkstead is the newest Lincolnshire
-watering-place—_Woodhall Spa_.
-
-[Sidenote: WOODHALL SPA]
-
-A deep boring for coal in 1811 found no coal but struck a spring or
-flow of water, which is more highly charged with iodine and bromine
-than any known spa. This has been utilised, and a fine range of baths,
-on the principle of those at Bath, has been set up, though the water,
-unlike that at Bath, or at Acqui near Genoa, does not gush out boiling
-hot, but has to be pumped up 400 feet and then heated. All the various
-kinds of baths and appliances for the treatment of rheumatism, etc., are
-now installed, and quite a town has arisen on what was not long ago a
-desolate moor. The air is fine, the soil dry and sandy, the heather is
-beautiful around the place, and the Scotch fir woods and the picturesque
-“Tower-on-the-Moor”—a watch-tower or part of a hunting-lodge built by the
-Cromwells of Tattershall—add a charm to the landscape, though the “greate
-ponde or lake brickid about,” mentioned by Leland, is gone.
-
-[Illustration: _Kirkstead Chapel._]
-
-[Sidenote: CHARLES BRANDON DUKE OF SUFFOLK]
-
-The Duke of Suffolk, to whom his sovereign gave so many Lincolnshire
-manors, was son of Sir W. Brandon, the king’s standard-bearer who fell
-at Bosworth field. Henry VIII. had a great liking for him and made him
-Master of the Horse, a viscount, and afterwards a duke. Like his royal
-master, he was the husband of several wives, the third of four being Mary
-Queen of France, widow of Louis XII. and second sister of Henry VIII. He
-resembled the king, too, in being a big man; indeed he was remarkable
-for his bodily strength and feats of arms, and was victor in several
-tournaments. The pains he took to quell the Lincolnshire Rebellion
-greatly pleased the king, who showered rewards on him with lavish hands.
-He is said to have somewhat resembled him, his countenance being bluff
-and his beard white and cut like the king’s. He was good-tempered and
-fortunate in never giving offence. Hence, on his portrait at Woburn Abbey
-he is said to have been “Gratiose withe Henry VIII. Voide of Despyte,
-moste fortunate to the end, never in displeasure with his Kynge.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXV
-
-THE FENS
-
- Brothertoft or Goosetoft—In Holland Fen—John Taylor’s Poem—Fen
- Skating.
-
-
-Primitive peoples have been always rather prone to establishing
-themselves on swampy ground, probably because they felt secure from
-attack in such places. They passed in their coracles easily from one
-little island of dry ground to another and found plenty of employment
-in taking fish and waterfowl, in cutting grass for fodder or hay, reeds
-for thatch and bedding, willows to make their wattled huts, and peat for
-fuel, all of which were close at hand and free to everyone. It was not
-such a bad life after all.
-
-[Sidenote: THE ROMANS IN BRITAIN]
-
-The earliest inhabitants of the Lincolnshire fens came from the mouths of
-the Meuse, Rhine, and Scheldt, so they lived by choice in low land and
-knew how to make the most of the situation. They clung for habitation to
-the islands of higher ground, and the names of many villages in the low
-part of the county, though no longer surrounded by water, bear witness
-by their termination to their insular origin, _e.g._, Bardney, Gedney,
-Friskney, Stickney, Sibsey, _ey_, as in the word ‘eyot’ (pronounced ait,
-_e.g._, Chiswick Eyot), meaning _island_. In time the knots of houses
-grew to village settlements, and raised causeways were made from one to
-another, which served also as banks to keep out the sea at high tides.
-And we know that they did this effectually; hence we find the churches
-mostly placed for safety on that side of the causeway bank which is
-furthest from the sea. You will see this to be the case as you go along
-the road from Boston to Wainfleet, where the churches are all west of
-the road, or from Spalding to Long Sutton, where they are all south of
-the road, and this explains how the Lincolnshire name for a high road is
-“ramper,” _i.e._, rampart. There are other sea banks which were thrown
-up purposely to keep out the sea, not necessarily as roads. These are
-very large and important works, fifty miles in length and at a varying
-distance from the sea, girdling the land with but little intermission
-from Norfolk to the Humber. Such large undertakings could only have been
-carried out by the Romans.
-
-This bank, when made, had to be watched; for both in the earliest ages,
-and also in Jacobean times when the fens were drained, all embanking and
-draining works were violently opposed by the fen-men who lived by fishing
-and fowling, and had no desire to see the land brought into cultivation.
-
-The Romans were great colonisers; they made good roads through the
-country wherever they went to stay, and in Lincolnshire they began
-the existing system of “Catchwater” drains which has been the means
-of converting a marshy waste into the finest agricultural land in the
-kingdom. The Roman Carr (or fen) dyke joined the Witham with the Welland,
-so making a navigable waterway from Lincoln in the centre to Market
-Deeping in the extreme south of the county; and by catching the water
-from the hills to the west it prevented the overflowing streams from
-flooding the low-lying lands, and discharged them into the sea.
-
-Rennie, at the beginning of last century, used the same method in the
-east fen; but modern engineers have this advantage over the Romans that
-they are able by pumping stations to raise the water which lies below the
-level of the sea to a higher level from which it can run off by natural
-gravitation. Still the Romans did wonderfully, and when they had to leave
-England, after 400 years of beneficent occupation, England lost its best
-friends, for, not only was he a great road and dyke builder but, as the
-child’s “Very First History Book” says,
-
- “If he just chose, there could be no man
- Nicer and kinder than a Roman.”
-
-The Romans themselves were quite aware of the beneficial nature of their
-rule, as far as their colonies were concerned, and were proud of it. Who
-can fail to see this feeling if he reads the charming lines on Rome which
-Claudian wrote, about 400 A.D., when the Romans were still in Britain.
-
- “Hæc est in gremium victos quae sola recepit,
- Humanumque genus communi nomine fovit
- Matris non Dominae ritu, civesque vocavit
- Quos domuit, nexuque pio longinqua revinxit.”
-
- Alone her captives to her heart she pressed,
- Gave to the human race one common name,
- And—mother more than sovereign—fondly called
- Each son though far away her citizen.
-
- W. F. R.
-
-[Sidenote: THE SAXONS]
-
-The whole country soon became a prey to the freebooters who crossed
-the North Sea in search of plunder. Of these, the Saxons under Cedric
-besieged Lincoln about 497 and, the Angles from the Elbe joining with
-them, made a strong settlement there which became the capital of Mercia
-and received a Saxon king. To these invaders, who came as plunderers
-but remained as colonists, we also owe much. In east Lincolnshire they
-certainly fostered agriculture, and like the Romans made salt-pans for
-getting the salt from sea water by evaporation.
-
-[Illustration: _Darlow’s Yard, Sleaford._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE DANES]
-
-[Sidenote: THE NORMANS]
-
-The Saxons dominated the country for about the same time as the Romans,
-and were then themselves ousted with much cruelty and bloodshed by the
-Danes or Norsemen. But during their time Christianity had been introduced
-at the instance of Pope Gregory I., who sent Augustine and forty monks
-to Britain at the end of the sixth century to convert the Anglo-Saxons,
-and as Bertha, wife of Æthelbert, King of Kent, was a Christian, he met
-with considerable success, and became the first Archbishop of Canterbury.
-He was followed early in the seventh century by Paulinus, who came from
-York and built the first stone church at Lincoln. When, a hundred and
-fifty years later, the Danes made their appearance they found in several
-places monasteries and cathedrals or churches which they ruthlessly
-pillaged and destroyed; and they too, having come for plunder, remained
-as indwellers, settling in the eastern counties, not only near the coast
-but far inland, just as the Norsemen settled and introduced industrial
-arts on the west coast in Cumberland. Dane and Saxon struggled long and
-fiercely, the Danes being beaten in Alfred’s great battle at Ethandune
-in Wilts, 878, but only to return in Edmund’s reign and defeat the
-Saxons at Assandun in Essex under King Canute, 1016, after which, by
-agreement, they divided the country with Edmund Ironsides, and withdrew
-from Wessex, the region south-west of _Watling Street_, but the whole
-country north-eastwards from the Tees to the Thames was given over to
-them and called the Danelagh, or country under Dane law. Thus Lincoln
-became a Danish burgh, and in the next year, on Edmund’s death, Canute
-became sole King of England. None of the Fenmen of Lincolnshire had been
-subdued till in 1013 Swegen, King of Denmark, invaded the county in force
-and pillaged and burnt St. Botolph’s town (Boston), and they appear to
-have maintained their independence all through the Norman times. For
-the dynasty of Danish kings did not last long, and both they and the
-kings of the restored Saxon line were effaced by the Norman invaders
-who, like all their predecessors, found the Fenmen a hard nut to crack.
-Hereward, who was not son of Leofric, but a Lincolnshire man, had many a
-fight for liberty, and held the Isle of Ely against the repeated attacks
-of the Normans, and, when at last the Fenmen were beaten, they still
-maintained a sort of independence, and instead of becoming Normans in
-manners and language they are said to have kept their own methods and
-their own speech, so that there may well be some truth in the boast that
-the ordinary speech of the East Lincolnshire men of “the Fens” and “the
-Marsh” is the purest English in the land.
-
-
-HOLLAND FEN AND FEN SKATING.
-
-In the Fens there were always some tracts of ground raised above the
-waters which at times inundated the lower levels there. These are
-indicated by such names as Mount Pleasant, or by the termination ‘toft,’
-as in Langtoft, Fishtoft, Brothertoft, and Wigtoft in the Fens; and
-similarly in the Isle of Axholme, Eastoft, Sandtoft, and Beltoft. Toft
-is a Scandinavian word connected with top, and means a knoll of rising
-ground. When the staple commodities of the Fens were “feathers, wool,
-and wildfowl,” these knolls were centres of industry. Sheep might roam
-at large, but in hard weather always liked to have some higher ground
-to make for, and human beings have a preference for a dry site, hence
-a cottage or two and, if there was room, a collection of houses and
-possibly a church would come into existence, and the grassy knoll would
-be often white with the flocks of geese which were kept, not so much
-for eating as for plucking; and we know that the monasteries always
-had ‘vacheries’ or cow-pastures either on these isolated knolls or on
-rising ground at the edge of the fen. One of the most notable of these
-island villages was called at one time Goosetoft, now Brothertoft, in the
-Holland Fen about four miles west of Boston. Here on the 8th of July,
-O.S., all sheep “found in their wool,” _i.e._, who had not been clipped
-and marked, were driven up to be claimed by their owners, fourpence a
-head being exacted from all who had no common rights.
-
-The custom survives in Westmorland, where in November of every year all
-stray Herdwick sheep are brought in to the shepherds’ meeting at the
-‘Dun Bull’ at Mardale, near Hawes-Water, and after they are claimed, the
-men settle down to a strenuous day, or rather two nights and a day, of
-enjoyment; a fox hunt on foot, and a hound trail whatever the weather
-may be, followed by feasting and songs at night, keep them all “as merry
-as grigs.” But where there are ten people at the Dun Bull there were one
-hundred or more at Brothertoft, people coming out from Boston for the day
-or even for the week, and all being lodged and fed in some thirty large
-tents.
-
-[Sidenote: GOOSETOFT]
-
-John Taylor, ‘the water poet,’ wrote in 1640 an account of Goosetoft
-which is worth preserving:—
-
- In Lincolnshire an ancient town doth stand
- Called Goosetoft, that hath neither fallow’d land
- Or woods or any fertile pasture ground,
- But is with wat’ry fens incompast round.
- The people there have neither horse nor cowe,
- Nor sheep, nor oxe, nor asse, nor pig, nor sowe;
- Nor cream, curds, whig, whey, buttermilk or cheese,
- Nor any other living thing but geese.
- The parson of the parish takes great paines,
- And tythe-geese only are his labour’s gaines;
- If any charges there must be defrayed
- Or imposition on the towne is lay’d,
- As subsidies or fifteenes[29] for the King,
- Or to mend bridges, churches, anything,
- Then those that have of geese the greatest store
- Must to these taxes pay so much the more.
- Nor can a man be raised to dignity
- But as his geese increase and multiply;
- And as men’s geese do multiply and breed
- From office unto office they proceed.
- A man that hath but with twelve geese began
- In time hath come to be a tythingman;
- And with great credit past that office thorough,
- His geese increasing he hath been Headborough,
- Then, as his flock in number are accounted,
- Unto a Constable he hath been mounted;
- And so from place to place he doth aspire,
- And as his geese grow more hee’s raisèd higher.
- ’Tis onely geese then that doe men prefer,
- And ’tis a rule no geese no officer.
-
-
-FEN SKATING.
-
-[Sidenote: FEN SKATING]
-
-The Fen skaters of Lincolnshire have been famous for centuries. In the
-Peterborough Museum you may see two bone skates made of the shin bones
-of an ox and a deer ground to a smooth flat surface on one side and
-pierced at either end with holes, or grooved, for attachment thongs.
-The regular fen skates, which are only now being ousted by the more
-convenient modern form were like the Dutch skates of Teniers’ pictures,
-long, projecting blades twice as long as a man’s foot, turned up high
-at the end and cut off square at the heel. They were called “Whittlesea
-runners,” and were supposed to be the best form of skate for pace
-straight ahead; and no man who lived at Ramsey 100 to 200 years ago or
-at Peterborough or Croyland was without a pair. The writer has been on
-Cowbit Wash (pronounced Cubbit), near Spalding, when the great frozen
-plain was in places black with the crowds of Lincolnshire fenmen, mostly
-agricultural labourers, all on skates and all thoroughly enjoying
-themselves, whilst ever and anon a course was cleared, and with a swish
-of the sounding “pattens” a couple of men came racing down the long lane
-bordered with spectators with both arms swinging in time to the long
-vigorous strokes which is the fenman’s style. The most remarkable thing
-about the gathering was the splendid physique of the crowd. Could they
-all have been taken and drilled for military service they would have made
-a regiment of which Peter the Great would have been proud.
-
-The best ice fields for racing purposes are Littleport in Cambridgeshire,
-and Lingay Fen and Cowbit Wash in Lincolnshire. Before it was drained in
-1849, Whittlesea Mere in Huntingdonshire was the great meeting ground,
-and the Ramsey and Whittlesea men were famous skaters. By dyke or river
-one could go from Cambridge to Ramsey on skates all the way. The best
-speed skaters—and speed was the only aim of the fen skater—for many years
-were the Smarts of Welney, near Littleport. “Turkey” Smart beat Southery,
-who won the championship in the last match on Whittlesea Mere from
-Watkinson of Ramsey, and after him “Fish” Smart held the record at Cowbit
-Wash for a whole generation from 1881 to 1912.
-
-In 1878 and 1879 the frost was long and hard, and the prizes at the
-great skating match near Ramsey took the form of food and clothing for
-the frozen-out labourers. The course was down a road which a heavy fall
-of snow, followed first by a thaw and then by a frost, had made into an
-ideal skating course.
-
-[Sidenote: THE CHAMPIONSHIPS]
-
-Whatever year you take you will find that the prize-winners for fen
-skating come from the same district and the same villages; Welney,
-Whaplode, Gedney, Cowbit, and Croyland are perpetually recurring
-names, the last four being all situated in the south-eastern corner of
-Lincolnshire which abuts on the Wash between the outfall of the Welland
-and the Nene.
-
-In the severe frost of 1912, which lasted from January 29 to February
-5, the thermometer on the night of February 3 going down to zero,
-Cowbit Wash saw the contest for both the professional and the amateur
-championship for Lincolnshire. The Lincolnshire professional race on
-Saturday, February 3, over a course of one mile and a half with one
-turn in it brought out two Croyland men, H. Slater first and G. Pepper
-second, F. Ward of Whaplode being third. The winning time was 4 minutes
-50 seconds.
-
-On Monday, February 5, W. W. Pridgeon of Whaplode won the Lincolnshire
-amateur championship over a mile course with a turn and a terrific wind
-in 3 minutes 40 seconds, two Boston men coming next. On the following
-day, February 6, the ice from the thaw, though wet, had a beautiful
-surface, and in the great “one mile straightaway” race open to amateurs
-and professionals alike, eight men entered, all of whom beat Fish Smart’s
-record of 3 minutes. F. W. Dix, the British amateur champion winning
-in 2 minutes 27¼ seconds, with S. Greenhall, the British professional
-champion, second in 2 minutes 32²⁄₁₅ seconds.
-
-F. W. Dix showed himself to be first-rate at all distances, for besides
-this mile race, he won the mile and a half on February 2 at Littleport,
-with five turns in 4 minutes 40 seconds, and next day at the Welsh Harp
-he secured the prize for 220 yards in 22⅘ seconds. S. Greenhall had won
-the British professional championship on the previous day at Lingay Fen
-over a course of one and a half miles, coming in first by 170 yards in 4
-minutes 44⅘ seconds.
-
-In all these races the wind was blowing a gale, and those who won the
-toss, and could run close up under the lee of the line of spectators had
-a decided advantage, and as a matter of fact they won in every case.
-
-[Sidenote: A WORLD’S RECORD]
-
-Since this Dix has won in the Swiss skating matches of 1913, and here it
-may be of interest to add the following, which appeared in _The Times_ of
-February 3, 1913:—
-
- “SPEED-SKATING.
-
- INTERNATIONAL RACE IN CHRISTIANIA.
-
- (From our Correspondent.)
-
- CHRISTIANIA, FEB. 1.
-
- “The International Skating Race held here to-day over a course
- of 10,000 metres was won by the Norwegian skater, Oscar
- Mathieson. His time was 17 min. 22⁶⁄₁₀ sec., which is a world’s
- ‘record.’ The Russian, Ipolitow, was second, his time being 17
- min. 35⁵⁄₁₀ sec. The previous world’s ‘record’ was 17 min. 36⅗
- sec.”
-
-‘Metres’ fairly beat me, but I take it that 10,000 of them would be about
-six miles.
-
-But anyone who likes to worry it out can postulate that the length of
-a metre is 39·37079 inches. This was originally adopted as a “Natural
-unit,” being one ten-millionth of the distance between a pole and the
-Equator. But, as an error has been found in the measurement of this
-distance, it is no longer a “Natural unit,” but just the length of a
-certain rod of platinum kept at Paris, as the yard is the length of a rod
-kept at Westminster.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVI
-
-THE FEN CHURCHES—NORTHERN DIVISION
-
- Friskney—Frescoes in the Church—Its Decoys—Wrangle—John
- Reed’s Epitaph—Leake—Leverton—Benington—Frieston—The
- Font-Cover—Frieston Shore—Rare
- Flowers—Fishtoft—Skirbeck—Boston—The Church.
-
-
-The two centres for “The parts of Holland” are Spalding and Boston. From
-the latter we go both north and south, from Spalding only eastwards, and
-in each case we shall pass few residential places of importance, but many
-exceptionally fine churches.
-
-We will take the district north of Boston first.
-
-Friskney, which is but three and a half miles south of Wainfleet, where
-we ended our south Lindsey excursion, is really in Lindsey. It stands
-between the Marsh and the Fen. The road from Wainfleet to Boston bounds
-the inhabited area of the parish on the east, and another from Burgh,
-which runs for ten miles without passing a single village till it reaches
-Wrangle, does the same on the west. Outside of these roads on the west is
-the great “East Fen,” reclaimed little more than 100 years ago, and on
-the east is the “Old Marsh,” along which went the Roman Bank, and east
-of which again is the “New Marsh,” and beyond it the huge stretch of the
-“Friskney flats,” over which the sea ebbs and flows for a distance of
-from three to four miles; the haunt of innumerable sea birds, plovers
-(locally pyewipes), curlew, redshanks, knots, dunlins, stints, etc., as
-well as duck and geese of many kinds and even, at times, the lordly swan.
-
-[Sidenote: FRISKNEY]
-
-Thus surrounded, _Friskney_ stands solitary about half way between
-Wainfleet and Wrangle, and if only the northern boundary of Holland had
-been made the “Black Dyke” and “Gout” as would have been most natural,
-Friskney would have been the north-eastern point of Holland, instead
-of being the south-eastern point of Lindsey. Since their discovery by
-the late rector, the Rev. H. J. Cheales, the most noticeable thing in
-the fine Perpendicular church is the series of wall paintings above the
-arcades of the nave, date 1320, most of them are faint and hard to make
-out, but there are drawings of them, and an account was published in 1884
-and 1905 in the “Archæologia,” vols. 48 and 50. The subjects are the
-Annunciation, Nativity, Resurrection, and Ascension, and the Assumption
-of the Virgin, on the north arcade; on the south are the Offering of
-Melchizedek, the Gathering of the Manna, the Last Supper, one possibly
-of Pope Gregory, one of King Æthelred entering Bardney Abbey, and a most
-curious one of Jews stabbing the Host. There are two Norman arches in
-the aisle wall, and a beautiful tower arch with steps from the nave down
-into the tower, the lower part of which is transition Norman, the next
-stage Early English, and the next Perpendicular; there are six bells in
-it. The nave is very high, the clerestory, on which the paintings are,
-having been added early in the fourteenth century. The old roof has
-been preserved, and the chancel screen and two chantry screens, which
-are unusually high to match the nave. The rood stairs, as at Wrangle
-and Leake, are on the south side. The pulpit is dated 1659. The north
-chantry is entered by a half arch, and there is a squint and a curious
-low-side window placed oddly on the north side of the chancel arch. Some
-unusually fine sedilia with diaper work at the back, and a trefoiled
-aumbry and piscina are in the chancel, which has been nearly ruined by
-bad restoration with a new roof in 1849. It has large handsome windows
-and finely canopied niches on each buttress, with ornamentation carved in
-Ancaster stone. This chancel was the gift of John Mitchell of Friskney in
-1566.
-
-An effigy of a knight of the Freshney family (a local pronunciation of
-Friskney), of whom we have seen so many monuments in the Marsh churches
-at Somercoats, Saltfleetby and Skidbrooke, is at the west end, and a
-restored churchyard cross stands near the south door.
-
-The family of Kyme, who had a manor near Boston and two villages called
-after them between Sleaford and Dogdyke, held land in Friskney through
-the thirteenth century and until 1339, when it passed by marriage to
-Gilbert Umfraville, whose son, the Earl of Angus, married Maud, daughter
-of Lord Lucy. She afterwards became the second wife of Henry Percy, first
-Earl of Northumberland, father of the famous “Hotspur,” whose wife,
-together with her second husband, Baron Camoys, has such a fine monument
-in Trotton church near Midhurst, Sussex. Hence, in the east window of the
-north aisle of the church at Friskney are the arms, amongst others, of
-Northumberland, Lucy, and Umfraville.
-
-The Earl’s grandson, the second Earl of Northumberland, who was killed at
-the battle of St. Albans fighting for Henry VI., May 22, 1455, possessed
-no less than fifty-seven manors in Lincolnshire, many of them inherited
-from the Kymes.
-
-William de Kyme, uncle of Gilbert Umfraville, left a widow Joan who
-married Nicolas de Cantelupe. He founded a chantry dedicated to St.
-Nicolas in Lincoln Cathedral, and she, one dedicated to St. Paul.
-
-[Sidenote: LOST INDUSTRIES]
-
-It is melancholy to hear of old-fashioned employments fading away, but
-it is the penalty paid by civilisation all the world over. Friskney in
-particular may be called the home of lost industries. For instance,
-“Mossberry or Cranberry Fen,” in this parish, was so named from
-the immense quantity of cranberries which grew on it, and of which
-the inhabitants made no use until a Westmorland man, knowing their
-excellence, taught them; and thence, until the drainage of the fens,
-thousands of pecks were picked and sent into Cambridgeshire, Yorkshire,
-and Lancashire every year, 5_s._ a peck being paid to the gatherers.
-After the drainage they became very scarce and fetched up to 50_s._ a
-peck.
-
-Similarly, before the enclosure of the fens there were at least ten _Duck
-Decoys_ in this part of the county, of which five were in Friskney, and
-they sent to the London market in one season over 31,000 ducks. Eighty
-years ago there were still two in Friskney and one in Wainfleet St.
-Mary’s, and I remember one in Friskney which still maintained itself, in
-the sixties, though each year the wild fowl came to it in diminishing
-numbers.
-
-Bryant’s large map of 1828 shows a decoy near Cowbit Wash, no less than
-five near the right bank of the River Glen in the angle formed by the
-“Horseshoe Drove” and the “Counter Drain,” and two on the left bank
-of the Glen, all the seven being within a two-mile square, and two
-more further north in the Dowsby Fen, and four in the Sempringham Fen
-probably made by the Gilbertines.
-
-[Sidenote: THE DECOY]
-
-The decoy was a piece of water quite hidden by trees, and only to be
-approached by a plank across the moat which surrounded it, and with a
-large tract of marshy uncultivated ground extending all round it, the
-absence of disturbing noises being an essential, for the birds slept
-there during the day and only took their flight to the coast at evening
-for feeding. The method of taking them was as follows. The pond had
-half-a-dozen arms like a star-fish, but all curving to the right, over
-which nets were arched on bent rods; and these pipes, leading down each
-in a different direction and gradually narrowing, ended in a purse of
-netting. All along the pipes were screens, so set that the ducks could
-not see the man till they had passed him, and lest they should wind
-him he always held a bit of burning turf before his mouth. Decoy birds
-enticed by hemp and other floating seed flung to them over the screens
-kept swimming up the pipes followed by the wild birds, and a little dog
-was trained to enter the water and pass in and out of the reed screens.
-The ducks, being curious, would swim up, and the dog, who was rewarded
-with little bits of cheese, kept reappearing ahead of them, and so led
-them on to follow the decoys. At last the man showed himself, and the
-birds—ducks, teal, and widgeon—rushed up the pipe into the purse and were
-taken. The decoy was only used in November, December, and January, and it
-is not in use now at all. But there are still two of the woods left round
-the ponds at Friskney, each about twelve acres, and the water is there
-to some extent, but the arms are grown over with weeds and are barely
-traceable. Indeed it is a hundred years and rather more since the famous
-old decoy man, George Skelton, lived and worked here with his four sons.
-His great grandson was the last to follow the occupation, but when the
-numbers caught came to be only three and four a day, it was clear that
-the business had “given out.” Absolute quiet and freedom from all the
-little noises which arise wherever the lowliest and smallest of human
-habitations exist was necessary, for at least a mile all round the wood,
-and as cultivation spread this could not be obtained. Nothing is so shy
-as wild-fowl; and Skelton said that even the smell of a saucepan of burnt
-milk would scare all the duck away. The mode of taking birds in “flight
-nets” is still practised on the coast, the nets being stretched on poles
-at several feet above the ground, and the birds flying into them and
-getting entangled. Plover are taken in this way, and the smaller birds
-which fly low in companies along by the edge of the sea, or across the
-mud flats.
-
-A decoy still exists near Croyland, and another at Ashby west of Brigg,
-in the lower reaches of the Trent; and formerly there were many in
-Deeping Fen and other parts of Holland. But wild-fowl were not the only
-birds the Fenmen had to rely on, and Cooper’s “Tame Villatic Fowl,” and
-the goose and turkey in particular, are a steady source of income, as the
-Christmas markets in the Fens testify.
-
-[Sidenote: WRANGLE]
-
-[Sidenote: THE REED EPITAPH]
-
-From _Friskney_ we run on about four miles to _Wrangle_. What the road
-used to be we may guess from the constable’s accounts for the parish of
-Friskney, in which the expenses for a journey to Boston are charged for
-two days and a night “being in the winter time.” The distance is thirteen
-miles. In the eighteenth century corn was still conveyed to market on
-the backs of horses tied in strings, head to tail, like the camels in
-eastern caravans. The name of _Wrangle_ is Weranghe, or Werangle, in
-Domesday, said to mean the lake or mere of reeds, from “wear,” a lake,
-and “hangel,” a reed. A friend of mine passing Old Leake station (which
-was first called “Hobhole drain,” but, at the request of the Wrangle
-parishioners, because the name deterred visitors, was altered afterwards
-to Leake-and-Wrangle), observed that this name reminded him of the
-words of Solomon that the beginning of strife is like the letting out
-of water.[30] The place used to be a haven on a large sea creek, and
-furnished to Edward III. for the invasion of France, in 1359, one ship
-and eight men, Liverpool at that time being assessed at one ship and five
-men. The church is large, and the rectors have been for over a hundred
-years members of the family of Canon Wright of Coningsby, a nephew of
-Sir John Franklin. The outer doorway of the south porch has a beautiful
-trefoiled arch with tooth moulding, and curious carvings at the angles.
-Near this is a fine octagonal font with three steps and a raised stone,
-called a ‘stall,’ for the priest to stand on. This is not uncommon in
-all these lofty Early English fonts. The tower was once much higher, as
-is shown by the fine tower arch with its very singular moulding. The
-tracery in the clerestory windows marks a period of transition, being
-alternately flowing and Perpendicular. There is a good deal of old
-glass of the fourteenth century in the north aisle, quite two-thirds of
-the east window of the aisle being old, with the inscription “Thomas
-de Weyversty, Abbas de Waltham me fieri fecit.” There is a turret
-staircase for the rood-loft stair at the junction of the south aisle and
-chancel, hence the door to the rood loft is on that side. The pulpit
-is Elizabethan. The Reed family have several monuments here, and it is
-probable that the three first known parsons of Wrangle—William (1342),
-John (1378), and Nicolas (1387)—were chaplains to that family. On a large
-slab in the chancel pavement to “John Reed sum time Marchant of Calys and
-Margaret his wyfe,” date 1503, are these lines:—
-
- This for man, when ye winde blows
- Make the mill grind,
- But ever on thyn oune soul
- Have thou in mind,
- That thou givys with thy hand
- Yt thou shalt finde,
- And yt thou levys thy executor
- Comys far behynde.
- Do thou for thy selfe while ye have space.
- To pray Jesu of mercy and grace,
- In heaven to have a place.
-
-Sir John Reade, the great-grandson of John and Margaret, who died in
-1626, is described as “eques aureus vereque Xianus eirenarcha prudens,”
-etc., the last substantive meaning Justice of the Peace.
-
-There is an old Bede-house founded 1555, which we shall pass now on our
-way to _Leake_, and we may perhaps trace the old sea-bank just behind
-it. There was once one also at Benington, a few miles further on, called
-“Benington Bede.” But before leaving so much that is old we may delight
-our eyes, if we are lucky enough to find Mr. Barker (the vicar) or his
-wife in the church, with a sight of some most exquisite modern church
-embroidery in the form of an altar cloth, lately made by the ladies of
-the rectory.
-
-[Illustration: _Leake Church._]
-
-[Sidenote: LEAKE]
-
-_Leake_, little more than a mile from Wrangle, has a most massive
-Perpendicular tower which was fifty-seven years building and never
-completed; here, too, there was a seaway to the coast. The south aisle
-of the church and the nave have been restored, but the north aisle is
-still in a ruinous condition, and reflects little credit on the patrons
-who are, or were, the governors of Oakham and Uppingham schools. There is
-a magnificent clerestory of six windows with carved and canopied niches
-between each window, giving a very rich effect; and, as at Wrangle, there
-is an octagonal rood turret and spirelet at the south-east of the nave.
-The wavy parapet of the nave gable reminds one of the similar work round
-the eastern chapel at Peterborough Cathedral, and the tall nave pillars
-resemble those at Boston. Only a very little Norman work remains from
-an earlier church. A knight in alabaster, a good Jacobean pulpit, and a
-remarkable old alms-box made out of a solid oak stem are in the church,
-and round the churchyard is a moat with a very large lych-gate on the
-bridge across it. A mile and a half east of this are the remains of an
-old stone building of early date, called the Moat House.
-
-Two of the Conington family were vicars here in the seventeenth century,
-and a Thomas Arnold was curate in 1794.
-
-[Sidenote: LEVERTON]
-
-_Leverton_ is but two miles from Leake, and _Benington_ only one mile
-further. The churches in this district have no pinnacles. Leverton was
-thatched until 1884, when the present clerestory was built. The chancel
-has some beautiful canopied sedilia, which are spoken of by Marrat in
-his “History of Lincolnshire” as “three stone stalls of most exquisite
-workmanship, to describe the beauties of which the pen seems not to
-possess an adequate power.” At the back of one of these is an aumbrey, or
-locker. The windows are square-headed, the font is tall and handsome, but
-the greatest charm of the building is the sacristy or Lady chapel to the
-south of the chancel—a perfect gem of architecture, the carved stone work
-of which is rich and tasteful. Crucifixes surmount both gables of this,
-and also that at the chancel end, this profusion being a consequence of
-the church being dedicated to St. Helena. Whether she was the daughter
-of a Bithynian innkeeper or a British princess, she was the wife of
-Constantius Chlorus and mother of Constantine the Great; and the legend
-is that, being admonished in a dream to search for the Cross of Christ,
-she journeyed to Jerusalem, and, employing men to dig at Golgotha, found
-three crosses, and having applied each of them to a dead person, one of
-the crosses raised the dead to life, so she knew that that was the one
-she was searching for. The church of North Ormsby is also dedicated to
-her. At Leverton the rood-loft steps exist on the south of the chancel
-arch, and the churchwarden’s book, which begins in 1535, gives the
-bill for putting up the rood loft and also for taking it down. At the
-beginning of last century Mrs. A. Skeath, of Boston, made a new sea-bank
-three miles long, which effectually reclaimed from the sea 390 acres for
-this parish.
-
-The village of _Benington_ has a fine church with a good porch and a
-turret stairway to the north-east of the nave. The roof retains its old
-timbers with carved angels. In the chancel are the springers for a stone
-roof. The pillars of the nave have a very wide circular base, and in the
-Early English chancel are sedilia with aumbries and piscina, and also
-an arched recess which may have been used for an Easter sepulchre. The
-tall red sandstone font is singularly fine, both bowl and pedestal being
-richly carved with figures under canopies.
-
-[Illustration: _Leverton Windmill._]
-
-The practice of putting inscriptions into rhyme is exemplified in the
-windows of these churches.
-
-[Sidenote: BENINGTON]
-
-Benington has a Latin couplet:—
-
- Ad loca Stellata
- Duc me Katherina beata
-
-Leverton one in Norman French:—
-
- Pour l’amour de Jhesu Christ
- Priez par luy q moy fatre fist.
-
- (Pray for him who caused me to be made.)
-
-[Sidenote: BUTTERWICK AND FRIESTON]
-
-[Sidenote: FRIESTON SHORE]
-
-A lane here leads eastwards to Benington-Sea-End, which is close on the
-Roman bank. And, as the main road to Boston is devoid of interest, we
-will bend to the left hand, and pass through Butterwick to Frieston
-and so to the shore. An old register records in rhyme the planting of
-the fine sycamore tree in _Butterwick_ churchyard, in 1653. The name
-Butterwick occurs in the East Riding of Yorkshire, and is derived
-probably from the Dane Buthar, as are Buttermere in Cumberland, and
-Butterlip-How in Grasmere. At _Frieston_, which, like Friskney and
-Firsby, is said to indicate a colony of Frieslanders, the present church
-is the nave of a fine old priory church of the twelfth century founded
-by Alan de Creon for Benedictines and attached as a cell to Croyland,
-where his brother was abbot. It had a central tower adjoining the east of
-the present building; the west piers of this tower are visible outside.
-Inside there are six Norman and three pointed arches, the latter leading
-to a massive western tower with a stone figure in a niche dating from the
-fifteenth century. The south aisle is now all of brick, the Norman stone
-corbelling being replaced above the eight large three light clerestory
-windows. The most remarkable thing in the church is the beautiful carved
-wood font-cover, at least twelve feet high, and surmounted by a figure
-of the Virgin. This is similar, but superior, to that at Fosdyke, but
-in no way equal to the beautiful and richly carved example ten feet in
-height at Ufford church in Suffolk. The font itself has carved panels
-and two kneeling-steps for priest and sponsor. The churchyard is an
-extremely large one. The sea once came close up to Frieston, the coast
-bending round to Fishtoft and towards Skirbeck; at the present time the
-Frieston shore is two and a half miles off. The road runs close up to the
-sea-bank. A long old-fashioned hostelry, with a range of stables telling
-of days gone by, stands under the shelter of the bank, on mounting which
-you find a bench on a level with the bedroom windows of the inn, whence
-you look out towards the sea, which forms a shining line in the far
-distance, for it is over two miles to ‘Boston deeps,’ far over a singular
-stretch of foreshore channelled with a network of deep clefts by which
-the retreating tide drains seaward through the glistening mud. The first
-part of this desolate shore is green with sea-grasses, visited daily by
-the salt water, and along the fringe of it there are here many rather
-uncommon flowers growing just below high-water mark, such as the yellow
-variety of the sea aster (_Aster tripolium var. discoideus_), and the
-rare _Suæda fruticosa_; and in the ditches leading inland the handsome
-marsh-mallow (_Althæa officinalis_) flourishes, as it does on Romney
-Marsh, near Rye. At high water all looks quite different; and a sunrise
-over the lagoon-like shallow water gives a picture of colour which is not
-easily forgotten.
-
-[Illustration: _Frieston Priory Church._]
-
-From Frieston shore one gets by a circuitous three-mile route to
-_Fishtoft_. Here once was a Norman church. The present one has two rood
-screens; one, at the west end, having been purchased from Frieston,
-which, however, retained its two aisle screens. There is a good small
-figure of St. Guthlac, the patron saint, over the west window of the
-tower, much like that at Frieston. On a tombstone in the churchyard is
-the following:—
-
- Interred here lies Anne the wife
- Of Bryon Johnson during life
- The 25ᵗʰ day of November
- In 68 he lost this member.
-
-He only survived her two months, and the next inscription is:—
-
- Now Bryon is laid down by Anne
- ’Till God does raise them up again.
-
-This rhyme might do for Norfolk or Devonshire, but is not Lincolnshire.
-
-[Sidenote: BOSTON STUMP]
-
-And now two miles more bring us to _Skirbeck_ on the outskirts of Boston.
-The only interesting feature of the church here is in the columns of the
-nave, which have four cylinders round a massive centre pillar, all four
-quite detached except at the bases and capitals, which last are richly
-carved. We shall find exactly similar ones at Weston, near Spalding. We
-now follow the curving line of the Haven with its grassy banks right
-into Boston. The splendid parish church, the sight of whose tower is a
-never-failing source of delight and inspiration, stands with its east end
-in the market-place, and its tall tower close on the bank of the river.
-It has no transepts as the Great Yarmouth church has, but, apart from
-its unapproachable steeple, it is longer and higher and greater in cubic
-contents than any parish church in the kingdom. The tower, 288 feet, is
-taller than Lincoln tower or Grantham spire, and is only exceeded in
-height by Louth spire, which is 300 feet. The view of it from across the
-river is one of the most entirely satisfying sights in the world.[31]
-The extreme height is so well proportioned, and each stage leads up so
-beautifully to the next, that one is never tired of gazing on it. Add
-to this that it is visible to all the dwellers in the Marsh and Fen for
-twenty miles round and from the distant Wolds, and again far out to sea,
-and is as familiar to all as their own shadow, and you can guess at the
-affection which stirs the hearts of all Lincolnshire men when they think
-or speak of the ‘Owd Stump,’ a curious title for a beloved object, but
-so slightly does it decrease in size as it soars upwards from basement
-to lantern, that in the distance it looks more like a thick mast or the
-headless stem of a gigantic tree than a church steeple.
-
-[Illustration: _Boston Church from the N.E._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE BUILDING OF THE CHURCH]
-
-[Sidenote: THE INTERIOR]
-
-There was once here a church of the type of Sibsey, said to date from
-1150, of which but little has been discovered. The present building was
-begun in 1309, when the digging for the foundation of the tower began
-“on ye Monday after Palm Sunday in the 3ʳᵈ yr of Ed. II.” They went down
-thirty feet to a bed of stone five feet below the level of the river
-bed, overlying “a spring of sand,” under which again was a bed of clay
-of unknown thickness. The excavation was a very big job, and the “first
-stone” was not laid till the feast of St. John the Baptist (Midsummer
-Day) by Dame Margaret Tilney, and she and Sir John Truesdale, then parson
-of Boston, and Richard Stevenson, a Boston merchant, each laid £5 on the
-stone “which was all ye gifts given at that time” towards the expense
-which, we are told, was, for the whole tower, under £500 of the money of
-those days. Leland, Vol. VIII., 204, says: “Mawde Tilney who layed the
-first stone of the goodly steeple of the paroche chirch of Boston lyith
-buried under it.” The work of building up the tower was interrupted for
-fifty years, and the body of the church was taken in hand, the present
-tower arch serving as a west window. Then the tower began to rise, but
-it was finished without the lantern. In the middle of the fifteenth
-century the chancel was lengthened by two bays, and the parapets and
-pinnacles added to the aisles. The parapet at the east end of the north
-aisle is very curious and elaborate, being pierced with tracery of nearly
-the same design as that on the flying buttresses of Henry VII.’s Chapel
-at Westminster. There were several statues round the building on tall
-pedestals rising from the lowest coping of the buttresses to about the
-height of the nave parapets; one is conspicuous still at the south-east
-corner of the tower and above the south porch. The tower has three
-stages, arranged as in Louth church, and then the lantern above. In the
-first stage a very large west window rises above the west doorway, and
-similar ones on the north and south of the tower, and all the surface is
-enriched with panelling both on tower and buttresses. The next stage is
-lighted by a pair of windows of great height, finely canopied and divided
-by a transom, on each side of the tower; this forms the ringing chamber,
-and a gallery runs round it in the thickness of the wall communicating
-with the two staircases. On the door of one of these is a remarkable
-handle, a ring formed by two bronze lizards depending from a lion’s
-mouth. The clustered shafts and springers of the stone vault were built
-at the beginning, but the handsome groined roof with its enormous central
-boss 156 feet from the ground was not completed until 1852. The next
-story has large single-arched windows of a decidedly plain type. These
-are the only things one can possibly find fault with, but probably when
-the tower had no lantern the intention was to exhibit the light from this
-story, the bells being hung below and rung from the ground. Eventually
-the eight bells were hung in the third story, and the lantern, by far the
-finest in England, was added, which gives so queenly an effect to the
-tall tower. Before this was done four very high pinnacles finished the
-building, subsequently arches were turned diagonally over the angles of
-the tower so as to make the base of the octagonal lantern. The roof of
-the tower and the gutters round it are of stone and curiously contrived.
-The lantern has eight windows like those in the second stage of the
-tower, but each one pane longer, and the corners are supported by flying
-buttresses springing in pairs from each tower pinnacle. The whole is
-crowned with a lofty parapet with pierced tracery and eight pinnacles
-with an ornamented gable between each pair of pinnacles. Inside was a
-lantern lighted at night for a sea mark. The church of All Saints, York,
-has a very similar one, and there the hook for the lantern pulley is
-still to be seen.
-
-[Sidenote: BOSTON, U.S.A.]
-
-Inside, one is struck by the ample size and height of the church and its
-vast proportions. The choir has five windows on each side. But the nave
-is spoilt by a false wooden roof which cuts off half of the clerestory
-windows. It is a pity this is not removed and the old open timber roof
-replaced. In the chancel are sixty-four stalls of good carved work, and
-the old and curiously designed miserere seats, often showing humorous
-subjects as at Lincoln, are of exceptional interest. Of the once numerous
-brasses most are gone, but two very fine ones are on either side the
-altar: one to Walter Peascod, merchant, 1390, and one to a priest in a
-cope, _c._ 1400; an incised slab of 1340 is at the west of the north
-aisle. The Conington tablet in memory of John Conington, Corpus Professor
-of Latin in the University of Oxford, on the south wall of the chancel
-is to be noticed, and the Bolles monument in the south aisle, and, near
-the south porch, the chapel which was restored by the Bostonians of
-the United States as a recognition of their Lincolnshire origin. Close
-to this is a curious epitaph painted on a wooden panel, which reads as
-follows:—
-
- My corps with Kings and Monarchs sleeps in bedd,
- My soul with sight of Christ in heaven is fedd,
- This lumpe that lampe shall meet, and shine more bright
- Than Phœbus when he streams his clearest light,
- Omnes sic ibant sic imus ibitis ibunt.
- Rich. Smith obiit
- Anno salutis 1626.
-
-[Illustration: _Boston Stump._]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVII
-
-ST. BOTOLPH’S TOWN
-
- The River Witham—Drayton’s Polyolbion—The Steeple at
- Boston—Monastic Houses—Merchants’ Guilds—Dykes and Sluices—The
- Fens reclaimed—Great Floods—High Tides—The Hussey and Kyme
- Towers—John Fox—Hallam and Conington—Jean Ingelow—Lincolnshire
- Stories.
-
-
-A not unapt parallel has been drawn between Boston and Venice for, like
-the Campanile, Boston steeple is a sort of Queen of the Waters, and
-before the draining of the Fens she often looked down on a waste of
-waters which stretched in all directions.
-
-Leland, who wrote in the reign of Henry VIII., in Vol. VII. of his
-Itinerary, speaks of “the great Steple of Boston,” and describes the town
-thus: “Bosstolpstoune stondeth harde on the river Lindis (Witham). The
-greate and chifiest parte of the toune is on the este side of the ryver,
-where is a faire market place, and a crosse with a square toure. Al the
-buildings of this side of the toune is fayre, and Marchuntes duelle yn
-it; and a staple of wulle is used there. There is a bridg of wood to cum
-over Lindis, into this parte of the toune, and a pile of stone set yn the
-myddle of the ryver. The streame of yt is sumtymes as swifte as it were
-an arrow. On the West side of Lindis is one long strete, on the same side
-is the White Freies. The mayne sea ys VI miles of Boston. Dyverse good
-shipps and other vessells ryde there.”
-
-[Sidenote: THE RIVER WITHAM]
-
-Michael Drayton, who wrote in Elizabeth’s reign, was quite enthusiastic
-about the merits of the Witham, which runs out at Boston, and makes her
-speak in her own person thus:—
-
- From Witham, mine own town, first water’d with my source,
- As to the Eastern sea I hasten on my course,
- Who sees so pleasant plains or is of fairer seen?
- Whose swains in shepherd’s gray and girls in Lincoln green,
- Whilst some the ring of bells, and some the bagpipes play,
- Dance many a merry round, and many a hydegy.[32]
- I envy, any brook should in my pleasure share,
- Yet for my dainty pikes, I am without compare.
-
- No land floods can me force to over proud a height;
- Nor am I in my course too crooked or too streight;
- My depths fall by descents, too long nor yet too broad,
- My fords with pebbles, clear as orient pearls, are strow’d,
- My gentle winding banks with sundry flowers are dress’d,
- My higher rising heaths hold distance with my breast.
- Thus to her proper song the burthen still she bare;
- Yet for my dainty pikes I am without compare.
-
- By this to Lincoln town, upon whose lofty scite
- Whilst wistly Wytham looks with wonderful delight,
- Enamour’d of the state and beauty of the place
- That her of all the rest especially doth grace,
- Leaving her former course, in which she first set forth,
- Which seem’d to have been directly to the North,
- She runs her silver front into the muddy fen
- Which lies into the east, in the deep journey when
- Clear Bane, a pretty brook, from Lindsey, coming down
- Delicious Wytham leads to lively Botulph’s town,
- Where proudly she puts in, among the great resort
- That there appearance make, in Neptune’s Wat’ry Court.
-
- Polyolbion. Song 25.
-
-[Sidenote: SKIRBECK]
-
-We have no definite information of what Boston was in Roman times, but
-as the Witham was the river on which their colony at Lincoln stood, it
-is more than probable that they had a station at Boston to defend the
-river-mouth, and whatever _they_ may have called it, it is certain that
-it has got its name of Boston or Botolph’s town from an English saint who
-is said to have founded a monastery here in 654, which was destroyed by
-the Danes in 870. St. Botolph was buried in his monastery in 680, and his
-remains moved in 870, part to Ely and part to Thorney Abbey. The name
-as a town does not appear in Domesday Book, though “Skirbec” does, and
-Skirbeck covered all the ground that Boston does, and almost surrounded
-it. As the old distich declares—
-
- Though Boston be a proud town
- Skirbeck compasseth it around.
-
-[Sidenote: BOSTON PORT]
-
-This name for pride or conceit, whether deserved or not, seems to have
-stuck to Boston, for a rhyme of later day runs thus:—
-
- Boston Boston Boston!
- Thou hast nought to boast on
- But a grand sluice, and a high steeple,
- And a proud conceited ignorant people,
- And a coast which souls get lost on.
-
-And certainly Boston once had some reason to be proud, for though the
-town was quite an infant till the beginning of the twelfth century, in
-1113 “Fergus, a brazier of St. Botolph’s town” was able, according to
-Ingulphus in his “Chronicles of Croyland Abbey,” “to give 2 _Skillets_
-(Skilletas) which supplied the loss of their bells and tower.” The gift,
-whatever it was (probably small bells), must have been of considerable
-value to Croyland, which had been burnt down in 1091, and argues much
-prosperity among Boston tradespeople. Indeed, the town and its trade rose
-with such rapidity during the next hundred years that when, in the reign
-of King John, a tax or tythe of a fifteenth was levied on merchants’
-goods, Boston’s contribution was £780, being second only to the £836 of
-London. For the next two centuries it was a commercial port of the first
-rank, and merchants from Flanders and most of the great Continental towns
-had houses there.
-
-[Illustration: _Custom House Quay, Boston._]
-
-When in 1304 Edward I. granted his wife Queen Margaret the castle and
-manor of Tattershall to hold till the heir was of age, he added to it
-the manor of St. Botolph and the duties levied on the weighing of the
-wool there. This was set down as worth £12 a year. A wool sack was very
-large—one sees them now at Winchester, each large enough to fill the
-whole bed of a Hampshire waggon—but at 6_s._ 8_d._ a sack the duties
-must have been often worth more than £12, for there was no other staple
-in the county but at Lincoln, and that was afterwards, under Edward III.
-in 1370, transferred to Boston, and whether at Boston or Lincoln, when
-weighed and sealed by the mayor of the staple, it was from Boston that it
-was all exported.
-
-[Sidenote: THE STAPLE]
-
-When a staple of wool, leather, lead, etc., was established at any
-town or port it was directed that the commodities should be brought
-thither from all the neighbourhood and weighed, marked and sealed.
-Then they could be delivered to any other port, where they were again
-checked. In 1353, during the long reign of Edward III., the staple was
-appointed to be held in Newcastle, York, Lincoln, Norwich, Westminster,
-Canterbury, Chichester, Winchester, Exeter and Bristol. Of these, York
-and Lincoln sent all the produce when weighed to Hull and Boston, Norwich
-to Yarmouth, Westminster to London Port, Canterbury to Sandwich, and
-Winchester (by water or road) to Southampton. In 1370 some of the inland
-towns—York, Lincoln and Norwich—were deprived of their staple, and
-Hull and Queensborough were added to the list; and, though Nottingham,
-Leicester and Derby petitioned to have the staple at Lincoln, which was
-much more convenient to them, the answer they got was that it should
-continue at St. Botolph’s during the king’s pleasure.
-
-[Illustration: _South Square, Boston._]
-
-In Henry VIII.’s time, when the king passed through Lincolnshire after
-“the pilgrimage of grace” and the chief towns made submission and paid
-a fine, Boston paid £50, while Stamford and Lincoln paid £20 and £40
-respectively.
-
-[Sidenote: FRIARIES AND GUILDS]
-
-In 1288 a church of the Dominican or Black Friars which had been recently
-built was burnt down, and a few years later a friary was re-established,
-which was one of the many Lincolnshire religious houses granted by Henry
-VIII. to Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk. In 1301, under Edward I., a
-Carmelite, or White Friars, monastic house and priory was founded; and in
-the next reign, 1307, an Augustinian, or “Austin,” friary; and only a few
-years later, under Edward III., a Franciscan, or Grey Friars, friary was
-established. All these three were granted by Henry at the dissolution to
-the mayor and burgesses of Boston. He also granted the town their charter
-under the great Seal of England, to make amends for the losses they
-sustained by the destruction of the religious houses. It is a document
-with fifty-seven clauses, making the town a free borough with a market
-on Wednesday and Saturday, and two fairs annually of three days each, to
-which are added two “marts” for horses and cattle. The ground where the
-grammar school stands is still called the Mart-yard, and there you may
-still see the beautiful iron gate which was once part of a screen in the
-church, and is a very notable piece of good seventeenth-century work.
-
-The charter also gave the corporation, among other things, “power to
-assess the inhabitants, as well unfree as free, with a tax for making
-a safeguard and defence of the borough and church there against the
-violence of the waters and rage of the sea.”
-
-In the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries there were no less than fifteen
-guilds in the town, six of them with charters. The hall of St. Mary’s
-guild still exists, the names of St. George’s Lane and Corpus Christi
-Lane is all that is left of the others, but the old names indicate the
-localities.
-
-[Sidenote: THE WINE-CELLARS]
-
-In 1360 we have mention on the corporation records of William de Spayne,
-one of a family of merchants of repute, after whom Spayne’s Place and
-what is now Spain Lane were named. William was an alderman of the Corpus
-Christi Guild, and sheriff of the county in 1378. Spain Lane had a row of
-great cellars, some of which were rented by the abbeys, and a quantity
-of wine was shipped from Bordeaux to Boston. King John of France had 140
-tuns at one time, the carriage of which to Boston, and some part of it
-to the place of his detention at Somerton Castle (_see_ Chap. XIII.),
-cost close upon £500. This large supply was sent to him from France,
-partly for his own consumption and partly to be sold in order to bring in
-money to keep up his royal state, and when we read of the silk curtains
-and tapestries, the French furniture for dining-hall and bedrooms which
-displaced the benches and trestles of an English castle, the horse
-trappings and stable fittings, and the enormous amount of stores and
-confectionery used at Somerton, we realise that his daily expenditure
-must have been a very large one. The cellars which stowed these large
-cargoes of wine were in Spain (or Spayne) Lane, and most of them were,
-in 1590, in accordance with Boston’s usual suicidal custom, destroyed,
-though the corporation still held two in 1640 which had once belonged to
-Kirkstead Abbey.
-
-[Illustration: _Spain Lane, Boston._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE SILTING OF THE RIVER]
-
-In the sixteenth century several trade companies—cordwainers, glovers,
-etc.—received charters. In this century Queen Elizabeth gave the mayor
-and burgesses a “Charter of Admiralty” over the whole of the “Norman
-Deeps” to enable them to repair and maintain the sea marks, and to levy
-tolls on all ships entering the port. But trade was then declining owing
-to the silting up of the river. This, in 1569, when the town was made
-a _Staple_ town, had been in good order, and navigable for seagoing
-ships of some size, the tide water running up two miles inland as far
-as Dockdyke (now Dogdyke), and then a large trade was done in wool and
-woollen goods between Boston and Flanders. Hence it was that when, in the
-reign of Henry VII., a council was held to discuss the two great needs
-of the town, _viz._, the restraining the sea water from flooding the
-land, and the delivery of the inland waters speedily to the sea, it was
-to Flanders that the Boston men turned for an engineer, one Mahave Hall,
-who built them a dam and sluice in the year 1500. This is called the Old
-Sluice, and was effectual for a time. But in Queen Elizabeth’s reign the
-river below Boston was getting so silted up again that the waters of
-South Holland were brought by means of two “gowts” (go outs), or “clows,”
-one into the Witham above Boston at Langrick, and one below into the
-harbour at Skirbeck, to scour out the channel. The Kesteven men, from a
-sense of being robbed of their waters, opposed, but their objections were
-over-ruled by the chief justices. In 1568-9 the “Maud Foster” drain was
-cut and named after the owner, who gave easement over her land on very
-favourable terms.
-
-In the map to the first volume of the “History of Lincolnshire,”
-published by Saunders in 1834, the Langrick Gowt (or gote) finds no
-place; but the “Holland Dyke” is probably meant for it. The Skirbeck dyke
-is marked very big and called “The South Forty-foot,” which, along with
-the North Forty-foot and Hobhole drains, and others of large size, aided
-by powerful steam pumps, have made the Fens into a vast agricultural
-garden.
-
-[Sidenote: THE GRAND SLUICE]
-
-But the Elizabethan expedient was only successful for a time, and in 1751
-a small sloop of forty to fifty tons and drawing about six feet of water
-could only get up to Boston on a spring tide. To remedy this and also to
-keep the floods down, which, when the cutfall was choked, extended in wet
-seasons west of the town as far as eye could see, an Act of Parliament
-was passed to empower Boston to cut the Witham channel straight and
-set to work on a new sluice. This “Grand Sluice,” designed by Langley
-Edwardes, had its foundation carried down twenty feet, on to a bed of
-stiff clay. Here, just as, near the old Skirbeck sluice, where Hammond
-beck enters the haven, at a depth of sixteen feet sound gravel and soil
-was met with, in which trees had grown; and at Skirbeck it is said that a
-smith’s forge, with all its tools, horseshoes, etc., complete, was found
-at that depth below the surface, showing how much silt had been deposited
-within no great number of years. The foundation stone of the present
-Grand sluice was laid by Charles Amcotts, then Member of Parliament and
-Mayor of Boston, in 1764, and opened two years later in the presence
-of a concourse of some ten thousand people. He died in 1777, and the
-Amcotts family in the male line died with him. In Jacobean times much
-good embankment work under Dutch engineers had been begun, and had met
-with fierce opposition from the Fen men, and the same spirit was still
-in existence a hundred and fifty years later, for when, in 1767, an Act
-was passed for the enclosure of Holland, the works gave rise to the most
-determined and fierce riots which were carried to the most unscrupulous
-length of murder, cattle maiming, and destruction of valuable property,
-and lasted from 1770 to 1773. But at length common sense prevailed,
-and a very large and fertile tract of land to the south-east of Boston
-was acquired, which helped again to raise the fortunes of the town to
-prosperity. Following on this in 1802 a still larger area was reclaimed
-on the other side of Boston in the East, West, and Wildmore Fens. But,
-as in all low-lying lands near the coast which are below the level of
-high-water mark, constant look-out has to be kept even now, both to
-prevent the irruption of the sea and the flooding of the land from
-storm-water not getting away quickly enough.
-
-[Sidenote: GREAT FLOODS]
-
-The Louth Abbey “Chronicle,” a most interesting document, extending from
-1066 to the death of Henry IV., 1413, records disastrous floods in the
-Marsh in 1253 and 1315, and a bad outbreak of cattle plague in 1321. From
-other sources we have notice of a great flood at Boston in 1285; another
-in ‘Holland,’ 1467; and again at Boston in 1571 a violent tempest, with
-rain, wind, and high tide combining, did enormous damage. Sixty vessels
-were wrecked between Newcastle and Boston, many thousands of sheep and
-cattle were drowned in the Marsh, the village of Mumby-Chapel was washed
-into the sea and only three cottages and the steeple of the church left
-standing. One “Maister Pelham had eleven hundred sheep drowned there.” At
-the same time “a shippe” was driven against a house in the village, and
-the men, saving themselves by clambering out on to the roof, were just in
-time to save a poor woman in the cottage from the death by drowning which
-overtook her husband and child. So sudden and violent was the rise of the
-flood that at Wansford on the Nene three arches of the bridge were washed
-away, and “Maister Smith at the Swanne there hadde his house, being three
-stories high, overflowed into the third storie,” while the walls of the
-stable were broken down, and the horses tied to the manger were all
-drowned.
-
-At the same time the water reached half way up Bourne church tower.
-This shows the tremendous extent of the flood, for those two places are
-forty-four miles apart. This is the “High tide on the Lincolnshire Coast”
-sung by our Lincolnshire poetess, Jean Ingelow. She speaks of the Boston
-bells giving the alarm by ringing the tune called “The Brides of Mavis
-Enderby.”
-
- The old Mayor climbed the belfry tower,
- The ringers ran by two by three;
- ‘Pull if ye never pulled before,
- Good ringers, pull your best,’ quoth he.
- Play uppe play uppe, O Boston bells;
- Ply all your changes, all your swells,
- Play uppe “The Brides of Enderby.”
-
-This tune, which Miss Ingelow only imagined, was subsequently composed,
-and is now well known at Boston, for, besides the ring of eight bells,
-the tower has a set of carillons like those at Antwerp. They were set
-up in 1867, thirty-six in number, by Van Aerschodt, of Louvain, but not
-proving to be a success, were changed in 1897 for something less complex,
-and now can be heard at 9 a.m., and every third hour of the day playing
-“The Brides of Mavis Enderby.”
-
-[Sidenote: AND HIGH TIDES]
-
-A violent gale is recorded on February 16, 1735, which did much damage,
-and in 1763-4 there was a great flood, not owing to any high tide but
-simply, as in 1912, from continued heavy rains, and we are told that the
-flood lasted for many weeks. Just lately, in 1912, this was aggravated
-by the bursting of a dyke in the Bedford level which flooded miles
-of fenland. In August, 1913, the land was parched by drought, but in
-1912 it was a melancholy sight to see, in August, on both sides of the
-railway between Huntingdon and Spalding the corn sheaves standing up
-out of the water, and the farm buildings entirely surrounded, while the
-rain continued to fall daily. Even after three weeks of fine weather in
-September, though the drenched sheaves had been got away, water still
-covered the fields, stretching sometimes as far as eye could see. In
-1779, when the reclamation of the Holland ‘Fens’ had been carried out,
-many vessels are said to have been driven by a violent gale nearly two
-miles inland on the ‘Marsh.’ This was long spoken of as “The New Year’s
-Gale.”
-
-Exceptionally high tides, each four inches higher than its predecessor,
-in the streets of Boston are recorded for October 19, 1801, November 30,
-1807, and November 10, 1810. This last accompanied by a storm of wind
-and rain. On this occasion the water was all over the streets of Boston
-and flowed up the nave of the church as far as the chancel step, being
-nearly a yard deep at the west end. Since then high-water marks were cut
-on the base of the tower showing how deep the nave was flooded in 1883
-and 1896. In 1813 another high tide caused the sea-bank assessment to
-rise to 13_s._ 8_d._ an acre, the normal rate then, as it is now, for the
-drainage tax in the east fen, amounting to 3_s._ an acre. Even that seems
-to be pretty stiff, £15 a year on a hundred acre farm! Of course it is an
-absolute necessity, and has been recognised from the earliest times. We
-know that in the reign of Edward I. an assessment was levied on all who
-had land to keep the drains in repair. This was as long ago as 1298.
-
-[Sidenote: PICTURESQUE BOSTON]
-
-[Sidenote: THE GUILDHALL]
-
-The great feature of Boston is the wonderful church tower. But the town
-is from many points very picturesque. The deep-cut channel of the tidal
-river goes right through it. Passing close up against the western side
-of the great steeple, it goes with houses almost overhanging its eastern
-bank down to the bridge, a structure of no beauty. After this it runs
-alongside the street. From the windows you look across and see the masts
-of the small sea-going craft tied up to the bank, which, with all the old
-weed-grown timbers of landing-stage and jetty, the natural accompaniments
-of a tidal river, make quaint and effective pictures. In another street
-the boys in their old-fashioned blue coats and brass buttons let you into
-the secret of Boston’s many educational charities. One is in Wormgate
-(or Withamsgate), one in White Friars Lane, dating from the beginning of
-the sixteenth century, and another in Shodfriars Lane. The very names
-of the streets in Boston are full of history, and the recently-restored
-“Shod Friars Hall,” to the south-east of the Market Place, helps, with
-its abundant timbers and carved gables, to take one right back to the
-fourteenth century, though the name was only recently bestowed on this
-particular building.
-
-[Illustration: _The Haven, Boston._]
-
-[Illustration: _The Guildhall, Boston._]
-
-But alas, not only all the monastic buildings, but nearly all the
-domestic buildings which once made Boston like a medieval Dutch town
-are gone, though the fifteenth-century brick Guildhall remains. The
-citizens seem to have had a fatal mania for pulling down all that was
-most worth preserving of their old buildings. Gone, too, is much else
-which Bostonians might well have preserved. Such, for instance, as “the
-prodigious clock bell which could be heard many miles round, and was
-knocked to pieces in the year 1710.” It is but a few years ago that some
-of the Boston Corporation plate was sold in London for immense prices,
-and when astonished people asked how it came to the hammer they heard
-a miserable tale how the fine collection of civic plate, and it was
-unusually fine, had been sold in 1837 for £600, nothing approaching to
-its value, by the corporation itself, for the purpose of liquidating some
-civic debt. But any sin Boston may commit, such as the crude colouring of
-the interior of the much-renovated Guildhall, and painting and graining
-of the deal panels only last year, will be forgiven, so long as they have
-their uniquely glorious church tower to plead for them.
-
-Lord Hussey’s tower and the Kyme tower are ruins, built about the end of
-the fifteenth century, and at the end of the eighteenth century a big
-house was still standing which may have been Lord Hussey’s. The brick
-tower stands near the school fields, not far from the Public Gardens,
-which are a credit to Boston, and have some first-rate salt-water baths
-close by, which belong to the corporation.
-
-The Kyme tower is also called the Rochford tower, that family having held
-it before the Kymes. It is a massive tower, also of brick, as may be seen
-from the illustration. It stands about two miles outside the town to the
-east.
-
-[Sidenote: FAMOUS BOSTONIANS]
-
-Of celebrated folk born in Boston we have, to begin with, John Fox,
-author of the “Book of Martyrs,” who was born there in 1517. He was sent
-to Brasenose, Oxford, and worked very hard, but was expelled as a heretic
-when he forsook the Roman Catholic religion. The Warwickshire family of
-Sir Thomas Lucie, a name made famous by Shakespeare, gave him shelter
-and employment as a tutor; and later he tutored the children of the Earl
-of Surrey who, in the reign of Queen Mary, helped him to escape from
-Bishop Gardiner’s deadly clutches. Like so many who suffered persecution
-for their religion, he made his home at Basle till Elizabeth’s accession
-allowed of his return. He then spent eleven years on his “Acts and
-Monuments,” and died in 1587.
-
-At about this time the plague raged at Boston, 1585, and broke out again
-in 1603. Boston and Frampton had, as the Registers show, suffered an
-unusual mortality in 1568-9. The water was not good, and as late as 1783
-a boring to a depth of 478 feet was made in a vain search for a better
-supply. The town was at that time supplied from the west fen through
-wooden pipes.
-
-[Illustration: _Hussey’s Tower, Boston._]
-
-[Sidenote: CROMWELL AT BOSTON]
-
-Hallam, the historian, and Professor John Conington, whose monuments are
-in the church, were both of Boston families, as was also Jean Ingelow;
-and the statue near the church preserves the memory of John Ingram,
-Member of Parliament for the town, and founder of the _Illustrated London
-News_. Saunders tells us that Oliver Cromwell lay at Boston the night
-before he fought the battle of Winceby, near Horncastle, October 10,
-1643. He must have been up betimes, for a crow couldn’t make the distance
-less than sixteen miles, and fen roads at that time were a caution.
-
-[Sidenote: “MY OWD SON”]
-
-Boston is a great centre for the fen farmers, and, as at Peterborough,
-you may see and hear in the market much that is original. It was at
-Peterborough that the “converted” sailor made his famous petition when
-asked to do a bit of praying in the open: “O Lord! bless this people!
-bless their fathers and mothers! and bless the children! O Lord bless
-this place! make it prosperous, send thy blessing upon it and make
-it—make it, O Lord! a sea-poort-town!” Boston having the Marsh farmers as
-well as the Fen-men meeting in her market, preserves a more racy dialect.
-I was once in the Boston Station waiting-room as it was getting dusk on a
-winter evening; three people of the sea-faring class were there—a tall,
-elderly man standing up, his son asleep on the floor, and the son’s wife
-sitting and apparently not much concerned with anything. The father,
-seeing me look at the sleeper, said “He’ll be all right after a bit. My
-owd son yon is. He’s a bit droonk now, but he’s my owd son. A strange
-good hand in a boat he is, I tell ye. They was out lass Friday i’ the
-Noorth Sea and it cam on a gale o’ wind, they puts abowt you knooa, an’
-runs for poort. The seäs was monstrous high, they was, and the gale was a
-rum un, an’ the booat she was gaff-hallyards under. The tother men ‘She’s
-gooing!’ they says, ‘She’s gooing!’ But my owd son he hed the tiller.
-‘_She’s_ all right,’ he säys, and mind ye she was gaff-hallyards under,
-but ‘_She’s_ all right,’ he säys, and he brings her right in. Aye he’s a
-rare un wi’ a booat is my owd son, noan to touch him. He’s a bit droonk
-now, but he’s my owd son.”
-
-On another occasion at Boston I heard one farmer greet another with
-“Well, Mr. Smith, how’s pigs?” a very common inquiry, for in Lincolnshire
-pigs fill a large space on the agricultural horizon. Witness the reply
-of an aged farmer, probably a little unmanned by market-day potations,
-to a vegetarian who, with a cruelty hardly to be suspected in the votary
-of so mild a diet, had attacked him with “How will you feel at the day
-of Judgment when confronted by a whole row of oxen whose flesh you have
-eaten?” “’Taint the beasts I’d be scared on; it’s the pigs; I’ve yetten a
-vast o’ pigs.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVIII
-
-SPALDING AND THE CHURCHES NORTH OF IT
-
- Potato Trade—Bulb-growing—The Welland—Ayscough Fee
- Hall—The Gentleman’s Society—The Church—Pinchbeck—Heraldic
- Tombs—The Custs—Surfleet—Leaning Tower—Gosberton—Churchyard
- Sheep—Cressy Hall—Quadring—Donington—Hemp and
- Flax—Swineshead—Bicker—Sutterton—Algarkirk.
-
-
-Three main roads enter the town of _Spalding_, the last town on the
-Welland before it runs out into Fosdyke Wash. They come from the north,
-south, and east. The west has none, being one huge fen which, till
-comparatively recent times, admitted of locomotion only by boat. The
-southern road comes from Peterborough and enters the county by the bridge
-over the Welland at Market Deeping, a pleasant-looking little town
-with wide market-like streets and its four-armed signpost pointing to
-Peterborough and Spalding ten miles, and Bourne and Stamford seven miles.
-
-[Sidenote: THE WELLAND]
-
-From Deeping to Spalding the road is a typical fen road—three little inns
-and a few farm cottages and the occasional line of white smoke on the
-perfectly straight Peterborough and Boston railway is all there is to see
-save the crops or the long potato graves which are mostly by the road
-side.
-
-[Illustration: _The Welland at Cowbit Road, Spalding._]
-
-[Illustration: _The Welland at High Street, Spalding._]
-
-[Sidenote: BULB-GROWING]
-
-The potato trade is a very large one. Every cart or waggon we passed at
-Easter-time on the roads between Deeping and Kirton-in-Holland was loaded
-with sacks of potatoes, and all the farm hands were busy uncovering
-the pits and sorting the tubers. Donington and Kirton seemed to be the
-centres of the trade, Kirton being the home of the man who is known as
-the potato king, and has many thousands of acres of fenland used for this
-crop alone. Spalding itself is the centre of the daffodil market, and
-quantities of bulbs are grown here and annually exported to Holland,
-it is said, to find their way back to England in the autumn as Dutch
-bulbs. I do not vouch for the truth of this, but certainly the business,
-which has been for years a speciality of Holland, where the lie of the
-land and the soil are much the same as in the South Lincolnshire and
-Cambridgeshire Fens, is now a large and lucrative industry here, and is
-each year expanding. The Channel and Scilly Islands and Cornwall can, of
-course, owing to their climate, get their narcissus into bloom earlier,
-but the conditions of soil are better in the Fens. Still, a liberal
-supply of manure is needed to insure fine blooms, and sixty or seventy
-tons to the acre is none too much, a crop of mustard or potatoes being
-taken off after its application before planting the bulbs. Hyacinths are
-still left to Holland, in one part of which, at Hillegom, near Haarlem,
-the soil has just that amount of sand and lime which that particular
-bulb demands. Tulips, however, are grown in England with great success;
-crocuses are seldom planted as they make such a small return on the
-outlay. For this outlay is very considerable, nine or ten women are
-needed to each plough for planting, which alone costs 45_s._ an acre,
-and then there is the constant weeding and cleaning of the ground, the
-picking, bunching and packing, which needs many hands at once; also
-there is the heavy cost of the bulbs themselves for planting, Narcissus
-poeticus will cost £50 an acre of 400,000 bulbs, but 270,000 of Golden
-Spur will cost £300 and fill the same space; others will cost prices
-halfway between these two. Tulips want more room, and at 180,000 to the
-acre some will cost as much as £500. Growers like to advertise big
-bulbs, but the harder and smaller English-grown bulb will often give
-as fine a bloom as the larger imported article. The whole industry is
-comparatively new, and a very pleasant one for the many women who are
-employed.
-
-[Sidenote: A DISTRIBUTING CENTRE]
-
-The town is a very old one, and the Welland going through it with trees
-along its banks and the shipping close to the roadway gives it rather
-a Dutch appearance. It is noteworthy as being the centre from which we
-shall be able to see more fine churches, all within easy distance, than
-we can in any other part of the county or kingdom. As early as 860 the
-fisheries of the Welland, together with a wooden chapel of St. Mary
-here, which became the site afterwards of the priory, were given by Earl
-Alfgar to Croyland. Ivo Taillebois, the Conqueror’s nephew, with his
-wife Lucia the first, lived here in the castle in some magnificence as
-Lord of Holland. They were both buried in the priory church, founded
-by Lady Godiva’s brother, Thorold of Bokenhale, and over possession of
-which Spalding and Croyland had frequent disputes. One of the priors
-subsequently built Wykeham chapel. The Kings Edward I. and II. stayed
-at the priory, and from Bolingbroke, John of Gaunt and Chaucer were
-not infrequent visitors. The building was on the south side of the
-Market-place, and a shop there with a vaulted roof to one of its rooms
-had probably some connection with it. At the dissolution it was valued
-at £878, a very large sum, and next only to Croyland, which was by far
-the richest house in the county and valued at £1,100 or £1,200. Thornton
-Abbey was only set at £730.
-
-The river is navigable for small sea-going vessels, and many large
-barges may generally be found tied up along its course through the town,
-discharging oil cake and cotton cake, and taking in cargoes of potatoes,
-both being transhipped at Fosdyke from or into coasting steamers running
-between Hull and London.
-
-But water carriage though cheap is limited in that it only goes between
-two points, whereas Spalding is the meeting-place of at least three
-railways, making six exits for Spalding goods to come and go to and from
-all the main big towns in Northamptonshire, Cambridgeshire or Norfolk, as
-well as to all those in our own county. Thus there are twice as many ways
-out of Spalding by rail as there are by road.
-
-[Illustration: _Ayscough Fee Hall Gardens, Spalding._]
-
-[Sidenote: AYSCOUGH FEE HALL]
-
-The Welland, carefully banked by the Romans, is now bridged for one
-railway after another, and runs with a street on either side of it and
-rows of trees along it right through the town. On your right as you
-enter from the south you see across the river, looking over the top of
-a picturesque old brick wall, the well-clipped masses of ancient yew
-trees which form the shaded walks in the pretty grounds of _Ayscough Fee
-Hall_. The house, built in 1429, but terribly modernised, is now used as
-a museum, and the grounds form a public garden for the town. Murray tells
-us that Maurice Johnson once lived in it, who helped to found the Society
-of Antiquaries in 1717, and founded in 1710 the “Gentleman’s Society of
-Spalding,” which still flourishes. Among its many distinguished members
-it numbered Newton, Bentley, Pope, Gay, Addison, Stukeley, and Sir Hans
-Sloane, and Captain Perry, engineer to the Czar, Peter the Great, who was
-engaged in the drainage of Deeping Fen.
-
-[Sidenote: SPALDING CHURCH]
-
-Close to it is the fine old church, the body of which is as wide as it
-is long owing to its having double aisles on either side of the nave.
-It was founded to take the place of an earlier one which was falling to
-ruins, in the market-place. It dates from 1284, and was once cruciform in
-plan, with a tower at the north-west corner of the nave. The transepts,
-which now do not project beyond the double north and south aisles, had
-each two narrow transept aisles, but the western ones have been thrown
-into the aisles of the nave. The inner nave aisles are the same length
-as the nave, but the outer ones only go as far west as the north and
-south porches, the tower filling up the angle beyond the south porch.
-The chancel is so large that it was used by Bishop Fleming (1420-30) for
-episcopal ordinations.
-
-[Illustration: _Spalding Church from the S.E._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE “HOLE IN THE WALL”]
-
-The east end wall is not rectangular, but the south chancel wall runs out
-two feet further east than the north wall, as it does also in the church
-of Coulsdon, near Reigate, in Surrey. The reason of this is that it is
-built on the foundation of an older chapel. The flat Norman buttresses
-are still to be seen outside the east end. The tower leans to the east,
-and when examined it was found to have been built flat on the surface
-of the ground with no foundation whatever. It seems incredible, but
-the intelligent verger was positive about it. The spire has beautiful
-canopied openings in three tiers, the lower ones having two lights and
-being unusually graceful. Standing inside the south porch and near the
-tower, and looking up the church, you get a most picturesque effect, for
-the church has so many aisles that you can see no less than twenty-three
-different arches. The north porch is handsome, and had three canopied
-niches over both the outer and the inner doorway, and a vaulted roof
-supporting a room over the entrance. A five-light window over the chancel
-arch is curious. There is a rood-loft and a staircase leading to it, and
-going on up to the roof. The Perpendicular west window is very large
-and has seven lights. This dates from the fifteenth century, when the
-nave was lengthened and the pillars of the nave considerably heightened
-and the old caps used again, and what had previously been an “early
-Decorated” church with only a nave and transepts, had Perpendicular
-aisles added. The large south-east chapel which, until 1874 was used
-as a school, was founded in 1311. An erect life-size marble figure
-commemorates Elizabeth Johnson, 1843. There are no other important
-monuments. The tower has eight bells and a Sanctus bell-cot at the east
-end of the nave. There are stone steps to enable people to get over the
-brick churchyard wall, as there are also at Kirton and Friskney. Some
-stone coffin-lids curiously out of place are let into one of the boundary
-walls of the churchyard. Close by is the White Horse, a picturesque old
-thatched and gabled inn. There is another inn here called “The Hole in
-the Wall.” I wonder if this title is derived from Shakespeare’s play,
-“The tedious brief scene of young Pyramus and Thisbe,” who, says the
-story, “did talk through the chink of a wall,” or does it refer to some
-breach in the sea wall? To come from fancy to fact, the real name seems
-to have been Holy Trinity Wall, the house having been built up against a
-wall of that church which, with half a score of others in Spalding, has
-been dismantled and utterly swept away. Another puzzling sign I passed
-lately was “The New Found out.” The writer of an article in _The Times_
-of April 8, on the fire at Little Chesterford, thinks the sign of one of
-the burnt public-houses, “The Bushel and Strike,” a very singular one,
-not knowing that the strike, like the bushel, is a measure of corn.
-
-_St. Paul’s, Fulney_, to the north of the town, is a handsome new
-brick-and-stone church, by Sir Gilbert Scott, who also restored the old
-church and removed every sort of hideous inside fitting, where galleries
-all round the nave came within four feet of the heads of the worshippers
-in the box pews. At that time £11,000 was spent on the restoration. This
-was in 1866, in which year the vicar, the Rev. William Moore, died, and
-he and his wife are buried in the nave; his parents, who had done so much
-for the church, are buried at Weston.
-
-About two miles from Fulney is Wykeham chapel,[33] built in 1310 and
-attached to a country residence of the priors of Spalding; it is now only
-a ruin.
-
-[Illustration: _N. Side, Spalding Church._]
-
-[Sidenote: PAINTED PILLARS]
-
-[Sidenote: PINCHBECK]
-
-Going out of Spalding northwards, three miles bring us to _Pinchbeck_,
-which was an important village in Saxon times, and attached to Croyland
-Abbey, where a fine tower with six bells leans to the north-west. It is
-approached by a lime avenue. There are two rows of diaper carved work
-round the base of the tower, and large canopied niches on either side
-of the west door. The old roof on the north aisle is good, the pillars
-of the nave are spoilt by a hideous coat of purple paint. A delightful
-old brass weathercock is preserved in the church, and over the south
-porch is a dial. The high narrow tower-arch is a pleasure to look on.
-The altar tomb of Sir Thomas Pinchbeck (1500) has heraldic shields all
-round it, but is quite outdone by a brass of Margaret Lambert, a very
-ugly one, but adorned with twenty-seven heraldic coats of arms of her
-husband and fifteen of her own. The ten fine Perpendicular clerestory
-windows of three lights give the church a handsome appearance, and show
-the large wooden angels in the roof, who used to hold shields bearing the
-achievements of the house of “Pynchebek.”
-
-[Illustration: _Pinchbeck._]
-
-
-THE CUSTS.
-
-[Sidenote: THE CUST FAMILY]
-
-There is another name connected with this place, for one of the oldest
-Lincolnshire families is that of the Custs, or Costes, who have held land
-in Pinchbeck and near Bicker Haven for fourteen generations: though the
-first known mention of the name is not in the fens but at Navenby, where
-one Osbert Coste had held land in King John’s reign.
-
-The neighbourhood of Croyland Abbey, of Spalding Priory, and of
-Boston Haven, with its large wool trade, made “Holland” a district of
-considerable importance, and led some of the more enterprising mercantile
-families to settle in the neighbourhood.
-
-The same causes occasioned the building of the fine fen churches, which
-still remain, though the great houses have disappeared. Custs settled in
-Gosberton and Boston as well as at Pinchbeck. At the latter place, what
-is now the River Glen was in the fifteenth century called the “Bourne
-Ee,” or Eau, and the road by it was the “Ee Gate.” Here Robert Cust in
-1479 lived in “The Great House at Croswithand,” in which was a large
-hall open to the roof and strewed with rushes, with hangings in it to
-partition off sleeping places for the guests or the sons of the house,
-the daughters sharing the parlour with their parents. Robert is called a
-“Flaxman,” that being the crop by which men began to make their fortunes
-in Pinchbeck Fen. He continually added small holdings to his modest
-property as opportunity arose, and his son Hugh, succeeding in 1492, did
-the same; buying two acres from “Thomas Sykylbrys Franklin” for 50_s._
-and one and a half from Robert Sparowe for £5, and so on. Hugh is styled
-in 1494 “flax chapman,” in 1500 he had advanced to “Yeoman.” He then had
-three farms of sixty-nine acres, and by economy and industry he not only
-lived, but lived comfortably, and had money to buy fresh land, though his
-will shows that things were on a small scale still, so that individual
-mention is made of his “black colt with two white feet behind.” After the
-death of his two sons, Hugh’s grandson Richard succeeded in 1554, and
-married the juvenile widow, Milicent Slefurth _née_ Beele, who brought
-him the lands of R. Pereson, the wealthy vicar of Quadring, with a house
-at Moneybridge on the Glen, which she left eventually to her second
-son, Richard. His grandson Samuel took to the legal profession, and,
-disdaining the parts of Holland after life in London, left the house
-there to his brother Joshua, who was the last Cust to live at Pinchbeck.
-The family were by this time wealthy, and had a good deal of land round
-Boston and elsewhere. Samuel’s son, Richard, married in 1641 Beatrice
-Pury, and had a son called Pury, whence spring the Purey Custs. The
-Pury family then lived at Kirton, near Boston. He left the law for a
-soldier’s life, and was “captain of a Trained Band in the Wapentake of
-Skirbeck in the parts of Holland.” He succeeded his father in 1663 and
-lived, after the Restoration, at Stamford. In 1677, by interest and the
-payment of £1,000, he obtained a baronetcy. His son, Sir Pury Cust, who
-had been knighted by William III. in 1690, after the battle of the Boyne,
-in which he commanded a troop of horse under the Duke of Schomberg, died
-in 1698, two years before his father. His wife, Ursula, the heiress of
-the Woodcock family of Newtimber, had died at the age of twenty-four
-in 1683. Her monument is in St. George’s church, Stamford. She traced
-back her family to Joan, “the fair maid of Kent,” through Joan’s second
-husband, John Lord Holland, if we are to take it that she was really
-married first, and not simply engaged when a girl to Lord Salisbury. At
-all events, her last husband was the Black Prince, by whom she was mother
-of Richard II. Her father was Edmund of Woodstock, Earl of Kent, the
-sixth son of Edward I.
-
-In 1768 Sir John Cust was Speaker of the House of Commons. The present
-head of the Cust family is the Earl of Brownlow.
-
-[Illustration: _Surfleet._]
-
-[Sidenote: GOSBERTON]
-
-[Sidenote: THE LEANING TOWER]
-
-Close to Pinchbeck, on whose already sinking tower the builders had not
-dared to place their intended spire, is _Surfleet_, where the tower
-and spire lean in a most threatening manner. Arches have been built
-up to support it, and by the well-known power of old buildings known
-as “Sticktion,” it may last for many generations, but it presents a
-very uncomfortable appearance. For the next twenty miles we shall be
-constantly crossing the great dykes which drain the fens, all running
-eastwards. The road which divides after crossing the Hammond Beck and
-the Rise-Gate-Eau passes through _Gosberton_, once called Gosberdekirk,
-a large village with a very fine Perpendicular church. You enter by a
-richly moulded doorway from a very wide porch, over the entrance to which
-is a figure. To the right of the porch, arched recesses are seen under
-each south aisle window. There is a central tower with large transepts
-and a lofty crocketed spire. A Lady chapel adjoins the south transept.
-The clerestory is a later addition, and the ground has been filled up
-so that the beautifully carved bases of the nave pillars are two feet
-below the present paving. A trap-door is lifted to show one of them.
-The rood staircase is on the south side, and in the south transept is a
-particularly fine window, with two carved cross-mullions. The moulding
-of the nave arches is carried right down the pillars, which deprives them
-of capitals and gives them a very feeble appearance. A similar absence
-of capitals is found in the tower arches at Horncastle. The roof under
-the belfry is groined, and a fine screen separates the chapel of St.
-Katherine from the body of the church. In this, there is an old plain
-chest with three iron bands. An elegant recumbent stone effigy of a lady
-and another of a knight in armour, with a shield bearing a Red Cross, are
-the only monuments of interest. As early as 1409, in the reign of Henry
-IV., Gosberton was a fat living, for in that year we find that the warden
-of the hospital of St. Nicholas at Pontefract exchanged the manor of
-Methley in Yorkshire for the advowsons of Gosberkirk, Lincolnshire, and
-Wathe, Yorkshire. This manor, before the end of that century, became the
-property of Sir Thomas Dymoke.
-
-[Sidenote: SHEEP IN CHURCHYARDS]
-
-The church is very well cared for, and I was glad to see sheep in the
-churchyard, the only way of keeping the grass tidy without going to an
-unwarrantable expense.
-
-[Illustration: _Surfleet Windmill._]
-
-I know quite well the objections which can reasonably be urged to this
-plan, that the sheep make the paths and the porch dirty and may damage
-the tombstones; but the porch can have wire netting doors, and the
-paths can be cleaned up and the sheep excluded for Sunday; and in those
-churchyards which are worst cared for there are generally no tombstones
-which would be liable to any hurt.
-
-Certainly in one churchyard where I have seen sheep for many years I
-never knew of any damage, and they did keep the grass neat where it would
-have cost much to keep it trimmed up by hand.
-
-Not far from Gosberton station is Cressy Hall, a modern red brick house,
-built on the site of a very ancient one. It had been a manor of the Creci
-family from Norman times, and passed from them to Sir John Markham, who
-entertained there the Lady Margaret, mother of Henry VII.
-
-Dr. Stukeley, towards the end of the eighteenth century, saw the old
-oak bedstead on which she slept. It was then in a farm-house, called
-Wrigbolt, in the parish of Gosberton, and was very large and shut in all
-round with oak panels carved outside, two holes being left at the foot
-big enough to admit a full-grown person—a sort of hutch in fact. The
-property subsequently came to the Heron family, who lived there for three
-centuries. They kept up a large heronry there, and we read of as many as
-eighty nests in one tree, but since the family left the manor, at the
-beginning of last century, the birds have been dispersed.
-
-[Sidenote: QUADRING]
-
-The next village to Gosberton is _Quadring_, a curious name, said to be
-derived from the Celtic Coed (= wood). The western tower and spire are
-well proportioned, and the tower is quite remarkable for the way in which
-it draws in, narrowing all the way up from the ground to the spire. The
-rich embattled nave parapet and the rood turrets and staircase are also
-noticeable, and, as usual with these Lincolnshire churches, a fine row of
-large clerestory windows gives a very handsome appearance. This church
-has in it a fine chest; as have Gosberton and Sutterton. The latter very
-plain, and both with three iron straps and locks, while at Swineshead is
-a good iron chest of the Nuremberg pattern.
-
-Four miles will bring us to _Donington_, once a market town and the
-centre of the local hemp and flax trade, of which considerable quantities
-were grown both here and round Pinchbeck. It was the flax trade that
-attracted the Custs to Pinchbeck in the fifteenth century.
-
-[Sidenote: DONINGTON]
-
-Up to the last century Donington had three hemp fairs in the year, in
-May, September, and October, and the land being mostly wet fen, the
-villagers kept large flocks of geese, one man owning as many as 1,000
-“old geese.” These, besides goslings, yielded a crop of quills and
-feathers, and the poor birds were plucked five times a year. The sea
-shells in the soil indicate that before the sea banks were made the land
-was just a salt-water fen, and it is probable that the men of Donington
-had a navigable cut to the sea near Bicker or Wigtoft, for the Roman
-sea-bank from Frieston curved inland to Wigtoft and thence ran to
-Fossdyke, and the sea water no doubt came up to the bank.
-
-The Romans did much for this village, which lies between their sea-bank
-and the Carr Dyke. The former kept out the sea water, and the latter
-intercepted the flood water from the hills. This was more effectually
-done later by the Hammond Beck, which, coming from Spalding, ran
-northwards a parallel course to the Roman Dyke, and with the same
-purpose, but some four or five miles nearer to Donington, after passing
-which place it bends round to the east and goes out at Boston. Thus
-farming was made possible, and potatoes now have taken the place of flax
-and hemp.
-
-[Sidenote: FLINDERS AND FRANKLIN]
-
-A large green, bordered by big school buildings, now fills the Market
-Square. The church, dedicated to St. Mary and the Holy Rood, is late
-Decorated and Perpendicular, and has a splendid tower and spire 240
-feet high, which stands in a semi-detached way at the south-east of the
-south aisle and is surmounted by a very fine ball and weathercock. The
-lower stage forms a groined south porch, over which as well as on each
-buttress are large canopied niches for statues, and over the inner door
-is a figure of our Lord. The pillars in the nave are octagonal. There
-is a large rood bracket, and the rood staircase starts, not from behind
-the pulpit, but from the top of the chancel step. The walls of the
-Early English chancel are of rough stone, with no windows on the north,
-but the east window is a grand five-light Perpendicular one, and three
-large windows of the same style are at the west end. In all of these the
-tracery is unusually good. A doorway at each side of the altar shows
-that the chancel once extended further, and there is a curious arched
-recess at the north-east corner with high steps, the meaning of which is
-a puzzle. A little kneeling stone figure is seen in the wall of the north
-aisle. The responds of the nave arcades, both east and west, have very
-large carved bosses. The roof is old and quite plain. In the church are
-many memorial slabs to members of the Flinders family, among them one to
-Captain Matthew Flinders,[34] 1814, one of the early explorers, who, in
-the beginning of last century, was sent to map the coast of Australia,
-and having been captured by the French, was kept for some years in prison
-in Mauritius.
-
-The Blacksmith’s epitaph, mentioned in the account of Bourne Abbey,
-is also found in the churchyard here, with bellows, forge, and anvil
-engraved on the stone.
-
-[Sidenote: SWINESHEAD]
-
-_Swineshead_ is but four miles further on, with _Bicker_ half way. The
-latter has a far older church than any in the neighbourhood. It is
-dedicated to St. Swithun. It is a twelfth-century cruciform building with
-massive piers and cushion capitals and fine moulding to its Norman arches
-over the two western bays of the nave. The clerestory has Norman arcading
-in triplets with glass in the centre light. The east window consists of
-three tall Early English lancets. A turret staircase in the south aisle
-gives access to another in the tower. The north aisle oak seats have been
-made out of portions of the rood screen. The Early English font, being
-supported on four short feet, is interesting, as is a holy water stoup in
-the porch. This church has been well restored by the Rev. H. T. Fletcher,
-now ninety-three years of age, who has been rector for half a century.
-In the last half of the thirteenth century a Christopher Massingberd
-was the incumbent. It is kept locked on account of recent thefts in the
-neighbourhood. As you go to _Swineshead_ you pass a roadside pond with a
-notice, “Beware of the Swans.” The village, like Donington, was once a
-market town, and has still the remains of its market cross and stocks.
-The low spire of the church rises from a beautiful battlemented octagon
-which crowns the tower and is _the_ feature of the building. There is a
-similar one at the base of the spire of the grand church of Patrington in
-Holderness. The tower is at the west end of the nave, and at each of its
-corners are very high pinnacles. The belfry is lighted by unusually large
-three-light Perpendicular windows, and the clerestory by large windows
-with Decorated tracery. The south aisle windows, too, are Decorated,
-those in the north aisle Perpendicular. The roof is old, and though
-plain in the nave, is richer in the north aisle. The clustered columns
-in the nave are slender, and the long pointed chancel arch, having
-no shoulders, is curiously ugly. The old iron chest has been already
-mentioned.
-
-[Illustration: _The Welland at Marsh Road, Spalding._]
-
-[Sidenote: SUTTERTON]
-
-At Swineshead the road goes east to Boston and west to Sleaford. This we
-will speak of when we describe the six roads out of Sleaford, of which
-the Swineshead road is by far the most interesting. But we must go back
-by _Bicker_, to which the sea once came close up, as testified by the
-remains of the Roman sea-bank only two miles off; and perhaps, too,
-by the name “Fishmere End,” near the neighbouring village of Wigton.
-After seeing _Bicker_ we will retrace our steps through Donington by
-Quadring and Gosberton, till we reach the “Gate Eau,” then turning to the
-left, strike the direct Spalding and Boston road. This, after crossing
-“Quadring Eau-Dyke”—a name which tells a fenny tale—passes over the Roman
-bank as it leaves Bicker, and making eastwards after its long inland
-curve from Frieston, proceeds to _Sutterton_ and _Algarkirk_. The names
-go together as a station on the Great Northern Railway loop line, and
-the villages are not far apart. They were both endowed as early as 868,
-as mentioned in the Arundel MSS. The churches of both are cruciform.
-_Sutterton_ has a tall spire thickly crocketed, and a charming Transition
-doorway in the south porch. That of the north is of the same date. The
-Early English arcades have rich bands of carving under the capitals
-of their round pillars; the two eastern pillars, from the thrust of
-the tower, lean considerably to the west; and, showing how much of the
-building was done in the Transition Norman time, the pointed arch of the
-chancel is enriched with Norman moulding. The large Perpendicular windows
-are very good, but the tracery of the Decorated west window is not
-attractive. The level of the floor has been so filled up that the narrow
-transept-arch pillars are now buried as much as three feet. The fittings
-are all pinewood, which gives one a kind of shock in so fine an old
-church. There are eight bells and a thirteenth-century Sanctus bell with
-inscription in Lombardic letters. The wood of the massive old iron-bound
-chest is sadly decayed.
-
-[Illustration: _Algarkirk._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE MAGNIFICENT WINDOWS]
-
-_Algarkirk_, the church of Earl Alfgar, stands within half a mile of
-Sutterton, in a park. The parish is a huge one, and the living was,
-till recently, worth £2,000 a year, but having been purchased from the
-Berridge family and presented to the Bishop of Lincoln, its revenues
-have gone largely to endow new churches in Grimsby, and the present
-incumbent has only one quarter of what his predecessors had. Like
-Spalding, Algarkirk had double aisles to the transepts, but the eastern
-aisle on the south side has been thrown into the transept. The Decorated
-windows of each transept are very fine ones, and those at the east and
-west ends of the nave are extremely large and good, that at the west
-filling the whole of the wall space. The clerestory has ten three-light
-windows, and the transepts have similar ones. Outside, the nave, aisles
-and transepts are all battlemented, which gives a very rich appearance.
-The fittings are all of oak, and there are six bells. Every window below
-the clerestory has good modern stained glass, and, taken as a whole, the
-church is one of the most beautiful in the county.
-
-[Sidenote: AT ALGARKIRK]
-
-It was Easter time when we visited Algarkirk, and the rookery in the park
-at the edge of the churchyard was giving abundant signs of busy life.
-The delightful cawing of the rooks is always associated in my mind with
-the bright spring time in villages of the Lincolnshire wolds. In the
-churchyard I noticed the name of Phœbe more than once, but I doubt if the
-parents, when bestowing this pretty classic name on their infant daughter
-at the font, ever thought of her adding to it, as the tombstone says she
-did, the prosaic name of Weatherbogg.
-
-At Sutterton two main roads cross, one from Swineshead to Holbeach,
-crossing the Welland near Fosdyke; the other from Boston to Spalding,
-crossing the Glen at Surfleet.
-
-From Swineshead two very dull roads run west to Sleaford, and north to
-Coningsby and Tattershall, to join the Sleaford and Horncastle road.
-This, after crossing the old Hammond Beck, sends an off-shoot eastwards
-to Boston, whose tower is seen about four miles off. It then crosses the
-great South-Forty-foot drain at Hubbert’s bridge, named after Hubba the
-Dane, and the North-Forty-foot less than a mile further on, and, passing
-by Brothertoft to the Witham, which it crosses at Langrick, runs in a
-perfectly straight line through Thornton-le-Fen to Coningsby. An equally
-straight road goes parallel to, but four miles east of it, from Boston by
-New Bolingbroke to Revesby.
-
-From what we have said it will be seen that the road from Spalding
-northwards is thickly set with fine churches; but that which goes
-eastwards boasts another group which are grander still. They are all
-figured in the volume of “Lincolnshire Churches,” which deals with the
-division of Holland. This was published in 1843 by T. N. Morton of
-Boston, the excellent drawings being by Stephen Lewin. His drawing of
-Kirton Old Church shows what an extremely handsome building it was before
-Hayward destroyed it in 1804.
-
-[Sidenote: MEANING OF ‘PINCHBECK’]
-
-One ought not to close this Chapter without some reference to the term
-“pinchbeck,” meaning _sham_, literally base metal, looking like gold, and
-used for watchcases.[35] Some Pinchbeck natives still have it that it
-was a yellow metal found rather more than a century ago near Pinchbeck,
-and now exhausted. But fen soil has no minerals, and really it was a
-London watchmaker, who was either a native of Pinchbeck or else called
-Pinchbeck, who invented the alloy of 80 parts copper to 20 of zinc. I
-remember hearing of a case at Spilsby sessions, where a man was accused
-of stealing a watch. The robbed man was asked, “What was your watch? a
-gold one?” “Nöa, it wëant gowd.” “Silver then?” “Näay, it wëant silver,
-nither.” “Then what was it?” “Why, it wor pinchbeck.”
-
-On a later occasion the thief, asking the same “lawyer feller” to defend
-him, said, by way of introduction, “You remember you got me off before
-for stealing a watch.” “For the _alleged_ stealing of a watch, you mean.”
-“Alleged be blowed! I’ve got the watch at home now.”
-
-[Illustration: _At Fulney._]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIX
-
-CHURCHES OF HOLLAND, EAST OF SPALDING
-
- Weston—The Font—Fertile Country—Colman’s Factory—The
- Woad Plant—’Twixt Marsh and Fen—Moulton—The Spire—The
- Elloe Stone—Whaplode—Holbeach—Fleet—Gedney—The Mustard
- Fields—Long Sutton—Groups of Churches—Fossdyke Old
- Bridge—Kirton—Frampton—Wyberton—A Storm—Agricultural
- Statistics, 1913—A Legend of Holbeach.
-
-
-The road which runs east from Spalding passes out of the county to reach
-King’s Lynn. But before it does so, it goes through a line of villages
-along which, within a distance of ten miles, are six of the finest
-churches which even Lincolnshire can show. Going out through Fulney we
-begin, less than four miles from Spalding, with _Weston_, where we find
-an unusually fine south porch with arcading and stone seats on either
-side. At the east end are three lancet lights of perfect Early English
-work and four slender buttresses. The nave dates from the middle of the
-twelfth century, and has stout round pillars in the south and octagonal
-in the north arcades, each set round with slender detached shafts as
-at Skirbeck, united under capitals carved with good stiff foliage. The
-aisles and transepts are later, and the tower later again.
-
-The Early English font is a splendid specimen and stands on its original
-octagonal steps with half of the circle occupied by a broad platform for
-the priest. Two good old oak chests stand on either side of the tower
-arch, and near the south door two curious musical instruments of the oboe
-type are hanging, and seem to be worthy of more careful preservation.
-
-[Sidenote: ‘MARSH’ AND ‘FEN’]
-
-The whole of our route to-day lies through a perfectly flat land, mostly
-arable and of extraordinary fertility. The corn crops at the end of May
-were standing nearly two feet high, and all around bright squares of
-yellow made the air heavy with the scent of the mustard flower. I lately
-went all over the great mustard factory of Messrs. Colman at Norwich, in
-which the beauty and ingenuity of the machinery for making and labelling
-the tins, for filling bags and boxes, or for sorting and folding up
-in their proper papers the cubes of blue (of which there is a factory
-contiguous) were a perfect marvel. The works cover thirty-two acres, and
-everything needed for the business is made on the premises. The mustard
-of commerce is a mixture of the brown and the white, both of which, and
-especially the best brown, are grown in the greatest perfection in the
-fields round Holbeach. It is a valuable crop. In October, 1912, I saw a
-quotation of 10_s._ 6_d._ to 13_s._ 6_d._ a bushel for brown, and 8_s._
-to 8_s._ 6_d._ for white; 1913 was a much better year, and so I suppose
-prices ruled higher. But to return.
-
-Here and there we passed a field with an unfamiliar crop of stiff
-purplish plants which showed where the cultivation of the _Isatis
-tinctoria_, the woad plant, which added so much to the attractiveness of
-our earliest British ancestors, was still kept going. This flat country
-is not without its trees, and near the villages park-like meadows, the
-remains of ancient manors, showed a beautiful wealth of chestnut bloom,
-whilst the cottage gardens were gay with laburnum and pink May. This
-was especially the case with the most easterly villages of Holbeach,
-Gedney and Long Sutton, but all along this line of road from Weston to
-Sutton there were, at one time, manors of the Irby, Welby, Littlebury,
-and other families, of which nothing now remains but this heritage of
-trees. The line of road is a very remarkable one, for it divides what
-once might have been described as the waters that were above from the
-waters that were below; in other words the Fen from the Marsh. If you
-look at a good map you will see to the north of the road, from west
-to east successively, Pinchbeck Marsh, Spalding Marsh, Weston Marsh,
-Moulton Marsh, Whaplode Marsh, Holbeach Marsh, Gedney Marsh, Sutton
-Marsh, and Wingland Marsh. The last of these lies between Sutton Bridge
-and Cross-Keys, on the county boundary; and since the new outfall of the
-river Nene was cut, a rich tract has been gained for cultivation where
-once the sea had possession, and just where King John lost his baggage
-and treasure in his disastrous crossing of the Cross-Keys Wash, at low
-tide, shortly before his death in 1216. There is now a good road there.
-
-Now look at the map again and you will see to the south of this Holbeach
-road the same names, but with _Fen_ instead of _Marsh_—Moulton, Whaplode,
-Holbeach, and Gedney _Fen_.
-
-[Sidenote: RETIREMENT OF THE WASH]
-
-The Marsh country is far the most interesting, and it is clear both from
-the nature of the land and from the names of the places that the Wash
-used to come several miles further inland than it does now, running up
-between Algarkirk and Gosberton as far as Bicker, and penetrating up
-the Welland estuary to “Surfleet seas end,” and up the Moulton river to
-“Moulton seas end,” to Holbeach Clough, to Lutton Gowt, which is north
-of Long Sutton on the Leam, and to the Roman bank which is still visible
-at Fleet and again further east between Cross-Keys and Walpole. This
-bank probably came by _Tydd St. Mary_, through which a Roman road from
-Cowbit also passed. But this was long ago, and many centuries elapsed
-before this Spalding and Lynn road, passing between Marsh and Fen, came
-into being, with its many magnificent churches, mostly the work of great
-monastic institutions between the twelfth and fifteenth centuries, and
-therefore built with exceptional magnificence.
-
-[Sidenote: MOULTON]
-
-After _Weston_ less than two miles, through a country brightened by the
-many red and white chestnut trees in bloom, brings us to _Moulton_,
-lying a little to the south of the main road. Here we have a beautiful
-Perpendicular tower and crocketed spire, reminding one, by its graceful
-proportions, of Louth, though not much more than half the height. The
-nave has six bays of Transition Norman work with pillars both round and
-clustered, resting on large millstone-like bases, the two western piers
-having tall responds built into them, which probably supported the arch
-of an earlier tower. The Early English carved foliage on the capitals is
-like that at Skirbeck, or in the Galilee Porch at Ely and the transept
-of York Cathedral. Some most graceful old work has been restored in the
-lower part of the rood-screen, and a new and well-designed canopy added.
-The doorway to this rood-loft is on the south side. A curious old oak
-alms-box is near the south door, and against the western pier of the
-north arcade is a singular font which has been displaced by a modern
-square one of no particular merit. In the older one the bowl stands on
-the trunk of a tree carved in stone, on either side of which are figures
-about three feet high of Adam and Eve, and the Serpent is curling round
-the tree.[36] The wooden cover with the figure of a stout Rubens angel
-flying and grasping the top has fallen into disrepair. A list of the
-vicars from 1237 is in the north aisle.
-
-The clerestory windows are handsomely arcaded outside, with round Norman
-arcading on the south and pointed arcades on the north side, and ugly
-Perpendicular windows inserted at intervals which occupy the space of two
-arcades.
-
-The great beauty of the church is the Perpendicular tower and spire,
-built about 1380. It has four stages, and over the great west window
-are some canopied niches, two of which still contain their statues. The
-buttresses have also niches and canopies, and the tower finishes with
-a rich battlement and pinnacles which are connected with the spire by
-light flying-buttresses; the whole is beautifully proportioned, and as it
-stands in a very wide street one can get a satisfactory view of it.
-
-The dividing of each side by set-off string courses, three on the west
-and four on the north and south sides, the canopy work of the buttresses
-at each stage, the pleasing varieties in the size of the windows, the
-canopied arcading on the west front, the panelled parapet and deep
-cornice, the elegant pinnacles at the corners of the coped battlements
-from which the light flying-buttresses spring up to the richly ornamented
-spire, all help to delight and satisfy the eye in a manner which few
-churches in any county can hope to rival.
-
-In a bridge half a mile from the church on the south side of a lane
-called ‘Old Spalding Gate,’ or ‘Elloe Stone lane,’ at the fifth milestone
-from Spalding, still stands _the Elloe Stone_.
-
-The Shire Mote or hundred court of the Elloe Wapentake, which is a huge
-one embracing the whole of Holland between the Welland and the Nene, used
-to be held at the four cross-roads near this stone, in pre-Norman times.
-The manor courts were introduced by the Normans.
-
-Boy Scouts were very much in evidence when we were in Moulton; they
-number over thirty there alone, and I never saw a smarter lot.
-
-[Sidenote: WHAPLODE]
-
-From Moulton we get back to the main road and go on two short miles
-to _Whaplode_. In Domesday Book this is spelt Quappelode, the cape on
-the lode or creek, the village being built on a spit of land elevated
-above the fens and encircled by drains, or lodes, to keep it free from
-inundation.
-
-[Illustration: _Whaplode Church._]
-
-The church here was built by the abbot of Croyland in rivalry with
-Moulton, which was the work of the prior of Spalding. The nave, of no
-less than seven bays, is narrow and 110 feet long, and exhibits in the
-low chancel arch and four adjoining arcades quite the most interesting
-Norman work in ‘Holland.’ The massive Norman pillars are built in pairs
-of different patterns. The three western arches are Transitional and
-pointed; of this period the chief feature is the west door with a fine
-series of mouldings and a double row of eight detached shafts on either
-side, set one behind the other.
-
-The tower is very fine and is in a most unusual position, being south
-of the eastmost bay of the south aisle and almost detached, though
-once joined by a transept. We quite agree with Mr. Jeans when he says
-“Probably it was intended to have two transeptal towers like Exeter
-and Ottery, the only two churches in England with them, but a late
-Perpendicular transept occupies the place of the North one.” The lower
-Transition stage is richly arcaded, the next two Early English stages
-have lancet arcading, and the belfry stage, which is early Decorated,
-has coupled lights and a parapet above them. The choir-screen stood,
-curiously, a bay in front of the rood loft, the stairs to which are on
-the south side. The pulpit is Jacobean, the font a copy of a Norman one,
-the chancel is of the meanest, and all the windows except one at the east
-of the north aisle are incredibly ugly. Some stone coffins are placed in
-the west end, where also is the fine canopied monument of Sir Anthony and
-Lady Elizabeth Irby with large figures of their children kneeling at the
-side. See _Ashby-cum-Fenby_, p. 267.
-
-[Sidenote: HOLBEACH]
-
-Another three miles along this wonderful line of grand churches brings
-us to the church of All Saints, _Holbeach_, a magnificent building all
-in the latest Decorated style throughout. The spire without crockets,
-though higher than Moulton, is rather dwarfed by the large tower
-without pinnacles. The nave is very spacious and light, having large
-aisle windows with no stained glass, and no less than fourteen pairs
-of clerestory windows. The flamboyant tracery in the east window is
-very good. The nave has seven very lofty bays on tall, light, clustered
-pillars, and the eastern bay does not reach the chancel arch, but leaves
-a wall space of six feet to accommodate the requirements of the rood
-loft. There is a very large north porch of singular construction, with
-heavy, round battlemented turrets like the flanking bastions of a castle
-gateway. Above is a parvise. In the north aisle is a well-preserved altar
-tomb to Sir Humphrey Littlebury, _c._ 1400, and two brasses; one of
-Joanna Welbye, 1458, for both these families once had manors at Holbeach.
-
-[Illustration: _Fleet Church._]
-
-The approach to the town is through a well-wooded country, and a row of
-pink chestnuts in bloom lined the churchyard, as we saw it early in June.
-Like Moulton, the parish is a very large one, containing, according to
-Murray, 21,000 acres of land and 14,000 of water. Somewhere in this huge
-parish was born, in 1687, William Stukeley, the antiquarian, who became
-in his later years the rector of Somerby, near Grantham.
-
-The “Legend of Holbeach” was probably unknown to him, but it is of some
-antiquity, and it is printed at the end of the chapter in the rhyming
-form which was given to it more than a hundred years ago by Thomas
-Rawnsley of Bourne, D.L.
-
-[Sidenote: A DETACHED SPIRE]
-
-A mile off the road to the right, is seen the spire of _Fleet_ church.
-This, too, is mainly in the Decorated style with Early English arcades
-and a Perpendicular west window. The tower stands apart from the rest of
-the church at an interval of fifteen feet. Other instances of detached
-towers are at Evesham in Worcestershire, at Elstow near Bedford, and, I
-think, at Terrington in Norfolk; but a detached spire is very rarely seen.
-
-All the churches on the main road are at intervals of three miles,
-and that distance will bring us to the tall slender Giotto-like tower
-of _Gedney_, ninety feet high with very small buttresses. This, like
-Whaplode, was built, by the abbots of Croyland. The spacious nave has
-twelve Perpendicular three-light clerestory windows of unusual beauty,
-divided by pinnacles rising above the parapet. There are six lofty bays
-and a fine Early English tower arch. As at Holbeach and Sutton, there
-is a parvise over the south porch. The tower was to have had a spire
-instead of its present little spirelet, but only the base of it was
-built. Possibly this was because the foundations were not trustworthy,
-and, indeed, it may be said to have no foundations but to be built on
-a raft in the peat bog on which it floats securely, as did Winchester
-Cathedral before the deep drainage trench was cut along the north side
-of the close. At Gedney, if you jump on the floor of the porch you will
-distinctly perceive the vibration of the ground.
-
-It is enriched at the first stage by lancet windows, then by an arcading
-with pointed arches, above which come beautiful twin windows, each with
-two lights; and the upper, Decorated, stage of the tower—above the line
-where the Black Death so obviously and effectually stopped the work,
-as described in the next chapter—has two lofty canopied and transomed
-windows in each face, which give a very handsome appearance. There is no
-west door.
-
-[Illustration: _Gedney Church._]
-
-[Sidenote: GEDNEY]
-
-Within is a ‘low-side’ window at the south-west end of the chancel which
-is sometimes called an ‘Ichnoscope,’ and in the vestry is a ‘squint.’
-A thirteenth-century cross-legged knight, the fine brass of a lady
-(1390), recently discovered, and the richly coloured alabaster monument
-of Adlard and Cassandra Welby (1590) are all worthy of notice; while the
-abbots’ inscription over the door, “Pax Xti sit huic domui et omnibus
-habitantibus in ea, hic requies nostra,” is to be contrasted with the
-worldly-wise motto of John Petty on the old bell-metal door lock, “Be
-Ware before, avyseth Johannes Pette.” Let into the door is a very
-remarkable crucifixion in ivory.
-
-[Sidenote: THE MUSTARD FIELDS]
-
-As we left Gedney and looked back over the fields the tall and
-Italian-looking campanile, whose bells, however, cannot vie with the
-eight bells of Holbeach, made a unique and memorable picture. I doubt
-if there is anything quite like it in England. We passed on eastwards
-another three miles by Gedney Marsh, with its “Cock and Magpie” inn,
-while the strong summer scent of the brilliant mustard fields recalled
-the apt description of our great Lincolnshire poet:
-
- “All the land in flowery squares,
- Beneath a broad and equal-blowing wind,
- Smelt of the coming Summer.”
-
-As with Shakespeare, once let anything be described by Tennyson, and no
-other form of words can ever again seem so fit and inevitable. How often
-does one notice this!
-
-[Sidenote: GROUPS OF FINE CHURCHES]
-
-But now we are at _Long Sutton_, or Sutton St. Mary’s, and find there
-perhaps the most interesting of this wonderful sequence of exceptional
-churches.
-
-Again we have a long nave of seven bays, with Norman pillars, both round
-and octagonal. A flat Norman arch to the chancel, and on each side of
-the chancel a slender column and two tall arches leading to chancel
-transepts. The rood staircase goes up from the pulpit on the north side,
-and above the nave arcades is a Transitional clerestory with arcading,
-which now serves as a triforium, being surmounted by another clerestory
-of the Perpendicular period; indeed the outside of the church, from its
-aisle and clerestory windows, has just the appearance of a Perpendicular
-building, so that when on entering one finds oneself in a fine Norman
-nave, the sight, as Mr. Jeans says, is quite startling.
-
-[Illustration: _Long Sutton Church._]
-
-At the north-east angle is a curious two-storied octagonal vestry,
-or sacristy, with a winding stair of fourteenth century date, having
-a small window into the chancel. The tower is Early English and is
-curiously placed at the south-west angle of the south aisle. That at
-Whaplode is at the south-east angle. Both tower and spire are in their
-original condition (the latter of timber covered with lead) and are the
-best and earliest specimens of their period. The tower stands on four
-magnificent arches now blocked, above which outside is a rich arcading
-like that in the north transept of Wells Cathedral. Above this the belfry
-windows are double, having a three-light window inside, with a two-light
-window outside, the mullion coming down to the outer edge of the splay;
-a very unusual arrangement. The spire is clasped at each corner by a
-spirelet, and rises to the height of 162 feet. Altogether this church
-is the fitting crown to our long string of stately churches. There are
-larger single churches with twelve to even twenty clerestory windows in
-Norfolk and Suffolk, but I doubt if any group in the kingdom can rival
-these, though the Sleaford group runs them hard. And certainly the Marsh
-churches between Boston and Wainfleet, and the still more characteristic
-group round Burgh-le-Marsh and Theddlethorpe have a charm—owing a
-good deal to their old oak fittings—which “can only be described in
-superlatives.” Next to these for interest I would put the Pinchbeck group
-in the triangle formed by Boston, Spalding, and Donington, and the group
-of old pre-Norman towers like Clee which are found near together to the
-south and west of Grimsby. Of course, Lincoln Minster with Stow, Grantham
-with Hough-on-the-Hill, Boston Stump, and Louth spire, stand outside
-every group in unapproachable greatness. Long Sutton is not without
-neighbours. Two miles to the north is _Lutton_, where Dr. Busby, the
-famous headmaster of Westminster, was born. He died in 1695. The large
-inlaid Italian pulpit with elegant canopy, put up in 1702, was probably
-his gift.
-
-Three miles east is _Sutton bridge_, only separated from Norfolk by the
-uninhabited Wingland Marsh, while three miles to the south is the village
-of _Tydd-St.-Mary_, the last village on the Wisbech road which is in
-Lincolnshire, _Tydd-St.-Giles_ being over the border in Cambridgeshire;
-for both Norfolk and Cambridge here touch the county; Wisbech, which
-is itself the centre of a grand group of churches, being in the latter
-county.
-
-[Sidenote: OLD FOSDYKE BRIDGE]
-
-To finish our day and get into “the parts of Lindsey,” we take the
-north road from Holbeach over Fosdyke bridge to Boston. In the church
-at _Fosdyke_ we may see a remarkable font with a tall Perpendicular oak
-cover similar, but not equal in beauty, to that at Frieston.
-
-Before 1814, people who wished to go from Boston into the eastern half of
-Holland and on to Cambridge and Norfolk had to cross the Welland estuary
-by ferry or go round by Spalding, but in 1811 an Act was passed for
-erecting a bridge at Fosdyke Wash and making a causeway to it over the
-sands. The work was designed by Rennie, who had an excellent patron in
-Sir Joseph Banks. The account of it, written at the time, is curious. The
-bridge was 300 feet long and had eight openings, the three in mid-stream
-being thirty feet wide, and the centre one opened with two leaves,
-which, having a counterpoise, were easily moved from a horizontal to a
-perpendicular position by means of a large rack-wheel and pinion wound by
-a common hand-winch. The nine piers were each made of oak trees driven
-in whole in clusters of six. These trees were none of them less than
-thirty feet long and eighteen inches in diameter, rather larger than the
-beams used to carry the floors in Tattershall Castle.[37] Those in the
-four central piers were enormous, being forty-two feet long and nineteen
-inches in diameter. They were driven in twenty to twenty-two feet below
-the bottom of the river and bolted together with timbers a foot thick.
-All was carried out in oak, the roadway planks being three inches thick.
-I went to see this stout old timber bridge and was disgusted to find that
-a grey-painted iron structure had taken its place.
-
-From Fosdyke the road passes Algarkirk and strikes the Spalding and
-Boston main road at Sutterton, where it turns north to _Kirton_. After
-passing Kirton—the magnificent church of which place was so strangely
-altered and mutilated by a ruthless architect called Hayward, in 1804,
-who pulled down its noble central tower and its double-aisled transept
-and built of the old materials a handsome but new tower at the west
-end—we soon see on the right, first Frampton and then Wyberton, the
-latter only about a mile south of Boston.
-
-[Sidenote: FRAMPTON AND WYBERTON]
-
-_Frampton_, once cruciform with a good tower and spire, has lost its
-north transept, its tall Early English pillars now support arches of a
-later style, but a fine oak roof and tall screen remain. There is an
-odd monument of ecclesiastical power on a buttress outside at the angle
-of the transept. A figurehead grotesquely carved, with the inscription,
-“Wot ye whi I sta̅d her [know ye, why I stand here] for I forswor my
-Savior ego Ricardus in Angulo,” probably a lasting reference to some
-ecclesiastical penance.
-
-Frampton Hall, a good Queen Anne house, is close to the church. Here, as
-in several of the Marsh churches, rings to tie horses to during service
-may be seen in the wall. Not a mile away northwards is _Wyberton_, which,
-if built as planned, would have been a very fine edifice. When it was
-restored by G. Scott, Jun., in 1881, the floor of the chancel being
-lowered brought to light two magnificent pillar bases. These, with the
-grand chancel arch, are indications that a fine cruciform church was
-projected but apparently never carried out. Tall arcades with clustered
-and octagonal columns and a good Perpendicular roof with carved bosses
-and angels are there now, and signs that an earlier building existed are
-visible in stones either lying loose or built into the walls. A slab to
-Adam Frampton is dated 1325.
-
-The font is a very rich one of the same period as those to the north-east
-of Boston, at Benington and Leverton. _The registers begin as early as
-1538._ We pass now through Boston, and crossing the sluice bridge, get a
-fine view of the tall tower by the water-side and soon strike the Sibsey
-and Spilsby road.
-
-A grand black thunder-cloud rolls up across the fen, and having
-discharged a tempest of hailstones on the Wolds, descends upon us between
-Sibsey and Stickney in torrents of rain. It passes, and the bright
-sunshine—the “clear shining after rain” of the Hebrew prophet—contrasted
-with the darkness of the moving thunder-clouds as they roll seawards,
-makes a fine picture, and one which in that flat land you can watch for
-miles as it moves.
-
-[Sidenote: AGRICULTURAL RETURNS]
-
-The agricultural statistics for Lincolnshire in 1913 show that there were
-in Lindsey about 860,000, in Kesteven 419,560, and in Holland 243,200
-acres under cultivation. The various crops in each were in thousands of
-acres as follows:—
-
- +-----------+-------------------------------------------------------+
- | |Wheat. |
- | | +------------------------------------------------+
- | | |Oats. |
- | | | +-----------------------------------------+
- | | | |Barley. |
- | | | | +----------------------------------+
- | | | | |Beans and Peas. |
- | | | | | +---------------------------+
- | | | | | |“Roots.” |
- | | | | | | +--------------------+
- | | | | | | |Potatoes. |
- | | | | | | | +-------------+
- | | | | | | | |Clover, |
- | | | | | | | |Vetches &c. |
- | | | | | | | | +------+
- | | | | | | | | |Other |
- | | | | | | | | |crops.|
- +-----------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
- |In Lindsey | 79 | 69½ | 125½ | 24 | 83¼ | 27 | 109 | 7 |
- | ” Kesteven| 44½ | 24 | 67½ | 17½ | 34½ | 8½ | 46¼ | 3¾ |
- | ” Holland | 35 | 23 | 18 | 17¼ | 7 | 40⅓ | 15 | 12¾ |
- +-----------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
-
-The table shows that Holland grows a good deal of wheat and oats, but not
-much barley compared with the two other divisions, and very few “roots.”
-But in 1913 it grew 40,370 acres of potatoes, which is 5,000 acres more
-than all the rest of the county; and this was a decrease on the previous
-year’s crop of 2,479 acres. Then the big item in Holland under “other
-crops” shows the mustard, while 2,500 acres in that column for Lindsey
-are taken up with “rape.” The amount of bare fallow last year was, in
-Lindsey, 22,940 acres; in Kesteven, 15,385; and in Holland, 5,311. This,
-and the number of horses employed on the land—Lindsey, 26,930; Kesteven,
-12,412; Holland, 10,892—when it is remembered that the acreage of the
-three divisions is in the proportion of 4, 2, and 1, shows how highly
-cultivated the Lincolnshire fen-land in Holland is. The arable land in
-that division is more than two-thirds of the whole acreage.
-
-Another thing this report brings out is the marked decrease in 1913 in
-the number of cattle, sheep and pigs, and especially of sheep in every
-part of the county. This decrease was—
-
- +--------------+---------+---------+-------+
- | | Cattle. | Sheep. | Pigs. |
- +--------------+---------+---------+-------+
- | In Lindsey | 8,672 | 35,516 | 1,002 |
- | ” Kesteven | 5,675 | 10,462 | 2,801 |
- | ” Holland | 3,664 | 9,587 | 4,638 |
- +--------------+---------+---------+-------+
- | Total | 18,011 | 55,565 | 8,441 |
- +--------------+---------+---------+-------+
-
-This shows that Holland suffered more decrease in proportion than the
-other two divisions in all respects, and especially in the number of
-pigs. Of course the season must always be answerable for a good deal,
-and the numbers may all go up this year. But the enormous drop in the
-number of cattle and sheep, telling a tale of the absence of “roots” and
-“feed,” will hardly be made good in one year.
-
-[Sidenote: THE REVELLERS]
-
-[Sidenote: “A LEGEND OF HOLBECH”]
-
-“A LEGEND OF HOLBECH”
-
-a true story.
-
-Made into this rhyme by Mr. Rawnsley of Bourne, about the year 1800.
-
- In the bleak noxious Fen that to Lincoln pertains
- Where agues assert their fell sway,
- There the Bittern hoarse moans and the seamew complains
- As she flits o’er the watery way.
-
- While with strains thus discordant, the natives of air
- With screams and with shrieks the ear strike,
- The toad and the frog croaking notes of despair
- Join the din, from the bog and the dyke.
-
- Mid scenes that the senses annoy and appal
- Sad and sullen old Holbech appears,
- As if doomed to bewail her hard fate from the Fall,
- Like a Niobe washed with her tears.
-
- From fogs pestilential that hovered around,
- To ward off despair and disease,
- The juice of the grape was most generous found,
- Source of comfort, of joy, and of ease.
-
- At the “Chequers” long famed to quaff then did delight
- The Burghers both ancient and young,
- With smoking and cards, passed the dull winter night,
- They joked and they laughed and they sung.
-
- Three revellers left, when the midnight was come,
- Unable their game to pursue,
- Repaired, most unhallowed, to visit the tomb
- Where enshrouded lay one of their crew.
-
- For _he_, late-departed, renowned was at whist,
- The marsh-men still tell of his fame,
- Till Death with a spade struck the cards from his fist
- And spoiled both his hand and his game.
-
- Cold and damp was the night; thro’ the churchyard they prowled,
- As wolves by fierce hunger subdued,
- ’Gainst the doors they huge gravestones impetuous rolled
- Which recoiled at such violence rude.
-
- From the sepulchre’s jaws their old comrade uncased,
- (How chilling the tale to relate),
- Upreared ’gainst the wall on the table was placed
- A corpse, in funereal state.
-
- By a taper’s faint blaze and with Luna’s faint light
- That would sometimes emit them a ray,
- The cards were produced, and they cut with delight
- To know who with “_Dumby_” should play.
-
- Exalted on basses the bravoes kneeled round
- Exulting and proud of the deed,
- To Dumby they bent with respect most profound
- And said “Sir! it is _your_ turn to lead.”
-
- The game then commenced, when one offered him aid,
- And affected to guide his cold hand
- While another cried out, “Bravo! Dumby, well played,
- I see you’ve the cards at command.”
-
- Thus impious, they jokèd devoid of all grace,
- When dread sounds shook the walls of the church,
- And lo! Dumby sank down, and a ghost in his place
- Shrieked dismal “Haste! haste! save your lurch!”
-
- Astounded they stared; but the fiend disappeared
- And Dumby again took his seat,
- So they deemed ’twas but fancy, nor longer they feared
- But swore that “Old Dumb should be beat.”
-
- Eight to nine was the game, Dumby’s partner called loud
- “Speak once, my old friend, or we’re done
- Remember our stake ’tis my coat or your shroud
- Now answer and win—_can you one?_”[38]
-
- “What silent, my Dumby, when most I you need
- Dame Fortune our wishes has crossed,”
- When a voice from beneath, howled, “your fate is decreed
- The game and the gamesters are lost.”
-
- Then strange! most terrific and horrid to view!
- Three Demons thro’ earth burst their way:
- Each one chose his partner, his arms round him threw
- And vanished in smoke with his prey.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XL
-
-THE BLACK DEATH
-
-
-Mention being made in the last chapter of the Black Death, the disastrous
-effects of which were so visible in the tower of Gedney, it will be not
-inappropriate to give some short account of it here.
-
-Edward the Third had been twenty years on the throne when a great change
-came over the country. The introduction of leases of lands and houses by
-the lord of the manor had created a class of “farmers”—the word was a
-new one—by which the old feudal system of land-tenure was disturbed, the
-old tie of personal dependence of the serf on his lord being broken, and
-the lord of the manor reduced to the position of a modern landlord. And
-not only was an independent class of tenants coming into existence who
-were able to rise to a position of apparent equality with their former
-masters, but among the labourers, too, a greater freedom was growing,
-which was gradually loosing them from their local bondage to the soil,
-and giving them power to choose what place of employment and what master
-they pleased. This rise of the free labourer following naturally on the
-enfranchisement of the serf had made it necessary for the landlord to
-rely on hired labour, and just when it was most essential for them to
-have an abundant supply of hands seeking employment, all at once the
-supply absolutely and entirely failed.
-
-The cause of this was the Black Death, which, starting in Asia, swept
-over the whole of Europe and speedily reached these shores in the autumn
-of 1348. No such swift and universally devastating plague had ever been
-known. One half of the population of every European country perished,
-and in England more than half. In one London burying-place above 50,000
-corpses were interred.
-
-[Sidenote: THE BLACK DEATH]
-
-In Norwich, then the chief east-coast port north of the Thames, we hear
-of 60,000 deaths. We hear, too, of whole villages being wiped out, and
-nowhere were sufficient hands left to cultivate the soil.
-
-Crops were ungathered, cattle roamed at will. The pestilence lasted
-through the whole of 1349, after which, though occasionally recurring, it
-died away.
-
-In Lincolnshire it was very bad, and some knowledge of it can be
-gathered from the memoranda of the Bishop of Lincoln, John Gynewell, who
-held office from September 23, 1347, to August 5, 1362; the appalling
-frequency of the institutions to the various benefices in his diocese
-give some measure of the severity of this dreadful visitation.
-
-It began at Melcombe Regis in Dorset in the month of July, 1348, but did
-not reach Lincoln until May, 1349. It got to London in January of that
-year, and was at its height there in March, April, and May. In May, in
-the town of Newark, we read that “it waxes day by day more and more,
-insomuch that the Churchyard will not suffice for the men that die in
-that place.”
-
-From his palace at Liddington, in Rutland, Bishop Gynewell went in May to
-consecrate a burial ground at Great Easton, which, being only a chapelry
-to the parish of Bringhurst, had no burial ground of its own. The licence
-was granted only during the duration of the pestilence. The bishop in
-his preamble says: “There increases among you, as in other places of our
-Diocese, a mortality of men such as has not been seen or heard aforetime
-from the beginning of the world, so that the old grave-yard of your
-church [Bringhurst] is not sufficient to receive the bodies of the dead.”
-
-The enormous number of clergy who died in the Diocese of Lincoln is
-attested by the fact that in July alone 250 institutions were made and
-all but fifteen owing to deaths, a number which is considerably more than
-the whole for the first eighteen months of Bishop Gynewell’s episcopate.
-The average is over eight a day.
-
-The most singular thing which the statistics point to, is that, on the
-high ground round Lincoln and in the parts of Lindsey the mortality
-among the clergy was far higher than in other parts of the diocese,
-whilst in the low lands and fens round Peterborough, and in the parts of
-Holland, the percentage of deaths was almost invariably low, twenty-seven
-and twenty-four per cent. as compared with fifty-seven for Stamford
-and sixty for Lincoln. The worst months in Lincolnshire were July and
-August, yet even then, in spite of the severity of the plague and the
-disorganisation which it occasioned in all the social and religious life
-of the age, ordinary business, we are told, went on, and the bishop never
-ceased his constant journeys and visitations to all parts of his enormous
-diocese, reaching as it did from Henley on the Thames to the Humber,
-and including besides Lincoln, the counties of Northampton, Rutland,
-Leicester, Huntingdon, Bedford, Hertford, Buckingham, and Oxford.
-
-That the nation was not more depressed by this state of things was
-doubtless due to the feeling of national exaltation occasioned by the
-battle of Cressy in 1346, and the capture of Calais in the next year and
-the subsequent truce with France.
-
-[Sidenote: ITS EFFECT ON BUILDING]
-
-One of the results of this plague was the absolute cessation of work for
-want of hands, which threw land out of cultivation and suspended all
-building operations. At Gedney, as the architect who restored the church
-in 1898, Mr. W. D. Caröe, pointed out to me, the history of the Black
-Death is distinctly written on the tower, and you may plainly see where
-the fourteenth-century builders ceased and how, above the present clock,
-the work was recommenced by different hands, with altered design and
-quite other materials.
-
-[Illustration: _Gedney, from Fleet._]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLI
-
-CROYLAND
-
- St. Guthlac—Abbot Joffrid—Boundary Crosses—The Triangular
- Bridge—Figure with Sceptre and Ball—Lincolnshire swan-marks.
-
-
-As you pass in the train along the line from Peterborough to Spalding,
-and have got a mile or two north of Deeping St. James station, you can
-see to the east in a cluster of trees a broad tower with a short, thick
-spire standing out as the only feature in a wide, flat landscape. This,
-for all who know it, has a mysterious attraction, for it is the sorrowful
-ruin of a once magnificent building, a far-famed centre of light and
-learning from whence came the brains, the piety, and the wealth which,
-issuing over the fens of south-east Lincolnshire, not only supplied the
-first lecturers to Cambridge, but planted those splendid churches for
-which the “parts of Holland” are famous to this day. For this is the
-great Abbey of Crowland, or Croyland, the home of the good St. Guthlac,
-to whose memory this and many another church was dedicated, and to whose
-shrine pilgrimage was made for several centuries. It stands alone on a
-once desolate and still sparsely inhabited and seemingly endless fen,
-and past it the Welland flows down to the long serpentine lake beloved
-of skaters, which is spelt Cowbit, but called by all Lincolnshire folk
-“Cubbit Wash.”
-
-Croyland is an older name than Crowland, and the fine church and
-monastery to which it owes its fame was set up in the eighth century,
-by King Æthelbald, in grateful memory of St. Guthlac. Now St. Guthlac
-is no legendary saint; he was a member of the Mercian royal house, who,
-tired of soldiering, sought a retirement from the world; and certainly
-few better places could be found than what was then a desolate, reedy
-waste of waters at the point where Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire and
-Lincolnshire meet by the edge of Deeping Fen. No road led to it, and the
-fenmen’s boats were the only means of passage.
-
-[Illustration: _Cowbit Church._]
-
-[Sidenote: ST. GUTHLAC]
-
-Guthlac was, we are told, the son of Penwald, a Mercian nobleman,
-and he was very likely born not far from Croyland. After nine years’
-military service he entered the monastery of Hrypadon, or Repton, and
-after two years’ study resolved to take up the life of an Anchorite.
-So, in defiance of the evil spirits who were reputed to have their
-abode there, and who were probably nothing but the shrieking sea-gulls
-and the melancholy cries of the bittern and curlew, he landed on a
-bit of dry ground two miles to the north-east of Croyland, now called
-Anchor-Church-Hill, just east of the Spalding road. Here were some
-British or Saxon burial mounds, on one of which he set up his hut and
-chapel, while his sister Pega established herself a few miles to the
-south-west, at Peakirk. He had landed on his island on St. Bartholomew’s
-Day, August 24, 699, a young man of twenty-six, and here he was visited
-by Bishop Hædda, who ordained him in 705. In 709 Æthelbald being outlawed
-by his cousin King Coelred, took sanctuary with St. Guthlac, who
-prophesied to him that he would one day be king, and without bloodshed.
-St. Guthlac died in 713 or 714, but Æthelbald, who had vowed to build
-a monastery for Guthlac if ever he could, did become king in 716, and
-in gratitude built the first stone church and endowed a monastery for
-Benedictines at Croyland. Naturally St. Guthlac was the patron saint,
-and to him was joined St. Bartholomew, on whose day he had first come to
-Croyland.
-
-[Sidenote: FOUNDATIONS OF THE ABBEY]
-
-[Sidenote: ABBOTS OF CROYLAND]
-
-_St. Guthlac_ is represented in his statue as bearing the scourge of St.
-Bartholomew, on whose feast day each year little knives were given away
-emblematic of his martyrdom by flaying. The custom was not abolished
-till 1476. Pictures of the scourge and knives are found in the stained
-glass of old windows; for instance, at Bag-Enderby, near Somersby. In
-866 the Danes burnt the monastery. Eighty years later the chancellor of
-King Edred, whose name is variously given as Turketyl, or _Thurcytel_,
-restored the church and monastery, and became the first abbot in 946,
-about which time he founded the Croyland library. The first church was
-built on a peat bog; oak piles five and a half feet long being driven
-through the peat on to gravel, and above the piles recent digging has
-shown alternate layers of loose stone and quarry-dust, above which the
-stone foundations of the tower were found to go down fifteen inches below
-the surface, and to rest on a mixture of rubble and stiff soil which was
-brought in boats a distance of nine miles. Thurcytel’s church, which was
-cruciform and of considerable size and held one large bell, has almost,
-if not entirely, disappeared. The monastery was finished after his death
-by his successor, _Egelric_, who added six other bells in 976. The Danes,
-by cruel and repeated exactions, ruined the abbey which Thurcytel had
-left so richly endowed, in the time of Egelric’s successor, _Godric_,
-about 1010. This Egelric must not be confused with the Peterborough abbot
-of the same name, who became Bishop of Durham and made the great causeway
-from Deeping to Spalding in 1052, probably to give work to the peasantry
-in the year of the dreadful famine, 1051.
-
-On so treacherous a foundation the monks wisely built in wood rather
-than stone when possible, but they had no preservatives for wood in
-those days, hence, in 1061, Abbot _Ulfcytel_ had to rebuild the wooden
-erections which were attached to the monastery. He was greatly helped
-by the famous Waltheof, Earl of Northampton and Huntingdon, and when,
-on the false accusation of his infamous wife Judith, sister of William
-I., Waltheof was beheaded at Winchester, the monks got leave from the
-Conqueror to have his body buried at Croyland. In 1076 _Ingulphus_
-became abbot, and, owing to the carelessness of some plumbers—an old and
-ever-recurring story—the whole of the buildings were again burnt down and
-the library of 700 MSS. destroyed. It is to the Chronicle of Ingulphus
-that we owe most of our knowledge of the early history of Croyland, and
-even if the Chronicle were written three centuries after his death, it
-still contains much sound and reliable information. Certainly after the
-fire his building was patched up for a generation, and the Abbot Joffrid,
-a man of extraordinary learning, zeal, and skill, built in 1109 what
-may well be called the third abbey. Most of Thurcytel’s work which had
-escaped the fire was taken down, and the foundations carried down to
-the gravel bed below the peat. Of this building, which was carried out
-by Arnold, a lay monk and a very skilful mason, the two western piers
-and arch of the central tower remain, but an earthquake in 1113 damaged
-the nave, and when in 1143 it was partly burnt down again, for the
-third time, Abbot Edward restored it. King Henry had sent for Joffrid
-(or Geoffrey) from Normandy. Among other remarkable deeds he sent four
-learned monks to give a course of lectures on grammar, logic, rhetoric
-and philosophy in a barn which they hired in Cambridge, or Grantbridge as
-it was then called. Sermons were also preached there in French and Latin,
-both by the monk Gilbert and by the abbot himself, of whom we are told
-that, though his numerous hearers understood neither language, the force
-of his subject and his comely person excited them to give amply towards
-his building fund. The account of the laying of the first stones of his
-new abbey is very remarkable. Five thousand persons were assembled and
-feasted on the spot, and many distinguished people took part, each laying
-one stone and placing on it a handsome offering of money, or titles to
-property, or patronage, or land, or possession of yearly tithes of sheep,
-gifts of corn or malt or stone, or the service for so many years of
-quarriers at the stone pits, with carriage of stone in boats.
-
-Croyland lost a good friend by the death of Queen Maud, wife of Henry
-I., in 1118. She had been the especial patroness of the abbot Joffrid,
-and had founded the first Austin priory in England in 1108. Twenty
-years later King Stephen gave a fresh charter to the abbey, in the time
-of Abbot _Edward_, who commenced to re-build the abbey in 1145. The
-beautiful west front of the nave, some of which remains, was possibly
-planned by _Henry de Longchamp_ in 1190, but was not finished till the
-time of _Richard de Upton_, 1417-1427. His predecessor, _Thomas de
-Overton_, had rebuilt the nave in 1405, and it was during his abbacy that
-Croyland became a mitred abbey.
-
-[Sidenote: THE MASTER MASON]
-
-The architect and master mason under Richard de Upton was one William
-de Wernington, or William de Croyland, whose monument is in the tower
-now. The effigy wears a monk’s cowl and long robe, and holds a builder’s
-square and compasses and has this inscription: “ICI : GIST : MESTRE :
-WILLM : DE : WERMIGTON : LE : MASON : A : LALME : DE : KY : DEVY : P″SA :
-GRACE : DOVNEZ : ABSOLVTION.”
-
-The noble west window, which has lost all its mullions and tracery, must
-have been one of the very finest in England.
-
-In the days of Henry II. a dispute arose between the Abbot of Croyland
-and the Prior of Spalding, the prior going so far as to claim Croyland as
-a cell to Spalding. This quarrel continued through the reigns of Richard
-I. and John, when the Abbot of Peterborough joined the fray with a fresh
-dispute about the rights of common and pasture, and the payment of tolls
-at Croyland bridge. In these controversies Croyland generally was worsted.
-
-[Illustration: _Croyland Abbey._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE RUINS]
-
-_John de Lytlyngton_ succeeded Abbot Upton and ruled for forty years.
-In his time Henry VI. and Edward IV. both visited Croyland, the latter
-being on his way to Fotheringay. A three months’ frost, followed by two
-years of famine, and later a great flood, followed by a pestilence and
-a fire which destroyed nearly all the village, but spared the abbey, are
-among the records of his abbacy. He vaulted the roofs of the aisles,
-glazed the windows, had the bells recast, and gave the choir an organ;
-also he built the great west tower for the bells and the porch with its
-parvise. He died in 1469. The short steeple was added to the tower later.
-The last abbot was _John Welles_, _alias_ Bridges. Another campanile had
-been built beyond the east end of the choir by Abbot _Ralph Marshe_,
-1260, which gave the abbey two separate peals, as once at Lincoln. After
-these many vicissitudes the greater part of the beautiful building was
-destroyed at the dissolution in 1539, the nave, of nine bays, being
-preserved for a parish church. The north aisle had been used for the
-purpose before, and is so still. Besides this there is left now the
-west front, consisting of a tower with short spire and a very fine
-Perpendicular window, and all but the gable and window tracery of the
-beautiful ornate west end of the nave. This had originally no less than
-twenty-nine statues under canopies, in seven tiers, covering the wall on
-either side of the doorway and window, and also above the window. The
-handsome doorway is entered by a deeply moulded single arch enclosing
-two smaller ones, and in the tympanum is a large quatrefoil illustrating
-the life of St. Guthlac. The tower has a western porch under a six-light
-window. Much has been done by the rector, the Rev. T. H. Le Bœuf, to
-preserve this magnificent ruin, and since 1860, under Sir G. Scott and
-Mr. J. L. Pearson, sound restoration has been carried out. Besides the
-west front and the western tower and spire, one of the most remarkable
-parts of the abbey still existing is the stone screen which, contrary to
-usual custom, filled the west arch of the central tower, and is pierced
-by two doors, one on either side of the altar. Of this the side looking
-west is plain and probably had wooden panelling, but the eastern side is
-handsomely carved and panelled in stone. The north aisle has Lytlyngton’s
-groined roof, five large Perpendicular windows, and a rood-screen. Of St.
-Guthlac’s Shrine, which was destroyed in 870 and newly erected in 1136,
-and moved in 1196, nothing remains.
-
-Of the old glass fragments have lately been found buried in the
-churchyard.
-
-An epitaph on the north wall, dated 1715, has the following apt lines:—
-
- Man’s life is like unto a winter’s day,
- Some brake their fast and so departs away;
- Others stay dinner then departs full fed,
- The longest age but supps and goes to bed.
-
-[Illustration: _Croyland Bridge._]
-
-[Sidenote: THE BOUNDARY CROSSES]
-
-[Sidenote: TRIANGULAR BRIDGE]
-
-The boundaries of Croyland, which in Æthelbald’s Charter were rivers,
-were staked out more definitely when disputes between this abbey and
-Peterborough arose, by stone crosses; and though these are in part
-destroyed or broken down, six crosses, or parts of them, are still
-standing in fields or hedges, which are all mentioned by name, in later
-charters. One of them, “Turketyls or Thurcytels Cross,” is placed at
-the junction of Lincolnshire and Cambridgeshire. In this, as in all the
-others, the cross is missing. The shaft is of obelisk form, on a shapely
-base, and has been restored. Parts of other crosses are “Guthlac’s
-Stone,” near the Assendyke, four miles from Croyland; “Finestone,” or
-“Fynset,” “Greynes,” “Folwardstaking,” and “Kenulph’s Stone.” One of the
-boundaries mentioned as early as the charter of Edred, A.D. 943, is “The
-Triangular Bridge.” The present is an extremely curious thirteenth- or
-fourteenth-century structure, doubtless replacing an earlier one. Like
-the triangular lodge near Rothwell, in Northamptonshire, it was probably
-intended to be emblematic of the Trinity. It has three pointed arches,
-with a way for a stream to flow under each, and three roadways over the
-arches, but the arches are too low, and the roadways too narrow for
-vehicles and too steep for any convenient traffic. Hence it may have
-been the basement of a large cross approached by three flights of steps,
-where now we have the steep inclines. The parapet walls are perhaps a
-later addition. Still it served as a bridge too. Roads from Stamford,
-Peterborough and Spalding meet at the bridge, and tributaries of the
-Welland and Nene, now covered in, flow under it. The height of the arches
-is nine feet, and their span sixteen and a half. It would not require
-that span now, but the streams were bigger when this bridge was built,
-for we are told that Henry VI. came to Croyland by water in 1460, and
-that Edward IV. embarked at the wharf just below the bridge, in 1468, for
-Fotheringay Castle, which is on the banks of the Nene, a distance of some
-two and twenty miles by water.
-
-[Sidenote: FIGURE ON THE BRIDGE]
-
-There is a stone bench along the left side of the bridge parapet, as you
-approach from Peterborough, and on this you find an ancient stone figure
-seated: it is often called Æthelbald holding a globe in his hand or a
-loaf of bread; but it is far more likely that it is the figure of our
-Lord, from the centre of the gable above the great west window of the
-nave, holding in his hands what Shakespeare in the lines below calls “the
-sceptre and the ball.” The shallowness of the statue and its height—six
-feet when seated but even the knees only projecting ten inches—make it
-certain that it was only meant to be seen from the front and at a good
-height. Moreover, the workmanship of the statue corresponds with that of
-the other statues on the west front of the abbey.
-
-The rector states as a fact that the west gable of this west front was
-taken down in 1720, and the statue placed on the bridge, where it must
-be admitted that it looks very much out of place and uncomfortable. The
-bridge is said to be in three counties—Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire and
-Northamptonshire—so, though the abbey is entirely in Lincolnshire, we can
-in a few steps leave the county of which Croyland is the last place we
-have to describe.
-
-The “ball,” or orb, is carried by the monarch at the coronation service
-in one hand and the sceptre in the other as symbols of imperial power.
-There is no finer passage in English literature than the soliloquy of
-King Henry V. on the eve of the battle of Agincourt, the last part of
-which runs thus:—
-
- ’Tis not the balm, the sceptre and the ball,
- The sword, the mace, the crown imperial,
- The intertissued robe of gold and pearl,
- The farced title running ’fore the king,
- The throne he sits on, nor the tide of pomp
- That beats upon the high shore of this world,
- No, not all these, thrice-gorgeous ceremony,
- Not all these, laid in bed majestical,
- Can sleep so soundly as the wretched slave,
- Who with a body fill’d and vacant mind
- Gets him to rest, cramm’d with distressful bread;
- Never sees horrid night, the child of hell,
- But, like a lackey, from the rise to set
- Sweats in the eye of Phœbus, and all night
- Sleeps in Elysium; next day after dawn,
- Doth rise and help Hyperion to his horse,
- And follows so the ever-running year,
- With profitable labour, to his grave:
- And, but for ceremony, such a wretch,
- Winding up days with toil and nights with sleep,
- Had the fore-hand and vantage of a king.
- The slave, a member of the country’s peace,
- Enjoys it; but in gross brain little wots
- What watch the king keeps to maintain the peace,
- Whose hours the peasant best advantages.
-
- _Henry V._, Act IV. Scene 1.
-
-[Sidenote: LINCOLNSHIRE SWAN-MARKS]
-
-In the Museum of the Record-office is a long brown-paper roll with a
-double column of swans’ heads, the bills painted red and showing in black
-the marks of the different owners in two counties, of which Lincolnshire
-is one. These marks were in use in the years 1497-1504, a few being added
-for the year 1515.
-
-One of the plainest to read is the name of Carolus Stanefeld de
-Bolyngbroke; among others are the marks of the parsons of Leek and
-Leverton, the vicars of Waynflete, Frekeney and Sybsa, the Bayly of
-Croft, the abbot of Revysbye and Philip abbas de Croyland.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLII
-
-LINCOLNSHIRE FOX-HOUNDS
-
-BY E. P. RAWNSLEY, ESQ., M.F.H.
-
- Brocklesby—Burton—Blankney and Southwold—Note by Author.
-
-
-[Sidenote: THE BROCKLESBY]
-
-Except the fen country and a small corner in the extreme north-west,
-the whole of Lincolnshire is hunted by fox-hounds. Four packs, namely,
-the _Brocklesby_ (Lord Yarborough’s), the _Burton_, _Blankney_ and
-_Southwold_ hunt entirely in Lincolnshire; while the Belvoir and
-Cottesmore hunt partly in Lincolnshire. Premier position must be given
-to the _Brocklesby_. It is one of the very few packs maintained entirely
-by the master, and for over 150 years the Earls of Yarborough have done
-this for the benefit of the residents and farmers in the large tract of
-country they hunt over. The country hunted extends from the Humber on
-the north to a line drawn from Louth to Market-Rasen on the south, and
-from the sea on the east to the river Ancholme on the west. The country
-is mostly wold, and consequently plough, but very open, the only big
-woods being those that surround Brocklesby itself. The hounds having
-been so long in one family are of the best, and there are few kennels
-in England but have a large infusion of the Brocklesby blood, famous
-for nose, tongue, and stoutness. For upwards of 100 years the family
-of Smith carried the horn and did much to establish the notoriety of
-the pack, while in more recent years Will Dale, a great huntsman and
-houndman, and Jem Smith, no relation of the former huntsman, have kept it
-up. Possibly sport in the country was never better than when W. Dale and
-Mr. Maunsell-Richardson each hunted one pack; when one was hunting the
-other was always out to render assistance, and as both knew the country
-perfectly, the result was more good runs and more foxes caught at the
-end of them than was ever done in the country before or since.
-
-With the exception of Brocklesby there are not many residences in the
-country, though the Upplebys of Barrow, the Alingtons of Swinhope, the
-Nelthorpes of Scawby in old days joined the chase; and it is related of
-the first, grandfather of the present owner of Barrow, that after a good
-run he was found riding on his pillow shouting at the top of his voice,
-“Mind you keep your eye on Blossom,” a noted bitch at that time in the
-pack. At the present time a great supporter is Mr. Haigh of Grainsby, who
-cannot have too many foxes, though he does all his hunting on foot. Mr.
-Pretyman’s covers at Riby are equally well stocked; while Bradley Wood,
-the property of Mr. Sutton-Nelthorpe, is the key of all that side of the
-country. Probably hunting will continue longer over cultivated country,
-such as the Brocklesby, than in most parts of England. There are few
-railways, the country is not adapted to small holdings, the farmers are
-all sportsmen, and occupy large farms, delighted to have a litter of cubs
-reared on their land and to see a couple of fox-hound puppies playing in
-their yards, while such a thing as a complaint about hounds and field
-crossing their land is unknown.
-
-[Sidenote: THE BURTON AND THE BLANKNEY]
-
-_The Burton_ comes next in point of antiquity, and takes its name from
-Burton, Lord Monson’s place near Lincoln, where Lord Monson first started
-the hounds in 1774. Many notable sportsmen have held the mastership.
-The old Burton country was of very wide extent, stretching from Brigg
-on the north to Sleaford on the south, and from Stourton by Horncastle
-on the east to the Trent on the west. It is now divided into _Burton_
-and _Blankney_, the present southern boundary of the Burton being the
-river Witham and the Fossdyke. The most notable Masters of the country
-when undivided were Mr. Assheton-Smith, Sir Richard Sutton, Lord Henry
-Bentinck, who bred a pack of hounds which for work were unequalled, and
-their blood is still treasured in many kennels, and Mr. Henry Chaplin,
-to whom Lord Henry gave his hounds, and when the old Burton country was
-divided Mr. Chaplin took this pack with him. The Burton country as it
-is now was established in 1871; Mr. F. Foljambe being the first master,
-a great houndman with a thorough knowledge of the science of hunting,
-he very soon established a pack, and with Will Dale as huntsman, sport
-of the highest order was the result. Mr. Foljambe was succeeded by Mr.
-Wemyss, Mr. Shrubb and again Mr. Wemyss for short periods; then Mr. T.
-Wilson came, and for twenty-four years presided over the country. He bred
-an excellent pack of hounds, and sport, especially during the latter part
-of his reign, was very good; the country, when he gave up, being better
-off for foxes than it had ever been; this was in 1912. Sir M. Cholmeley
-succeeded Mr. Wilson. The Burton country is a fair mixture of grass and
-plough, with some very fine woodlands on the east side of it, known as
-the Wragby woods. It is far the best scenting country in Lincolnshire,
-and being little cut up with railways or rivers, is the best hunting
-country in all the shire. There are not many residences in the country,
-but excellent support in the way of foxes is given by the landowners.
-The Bacons of Thonock have ever assisted; then the Amcotts family of
-Hackthorn and Kettlethorpe, the Wrights of Brattleby, the owners of most
-of the Wragby woods, and of Toft, Newton and Nevile’s gorses are perhaps
-most conspicuous; but the whole country is well provided.
-
-_The Blankney_ was first formed as a separate country in 1871, when Mr.
-Henry Chaplin took command, and as he brought the pack given to him by
-Lord H. Bentinck, and H. Dawkins as huntsman, very good sport was shown.
-On Mr. Chaplin giving up he was succeeded by Major Tempest. Then followed
-Mr. Cockburn, and for a short time Lord Londesborough joined him; Mr.
-Lubbock followed, then an old name in Lord Charles Bentinck; Mr. R. Swan
-came next and is still in command. Changes have been rather frequent, as
-in many countries.
-
-The Blankney country is now a good deal intersected by railways, and the
-vale towards the Trent has two rivers, the Brant and Witham, which cut
-it up further. The Wellingore vale is looked on as the best part, having
-a large proportion of grass, “the heath,” in the centre, is all light
-plough and very bad scenting country, while on the east there is a strip
-of country bordering on the fen of good hunting character, and a portion
-of the Belvoir country towards Sleaford, which is lent to the Blankney,
-is also very fair.
-
-[Sidenote: THE SOUTHWOLD]
-
-_The Southwold_ was the last part of Lincolnshire to be established as
-a separate country (later, that is, than either the Brocklesby or the
-Burton); it was not till 1823 that it was hunted regularly. It has a
-wide range, extending from the sea on the east to the river Witham on
-the west, and from Market-Rasen and Louth on the north to the fens on
-the south. It is probably more varied than any part of Lincolnshire.
-The marsh with its wide ditches comes on the east; the wolds, mostly
-light plough, in the centre; while on the west they dip into a mixed
-country of grass and plough. The fen country, all ditches and plough,
-is in the south; hounds, however, only occasionally get into it, as
-there are hardly any covers. Very short masterships have been the rule,
-but a committee ruled for nearly twenty years (1857-76), at the end of
-which time foxes were very scarce in the country. Mr. Crowder then came
-for four years, and in 1880 Mr. E. P. Rawnsley took the country, and is
-still master. With latterly the aid of Mr. J. S. V. Fox, and now of Sir
-W. Cooke, so great an alteration has taken place that whereas formerly
-four days a week sufficed to hunt the country, now it is always hunted
-six days, Sir W. Cooke taking the north side and Mr. Rawnsley the south.
-Sir W. Cooke has a pack of his own, while Mr. Rawnsley hunts the pack
-which belongs to the country and has been bred from all the best working
-strains of blood obtainable. Though there are some very big woods on the
-edges of the country, the centre is all open; there are few railways
-and no rivers, the scenting conditions are fair, and it is probably the
-second best hunting country in Lincolnshire.
-
-Conspicuous supporters of the hunt are the Heneages of Hainton, and the
-large extent of covers and country owned by them has always been open to
-hounds. The Foxes of Girsby and Mr. Walter Rawnsley of Well Vale have
-been the same. The late Captain J. W. Fox was for many years chairman
-of the committee when it ruled the affairs of the hunt, and his son was
-for seven years joint master with Mr. Rawnsley, during which time the
-sport was of higher average merit than it had ever attained. Many more
-residents now come out than was formerly the case, and everywhere the
-stock of foxes is far better than thirty years ago.
-
-Somersby, the birthplace of Tennyson, is situated in the centre of
-the hunt, but we never heard of the Poet Laureate joining the chase
-in his young days. Then Spilsby, the birthplace of Sir John Franklin,
-and Tattershall Castle, noted as one of the finest brick buildings in
-England, are both of them in the Southwold country.
-
-
-NOTE BY AUTHOR
-
-[Sidenote: MASTERS OF THE SOUTHWOLD]
-
-It appears that Mr. Charles Pelham, who was the last of the Brocklesby
-Pelhams, was the first M.F.H. of _The Brocklesby_, at first as joint and
-then as sole master, till his death in 1763. Also that Lord Yarborough
-hunted what is now the Southwold country for a month at a time in spring
-and autumn, having kennels at Ketsby until 1795, by which time his gorse
-covers round Brocklesby had grown up and he was able to dispense with the
-country south of Louth. Then till 1820 a pack of trencher-fed harriers
-hunted fox and hare indiscriminately. These from 1820 to 1822 were called
-“_The Gillingham_” and were hunted by Mr. Brackenbury from Scremby, after
-which the kennels were transferred to Hundleby and the name changed to
-“_The Southwold_.” They now kept to fox entirely, and the Hon. George
-Pelham, then living at Legbourne, was the first master.
-
-The following is a complete list of the masters of the Southwold up to
-the present date, 1914:—
-
- Hon. G. Pelham 1823-6
- Lord Kintore 1826
- Mr. Joseph Brackenbury 1827-9
- Sir Richard Sutton, combining it with the Burton 1829-30
- Captain Freeman, who brought hounds from “The Vine” 1830-32
- Mr. Parker 1832-35
- Mr. Heanley, who brought his own hounds 1835-41
- Mr. Musters, who brought his own hounds 1841-43
- Mr. Hellier 1843-52
- Mr. Henley Greaves 1852-53
- Mr. Cooke 1853-57
- A Committee, presided over part of the time by Captain
- Dallas York 1857-76
- Mr. F. Crowder 1876-80
- Mr. E. Preston Rawnsley 1880
-
-From this it will be seen that until the days of the committee no one
-hunted the pack for even five years, with the exception of Mr. Heanley
-and Mr. Hellier, until the present master, Mr. E. P. Rawnsley.
-
-[Sidenote: BELCHFORD KENNELS]
-
-With the reign of the committee central kennels were established for the
-hunt at Belchford in 1857. Previously each master fixed his kennels as it
-suited him, either at Louth, Horncastle, Hundleby or Harrington.
-
-Now, April 1914, Sir William Cooke having given up, Lord Charles Bentinck
-has succeeded him. He brings his own pack with him, and the country no
-longer is divided into north and south, but hunted as a whole again.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX I
-
-
-The altar tombstone from which John preached is near the chancel door.
-Epworth people will tell you that the mark of his heels is still visible
-on the stone. Really they are segments of two ironstone nodules in the
-sandstone slab. The inscription is a remarkable one:
-
- “Here lieth all that was mortal of Samuel Wesley, A.M., who was
- Rector of Epworth for 39 years and departed this life 15th of
- April, 1735, aged 72.
-
- As he lived so he died, in the true Catholic faith of the Holy
- Trinity in Unity, and that Jesus Christ is God incarnate and
- the only Saviour of mankind.—Acts 4, 12.
-
- Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord: yea, saith the
- Spirit, that they may rest from their labours; and their works
- do follow them.—Rev. 14, 13.”
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX II
-
-
-Dr. Wm. Stukeley, 1687-1765, was a famous Lincolnshire antiquarian. He
-practised medicine, first at Boston and then at Grantham from 1710 to
-1726. He was made an F.R.S. in 1717, and in that or the following year
-he helped to establish the Society of Antiquaries in London, and was for
-the first nine years secretary to that Society. In 1719 he became an M.D.
-of Cambridge and was made a member of the “Spalding Gentlemen’s Society”
-in 1722. In 1727 he took Holy Orders and from 1730 to 1748 officiated
-as Vicar of All Saints at Stamford, where he founded the short-lived
-“Brazenose Society.” He was a great friend of Sir Isaac Newton and kept
-up his interest in scientific matters to the end, inasmuch as he put off
-his service on one occasion in order that his congregation might watch
-an eclipse of the sun. Whilst still Vicar of Stamford he was made Rector
-of Somerby near Grantham, 1739-1747, but he retired from both livings
-in 1748, and spent the rest of his life in London, where at the age of
-75 he preached his first sermon in spectacles, taking as his text “Now
-we see through a glass darkly.” He wrote five volumes of Notes of the
-proceedings of the “Royal Society,” which are now in the library of
-the “Spalding Gentlemen’s Society,” and he dedicated his “_Itinerarium
-curiosum_” to Maurice Johnson, the founder of that society. He took, for
-many years, antiquarian tours all over England; writing at some length
-on Stonehenge and the Roman Wall, and often illustrating his articles,
-for he was a skilful draughtsman. He died in London in his seventy-ninth
-year.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX III
-
-A LOWLAND PEASANT POET
-
-
-I had not long ago a couple of poems put into my hands by one who,
-knowing the author, told me something of his life and circumstances.
-Being much struck by the poems I set to work to make inquiries in the
-hope of getting something further. But he seems to have written very
-little. His nephew copied out and sent _The Auld Blasted Tree_ and added
-“I made inquiry of my aunt if she had any more; she says those you have
-seen along with this one I now enclose were all he wrote, at least the
-best of them.” The relatives allowed me to see the account of his funeral
-with an appreciation of the man as it appeared in the local newspaper. It
-ran as follows, and was published in _The Peebleshire Advertiser_, July
-7, 1906.
-
- THE LATE MR. FARQUHARSON, LONELYBIELD.
-
- Our obituary of Saturday last contained the name of one whose
- memory will be for long in this district. We refer to the
- late Alexander Forrester Farquharson. His “mid name” takes us
- back to the first baptismal scene of by-gone long occupants
- of Linton Manse, viz., the Rev. Alexander Forrester, whose
- father, too, was minister before. Born in Carlops sixty-nine
- years ago, there are but few now amongst us who were children
- then. When six years old, his father, of the same vocation as
- himself, removed to the picturesque hamlet at the foot of the
- “Howe,” and here his lifetime was spent. Married to one of a
- family of long pastoral connection with our district, who still
- survives to cherish the happy memories of their long sojourn
- together, in this, their quiet and peaceful home, they reared
- their family. By his departure, there has gone from amongst us
- one of the finest types of Scotchmen that our country districts
- develop, both, it may be said, in lineaments of feature and
- character. But, added to the possession generally of the
- best features of our race, there was in him truly a special
- element, which seemed to be gathered from the classic scenes in
- which he was reared. It is not too much to say that his manner
- and language (quaint to a degree) were a living, embodied
- personification of the genius of the place, as pictured in
- the pages of the immortal Pastoral of Ramsay. Gifted with
- musical powers and some inspiration from the Muses—which,
- however, not often saw the light—these were fostered in his
- wanderings amid the lovely scenes, o’er moor and fell, whither
- his daily vocations led. And with such characteristics, added
- to his stores of local lore and story, and knowledge of bird,
- beast, and fossil, it may be gathered how entertaining were
- the “cracks” in the homesteads he visited, and how much these
- would be looked forward to and welcomed. And not less so were
- those in the cosy home in the “Bield,”[39] to which many a
- one of kindred spirit specially pilgrimaged. Evidence of this
- was ample from the large gathering from all parts to his
- resting-place with his “forbears” in Linton’s “auld kirkyaird.”
-
-Thus far the newspaper of 1906; and a correspondent who knew the family
-writes under date March 18, 1912, “Alexander Forrester Farquharson (the
-subject of the foregoing notice) was born on Sept. 26, 1836, and was
-named Forrester after the minister of West Linton Parish. He was the
-son of Andrew Farquharson, mole catcher and small Farmer, and Isabella
-Cairns, both natives of the Carlops district who lived there at a house
-called Lonely Bield. Alexander lived in the same house, and followed his
-father’s occupation. His son died lately and the mother has now left the
-House.” From this somewhat meagre account we may gather that the whole of
-his life was spent in Nature’s lonely places
-
- “up on the mountains, in among the hills”
-
-and in this respect he resembles Allan Ramsay who drank in the poetry
-of Nature when a boy at Leadhills high up on the Crawford moor in
-Lanarkshire, where hills, glens, and burns, with birds and flowers and
-ever-changing skies were his to watch and study and take delight in, at
-the impressionable season of boyhood; whereby Nature herself laid the
-foundations of his poetic fancies. And this opportunity to walk with
-Nature came also to Farquharson, in even a greater measure than it did
-to Ramsay; for he, like Burns, lived and laboured in the country after
-he had grown to manhood. But Farquharson had not so good an education
-as the other two, nor did it fall to him, as it did to them, to have
-at the outset of his career books put into his hands which directed
-his attention more especially to poetry. Thus, what the selection of
-English Songs, which he called his _Vade mecum_, did for Burns, Watson’s
-collection of Scottish poems did for Ramsay, and among these, notably,
-one by Robt. Semphill called “The life and death of the Piper of
-Kilbarchan” and another by Hamilton of Gilbertfield, “The last dying
-words of Bonnie Heck.” Later, Hamilton, who by this poem first inspired
-Ramsay with the desire to write in verse, heartily recognised his merit
-and himself wrote of him
-
- “O fam’d and celebrated Allan!
- Renowned Ramsay! canty callan!
- There’s nouther Hieland man nor Lawlan
- In poetrie,
- But may as soon ding doun Tantallan
- As match wi’ thee.”
-
-This source of inspiration from books of poetry never, as far as we
-know, fell to the lot of Farquharson, whose education was altogether on
-a lower plane. He was born and died just a Scottish peasant; but his
-communing with Nature gave him the power of observation, whilst the love
-of reading, which has for generations been the heritage of the Scots even
-in the humblest walks of life, taught him how to express the thoughts
-which came to him, and he had undoubtedly a gift for verse. His poems
-on his old “Hardie” fiddle, and on the Sundew are so good that they
-might have been written by Burns. But, like Burns and Ramsay too, he is
-best when he sticks to the vernacular. When he begins to write English
-he is less convincing. It is well to remember that Ramsay could owe
-nothing to Burns, as he died in 1758, the year before Burns was born; but
-Farquharson, whose widow is still alive, died only the other day, and was
-acquainted with the works certainly of one and probably of both of them.
-This does not, however, make him less deserving of notice; for little
-as he wrote, the two poems just mentioned show, I cannot help thinking,
-a high degree of poetic merit, being not merely surprising as the work
-of a peasant, but—extremely good _per se_, and serve to show how the
-true poetic gift may lurk unsuspected in a country village. In his poems
-_Fair Habbies Howe_ (or hollow) and _Monk’s Burn_ he refers to the fact
-that the descriptions of Nature in Allan Ramsay’s pastoral _The Gentle
-Shepherd_ are taken from the Carlops district, about twelve miles from
-Edinburgh, in which he himself lived. The second scene of the first act
-of _The Gentle Shepherd_ begins thus:
-
- _Jenny._ Come, Meg, let’s fa’ to wark upon this green,
- This shining day will bleach our linen clean;
- The waters clear, the lift’s unclouded blue
- Will make them like a lily wet wi’ dew.
-
- _Peggy._ Gae farer up the burn to Habbie’s Howe,
- Where a’ the sweets o’ spring an’ simmer grow:
- Between two birks, out o’er a little lin,[40]
- The water fa’s an’ maks a singan din:
- A pool breast-deep, beneath as clear as glass,
- Kisses wi’ easy whirls the bord’ring grass.
- We’ll end our washing while the morning’s cool;
- An’ when the day grows het, we’ll to the pool,
- There wash oursells—’tis healthfu’ now as May,
- An sweetly cauler on sae warm a day.
-
-_The Gentle Shepherd_, the poem on which Allan Ramsay’s reputation is
-mainly founded, is a pastoral of great beauty and charm. The original MS.
-was presented by the author to the Countess of Eglinton. It is a folio
-Vol. of 105 pages, clearly written by his own hand, and has a few comic
-pen-and-ink sketches added at the beginning or end of the acts, and at
-the close is this note:
-
- “Finished the 29ᵗʰ of April, 1725, just as eleven o’clock
- strikes, by Allan Ramsay.
-
- All glory be to God. Amen.”
-
-We will now turn to the seven bits of verse we have been able to collect
-by the Shepherd of Lonely Bield.
-
-FAIR HABBIE’S HOWE.
-
-(May be sung to the tune “Craigielea,” with first verse as the Chorus).
-
- O Habbie’s Howe! Fair Habbie’s Howe,
- Where wimplin’ burnies[41] sweetly row;
- Where aft I’ve tasted nature’s joys,
- O Habbie’s Howe! Fair Habbie’s Howe.
-
- Roond thee my youthfu’ days I spent,
- Amang thy cliffs aft ha’e I speil’d.
- Thou theme o’ Ramsay’s pastoral lay;
- O hoary, moss-clad Craigy Bield.
-
- The auld oak bower, wi’ ivy twined,
- Adorns thy weather-furrowed brow,
- A trysting-place where lovers met
- When tenting flocks in Habbie’s Howe.
-
- When April’s suns glint through the trees,
- The mavis lilts his mellow lay;
- And, deep amid thy sombre shades
- The owlet screams at close of day.
-
- Amang thy cosy, mossy chinks,
- The fern now shows its gentle form
- And through thy caves the ousel darts,
- To build his nest in early morn.
-
- The scented birk, and glossy beech,
- Hang o’er thee for thy simmer veil;
- And gowany haughs[42] aroond thee bloom,
- Where shepherds tauld love’s tender tale.
-
- Sweet Esk, glide o’er thy rocky path,
- And echo through thy classic glen;
- Where can we match, in flowery May,
- Fair Habbie’s Howe, and Hawthornden?
-
- ALEX. FARQUHARSON.
-
- Lanely Bield. Carlops, 1885.
-
-MONK’S BURN.
-
- Doon in Monk’s bonnie verdant glen
- A sparklin’ birnie murmurs through
- Dark waving pines, ’mang hazel shaws
- Decked with the hawk-weed’s golden hue.
-
- It ripples aft ’neath ferny banks
- With fragrant birks and briers spread
- Till o’er the linn its echo sings,
- Deep cradled in a rocky bed.
-
- Here Auld Dame Nature gaily haps
- Frae ilka side her crystal streams;
- And soaring high o’er leafy bowers,
- On hovering wing, the falcon screams.
-
- Aboon Glaud’s yaird the burnie meets
- Esk dancing to the morning sun,
- An’ glintin’ bonnie through Monk’s Haugh,[43]
- Where Pate and Peggie[44] aft hae run;
-
- Noo joined wi’ silv’ry limpid Esk,
- Gangs merrily singing tae the sea.
- Ilk bird and flower the chorus join
- Till wilds and braes resound wi’ glee.
-
- Sing on, ye warblers ’mang the trees,
- Bloom fair, ye blue-bells on the plains,
- And deck the banks of infant rills
- That wander through my native glens.
-
- ALEX. FARQUHARSON.
-
- Lanely Bield, _16th January 1886_.
-
-THE AULD BLASTED TREE.
-
- The blasted ash tree that langsyne grew its lane,
- Whilk Ramsay has pictured in his pawky strain,
- Wi’ Bauldy aboon’t on the tap o’ the knowe,
- Glowrin’ doon at auld Mause[45] in aneath, spinnin’ tow,
- Is noo whommilt doon ower the Back Buckie Brae,
- Baith helpless, an’ lifeless, an’ sair crummilt away,
- ’Mang the bonnie blue speedwell that coortit its beild,
- Tho’ its scant tap e’en growin’ but little could yield.
-
- For years—nigh twa hunner—it markit the spot
- Whaur Mause the witch dwalt in her lanely wee cot;
- But dour Eichty-sax sent a drivin’ snaw blast,
- An’ the storied link brak ’tween the present an’ past.
- Tho’ in summer ’twas bare, an’ had lang tint its charms,
- Scarce a leaf e’er was seen on’t to hap its grey arms,
- Yet it clang to the brae,[46] rockit sair, sair, I ween,
- Wi’ the loud howlin’ winds that blaw doon the Linn Dean.
-
- An’ mony a squall warsled at the deid ’oor o’ nicht.
- When Mause took in her noddle to raise ane for a flicht,
- On her auld besom shank, lowin’ at the ae en’,[47]
- That she played sic pranks on when she dwalt i’ the glen;
- Some alloo she could loup on’t clean ower Carlops toon,
- Gawn as heich i’ the air as Dale wi’ his balloon,
- Wi’ nocht on but her sark an’ a white squiny much—
- A dress greatly in vogue in thae days wi’ a wutch.
-
- But thae fashions, like wutches, hae gane oot o’ date
- E’en the black bandit squiny has shared the same fate,
- The lint-wheels they span on are just keepit for fun,
- Or tae let lasses see the wey hand-cloots were spun.
- Feint a trace o’ the carlin’ there’s noo left ava—
- Her wee hoosie’s doon, an’ the auld tree an’ a’,
- That waggit ayont it for mony a year
- Ere anither bit timmer took thocht to grow here.
-
- A. FARQUHARSON.
-
- Lanely Bield (1887?).
-
-EPISTAL TO ALAN REID. EDINBURGH. 1888.
-
- Gin August wiles oot wi’ her smile
- Auld Reekie’s sons when freed frae toil,
- There ane’ comes here tae bide awhile,
- A clever chield;
- Ilk place he’s paintit in grand style,
- E’en oor wee bield.
-
- He’s craigs an’ castles, cots an’ ha’s,
- Lint mills, auld brigs, an’ water fa’s,
- Auld stumps o’ trees an’ cowpit wa’s[48]
- A treat to see’t.
-
- O’er vera hills he’s gi’en a ca’,
- Frae Rullion Green yont ta’ Mentma’;
- An’ brawer pictures I ne’er saw,
- They’re fair perfection:
- They’d even mense[49] a baron’s ha’
- That rare collection.
-
- Thanks tae ye, noo, for paintin’ bonnie
- The “Lanely Bield,” whaur dwells a cronie,
- Wha likes a nicht wi’ ane sae funny
- An’ fu’ o’ glee:
- I trow Auld Reekie has nae mony
- Tae match wi’ thee.
-
- It mak’s me dowie the news I hear
- That ye’re no comin’ oot this year;
- They tell me that ye’re gaun tae steer
- For Lunnon toon:
- Losh, man, I’ll miss ye sair I fear
- No’ comin’ doon.
-
- But gif I’m spared wi’ health ava,
- A holiday, or may be twa,
- I’ll tak’ an’ come tae see ye a’,
- An’ bide a’ nicht;
- An’ faith we’ll sing tae the cock’s craw
- At “grey daylicht.”
-
- ALEX. FARQUHARSON.
-
- Lanely Bield.
-
-ADDRESS TO THE SUNDEW.
-
-(One of the insect-eating plants).
-
- Wha e’er wad think sae fair a flow’r
- Wad be sae pawky[50] as to lure
- A midge intae its genty bow’r
- O’ bristles bricht,
- An’ syne at leisure clean devour
- It oot o’ sicht?
-
- Your crimson colour’s sae enticin’
- In simmer gin the sun be risin’
- I daursay they’ll need nae advisin’
- Tae step in ow’r
- Tae view an’ find the plan surprisin’
- O sic a bow’r.
-
- For oot again they canna wun;
- Tho’ wee an’ gleg,[51] they’re fairly done,
- I wad they’ll get an awfu’ stun
- Gin its deteckit
- They’ve death tae face an’ no’ the fun
- That they expeckit.
-
- It serves them richt, the wicked crew,
- De’il gin the lave were in your mou’!
- For oh! they’re ill tae thole the noo
- When bitin’ keen,
- Dingin’ their beaks intae ane’s broo
- Up tae the een!
-
- Ilk foggy[52] sheugh aroond ye scan,
- An’ nip as mony as ye can,
- ’Twill help a wee tae gar ye stan’
- The winter weather,
- For fient a midge ye’ll pree[53] gin than
- Amang the heather.
-
- I kenna hoo ye’ll fend ava
- Gin a’ the muirs are clad wi’ snaw.
- I doot ye’ll hae tae snooze awa’
- Sax months at least,
- An’ aiblins then your chance is sma’
- Tae get a feast.
-
- But gin I happen ere tae stray
- Neist August roond by Jenny’s Brae,
- I hope tae see ye fresh an’ gay,
- Wee muirlan’ plantie!
- Wi’ routh[54] o’ midges then tae slay
- Tae keep ye cantie.
-
- A. F.
-
- Lanely Bield.
-
-ADDRESS TAE A MATTHEW HARDIE FIDDLE.
-
- Ae blink at you an’ ane could tell
- That ye’re nae foreign factory shell,
- But a Scotch mak’, an’, like mysel’,
- Made gey and sturdy;
- An’ as for tone, there’ll few excel
- Ma guid auld Hardie.
-
- Ye’ve been ma hobbie late and sune,
- Noo sax an’ twenty years come June,
- An’ noo and than I tak’ a tune;
- Yet gin I weary.
- Altho’ it’s but a kin’ o’ croon,
- It keeps ane cheery.
-
- Gin ower ye’re thairms[55] I jink the bow,
- Bright notions bizz intae ma pow,
- For worl’y cares ye them can cow,
- An’ a’ gangs richt,
- When ower I stump[56] ‘Nathaniel Gow,’
- Or ‘Grey daylicht.’
-
- Wi’ reek an’ rozet noo ye’re black
- An scarted sair aboot the back,
- But what tho’ tawdry ye’re ne’er slack
- Tae lilt a spring[57]
- Wi’ ony far fecht fancy crack
- They e’er will bring.
-
- In silk-lined cases ower the seas
- Scrawled oot an’ in wi’ foreign lees
- Aboot their S’s, scrolls, an’ C’s,[58]
- An’ eke a name
- Wad tak’ a child that’s ta’en degrees
- Tae read that same.
-
- An’ nocht but bum-clocks[59] at the best
- Wi’ shinin’ coats o’ amber drest;
- Och! what o’ that? their tones but test!
- Sic dandie dummies!
- Lyin’ in braw boxes at their rest,
- Row’d up like mummies.
-
- For a’ the sprees ye hae been at,
- Haech! nae sic guide-ship e’er ye gat,
- But took your chance tho’ it was wat,
- Ay, e’en wat snaw
- I’ve seen or noo a denty brat[60]
- Oot ower ye a’.
-
- I never kent ye tak’ the gee,[61]
- But aye sang sweet at ilka spree,
- Tho’ I played wild at times a wee
- Gin I gat fou.
- The fau’t lay wi’ the wee drap bree,[62]
- An’ no’ wi’ you.
-
- Sae noo I trust gin I’m nae mair,
- Some fiddlin’ frien’ will tak’ guid care,
- And see that ye’re nae dauded[63] sair,
- When frail an’ auld;
- For Hardies noo are unco rare
- Sae that I’m tauld.
-
- A. F.
-
- Lanely Bield.
-
-SONNET IN MEMORY OF ELEANORA BROWN.
-
- Gone! noble spirit, from our mortal view,
- The still form shaded by the sombre yew
- In Mary’s Bower, a spot remote from din,
- Save when in flood the shrill gush of the linn
- From wailing waves is wafted o’er her tomb,
- Retiring soft round her parental home,
- Where trained with pious care to womanhood,
- Henceforth her motto, Ever doing good;
- Gentle with youth, and comforting the old,
- In faith and hope to gain the promised Fold.
- Alas! the link has snapped in Friendship’s chain.
- Kind Ora’s call we’ll sigh for now in vain,
- Amid her native flora laid to rest,
- The modest speedwell a remembrance on her breast.
-
- A. FARQUHARSON.
-
- Lanely Bield.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[1] Or Medeshamstede = Meadow homestead.
-
-[2] He claimed the Earldom of Oxford and the Great Chamberlainship of
-England in right of his mother, Lady Mary Vere, sister and heiress of
-Edward, seventeenth Earl of Oxford, but succeeded in establishing his
-claim to the Chamberlainship only.
-
-[3] Defeated and slain at Flodden Field, 1513.
-
-[4] The others are Riby, Sutton St. Edmund, and one in Lincoln, now
-destroyed.
-
-[5] The Hermitage which dated from 1323 was absorbed into the Hospital.
-
-[6] Originally “Glanford briggs.”
-
-[7] At Mellor in Derbyshire is a pulpit of very early date, hollowed out
-of the trunk of a tree and carved in panels.
-
-[8] Nearly five hundred years later his tombstone was discovered in the
-pavement of St. Mark’s and brought to England.
-
-[9] The coal output in the United Kingdom in 1913 was 287,411,869 tons,
-an increase of 27 millions on the previous year.
-
-[10] As at Grantham.
-
-[11] Where there were no osiers they took to the reeds. A Ramsay man, now
-in his 95th year (1914), remembers the reed-harvest at Whittlesey Mere
-being frequently injured by the clouds of starlings who roosted in them.
-
-[12] Figured in Lyson’s Cumberland p. ccvii.
-
-[13] She saved Smith’s life, subsequently married an Englishman, John
-Rolfe, and died at Gravesend, where two windows have just—July, 1914—been
-put up to her memory. Her most distinguished descendant is Sir R. S.
-Baden-Powell.
-
-[14] Near Boston Haven.
-
-[15] The ‘shout’ was a sort of flat-bottomed canoe, sometimes covered
-fore and aft with canvas painted grey in which one man lay with his hands
-over the sides so that by using short paddles he could approach the ducks
-unseen. It is not likely that Hall _made_ the gun, but no doubt he fitted
-it to the shout.
-
-[16] On the outer side of Boston Deeps opposite Friskney Flats.
-
-[17] The gift of a late parish clerk.
-
-[18] _Wytteworde_ may have meant the warning notice of a funeral.
-
-[19] _Yereday_ = the anniversary of a death.
-
-[20] Corporaxys is the plural of corporax = a linen cloth for the
-consecrated elements. (_See_ Chap. XXIII.)
-
-[21] Spelt indifferently Reseuyd, Receuyd, Reseauyd, reseueade, Resauyd,
-resevyd, Recevyd.
-
-[22] This is Gunby St. Peter; Gunby St. Nicholas is between N. Witham and
-the Leicestershire border.
-
-[23] The corporax or corporal was the linen cloth to go under or over the
-vessel containing the consecrated elements.
-
-[24] Wong = field. In Horncastle there is a street called “The Wong.”
-
-[25] The most notable instance of this is on the Gosforth Cross in
-Cumberland, where the same figure represents both Odin and Christ. Here
-too was a permanent Norse settlement.
-
-[26] The astounding list of Manors and advowsons handed over to “the
-Master or custodian and the Chaplains of the College and almshouse
-of the Holy Trinity of Tattershall and to their successors” was the
-following:—“The Manors of Wasshyngburgh, Ledenham, ffulbeck, and Driby,
-and the advowsons of the Churches of the same Manors, and the Manors of
-Brinkyll, ffoletby, Boston, Ashby Puerorum, Withcall Souche, Withcall
-Skypwyth, Bynbroke, called Northall, Woodenderby, Moreby, Wylkesby,
-Conyngesbye, Holtham, the moiety of the Manors of Swynhope, Willughton,
-Billingey and Walcote and the advowson of the Church of Swynhope.”
-
-[27] They all came from Lord Middleton’s park in Nottinghamshire.
-
-[28] This is now being done.
-
-[29] A tax of a fifteenth levied on merchants’ goods in King John’s reign.
-
-[30] Prov. 17. 14.
-
-[31] See Frontispiece.
-
-[32] _Hydegy_ Hay-de-guy or guise lit. Hay of Guy or Guise, a
-particular kind of hay or dance in the 16th and early 17th century.
-Spenser, Shepherd’s Calendar “Heydeguyes”; Drayton, Polyolbion, “dance
-hy-day-gies” among the hills. Robin Goodfellow in “Percy Reliques,” &c.
-English Dictionary, Murray. _Hay_ (of uncertain origin) a country dance
-with winding movement of the nature of a reel.
-
-[33] See Illustration, page 180.
-
-[34] This Matthew Flinders, of Donington, was a notable hydrographer. He
-was sent as lieutenant in command of an old ship the _Xenophon_, renamed
-the _Investigator_, to explore and chart the coast of S. Australia in
-1801-3. And he took with him his young cousin John Franklin who had just
-returned from the battle of Copenhagen where he distinguished himself as
-a midshipman on the _Polyphemus_,—Captain John Lawford. Under Flinders he
-showed great aptitude for Nautical and Astronomical observations and was
-made assistant at the Sydney observatory, the Governor, Mr. King, usually
-addressing him as “Mr. Tycho Brahe.” These two natives of Lincolnshire,
-Flinders and Franklin, are of course responsible for such names on the
-Australian Coast as _Franklin Isles_, _Spilsby Island_ in the _Sir
-Joseph Banks_ group, _Port Lincoln_, _Boston Island_, _Cape Donington_,
-_Spalding Cove_, _Grantham Island_, _Flinders Bay_, _&c._
-
-The _Investigator_ proving unseaworthy, Flinders, with part of his crew,
-sailed homewards on the _Cumberland_; and touching at St. Mauritius was
-detained by the French Governor because his passport was made out for the
-_Investigator_. He was set free after seven tedious years on the island,
-1803-1810, and died at Donington 1814.
-
-[35] The _Times_, alluding to the Ulster Plot, spoke of “The Pinchbeck
-Napoleons of the Cabinet.”
-
-[36] See Chap. XXII.
-
-[37] These were cut in Nottinghamshire; but I see that Sussex is to
-supply the oak for the roof timbers of Westminster Hall.
-
-[38] An expression used in “Long whist.”
-
-[39] Or “Shelter,” which, from its name, “Lonely Bield,” was probably far
-from any other human habitation.
-
-[40] Waterfall.
-
-[41] “A trotting burnie wimpling thro’ the ground,” Allan Ramsay’s
-_Gentle Shepherd_, Act I., Sc. 2.
-
-[42] Daisied slopes.
-
-[43] Vale.
-
-[44] Characters in _The Gentle Shepherd_.
-
-[45] Characters in _The Gentle Shepherd_.
-
-[46] Brow.
-
-[47] Flaming at one end.
-
-[48] Ruinous walls.
-
-[49] Grace.
-
-[50] Cunning.
-
-[51] Quick.
-
-[52] Hollow.
-
-[53] Taste.
-
-[54] Plenty.
-
-[55] Catgut, fiddlestrings.
-
-[56] Play.
-
-[57] A tune.
-
-[58] Stradivariuses and Cremonas.
-
-[59] Chafers.
-
-[60] Thick covering (of snow).
-
-[61] Offence.
-
-[62] Brew = whisky.
-
-[63] Knocked about.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-Compiled mainly by Miss Rotha Clay, author of _Mediæval Hospitals of
-England_ and _Hermits and Anchorites of England._
-
-
- A
-
- Addlethorpe, 307-12
-
- Ædwin, King, 93, 114, 354
-
- Agricultural returns, 477
-
- Alexander, Bp., 76, 95, 371
-
- Alford, 305
-
- Algarkirk, 32, 459-61
-
- Alkborough, 196-7
-
- Allington, E. and W., 70
-
- Alms-box, 69
-
- Almshouses, 13-14, 16, 186, 206, 267, 414.
- _See also_ Hospitals
-
- Altar stone, 41, 142, 200, 257
-
- Alton church fight, 287
-
- Alvingham, 280, 371
-
- Anatomy of Melancholy, 274
-
- Ancaster, 88-9
-
- Ancholme, R., 183
-
- Anderson, Sir Charles, 205-6, 207
-
- Angel Hotel, Grantham, 56
-
- Anglo-Saxon ornaments, 254-5
-
- Anglo-Saxon remains, 168-9.
- _See also_ Architecture
-
- Anwick, 371
-
- Aragon, Katherine of, 31
-
- Architecture, Different Styles, 6.
- Saxon and Early Romanesque, 19, 29, 43, 46, 71-2, 85, 90, 126, 139,
- 148, 164, 188-9, 196, 230, 251-5, 252-4.
- Norman Domestic, 51, 122, 124, 255
-
- Armada picture of Bratoft Church, 321
-
- Arras and Cambray, St. Vedast, Bp. of, 276
-
- Ashby near Spilsby, 335
-
- Ashby-cum-Fenby, 267
-
- Ashby Puerorum, 342, 379
-
- Askew (Ayscoughe), family of, 223-4
-
- Axholme, Isle of, 4, 5, 198, 208-12
-
- Ayscoughe Fee Hall, Spalding, 445
-
-
- B
-
- Baden-Powell, Sir R. S., 278, note
-
- Bain, R., 274, 364-5, 371, 385
-
- Bacon, Sir Hickman, of Thonock, 204, 405
-
- Baptists in Lincolnshire, 325
-
- Bardney, 390-3
-
- Barholm, 19
-
- Barkston, 65-6
-
- Barkwith, East and West, 268
-
- Barlings Abbey, 143, 395
-
- Barnadiston, family of, 225
-
- Barnetby-le-Wold, 234, 259
-
- Barnoldby-le-Beck, 283
-
- Barrow-on-Humber, 216-7
-
- Barrowby, 70
-
- Barton-on-Humber, 7, 188-93
-
- Barsham, Norfolk, 384
-
- Bassingham Saxon font, 148
-
- Bassingthorpe, 40
-
- Baston, 29
-
- Baumber, 144
-
- Bayons Manor, 273
-
- Beacon, 48, 167, 423
-
- Beaufort, Lady Margaret, 12, 49
-
- Bec, Sir Walter’s grave, Halton, 330
- Thomas and Antony, Bishops, 97, 160
-
- Belchford, S. W. H. Kennels, 275, 283
-
- Belleau, 247-48, 249
-
- Bells, 19-20, 60, 99, 126, 197, 311, 313, 318, 434, 438, 459
-
- Belton, 64-5, 210
-
- Belvoir Castle, 69-70
-
- Benington, 416-7
-
- Benniworth, 268
-
- Bertie, family of, 19, 30-1, 335
-
- Bicker, 457, 459
-
- Bigby, 183, 235
-
- Bigby font and Tyrwhit Monuments, 235-6
-
- Billingborough, 35
-
- Bilsby, 305
-
- Bitchfield, 40
-
- Binbrook, 274
-
- Black Death, 480-2
-
- Blankney, 149
-
- Bloody Oaks, battle of, 11, 18
-
- Blow wells, 232, 267
-
- Boat, ancient, 184-5
-
- Bolingbroke, Old, 339, 359
-
- Bolles, family of, 284-8
-
- Bond family monuments at Croft, 318
-
- Books, chained, 60
-
- Boothby Graffoe, 162
-
- Boothby Pagnell, 51
-
- Bore, the, 201-2
-
- Boston, 420-40
- “stump,” 60, 108, 420-3
- guilds, 430
- religious houses, 430
- silting of the river, 432-3
-
- Bottesford, 200
-
- Botolph, St., 426
-
- Boucherett, family, 273
-
- Bourne Town and Abbey, 23, 27;
- manor, 21-4, 32
-
- Braceborough Spa, 22
-
- Bracebridge, 164
-
- Braceby, 42
-
- Bramfield, Sub-dean, Murder of, 104
-
- Brandon, Chas., Duke of Suffolk, 399
-
- Brant, Broughton, 90, 148, 151-4
-
- Brasenose Coll., Stamford, 14
-
- Brasses, 171-2, 225, 235, 294-5, 317, 334, 387
-
- Brasses, earliest in County, 146, 317
-
- Brasses twice used, 200, 322
-
- Bratoft, 321
-
- Bridges, ancient, 129, 270, 490
-
- Brigg, old boat at, 184-5
-
- Brigsley, 274
-
- Brocklesby, 236-8
-
- Bromhead and Chard, 131
-
- Brothertoft, 404
-
- Broughton near Brigg, 71, 183-4
-
- Browne family, Monuments at Croft, 317
-
- Browne, William, 12, 13
-
- Brownlow family, 64-5
-
- Buckden, 109, 117, 384
-
- Buckland, 283
-
- Bulb trade, Spalding, 441-4
-
- Bull-running, 11
-
- Bully Hill, 276
-
- Burgh-le-Marsh, 320
-
- Burgh-on-Bain, 268
-
- Burghley House, 12
-
- Burleigh, Lord of, 16-17
-
- Burton Coggles, 40
-
- Burton Pedwardine, 85
-
- Burton Stather, 4, 198
-
- Buslingthorpe, early brass, 146
-
- Butterwick, 418
-
- Bytham, Castle, 44-5
- maypole ladder, 44
-
- Bytham, Little, 40, 44, 46
-
- Bytham farmers’ motto, 46
-
- Byways, 245-7
-
-
- C
-
- Cabourn Hill, 231
-
- Caenby, 269-270
-
- Caistor, 7, 228-30, 236
-
- Callis, (Almshouse), 13
-
- Candlesby, 283, 382
-
- Canwick, 149
-
- Careby and Carlby, 40
-
- Carlton Scroop, 67
-
- Carlton Gt. and Little, 278
-
- Carr, use of word, 183-4
-
- Carr Dyke, 23, 28-9, 34, 40, 44, 87, 165, 183, 371, 401, 456
-
- Carre Family, 77
-
- Casewick Hall, 19
-
- Casterton, Great, 7
-
- Cathedrals Compared, 98-9
-
- Cawdron Monuments, 85
-
- Cawkwell, 276
-
- Cawthorpe, 245-7
-
- Caythorpe, 67-8
-
- Ceremony of Championship, 376-8
-
- Chalice, Priest’s, 83
-
- Champion of England, Grand, 334, 372-8
-
- Chantries, 63
-
- Chaplin, Jane, aged 102, 277
-
- Cartulary, Alvingham, 281
-
- Charterhouse, Founder of, 206
-
- Chaucer, 199, 339, 359, 444
-
- Cherry Willingham, 143
-
- Church Clock at Rowston, 150
-
- Churchwardens’ Books, 83-4, 137, 240, 257, 260, 309-10, 318-19, 325-7
-
- Claxby, near Alford, 248
-
- Claxby, near Rasen, 232
-
- Claypole, 71, 74-75
-
- Clee, 264-6
-
- Cleethorpes, 227, 265
-
- “Cliff,” 159, 183, 198, 232-3
-
- Clixby, 234
-
- Cockerington, (North, South), 279-81
-
- Coifi, Chief Priest, 113
-
- Coleby, 141, 162-3
-
- Colsterworth, Newton Chapel, 46-47, 66
-
- Compton Church, Surrey, 397
-
- Coningsby, 370-1
-
- Conington, Prof., 423
-
- Corby, 31, 40
-
- Corringham, 200-1
-
- Cotes-by-Stow, 141-2
-
- Cotes, Great, and Barnadiston Brasses, 224-5
-
- Cotes, Little, 267
-
- Cotes, North, 295
-
- Country Seats near Grantham, 64
-
- Covenham, St. M. and St. B., 281
-
- Cowbit, 406, 483-4
-
- Cowpaddle, The, 149
-
- Crabbe, Rector of Allington, 70
-
- Cranwell, 90
-
- Cressy Hall, 71, 454-5
-
- Creeton, Stone coffins at, 40
-
- Cripple, Memorial Brass to, 310
-
- Croft, 316-19
-
- Cromwell, Oliver, 201, 364, 439
- his letters, 54-55, 364, 439
-
- Cromwell, Ralph, 380-382, 384-385
-
- Crosses, Stone, 33, 57, 71, 74, 79, 80, 134, 139, 150, 196, 342
- Queen Eleanor, 9, 62, 134, 174
- Boundary, 489-90
-
- Crowle, 212, 261
-
- Croxby Pond, 267, 274
-
- Croyland Abbey, 5, 342, 483-9
- Bridge, 490-1
-
- Curfew, 149
-
- Cust, Family of, 64-5, 450-2
-
- Cuthbert Bede, 40
-
- Cuthbert, St., 213-14
-
- Cuxwold, 231
-
-
- D
-
- Dalby, 360
-
- Danegelt, 7
-
- Danish occupation, 8-9, 20, 32, 140, 201, 204, 263-5, 276, 402-3, 485
-
- Dashwoods and Batemans at Well, 249
-
- Deeping Fen, 21-2
- St. James, 20, 29
-
- Denton, 69
-
- Devil’s door, the, 331
-
- Devil looking over Lincoln, 101
-
- Dictionary, Elliott’s, 327
-
- Digby, 150
-
- Disney, family of, 171-3
-
- Doddington Hall, 173-6
-
- Dog-whipping in church, 83, 319
-
- _Dominus_, use of word, 394-5
-
- Donington, 455-6
- on Bain, 276
-
- Dorchester (Oxon), bishopric of, 93, 140
-
- Drainage and embankments in fen and marsh, 28, 209, 314, 432-5, 446,
- 456.
- _See also_ Roman Works
-
- Drainage opposed by Fenmen, 433
-
- Drayton, M., quoted, 426
-
- Driby, 378-83
-
- “Droves,” all E. and W., 44
-
- Duck-decoys, 200, 411-13
-
- Dunham Bridge, 137-8
-
- Dunsby and Dowsby, 34
-
- Dunston pillar, 148, 167
-
- Durham priory, 8
-
- Durobrivæ Roman station, 7
-
- Dymoke, family of, 80, 334, 372-7
-
-
- E
-
- Eagle, 173
-
- “Eagre” or bore in R. Trent, 201-2
-
- Early church towers, group of, 198-9, 230, 252, 262
-
- Easter Sepulchre, 21, 41, 75, 82, 106, 162
-
- Easton, 48, 50
-
- Eden, R., 40, 41, 43
-
- Edenham, 29-30
-
- Eleanor, Queen, 9, 103, 116, 174
-
- Elkington, South, 274, 284
- North, 284
-
- Elloe stone, 466
-
- Elsham, 3, 185-6
-
- Empingham, battle at, 11, 18
-
- Enderby, Bag, 258, 340, 379
-
- Enderby, Mavis, 362, 434
-
- Enderby Wood, 369
-
- Epworth, 210
-
- Eresby, 335
-
- Ermine Street, High Dyke, 3-4, 7, 18, 50, 88, 90, 92, 122, 129, 149,
- 151, 154, 157, 159, 178, 182-4, 190, 230, 269
-
- Ewerby, 60, 78-9, 85, 259
-
-
- F
-
- Farquharson, A. F., 501-10
-
- Fens, 2, 5, 23, 34-35, 400-8, 464-5
-
- Ferriby, South and North, 186-7, 196
-
- Ferries over the Trent, 138
-
- Ferry at Hull, 217-8
-
- Fillingham, 199
-
- Firsby, 325
-
- Fishtoft, 419-20
-
- Fiskerton, 143, 168-9
-
- Fleet, 470
-
- Flinders, Matthew, 456-7, note
-
- Flodden Field, 240
-
- Floods, in the fen, 433-5
-
- Floss, mill on, 201
-
- Flowers in June, 262-3, 464
- Rare, 370-1, 419
-
- Folkingham, 32
-
- Folk-song, Lincolnshire, 296-303
-
- Font covers, 257-8, 419, 475
-
- Fonts, 64-5, 69, 108, 215, 234-5, 257-61, 291, 305, 306, 340-1, 368,
- 417, 463, 465-6
-
- Football, a family team, 207
-
- Fosdyke, Rennie’s Bridge at, 475
-
- Foss Dyke, 134, 137
-
- Foss Way, 92, 148, 173
-
- Fotherby Top, 284
-
- Fox, John, born at Boston, 438
-
- Fox-hounds, 493-8
-
- Frampton, 476
-
- Franklin, family of, 336, 457
-
- Friaries, 124, 430
-
- Frieston, 257, 418-9
-
- Friskney, 380, 409-11
- duck decoy, 411-12
-
- Frodingham, 198
-
- Fulbeck, 68
-
- Fulney, 448
-
- Fulston, 281, 295
-
-
- G
-
- Gainsborough, 138, 201-4
-
- Gautby, 144
-
- Gaynisburgh, Richard de, 204
-
- Gayton-le-Marsh, 278
-
- Gayton-le-Wold, 268
-
- Gedney, 470-2
-
- Gelston Cross, 74
-
- Gentleman’s Soc. of Spalding, 445-6
-
- Giantess, Lincolnshire, 34
-
- Gibbets, 270-1
-
- Gibraltar Point, 298, 315
-
- Gilbert de Gaunt, 32
-
- Gilbert of Sempringham, St., 35-8, 371
-
- Girsby, 268
-
- Glass, ancient, 12, 33, 43
-
- Glen, R., 19, 29, 39-41, 43-4, 51
-
- Glentham, 269-70
-
- Glentworth, 199-200
-
- Gobaud family, 34
-
- Godiva, Lady, 444
-
- Gonerby Hill, 71
-
- Goosetoft, 404-5
-
- Gosberton, 452-4
-
- Gowts, 126, 432
-
- Goxhill, 218-19
-
- Grainsby, 263
-
- Grainthorpe, 294-5
-
- Grandiloquent writing, 109
-
- Grantham, 5, 52-63, 73
-
- Grantham, Thomas, of Halton Baptist, 325
-
- Grasby, 233-4
-
- Great Humby, 34
-
- Grebby, 282
-
- Green lady, the, 286, 289
-
- Greetham, 342
-
- Gretford, 19-20
-
- Grey friars at Grantham and Lincoln, 62, 128
-
- Grimblethorpe, 268
-
- Grimoldby, 216, 242, 279, 281
-
- Grimsby, 225-7
- Corporation seals, 227
-
- Grimsthorpe, 30-1
-
- Grinling Gibbons, 65
-
- Guilds and charters, 430, 432
-
- Gunby, Dan, 296
-
- Gulls breeding at Manton, 198
-
- Gunby St. Peter, 283, 322
-
- Guthlac, St., 483-5
-
- Gynewell, Bishop, 481
-
-
- H
-
- Habrough, 222
-
- Hacconby, 31
-
- Haceby, 42
-
- Hagnaby, 306, 366
-
- Hagworthingham, 362
-
- Hainton, 268
-
- Hale, Great, 71, 84-5
-
- Hallam, historian, 439
-
- Halstead Hall, 396
-
- Haltham, 369
-
- Halton, East, 221
-
- Halton, West, 195
-
- Halton Holgate, 329-32
-
- Halton, John de, Bp. of Carlisle, 368-9
-
- Hameringham, 363-4
-
- Harlaxton, 68-9
-
- Harmston, 164
-
- Harpswell, 198
-
- Harrington, 340
-
- Hatcliffe, 267
-
- Haugh, 285
-
- Haugham, 245, 277
-
- Havelock, The Dane, Story of, 227, 394
-
- Haverholme, 37, 78, 243, 371
-
- Hawysia, de Trikingham, 42
-
- Haydor, good stained glass, 33
-
- Heapham, 206
-
- Heckington, 80-3
-
- Helpringham, 85-6
-
- Heneage, family of, 268
-
- Henry VIII., 76, 109, 157, 240
-
- Hereward the Wake, 23-4, 40
-
- Hermits, 178, 219
-
- Hexham, 80
-
- Hibaldstow, 183
-
- High Dyke, alias Ermine St., 159
- From Caistor, 230
-
- Hogsthorpe, 307
-
- Holbeach, 468-70
- Legend of, 478-9
-
- Holdingham, 89
-
- Holland Fen, 404
-
- Holton-le-Clay, 263
-
- Holywell, 22
-
- Honington, 67
-
- Horbling, 35
-
- Horkstow, 186-7
-
- Horncastle, 91, 364-5
-
- Hospitals and Almshouses, 9, 12-14, 53, 134, 178-81, 186
-
- Hough-on-the-Hill, 71-4, 149, 162, 184
-
- Hour-Glasses, 41, 90, 164, 210, 364
-
- Houses, beautiful, 40
-
- Howell, 79-80
-
- Howorth, Sir Henry’s interesting book, 112
-
- Hubbert’s Bridge, why so called, 46
-
- Hugh of Lincoln, St., 96-117
-
- Hugh of Wells, 96-7
-
- Hugh, “Little St. Hugh,” 118-9
-
- Humber, R., 187
-
- Humberstone, 266
-
- Hundleby, 361
-
- Hundon, Tombs, Caistor, 229-30
-
- Hussey, Ld., 76, 242, 438
-
- Huttoft, 306
-
-
- I
-
- Iconoclasm, 256-7
-
- Immingham, 222-3
-
- Imp, The Lincoln, 106
-
- Ingelow, Jean, 434, 439
-
- Ingoldmells, 310, 315
-
- Ingoldsby, 40
-
- Inscriptions in Churches, 19, 21, 42, 43, 46, 49, 51, 67, 108, 201,
- 216, 224, 225, 234, 235, 267, 280, 286, 288, 307, 318, 321,
- 363, 375, 414, 417, 424, 476, 487, 489
- On Jubilee Memorial, 186
- On Bells, 511, 313
-
- Irby, 324
-
- Irby-on-Humber, 231-2
-
- Irby family monuments, 468
-
- Irnham, 40-1
-
- Ithamar, first English Bp., 114
-
-
- J
-
- Jesus Coll. Chapel bench ends, 332
-
- Jews, persecution of, 117-9, 123
-
- Joffrid, Abbot of Croyland, 486-7
- sends Lecturers to Cambridge, 486
- lays first stone of the third abbey, 487
-
- John, King of England, at Kingscliffe, 9, 56, 71, 76
-
- John, King of France, 53, 160, 238
-
- Johnson, Archdeacon, 16
-
- Johnson, Dr., 360
-
- Jump, famous, of Dr. Trought, 246
-
-
- K
-
- Katherine Howard, 76, 109, 157
-
- Keate, Dr., 345
-
- Keddington, 244
-
- Keelby, 283
-
- Kelstern, 274
-
- Kettleby, 235-6
-
- Kettlethorpe Hall, 176-7
-
- Killingholme, North, South, 222
-
- King’s Street, 23, 31-4
-
- Kirkby-Underwood, 40
-
- Kirkby, East, 366
-
- Kirkstead, Abbey and Chapel, 396-8
-
- Kirmington, Green Spire, 236
-
- Kirmond-le-mire, 274
-
- Kirton, 475
-
- Kirton-in-Lindsey, 182
-
- Knaith, 206
-
- Knights Hospitallers, alias of Jerusalem and of St. John, 155-9
-
- Knights Templars, 155-9, 173, 198.
- _See also_ Temple Belwood, Temple Bruer
-
- Koh-i-noor (mt. of light), diamond, 237.
-
- Kyme, North and South, 87-9, 371
- tower, 438
-
-
- L
-
- Laceby, 232, 267
-
- Lady Lucia, 339
-
- Lambert, Daniel, 16
-
- Langton, 360
-
- Langtoft, 20-1
-
- Laughton, 200
-
- Lea, 201, 204-5
-
- Leadenham, 68, 151
-
- Leake, 413-6
-
- Leasingham, 89-90
-
- Lenton or Lavington, 40
-
- Leverton, 416-7
-
- Liddington, 481
-
- Lincoln—
- Lindum Colonia, 91
- Afternoon tea at, A.D. 1762, 136
- Bishop’s palaces, 109, 117, 384, 481
- Cathedral, 91-111
- Chancery, 109-10
- Chapter-house, 110
- Churches, 126-7
- Corporation, 129-31
- Conduits, 128-9
- Friaries, 123-4, 128, 135
- Gates, 91-2, 120-2, 129, 131
- Guild, 124-5, 255
- High bridge, 129
- Hospitals, 134
- Jews’ houses, 118, 121-3, 255
- Library, 131
- Stonebow, 129-30
-
- Lincoln, Bishops of, 95-8, 103-8, 117, 481
- Parliaments of, 110-11
- Heath, 148-9, 157
-
- Lincoln Stuff ball, 134
-
- Lincolnshire flocks, 232
-
- Lincolnshire, divisions of, 4-5, 22, 73-4
-
- Lincolnshire Rebellion, 240-2
-
- Lincolnshire Roads, 207
- Slope of the land, 34, 39
-
- Lincolnshire stories, 337-8, 339-40, 462
-
- Linwood, 146-7
-
- Littleborough, 90, 138
-
- Lock-up house, 150
-
- “Long and short” work, 2, 253
- Long Bennington, 71
-
- Lord High Treasurer Cromwell, Chapter XXXIII
-
- Louth, 60, 239-45
- Grammar School, 242
-
- Louth Park Abbey, 37, 242-4
- Chronicle, 244, 433
- Roads, 244
-
- Lud, R., 3
-
- Ludford Magna, 274
-
- Lusby, 363
-
- “Lyttyl clause,” the, 240-2
-
-
- M
-
- Mablethorpe, 292, 347
-
- Maddison, Canon, 103
-
- Maltby-le-Marsh, 291
-
- Manby, 278-9
-
- Mappa Mundi, 76
-
- Mareham-le-fen, 370
-
- Markby, 306
-
- Markham, Mrs., 102
-
- Marquis of Granby, 70
-
- Marsh, the, 2-3, 464-5
-
- Marsh Chapel, 295
-
- Marton, 139
-
- Marston, 149
-
- Martyrs, Clerical, 242
-
- Masquerade at Nocton, 169-70
-
- Massingberd family, 322
-
- Mausoleum at Brocklesby, 236
-
- Mavis Enderby, 362, 366, 434
-
- Maypole, use of, 44
-
- Mazes, 196-7
-
- Melton Ross, 234
-
- Mercia, kings of, 7-8, 114
-
- Messingham, 107, 200
-
- Miningsby, 366
-
- Miserere seats, 104, 423
-
- “Molly Grime,” 270
-
- Monksthorpe, 324
-
- Monumental effigies, &c., 30, 31, 34, 49, 67, 69, 77, 79, 80, 83,
- 103, 104, 145-7, 149, 171-3, 184, 192, 195, 200, 210, 223-6,
- 229-30, 232, 235-6, 238, 267-9, 271, 278, 280-1, 292-5, 310,
- 312, 317, 322-4, 330, 334, 340, 364, 372-5, 423, 453, 468,
- 471-2, 487
-
- Monumental epitaphs, 26-7, 420, 457.
- _See also_ Inscriptions in Churches.
-
- Moorby, 368
-
- Morton, 31, 204
-
- Moulton, 260, 465-6
-
- Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk, 209
-
- Muckton, 247
-
- Mustard, cultivation of, 463-4, 472, 477
- Colman’s factory, Norwich, 464
-
- Muston, 70
-
- “My owd Son,” 440
-
-
- N
-
- Names ending in ‘by,’ 185, 341
-
- Nature’s poets, 303-4
-
- Navenby, 161-3
-
- Nettleton, 231
-
- Nettleship, R. L., 297
-
- Newsham Abbey, 238
-
- Newton Church Tower, 42
-
- Newton, Isaac, 31, 46-8, 55, 57, 62
-
- Newton-by-Toft, 270
-
- Noblemen not Saints, 257
-
- Nocton, 166-9
-
- Nonconformists, 324-5
-
- Normanby-le-Wold, 230
-
- Norman buildings, 255
-
- North Country humour, 303
-
- Northorpe, 200
-
- North Wytham, 46
-
- Norton Disney, 148, 170-3
-
-
- O
-
- Octave of E.E. Churches, 42
-
- Orgarth Hill, Danish Camp, 276
-
- Ormsby, North, 284
-
- Ormsby, South, 361
-
- Osbournby, 33
-
- Oswald, St., 212-4
-
- Oswy, King of Northumbria, 8
-
-
- P
-
- Pagnell, Boothby, 51
-
- Palmer, effigy of, 34
-
- Parish Clerks, Stories of, 319-20
-
- Partney, 358-60
-
- Paulinus, St., 93, 112-14
-
- Peasant poets, 303-4, 501
-
- Pelham buckle, the, 238, 385
-
- Pelham pillar, 231, 233, 236
-
- Penda and Pæda, Kings of Mercia, 8, 114
-
- Penrose, Rev. Trevenen, 163
-
- Peterborough, cathedral, 49-50, 52
-
- Pickworth, 41
-
- Pilgrimage of Grace, 240, 242
-
- Pinchbeck, 448-50
- metal called, 461-2
-
- Plague, 290-1, 439
-
- Plague-stone, 290-1
-
- Ponton, Great, 50
-
- Ponton, Little, 51
-
- Pope Gregory, 112-13
-
- Potter Hanworth, 165
-
- Potteries, Pre-Roman, 315-6
-
- Premonstratensian, meaning of, 395
-
- Pulpit, early, note, 192
-
-
- Q
-
- Quadring, 455
-
- Queen Margaret (Ed. I.), 428
-
- Queen Eleanor’s heart buried at Lincoln A.D. 1290, 103
-
-
- R
-
- Raithby, 361-2
-
- Rasen, Market, 272
- Middle, 271
- West, 270
-
- Ravendale, 267, 274
-
- Rawnsley, 27, 43, 249, 328, 330, 332, 336, 340, 352, 361, 493, 496
-
- Read’s Island, 187
-
- Rebellion, Lincolnshire, 240-2, 243
-
- Registers, Early, 306, 476
-
- Remigius, Bishop, 76, 93, 140
-
- Revesby Abbey, 367
-
- Riby Grove, 232
-
- Richard III. at Grantham, 56
-
- Ridge, the, 4, 159
-
- Rigsby, 247
-
- Rippingale, 34
-
- Riseholme, 269
-
- Roads, few going E. and W., 33
- in the marsh, 280, 316
- without villages, 151
-
- Roadway streams, 246-7
-
- Robert de Brunne, 25-6
-
- Rochford, Stoke, 48
-
- Romanus, Bp., 113-114
-
- Romans, our benefactors, 401
-
- Roman works:
- embankments, etc., 2, 295, 310-12, 315, 401, 409, 417, 456, 459,
- 464-5;
- _see_ Carr Dyke, Foss Dyke
- gateways, 91
- roads, 23, 34, 89, 91-3, 137, 144,183, 230, 328, 465.
- _See_ Ermine Street, Foss Way, King’s Street
- stations, 32, 50, 67, 87, 88, 91, 138, 140, 184, 228-9, 248, 315-6,
- 364-5
- remains, 91, 104, 120, 122, 125-6, 149, 184, 196
-
- Rood lofts and screens, 256
-
- Roof covering both nave and aisles, 87, 225
-
- Rooks in towns, 365
-
- Ropsley, 43
-
- Rothwell, long and short work, 230
-
- Rowston, 150
-
- Rulos, Richard de, father of Lincolnshire farmers, 21-22
-
-
- S
-
- St. Denis, 76
-
- St. John, family of, 49-50
-
- St. John, Oliver, 49-50
-
- St. Poll, family of, 145
-
- St. Thomas of Canterbury, Church Dedicated to, 40
-
- Saleby, 278
-
- Salinas, Mary de, 31
-
- Salisbury, Connection of Grantham with, 62-3
-
- Saltfleetby, All Saints, 293
- St. Clements, 294
-
- Samplers, 168
-
- Sandbank, “The Old Warp,” 187
-
- Sandtoft, 209
-
- Sapperton, Pulpit Hour-glass at, 41
-
- Sausthorpe, 360
-
- Saxby, All Saints, 186
-
- Saxilby, 137
-
- Saxon Churchyard, 29
-
- Scamblesby, 276
-
- Scartho, 264
-
- Scawby, 183, 198
- Sutton Nelthorpe of, 198, 494
-
- Schools, 13, 16, 27, 43, 57, 206, 242, 272
-
- Scopwick, 149
-
- Scremby, 282
-
- Scrivelsby, 372-4
-
- Scunthorpe, 198, 207
-
- Sea-dyke, 2, 416-7,
- _see_ Draining, Roman Embankment
-
- Seals, Ancient, 227
-
- Sedgebrook, 69, 70
-
- Sempringham, 35-38
-
- Sempringham Hall, Stamford, 14
-
- Sempringham, Order of, 25-6
-
- Sheep in Churchyard, 267, 454
-
- Sibsey, 361
-
- Silk Willoughby Wayside Cross, 33
-
- Sixhills, 146, 273, 277
-
- Shakespeare Quotations, 63, 209, 491-2
-
- Skating in Fens, 405-7
- International, 408
-
- Skegness, 314-5
- Roman Castrum at, 316
-
- Skendleby, 282
-
- Skidbroke, 294
-
- Skirbeck, 420, 427
-
- “Skirth” Billinghay, 371
-
- Slash Lane, 364
-
- Sleaford, 4, 76-8, 169
-
- Slope of Church W. to E., 66, 186
-
- Smith, Capt. John, 278
-
- Snarford, 144-5
-
- Snelland Register, 144
- St. Poll Tombs, 145-6
-
- Somerby, 42-3
-
- Somercotes, South, 294
-
- Somersby, 340-343, 345-353
-
- Somersby Brook, 298, 322, 342
-
- Somersby Church Opening, 352
-
- Somerton Castle, 160-1
-
- South Thoresby, 247, 290
-
- Spalding, 441-8
-
- Spectacles, Use of, 51
-
- Spelling, a clear gift, 49
-
- Spilsby, 233, 333-7
-
- Spital-on-the-Street, 178-81
-
- Springs, Mineral, 22, 69, 70
-
- Springthorpe, 206
-
- Stainfield, 395
-
- Stainsby, 379
-
- Stainton-le-Vale, 274
-
- Stallingborough, 223
- The Ayscoughe Tombs, 223-4
-
- Stamford, 4, 7-17
- bedehouse, 13-14
- churches, 7, 9, 12-14
- college, 14
- St. Leonard’s Priory, 8
-
- “Stamford Baron,” 12
-
- Stanley, Dean, on Wesley, 211
-
- “Staple,” the meaning of, 428
-
- Starlings, flocks of, 250
-
- Steeping, Little and Great, 323-4
-
- Stephen King, 76
-
- Stickford and Stickney, 361
-
- Stixwould, 395-6
-
- Stocks, 372, 389, 457
-
- Stoke Rochford, 48
-
- Stones, sculptured, 139, 150, 212, 269, 281, 366, 368
-
- Stonebow, the, 129
-
- Stone Coffin, use for, 80
-
- Stow, 140-2
-
- Stow Green, 32
-
- Stragglethorpe, 90
-
- Strubby, 291
-
- Stubton, 71
-
- Stukeley, Dr. W., 43, 500
-
- Sturton, 207
-
- Suffolk, Duke of, 398-9
- Duchess of, 31
-
- Surfleet, 452-3
-
- Sutterton, 459
-
- Sutton, Long, 472-4
-
- Sutton, Thomas, 206
-
- Swallow, 231
-
- Swan, St. Hugh’s, 116
-
- Swan-marks, 492
-
- Swan, ballad of the, 299
-
- Swaton, 86-7
-
- Swineshead, 457-9
-
- Swinstead, 31
-
- Sword called “Fox,” 131
-
- Syston Hall, 64
-
-
- T
-
- Tallington, 7, 19
-
- Tathwell, St. Vedast’s, 276-7
-
- Tattershall, 12, 235, 370-1, 379-80, 382-9
- Mantelpieces, 384, 388
-
- Taylor, John, poet, 405
-
- Tealby, 273, 343
-
- Temple Belwood, 210
- Bruer, 76, 151, 154-9
-
- Tennyson, Alfred Lord, 131-4, 340, 346-357
-
- Tennyson, Dr., 342-344, 346
-
- Tennyson Centenary, 131-2
-
- Tennyson, family of, 343-57
-
- Tennyson-Turner, C., 233-4
-
- Tennyson poems in the Lincolnshire dialect, 356
-
- Tennyson, Matilda, last of the family, 353
-
- Tetford, 379
-
- Tetney, 3, 266-7
-
- Theddlethorpe, West, 293, 313
-
- Theodore, Archbp. of Canterbury, 193
-
- Thorganby, 274
-
- Thonock Hall, 204, 495
-
- Thornton Abbey, 219-21, 238
-
- Thornton Curtis, 108, 215-16
-
- Thorpe, 325-7
-
- Thorpe Hall, 284-9
-
- Thorpe St. Peter’s, 259
-
- Threckingham, 32
-
- Thurcytel, first Abbot of Croyland, 485
-
- Thurlby, 29, 259
-
- Tickencote, 18
-
- Toft-next-Newton, 270
-
- Top, Cliff and Wold, 232
-
- Torrington, East and West, 263
-
- Tothby, 290
-
- Tournai fonts, 108, 215, 259
-
- Tournays, or Tourneys, family of, 269-70
-
- Tower-on-the-Moor, 398
-
- Toynton, High, 342
-
- Trent, R., 4, 114, 137-8, 200-2, 207
-
- Tumby, 370, 379-80
-
- Tupholme, Abbey, 284, 395
-
- Two churches in one churchyard, 280
-
- Tydd St. Mary, 465, 474
-
-
- U
-
- Uffington Hall, 19
-
- Ulceby, 213, 282
-
- Uppingham, founder of, 16, 206
-
- Upton, 206
-
- Usselby, 231
-
- Utterby, 260, 267, 284
-
-
- V
-
- Vyner, F. G., 144
-
-
- W
-
- Waddington, 164
-
- Wainfleet, 91, 327-9, 379
-
- Wainfleet, St. Mary’s, 329
-
- Wainfleet, William of, Bishop, 327-8
-
- Waith, 263
-
- Wake, de, family of, 20-1, 23, 40
-
- Walcot, double “squint” at, 41
-
- Walesby, 274
-
- Walks, Uppingham to Boston, 35;
- Horncastle to Mablethorpe, 249
-
- Wall-painting, 141, 182, 410
-
- Walmsgate, 283
-
- Waltham, 264, 274
-
- Wapentake, meaning of, 73-74
-
- “Warping,” process of, 212
-
- Wars, Civil, 19, 53-5, 201, 232, 286, 364
-
- Wars of the Roses, 10-11, 18
-
- Watts, G. F., and Tennyson, 134
-
- “Wedercoke” at Louth, 240
-
- Weir dyke, 144, 183, 186
-
- Welbourn, John de, treasurer, 98, 151
-
- Well, 247-251
-
- Welland, R., 7
-
- Wellbourn, 154
-
- Wellingore, 161
-
- Wellington and Dr. Keate, 345
-
- Wells, blow-, 232, 267
-
- Welton-le-Wold, 268
-
- Wernington, William de, Master Mason, 487
-
- Wesley, Samuel and John, 210-12, 499
-
- Westmoreland Stories, 303, 338-9
-
- Weston, 463
-
- Whitgift, John, Archbp. of Canterbury, 225, 232
-
- Wickenby, 260
-
- Wilfrid, Bishop, 8-10
-
- Wilksby, 368
-
- Willingham, North, 146, 230, 244, 272, 277
- South, 244, 268
- Cherry, 143
- by Stow, 206
-
- Wilsthorpe, 40, 41
-
- Whaplode, 466-8
-
- Willoughby, 248, 278
-
- Willoughby d’Eresby, family of, 30-1, 86, 248-9, 333-5
-
- Willoughton, 157
-
- Winceby, 364-5
-
- Wine-cellars in Boston, 430-1
-
- Winteringham, 3, 184, 195
-
- Winterton, 184, 195-6
-
- Winthorpe, 312-14
-
- Witham-on-hill, inscription on Bells, 20
-
- Witham, R., 39, 44, 46, 51, 90, 91, 126, 129, 134, 137, 149, 371,
- 425-6, 432-3
-
- Withern, 278
-
- Woad, cultivation of, 464
-
- Wolds, the, 2-5, 146, 148, 232
-
- Wood, Enderby, 369
-
- Woodhall Spa, 397-8
-
- Woodcarving by Wallis, of Louth, 237
-
- Wood-work, church, 255-6
-
- Wool, staple, 13, 147, 309, 428-9, 432
-
- Woolsthorpe, 31, 47-8
-
- Wordsworth, Bishop, Christopher, 103, 265, 269
-
- Wordsworth, W., Sonnet _Persuasion_, 113
-
- Wragby, 269
-
- Wrangle, 413-4
-
- Wrawby, 183, 185, 206
-
- Wray, Sir Christopher, 145, 200
-
- Wright family, 289, 413
-
- Wulfhere, King of Mercia, 7
-
- Wyberton, 476
-
- Wyclif, John, 199
-
- Wykeham Chapel, 448
-
-
- Y
-
- Yarborough, Earls of, 236-7
- Church, 281
-
-
- Z
-
- Zucchero, 289
-
-
-R. CLAY AND SONS, LTD., BRUNSWICK ST., STAMFORD ST., S.E.
-
-[Illustration: HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS IN LINCOLNSHIRE
-
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-London: Macmillan & Co. Lᵗᵈ.]
-
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-THE HIGHWAYS & BYWAYS SERIES.
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-Extra crown 8vo, gilt tops, =7s. 6d.= net each.
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-=London.= By Mrs. E. T. Cook. With Illustrations by HUGH THOMSON and
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- _GRAPHIC._—“Mrs. Cook is an admirable guide; she knows her
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- with the fact that she is a writer who could not be dull if she
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-=Middlesex.= By WALTER JERROLD. With Illustrations by HUGH THOMSON.
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- _EVENING STANDARD._—“Every Londoner who wishes to multiply
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- beg, borrow, or buy it without a day’s delay.”
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-=Hertfordshire.= By HERBERT W. TOMPKINS, F.R.Hist.S. With Illustrations
-by FREDERICK L. GRIGGS.
-
- _WESTMINSTER GAZETTE._—“A very charming book.... Will delight
- equally the artistic and the poetic, the historical and the
- antiquarian, the picturesque and the sentimental kinds of
- tourist.”
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-=Buckinghamshire.= By CLEMENT SHORTER. With Illustrations by FREDERICK L.
-GRIGGS.
-
- _WORLD._—“A thoroughly delightful little volume. Mr. Frederick
- L. Griggs contributes a copious series of delicately graceful
- illustrations.”
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-=Surrey.= By ERIC PARKER. With Illustrations by HUGH THOMSON.
-
- _SPECTATOR._—“A very charming book, both to dip into and to
- read.... Every page is sown with something rare and curious.”
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-=Kent.= By WALTER JERROLD. With Illustrations by HUGH THOMSON.
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-GRIGGS.
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-JOSEPH PENNELL.
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- lover of Wales.”
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-FREDERICK L. GRIGGS.
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- _ATHENÆUM._—“A volume which, light and easily read as it is,
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- which it augments; a book that no student of our Midland
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-by FREDERICK L. GRIGGS.
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-and HUGH THOMSON.
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- _ST. JAMES’S GAZETTE._—“A notable edition—an engaging volume,
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- _DAILY TELEGRAPH._—“A perfect book of its kind, on which
- author, artist, and publisher have lavished of their best.”
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- _ST. JAMES’S GAZETTE._—“A charming book.... Mr. Dearmer is
- as arrestive in his way as Mr. Pennell. He has the true
- topographic eye. He handles legend and history in entertaining
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-
-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Highways and Byways in Lincolnshire, by Willingham Franklin Rawnsley</div>
-
-<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:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Highways and Byways in Lincolnshire</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Willingham Franklin Rawnsley</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Illustrator: Frederick L. Griggs</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: July 26, 2021 [eBook #65921]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Tim Lindell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS IN LINCOLNSHIRE ***</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_i"></a>[i]</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage larger">HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS<br />
-IN LINCOLNSHIRE</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ii"></a>[ii]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
-<img src="images/macmillan.jpg" width="300" height="90" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">MACMILLAN AND CO., Limited</span><br />
-<span class="smaller">LONDON . BOMBAY . CALCUTTA<br />
-MELBOURNE</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br />
-<span class="smaller">NEW YORK . BOSTON . CHICAGO<br />
-DALLAS . SAN FRANCISCO</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, Ltd.</span><br />
-<span class="smaller">TORONTO</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iii"></a>[iii]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 625px;" id="illus1">
-<img src="images/illus1.jpg" width="625" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Boston.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iv"></a>[iv]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_v"></a>[v]</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage larger"><i>Highways and Byways</i><br />
-<span class="smaller"><span class="smaller">IN</span></span><br />
-<i>Lincolnshire</i></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">BY</span><br />
-WILLINGHAM FRANKLIN RAWNSLEY</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smaller">WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY</span><br />
-FREDERICK L. GRIGGS</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED<br />
-ST. MARTIN’S STREET, LONDON<br />
-<span class="smaller">1914</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vi"></a>[vi]</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller"><i>COPYRIGHT</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vii"></a>[vii]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">PREFACE</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>All writers make use of the labours of their predecessors.
-This is inevitable, and a custom as old as time. As Mr. Rudyard
-Kipling sings:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“When ’Omer smote ’is bloomin’ lyre</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">’E’d ’eard men sing by land and sea,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And what ’e thought ’e might require</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">’E went and took, the same as me.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In writing this book I have made use of all the sources that
-I could lay under contribution, and especially I have relied for
-help on “Murray’s Handbook,” edited by the Rev. G. E. Jeans,
-and the Journals of the associated Architectural Societies.
-I have recorded in the course of the volume my thanks to a
-few kind helpers, and to these I must add the name of Mr. A. R.
-Corns of the Lincoln Library, for his kindness in allowing me
-the use of many books on various subjects, and on several
-occasions, which have been of the utmost service to me. My
-best thanks, also, are due to my cousin, Mr. Preston Rawnsley,
-for his chapter on the Foxhounds of Lincolnshire. That the
-book owes much to the pencil of Mr. Griggs is obvious; his
-illustrations need no praise of mine but speak for themselves.
-<a href="#illus58">The drawing given on p. 254</a> is by Mrs. Rawnsley.</p>
-
-<p>I have perhaps taken the title “Highways and Byways”
-more literally than has usually been done by writers in this
-interesting series, and in endeavouring to describe the county
-and its ways I have followed the course of all the main roads
-radiating from each large town, noticing most of the places
-through or near which they pass, and also pointing out some
-of the more picturesque byways, and describing the lie of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_viii"></a>[viii]</span>
-country. But I have all along supposed the tourist to be
-travelling by motor, and have accordingly said very little
-about Footpaths. This in a mountainous country would be
-entirely wrong, but Lincolnshire as a whole is not a pedestrian’s
-county. It is, however, a land of constantly occurring magnificent
-views, a land of hill as well as plain, and, as I hope the
-book will show, beyond all others a county teeming with
-splendid churches. I may add that, thanks to that modern
-devourer of time and space—the ubiquitous motor car—I have
-been able personally to visit almost everything I have
-described, a thing which in so large a county would, without
-such mercurial aid, have involved a much longer time for the
-doing. Even so, no one can be more conscious than I am
-that the book falls far short of what, with such a theme, was
-possible.</p>
-
-<p class="right">W. F. R.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ix"></a>[ix]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="tdpg smaller">PAGE</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER I</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>INTRODUCTORY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER II</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>STAMFORD</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">7</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER III</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>STAMFORD TO BOURNE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">18</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER IV</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ROADS FROM BOURNE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">28</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER V</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SOUTH-WEST LINCOLNSHIRE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">39</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER VI</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>GRANTHAM</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">52</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER VII</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ROADS FROM GRANTHAM</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">64</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_x"></a>[x]</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER VIII</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SLEAFORD</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">76</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER IX</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>LINCOLN CATHEDRAL</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">91</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER X</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>PAULINUS AND HUGH OF LINCOLN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">112</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XI</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>LINCOLN CITY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">120</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XII</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ROADS FROM LINCOLN, WEST AND EAST</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">137</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XIII</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ROADS SOUTH FROM LINCOLN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">148</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XIV</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>PLACES OF NOTE NEAR LINCOLN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">165</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XV</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HERMITAGES AND HOSPITALS</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">178</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XVI</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ROADS NORTH FROM LINCOLN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">182</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XVII</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>GAINSBOROUGH AND THE NORTH-WEST</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">195</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xi"></a>[xi]</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XVIII</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE ISLE OF AXHOLME</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">208</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XIX</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>GRIMSBY AND THE NORTH-EAST</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">215</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XX</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>CAISTOR</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">228</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXI</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>LOUTH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">239</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXII</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ANGLO-SAXON, NORMAN AND MEDIÆVAL ART</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">251</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXIII</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ROADS FROM LOUTH, NORTH AND WEST</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">262</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXIV</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>LINCOLNSHIRE BYWAYS</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">278</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXV</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE BOLLES FAMILY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">285</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXVI</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE MARSH CHURCHES OF EAST LINDSEY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">290</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXVII</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>LINCOLNSHIRE FOLKSONG</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">296</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xii"></a>[xii]</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXVIII</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>MARSH CHURCHES OF SOUTH LINDSEY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">305</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXIX</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>WAINFLEET TO SPILSBY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">323</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXX</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SPILSBY AND NEIGHBOURHOOD</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">333</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXXI</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SOMERSBY AND THE TENNYSONS</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXI">343</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXXII</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ROADS FROM SPILSBY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXII">358</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXXIII</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SCRIVELSBY AND TATTERSHALL</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII">372</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXXIV</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>BARDNEY ABBEY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIV">390</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXXV</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HOLLAND FEN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXV">400</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXXVI</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE FEN CHURCHES—NORTHERN DIVISION</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVI">409</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXXVII</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ST. BOTOLPH’S TOWN (BOSTON)</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVII">425</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xiii"></a>[xiii]</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXXVIII</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SPALDING AND THE CHURCHES NORTH OF IT</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVIII">441</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXXIX</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>CHURCHES OF HOLLAND</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIX">463</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XL</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE BLACK DEATH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XL">480</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XLI</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>CROYLAND</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XL">483</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XLII</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>LINCOLNSHIRE FOXHOUNDS</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLII">493</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">APPENDIX I</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SAMUEL WESLEY’S EPITAPH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#APPENDIX_I">499</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">APPENDIX II</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>DR. WM. STUKELEY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#APPENDIX_II">500</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">APPENDIX III</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>A LOWLAND PEASANT POET</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#APPENDIX_III">501</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xiv"></a>[xiv]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xv"></a>[xv]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<table summary="List of illustrations">
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="tdpg smaller">PAGE</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>BOSTON</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus1"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ST. LEONARD’S PRIORY, STAMFORD</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus2">8</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ST. GEORGE’S SQUARE, STAMFORD</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus3">10</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ST. MARY’S STREET, STAMFORD</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus4">11</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ST. PAUL’S STREET, STAMFORD</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus5">13</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ST. PETER’S HILL, STAMFORD</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus6">15</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>STAMFORD FROM FREEMAN’S CLOSE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus7">17</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>BOURNE ABBEY CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus8">24</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE STATION HOUSE, BOURNE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus9">26</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SEMPRINGHAM</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus10">36</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE WITHAM, BOSTON</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus11">45</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE ANGEL INN, GRANTHAM</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus12">56</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>GRANTHAM CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus13">61</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>WITHAM-SIDE, BOSTON</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus14">66</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HOUGH-ON-THE-HILL</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus15">72</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>NORTH TRANSEPT, ST. DENIS’S CHURCH, SLEAFORD</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus16">78</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HECKINGTON CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus17">81</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>GREAT HALE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus18">84</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HELPRINGHAM</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus19">86</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SOUTH KYME</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus20">88</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SOUTH KYME CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus21">89</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>NEWPORT ARCH, LINCOLN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus22">92</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>GATEWAY OF LINCOLN CASTLE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus23">94</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE ROOD TOWER AND SOUTH TRANSEPT, LINCOLN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus24">100</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>POTTERGATE, LINCOLN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus25">110</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xvi"></a>[xvi]</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ST. MARY’S GUILD, LINCOLN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus26">118</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE POTTERGATE ARCH, LINCOLN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus27">121</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE JEW’S HOUSE, LINCOLN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus28">123</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>REMAINS OF THE WHITEFRIARS’ PRIORY, LINCOLN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus29">124</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ST. MARY’S GUILD AND ST. PETER’S AT GOWTS, LINCOLN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus30">125</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ST. BENEDICT’S CHURCH, LINCOLN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus31">127</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ST. MARY-LE-WIGFORD, LINCOLN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus32">128</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE STONEBOW, LINCOLN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus33">130</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>OLD INLAND REVENUE OFFICE, LINCOLN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus34">132</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>JAMES STREET, LINCOLN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus35">133</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THORNGATE, LINCOLN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus36">135</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>LINCOLN FROM THE WITHAM</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus37">138</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>STOW CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus38">142</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>BRANT BROUGHTON</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus39">152</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE ERMINE STREET AT TEMPLE BRUER</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus40">154</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>TEMPLE BRUER TOWER</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus41">158</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>NAVENBY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus42">163</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>WYKEHAM CHAPEL, NEAR SPALDING</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus43">180</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE AVON AT BARTON-ON-HUMBER</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus44">189</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ST. PETER’S, BARTON-ON-HUMBER</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus45">190</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ST. MARY’S, BARTON-ON-HUMBER</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus46">192</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>NORTH SIDE, OLD HALL, GAINSBOROUGH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus47">202</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SOUTH SIDE, OLD HALL, GAINSBOROUGH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus48">203</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>GAINSBOROUGH CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus49">205</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>GREAT GOXHILL PRIORY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus50">218</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THORNTON ABBEY GATEWAY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus51">220</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>REMAINS OF CHAPTER HOUSE, THORNTON ABBEY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus52">221</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE WELLAND, NEAR FULNEY, SPALDING</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus53">237</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THORNTON ABBEY GATEWAY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus54">238</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>BRIDGE STREET, LOUTH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus55">241</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HUBBARD’S MILL, LOUTH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus56">243</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE LUD AT LOUTH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus57">246</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ANCIENT SAXON ORNAMENT FOUND IN 1826 IN CLEANING OUT THE
- WITHAM, NEAR THE VILLAGE OF FISKERTON, FOUR MILES EAST OF
- LINCOLN. DRAWN BY MRS. RAWNSLEY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus58">254</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>CLEE CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus59">266</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xvii"></a>[xvii]</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>WESTGATE, LOUTH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus60">275</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>MANBY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus61">279</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>MABLETHORPE CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus62">292</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SOUTHEND, BOSTON</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus63">297</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>MARKBY CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus64">306</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ADDLETHORPE AND INGOLDMELLS</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus65">308</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE ROMAN BANK AT WINTHORPE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus66">311</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>BRIDGE OVER THE HOLLOW-GATE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus67">330</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HALTON CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus68">331</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SOMERSBY CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus69">341</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>TENNYSON’S HOME, SOMERSBY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus70">351</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>LITTLE STEEPING</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus71">357</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SIBSEY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus72">362</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>CONINGSBY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus73">369</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>TATTERSHALL AND CONINGSBY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus74">370</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>TATTERSHALL CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus75">371</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE LION GATE AT SCRIVELSBY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus76">373</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>TATTERSHALL CHURCH AND THE BAIN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus77">381</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>TATTERSHALL CHURCH AND CASTLE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus78">386</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>TATTERSHALL CHURCH WINDOWS</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus79">388</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SCRIVELSBY STOCKS</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus80">389</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>KIRKSTEAD CHAPEL</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus81">391</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>REMAINS OF KIRKSTEAD ABBEY CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus82">396</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>KIRKSTEAD CHAPEL, WEST END</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus83">398</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>DARLOW’S YARD, SLEAFORD</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus84">403</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>LEAKE CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus85">415</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>LEVERTON WINDMILL</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus86">417</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>FRIESTON PRIORY CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus87">418</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>BOSTON CHURCH FROM THE N.E.</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus88">421</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>BOSTON STUMP</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus89">424</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>CUSTOM HOUSE QUAY, BOSTON</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus90">427</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SOUTH SQUARE, BOSTON</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus91">429</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SPAIN LANE, BOSTON</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus92">431</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE HAVEN, BOSTON</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus93">436</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE GUILDHALL, BOSTON</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus94">437</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HUSSEY’S TOWER, BOSTON</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus95">439</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xviii"></a>[xviii]</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE WELLAND AT COWBIT ROAD, SPALDING</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus96">442</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE WELLAND AT HIGH STREET, SPALDING</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus97">443</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>AYSCOUGH FEE HALL GARDENS, SPALDING</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus98">445</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SPALDING CHURCH FROM THE S.E.</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus99">447</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>N. SIDE, SPALDING CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus100">449</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>PINCHBECK</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus101">450</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SURFLEET</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus102">453</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SURFLEET WINDMILL</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus103">454</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE WELLAND AT MARSH ROAD, SPALDING</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus104">458</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ALGARKIRK</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus105">460</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>AT FULNEY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus106">462</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>WHAPLODE CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus107">467</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>FLEET CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus108">469</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>GEDNEY CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus109">471</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>LONG SUTTON CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus110">473</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>GEDNEY, FROM FLEET</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus111">482</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>COWBIT CHURCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus112">484</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>CROYLAND ABBEY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus113">488</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>CROYLAND BRIDGE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus114">490</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>MAP</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#map"><i>At end Volume</i></a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1"></a>[1]</span></p>
-
-<h1>HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS<br />
-IN LINCOLNSHIRE</h1>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I<br />
-<span class="smaller">INTRODUCTORY</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In dealing with a county which measures seventy-five miles
-by forty-five, it will be best to assume that the tourist has either
-some form of “cycle” or, better still, a motor car. The railway
-helps one less in this than in most counties, as it naturally
-runs on the flat and unpicturesque portions, and also skirts the
-boundaries, and seldom attempts to pierce into the heart of
-the Wolds. Probably it would not be much good to the tourist
-if it did, as he would have to spend much of his time in tunnels
-which always come where there should be most to see, as on
-the Louth and Lincoln line between Withcal and South Willingham.
-As it is, the only bit of railway by which a person
-could gather that Lincolnshire was anything but an ugly county
-is that between Lincoln and Grantham.</p>
-
-<p>But that it is a county with a great deal of beauty will be,
-I am sure, admitted by those who follow up the routes described
-in the following pages. They will find that it is a county famous
-for wide views, for wonderful sunsets, for hills and picturesque
-hollows; and full, too, of the human interest which clings round
-old buildings, and the uplifting pleasure which its many splendid
-specimens of architecture have power to bestow.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2"></a>[2]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MARSH AND FEN</div>
-
-<p>At the outset the reader must identify himself so far with
-the people of Lincolnshire as to make himself at home in the
-universally accepted meanings of certain words and expressions
-which he will hear constantly recurring. He will soon
-come to know that ‘siver’ means however, that ‘slaäpe’
-means slippery, that ‘unheppen,’ a fine old word (—unhelpen),
-means awkward, that ‘owry’ or ‘howry’ means dirty; but,
-having learnt this, he must not conclude that the word ‘strange’
-in ‘straänge an’ owry weather’ means anything unfamiliar.
-‘Straänge’—perhaps the commonest adverbial epithet in
-general use in Lincolnshire—<i>e.g.</i> “you’ve bin a straänge long
-while coming” only means very. But besides common conversational
-expressions he will have to note that the well-known
-substantives ‘Marsh’ and ‘Fen’ bear in Lincolnshire a special
-meaning, neither of them now denoting bog or wet impassable
-places. The <i>Fens</i> are the rich flat corn lands, once perpetually
-flooded, but now drained and tilled; the divisions between
-field and field being mostly ditches, small or big, and all full of
-water; the soil is deep vegetable mould, fine, and free from
-stones, hardly to be excelled for both corn and roots; while
-the <i>Marsh</i> is nearly all pasture land, stiffer in nature, and producing
-such rich grass that the beasts can grow fat upon it
-without other food. Here, too, the fields are divided by ditches
-or “dykes” and the sea wind blows over them with untiring
-energy, for the Marsh is all next the coast, being a belt averaging
-seven or eight miles in width, and reaching from the Wash to
-the Humber.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE WOLDS</div>
-
-<p>From this belt the Romans, by means of a long embankment,
-excluded the waters of the sea; and Nature’s sand-dunes, aided
-by the works of man in places, keep up the Roman tradition.
-Even before the Roman bank was made, the <i>Marsh</i> differed
-from the <i>Fen</i>, in that the waters which used to cover the <i>fens</i>
-were fed by the river floods and the waters from the hills,
-and it was not, except occasionally and along the course of a
-tidal river, liable to inundation from the sea; whereas the
-<i>Marsh</i> was its natural prey. Of course both Marsh and Fen
-are all level. But the third portion of the county is of quite
-a different character, and immediately you get into it all the
-usual ideas about Lincolnshire being a flat, ugly county vanish,
-and as this upland country extends over most of the northern
-half of the county, viz., from Spilsby to the Humber on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[3]</span>
-eastern side and from Grantham to the Humber on the western,
-it is obvious that no one can claim to know Lincolnshire who
-does not know the long lines of the Wolds, which are two long
-spines of upland running north and south, with flat land on
-either side of them.</p>
-
-<p>These, back-bones of the county, though seldom reaching
-500 feet, come to their highest point of 530 between Walesby
-and Stainton-le-Vale, a valley set upon a hill over which a line
-would pass drawn from Grimsby to Market Rasen. The hilly
-Wold region is about the same width as the level Marsh belt,
-averaging eight miles, but north of Caistor this narrows. There
-are no great streams from these Wolds, the most notable being
-the long brook whose parent branches run from Stainton-in-the-Vale
-and “Roman hole” near Thoresway, and uniting at
-Hatcliffe go out to the sea with the Louth River “Lud,” the
-two streams joining at Tetney lock.</p>
-
-<p>North of Caistor the Wolds not only narrow, but drop by
-Barnetby-le-Wold to 150 feet, and allow the railway lines from
-Barton-on-Humber, New Holland and Grimsby to pass through
-to Brigg. This, however, is only a ‘pass,’ as the chalk ridge
-rises again near Elsham, and at Saxby attains a height of
-330 feet, whence it maintains itself at never less than 200 feet,
-right up to Ferriby-on-the-Humber. These Elsham and Saxby
-Wolds are but two miles across.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally this Wold region with the villages situated in its
-folds or on its fringes is the pretty part of the county, though
-the Marsh with its extended views, its magnificent sunsets and
-cloud effects,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The wide-winged sunsets of the misty Marsh,”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">its splendid cattle and its interesting flora, its long sand-dunes
-covered with stout-growing grasses, sea holly and orange-berried
-buckthorn, and finally its magnificent sands, is full of
-a peculiar charm; and then there are its splendid churches;
-not so grand as the fen churches it is true, but so nobly planned
-and so unexpectedly full of beautiful old carved woodwork.</p>
-
-<p>West of these Wolds is a belt of Fen-land lying between them
-and the ridge or ‘cliff’ on which the great Roman Ermine
-Street runs north from Lincoln in a bee line for over thirty
-miles to the Humber near Winteringham, only four miles west
-of the end of the Wolds already mentioned at South Ferriby.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4"></a>[4]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">PARALLEL RIDGES</div>
-
-<p>The high ridge of the Lincoln Wold is very narrow, a regular
-‘Hogs back’ and broken down into a lower altitude between
-Blyborough and Kirton-in-Lindsey, and lower again a little
-further north near Scawby and still more a few miles further
-on where the railway goes through the pass between Appleby
-Station and Scunthorpe.</p>
-
-<p>From here a second ridge is developed parallel with the
-Lincoln Wold, and between the Wold and the Trent, the ground
-rising from Bottesford to Scunthorpe, reaching a height of
-220 feet on the east bank of the Trent near Burton-on-Stather
-and thence descending by Alkborough to the Humber at Whitton.
-The Trent which, roughly speaking, from Newark, and actually
-from North Clifton to the Humber, bounds the county on the
-west, runs through a low country of but little interest, overlooked
-for miles from the height which is crowned by Lincoln Minster.
-Only the Isle of Axholme lies outside of the river westwards.</p>
-
-<p>The towns of Gainsborough towards the north, and Stamford
-at the extreme south guard this western boundary. Beyond
-the Minster the Lincoln Wold continues south through the
-Sleaford division of Kesteven to Grantham, but in a modified
-form, rising into stiff hills only to the north-east and south-west
-of Grantham, and thence passing out of the county into
-Leicestershire. A glance at a good map will show that the ridge
-along which the Ermine Street and the highway from Lincoln
-to Grantham run for seventeen miles, as far, that is, as Ancaster,
-is not a wide one; but drops to the flats more gently east of the
-Ermine Street than it does to the west of the Grantham road.
-From Sleaford, where five railway lines converge, that which
-goes west passes through a natural break in the ridge by
-Ancaster, the place from which, next after the “Barnack rag,”
-all the best stone of the churches of Lincolnshire has always
-been quarried. South of Ancaster the area of high ground is
-much wider, extending east and west from the western boundary
-of the county to the road which runs from Sleaford to
-Bourne and Stamford.</p>
-
-<p>Such being the main features of the county, it will be as well
-to lay down a sort of itinerary showing the direction in which
-we will proceed and the towns which we propose to visit as
-we go.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ITINERARY</div>
-
-<p>Entering the county from the south, at <i>Stamford</i>, we will
-make for <i>Sleaford</i>. These are the two towns which give their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span>
-names to the divisions of South and North Kesteven. <i>Grantham</i>
-lies off to the west, about midway between the two. As this
-is the most important town in the division of Kesteven, after
-taking some of the various roads which radiate from Sleaford
-we will make Grantham our centre, then leave South Kesteven
-for Sleaford again, and thence going on north we shall reach
-<i>Lincoln</i> just over the North Kesteven boundary, and so continue
-to <i>Gainsborough</i> and <i>Brigg</i>, from which the west and north
-divisions of Lindsey are named. From each of the towns we
-have mentioned we shall trace the roads which lead from them
-in all directions; and then, after entering the Isle of Axholme
-and touching the Humber at <i>Barton</i> and the North Sea at
-Cleethorpes and Grimsby, we shall turn south to the <i>Louth</i>
-and <i>Horncastle</i> (in other words the east and south) divisions of
-Lindsey, and, so going down the east coast, we shall, after
-visiting <i>Alford</i> and <i>Spilsby</i>, both in South Lindsey, arrive at
-<i>Boston</i> and then at <i>Spalding</i>, both in the “parts of Holland,”
-and finally pass out of the county near the ancient abbey of
-<i>Croyland</i>.</p>
-
-<p>By this itinerary we shall journey all round the huge county,
-going up, roughly speaking, on the west and returning by the
-east; and shall see, not only how it is divided into the political
-“parts” of Kesteven, Lindsey and Holland, but also note as
-we go the characteristics of the land and its three component
-elements of Fen, Wold and Marsh.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen that the Wolds, starting from the Humber,
-run in two parallel ridges; that on the west side of the county
-reaching the whole way from north to south, but that on the
-east only going half the way and ending abruptly at West Keal,
-near Spilsby.</p>
-
-<p>All that lies east of the road running from Lincoln by Sleaford
-and Bourne to Stamford, and south of a line drawn from Lincoln
-to Wainfleet is “Fen,” and includes the southern portion of
-South Lindsey, the eastern half of Kesteven, and the whole of
-Holland.</p>
-
-<p>In this Fen country great houses are scarce. But the great
-monasteries clung to the Fens and they were mainly responsible
-for the creation of the truly magnificent Fen churches which
-are most notably grouped in the neighbourhood of Boston,
-Sleaford and Spalding. In writing of the Fens, therefore, the
-churches are the chief things to be noticed, and this is largely,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span>
-though not so entirely, the case in the Marsh district also.
-Hence I have ventured to describe these Lincolnshire churches
-of the Marsh and Fen at greater length than might at first sight
-seem warrantable.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">PERIODS OF ARCHITECTURE</div>
-
-<p>It would make it easier to follow these descriptions if the
-reader were first to master the dates and main characteristics
-of the different periods of architecture and their order of sequence.
-Thus, roughly speaking, we may assign each style to one century,
-though of course the style and the century were not in any
-case exactly coterminous.</p>
-
-<table summary="Dates, styles and characteristics of church architecture">
- <tr>
- <td>11th</td>
- <td>Century</td>
- <td>Norman</td>
- <td>⎫</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="valign">With round arches.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>12th</td>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- <td>Transition</td>
- <td>⎭</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>13th</td>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- <td>Early English (E.E.)</td>
- <td>⎫</td>
- <td rowspan="3" class="valign">With pointed arches.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>14th</td>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- <td>Decorated (Dec.)</td>
- <td>⎬</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>15th</td>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- <td>Perpendicular (Perp.)</td>
- <td>⎭</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II<br />
-<span class="smaller">STAMFORD</span></h2>
-
-<p>The North Road—Churches—Browne’s Hospital—Brasenose College—Daniel
-Lambert—Burghley House and “The Peasant Countess.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Great Northern line, after leaving Peterborough, enters
-the county at Tallington, five miles east of Stamford. Stamford
-is eighty-nine miles north of London, and forty miles south of
-Lincoln. Few towns in England are more interesting, none
-more picturesque. The Romans with their important station
-of Durobrivæ at Castor, and another still nearer at Great
-Casterton, had no need to occupy Stamford in force, though
-they doubtless guarded the ford where the Ermine Street crossed
-the Welland, and possibly paved the water-way, whence arose
-the name Stane-ford. The river here divides the counties of
-Lincoln and Northamptonshire, and on the north-west of the
-town a little bit of Rutland runs up, but over three-quarters
-of the town is in our county. The Saxons always considered
-it an important town, and as early as 664 mention is made in
-a charter of Wulfhere, King of Mercia, of “that part of Staunforde
-beyond the bridge,” so the town was already on both
-sides of the river. Later again, in Domesday Book, the King’s
-borough of Stamford is noticed as paying tax for the army,
-navy and Danegelt, also it is described as “having six wards,
-five in Lincolnshire and one in Hamptonshire, but all pay
-customs and dues alike, except the last in which the Abbot of
-Burgh (Peterborough) had and hath Gabell and toll.”</p>
-
-<p>This early bridge was no doubt a pack-horse bridge, and an
-arch on the west side of St. Mary’s Hill still bears the name of
-Packhorse Arch.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus2">
-<img src="images/illus2.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>St. Leonard’s Priory, Stamford.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ST. LEONARD’S PRIORY</div>
-
-<p>St. Leonard’s Priory is the oldest building in the neighbourhood.
-After Oswy, King of Northumbria, had defeated Penda,
-the pagan King of Mercia, he gave the government of this part
-of the conquered province to Penda’s son Pæda, and gave land
-in Stamford to his son’s tutor, Wilfrid, and here, in 658, Wilfrid
-built the priory of St. Leonard which he bestowed on his monastery
-at Lindisfarne, and when the monks removed thence
-to Durham it became a cell of the priory of Durham. Doubtless
-the building was destroyed by the Danes, but it was refounded<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span>
-in 1082 by the Conqueror and William of Carilef, the then
-Bishop of Durham.</p>
-
-<p>The Danish marauders ravaged the country, but were met
-at Stamford by a stout resistance from Saxons and Britons
-combined; but in the end they beat the Saxons and nearly
-destroyed Stamford in 870. A few years later, when, after the
-peace of Wedmore, Alfred the Great gave terms to Guthrum on
-condition that he kept away to the north of the Watling Street,
-the five towns of Stamford, Leicester, Nottingham, Derby and
-Lincoln were left to the Danes for strongholds; of these Lincoln
-then, as now, was the chief.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">PARLIAMENT AT STAMFORD</div>
-
-<p>The early importance of Stamford may be gauged by the
-facts that Parliament was convened there more than once in
-the fourteenth century, and several Councils of War and of State
-held there. One of these was called by Pope Boniface IX. to
-suppress the doctrines of Wyclif. There, too, a large number
-of nobles met to devise some check on King John, who was often
-in the neighbourhood either at Kingscliffe, in Rockingham
-Forest, or at Stamford itself—and from thence they marched
-to Runnymede.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">STAMFORD TOWN</div>
-
-<p>The town was on the Great North Road, so that kings, when
-moving up and down their realm, naturally stopped there. A
-good road also went east and west, hence, just outside the town
-gate on the road leading west towards Geddington and Northampton,
-a cross (the third) was set up in memory of the halting
-of Queen Eleanor’s funeral procession in 1293 on its way from
-Harby near Lincoln to Westminster.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus3">
-<img src="images/illus3.jpg" width="500" height="475" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>St. George’s Square, Stamford.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">CITY ARMS</div>
-
-<p>There was a castle near the ford in the tenth century, and
-Danes and Saxons alternately held it until the Norman Conquest.
-The city, like the ancient Thebes, had a wall with seven gates
-besides posterns, one of which still exists in the garden of 9, Barn
-Hill, the house in which Alderman Wolph hid Charles I. on his
-last visit to Stamford in 1646. Most of the buildings which
-once made Stamford so very remarkable were the work of the
-twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and as they comprised fifteen
-churches, six priories, with hospitals, schools and almshouses
-in corresponding numbers, the town must have presented a
-beautiful appearance, more especially so because the stone used
-in all these buildings, public and private, is of such exceptionally
-good character, being from the neighbouring quarries of Barnack,
-Ketton and Clipsham. But much of this glory of stone building<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span>
-and Gothic architecture was destroyed in the year 1461;
-and for this reason. It happened that, just as Henry III. had
-given it to his son Edward I. on his marriage with Eleanor of
-Castile in 1254, so, in 1363, Edward III. gave the castle and
-manor of Stamford to his son Edmund of Langley, Duke of
-York; this, by attaching the town to the Yorkist cause, when
-Lincolnshire was mostly Lancastrian, brought about its destruction,
-for after the battle of St. Alban’s in 1461, the Lancastrians
-under Sir Andrew Trollope utterly devastated the town, destroying
-everything, and, though some of the churches were rebuilt,
-the town never recovered its former magnificence. It still looks
-beautiful with its six churches, its many fragments of arch or
-wall and several fine old almshouses which were built subsequently,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span>
-but it lost either then or at the dissolution more than
-double of what it has managed to retain. Ten years later the
-courage shown by the men of Stamford at the battle of Empingham
-or “Bloody Oaks” close by, on the North Road, where
-the Lancastrians were defeated, caused Edward IV. to grant
-permission for the royal lions to be placed on the civic shield
-of Stamford, side by side with the arms of Earl Warren. He
-had had the manorial rights of Stamford given to him by King
-John in 1206, and he is said to have given the butchers a field in
-which to keep a bull to be baited annually on November 13,
-and the barbarous practice of “bull running” in the streets
-was actually kept up till 1839, and then only abolished with
-difficulty.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus4">
-<img src="images/illus4.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>St. Mary’s Street, Stamford.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus5">
-<img src="images/illus5.jpg" width="500" height="575" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>St. Paul’s Street, Stamford.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE SIX CHURCHES</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE CALLISES</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">STAMFORD UNIVERSITY</div>
-
-<p>Of the six churches, St. Mary’s and All Saints have spires.
-St. Mary’s, on a hill which slopes to the river, is a fine arcaded
-Early English tower with a broach spire of later date, but full
-of beautiful work in statue and canopy, very much resembling
-that at Ketton in Rutland. There are three curious round
-panels with interlaced work over the porch, and a rich altar
-tomb with very lofty canopy that commemorates Sir David
-Phillips and his wife. They had served Margaret Countess of
-Richmond, the mother of Henry VII., who resided at Collyweston
-close by. The body of the church is rather crowded
-together and not easy to view. In this respect All Saints,
-with its turrets, pinnacles and graceful spire, and its double
-belfry lights under one hood moulding as at Grantham, has the
-advantage. Moreover the North Road goes up past it, and the
-market place gives plenty of space all round it. Inside, the
-arcade columns are cylindrical and plain on the north, but
-clustered on the south side, with foliated capitals. This church
-is rich in brasses, chiefly of the great wool-merchant family of
-Browne, one of whom, William, founded a magnificent hospital
-and enlarged the church, and in all probability built the handsome
-spire; he was buried in 1489. The other churches all
-have square towers, that of St. John’s Church is over the last
-bay of the north aisle, and at the last bay of the south aisle
-is a porch. The whole construction is excellent, pillars tall,
-roof rich and windows graceful, and it once was filled with
-exceptionally fine stained glass. St. George’s Church, being
-rebuilt with fragments of other destroyed churches, shows a
-curious mixture of octagonal and cylindrical work in the same
-pillars. St. Michael’s and St. Martin’s are the other two, of
-which the latter is across the water in what is called <i>Stamford
-Baron</i>, it is the burial place of the Cecils and it is not far from
-the imposing gateway into Burghley Park. This church and
-park, with the splendid house designed by John Thorpe for the
-great William Cecil in 1565, are all in the diocese of Peterborough,
-and the county of Northampton. We shall have to
-recall the church when we speak of the beautiful windows
-which Lord Exeter was allowed by the Fortescue family to take
-from the Collegiate Church of Tattershall, and which are now in
-St. Martin’s, where they are extremely badly set with bands
-of modern glass interrupting the old. Another remnant of a
-church stands on the north-west of the town, St. Paul’s. This<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span>
-ruin was made over as early as the sixteenth century for use
-as a schoolroom for Radcliffe’s Grammar School. Schools,
-hospitals or almshouses once abounded in Stamford, where the
-latter are often called <i>Callises</i>, being the benefactions of the
-great wool merchants of the Staple of Calais. The chief of
-all these, and one which is still in use, is Browne’s Hospital,
-founded in 1480 by a Stamford merchant who had been six times
-Mayor, for a Warden, a Confrater, ten poor men, and two poor<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>
-women. It had a long dormitory hall, with central passage
-from which the brethren’s rooms opened on either side, and, at
-one end, beyond a carved screen, is the chapel with tall windows,
-stalls and carved bench-ends, and a granite alms box. An
-audit room is above the hall or dormitory, with good glass, and
-Browne’s own house, with large gateway to admit the wool-wagons,
-adjoined the chapel. It was partly rebuilt with new
-accommodation in 1870; the cloister and hall and chapel remain
-as they were. One more thing must be noted. In the north-west
-and near the old St. Paul’s Church schoolroom is a beautiful
-Early English gateway, which is all that remains of <i>Brasenose
-College</i>. The history is a curious one. Violent town and
-gown quarrels resulting even in murders, at Oxford in 1260,
-had caused several students to migrate to Northampton, where
-Henry III. directed the mayor to give them every accommodation;
-but in 1266, probably for reasons connected with civil
-strife, the license was revoked, and, whilst many returned to
-Oxford, many preferred to go further, and so came to Stamford,
-a place known to be well supplied with halls and requisites for
-learning. Here they were joined in 1333 by a further body of
-Oxford men who were involved in a dispute between the northern
-and southern scholars, the former complaining that they
-were unjustly excluded from Merton College Fellowships. The
-Durham Monastery took their side and doubtless offered them
-shelter at their priory of St. Leonard’s, Stamford. Then, as
-other bodies of University seceders kept joining them, they
-thought seriously of setting up a University, and petitioned
-King Edward III. to be allowed to remain under his protection
-at Stamford. But the Universities petitioned against them,
-and the King ordered the Sheriff of Lincolnshire to turn them
-out, promising them redress when they were back in Oxford.
-Those who refused were punished by confiscation of goods and
-fines, and the two Universities passed Statutes imposing an
-oath on all freshmen that they would not read or attend lectures
-at Stamford. In 1292 Robert Luttrell of Irnham gave a manor
-and the parish church of St. Peter, near Stamford, to the priory at
-Sempringham, being “desirous to increase the numbers of the
-convent and that it might ever have scholars at Stamford
-studying divinity and philosophy.” This refers to Sempringham
-Hall, one of the earliest buildings of Stamford University.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus6">
-<img src="images/illus6.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>St. Peter’s Hill, Stamford.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A MAZE OF STREETS</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">STAMFORD’S GREAT MEN</div>
-
-<p>A glance at a plan of the town would show that it is exactly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span>
-like a maze, no street runs on right through it in any direction,
-and, for a stranger, it is incredibly difficult to find a way out.
-To the south-west, and all along the eastern edge on the river-meadows
-outside the walls, were large enclosures belonging to
-the different Friaries, on either side of the road to St. Leonard’s
-Priory. No town has lost more by the constant depredations
-of successive attacking forces; first the Danes, then the Wars
-of the Roses, then the dissolution of the religious houses, then
-the Civil War, ending with a visit from Cromwell in his most
-truculent mood, fresh from the mischief done by his soldiers
-in and around Croyland and Peterborough. But, even now,
-its grey stone buildings, its well-chosen site, its river, its neighbouring<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>
-hills and wooded park, make it a town more than ordinarily
-attractive. Of distinguished natives, we need only
-mention the great Lord Burleigh, who served with distinction
-through four reigns, and Archdeacon Johnson, the founder of
-the Oakham and Uppingham Schools and hospitals in 1584,
-though Uppingham as it now is, was the creation of a far
-greater man, the famous Edward Thring, a pioneer of modern
-educational methods, in the last half of the nineteenth century.
-Archbishop Laud, who is so persistently mentioned as having
-been once Vicar of St. Martin’s, Stamford, was never there;
-his vicarage was Stanford-on-Avon. But undoubtedly Stamford’s
-greatest man in one sense was Daniel Lambert, whose
-monument, in St. Martin’s churchyard, date 1809, speaks
-of his “personal greatness” and tells us that he weighed
-52 stone 11 lbs., adding “N.B. the stone of 14 lb.” The
-writer once, when a schoolboy, went with another to see his
-clothes, which were shown at the Daniel Lambert Inn; and,
-when the two stood back to back, the armhole of his spacious
-waistcoat was slipped over their heads and fell loosely round
-them to the ground.</p>
-
-<p>This enormous personage must not be confounded with
-another Daniel Lambert, who was Lord Mayor and Member
-for the City of London in Walpole’s time, about 1740.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE PEASANT COUNTESS</div>
-
-<p>It is quite a matter of regret that “Burleigh House near
-Stamford town” is outside the county boundary. Of all the
-great houses in England, it always strikes me as being the most
-satisfying and altogether the finest, and a fitting memorial of
-the great Lincolnshire man William Cecil, who, after serving
-in the two previous reigns, was Elizabeth’s chief Minister for
-forty years. “The Lord of Burleigh” of Tennyson’s poem
-lived two centuries later, but he, too, with “the peasant
-Countess” lived eventually in the great house. Lady Dorothy
-Nevill, in <i>My Own Times</i> published in 1912, gives a clear
-account of the facts commemorated in the poem. She tells us
-that Henry Cecil, tenth Earl of Exeter, before he came into the
-title was divorced from his wife in 1791, owing to her misconduct;
-being almost broken-hearted he retired to a village
-in Shropshire, called Bolas Magna, where he worked as a farm
-servant to one Hoggins who had a mill. Tennyson makes him
-more picturesquely “a landscape painter.” He often looked
-in at the vicarage and had a mug of ale with the servants, who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span>
-called him “Gentleman Harry.” The clergyman, Mr. Dickenson,
-became interested in him, and often talked with him, and used
-to invite him to smoke an evening pipe with him in the study.
-Mr. Hoggins had a daughter Sarah, the beauty of Bolas, and
-they became lovers. With the clergyman’s aid Cecil, not
-without difficulty, persuaded Hoggins to allow the marriage,
-which took place at St. Mildred’s, Bread Street, October 30th,
-1791, his broken heart having mended fairly quickly. He was
-now forty years of age, and before the marriage he had told
-Dickenson who he was. For two years they lived in a small
-farm, when, from a Shrewsbury paper, “Mr. Cecil” learnt that
-he had succeeded his uncle in the title and the possession of
-Burleigh House and estate. Thither in due course he took his
-bride. Her picture is on the wall, but she did not live long.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“For a trouble weighed upon her,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And perplexed her night and morn,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With the burthen of an honour</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Unto which she was not born.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Faint she grew and even fainter,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And she murmured ‘Oh that he</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Were once more that landscape painter</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">That did win my heart from me’!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">So she drooped and drooped before him,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Fading slowly from his side:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Three fair children first she bore him,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Then before her time she died.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus7">
-<img src="images/illus7.jpg" width="500" height="325" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Stamford from Freeman’s Close.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III<br />
-<span class="smaller">STAMFORD TO BOURNE</span></h2>
-
-<p>Tickencote—“Bloody Oaks”—Holywell—Tallington—Barholm—Greatford—Witham-on-the-Hill—Dr.
-Willis—West Deeping—Market
-Deeping—Deeping-St.-James—Richard de Rulos—Braceborough—Bourne.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Of the eight roads which run to Stamford, the Great North
-Road which here coincides with the Roman Ermine Street is
-the chief; and this enters from the south through Northamptonshire
-and goes out by the street called “Scotgate” in a north-westerly
-direction through Rutland. It leaves Lincolnshire at
-Great or Bridge Casterton on the river Gwash; one mile further
-it passes the celebrated church of Tickencote nestling in a hollow
-to the left, where the wonderful Norman chancel arch of five
-orders outdoes even the work at Iffley near Oxford, and the
-wooden effigy of a knight reminds one of that of Robert Duke
-of Normandy at Gloucester. <i>Tickencote</i> is the home of the
-Wingfields, and the villagers in 1471 were near enough to hear
-“the Shouts of war” when the Lincolnshire Lancastrians fled
-from the fight on Loosecoat Field after a slaughter which is
-commemorated on the map by the name “Bloody Oaks.”
-Further on, the road passes Stretton, ‘the village on the street,’
-whence a lane to the right takes you to the famed Clipsham
-quarries just on the Rutland side of the boundary, and over it
-to the beautiful residence of Colonel Birch Reynardson at
-<i>Holywell</i>. Very soon now the Ermine Street, after doing its
-ten miles in Rutland, passes by “Morkery Wood” back into
-Lincolnshire.</p>
-
-<p>The only Stamford Road which is all the time in our county
-is the eastern road through Market Deeping to Spalding, this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>
-soon after leaving Stamford passes near Uffington Hall, built
-in 1688 by Robert Bertie, son of Montague, second Earl of
-Lindsey, he whose father fell at Edgehill. On the northern
-outskirt of the parish Lord Kesteven has a fine Elizabethan
-house called Casewick Hall. Round each house is a well-timbered
-park, and at Uffington Hall the approach is by a fine
-avenue of limes. At <i>Tallington</i>, where the road crosses the
-Great Northern line, the church, like several in the neighbourhood,
-has some Saxon as well as Norman work, and the original
-Sanctus bell still hangs in a cot surmounting the east end of the
-nave. It is dedicated to St. Lawrence.</p>
-
-<p>South Lincolnshire seems to have been rather rich in Saxon
-churches, and two of the best existing towers of that period at
-Barnack and Wittering in Northamptonshire are within three
-miles of Stamford, one on either side of the Great North Road.</p>
-
-<p><i>Barholm</i> Church, near Tallington, has some extremely massive
-Norman arches and a fine door with diapered tympanum. The
-tower was restored in the last year of Charles I., and no one
-seems to have been more surprised than the churchwarden or
-parson or mason of the time, for we find carved on it these
-lines:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Was ever such a thing</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Sence the creation?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A new steeple built</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In the time of vexation.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right">I. H. 1643.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FORDS OF THE WELLAND</div>
-
-<p>An old Hall adds to the interest of the place, and another
-charming old building is Mr. Peacock’s Elizabethan house in the
-next parish of <i>Greatford</i>, or, as it should be spelt, Gretford or
-Gritford, the grit or gravel ford of the river Glen, just as Stamford
-should be Stanford or Staneford, the stone-paved ford of the
-Welland. Gretford Church is remarkable if only for the unusual
-position of the tower as a south transept, a similar thing being
-seen at <i>Witham-on-the-Hill</i>, four miles off, in Rutland. Five
-of the bells there are re-casts of some which once hung in Peterborough
-Cathedral, and the fifth has the date 1831 and a
-curious inscription. General Johnson I used to see when I was a
-boy at Uppingham; he was the patron of the school, and the one
-man among the governors of the school who was always a friend
-to her famous headmaster, Edward Thring. But why he wrote
-the last line of this inscription I can’t conceive:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“’Twas not to prosper pride and hate</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">William Augustus Johnson gave me,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But peace and joy to celebrate;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And call to prayer to heaven to save ye.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Then keep the terms, and e’er remember,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">May 29 ye must not ring</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nor yet the 5th of each November</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nor on the crowning of a king.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE DEEPINGS</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">DEEPING FEN</div>
-
-<p>To return to Gretford. In the north transept is a square
-opening, in the sill of which is a curious hollow all carved with
-foliage, resembling one in the chancel at East Kirkby, near
-Spilsby, where it is supposed to have been a sort of alms dish
-for votive offerings. Here, too, is a bust by Nollekens of a man
-who had a considerable reputation in his time, and who occupied
-more than one house in this neighbourhood and built a private
-asylum at Shillingthorpe near Braceborough for his patients, a
-distinguished <i>clientèle</i> who used to drive their teams all about
-the neighbourhood; this was Dr. F. Willis, the mad-doctor who
-attended George III. But these are all ‘side shows,’ and we
-must get back to Tallington. The road from here goes through
-<i>West Deeping</i>, which, like the manor of Market Deeping, belonged
-to the Wakes. Here we find a good font with eight
-shields of arms, that of the Wakes being one, and an almost
-unique old low chancel screen of stone, the surmounting woodwork
-has gone and the west face is filled in with poor modern
-mosaic. Within three miles the Bourne-and-Peterborough road
-crosses the Stamford-and-Spalding road at <i>Market Deeping</i>,
-where there is a large church, once attached to Croyland, and
-a most interesting old house used as the rectory. This was
-the refectory of a priory, and has fine roof timbers. The manor
-passed through Joan, daughter of Margaret Wake, to the Black
-Prince. Two miles further, the grand old priory church of
-<i>Deeping-St.-James</i> lies a mile to the left. This was attached
-as a cell to Thorney Abbey in 1139, by the same Baldwin FitzGilbert
-who had founded Bourne Abbey. A diversion of a
-couple of miles northwards would bring us to a fine tower and
-spire at <i>Langtoft</i>, once a dependency of Medehamstead<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> Abbey
-at Peterborough, together with which it was ruthlessly destroyed
-by Swegen in 1013. On the roof timbers are some
-beautifully carved figures of angels, and carved heads project
-from the nave pillars. The south chantry is a large one, with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>
-three arches opening into the chancel, and has several interesting
-features. Amongst these is a handsome aumbry, which
-may have been used as an Easter sepulchre. The south chantry
-opens from the chancel with three arches, and has some good
-carving and a piscina with a finely constructed canopy. There
-is a monument to Elizabeth Moulesworth, 1648, and a brass
-plate on the tomb of Sarah, wife of Bernard Walcot, has this
-pretty inscription:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Thou bedd of rest, reserve for him a roome</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Who lives a man divorced from his deare wife,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That as they were one hart so this one tombe</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">May hold them near in death as linckt in life,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">She’s gone before, and after comes her head</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To sleepe with her among the blessed dead.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>At Scamblesby, between Louth and Horncastle, is another
-pathetic inscription on a wife’s tomb:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="center">To Margaret Coppinger wife of Francis Thorndike 1629.<br />
-Dilectissimæ conjugi Mæstissimus maritorum Franciscus<br />
-Thorndike.</p>
-
-<p class="center">L.(apidem) <span class="spacer">M.(armoreum)</span> P.(osuit)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The old manor house of the Hyde family is at the north end
-of the village. The road for the next ten miles over Deeping
-Fen is uninteresting as a road can be. But this will be amply
-made up for in another chapter when we shape our eastward
-course from Spalding to Holbeach and Gedney.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE FATHER OF FEN FARMERS</div>
-
-<p>In Deeping Fen between Bourne, Spalding, Crowland and
-Market Deeping there is about fifty square miles of fine fat
-land, and Marrat tells us that as early as the reign of Edward
-the Confessor, Egelric, the Bishop of Durham, who, having been
-once a monk at Peterborough, knew the value of the land, in
-order to develop the district, made a cord road of timber and
-gravel all the way from Deeping to Spalding. The province
-then belonged to the Lords of Brunne or Bourne. In Norman
-times Richard De Rulos, Chamberlain of the Conqueror, married
-the daughter of Hugh de Evermue, Lord of Deeping. Their
-only daughter married Baldwin FitzGilbert, and his daughter
-and heiress married Hugh de Wake, who managed the forest
-of Kesteven for Henry III., which forest reached to the bridge
-at Market Deeping. Richard De Rulos, who was the father of
-all Lincolnshire farmers, aided by Ingulphus, Abbot of Croyland,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>
-set himself to enclose and drain the fen land, to till the
-soil or convert it into pasture and to breed cattle. He banked
-out the Welland which used to flood the fen every year, whence
-it got its name of Deeping or the deep meadows, and on the bank
-he set up tenements with gardens attached, which were the
-beginnings of Market Deeping. He further enlarged St.
-Guthlac’s chapel into a church, and then planted another little
-colony at Deeping-St.-James, where his son-in-law, who carried
-on his activities, built the priory. De Rulos was in fact a model
-landlord, and the result was that the men of Deeping, like
-Jeshuron, “waxed fat and kicked,” and the abbots of Croyland
-had endless contests with them for the next 300 years for constant
-trespass and damage. Probably this was the reason why
-the Wakes set up a castle close by Deeping, but on the Northampton
-side of the Welland at Maxey, which was inhabited
-later by Lady Margaret, Countess of Richmond, the mother of
-Henry VII., who, in addition to all her educational benefactions,
-was also a capital farmer and an active member of the Commissioners
-of Sewers.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE LIMESTONE SPRINGS</div>
-
-<p>We must now get back to Stamford. Even the road which
-goes due north to Bourne soon finds itself outside the county;
-for Stamford is placed on a mere tongue or long pointed nose of
-land belonging to Lincolnshire, in what is aptly termed the
-Wapentake of ‘Ness.’ However, after four miles in Rutland,
-it passes the four cross railroads at <i>Essendine</i> Junction, and soon
-after re-crosses the boundary near <i>Carlby</i>. Essendine Church
-consists simply of a Norman nave and chancel. Here, a little
-to the right lies <i>Braceborough Spa</i>, where water gushes from the
-limestone at the rate of a million and a half gallons daily. This
-is a great district for curative springs. There is one five miles
-to the west at <i>Holywell</i> which, with its stream and lake and
-finely timbered grounds, is one of the beauty spots of Lincolnshire,
-and at the same distance to the north are the strong
-springs of Bourne. We hear of a chalybeate spring “continually
-boiling” or gushing up, for it was not hot, near the church
-at Billingborough, and another at Stoke Rochford, each place
-a good ten miles from Bourne and in opposite directions. Great
-Ponton too, near Stoke Rochford, is said to “abound in Springs
-of pure water rising out of the rock and running into the river
-Witham.” The church at <i>Braceborough</i> had a fine brass once
-to Thomas De Wasteneys, who died of the Black Death in 1349.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span>
-After Carlby there is little of interest on the road itself till it
-tops the hill beyond <i>Toft</i> whence, on an autumn day, a grand
-view opens out across the fens to the Wash and to Boston on
-the north-east, and the panorama sweeps southward past
-Spalding to the time-honoured abbey of Croyland, and on again
-to the long grey pile of Peterborough Minster, once islands in a
-trackless fen (the impenetrable refuge of the warlike and unconquered
-Gervii or fenmen), but now a level plain of cornland
-covered, as far as eye can see, with the richest crops imaginable.
-A little further north we reach the Colsterworth road, and
-turning east, enter the old town of <i>Bourne</i>, now only notable as
-the junction of the Great Northern and Midland Railways.
-Since 1893 the inhabitants have used an “e” at the end of the
-name to distinguish it from Bourn in Cambridgeshire. Near
-the castle hill is a strong spring called “Peter’s Pool,” or Bournwell-head,
-the water of which runs through the town and is
-copious enough to furnish a water supply for Spalding. This
-castle, mentioned by Ingulphus in his history of Croyland Abbey,
-existed in the eleventh century; possibly the Romans had a fort
-here to guard both the ‘Carr Dyke’ which passes by the east
-side of the town, and also the King’s Street, a Roman road
-which, splitting off from the Ermine Street at Castor, runs
-through Bourne due north to Sleaford. There was an outer
-moat enclosing eight acres, and an inner moat of one acre,
-inside which “on a mount of earth cast up with mene’s hands”
-stood the castle, once the stronghold of the Wakes. To-day a
-maze of grassy mounds alone attests the site, amongst which
-the “Bourn or Brunne gushes out in a strong clear stream.”
-Marrat in his “History of Lincolnshire” tells us that as early
-as 870 Morchar, Lord of Brun, fell fighting at the battle of
-Threekingham. Two hundred years later we have “Hereward
-the Wake” living at Bourn, and in the twelfth century “Hugh
-De Wac” married Emma, daughter and heir of Baldwin FitzGilbert,
-who led some of King Stephen’s forces in the battle of
-Lincoln and refused to desert his king. Hugh founded the
-abbey of Bourn in 1138 on the site of an older building of the
-eighth or ninth century.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus8">
-<img src="images/illus8.jpg" width="500" height="650" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Bourne Abbey Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BOURNE</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FAMOUS NATIVES</div>
-
-<p>Six generations later, Margaret de Wake married Edmund
-Plantagenet of Woodstock, Earl of Kent, the sixth son of
-Edward I., and their daughter, born 1328, was Joan, the Fair
-Maid of Kent, who was finally married to Edward the Black<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>
-Prince. Their son was the unfortunate Richard II., and through
-them the manor of Bourn, which is said to have been bestowed
-on Baldwin, Count of Brienne, by William Rufus, passed back
-to the Crown. Hereward is supposed to have been buried in
-the abbey in which only a little of the early building remains.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>
-Certainly he was one of Bourn’s famous natives, Cecil Lord
-Burleigh, the great Lord Treasurer, being another, of whom it
-was said that “his very enemies sorrowed for his death.” Job
-Hartop, born 1550, who sailed with Sir John Hawkins and
-spent ten years in the galleys, and thirteen more in a Spanish
-prison, but came at last safe home to Bourn, deserves honourable
-mention, and Worth, the Parisian costumier, was also a
-native who has made himself a name; but one of the most noteworthy
-of all Bourn’s residents was Robert Manning, born at
-Malton, and canon of the Gilbertine Priory of Six Hills. He is
-best known as Robert de Brunne, from his long residence in
-Bourn, where he wrote his “Chronicle of the History of
-England.” This is a Saxon or English metrical version of
-Wace’s Norman-French translation of the “Chronicles of
-Geoffrey of Monmouth,” and of Peter Langtoft’s “History of
-England,” which was also written in French. This work he
-finished in 1338, on the 200th anniversary of the founding of
-the abbey; and in 1303, when he was appointed “Magister”
-in Bourn Abbey, he wrote his “Handlynge of Sin,” also a
-translation from the French, in the preface to which he has the
-following lines:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">For men unlearned I undertook</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In English speech to write this book,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For many be of such mannere</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That tales and rhymes will gladly hear.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On games and feasts and at the ale</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Men love to hear a gossip’s tale</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That leads perhaps to villainy</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Or deadly sin, or dull folly.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For such men have I made this rhyme</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That they may better spend their time.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To all true Christians under sun,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To good and loyal men of Brunn,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And specially all by name</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">O’ the Brotherhood of Sempringhame,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Robert of Brunn now greeteth ye,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And prays for your prosperity.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ROBERT DE BRUNNE</div>
-
-<p>Robert was a translator and no original composer, but he was
-the first after Layamon, the Worcestershire monk who lived
-just before him, to write English in its present form. Chaucer
-followed him, then Spenser, after which all was easy. But he
-was, according to Freeman, the pioneer who created standard<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
-English by giving the language of the natives a literary
-expression.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus9">
-<img src="images/illus9.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Station House, Bourne.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BLACKSMITH’S EPITAPH</div>
-
-<p>It is difficult to see the abbey church, it is so hemmed in by
-buildings, and it never seems to have been completed. At the
-west end is some very massive work. In the churchyard there
-is a curious epitaph on Thomas Tye, a blacksmith, the first six
-lines of which are also found on a gravestone in Haltham churchyard
-near Horncastle:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">My sledge and hammer lie reclined,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My bellows too have lost their wind,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My fire’s extinct, my forge decayed,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And in the dust my vice is laid,</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>
- <div class="verse indent0">My coal is spent, my iron’s gone,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My nails are drawn, my work is done.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My fire-dryed corpse lies here at rest,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My soul like smoke is soaring to the bles’t.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>There is a charming old grey stone grammar school, possibly
-the very building in which Robert De Brunne taught when
-“Magister” at the abbey at the beginning of the fourteenth
-century. The station-master’s house, called “Red Hall,” is a
-picturesque Elizabethan brick building once the home of the
-Roman Catholic leader, Sir John Thimbleby, and afterwards of
-the Digbys. Sir Everard Digby, whose fine monument is in
-Stoke Dry Church near Uppingham, was born here. Another
-house is called “Cavalry House” because Thomas Rawnsley,
-great grandfather of the writer, was living there when he raised
-at his own expense and drilled a troop of “Light Horse Rangers”
-at the time when Buonaparte threatened to invade England.
-Lady Heathcote, whose husband commanded them, gave him
-a handsome silver goblet in 1808, in recognition of his services.
-He died in 1826, and in the spandrils of the north arcade in
-Bourne Abbey Church are memorial tablets to him and to his
-wife Deborah (Hardwicke) “and six of their children who died
-infants.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV<br />
-<span class="smaller">ROADS FROM BOURNE</span></h2>
-
-<p>The Carr Dyke—Thurlby—Edenham—Grimsthorpe Castle—King’s Street—Swinstead—Stow
-Green—Folkingham—Haydor—Silk Willoughby—Rippingale—Billingborough—Horbling—Sempringham
-and the
-Gilbertines.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Bourne itself is in the fen, just off the Lincolnshire limestone.
-From it the railways run to all the four points of the compass,
-but it is only on the west, towards Nottingham, that any cutting
-was needed. Due north and south runs the old Roman road,
-keeping just along the eastern edge of the Wold; parallel with it,
-and never far off, the railway line keeps on the level fen by
-Billingborough and Sleaford to Lincoln, a distance of five-and-thirty
-miles, and all the way the whole of the land to the east
-right up to the coast is one huge tract of flat fenland scored
-with dykes, with only few roads, but with railways fairly
-frequent, running in absolute straight lines for miles, and with
-constant level crossings.</p>
-
-<p>One road which goes south from Bourne is interesting because
-it goes along by the ‘Carr Dyke,’ that great engineering
-work of the Romans, which served to catch the water from the
-hills and drain it off so as to prevent the flooding of the fens.
-Rennie greatly admired it, and adopted the same principle in
-laying out his great “Catchwater” drain, affectionately spoken
-of by the men in the fens as ‘the owd Catch.’ The Carr Dyke
-was a canal fifty-six miles long and fifty feet wide, with broad,
-flat banks, and connected the Nene at Peterborough with the
-Witham at Washingborough near Lincoln. From Washingborough
-southwards to Martin it is difficult to trace, but it is
-visible at Walcot, thence it passed by Billinghay and north<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span>
-Kyme through Heckington Fen, east of Horbling and Billingborough
-and the Great Northern Railway line to Bourne. Two
-miles south of this we come to the best preserved bit of it in the
-parish of <i>Thurlby</i>, or Thoroldby, once a Northman now a Lincolnshire
-name. The “Bourne Eau” now crosses it and empties
-into the River Glen, which itself joins the Welland at Stamford.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THURLBY</div>
-
-<p><i>Thurlby</i> Church stands only a few yards from the ‘Carr Dyke,’
-it is full of interesting work, and is curiously dedicated to St.
-Firmin, a bishop of Amiens, of Spanish birth. He was sent
-as a missionary to Gaul, where he converted the Roman prefect,
-Faustinian. He was martyred, when bishop, in 303, by order
-of Diocletian. The son of Faustinian was his godson, and was
-baptized with his name of Firmin, and he, too, eventually became
-Bishop of Amiens. Part of the church is pre-Norman and
-even exhibits “long and short” work. The Norman arcades
-have massive piers and cushion capitals. In the transepts are
-Early English arcades and squints, and there is a canopied
-piscina and a font of very unusual design. There is also an old
-ladder with handrail as in some of the Marsh churches, leading
-to the belfry. Three miles south is <i>Baston</i>, where there is a
-Saxon churchyard in a field. Hence the road continues to
-<i>Market Deeping</i> on the Welland, which is here the southern
-boundary of the county, and thence to Deeping-St.-James and
-Peterborough. <i>Deeping-St.-James</i> has a grand priory church,
-which was founded by Baldwin Fitz-Gilbert as a cell to Thorney
-Abbey in 1136, the year after he had founded Bourne Abbey.
-It contains effigies of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries.
-Shameful to say a fountain near the church was erected in 1819
-by mutilating and using the material of a fine village cross.
-Peakirk, with its little chapel of St. Pega, and Northborough
-and Woodcroft, both with remarkable houses built of the good
-gray stone of the neighbourhood, Woodcroft being a perfect
-specimen of a fortified dwelling-house, though near, are in the
-county of Northants.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">EDENHAM CHURCH</div>
-
-<p>The Corby-Colsterworth-and-Grantham Road leaves Bourne
-on the west and, passing through Bourne Wood at about four
-miles’ distance, reaches <i>Edenham</i>. On the west front of the
-church tower, at a height of forty feet, is the brass of an archbishop.
-Inside the church are two stones, one being the figure
-of a lady and the other being part of an ancient cross, both
-carved with very early interlaced work. The chancel is a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>
-museum of monuments of the Bertie family, the Dukes of
-Ancaster, continued from the earliest series at Spilsby of the
-Willoughby D’Eresbys, and beginning with Robert Bertie,<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>
-eleventh Lord Willoughby and first Earl of Lindsey, who fell
-at Edgehill while leading the Lincolnshire regiment, 1642.
-The present Earls of Lindsey and Uffington are descended from
-Lord Albemarle Bertie, fifth son of Robert, third Earl of
-Lindsey, who has a huge monument here, dated 1738, adorned
-with no less than seven marble busts.</p>
-
-<p>Two fine altar tombs of the fourteenth century, with effigies
-of knight and lady, seem to be treated somewhat negligently,
-being thrust away together at the entrance. The nave pillars
-are very lofty, but the whole church has a bare and disappointing
-appearance from the plainness of the architecture, and the ugly
-coat of yellow wash, both on walls and pillars, and the badness
-of the stained glass.</p>
-
-<p>On the north wall of the chancel and reaching to the roof
-there is a very lofty monument, with life-size effigy to the first
-Duke of Ancaster, 1723. East of this, one to the second duke
-with a marble cupid holding a big medallion of his duchess, Jane
-Brownlow, 1741, and on the south wall are equally huge
-memorials. In the family pew we hailed with relief a very
-good alabaster tablet with white marble medallion of the late
-Lady Willoughby “Clementina Elizabeth wife of the first Baron
-Aveland, Baroness Willoughby d’Eresby in her own right, joint
-hereditary Lord Chamberlain of England,” 1888.</p>
-
-<p>The font is transition Norman, the cylindrical bowl surrounded
-by eight columns not detached, and a circle of arcading consisting
-of two Norman arches between each column springing from
-the capitals of the pillars.</p>
-
-<p>The magnificent set of gold Communion plate was presented
-by the Willoughby family. It is of French, Spanish, and
-Italian workmanship. <i>Humby</i> church has also a fine gold
-service, presented by Lady Brownlow in 1682. It gives one
-pleasure to find good cedar trees and yews growing in the
-churchyard.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">GRIMSTHORPE</div>
-
-<p><i>Grimsthorpe Castle</i> is a mile beyond Edenham. The park,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span>
-the finest in the county, in which are herds of both fallow and
-red deer, is very large, and full of old oaks and hawthorns; the
-latter in winter are quite green with the amount of mistletoe
-which grows on them. The lake covers one hundred acres. The
-house is a vast building and contains a magnificent hall 110
-feet long, with a double staircase at either end, and rising to
-the full height of the roof. In the state dining-room is the
-Gobelin tapestry which came to the Duke of Suffolk by his
-marriage with Mary, the widow of Louis XII. of France. Here,
-too, are several Coronation chairs, the perquisites of the Hereditary
-Grand Chamberlain. The Willoughby d’Eresby family
-have discharged this office ever since 1630 in virtue of descent
-from Alberic De Vere, Earl of Oxford, Grand Chamberlain to
-Henry I., but in 1779, on the death of the fourth Duke of
-Ancaster, the office was adjudged to be the right of both his
-sisters, from which time the Willoughby family have held it
-conjointly with the Earl of Carrington and the Marquis of
-Cholmondeley. Among the pictures are several Holbeins. The
-manor of Grimsthorpe was granted to William, the ninth
-Lord Willoughby, by Henry VIII. on his marriage with Mary
-de Salinas, a Spanish lady in attendance on Katharine of Aragon,
-and it was their daughter Katherine who became Duchess of
-Suffolk and afterwards married Richard Bertie.</p>
-
-<p>Just outside Grimsthorpe Park is the village of <i>Swinstead</i>, in
-whose church is a large monument to the last Duke of Ancaster,
-1809, and an effigy of one of the numerous thirteenth century
-crusaders. Somehow one never looks on the four crusades of
-that century as at all up to the mark in interest and importance
-of the first and third under Godfrey de Bouillon and Cœur de
-Lion in the eleventh and twelfth centuries; as for the second
-(St. Bernard’s) that was nothing but a wretched muddle all
-through.</p>
-
-<p>Two miles further on is <i>Corby</i>, where the market cross remains,
-but not the market. The station on the Great Northern main
-line is about five miles east of Woolsthorpe, Sir Isaac Newton’s
-birthplace and early home.</p>
-
-<p>I think the most remarkable of the Bourne roads is the Roman
-“Kings Street,” which starts for the north and, after passing on
-the right the fine cruciform church of <i>Morton</i> and then the graceful
-spire of <i>Hacconby</i>, a name of unmistakable Danish origin,
-sends first an offshoot to the right to pass through the fens to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span>
-Heckington, and three or four miles further on another to the
-left to run on the higher ground to Folkingham, whilst it keeps
-on its own rigidly straight course to the Roman station on the
-ford of the river Slea, passing through no villages all the way,
-and only one other Roman station which guarded a smaller ford
-at <i>Threckingham</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">STOW GREEN, ALGAR AND MORCAR</div>
-
-<p>This place is popularly supposed to be named from the three
-Danish kings who fell in the battle at Stow Green, between
-Threckingham and Billingborough, in 870; but the fine recumbent
-figures of Judge Lambert de Treckingham, 1300, and a
-lady of the same family, and the fact that the Threckingham
-family lived here in the fourteenth century points to a less
-romantic origin of the name. The names of the Victors, Earl
-Algar and Morcar, or Morkere, Lord of Bourne, survive in
-‘Algarkirk’ and ‘Morkery Wood’ in South Wytham.</p>
-
-<p><i>Stow Green</i> had one of the earliest chartered fairs in the kingdom.
-It was held in the open, away from any habitation. Like
-Tan Hill near Avebury, and St. Anne de Palue in Brittany, and
-Stonehenge, all originally were probably assembling-places for
-fire-worship, for tan = fire.</p>
-
-<p>But as we go to-day from Bourne to Sleaford, we shall not
-use the Roman road for more than the first six miles, but take
-then the off-shoot to the left, and passing <i>Aslackby</i>, where, in
-the twelfth century, as at Temple-Bruer, the Templars had one
-of their round churches, afterwards given to the Hospitallers,
-come to the little town of <i>Folkingham</i>, which had been granted
-by the Conqueror to Gilbert de Gaunt or Ghent, Earl of Lincoln.</p>
-
-<p>He was the nephew of Queen Matilda, and on none of his followers,
-except Odo Bishop of Bayeux, did the Conqueror bestow
-his favours with a more liberal hand; for we read that he gave
-him 172 Lordships of which 113 were in Lincolnshire. He made
-his seat at Folkingham, but, having lands in Yorkshire, he was
-a benefactor to St. Mary’s Abbey, York, at the same time that
-he restored and endowed Bardney Abbey after its destruction
-by the Danes under Inguar and Hubba.</p>
-
-<p>The wide street seems to have been laid out for more people
-than now frequent it. The church is spacious and lofty, with
-a fine roof and singularly rich oak screen and pulpit, into which
-the rood screen doorway opens. It was well restored about
-eighty years ago, by the rector, the Rev. T. H. Rawnsley, who was
-far ahead of his time in the reverend spirit with which he handled<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-old architecture. The neighbouring church of <i>Walcot</i> has a
-fine fourteenth century oak chest, similar to one at Hacconby.
-Three and a half miles further on we come to <i>Osbournby</i>, with a
-quite remarkable number of old carved bench-ends and some
-beautiful canopied Sedilia. Another Danish village, <i>Aswardby</i>—originally,
-I suppose, Asgarby, one can fancy a hero called
-‘Asgard the Dane’ but hardly Asward—has a fine house and
-park, sold by one of the Sleaford Carr family to Sir Francis
-Whichcote in 1723.</p>
-
-<p>Four miles west of Aswardby is the village of <i>Haydor</i> (Norse,
-heide = heath). Here, in the north aisle of the church, which
-has a tall tower and spire, is some very good stained glass. It
-was given by Geoffrey le Scrope, who was Prebend of Haydor
-1325 to 1380, and much resembles the fine glass in York Minster,
-which was put in in 1338. In this parish is the old manor of
-Culverthorpe, belonging to the Houblon family. It has a very
-fine drawing-room and staircase and a painted ceiling.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SILK-WILLOUGHBY</div>
-
-<p>We must now come back to the Sleaford road which, a couple
-of miles beyond Aswardby Park, turns sharp to the right for
-<i>Silk-Willoughby</i>, or Silkby cum Willoughby. Here we have a
-really beautiful church, with finely proportioned tower and
-spire of the Decorated period. The Norman font is interesting
-and the old carved bench-ends, and so is the large base
-of a wayside cross in the village, with bold representations of
-the four Evangelists, each occupying the whole of one side.
-Three miles further we reach Sleaford.</p>
-
-<p>One of the features of the county is the number of roads it
-has running north and south in the same direction as the Wolds.
-The Roman road generally goes straightest, though at times
-the railway line, as for instance between Bourne and Spalding,
-or between Boston and Burgh, takes an absolute bee line which
-outdoes even the Romans.</p>
-
-<p>We saw that the two roads going north from Bourne sloped
-off right and left of the “Kings Street.” That on the left or
-western side keeps a parallel course to Sleaford, but that on the
-right, after reaching <i>Horbling</i>, diverges still further to the east
-and makes for <i>Heckington</i>. These two places are situated
-about six miles apart, and it is through the Horbling and Heckington
-fens that the only two roads which run east and west
-in all South Lincolnshire make their way. They both start
-from the Grantham and Lincoln Road at Grantham and at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span>
-Honington, the former crossing the “Kings Street” at Threckingham,
-and thence to Horbling fen, the latter passing by
-Sleaford and Heckington. Both of these roads curve towards
-one another when they have passed the fens, and, uniting near
-Swineshead, make for Boston and the Wash. The whole of
-the land in South Lincolnshire slopes from west to east, falling
-between Grantham and Boston about 440 feet, but really this
-fall takes place almost entirely in the first third of the way on
-the western side of “The Roman Street” which was cleverly
-laid out on the Fen-side fringe of the higher ground. The
-road from Bourne to Heckington East of the “Street” is absolutely
-on the fen level and the railway goes parallel to it, between
-the road and the Roman ‘Carr Dyke.’ Thus we have a Roman
-road, a Roman canal, two modern roads and a railway, all
-running side by side to the north.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">RIPPINGALE</div>
-
-<p>The Heckington road, after leaving the “Street,” passes
-through <i>Dunsby</i> and <i>Dowsby</i>, where there is an old Elizabethan
-house once inhabited by the Burrell family. <i>Rippingale</i> lies
-off to the left between the two and has in its church a rood screen
-canopy but no screen, which is very rare, and a large number
-of old monuments from the thirteenth century onwards, the
-oldest being two thirteenth century knights in chain mail of
-the family of Gobaud, who lived at the Hall, now the merest
-ruin, where they were succeeded by the Bowet, Marmion,
-Haslewood and Brownlow families. An effigy of a deacon
-with the open book of the Gospels has this unusual inscription,
-“Ici git Hwe Geboed le palmer le fils Jhoan Geboed. Millᵒ 446
-Prees pur le alme.” It is interesting to find here a fifteenth
-century monument to a Roger de Quincey. Was he, I wonder,
-an ancestor of the famous opium eater? There is in the pavement
-a Marmion slab of 1505. The register records the death
-in July, 1815, of “the Lincolnshire Giantess” Anne Hardy,
-aged 16, height 7 ft. 2 in. The Brownlow family emigrated
-hence to Belton near Grantham. They had another Manor
-House at <i>Great Humby</i>, which is just half-way between Rippingale
-and Belton, of which the little brick-built domestic chapel
-now serves as a church. As we go on we notice that the whole
-of the land eastwards is a desolate and dreary fen, which extends
-from the Welland in the south to the Witham near Lincoln.
-Of this Fenland, the Witham, when it turns southwards, forms the
-eastern boundary, and alongside of it goes the Lincoln and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span>
-Boston railway, while the line from Bourne viâ Sleaford and on
-to Lincoln forms the western boundary. I use the term ‘fen’
-in the Lincolnshire sense for an endless flat stretch of black
-corn-land without tree or hedge, and intersected by straight-cut
-dykes or drains in long parallels. This is the winter aspect;
-in autumn, when the wind blows over the miles of ripened corn,
-the picture is a very different one.</p>
-
-<p>It is curious that on the Roman road line all the way from
-the Welland to the Humber so few villages are found, whilst
-on the roads which skirt the very edge of the fen from Bourne
-to Heckington and then north again from Sleaford to Lincoln,
-villages abound.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus10">
-<img src="images/illus10.jpg" width="500" height="525" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Sempringham.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A LONG TRUDGE</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SEMPRINGHAM</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MONK AND NUN</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ST. GILBERT</div>
-
-<p>I once walked with an Undergraduate friend on a winter’s
-day from Uppingham to Boston, about 57 miles, the road led
-pleasantly at first through Normanton, Exton and Grimsthorpe
-Parks, in the last of which the mistletoe was at its best;
-but when we got off the high ground and came to Dunsby and
-Dowsby the only pleasure was the walking, and as we reached
-Billingborough and Horbling, about 30 miles on our way, and
-had still more than twenty to trudge and in a very uninviting
-country, snow began to fall, and then the pleasure went out of
-the walking. By the time we reached Boston it was four inches
-deep. It had been very heavy going for the last fourteen miles,
-and never were people more glad to come to the end of their
-journey. Neither of us ever felt any great desire to visit that
-bit of Lincolnshire again; and yet, under less untoward circumstances,
-there would have been something to stop for at <i>Billingborough</i>
-with its lofty spire, its fine gable-crosses, and great west
-window, and at the still older small cruciform church at <i>Horbling</i>,
-exhibiting work of every period but Saxon, but most of which,
-owing to bad foundations, has had to be at different times taken
-down and rebuilt. It contains a fine fourteenth century monument
-to the De la Maine family. Even more interesting would
-it have been to see the remains of the famous priory church at
-<i>Sempringham</i>, a mile and a half south of Billingborough, for
-Sempringham was the birthplace of a remarkable Englishman.
-Gilbert, eldest son of a Norman knight and heir to a large estate,
-was born in 1083; he was deformed, but possessing both wit and
-courage he travelled on the Continent. Later in life he was
-Chaplain to Bishop Alexander of Lincoln, who built Sleaford
-Castle in 1137, and Rector of Sempringham, and Torrington,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span>
-near Wragby. Being both wealthy and devoted to the church,
-he, with the Bishop’s approval, applied in the year 1148 to
-Pope Eugenius III. for a licence to found a religious house to
-receive both men and women; this was granted him, and so he
-became the founder of the only pure English order of monks
-and nuns, called after him, <i>the Gilbertines</i>. Eugenius III.
-suffered a good deal at the hands of the Italians, who at that
-time were led by Arnold of Brescia, the patriotic disciple of
-Abelard, insomuch that he was constrained to live at Viterbo,
-Rome not being a safe place for him; but he seems to have
-thought rather well of the English, for he it was who picked out<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
-the monk, Nicolas Breakspeare, from St. Alban’s Abbey and
-promoted him to be Papal legate at the Court of Denmark,
-which led eventually to his becoming Pope Adrian IV., the only
-Englishman who ever reached that dignity. The elevation
-does not seem to have improved his character, as his abominable
-cruelty to the above-mentioned Arnold of Brescia indicates.
-Eugenius, however, is not responsible for this, and at Gilbert’s
-request he instituted a new order in which monks following the
-rules of St. Augustine were to live under the same roof with nuns
-following the rules of St. Benedict. Their distinctive dress was
-a black cassock with a white hood, and the canons wore beards.
-What possible good Gilbert thought could come of this new
-departure it is difficult to guess. Nowadays we have some
-duplicate public schools where boys and girls are taught together
-and eat and play together, and it is not unlikely that the
-girls gain something of stability from this, and that their presence
-has a useful and far-reaching effect upon the boys, besides
-that obvious one which is conveyed in the old line</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Emollit mores nec sinit esse feros;”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">but these monks and nuns never saw one another except at some
-very occasional service in chapel; even at Mass, though they
-might hear each other’s voices in the canticles, they were parted
-by a wall and invisible to each other, and as they thus had no
-communication with one another they might, one would think,
-have just as well been in separate buildings. Gilbert thought
-otherwise. He was a great educator, and especially had given
-much thought to the education of women, at all events he believed
-that the plan worked well, for he increased his houses
-to the number of thirteen, which held 1,500 nuns and 700 canons.
-Most of these were in Lincolnshire, and all were dissolved by
-Henry VIII. Gilbert was certainly both pious and wise, and
-being a clever man, when Bishop Alexander moved his Cistercians
-from Haverholme Priory to Louth Park Abbey, because
-they suffered so much at Haverholme from rheumatism, and
-handed over the priory, a chilly gift, to the Gilbertines, their
-founder managed to keep his Order there in excellent health.
-He harboured, as we know, Thomas à Becket there in 1164,
-and got into trouble with Henry II. for doing so. He was over
-80 then, but he survived it and lived on for another five and
-twenty years, visiting occasionally his other homes at Lincoln,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span>
-Alvingham, Bolington, Sixhills, North Ormsby, Catley, Tunstal
-and Newstead, and died in 1189 at the age of 106. Thirteen
-years later he was canonised by Pope Innocent III., and his
-remains transferred to Lincoln Minster, where he became
-known as St. Gilbert of Sempringham. Part of the nave of
-his priory at Sempringham is now the Parish Church; it stands
-on a hill three-quarters of a mile from <i>Pointon</i>, where is the
-vicarage and the few houses which form the village. Much
-of the old Norman work was unhappily pulled down in 1788,
-but a doorway richly carved and an old door with good iron
-scroll-work is still there. At the time of the dissolution the
-priory, which was a valuable one, being worth £359 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>,
-equal to £3,000 nowadays, was given to Lord Clinton. Campden,
-300 years ago, spoke of “Sempringham now famous for the
-beautiful house built by Edward Baron Clinton, afterwards
-Earl of Lincoln,” the same man to whom Edward VI. granted
-Tattershall. Of this nothing is left but the garden wall, and
-Marrat, writing in 1815, says: “At this time the church stands
-alone, and there are but five houses in the parish, which are two
-miles from the church and in the fen.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V<br />
-<span class="smaller">SOUTH-WEST LINCOLNSHIRE AND ITS RIVERS</span></h2>
-
-<p>The Glen—Burton Coggles—Wilsthorpe—The Eden—Verdant Green—Irnham
-Manor and Church—The Luttrell Tomb—Walcot—Somerby—Ropsley—Castle
-Bytham—The Witham—Colsterworth—The
-Newton Chapel—Sir Isaac Newton—Stoke Rochford—Great Ponton—Boothby
-Bagnell—A Norman House.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>I have said that the whole of the county south of Lincoln
-slopes from west to east, the slope for the first few miles being
-pretty sharp. The only exception to the rule is in the tract
-on the west of the county, which lies north of the Grantham
-and Nottingham road, between the Grantham to Lincoln
-ridge and the western boundary of the county. This tract is
-simply the flat wide-spread valley of the Rivers Brant and
-Witham, which all slopes gently to the north. North Lincolnshire
-rivers run to the Humber; these are the Ancholme and the
-Trent; but there is a peculiarity about the rivers in South
-Lincolnshire; for though the Welland runs a consistent course
-eastward to the Wash, and is joined not far from its mouth by
-the River Glen, that river and the Witham each run very devious
-courses before they find the Eastern Sea. The Glen flowing
-first to the south then to the north and north-east, the Witham
-flowing first to the north and then to the south with an easterly
-trend to Boston Haven.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE GLEN AND THE EDEN</div>
-
-<p>Both these streams are of considerable length, the course
-of the Glen measured without its windings being five and thirty
-miles, and that of the Witham as much again.</p>
-
-<p>All the other streams which go from the ridge drain eastwards
-into the fens, and they effectually kept the fens under<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span>
-water until the Romans cut the Carr Dyke, intercepting the
-water from the hills and taking it into the river.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">IRNHAM</div>
-
-<p>To follow the “Glen” from its source in the high ground
-between Somerby and Boothby Pagnell to its most southerly
-point two miles below Braceborough, will take us through a
-very pleasant country. A tributary, the first of many, runs
-in from <i>Bassingthorpe</i>, whose church, like that of <i>Burton Coggles</i>,
-three miles to the south, is dedicated to St. Thomas of Canterbury.
-A beautiful little house, built here by the Grantham
-wool merchant, Thomas Coney, in 1568, has a counterpart at
-Ponton in the immediate neighbourhood, where Antony Ellys,
-also a merchant of the staple at Calais, built himself a charming
-little Tudor house about the same time. Augmented by the
-Bassingthorpe brook, the Glen goes on past <i>Bitchfield</i>, <i>Burton-Coggles</i>
-and <i>Corby</i>, and on between <i>Swayfield</i> and <i>Swinstead</i> to
-<i>Creeton</i>, where are to be seen many stone coffins, probably of
-the monks of Vaudey Abbey in Grimsthorpe Park, a corruption
-of Valdei (Vallis dei or God’s Vale). It then winds along by
-<i>Little Bytham</i>, and, passing <i>Careby</i> and <i>Carlby</i>, gets into a plain
-country, and turns north near Shillingthorpe Hall. The last
-place it sees before entering the region of the Bedford Levels is
-<i>Gretford</i>. But near the church of <i>Wilsthorpe</i>—in which is the
-effigy of a thirteenth century knight with the arms of the Wake
-family, who claim descent from the famous Hereward the
-Wake—we find another stream joining the Glen to help it on
-its straight-cut course through Deeping fen. We may well
-spend an afternoon in tracing this stream from its source some
-sixteen miles away. It flows all the way through a valley of
-no great width, and, with the exception of <i>Edenham</i>, undistinguished
-by any villages. A purely rustic stream, it is known
-as the Eden, though it has no name on the maps, and its only
-distinction since it left its source near Humby is that it divides
-the villages of <i>Lenton</i> or <i>Lavington</i>, where the author of “Verdant
-Green,” Rev. E. Bradley, best known as “Cuthbert Bede,”
-was once rector, and <i>Ingoldsby</i>, the village of Ingold or Ingulph,
-the Dane, which, however, has nothing to do with the well-known
-“Ingoldsby Legends.” A little to the south of Ingoldsby
-are the prettily named villages <i>Irnham</i>, <i>Kirkby-Underwood</i>, and
-<i>Rippingale</i>; of these <i>Irnham</i> has a picturesque Tudor hall in
-a fine park. This was built in 1510 by Richard Thimelby in
-the form of the letter L; the north wing was mostly destroyed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span>
-by fire in 1887, but the great hall remains, and there is a
-priest’s hiding-place entered by a hinged step in the stairs in
-which was found a straw pallet and a book of hours.</p>
-
-<p>The manor was granted by the Conqueror to Ralph Paganel
-along with others, <i>e.g.</i>, Boothby Bagnell and Newport Pagnell,
-and there was even then, in the eleventh century, a church
-here. This manor passed by marriage in 1220 to Sir Andrew
-Luttrell, Baron of Irnham, whence, through an heiress, it passed
-to the Thimelbys. In the church is a fine brass to “Andrew
-Luttrell Miles Dominus de Irnham,” 1390. He is in plate
-armour with helmet, and has his feet on a lion. In the north
-aisle, which is sometimes called the Luttrell Chapel, is a beautifully
-carved Easter sepulchre, the design and work being
-much like that of the rood screen in Southwell Cathedral.
-This was really a founder’s tomb of the Luttrell family, and stood
-east and west under the easternmost arch on the north side of
-the nave, whence it was most improperly moved in 1858 and
-should certainly be put back again. Doubtless it was used as
-an Easter sepulchre, and it is of about the same date, 1370,
-as those at Heckington, Navenby, and Lincoln. In the pavement
-of the north aisle is an altar slab, with the five consecration
-crosses well preserved.</p>
-
-<p>Since the Thimelbys, who followed the Hiltons, the house
-has been in possession of the Conquest, Arundel, and Clifford
-families. Not more than two miles to the east is a fine avenue
-leading to an Elizabethan house in the form of an E, called
-Bulby Hall. Later the stream goes through its one village of
-Edenham, passes near Bowthorpe Park with its great oak,
-fifty feet in girth, and so joins the river Glen at Kotes Bridge,
-near <i>Wilsthorpe</i>. Though the stream, Edenham excepted,
-has nothing particular on its banks, near its source are
-several interesting churches. <i>Sapperton</i>, which still exhibits
-the pulpit hour-glass-stand for the use of the preacher to insure
-that the congregation got their full hour; <i>Pickworth</i>, with
-chantry chapels at each end of the south aisle, a rood screen
-and a fine old south door; and <i>Walcot</i>, with its curious double
-“squint” from the south chantry and its beautiful little
-priest’s door, evidently once a low-side window, for its sill is
-two feet from the ground and is grooved for glazing. Here
-the economy of the Early English builders is shown by their
-use of the caps of an earlier Norman arcade to form the bases of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>
-their new pillars. Hard by is <i>Newton</i> with its lofty tower,
-<i>Haceby</i>, where once the Romans had a small settlement, and
-<i>Braceby</i>, which, with <i>Ropsley</i> and <i>Somerby</i>, complete an octave
-of Early English churches all near together.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SOMERBY</div>
-
-<p><i>Somerby</i> is within four miles of Grantham. The church contains
-a singular effigy, date 1300, of a knight with a saddled
-horse at his feet, and a groom wearing the hooded short cloak
-of the period, holding the horse’s head. Among the Brownlow
-monuments is the following inscription to Jane Brownlow,
-daughter of Sir Richard Brownlow of Humby, 1670,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">She was of a solid serious temper, of a competent</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Stature and a fayre compleaciton, whoes soul</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">now is perfectly butyfyed with the friution of</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">God in glory and whose body in her dew time</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">he will rais to the enjoyment of the same.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">It is curious to find notes on stature and complexion in an
-epitaph, but it was only lately that I saw a tomb slab in the
-church of Dorchester-on-Thames, where, in the tenth and
-eleventh centuries, some of our Lindsey bishops had their
-Bishop-stool (<i>see</i> Cap. <a href="#CHAPTER_XII">XII.</a>), on which it was thought worth
-while to record, <i>inter alia</i>, that Rebekah Granger who died in
-1753 was “respectful to her friends, and chearful and innocent
-in her deportment”; whilst close by is a somewhat minute
-description of the nervous idiosyncrasy of Mrs. S. Fletcher,
-who died in 1799 at the age of 29, ending with “She sank and
-died a martyr to excessive sensibility.”</p>
-
-<p>The feature of the church is the Norman chancel arch with
-double moulding. It is especially interesting as showing that
-the carving of the stones which form the arch was done not by
-plan but by eye; though the same pattern goes throughout,
-no two stones are exactly similar, and the pattern is larger or
-smaller as the mason cut it by guess, and has two zigzags or
-two and a half accordingly, and therefore the pattern in some
-places does not properly meet, but the whole effect is all right.
-The manor was held by the Threckingham family in the fourteenth
-century, and their arms are in one of the windows. In
-the feet of fines, Lincoln file 86, we have an agreement between
-Lambert de Trikingham and Robert, son of Walter le Clerk,
-of Trikingham, and Hawysia his wife, made at Westminster
-in the second year of Edward II. (1319). The lady with this
-charming name seeming to have afterwards married Sir Henry<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span>
-de Wellington, for in the thirty-second year of Edward III.
-(1359) another settlement is recorded of a dispute about Somerby
-Manor between Enericus de Welyngton Miles and Hawysia
-his wife on one side, and John Bluet and Alan Rynsley (one of
-the sixteen various spellings of Rawnsley) and his wife Margaret
-on the other, by which Alan and Margaret, for conceding their
-claims, receive 100 marks of silver. This and much other interesting
-information is to be found in a paper on The Manor
-of Somerby, by Gilbert George Walker, rector of the parish.</p>
-
-<p>In the fifteenth century John Bluet held the living, one of
-whose ancestors was probably the civilian with his feet on a
-fleece, whose fine recumbent effigy is in Harlaxton church.
-His daughter married Robert Bawde, whose brass is in the
-church, and their family were in possession till 1720. A large
-monument on the north wall commemorates Elizabeth Lady
-Brownlow, <i>née</i> Freke, whose son John built Belton House. She
-died in 1684. There is also a brass to Peregrine Bradshaw and
-his wife, who died in 1669 and 1673.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. William Stukeley, the famous antiquary, who was a Lincolnshire
-man, born at Holbeach in 1687, was, at one time,
-rector of Somerby.</p>
-
-<p><i>Ropsley</i>, two and a half miles to the east, shows some ‘Long
-and Short’ Saxon work at the north-east angle of the nave.
-The tower has a Decorated broach spire. At the south porch
-is the couplet,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Hac non vade via</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nisi dices Ave Maria.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BISHOP FOX</div>
-
-<p>The church has also a very notable little stained glass window
-with an armed figure of Johannes de Welby. In the church
-a curious broad projection from the east window of the north
-aisle forms a bridge to the rood loft. In the eyes of a Corpus
-man, like the writer, Ropsley is sacred as being the birthplace
-of Bishop Fox, who held successively the sees of Exeter, Bath
-and Wells, Durham and Winchester, and founded, or helped
-to found, the Grantham Grammar School near his old home
-in 1528, and also, in 1516, the College of Corpus Christi, Oxford.</p>
-
-<p>The Eden, whose course we have been tracing, having joined
-the Glen, crosses the Carr Dyke a mile beyond Wilsthorpe,
-after which the Glen becomes for a time simply a fen drain.
-The “Bourne Eau” goes into it and they proceed together with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span>
-many duck decoys marked in the 1828 map on each side of
-them till they come to the beginning of the great “Forty foot
-drain.” The Glen then turning east resumes more or less its
-river character, joins the Welland and goes seawards to the
-Wash, while the Forty foot going northwards parallel to and
-with the same purpose as the “Carr Dyke” but a few miles
-to the east of that famous work, receives the water from the
-many “Droves” which are all cut east and west and conveys
-them to the outfall in Boston Haven.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">PRIZE-FIGHTING</div>
-
-<p>We will now, without having to go outside the parallelogram
-of pleasant upland country which lies between the four towns
-of Stamford, Bourne, Sleaford and Grantham, find the sources
-of the river Witham and follow them through Grantham as far
-as Barkston and Marston, and thence through a totally different
-country to Lincoln. To begin at the beginning of things. Just
-at the junction of the three counties of Lincoln, Leicester, and
-Rutland, is a place near ‘Crown point’ called Cribbs Lodge.
-This commemorates the great boxing match between Molyneux,
-the black, and Tom Cribb, when, as the <i>Stamford Mercury</i> has
-it, “after a severe fight Molyneux was beat, and a reel was
-danced by Gully and Cribb amidst shouts of applause. There
-were 15,000 people present.” Gully afterwards became an M.P.</p>
-
-<p>Close to this spot, but in the county of Leicestershire, is the
-source of our river Witham, which takes its name from the
-little village of <i>South Witham</i> close by.</p>
-
-<p>The infant stream skirts the western side of Witham Common,
-which is something like 400 feet above sea level; nearly all its
-feeders come from still higher ground just outside the western
-edge of the county. A glance at the map will show with what
-remarkable unanimity all the streams which feed the South
-Lincolnshire rivers flow eastwards. Thus from Witham
-Common a brook goes through <i>Castle Bytham</i> to join the Glen
-at <i>Little Bytham</i>. The castle, of which only huge mounds now
-remain, was perched on a hill and divided by the brook from
-the village which covers the slope of the valley and is crowned
-by its very early Norman church, making altogether a very
-pretty picture. The church contains a fine canopied tomb
-of the Colville family, who owned the castle in the thirteenth
-century, and also in the tower is a ladder eloquent of the Restoration,
-with the inscription “This ware the May Poul, 1660.”
-Middleton, first Bishop of Calcutta, once held this living.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus11">
-<img src="images/illus11.jpg" width="500" height="525" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Witham, Boston.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">CASTLE BYTHAM</div>
-
-<p>The castle is of considerable interest. At the time of the
-Conquest the land belonged to Morcar, Earl of Northumbria,
-whose name survives in “Mockery or Morkery Wood” near
-South Witham, and was given by William the First to his
-brother-in-law Drogo, who began the castle, and afterwards to
-Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, William’s half-brother, the same who
-gave his name to “Bayons Manor.” When Odo began to show
-signs of contumacy Henry III. in person fought against and
-took the castle, and when dismantled gave it to the Colvilles,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span>
-but it was not completely destroyed until the Wars of the
-Roses.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">“PRAY AND PLOUGH”</div>
-
-<p><i>Little Bytham</i>, two miles to the east, is the station for
-Grimsthorpe, which is approached by a drive of three miles
-through the park. The church is dedicated to St. Medard,
-Bishop of Noyon, <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 531, a name familiar to us from the
-“Ingoldsby Legends.” It shows some Saxon “Long and Short”
-work and a good deal of Norman, notably a doorway with a
-curious tympanum ornamented with birds in circles. There
-is a small lowside window of two lights on the west and a little
-Norman window high up on the east of this doorway, which
-is at the south-east angle of the nave. The Norman tower is
-surmounted by a transition upper story and spire. The south
-porch and chancel arch are Early English and all round the
-chancel runs a most interesting stone seat, broken only by a
-fine canopied recess for a tomb. A good agricultural motto
-is cut on the stone base of the pulpit, “Orate et arate,” “pray
-and plough.” The motto is not inapt, for the land about here
-is mostly plough land, and one wonders it should be as good as
-it is, for the limestone is very near the surface, indeed the Great
-Northern line has stone <i>in situ</i> on each side of it about five
-feet high, which seems to have very few inches of soil above it,
-and this runs the whole way from Little Bytham to Corby, and
-again at Ponton the lines pass through it in a deeper cutting.</p>
-
-<p>But to return to our Witham river. This keeps due north
-by <i>North-Witham</i>, <i>Colsterworth</i>, <i>Easton</i>, <i>Stoke Rockford</i>, <i>Great
-and Little Ponton</i> to <i>Grantham</i>, a distance of ten miles. The
-church at <i>North Wytham</i> has a long nave, a narrow massive
-Norman chancel arch, and the floor descending to the east.
-In the 1887 restoration by Withers, a choir was formed out of
-the east end of the nave, and the chancel has been left as a
-monumental chapel for the Sherard family monuments of the
-seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, a decidedly clever arrangement.
-Robert Sherard seems to have been a scholar, for he
-occupied his thoughts when on his deathbed in writing twenty-six
-Latin elegiacs now on his brass and dated 1592.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">WOOLSTHORPE. THE NEWTON CHAPEL</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SIR ISAAC NEWTON</div>
-
-<p>From <i>Colsterworth</i> a road runs east past Twyford Forest,
-twelve miles to Bourne. In the church, which is both Norman,
-Decorated, and Perpendicular, there is the Newton chapel, with
-tombs of Sir Isaac’s parents and grandparents. This is modern,
-but is on the site of the old Woolsthorpe Manor chapel. It<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
-contains a sundial with an inscription, which says that it was
-cut by Newton when a boy of nine. His baptism appears in the
-Register thus:—“Isaac son of Isaac and Hanna Newton
-Janʳʸ 1, 1643.” She was an Ayscough, and married for her second
-husband the Rev. Barnabas Smith of North Wytham. On
-the left bank of the Witham, at a distance of half a mile, is the
-hamlet of <i>Woolsthorpe</i>, which must not be confused with the
-Woolsthorpe near Belvoir. The name was probably Wolph’s
-or Ulfsthorpe, and nothing to do with Wool. In Domesday
-Book it is Ulstanthorp. In Woolsthorpe Manor House Newton
-was born on Christmas Day, 1641. The window is shown from
-which he saw the apple fall and the Newton Arms—two cross-bones—are
-sculptured over the door. In the days of the Commonwealth
-he was at Bishop Fox’s school at Grantham, 1651-1656.
-His mother thought to make a farmer of him, but kindly fate
-took him to Cambridge when he was eighteen, and he spent more
-than four years there, taking his degree in 1665. The incident
-of the apple dates from 1666, the year of the great Plague and
-the Fire of London. Starting from this he deduced the reasons
-for the movement of the planets which Galileo in 1610 and
-Copernicus in 1540 had noted. He had by this time accumulated
-much of the material for his great work the “Principia,”
-and for the next thirty years he worked and wrote unceasingly.
-He was appointed Master of the Mint in 1695, and President
-of the Royal Society in 1703, and was knighted in 1705. He
-died in March, 1727. His own view of his life’s work may be
-given in his own words: “I do not know what I may appear
-to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only like a boy
-playing on the seashore, and diverting myself in now and then
-finding a smoother or prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the
-great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me.” After
-lying in state in the Jerusalem Chamber he was buried in Westminster
-Abbey, the Lord Chancellor, two dukes, and three
-earls being pall-bearers; his monument, near the entrance to
-the choir on the north side, shows a recumbent figure with the
-right arm on four folios named Divinity, Chronology, Optics,
-and Phil. Prin. Math. Above is a large globe showing the
-planets, etc., projecting from a pyramid, and on the globe the
-figure of Astronomy with a closed book, in a very pensive mood.
-Below is a bas-relief representing Newton’s various labours and
-discoveries.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span></p>
-
-<p>The inscription, written by Pope, is as follows:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="center">“Isaacus Newtonius<br />
-Quem Immortalem<br />
-Testantur Tempus, Natura, Coelum:<br />
-Mortalem<br />
-Hoc Marmor fatetur.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Nature, and Nature’s laws lay hid in night;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">God said let Newton be! and all was light.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>His statue is also in the ante-chapel of Trinity College, Cambridge,
-so eloquently described by Wordsworth as</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The marble index of a mind for ever</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Voyaging through strange seas of thought alone.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Newton is represented standing, and faces to the east, and of
-the other seated figures in the ante-chapel, which all face north
-or south, the latest addition and the finest work is Thornicroft’s
-statue of another Lincolnshire celebrity Alfred Lord
-Tennyson. This is an admirable likeness; the best view of it
-is from the east side.</p>
-
-<p>West of Woolsthorpe is <i>Buckminster</i>, just over the border,
-but remarkable for having once had a beacon on the tower.
-The circular chimney of the Watcher’s shelter still stands in
-the north-west angle. At Weldon near Kettering is a lantern
-fifteen feet high with a cupola put up 200 years ago to guide
-folk through Rockingham Forest. It is lit now on New Year’s
-Eve.</p>
-
-<p>From Colsterworth and Woolsthorpe we follow the river to
-<i>Stoke Rockford</i>, which is wedged in between the parks of <i>Stoke</i>
-and <i>Easton</i>. Both these manors were once held by the Rochfords
-and each had a separate church. Now one church serves for both
-and has a chapel for each manor, one on either side and extending
-the full length of the chancel. The Stoke Chapel has monuments
-of John de Neville 1320 and of the family of the present owners,
-the Turners. The Easton Chapel has a very fine one to the
-Cholmeleys, 1641, whose descendants still live in the old Elizabethan
-“Hall” with its triple avenue of limes which reach to
-the Great North Road. On the other side of the road the house
-at Stoke Park is also Elizabethan in style, but not in date, being
-by Salvin. It belongs to Christopher Turner, who also owns
-Panton Hall, near East Barkwith. The park has many fine<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span>
-trees and some very old thorns. In the chancel of Stoke Rochford
-is a brass to Henry Rochford, 1470, and on a brass plate
-this inscription to Oliver St. John and his wife Elizabeth Bygod,
-1503:—</p>
-
-<p>“Pray for the soil of Master Olyr-Sentjehn Squier, sonne
-unto ye right excellent hye and mightty pryncess of Som~sete
-g~ndame unto ou~ sovey~n Lord Kynge Herre the VII. and for
-the soll of Dame Elizabeth Bygod his wiff, whoo dep~ted from
-this t~nsitore liffe ye XII daye of June, i~ ye year of ou~ Lord
-MCCCCC and III.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE LADY MARGARET</div>
-
-<p>Thus Oliver was brother to Margaret Beaufort, Countess of
-Richmond, the mother of the King. She made a great mark
-on the history of her time, which was the fifteenth century.
-Daughter of the first Duke of Somerset and wife successively
-of the Earl of Richmond, who was half-brother to Henry VI.,
-and of Henry Stafford, son to the Duke of Buckingham, and of
-Lord Stanley, Earl of Derby, and mother, by her first marriage,
-of Henry VII., she was a magnificent patron of learning, for
-she endowed Christ’s College and St. John’s College, Cambridge,
-and founded the “Lady Margaret” professorships of Divinity
-both at Cambridge and at Oxford. Oliver’s mother had been
-the wife of Sir John Bigod, who with his father was killed on
-Towton field, near Leeds, in 1461, when, after a very bloody
-fight, the throne was secured to Edward IV., 28,000 Lancastrians,
-it is said, though this is hardly credible, having been left on
-the field of battle. Oliver, whom Leland describes as a big
-black fellow, died at Fontarabia, in Spain, but was buried at
-Stoke Rochford. It shows of how little account the spelling
-even of proper names was in the fifteenth century when we find
-here the brass plate on his daughter’s tomb inscribed, “Hic
-jacet Sibella Seyntjohn quondam filia Oliveri Sentjohn.” Perhaps
-there is something after all in the remark I heard a farmer
-make in the train at Boston: “Well, I reckon it is a clear gift,
-is spelling. My boy John, he’s nobbut eleven, and he can spell
-owt, but I’m noä hand at it mysen, and I reckon theer’s a
-stränge many is makes but a poor job on it.” In the museum
-at Peterborough there is a notebook of The Lord Chief Justice,
-Oliver St. John, Chancellor of the University of Cambridge,
-dated 1649, who earned for himself the undying gratitude of
-his own and all future generations by saving Peterborough
-Cathedral.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">OLIVER ST. JOHN</div>
-
-<p>Henry VIII., when urged to erect a suitable monument to
-Queen Katherine of Aragon in the cathedral, had said he would
-leave her one of the goodliest monuments in Christendom,
-meaning that he would spare the cathedral for her sake, but
-at the time of the civil war nearly all in the nature of ornamentation
-was destroyed, including the organ, the windows, the reredos,
-and the tombs and escutcheons of Queen Katherine herself, and
-of Mary Queen of Scots. After a time Oliver St. John, who had
-married twice over into the Cromwell family, as a reward for
-political services in Holland obtained a grant of the ruined
-minster, which was actually “propounded to be sold and demolished,”
-and gave it to the town for use as a parish church.
-It still remained in a sad state, but was being gradually put into
-order all through the nineteenth century, and at last the tower,
-which rested on four piers, all of which were found to be simply
-pipes of Ashlar masonry filled with sand, was taken down in
-1883 and solidly rebuilt, and the whole fabric put in order, the
-white-washed walls scraped, new stalls excellently carved by
-Thompson of Peterborough and a beautiful inlaid marble floor,
-the gift of Dean Argles, placed in the choir, which was prolonged
-westwards two bays into the nave, on the old Benedictine lines,
-till now the interior is fully worthy of the uniquely magnificent
-west front.</p>
-
-<p>At <i>Easton</i> there was a Roman station, halfway between <i>Casterton</i>
-and <i>Ancaster</i>. It was important as being the last roadside
-watering place, the Ermine Street passing through a waterless
-tract for the next twelve miles.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A NORMAN HOUSE</div>
-
-<p>A mile and a half to the east, the Great Northern line tunnels
-under Bassingthorpe hill at 370 feet above sea level, and, with
-the exception of one spot in Berwickshire, this is the highest
-point the line attains between London and Edinburgh. Immediately
-after this the line crosses the “Ermine Street,” which
-from Stamford to Colsterworth is identical with “the Great
-North Road,” but it splits off to the right a mile south of Easton
-Park, and keeping always to the right bank of the Witham,
-takes a straight course to Ancaster, leaving Grantham three
-miles to the left. After this parting, the North Road crosses
-to the left bank of the river and runs up to <i>Great Ponton</i>. The
-tall tower of the late Perpendicular church, built in 1519 by
-Anthony Ellys, merchant of the staple, of Calais, who lived in
-a manor house in the middle of the village, has Chaucer’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span>
-phrase, “Thynke and thanke God of all,” carved on three sides
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>Inside is a very early font, possibly Saxon; a large square
-bowl chamfered on the under side resting on a square stone.
-The tower is unlike anything in the county, but has counterparts
-among the churches of Somersetshire. The base moulding
-is enriched with carving, and the double buttresses have
-canopied niches excellently worked. The belfry has large
-double two-light windows under a carved hood-mould, as at
-Grantham and All Saints, Stamford. The gargoyles are remarkably
-fine, one shows a face wearing spectacles, and the
-whole is finished by a fine parapet and eight pinnacles.</p>
-
-<p><i>Little Ponton</i> is dedicated to St. Guthlac, which implies a connection
-with Croyland. Four miles east of Great Ponton is
-the village of <i>Boothby Pagnell</i>, where the Glen rises. Here is
-a twelfth century manor house, supremely interesting as being
-one of the very few surviving examples of Norman Domestic
-architecture. It is in the grounds of the modern hall. The
-lower story is carried on vaulted arches and the upper rooms
-were reached by an outside staircase. These are a hall and a
-chamber with a thick partition wall; each had a two-light
-window in the east wall, with window seats on either side. On
-the opposite side is a fine fireplace with a flat arch formed by
-joggled stones and a projecting hood, and a round chimney-shaft.
-The lower groined story had also two rooms, possibly
-the larger was a kitchen, and the other a cellar. The barrel
-roof of this has its axis at right angles to the larger room, the
-heavy vault-ribs of which are in two bays, with low buttresses
-outside to take the thrust of the roof. The building at St.
-Mary’s Guild, Lincoln, the hall at Oakham, and a somewhat
-similar building at the north-eastern boundary of Windsor
-Castle are of corresponding date to this. Robert Sanderson,
-who was expelled as a Royalist, but on the restoration was
-made Bishop of Lincoln, and whose saintly life is dwelt on in
-“Walton’s Lives,” was incumbent here from 1619 to 1660.
-The whole building has been beautifully restored by Pearson,
-thanks to the munificence of Mrs. Thorold of the Hall.</p>
-
-<p>The course of the river between Grantham and Lincoln is
-through a totally different country and may well claim another
-chapter.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI<br />
-<span class="smaller">GRANTHAM</span></h2>
-
-<p>Cromwell’s Letter—The George and the Angel—The Elections—Fox’s
-Grammar School—The Church of St. Wolfram—The Market Place.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The usual way of reaching Grantham is by the Great Northern
-main line—all expresses stop here. It is 105 miles from London,
-and often the only stop between that and York. After the levels
-of Huntingdonshire and the brief sight of Peterborough
-Cathedral, across the river Nene, the line enters Lincolnshire
-near Tallington, after which it follows up the valley of the
-river Glen, then climbs the wold and, just beyond Bassingthorpe
-tunnel, crosses the Ermine Street and runs down the
-Witham Valley into Grantham. Viewed from the train the
-town looks a mass of ugly red brick houses with slate roofs,
-but the magnificent tower and spire soon come into sight, and
-one feels that this must be indeed a church worth visiting.</p>
-
-<p>Coming, as we prefer to do, by road, the view is better; for
-there is a background of hill and woodland with the fine park of
-Belton and the commanding height of Syston Hall beyond to
-the north-east; and to the left you see the Great North Road
-climbing up Gonerby Hill to a height of 200 feet above the
-town.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE MANOR AND THE GEORGE</div>
-
-<p>Grantham has no Roman associations, nor did it grow up
-round a feudal castle or a great abbey; for, though a castle of
-some kind must once have stood on the west side near the
-junction of the Mowbeck and the Witham, the only proof of it
-is the name Castlegate and a reference in an old deed to
-“Castle Dyke.” That the town was once walled, the streets
-called Watergate, Castlegate, Swinegate, Spittalgate sufficiently
-attest, but no trace of wall now exists. The name Spittalgate<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span>
-points to the existence of a leper hospital, and I see from
-Miss Rotha Clay’s interesting and exhaustive book, “The
-Mediæval Hospitals of England,” that there have been two at
-Grantham—St. Margaret’s, founded in 1328, and St. Leonard’s
-in 1428.</p>
-
-<p>The flat pastoral valley watered by the Wytham, then called
-in that neighbourhood the Granta, as the Cam was at Cambridge,
-seems to have been its own recommendation to an agricultural
-people; and the fact that the manor was from the time of
-Edward the Confessor an appanage of the queen, and remained
-all through the times of the Norman kings and their successors
-down to William III. a Crown property, used as a dower for the
-queen consort of the time, was no doubt some benefit to it.
-Even when the town was bestowed, as, for instance, by King
-John on the Earl of Warren who also owned Stamford, or by
-Edward I., who knew Grantham well, on Aylmer Valence Earl
-of Pembroke, it was looked on as inalienable from the Crown to
-which it always reverted. In the reign of Edward III., on
-August 3, 1359, King John of France, captured at Poictiers,
-slept at Grantham on his way from Hereford to Somerton Castle
-in custody of Lord d’Eyncourt and a company of forty-four
-knights and men-at-arms. In 1420 Henry V. allotted it as a
-dower to Katherine of France. In 1460 Edward IV. headed
-the procession which brought from Pontefract to Fotheringay
-for burial the body of his father Richard Duke of York, who
-was killed at the battle of Wakefield. In 1461 he granted the
-lordship and the manor to his mother Cicely Duchess of York,
-and the grant, it is interesting to know, included the inn called
-“le George.”</p>
-
-<p>In 1503 Margaret Tudor, daughter of Henry VII., passed with
-her attendant cavalcade through Grantham on her way to meet
-her affianced bridegroom,<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> James IV., King of Scotland. She
-arrived in state, and was met by a fine civic and ecclesiastical
-procession which conducted her the last few miles into and out
-of the town, and she lay all “Sounday the 9ᵗʰ day of the monneth
-of Jully in the sayde towne of Grauntham.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">OLIVER CROMWELL</div>
-
-<p>In 1642 the town was taken by Colonel Charles Cavendish for
-Charles I., but his success was wiped out next year by Cromwell.
-Defoe in his “Memoir of a Cavalier,” writing of this, says “About<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span>
-this time it was that we began to hear of the name of Oliver
-Cromwell, who, like a little cloud, rose out of the East and spread
-first into the North, till it shed down a flood that overwhelmed
-the three Kingdoms.... The first action in which we heard
-of his exploits and which emblazoned his character was at
-Grantham.” Cromwell was with the Earl of Manchester, but
-was in command of his own regiment of horse. Where the
-battle actually took place is uncertain, but probably on Gonerby
-Moor. We happen to have Cromwell’s own account of the
-skirmish—see vol. I., p. 177, of ‘Cromwell’s Letters and Speeches,’
-by Carlyle. It was written to some official, and is the first letter
-of Cromwell’s ever published in the newspapers:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">“<i>Grantham, 13ᵗʰ May, 1643.</i></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">“<span class="smcap">Sir</span>,</p>
-
-<p>“God hath given us, this evening, a glorious victory over our
-enemies. They were, as we are informed, one and twenty
-colours of horse troops, and three or four of dragoons.</p>
-
-<p>“It was late in the evening when we drew out; they came
-and faced us within two miles of the town. So soon as we had
-the alarm we drew out our forces, consisting of about twelve
-troops whereof some of them so poor and broken, that you shall
-seldom see worse: with this handful it pleased God to cast the
-scale. For after we had stood a little, above musket shot the
-one body from the other; and the dragooners had fired on both
-sides, for the space of half an hour or more; they were not
-advancing towards us, we agreed to charge them; and, advancing
-the body after many shots on both sides, we came on with our
-troops a pretty round trot; they standing firm to receive us;
-and our men charging fiercely upon them, by God’s providence
-they were immediately routed, and ran all away, and we had
-the execution of them two or three miles.</p>
-
-<p>“I believe some of our soldiers did kill two or three men
-apiece in the pursuit; but what the number of dead is we are
-not certain. We took forty-five prisoners, besides divers of
-their horse and arms and rescued many Prisoners whom they
-had lately taken of ours, and we took four or five of their colours.</p>
-
-<p class="center">“I rest ...</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">Oliver Cromwell</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A fortnight later he writes from Lincolnshire to the Mayor
-and Corporation of Colchester announcing the victory of Fairfax<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span>
-at Wakefield, and asking for immediate supplies both of men
-and money. He tells them how greatly Lord Newcastle outnumbers
-Fairfax, infantry two to one, horse more than six to
-one. And he ends with:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Our motion and yours must be exceeding speedye or else it
-will do you no good at all. If you send, let your men come to
-Boston. I beseech you to hasten the supply to us:—forget not
-money! I press not hard; though I do so need, that I assure
-you the foot and dragooners are ready to mutiny. Lay not too
-much upon the back of a poor gentleman, who desires, without
-much noise, to lay down his life, and bleed the last drop to serve
-the Cause and you. I ask not your money for myself; if that
-were my end and hope,—viz. the pay of my place,—I would not
-open my mouth at this time. I desire to deny myself; but others
-will not be satisfied. I beseech you to hasten supplies. Forget
-not your prayers</p>
-
-<p>“Gentlemen, I am,</p>
-
-<p class="center">“Yours</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">Oliver Cromwell</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It was six years after this that Isaac Newton went to school
-in Grantham. Since the Restoration, but for the pulling down
-of the market cross by Mr. John Manners in 1779, which he was
-compelled to put up again the following year, nothing of note
-happened at Grantham till the Great Northern Railway came
-and subsequently Hornsby’s great agricultural implement works
-arose.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">PRICE OF VOTES</div>
-
-<p>Grantham had been incorporated in 1463, and received the
-elective franchise four years later, in the reign of Edward IV.,
-who more than once visited the town. The two families at
-Belvoir and Belton usually influenced the elections. But in
-1802 their united interests were opposed by Sir William Manners,
-who had bought most of the houses in the borough. But the
-Duke of Rutland and Lord Brownlow won. There were then
-two members, and the historian makes the naïve statement,
-“previous to this election it had been customary for the voters
-to receive two guineas from each candidate; at this election
-the price rose to ten guineas.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus12">
-<img src="images/illus12.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Angel Inn, Grantham.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE ANGEL</div>
-
-<p>The mention of “le George” inn in the grant of 1461 brings
-to mind the other ancient hostel opposite to it. The Angel
-stands on the site of an earlier inn which goes back to the twelfth<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span>
-century. King John is said to have held his court in it in 1203.
-On October 19, 1483, Richard III., having sent to London for
-the Great Seal, signed the warrant for the execution of Buckingham
-“in a chamber called the King’s Chamber in the present
-Angel Inn.” This was a fine room extending the whole length
-of the front, and now cut up into three rooms. There are two
-oriel windows in this, and two more in the rooms beneath, which
-have all curved and vaulted alcoves of stone. The present front
-dates from 1450, the gateway from about 1350, and shows the
-heads of Edward III. and Queen Philippa on the hood-mould.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>
-Next to it is a very pretty half-timbered house, figured in Allan’s
-“History of the County of Lincoln,” 1830. This and the Angel
-stand on land once the property of the Knights Templars of
-Temple-Bruer.</p>
-
-<p>Among the misdeeds of the eighteenth century are the pulling
-down of the George Inn and a beautiful stone oratory or guild
-chapel which stood near it. The Free Grammar school, founded
-by Bishop Fox 1528, still stands on the north side of the churchyard;
-but new buildings having been lately erected, the fine
-old schoolroom has been fitted up as a school chapel.</p>
-
-<p>Fox endowed his school with the revenue of two chantries,
-which before the dissolution belonged to the church of St. Peter.
-This church is gone, but doubtless it stood on St. Peter’s Hill
-on lands which had been granted by Æslwith, before the Conquest,
-to the abbey of Peterborough. Close by now is a good
-bronze statue of Sir Isaac Newton, and once there was an
-Eleanor cross, which, with those at Lincoln and Stamford, were
-destroyed by the fanatical soldiery in 1645.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ST. WULFRAM’S</div>
-
-<p>We now come to the great feature of the town, its magnificent
-church dedicated to St. Wulfram, Archbishop of Sens,
-680. We might almost call this the third church, for the first
-has entirely disappeared though its foundations remain beneath
-the floor of the eastern part of the nave, and the second has been
-so enlarged and added to, that it is now practically a different
-building; the tower, built at the end of the thirteenth century,
-belongs entirely to number three.</p>
-
-<p>The ground plan is singularly simple, one long parallelogram
-nearly 200 feet long and eighty feet wide, with no transepts,
-its only projections being the north and south porches and the
-“Hall” chapel used as a vestry.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE INTERIOR</div>
-
-<p>The second, or Norman, church, ended two bays east of the
-present tower, as is plain to see from the second pillar from the
-tower being, as is the case in Peterborough Cathedral, composed
-of a broad mass of wall with a respond on either side, the
-western respond being of much later character than the eastern.
-If the chancel was originally as it is now, it must have been as
-long as the nave, but the nave then perhaps included two of the
-chancel bays. At present the lengthening of the nave westward
-and the adding of the tower has made the nave twice the
-length of the chancel. At first the church had just a nave and
-a chancel, but, about 1180, aisles were added to the nave; to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>
-do this the nave walls were taken down and the eastern responds
-made, which we have just spoken of, and the beautiful clustered
-columns of the arcades, three on each side, set up. The aisles
-were narrow and probably covered by a lean-to roof. The
-arches springing from these columns would be round-headed,
-the pointed arches we see now being the work of a century later,
-when much wider north and south aisles were built; that on
-the north being on a particularly grand and massive scale. The
-westernmost bay on either side was made nearly twice the width
-of the others so as to correspond with the breadth of the tower,
-because one of the features of the church is that the two aisles
-run out westwards and align with the tower, and as the chapels
-on either side run out in the same way eastwards, as far as the
-chancel, we get the parallelogram above mentioned. As you
-enter the west door you are at once struck by the great size of
-the tower piers, and next you will notice the beauty of the
-tower arch, with its mouldings five deep. There is no chancel
-arch, and the church has one long roof from end to end. The
-aisles are very wide, and the pillars tall and slender, so that
-you are able to see over the whole body of the church as if it
-were one big hall. Curiously, the west window of the south
-aisle is not in the centre of the wall, and looks very awkward.
-Below it is a bookcase lined with old books. There are two
-arched recesses for tombs in the south wall, and there is a monument
-between two of the south arcade pillars, where a black
-marble top to an altar tomb is inscribed to Francis Malham de
-Elslacke, 1660. The east end of the north aisle is used as a
-morning chapel. A tall gilt reredos much blocks the chancel
-east window. When I last visited the church the north and
-south doorways being wide open gave the church plenty of
-wholesome fresh air, so different from the well-known Sabbath
-“frowst” which, in the days of high pews, and when a church
-was only opened on Sunday, never departed from the
-building.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE TOWER</div>
-
-<p>The north porch is very large, and has a passage-way east
-and west right through; it was built with the north aisle about
-1280, and was extended and a room built over it about 1325,
-when the head of the north doorway was much mutilated to let
-the floor in, at the same time a Lady chapel was constructed on
-the south side of the chancel, and with a double vaulted crypt,
-entered from outside, and also from the chancel, by a beautiful<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span>
-staircase with richly carved doorway. The rood screen was also
-built now, on which was an altar served by the chaplain daily
-at 5 a.m. “after the first stroke of the bell which is called Daybelle.”
-It is said that this bell is still rung daily from Lady Day
-to Michaelmas, but whether at 5 o’clock deponent sayeth not.
-The Lincoln daybell rang at 6. To reach this rood loft there
-is an octagon turret with a staircase on the south side at the
-junction of the nave and chancel. The south porch has also a
-staircase to the upper chamber, and the north porch has two
-turreted staircases, probably for the ingress and egress of pilgrims
-to the sacred relics kept there. Besides this there were at least
-five chantries attached to the church; the latest of these were
-the fifteenth century Corpus Christi chapel along the north side
-of the chancel, and the contiguous “Hall” chapel which dates
-from the fifteenth century. There is a good corbel table all
-along the aisles outside, and the west front is very fine and
-striking.</p>
-
-<p>But the great glory of the building is the steeple. We have
-seen that the nave runs up to the large eastern piers of the
-tower, and the aisles run on past each side of it as far as the
-western piers, and so with the tower form a magnificent western
-façade, examples of which might even then have been seen at
-Newark, which was begun before Grantham, and at Tickhill
-near Doncaster.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LINCOLNSHIRE SPIRES</div>
-
-<p>The tower, one of the finest bits of fourteenth century work
-in the kingdom, has four stages: first, the west door and window,
-both richly adorned with ballflower, reminiscent of the then
-recent work at Salisbury, to which North and South Grantham
-were attached as prebends. Then comes a stage of two bands
-of arcading on the western face only, and a band of quatrefoil
-diaper work all round. In the third stage are twin deep-set
-double-light windows and then come two very lofty double lights
-under one crocketed hood mould. Both this stage and the last
-show a very strong central mullion and the fourth, or belfry
-stage, has statued niches reaching to the parapet and filling the
-spandrils on either side of the window head. Inside the parapet
-at the south-west corner is a curious old stone arch like a sentry-box
-or bell turret. The magnificent angle buttresses are crowned
-by pinnacles, from within which rises the spire with three rows
-of lights and lines of crockets at each angle running up 140 feet
-above a tower of equal height. It seems at that distance to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span>
-come to a slender point; but we are told that when it was
-struck by lightning in 1797 a mill-stone was set on the apex
-into which the weathercock was mortised. There are ten bells,
-a larger ring than is possessed by any church in the county but
-one, viz., Ewerby near Sleaford.</p>
-
-<p>The date 1280 is assigned to the tower and north aisle because
-the windows of that aisle reproduce in the cusped circles of their
-head-lights the patterns of windows which had just a few years
-before been inserted in Salisbury chapter-house, and the west
-window of the aisle is a reduction to six lights of the great eight-light
-east window at Lincoln; but neither Lincoln great tower
-nor Salisbury spire had yet been built, and as they are the only
-buildings which are admitted to surpass Grantham steeple—the
-former in richness of detail, the latter in its soaring spire—and
-as Boston was not built till a hundred years later, nor Louth till
-200 years after Boston, it is clear that in 1300 Grantham for
-height and beauty stood without a rival. Now-a-days, of
-course, we have both Boston and Louth, and have them in the
-same county, and though Sir Gilbert Scott puts Grantham as
-second only to Salisbury among English steeples, and though
-in the grandeur and interest of its interior as well as in the
-profuse ornamentation of its exterior Louth cannot compete
-with it at all, yet there is in the delicate tapering lines of Louth
-spire and the beautiful way in which it rises from its lofty tower-pinnacles
-connected with their four pairs of light flying buttresses
-a satisfying grace and a beauty of proportion which no other
-church seems to possess; and when we look closely at the somewhat
-aimless bands of diaper work and arcading in the second
-stage of Grantham tower and then turn to the harmonious
-simplicity of the three stages in the Louth tower and the incomparable
-beauty of the belfry lights with their crocketed hood-mouldings
-which are carried up in lines ascending like a canopy
-to the pinnacled parapet, it seems to satisfy the eye and the
-desire for beauty and symmetry in the fullest possible measure.</p>
-
-<p>The church has not a great number of monuments; that to
-Richard de Salteby, 1362, is the earliest, and there is, besides
-the Malham tomb, one of the Harrington family, and a huge
-erection to Chief Justice Ryder, whose descendants derive their
-title of Harrowby from a hamlet close by. There are two
-libraries in the church, one with no less than seventy-four
-chained books. But a church forms a bad library, and many
-are gone and some of the best are mutilated, for as Tennyson
-says in “The Village Wife”:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The lasses ’ed teäred out leäves i’ the middle to kindle the fire.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Only here it was not the lasses but the mediæval verger.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus13">
-<img src="images/illus13.jpg" width="500" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Grantham Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span></p>
-
-<p>The bowl of the font has most interesting carved panels of
-the Annunciation, the Magi, the Nativity, Circumcision,
-Baptism, Blessing of Children, the Sacrifice of Isaac, and one
-other. The oak chancel screen and the parcloses by Scott, the
-reredos by Bodley, and the rest of the oak fittings by Blomfield,
-are all very good. The screen takes the place of the old stone
-screen which is quite gone. There is some excellent modern
-glass, and for those who understand heraldry, I might mention
-that in the east window were once many coats of arms of which
-Marrat gives a list with notes by Gervase Holles, from which
-I gather that the armorial glass was very fine, and that the arms
-of “La Warre” are “G. crusily, botony, fitchy, a lion rampant
-or.” It is pleasant to know this, even if one does not quite
-understand it.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE MARKET CROSS</div>
-
-<p>The extending of the church westwards encroached upon the
-open space in which stood the reinstated “Applecross,” at one
-time replaced by a quite uncalled-for stone obelisk in the market-place,
-opposite the Angel, with an inscription to say that the
-Eleanor Cross once stood there, which was not true, as that was
-set up in the broad street or square called “St. Peter’s Hill,”
-where now the bronze statue of Newton stands. In Finkin
-Street the town, until ten years ago, preserved a splendid chestnut
-tree, and other fine trees near the church add a beauty which
-towns now-a-days rarely possess.</p>
-
-<p>As at Lincoln, the Grey Friars first brought good drinking
-water to the town, and their conduit is still a picturesque object
-in the market square. It is on the south side, close to the Blue
-Sheep. Blue seems to have been the Grantham colour, for
-there are at least twelve inns whose sign is some blue thing—Bell,
-Sheep, Pig, Lion, Dragon, Boy, etc. Blue pill is almost
-the only thing of that colour not represented.</p>
-
-<p>The connection of Grantham with Salisbury is a very old one,
-as far back as 1091 the lands and endowments of the church
-were granted to St. Osmund, and by him given to his new
-cathedral at Old Sarum, the site of which is now being cleared
-in much the same manner as has been adopted at Bardney<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span>
-Abbey. The Empress Maud added the gift of the living and
-the right of presentation, so the prebendaries of North and
-South Grantham became the rectors; North Grantham comprising
-Londonthorpe and North Gonerby, and South Grantham
-South Gonerby and Braceby. Later, about 1225, vicars were
-appointed, but there was no vicarage, and the work was mainly
-done by the chaplain and the chantry priests. In 1713 the dual
-vicars were merged in one, and since 1870 the presentation has
-been in the hands of the Bishop of Lincoln.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE CHANTRIES</div>
-
-<p>We have spoken often of chantries. A chantry was a chapel
-endowed with revenues for priests to perform Mass therein for
-the souls of the donors or others. Hence we have in Shakespeare—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Five hundred poor I have, in yearly pay,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Who twice a day their wither’d hands hold up</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Toward heaven, to pardon blood; and I have built</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Three Chantries where the sad and solemn priests</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Sing still for Richard’s soul.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Henry V.</i> iv. i.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII<br />
-<span class="smaller">ROADS FROM GRANTHAM</span></h2>
-
-<p>Syston Hall—Belton—Harlaxton—Denton—Belvoir Castle—Allington—Sedgebrook—Barrowby—Gonerby-hill—Stubton—Hough-on-the-Hill—Gelston—Claypole.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The main South Lincolnshire roads run up from Stamford to
-Boston, to Sleaford and to Grantham; here of the six spokes of
-the wheel of which Grantham is the hub, three going westwards
-soon leave the county. That which goes east runs a very uneventful
-course for twelve miles till, having crossed the Bourne
-and Sleaford road, it comes to Threckingham, and in another
-six or seven miles to Donington where it divides and, after
-passing many most remarkable churches, reaches Boston either
-by Swineshead or by Gosberton, Algarkirk and Kirton, which
-will be described in the route from Spalding. The Great Road
-north and south from Grantham is full of interest, and passes
-through village after village, and on both the northern and
-western sides the neighbourhood of Grantham is extremely hilly
-and well wooded, and contains several fine country seats.
-Belvoir Castle (Duke of Rutland), Denton (Sir C. G. Welby),
-Harlaxton (T. S. Pearson Gregory, Esq.), Belton (Earl Brownlow),
-and Syston (Sir John Thorold).</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BELTON AND BARKSTON</div>
-
-<p><i>Syston Hall</i>, Sir John Thorold’s place, looks down upon Barkstone.
-It is grandly placed, and the house, which was built in the
-eighteenth century, contains a fine library. The greatest treasure
-of this, however, the famed Mazarin Bible, was sold in 1884 for
-£3,200. A mile to the south lies <i>Belton</i>. Here the church is
-filled with monuments of the Cust and Brownlow families, and
-the font has eight carved panels with very unusual subjects—a
-man pulling two bells, a monk reading, a priest with both hands<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span>
-up, a deacon robed, a monster rampant with a double tail, a
-man with a drawn sword, a naked babe and a rope, a man with
-a large bird above him, and a tree; also among the monuments
-is one of Sir John Brownlow, 1754, and one dated 1768 of Sir
-John Cust, the “Speaker.” In this a singularly graceful female
-figure is holding the “Journals of the House of Commons.”
-The monument of his son, the first Baron Brownlow, 1807, is by
-Westmacott. The family have added a north transept for use
-as a mortuary chapel. Here, amongst others, are monuments
-of the first Earl Brownlow, 1853, by Marochetti, and of his two
-wives with a figure emblematic of Religion, by Canova. The
-village is always kept in beautiful order; adjoining it is the
-large park with fine avenues and three lakes in it. The house,
-built in the shape of the letter H, was finished from Sir Christopher
-Wren’s designs in 1689, and the park enclosed and planted in
-the following year by Sir John, the third Baronet Brownlow,
-who entertained William III. there in 1695. His nephew, Sir
-John, who was created Viscount Tyrconnel in 1718, formed the
-library and laid out the gardens. In 1778 James Wyatt was
-employed to make improvements. He removed Wren’s cupola,
-made a new entrance on the south side, and raised the height of
-the drawing-room to twenty-two feet. All the rooms in the
-house are remarkably high, and the big dining-room is adorned
-with enormous pictures by Hondekoeter.</p>
-
-<p>Wonderful carvings by Grinling Gibbons are in several rooms,
-and also in the chapel, which is panelled with cedar wood.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ON THE WITHAM</div>
-
-<p><i>Barkston</i> is near the stream of the Witham, and is thence
-called <i>Barkston-in-the-Willows</i>; and ten miles off, on the county
-boundary near Newark, is <i>Barnby-in-the-Willows</i>, also on the
-Witham, which has arrived there from Barkston by a somewhat
-circuitous route.</p>
-
-<p>Barkston Church is worth seeing by anyone who wishes to
-see how a complete rood-loft staircase was arranged, the steep
-twelve-inch risers showing how the builders got the maximum
-of utility out of the minimum of space. The last three steps
-below appear to have been cut off to let the pulpit steps in.
-There is a similar arrangement at Somerby, where the steps
-also are very high. A very good modern rood screen and canopy,
-somewhat on the pattern of the Sleaford one, has been put up
-by the rector, the Rev. E. Clements. There are two squints,
-on either side of the chancel arch, one through the rood staircase.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>
-The church has a nave and a south aisle, and the plain
-round transition Norman pillars are exactly like those at Great
-Hale, but are only about one-half the height. The arches are
-round ones, with nail head ornament, and from the bases of
-these pillars it is clear that the floor once sloped upwards continuously
-from west to east, as at Colsterworth and Horkstow.
-The chancel arch is made lofty by being set on the stone basement
-of the rood screen. The transitional tower has a beautiful
-Early English window in the west front, and the Decorated
-south aisle has a richly panelled parapet; but the Perpendicular
-porch is not so well executed, and cuts rudely into two pretty
-little aisle windows, and a niche over the door. It has over it
-this rhyming inscription carved in stone.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus14">
-<img src="images/illus14.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Withamside Boston.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Me Thomam Pacy post mundi flebile funus</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Jungas veraci vite tu trinus et unus</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Dñe Deus vere Thome Pacy miserere.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">And under the capital of one of the doorway pillars is the line,
-rather difficult to construe, but in beautiful lettering:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Lex et natura XRS simul omnia cura.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The severe three-light east window has good glass by Kempe.
-The spire, a very good one, is later than the tower, and built of
-squared stones, different in colour from the small stones of the
-tower. Two half figures incised in bold relief on fourteenth
-century slabs, are built into the north wall, opposite the south
-door.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HONINGTON AND CAYTHORPE</div>
-
-<p>Keeping along the Lincoln road the next place we reach is
-<i>Honington</i>. The Early English tower of the church is entered
-by a very early pointed arch, the nave being of massive Norman
-work with an unusually large corbel table. There are the remains
-of a stone screen, and a canopied aumbry in the chancel
-was perhaps used as an Easter sepulchre. The chantry chapel
-has monuments of the Hussey family, and one of W. Smith,
-1550, in gown and doublet. An early slab, with part of the
-effigy of a priest on it, has been used over again to commemorate
-John Hussey and his wife, he being described on it as “A professor
-of the Ghospell,” 1587. To the south-east of the village
-is what was once an important British fort with a triple ditch,
-used later by the Romans whose camp at Causennæ on the
-“High Dyke” was but four miles to the east. Less than two
-miles brings us to <i>Carlton Scroop</i>, with a late Norman tower and
-Early English arcade, also some good old glass and a Jacobean
-pulpit. The remains of a rood screen and the rood loft steps
-are still there.</p>
-
-<p>A mile further on is one of the many <i>Normantons</i>, with Early
-English nave, decorated tower, fine west window, and Perpendicular
-clerestory.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FULBECK AND LEADENHAM</div>
-
-<p>Two miles on we come to <i>Caythorpe</i>, which is built on a very
-singular plan, for it has a double nave with a buttress between
-the two west windows to take the thrust of the arches which
-are in a line with the ridge of the roof. This forms the remarkable
-feature of the church interior. There are short transepts,
-and the tower rises above the four open arches. Over one of
-these there is a painting of the Last Judgment. There are fine<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span>
-buttresses outside with figures of the Annunciation and the
-Coronation of the Virgin, and one of our Lord on the porch.
-The windows are large. The spire is lofty but unpleasing, as
-it has a marked “entasis” or set in, such as is seen in many
-Lincolnshire and Northamptonshire spires, which hence are often
-termed sugar-loafed. Before its re-building, in 1859, after it
-had been struck by lightning, the entasis was still more marked
-than it is now. The singularly thin, ugly needle-like spire of
-Glinton, just over the southern border of the county near
-Deeping, has a slight set in which does not improve its appearance.
-A mile to the north the road passes through the very
-pretty village of <i>Fulbeck</i>. The dip of the road, the charming
-old houses, grey and red, the handsome church tower with its
-picturesque pinnacles, and the ancestral beauty of the fine trees,
-make a really lovely picture. Fine iron gates lead to the Hall,
-the home of the Fanes, an honoured name in Lincolnshire.
-Many of the name rest in the churchyard, and their monuments
-fill the dark church, which has a good Norman font. The tampering
-with old walls and old buildings is always productive of
-mischief, and, as at Bath Abbey, when, to add to its appearance,
-flying buttresses were put up all along the nave, the
-weight began to crush in the nave walls, and the only remedy
-was to put on, at great expense, a stone groined roof, which is
-the real <i>raison d’être</i> of flying buttresses, so here at Fulbeck,
-when they pulled down the chancel and built it up again with the
-walls further out, the consequence was that the east wall of the
-nave, missing its accustomed support, began to lean out eastwards.</p>
-
-<p>Another mile and a half brings us to <i>Leadenham</i>, where the
-east and west road from Sleaford to Newark crosses the Great
-North road. The fine tall spire is seen from all the country
-round, for it stands half way up the cliff. But this and the rest
-of the road to Lincoln is described in Chapter <a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">XIII.</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HARLAXTON AND DENTON</div>
-
-<p>If you go out of Grantham by the south-west, you should stop
-at a very pretty little village to the south of the Grantham
-and Melton road, from which a loop descends to an old gateway,
-all that is left of the old <i>Harlaxton</i> Manor, a pretty Tudor
-building now pulled down, the stone balustrades in front of it
-having been removed by Mr. Pearson Gregory to his large house
-a mile off, built on the ridge of the park by Salvin in 1845. The
-Flemish family of De Ligne lived in the old Hall in Jacobean<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>
-times, and their predecessors are probably represented by the
-fine but mutilated alabaster recumbent effigies now in the
-northern, or Trinity, chapel of the church. In the north-east
-angle of this chapel is a very graceful canopied recess on a bracket,
-much like those at <i>Sedgebrook</i>, about five miles off on the border
-of the county.</p>
-
-<p>The north aisle and nave are older than the tower and south
-aisle; and a curious staircase ascends at the east of the south
-aisle wall, from which a gangway crossed to the rood loft.</p>
-
-<p>There are many aumbries in various parts of the church,
-and a tall, Decorated font, with grotesque faces in some
-panels, and in others sacred subjects oddly treated, such as
-our Lord crowned and holding a Chalice. In the south aisle
-is an old oak post alms-box resembling one at Halton Holgate.</p>
-
-<p>A doorway leads out from the south side of the east end,
-an entrance probably to an eastern chapel. The two doorways,
-one on each side of the altar, at Spalding may have led to the
-same, or possibly to a vestry, as in Magdalen Chapel, Oxford.</p>
-
-<p>The spire has a staircase, passing curiously from one of the
-pinnacles. A very massive broken stone coffin, removed from
-a garden, lies in the south chapel. The fine row of limes, and
-the ivy-grown walls of old Harlaxton Manor, add to the beauty
-of this quiet little village, and a group of half-timbered brick
-buildings, said to be sixteenth century, though looking more
-modern, which are near the church, are a picturesque feature.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BELVOIR CASTLE</div>
-
-<p><i>Denton Manor</i>, the seat of Sir C. G. E. Welby, Bart., is just
-beyond Harlaxton, and there one might once have seen a fine
-old manor house, now replaced by a large modern hall of fine
-proportions; the work is by Sir A. W. Blomfield, good in design
-and detail, and containing a notable collection both of furniture
-and pictures. St. Christopher’s Well, a chalybeate spring,
-is in the park, and in the restored church are a good recumbent
-effigy of John Blyth, 1602, and a figure of Richard Welby,
-1713, with angels carefully planting a crown on his wig. After
-this the road passes into Leicestershire, so we turn to the right
-and in less than four miles, halfway between the Melton road
-and the Nottingham road, and more in Leicestershire than in
-Lincolnshire, we come to <i>Belvoir Castle</i>. The mound on which
-it stands is over the border and is not a natural height, but was
-thrown up on a spur of the wold as early as the eleventh century
-by Robert de Todeni, who thence became known as Robert de<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span>
-Belvedeir. Certainly the pile is grandly placed, and has a
-sort of Windsor Castle appearance from all the country round.
-It has been in possession of the Manners family now for four
-hundred years. The celebrated Marquis of Granby, a name
-well known in all the neighbourhood as a public-house sign,
-was son of the third Duke. He was “Col. of the Leicester
-Blues” in 1745, and General and Commander-in-Chief of the
-British contingent at Minden, where the English and German
-forces, under the Duke of Brunswick, defeated the French in
-1759, and he distinguished himself in battle in each of the three
-following years. The castle, destroyed by order of Parliament
-in the civil wars, was rebuilt in 1668, and again in 1801, but a
-fire having destroyed part of it in 1816 it was restored at the
-worst of all architectural periods, so that at a near view it does
-not fulfil the expectation raised by its grand appearance when
-seen from a distance. As at Windsor there is a very fine
-“Guard Room,” and many large rooms hung with tapestry
-or pictures, and a picture gallery of unusual excellence. The
-Duchess’s garden in spring is one of the finest horticultural
-sights in the kingdom. The greater part of the castle is most
-liberally thrown open daily to the public.</p>
-
-<p>Returning from Belvoir we can pass by Barrowby to join
-the Nottingham and Grantham road, which leaves the county
-at Sedgebrook, on either side of which are seen the churches
-of <i>Muston</i> and <i>East</i> and <i>West Allington</i>, where Crabbe, the poet,
-was rector 1789-1814. West Allington church stands in Mr.
-Welby’s park, and close by, a salt well is marked on the map.
-At <i>Sedgebrook</i> is a farm house which was built as a manor-house
-by Sir John Markham in the sixteenth century, when
-he was Lord Chief Justice of the King’s Bench. He it was
-who received the soubriquet of “The upright Judge,” on the
-occasion of his being turned out of office by Edward IV., because
-of his scrupulous fairness at the trial of Sir Thomas Coke, Lord
-Mayor of London.</p>
-
-<p>From Sedgebrook to <i>Barrowby</i> is three miles of level ground,
-and then the road rises 150 feet to the village, which commands
-a splendid view over the vale of Belvoir. Leaving this you
-descend a couple of miles to Grantham.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">GONERBY HILL</div>
-
-<p>At the outskirts of the town the road meets two others, one
-the northern or Lincoln road, and the other the north-western
-or Newark road. This is the Great North Road, and it starts<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span>
-by climbing the famous <i>Gonerby Hill</i>, the terror and effectual
-trial ground of motors in their earliest days, and described by
-“mine host” in <i>The Heart of Midlothian</i> as “a murder to
-post-horses.” The hill once gained affords a fine view eastwards,
-<i>Foston</i> and <i>Long Bennington</i> (which has a large church
-with a handsome porch, a good churchyard cross, and a mutilated
-market cross), are the only villages, till the road crosses the
-county boundary near <i>Claypole</i>, and runs on about four miles
-to Newark, distant fifteen miles from Grantham. Long Bennington
-is a mile north-east of Normanton Lodge, where Lincolnshire,
-Nottinghamshire, and Leicestershire touch.</p>
-
-<p><i>Stubton</i>, a couple of miles to the east, has a fine group of
-yew trees growing round the tomb of Sir George Heron, one
-of the family from Cressy Hall, Gosberton, I suppose, who built
-the hall now occupied by G. Neville, Esq.</p>
-
-<p>Between Stubton and the Grantham-and-Lincoln road are
-many winding lanes, by a judicious use of which you may escape
-the fate that overtook us of landing after a steep and rather
-rough climb from Barkstone at two farms one after the other,
-beyond which the road did not even try to go. If you have
-better luck you will reach the out-of-the-way parish church of
-<i>Hough-on-the-Hill</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HOUGH-ON-THE-HILL</div>
-
-<p>This, the last resting-place of King John, when on his journey
-to Newark where he died, has a church whose tower is singularly
-interesting, being akin to St. Peter’s at Barton-on Humber,
-and the two very old churches in Lincoln, and one at Broughton,
-near Brigg, and we may add, perhaps, the tower at Great Hale.</p>
-
-<p>The work of all these towers is pre-Norman, and it is not
-unlikely that the church, when first built, consisted of only a
-tower and two apses. At Hough, as at Broughton, we have
-attached to the west face of the tower a Saxon circular turret
-staircase, built in the rudest way and coped with a sloping top
-of squared masonry, of apparently Norman work. The tower
-has several very small lights, 12 to 15 inches high, and of various
-shapes, while the west side of the south porch is pierced with
-a light which only measures 8 inches by 4, but is framed with
-dressed stone on both the wall-surfaces. The two lower stages
-of the square tower, to whose west face the round staircase-tower
-clings, are all of the same rough stone-work, with wide
-mortar joints, but with two square edged thick string-courses
-of dressed stone, projecting 6 inches or more. The upper<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span>
-stage is of much later date. The Early English nave, chancel,
-and aisles are very high, and are no less than 20 feet wide,
-mercifully (for it was proposed to abolish them and substitute
-a pine roof) they still retain their old Perpendicular roofs with
-the chancel and nave timbers enriched with carving. The
-sedilia are of the rudest possible construction.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus15">
-<img src="images/illus15.jpg" width="500" height="575" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Hough-on-the-Hill.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A SAXON TOWER</div>
-
-<p>The staircase turret has two oblong Saxon windows, like those
-at Barnack, about four feet by one, in the west face, three small<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span>
-round lights on the north, and four on the south, one square
-and one diamond-shaped and two circular. The turret is of
-the same date as the tower, but appears to have been built
-on after the tower was finished; and it almost obscures the two
-little west windows of the tower, one on each side of it, and
-near the top. A round-headed doorway leads from the tower
-to the turret, inside which the good stone steps lead up to a
-triangular-headed door into the tower, where now is the belfry
-floor, from which another similar doorway leads into the nave.
-Close to the top of the old Saxon tower walls are very massive
-stone corbels for supporting the roof. The Newel post of the
-old tower is a magnificent one, being eighteen inches thick.
-This, where the upper stage was added, is continued, but with
-only half that thickness.</p>
-
-<p>There was once a porch with a higher pitched roof, as shown
-by the gable roof-mould against the aisle. On the stone benches
-are three of the solitaire-board devices, with eight hollows connected
-by lines all set in an oblong, the same that you see often
-in cloisters and on the stone benches at Windsor, where monks
-or chorister boys passed the time playing with marbles. It is
-a truly primitive and world-wide amusement. The natives of
-Madagascar have precisely the same pattern marked out on
-boards, seated round which, and with pebbles which they
-move like chessmen, they delight themselves, both young and
-old, in gambling.</p>
-
-<p>The church used to go with the Head-Mastership of Grantham
-Grammar School, seven miles off, and some of the Headmasters
-were buried here; one, Rev. Joseph Hall, is described as “Vicar
-of Ancaster and Hough-on-the-Hill, Headmaster of Grantham
-Grammar School, and Rector of Snelland, and Domestic Chaplain
-to Lord Fitzwilliam”—he died in 1814.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE WAPENTAKE</div>
-
-<p>It stands on a high knoll, whence the churchyard, which is
-set round with yew-trees, slopes steeply to the south. The
-Wapentake of Loveden takes its name from a neighbouring
-round-topped hill, and the old tower of Hough-on-the-Hill
-may well have been the original meeting-place; just as Barnack
-was, where the triangular-headed seat for the chief man is built
-into the tower wall. The term “Wapentake” means the taking
-hold of the chief’s weapon by the assembled warriors, or of the
-warriors’ weapons by the chief, as a sign that they swear fealty
-to him, and then the name was applied to the district over<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span>
-which a particular chief held rule. The native chiefs of India,
-when they come to a Durbar, present their swords to the King
-or his representative in a similar manner, for him to touch.</p>
-
-<p>Just south of Hough is the hamlet of <i>Gelston</i>, where, on a
-triangular green, is all that is left of a wayside cross, a rare
-thing in this county. Only about two feet of the old shaft is
-left and the massive base block standing on a thick slab with
-chamfered corners. This is mounted on three steps and is a
-very picturesque object.</p>
-
-<p>There are some two dozen Wapentakes within the county,
-some with odd names, <i>e.g.</i>, Longoboby; of these, eight end like
-Elloe in <i>oe</i>, which, I take it, means water.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">CLAYPOLE</div>
-
-<p>From Hough-on-the-Hill the byway to the Grantham and
-Newark road, with villages at every second milestone, runs
-through <i>Brandon</i>, where a small chapel contains a Norman door
-with a tympanum and a rather unusual moulding, very like
-one we shall see in the old church at Stow, and then through
-<i>Stubton</i>, to <i>Claypole</i>, close to the county boundary. The beautiful
-crocketed spire of this fine church is a landmark seen for
-miles; as usual, it is Perpendicular, and on an Early English
-tower, which is plastered over with cement outside and engaged
-between the aisles inside. It is a cruciform building, and in
-the Early English south transept are three beautiful sedilia,
-not at all common in such a position. The flat coloured ceiling
-of the nave is old, though, since the restoration by C. Hodgson
-Fowler in 1892, the high pitch of the roof over it has been reverted
-to, both on chancel and nave. The nave is large with
-four wide bays, supported on clustered pillars, the capitals being
-all different and all ornamented with singularly bold foliated
-carving of great beauty. The chancel arch exhibits brackets
-for the rood beam. The large clerestory windows were probably
-in the nave before the aisles were added. Another set
-of sedilia in the chancel are of the Decorated period, and most
-of the windows have flowing tracery. On the north side of
-the chancel is a Sacristy, containing an altar slab in situ with
-its five dedication crosses. The porch has a very deep niche
-over it, for a statue, and there is another niche at the east end
-of the nave; the fine Perpendicular parapet leading to it being,
-like the rest of the church, embattled. The screen is a good
-Perpendicular one, and the desk of the well-carved pulpit was
-once part of it, this now is oddly supported by the long stem of a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span>
-processional cross. The font, which is hexagonal, is of the
-Decorated period.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most unusual features in the church is to be found
-in the stone seats which surround the bases of the pillars in the
-south arcade. This is to be seen also at Bottesford and at
-Caistor.</p>
-
-<p>A short distance to the south-west of the church there was,
-until quite recently, a charming old stone bridge, over a small
-stream, but this has now, I regret to say, been superseded by
-one of those iron girder structures, so dear to the heart of the
-highway surveyor.</p>
-
-<p>In the church the hook for the “Lenten Veil” still remains
-at the end of the sedilia, and a staple over the vestry-door
-opposite.</p>
-
-<p>In pre-reformation days there was a regular “office” or
-service for the Easter sepulchre, in which the priests acted the
-parts of the three kings, the angel, and the risen Lord, at which
-time a line was stretched across the chancel to support the
-“Lenten Veil” which served as a stage-curtain.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">SLEAFORD</span></h2>
-
-<p>Ewerby—Howell—Use of a Stone Coffin—Heckington—Great Hale—Outer
-Staircase to Tower—Helpringham—Billinghay—North and
-South Kyme—Kyme Castle—Ancaster—Honington—Cranwell.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SLEAFORD CHURCH</div>
-
-<p>Six roads go out of Sleaford, and five railways. Lincoln,
-Boston, Bourne and Grantham have both a road and a railway
-to Sleaford, Spalding has only a railway direct, and Horncastle
-and Newark only a road. At no towns but Louth and Lincoln
-do so many routes converge, though Caistor, Grantham and
-Boston come very near. The southern or Bourne road we have
-traced from Bourne, so we will now take the eastern roads to
-Boston and Horncastle. But first to say something of Sleaford
-itself. The Conqueror bestowed the manor on Remigius, first
-Bishop of Lincoln. About 1130 Bishop Alexander built the
-castle, together with that at Newark, which alone in part survives.
-These castles were seized by Stephen, and here King John,
-having left Swineshead Abbey, stayed a night before his last
-journey by Hough-on-the-hill to Newark, where he died 1216.
-Henry VIII., with Katherine Howard, held a council here on
-his way from Grimsthorpe to Lincoln, 1541, dining next day at
-Temple-Bruer, which he gave in the same year to the Duke of
-Suffolk. He had here in 1538 ordered the execution of Lord
-Hussey. Murray’s guide-book tells us that Richard de Haldingham,
-1314, who made the famous and curious “Mappa
-Mundi,” now kept in Hereford Cathedral, was born at Holdingham
-close by. The church is one of four in this neighbourhood
-dedicated to St. Denis. The lower stage of the tower dates from
-1180. The spire, a very early one, built about 1220, being
-struck by lightning, was taken down and put up again by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span>
-C. Kirk in 1884. It is only 144 feet in height. As at Grantham
-and Ewerby the tower is engaged in the aisles; its lower stage
-dates from 1180. The nave has eight three-light clerestory
-windows, with tall pinnacles rising from the parapet. The
-aisles have a richly carved parapet, without pinnacles; but the
-beauty and extreme richness of the western ends of the aisles,
-where they engage with the massive tower, surmounted as they
-are by turrets, bellcots and pinnacles, and niches, some still containing
-their statues, is not surpassed in any church in England.</p>
-
-<p>The doorway, which is in the west end of the north aisle, cuts
-into the fine window above, and opens upon the baptistery.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE NORTH TRANSEPT</div>
-
-<p>The nave and aisles are all very lofty; and the grand proportions
-of the church give one the feeling of being in a cathedral.
-There is an outer north aisle, now screened off by a good modern
-oak screen, and fitted with an organ and an altar with modern
-painted reredos depicting the Crucifixion. The tracery of the
-big window is good, but that in the north transept (there is no
-south transept) is one of the finest six-light windows to be seen,
-and is filled with first-rate modern glass by Ward and Hughes.
-The supporting arch at the west of the north aisle has an inverted
-arch, as at Wells, to support the tower. At the end of
-the south aisle, a tall half-arch acts as a buttress to the other
-side of the tower arch. The chancel was once a magnificent
-one, but was rebuilt and curtailed at a bad period.</p>
-
-<p>The fine monuments on each side of the chancel arch—one
-having two alabaster recumbent figures, much blocked by the
-pulpit, are all of the Carre family; and a curious carved and
-inscribed coffin lid, showing just the face, and then, lower
-down, the praying hands of a man, apparently a layman, with
-long hair, is set up in the transept against the chancel pier. At
-Hartington in Derbyshire is one showing the bust and praying
-hands together, and then, lower down, the feet. An old iron
-chest is in the south aisle, and the church has a very perfect
-set of consecration crosses both inside and out.</p>
-
-<p>The rood screen is especially fine, in fact, the finest in the
-country, having still its ancient canopy projecting about six
-feet, with very graceful carving on the heads of the panels
-below it. Two staircases in the chancel piers still remain, opening
-on to the rood loft on either side.</p>
-
-<p>The west end of the church overlooks the market, where there
-is always a gay scene on Mondays—stalls and cheap-jacks and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span>
-crowds of market folk making it almost Oriental in life and
-colour.</p>
-
-<p>The street runs along the south side of the church, across
-which is seen the excellent but not beautiful Sleaford almshouse.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus16">
-<img src="images/illus16.jpg" width="500" height="525" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>North Transept, St. Denis’s Church, Sleaford.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">EWERBY</div>
-
-<p>Eastwards on the Swineshead road, and within half-a-dozen
-miles of Sleaford, is a cluster of especially good churches—Ewerby,
-Asgarby, Heckington, Howell, Great Hale and Helpringham.
-Four of these six have fine spires, and are seen from
-a long distance in this flat country. <i>Ewerby</i> is just on the edge of
-Haverholme Priory Park, and the building rooks who have
-chosen the trees at the village end of the park for their colony,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span>
-gave, when we visited it, pleasant notification of the coming
-spring.</p>
-
-<p>The tower is at the west end, engaged in the two aisles, and,
-adjoining the churchyard, a little green with remains of the old
-village cross leaves room for the fine pile of building to be seen
-and admired. The roof line of nave and chancel is continuous,
-and the broach spire, a singularly fine one, perhaps the best in
-England, is 174 feet high. It is probably the work of the same
-master builder who planned and built Heckington and Sleaford.
-The tower has a splendid ring of ten bells (Grantham alone has
-as many) for the completion of which, as for much else, Ewerby
-is indebted to the Earls of Winchelsea.</p>
-
-<p>Internally, the walls are mostly built of very small stones,
-like those in a roadside wall. In the tower are good Decorated
-windows, in the lower of which, on the western face, is a stained
-glass window. This was struck by lightning in 1909, and all
-the faces of the figures were cut right out, the rest of the glass
-being intact. A lightning-conductor is now installed, but the
-faces are not yet filled in.</p>
-
-<p>There is a most beautiful little window at the west end of the
-north aisle. Under the tower are three finely proportioned
-arches, and a stone groined roof. The ten bells are rung from
-the ground. The nave pillars are clustered, each erected on an
-earlier transition-Norman base; and the base of the font is also
-Norman. The porch is unusual in having a triangular string-course
-outside the hood-moulding. Besides the Market Cross,
-there are parts of two others, in the church and churchyard.
-There is a grand old recumbent warrior, probably Sir Richard
-Anses, with fourteenth century chain mail and helmet, and
-gorget, but the most interesting thing of all is a pre-Norman tomb-cover
-on the floor of the north aisle, with a rude cross on it, and
-a pattern of knot-work all over the rest of the slab. This is
-covered by a mat, but it certainly ought to have a rail round it
-for permanent protection, for it is one of the most remarkable
-stones in the county. An old oak chest with carved front is in
-the vestry. The whole church is well-cared-for, but at present
-only seated with chairs.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HOWELL PORCH</div>
-
-<p>From Ewerby, two miles bring us to <i>Howell</i>, a small church
-with neither spire nor tower, but a double bell-gable at the west
-end of the nave; the porch is Norman, and a large pre-Norman
-stone coffin slab has been placed in it. The transition pillars<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span>
-have huge mill-stone shaped bases; and there is only a nave
-and north aisle. On the floor of the aisle is a half figure of a
-mother with a small figure of her daughter, both deeply cut on
-a fourteenth century stone slab. It is curious to come on a
-monument to “Sir Charles Dymok of Howell, 2nd son to Sir
-Edward Dymok of Scrielsby”—whose daughter married Sir
-John Langton. The tomb, with coloured figures of the knight
-and his lady kneeling at an altar, was put up about 1610 by his
-nephew, another Sir Edward Dymok.</p>
-
-<p>There is a broken churchyard cross, the base inscribed to
-John Spencer, rector, 1448. The church is dedicated to St.
-Oswald. Ivy is growing inside the nave, having forced its way
-right through the wall—a good illustration of the mischief that
-ivy can do.</p>
-
-<p>The mention of the stone coffin in Howell church porch calls
-to mind a similar case in a Cumberland church, where the sexton,
-pointing it out to a visitor, said: “Ah think thet a varra good
-thing; minds ’em o’ their latter end, ye knaw; an’ its varra
-useful for umberellas.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Heckington</i> is a town-like village on the main road, and its
-splendid church, which faces you at the end of the street, as at
-Louth, is one of the wonders of Lincolnshire. It is entirely in
-the Decorated style, with lofty spire and four very high pinnacles.
-It owes its magnificence to the fact that the great abbey at
-Bardney, which had a chantry here, obtained a royal licence in
-1345 to appropriate the church. Certainly it is the most perfect
-example of a Decorated church in the kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>The nave is remarkably high and wide, and the building of it,
-as in the case of Wilfrid’s great church at Hexham, apparently
-took thirty-five years. The dimensions are 150 feet by eighty-five,
-and the masonry, owing probably to the leisurely way in
-which it was built, is remarkably good throughout. The statue
-niches have a few of their figures still. The porch, with its
-waved parapet richly carved, with a figure of our Lord above,
-still has its original roof. On either side are double buttresses,
-each with its canopied niche; and the nave ends with handsome
-turrets. The transept windows are very fine, and the
-seven-light east window, a most superb one, is only surpassed
-in its dimensions and beautiful tracery by those at Selby and
-Carlisle. It is filled with good glass by Ward and Hughes, put
-up in memory of Mr. Little, by his wife, 1897.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus17">
-<img src="images/illus17.jpg" width="500" height="650" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Heckington Church</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HECKINGTON</div>
-
-<p>A massive timber gallery crosses the west end, above the tower
-arch, giving access to the belfry above the groined roof of the
-tower. The clock struck while we were in the church, and gave
-evidence of at least one of the peal being of unusual magnificence
-of tone.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE EASTER SEPULCHRE</div>
-
-<p>On the south side of the chancel is one window beneath which
-is a canopied credence table; and west of this, three tall and
-richly carved sedilia with figures of our Lord and the Virgin
-Mary and Saints Barbara, Katherine and Margaret; but the
-gem of the building is the Easter sepulchre on the north side,
-where there are no windows. This is only surpassed by one at
-Hawton, near Newark. Below are the Roman guards asleep, in
-fourteenth century armour. On each side of the recess for the
-sacred elements, which once had a door to it, are two figures of
-women and a guardian angel, and above them, the risen Christ
-between two flying angels. This is a truly beautiful thing, enshrined
-in a worthy building.</p>
-
-<p>Outside is a broken churchyard cross, and the slender chancel
-buttresses are seen to have each a niche for a figure. The
-magnificent great “Dos-D’Âne” coping-stones on the churchyard
-wall, both here and at Great Hale, are a pleasure to see.</p>
-
-<p>There was a church at Heckington before the Conquest, and
-a second was built about 1100. The income of this, as well as
-of that of Hale Magna, was given in 1208 by Simon de Gant and
-his wife Alice to support the church of St. Lazarus outside the
-walls of Jerusalem, and this endowment was confirmed by King
-John. The rector of Hale Magna in his parish magazine points
-out that the enormous amount of land which was constantly
-passing to the churches and monasteries in the Middle Ages
-became a distinct danger, and that an Act was passed to prevent
-it, called the Statute of Mortmain, under which licence had to
-be obtained from the Crown.</p>
-
-<p>Consequently we find that in the fourth year of Edward II.
-(1310) inquisition was taken on a certain Sunday before Ranulph
-de Ry, Sheriff of Lincoln, at Ancaster “to inquire whether or
-not it be to the damage of the King or others if the King permit
-Wm. son of Wm. le Clerk of St. Botolph (Boston) to grant
-a messuage and 50 acres of land in Hekyngton and Hale to a
-certain chaplain and his successors to celebrate Divine service
-every day in the parish church of Hekyngton for the health of
-the souls of the said Wm. his father, mother and heirs, &amp;c., for
-ever,” etc. The jury found that it would not be to the damage
-or prejudice of the king to allow the grant. They also reported
-that Henry de Beaumont was the “Mesne,” or middle, tenant
-between the king and William Clerk of Boston for twenty-eight
-acres, and between the king and Ralph de Howell for the other<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span>
-twenty-two acres, he holding from the king “by the service of
-a third part of a pound of pepper,” and subletting to the others,
-for so many marks a year. The land apparently being valued
-at about 1<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> an acre. From other sources we find that land
-thereabouts varied in value from 4<i>d.</i> to 8<i>s.</i> an acre yearly rent.</p>
-
-<p>In 1345 when the abbot and abbey of Bardney by royal
-licence received the churches and endowments of Hale and
-Heckington for their own use, the abbot became rector and
-appointed a vicar to administer each parish. The name of the
-abbot was Roger De Barrowe, whose tomb was found by the
-excavators at Bardney in 1909.</p>
-
-<p>The building of the present beautiful church was completed
-by Richard de Potesgrave, the vicar, in 1380. He doubtless
-received help from Edward III., to whom he acted as chaplain.
-That he was an important person in the reigns of both Edward II.
-and III. is shown by the former king making over to him the
-confiscated property of the Colepeppers who had refused to
-deliver Leeds Castle, near Maidstone, to Queen Isabella, wife
-of Edward II., in 1321; while he was selected by Edward III. to
-superintend the removal of the body of Edward II. from Berkeley
-Castle to Gloucester. His mutilated effigy is under the north
-window of the chancel, and in a little box above it with a glass
-front is now preserved the small chalice which he used in his
-lifetime.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">CHURCHWARDENS’ BOOKS</div>
-
-<p>The churchwardens’ account book at Heckington begins in
-1567, and in 1580 and 1583 and 1590 “VIˢ VIIIᵈ” is entered
-as the burial fee of members of the Cawdron family, whose later
-monuments are at Hale.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">WHIPPING FOR TRAMPS</div>
-
-<p>Another entry which constantly occurs in the sixteenth century
-is “for Whypping dogges out of Church,” and in the seventeenth
-century not “dogges” only but vagrants are treated to
-the lash, <i>e.g.</i>:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“April 21, 1685. John Coulson then whipped for a vagrant
-rogue and sent to Redford.</p>
-
-<p class="right">“Antho. Berridge (Vicar).”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And in 1686:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Memorand. that John Herrin and Katherine Herrin and
-one child, and Jonas Hay and wife and two children, and Barbary
-Peay and Eliz. Nutall were openly whipped, at Heckington, the
-28th day of May, 1686—and had a passe then made to convey
-them from Constable to Constable to Newark, in Nottinghamshire,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>
-and Will Stagg was at the same time whipped and sent
-to Conton in Nottinghamshire.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A good, sound method of dealing with “Vagrom men,” but
-for the women and children one wonders the parson or churchwardens
-were not ashamed to make the entry.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus18">
-<img src="images/illus18.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Great Hale.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The book also shows the accounts of the “Dike-reeve” (an
-important officer) for what in another place is called “the farre
-fenne.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HALE MAGNA</div>
-
-<p>We have already spoken of <i>Great Hale</i> or <i>Hale Magna</i>. It is
-very near Heckington, and was once a large church. Long
-before the abbey of Bardney appropriated it, in 1345, it had
-both a rector and a vicar, the two being consolidated in 1296.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span>
-In 1346 the vicarage was endowed, and on the dissolution the
-rectorial tithes were granted, in 1543, to Westminster Abbey;
-but within four years they reverted to the Crown by exchange,
-and in 1607 were sold by James I., and eventually bought by
-Robert Cawdron, whose family were for many years lay rectors.
-Robert probably found the chancel in a bad state, and rather
-than go to the expense of restoring it, pulled it down and built up
-the chancel arch, and so it remains. But the great interest of
-the building lies at the west end. Here the tower arch is a round
-one, but the tower into which the Normans inserted it is Saxon,
-probably dating from about 950. It is built of small stones,
-and the line of the roof gable is still traceable against it outside.
-It has also a curious and complete staircase of the tenth century
-in a remarkably perfect condition, though the steps are much
-worn. The outer walls of this are built of the same small thin
-stones as are used in the tower, in the upper stage of which are
-deeply splayed windows with a baluster division of the usual
-Saxon type.</p>
-
-<p>The nave pillars are Early English and slender for their height,
-for they are unusually tall, recalling the lofty pillars in some of
-the churches in Rome. The arches are pointed. Among the
-monuments are those of Robert Cawdron, and his three wives,
-1605, and of another Robert, 1652, father of twenty children,
-while a large slab with the indent of a brass to some priest has
-been appropriated to commemorate a third of the same name.</p>
-
-<p>The Cawdron arms are on a seventeenth century chalice.
-The old registers, which are now well cared for, are on paper,
-and have suffered sadly from damp and rough handling. The
-first volume begins in 1568, the second in 1658, and the list of
-vicars is complete from 1561. To antiquarians I consider that
-this is one of the most interesting of Lincolnshire churches.
-Two miles west is <i>Burton Pedwardine</i>, with fine Pedwardine
-and Horsman tombs, and a pretty little square grille for exhibiting
-relics. The central tower fell in 1862.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HELPRINGHAM</div>
-
-<p>The road which runs south from Heckington to Billingborough
-and so on by Rippingale to Bourne, passes by Hale Magna to
-<i>Helpringham</i>. Here is another very fine church, with a lofty
-crocketed spire, starting from four bold pinnacles with flying
-buttresses. The tower is engaged in the aisles, as at Ewerby
-and Sleaford, and as at Ewerby it opens into nave and aisles by
-three grand arches. The great height of the tower arch into the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span>
-nave here and at Boston and Sleaford was in order to let in
-light to the church from the great west window. The main
-body of the building is Decorated and has fine windows; the
-chancel with triplet window is Early English. The font, Early
-English transition, the rood screen is of good Perpendicular
-design, and the effect of the whole building is very satisfying,
-especially from the exterior. It is curious that the lord of the
-manors of Helpringham and Scredington, who since the sixteenth
-century has been the Lord Willoughby De Broke, was in the
-fourteenth century the Lord Willoughby D’Eresby.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus19">
-<img src="images/illus19.jpg" width="500" height="450" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Helpringham.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SWATON</div>
-
-<p>South of Helpringham, and situated half-way between that
-and Horbling, and just to the north of the Sleaford-and-Boston
-road is <i>Swaton</i> with a beautiful cruciform church in the earliest
-Decorated style; indeed, looking at the lancet windows in the
-chancel, one might fairly call it transitional Early English.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span>
-The simple two-light geometrical window at the east end with
-the mullions delicately enriched outside and in, form a marked
-contrast to the rich but heavy Decorated work of the four-light
-west window. At the east end the window is subordinated to
-the whole design. At the west end the windows are the predominant
-feature of the building, and nowhere can this period of
-architecture be better studied. The roof spans both nave and
-aisles, as at Great Cotes, near Grimsby, so though the nave is
-big and high it has no clerestory. The tower arches are very
-low. The font is a very good one of the period, with diaper
-work and ball-flower.</p>
-
-<p>We have dwelt at some length on Sleaford and its immediate
-neighbourhood, and not without cause, for there are few places
-in England or elsewhere in which so many quite first-rate churches
-are gathered within less than a six-mile square. They are all
-near the road from Sleaford to Boston, on which, after leaving
-Heckington, nothing noticeable is met with for seven miles,
-till Swineshead is reached, and nothing after that till Boston.</p>
-
-<p>The north-eastern road from Sleaford to Horncastle passes
-over a flat and dull country to Billinghay and Tattershall, and
-thence by the interesting little churches of Haltham and Roughton
-(pronounced Rooton) to Horncastle. The road near <i>Billinghay</i>
-runs by the side of the Old Carr Dyke, which is a picturesque
-feature in a very Dutch-looking landscape.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">KYME TOWER AND PRIORY</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SOUTH KYME</div>
-
-<p>This road crosses the Dyke near <i>North Kyme</i>, where there is
-a small Roman camp. The Normans have left their mark in
-the name of “Vacherie House” and Bœuferie Bridge, close
-to which is “Decoy House,” and two miles to the south is the
-isolated village of <i>South Kyme</i>. Here is the keep of a thirteenth
-century castle, which is nearly eighty feet high, a square
-tower with small loophole windows. The lower room vaulted
-and showing the arms of the Umfraville family, to whom the
-property passed in the fifteenth century from the Kymes by
-marriage, and soon afterwards to the Talboys family, and, in
-1530, to Sir Edward Dymoke of Scrivelsby, whose descendants
-resided there till 1700. The castle was pulled down about
-1725, after which the Duke of Newcastle bought the estate and
-sold it twenty years later to Mr. Abraham Hume. The existing
-tower communicated from the first floor with the rest of the
-castle. The upper floors are now gone.</p>
-
-<p>Close by was a priory for Austin canons, founded by Philip<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span>
-de Kyme in the reign of Henry II., but all that now remains of it
-is in the south aisle of the church, which, once a splendid cruciform
-building, has been cut down to one aisle and a fine porch;
-over this is represented the Coronation of the Virgin. A bit of
-very early carved stonework has been let into the wall, and a
-brass inscription from the tomb of Lord Talboys 1530.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus20">
-<img src="images/illus20.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>South Kyme.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The western road from Sleaford has no interesting features,
-till at about the fifth milestone it comes to <i>Ancaster</i>, the old
-Roman ‘Causennæ’; here it crosses the Ermine Street, which is a
-fine wide road, but fallen in many parts into disuse. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span>
-Ancaster stone quarries lie two miles to the south of the village
-in Wilsford heath on high ground; the Romans preferred a high
-ridge for their great “Streets,” but at Ancaster the Ermine
-Street descends 100 feet, and from thence, after crossing it,
-our route takes us by a very pretty and wooded route to
-<i>Honington</i>, on the Great North Road.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus21">
-<img src="images/illus21.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>South Kyme Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>We will now go back to Sleaford and trace out the course
-of its other western road to Newark, leaving the north or Lincoln
-Road to be described from Lincoln.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HOUR-GLASS STANDS</div>
-
-<p>This road starts in a northerly direction, but splits off at
-<i>Holdingham</i> before reaching <i>Leasingham</i>, of which Bishop
-Trollope of Nottingham, who did so much for archæology in
-our county, was rector for fifty years. The church has a fine<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span>
-transition tower with curiously constructed belfry windows and
-a broach spire. Two finely carved angels adorn the porch, and the
-font, of which the bowl seems to have been copied from an earlier
-one, though only the stem and base remain, exhibits very varied
-subjects, among them The Resurrection, Last Judgment, The
-Temptation, The Entry into Jerusalem, Herodias and Salome,
-and the Marriage of the Virgin. Fixed to one of the pillars is
-the old hourglass stand, of which other specimens, but usually
-fixed to the pulpit, are at Bracebridge near Lincoln, Sapperton
-near Folkingham, Hameringham near Horncastle, and Belton
-in the Isle of Axholme.</p>
-
-<p>But the Newark road holds westwards, and, leaving the tower of
-Cranwell, with its interesting “Long and Short” work, to the
-right, climbs to the high ground and crosses the Ermine Street
-by Caythorpe Heath to <i>Leadenham</i>, eight miles. Here it drops
-from “the Cliff” to the great plain, drained by the Wytham
-and Brant rivers, and at <i>Beckingham</i> on the Witham reaches
-the county boundary. The Witham only acts as the boundary
-for two miles and then turns to the right and makes for Lincoln.
-Half way between this and the lofty spire of Leadenham the
-road passes between <i>Stragglethorpe</i> and <i>Brant-Broughton</i> (pronounced
-Bruton), which is described later.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX<br />
-<span class="smaller">LINCOLN, THE CATHEDRAL AND MINSTER-YARD</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The city of Lincoln was a place of some repute when Julius
-Cæsar landed <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> 55. The Witham was then called the Lindis,
-and the province Lindisse. The Britons called the town Lindcoit,
-so the name the Romans gave it, about <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 100, “Lindum
-Colonia,” was partly Roman and partly British. The Roman
-walled town was on the top of the hill about a quarter of a mile
-square, with a gate in the middle of each wall. Of their four
-roads, the street which passed out north and south was the
-Via Herminia or Ermine Street. The east road went to “Banovallum”—Horncastle
-(or the Bain)—and “Vannona”—Wainfleet—and
-the west to “Segelocum”—Littleborough. The
-Roman milestone marking XIV miles to Segelocum is now in
-the cathedral cloisters.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ROMAN ARCH</div>
-
-<p>This walled space included the sites of both cathedral and
-castle, and was thickly covered with houses in Danish and
-Saxon times. We hear of 166 being cleared away by the Conqueror
-to make his castle. The Romans themselves extended
-their wall southward as far as the stone-bow in order to accommodate
-their growing colony. Their northern gate yet exists.
-It is known as “Newport Gate,” and is of surpassing interest,
-as, with the exception of one at Colchester, there is not another
-Roman gateway in the kingdom. Only last October the foundations
-of an extremely fine gateway were uncovered at <i>Colchester</i>,
-the Roman “Camelodunum”; apparently indicating
-the fact that there were two chariot gates as well as two side
-entrances for foot passengers. The Newport Gate is sixteen
-feet wide, and twenty-two feet high, with a rude round arch of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span>
-large stones without a key, the masonry on either side having
-stones some of which are six feet long. On each side of the main
-gate was a doorway seven feet wide for foot passengers. A fifth
-Roman road is the “Foss Way,” which came from Newark and
-joined the Ermine Street at the bottom of Canwick Hill, a mile
-south of Lincoln.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus22">
-<img src="images/illus22.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Newport Arch, Lincoln.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>From the junction of these two roads a raised causeway,
-following the line of the present High Street, ran over the marshy
-ground to the gate of the walled town. This causeway, bearing
-in places the tracks of Roman wheels, is several feet below the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span>
-present level, and even on the top of the hill several feet of
-debris have accumulated over the Roman pavements which
-were found in the last century where the castle now stands.
-Doubtless, as years went on, many villas would be planted outside
-the walls of the Roman city, but we know little of the
-history of the colony, except that it was always a place of considerable
-importance.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BISHOP REMIGIUS</div>
-
-<p>To come to post-Roman times, Bede, who died in 785, tells us
-that <i>Paulinus</i>, who had been consecrated Bishop of York in
-625, and had baptised King Ædwin and a large number of
-people at York in the church which stood on the site afterwards
-occupied by the Minster, came to Lincoln, and, after baptising
-numbers of people in the Trent, as he had previously done in
-the Swale near Richmond in Yorkshire, built a stone church
-in Lincoln, or caused his convert Blaeca, the Reeve of the city,
-to build it, in which he consecrated Honorius Archbishop of
-Canterbury. Bede saw the walls of this church which may well
-have stood where the present church of St. Paul does. William
-the Conqueror in 1066 built the Norman castle on the hill to
-keep the town, which had spread along the banks of the Witham,
-in order. It was about this time that Remigius, a monk of
-Fécamp, in Normandy, who had been made by William, Bishop
-of Dorchester-on-Thames in 1067, as a reward for his active
-help with a ship and a body of armed fighting men, got leave,
-after much opposition from the Archbishop of York, to build a
-cathedral at Lincoln on the hill near the castle. So, next after
-the Romans (and perhaps the Britons were there before them),
-it is to him that we owe the choice of this magnificent site for
-the cathedral. Remigius began his great work in 1075, of which
-the central portion of the west front, with its plain rude masonry
-and its round-headed tall recesses on either side of the middle
-door, and its interrupted band of bas-reliefs over the low Norman
-arches to right and left of the tall recesses, is still <i>in situ</i>. The
-sixteen stone bas-reliefs are subjects partly monkish, but mostly
-Scriptural, concerning Adam, Noah, Samuel, and Jesus Christ.
-They are genuine Norman sculptures, and they are at the same
-level as Welbourn’s twelve English kings under the big central
-window, but these are of the fourteenth century.</p>
-
-<p>The church of Remigius ended in an apse, of which the foundations
-are now under the stalls about the middle of the choir.
-It probably had two towers at the west end, and possibly a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span>
-central tower as well. The church of St. Mary Magdalene was
-swept away to clear the site, and a chapel at the north west end
-of the new building allotted to the parishioners in compensation.
-Like the Taj at Agra it was seventeen years in building, and its
-great founder died, May 4, 1092, a few months before its completion.
-This was in the reign of Rufus, a reign notable for the
-building of the great Westminster Hall.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus23">
-<img src="images/illus23.jpg" width="500" height="575" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Gateway of Lincoln Castle.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LINCOLN CASTLE</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BISHOP ALEXANDER</div>
-
-<p>The wide joints of the masonry, and the square shape of the
-stones, and the rude capitals of the pilasters are distinctive of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span>
-Remigius’ work. <i>Bloet</i> succeeded Remigius, and during his thirty
-years he did much for the cathedral staff, but not very much
-to the fabric. His successor, <i>Bishop Alexander</i>, 1123, was a
-famous builder, and besides the castles of Sleaford, Newark
-and Banbury, the first two of which Stephen forced him to give
-to the Crown, he built the later Norman part of the west front,
-raising its gables and putting in three doors and the interlaced
-arcading above the arches of Remigius. He also vaulted the
-whole nave with stone, after a disastrous fire in 1141. There
-had been a previous fire just before Alexander was consecrated
-Bishop in 1123, of which Giraldus Cambrensis, writing about
-1200, says that the roof falling on it “broke the stone with
-which the body of Remigius was covered into two equal parts.”
-This richly carved and thus fractured stone you may see to-day,
-where it is placed close to the north-west arch of the nave and
-north aisle. Bishop Alexander’s work is richer than that of
-Remigius, and the shafts and capitals of his west doors are
-beautifully carved. In these, according to Norman custom,
-hunters are aiming at the birds and beasts in the foliage. This
-is best seen in the north-west doorway. King Stephen came to
-Lincoln in 1141, the year of the fire, and it was there that, after
-a fierce fight which raged round the castle and cathedral, he
-was taken prisoner and sent to Bristol, but in the following
-year terms were arranged between him and the Empress Maud,
-and he was crowned at Christmas in Lincoln cathedral. After
-that date Bishop Alexander carried forward his work on the
-cathedral without intermission till his death in 1047, putting
-in the central western gable and the two gables over the arcading,
-vaulting the whole west front with stone, and adding the
-little north and south gables against the towers and the Norman
-stages of the towers, of which the northern tower was a little
-the highest, but looked less high because the south tower had
-its angles carried up higher than the walls of the square.</p>
-
-<p>Bishop Alexander, like St. Hugh, died of a fever, which he
-caught at Auxerre in France, where he had been to meet the
-Pope. Those French towns seem to have been pretty pestilential
-at all times. <i>Bishop Chesney</i> succeeded him, and either
-he or Bishop Bloet began the episcopal palace. He assisted
-at the Coronation of Henry II. in Lincoln, and founded St.
-Catharine’s Priory. He died in 1166, and, after the lapse of six
-years, <i>Geoffrey Plantagenet</i>, son of Henry II. by Fair Rosamund,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span>
-held the See for nine years, but was never consecrated. In
-1182 he resigned, and was afterwards made Archbishop of
-York. He gave many gifts to the cathedral, and notably two
-“great and sonorous bells,” the putative parents of “Great
-Tom.” <i>Walter de Constantiis</i> followed him, but was in the very
-next year translated to Rouen, 1184, and again the See was
-vacant for the space of two years.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ST. HUGH</div>
-
-<p>In 1185 an earthquake did great damage, and in the following
-year <i>Hugh of Avalon</i>, the famous St. Hugh of Lincoln, was
-appointed Bishop by Henry II. He widened the west end by
-putting a wing to each side of the work of Remigius, and put
-a gable over the central arch, and began his great work of
-making a new and larger cathedral with double transepts and
-a choir 100 feet longer and a nave ten feet wider than that of
-Remigius, starting at the east and building the present ritual
-choir and both the eastern and western transepts. In this
-his work was of a totally new character, with pointed arches,
-and “is famous as being the earliest existing work of pure
-English Gothic.” But Early English work, so says Murray,
-was already being done at Wells in 1174, twelve years earlier,
-and it was there that the Gothic vaulting and pointed arch was
-first seen in England. From the great transept to the angel
-choir is all his design, and it bears no trace of Norman French
-influence in any particular. The name of Hugh’s architect is
-Geoffrey de Noiers, his work is more remarkable for lightness
-than for strength, and in about fifty years Hugh’s tower fell,
-setting thereby a bad example which has been followed so frequently
-that Bishop Creighton’s first question on visiting a
-new church used generally to be, “When did your tower fall?”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BISHOP GROSTESTE</div>
-
-<p>Hugh of Avalon died in London in 1200, and <i>William de
-Blois</i> (1201) and <i>Hugh of Wells</i> (1209) went on with the building.
-The latter particularly kept to Hugh of Avalon’s plan of intercalating
-marble shafts with those of stone. Other characteristics
-of St. Hugh’s work are the double arcading in the transept
-and the little pigeon-hole recesses between the arcade arches,
-a trefoil ornament on the pillar belts and on the buttresses, and
-the deep-cut base mouldings. He put in the fine Early English
-round window in the north transept called the “Dean’s eye,”
-which has plate tracery. The five lancet lights, something after
-the “Five Sisters” window at York, were a later addition.
-The end of his work is easily distinguishable in the east wall of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span>
-the great transept. He also built the Galilee porch, which was
-both a porch and an ecclesiastical court, and the Chapter house,
-with its ten pairs of lancet windows, its arcading and clustered
-pillars and beautiful central pillar to support the roof groining.
-He was succeeded, in 1235, by the famous <i>Robert Grosteste</i>, a
-really great man and a fine scholar, who had studied both at
-Oxford and Paris. He opposed the Pope, who wished to put
-his nephew into a canonry, declaring him to be unfit for the post,
-and stoutly championed the right of the English Church to be
-ruled by English and not Italian prelates. In his time the
-central tower fell, and he it was who built up in its place the
-first stage at least of the magnificent tower we have now. He
-also added the richly arcaded upper portion of the great west
-front, and its flanking turrets crowned by the figures of the
-Swineherd of Stow with his horn, on the north, and Bishop
-Hugh on the south. <i>Henry Lexington</i>, Dean of Lincoln, succeeded
-him as Bishop in 1254, and during his short episcopate
-of four years Henry III. issued a royal letter for removing the
-Roman city wall further east to enable the Dean and Chapter
-to lengthen the cathedral for the Shrine of St. Hugh after his
-canonisation. Then began the building of the ‘Angel Choir,’
-which “for the excellence of its sculpture, the richness of its
-mouldings and the beauty of its windows, is not surpassed by
-anything in the Kingdom” (Sir C. Anderson). Its height
-was limited by the pitch of the vaulting of Hugh’s Ritual Choir,
-just as the height of Grosteste’s tower arches had been. The
-Angel Choir was finished by Lexington’s successor <i>Richard of
-Gravesend</i>, 1258-1279, and inaugurated in the following year
-with magnificent ceremony under <i>Bishop Oliver Sutton</i>, Edward I.
-and Queen Eleanor both being present with their children to
-see the removal of St. Hugh’s body from its first resting-place
-before the altar of the Chapel of St. John the Baptist in the
-north-east transept, where it had been placed in 1200 when
-King John himself acted as one of the pall bearers, to its new
-and beautiful gold shrine in the Angel Choir behind the high
-altar.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">JOHN DE WELBOURN</div>
-
-<p>The whole cost of the consecration ceremony was borne by
-Thomas Bek, son of Baron d’Eresby, who was on the same day
-himself consecrated Bishop of St. David’s, his brother Antony
-being Bishop of Durham, and Patriarch of Jerusalem. Bishop
-Sutton, in 1295, built the cloisters and began the charming<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span>
-little “Vicar’s court.” He died in 1300, his successor was <i>Bishop
-John of Dalderby</i>, the same who had a miracle-working shrine
-of pure silver in the south transept, and whom the people chose
-to call <i>St.</i> John of Dalderby, just as they did in the case of
-Bishop Grosteste, though the Pope had refused canonisation
-in each case. He finished the great tower, which, with its beautiful
-arcaded tower stage, its splendid double lights and canopies
-above, and its delicate lace-like parapet, seems to me to be quite
-the most satisfying piece of architecture that this or any other
-county has to show. It is finished with tall pinnacles of wood
-covered with lead. The exquisite stone rood-screen and the
-beautiful arches in the aisles were put in at the same time,
-the work on the screen being, as Sir C. Anderson remarks, very
-like the work on the Eleanor’s Cross at Geddington. He died
-in 1320, and the lovely tracery of the circular window in the
-south transept, called “The Bishop’s eye,” was inserted about
-1350 above his tomb.</p>
-
-<p><i>John de Welbourn</i>, the munificent treasurer, who died in
-1380, gave the eleven statues of kings beneath the window at
-the west end, which begin with William the Conqueror and end
-with Edward III., in whose reign they were set up. Among
-other benefactions Welbourn gave the beautifully carved choir
-stalls, and he also vaulted the towers. These were all, at one
-time, finished by leaded spires. Those of the western tower
-being 100 feet high, and that on the great central or rood tower
-soaring up to a height of 525 feet. This was blown down in
-1547, and the western spires were removed in 1807-08, a mob
-of excited citizens having prevented their removal in 1727,
-but eighty years later the matter made no great stir, and though
-their removal may by some be regretted, I think it is a matter
-of pure congratulation that the splendid central tower, whose
-pinnacles attain an altitude of 265 feet, should have remained
-as it is. The delicate lace-like parapet was added in 1775. It
-is not very likely that anyone should propose to raise those
-spires again, but dreadful things do happen; and quite lately
-one of our most eminent architects prepared a design for putting
-a spire on the central tower at Peterborough. Think of that!
-and ask yourself, is there any stability in things human?</p>
-
-<p>Apart from its commanding situation, the whole pile is very
-magnificent, and, viewed as a whole, outside, it has nothing to
-touch it, though the west front is not to compare in beauty with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span>
-that of Peterborough. Inside, York is larger and grander, and
-Ely surpasses both in effect. But if we take both the situation
-and the outside view and the inside effect together, Lincoln
-stands first and Durham second.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">GREAT TOM</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE CENTRAL TOWER</div>
-
-<p>I was once at an Archæological society’s meeting in Durham
-when Dean Lake addressed us from the pulpit, and he began by
-saying: “We are now met in what by universal consent is considered
-the finest church in England but one; need I say that
-that one is Lincoln?” The chuckle of delight which this
-remark elicited from my neighbour, Precentor Venables, was a
-thing I shall never forget. We will now take a look at the
-building, and begin first with the outside, and, starting at the
-west, walk slowly along the south side of the close. If we begin
-near the Exchequer Gate we see the west front with its fine
-combination of the massive work of Remigius, the fine Norman
-doors of Alexander (with the English kings over the central
-door), the rich arcading of Grosteste along the top and at the
-two sides, and the flanking turrets with spirelets surmounted by
-the statues of St. Hugh and the Stow Swineherd. We look up
-to the gable over the centre flanked by the two great towers
-on either side of it. Norman below, Gothic above, with their
-very long Perpendicular double lights, octagonal angle buttresses
-and lofty pinnacles. The northern tower once held the big bell
-“Great Tom,” and the southern (“St. Hugh’s”) has still its
-peal of eight. Lincoln had a big bell in Elizabeth’s reign, which
-was re-cast in that of James I., and christened “Great Tom of
-Lincoln,” 1610. This second great bell being cracked in 1828,
-was re-cast in 1855, and the Dean and chapter of the time actually
-took down the beautiful peal of six, called the “Lady
-Bells,” which had been hung in Bishop Dalderby’s great central
-tower about 1311 and gave that tower its name of the “Lady
-Bell Steeple,” and had them melted down to add to the weight of
-“Great Tom,” thus depriving the minster, by this act of vandalism,
-of its second ring of bells. The third, or new, “Great
-Tom,” now hangs alone in the central tower. It weighs five
-tons eight hundredweight, and is only surpassed in size in
-England by those at St. Paul’s, at Exeter Cathedral, and Christ
-Church, Oxford. It is six feet high, six feet ten inches in
-diameter, and twenty-one and a half feet round the rim, and
-the hammer, which strikes the hours, weighs two hundredweight.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus24">
-<img src="images/illus24.jpg" width="500" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Rood Tower and South Transept, Lincoln.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE SOUTH SIDE</div>
-
-<p>From the west front we should walk along the south side,
-passing first the consistory court with its three lancet windows,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>
-and high pitched gable, where is the little figure of “the devil
-looking over Lincoln.” This forms a small western transept,
-and has a corresponding transept on the north side, containing
-the ringers’ chapel and that of St. Mary Magdalene.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE EAST END</div>
-
-<p>Going on we get a view of the clerestory windows in the nave,
-above which is the parapet relieved by canopied niches, once
-filled with figures. The flying nave buttresses now come into
-view, and next we reach, at the south-western corner of the
-great transept, the beautifully built and highly ornamented
-“Galilee Porch,” which was meant for the bishop’s entrance
-from his palace into the cathedral. The room over it is now
-the muniment room. From this point we get a striking view
-of the western towers with the southern turret of the west front.
-The buttresses of the transept run up to the top of the clerestory,
-and end in tall pinnacles with statue-niches and crockets. The
-transept gable has a delicately pierced parapet and lofty pinnacles.
-Above is a five-light Decorated window, and below this
-a broad stone frieze, and then the large round window, “The
-Bishop’s Eye,” with its unspeakably lovely tracery, a marvel
-of lace-work in stone; below this comes a row of pointed arcading.
-The eastern transept is the next feature, with another
-fine high-pitched gable. Here the work of St. Hugh ends.
-The apsidal chapels of St. Paul and St. Peter are at the east side
-of this transept, and then, along the south side of the Angel
-Choir, the chapels of Bishops Longland and Russell, with the
-splendid south-east porch between them. This, from its
-position, is unique in English churches, and was probably
-designed for the state entrance of the bishop after the presbytery
-had been added, in place of the Galilee porch entrance.
-It has a deeply recessed arch, with four canopied niches holding
-fine figures. The doorway has two trefoil headed arches,
-divided by a central shaft with a canopied niche above it, once
-containing the figures of the Virgin and Child. Above this,
-and in the tympanum, is represented the Last Judgment. The
-buttresses of the Angel Choir are beautifully and harmoniously
-enriched with canopy and crocket, and the upper windows are
-perfect in design and execution. Apart from its splendid position,
-it is this exquisite finish to the beautifully designed building
-that makes Lincoln Cathedral so “facile princeps” among English
-cathedrals. At the south-east buttress are finely conceived
-figures of Edward I. trampling on a Saracen, and his Queen<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span>
-Eleanor; and another figure possibly represents his second
-queen, Margaret. Coming round to the east we look with
-delighted eyes on what has been called “the finest example of
-Geometrical Decorated Architecture to be found in the kingdom.”
-The window is not so fine as that at Carlisle, and no
-east end competes with that at York, but York is Perpendicular,
-and Lincoln is Geometrical. Here we have not only a grand
-window, fifty-seven feet high, but another great five-light window
-above it, and over that a beautiful figure of the Virgin and
-Child, and all finished by a much enriched gable surmounted
-by a cross. The two windows, one above the other, seem not
-to be quite harmonious, in fact, one does not want the upper
-window, nor perhaps the windows in the aisle gables, but the
-buttresses and their finials are so extraordinarily good that they
-make the east end an extremely beautiful whole. Close to the
-north-east angle is a little stone well cover, and the chapter-house,
-with its off-standing buttress-piers and conical roof, comes
-into view at the north. The north side is like the south, but
-has near it the cloisters, which are reached by a short passage
-from the north-east transept. From the north-east corner of
-these cloisters you get an extremely good view of the cathedral
-and all its three towers. Steps from this corner lead up to the
-cathedral library. The north side of the cloisters of Bishop
-Oliver Sutton, unable to bear the thrust of the timber-vaulted
-ceiling, fell, and was replaced in 1674 by the present inharmonious
-pillars and ugly arches designed by Sir Christopher
-Wren.</p>
-
-<p>We must now look inside the cathedral, and if we enter the
-north-east transept from the cloisters we shall pass over a large
-stone inscribed “Elizabeth Penrose, 1837.” This is the resting-place
-of “Mrs. Markham,” once <i>the</i> authority on English history
-in every schoolroom, and deservedly so. She took her <i>nom de
-plume</i> from the little village of East Markham, Notts., in which
-she lived for many years.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE INTERIOR</div>
-
-<p>Passing through the north-east transept, with its stained
-glass windows by Canon Sutton, and its curious “Dean’s
-Chapel,” once the minster dispensary, and turning eastwards,
-we enter the north aisle of the Angel Choir and find the chapel
-of Bishop Fleming, the founder of Lincoln College, Oxford.
-In this the effigy of the bishop is on the south side, and there
-is a window to the memory of Sir Charles Anderson, of Lea,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span>
-and a reredos with a painting of the Annunciation, lately put
-up in memory of Arthur Roland Maddison, minor canon and
-librarian, who died April 24, 1912, and is buried in his parish
-churchyard at Burton, by Lincoln. He is a great loss, for he
-was a charming personality, and, having been for many years a
-painstaking student of heraldry, he was always an accurate
-writer on matters of genealogy, and on the relationships and
-wills of the leading Lincolnshire families, subjects of which he
-had a special and unique knowledge. Bishop Fleming was not
-the only Bishop of Lincoln who founded a college at Oxford,
-as William Smith, founder of Brasenose, Cardinal Wolsey,
-founder of Christchurch, and William of Wykeham, founder
-of New College, were all once bishops here. Opposite to the
-Fleming chapel is the Russell chapel, just east of the south
-porch and between these lies the Retro Choir, which contained
-once the rich shrine of St. Hugh, its site now marked, next to
-Bishop Fuller’s tomb, by a black marble memorial. Here is
-the beautiful monument to the reverend Bishop Christopher
-Wordsworth. This is a very perfect piece of work, with a rich,
-but not heavy, canopy, designed by Bodley and executed by
-M. Guillemin, who carved the figures in the reredos of St. Paul’s.
-This rises over a recumbent figure of the bishop in robes and
-mitre. The face is undoubtedly an excellent likeness.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE CHOIR</div>
-
-<p>The view from here of the perfect Geometrical Gothic east
-window, with its eight lights, is very striking; beneath it are
-the three chapels of St. Catherine, St. Mary, and St. Nicholas,
-and on either side of it are two monuments, those on the south
-side to Wymbish, prior of Nocton, and Sir Nicolas de Cantelupe;
-and on the north side to Bishop Henry Burghersh,
-Chancellor of Edward III., 1340, and his father, Robert. On
-each tomb are canopied niches, each holding two figures, among
-which are Edward III. and his four sons—the Black Prince,
-Lionel Duke of Clarence, John of Gaunt, and Edmund of
-Langley. Adjoining the chapel of St. Catherine, which was
-founded by the Burghersh family, is a fine effigy of Bartholomew
-Lord Burghersh, who fought at Crécy, in full armour with his
-head resting on a helmet. A fine monument of Queen Eleanor
-once stood beneath the great window where her heart was
-buried before the great procession to London began. The
-effigy was of copper gilt, but, having been destroyed, it has been
-recently replaced by a generous Lincoln citizen from drawings<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span>
-which were in existence and from a comparison with her monument
-in Westminster Abbey. A stone at the west of St. Catherine’s
-chapel shows a deep indentation worn by the scrape of
-the foot of each person who bowed at the shrine. A similar
-one is to be seen at St. Cuthbert’s shrine, Durham.</p>
-
-<p>In the east windows of both the choir aisles is some good
-Early English glass.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE PRESBYTERY</div>
-
-<p>We will now turn westwards, past the south porch, and come
-to the south-east transept; here the line of the old Roman
-wall and ditch runs right through the cathedral, the apsidal
-chapels of the eastern transepts and the whole of the presbytery,
-as well as the chapter-house, lying all outside it. Two apsidal
-chapels in this transept are dedicated to St. Peter and St. Paul.
-It was in St. Peter’s that sub-dean Bramfield was murdered
-by a sub-deacon, September 25, 1205, who paid the penalty
-immediately at the hands of the sub-dean’s servants. The
-exquisite white marble tomb and recumbent figure of John
-Kaye, bishop 1827 to 1853, by Westmacott, is in this chapel.
-Opposite to these apsidal chapels are the canons’ and choristers’
-vestries; under the former is a crypt; the latter has the monks’
-lavatory, and a fireplace for the baking of the sacramental
-wafers by the sacristan. Passing along the south choir-aisle
-we reach the shrine of little St. Hugh, and here the work all
-around us, in choir, aisles, and transepts, is that of the great
-St. Hugh. The whole of the centre of the cathedral, with its double
-transept and the choir between them, being his; and we must
-notice in two of the transept chapels his peculiar work in the
-double capitals above slender pillars of alternate stone and
-marble, and projecting figures of saints and angels low down
-in each spandrel. We now enter the choir, and pause to admire
-the magnificent work and all its beauty. On either side are the
-sixty-two beautiful and richly carved canopied stalls. They
-are only excelled, perhaps, by those at Winchester. The carving
-of the <i>Miserere</i> seats is much like that at Boston, where humorous
-scenes are introduced. The fox in a monk’s cowl, the goose,
-and the monkey being the chief animals represented. Here,
-on a poppy-head in the precentor’s seat, a baboon is seen stealing
-the butter churned by two monkeys; he is caught and
-hanged, and on the <i>Miserere</i> he is being carried forth for burial.
-A finely carved oak pulpit, designed by Gilbert Scott, is at the
-north-east end of the stalls. The brass eagle is a seventeenth<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span>
-century copy of an earlier one. We notice overhead the stone
-vaulting, springing from Purbeck shafts; notice, too, the beauty
-of the mouldings and carved capitals, and the groups of arches
-forming the triforium with clerestory window above, which,
-however, only show between the ribs of the vaulting; and, then,
-the length of it! For now, by taking in two from the Angel
-Choir, the chancel has seven bays. It is a very striking view as
-you look eastwards, but it has the defect of a rather plain, low
-vaulting, and west of it the nave, which is a generation later, is
-more splendidly arranged, while east of it the Angel Choir, which
-is nearly half a century later than the nave, admittedly surpasses
-all the rest in delicacy and beauty. The choir vaulting
-being low, caused both nave and presbytery to be lower than
-they would otherwise have been, so that it has been said that
-when the tower fell it was a pity the chancel did not fall with
-it, all would then have been built with loftier roofs and with
-more perfect symmetry.</p>
-
-<p>If we pass down the Ritual Choir eastwards, we enter the
-presbytery, and at once see the origin of the name “Angel Choir”
-in the thirty figures of angels in the spandrels. It was built to
-accommodate the enormous number of pilgrims who flocked to
-St. Hugh’s shrine, and is, according to G. A. Freeman, “one of
-the loveliest of human works; the proportion of the side elevation
-and the beauty of the details being simply perfect,” and
-it would seem to be uncontested that all throughout, whether
-in its piers, its triforium, its aisles, or its carved detail, it shows
-a delicacy and finish never surpassed in the whole history of
-Gothic architecture. One of its large clerestory windows was
-filled, in 1900, with excellent glass by H. Holiday, to mark the
-seven-hundredth anniversary of St. Hugh’s death.</p>
-
-<p>The angels sculptured in stone, and mostly carrying scrolls,
-fill the triforium spandrels in groups of three, five groups on
-either side. They are probably not all by the master’s hand.
-The Virgin and Child in the south-west bay and the angel with
-drawn sword in the north-west seem finer than the rest. The
-stone inscribed in Lombardic letters “Cantate Hic,” marks the
-place for chanting the Litany; this is chanted by two lay
-clerks. There are nine of these, one being vestry clerk; also
-four choristers in black gowns with white facings (a reminiscence
-of the earliest dress for the Lincoln choir, and a unique costume
-in England), eight Burghersh choristers or “Chanters” (lineal<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span>
-descendants of the Burghersh chantry of St. Catherine with its
-separate band of choristers), and some supernumerary boys and
-men. There are four canons residentiary, viz., the sub-dean,
-chancellor, precentor, and Archdeacon of Lincoln, and fifty-three
-prebendaries.</p>
-
-<p>In the first bay of the north side of the Angel Choir is a remarkable
-monument, part of which once served for an Easter
-sepulchre. This, like those of Navenby and Heckington of the
-same date, is richly carved with oak and vine and fig-tree
-foliage, and shows the Roman soldiers sleeping. Opposite, on
-the south side, are the tombs of Katharine Swynford of Ketilthorpe,
-Duchess of Lancaster, Chaucer’s sister-in-law, whose
-marriage to John of Gaunt took place in the minster in 1396.
-Like so many of the monuments, these are sadly mutilated, and
-are not now quite in their original position.</p>
-
-<p>It is on one of the pillars of the east bay, the second from the
-east end, that the curious grotesque, familiar to all as the
-“Lincoln Imp,” is perched.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE NAVE</div>
-
-<p>If we now turn westwards we shall come to the fine stone
-organ screen, and pass through to the tower, whose predecessor
-fell through faultiness of construction, and was rebuilt by
-Grosteste as far as the nave roof, and we shall look down the nave,
-which is forty-two feet wide, each aisle being another twenty
-feet in width. The planning and execution of the nave we owe
-to the two Bishops Hugh. Its great length (524 feet with the
-choir and presbytery) makes the whole building, when viewed
-from the west, look lower than it is, for it is really eighty-two
-feet high. Looking west this is not felt so much, and there is
-a feeling of great dignity which the best Early English work
-always gives. The piers may seem lacking in massive strength,
-but they vary in pattern, those to the east being the most
-elaborate, and so gain in interest. One curious thing about
-the nave, though not discernible to the uninitiated, is that the
-axis, which is continuous from the east end for the first five of
-the seven bays, here diverges somewhat to the north, and so
-runs into the centre of the Norman west front. The two western
-bays are five and a quarter feet less in span than the others.
-Probably the architect, as he brought the nave down westwards
-with that light-hearted disregard of a previous style of architecture
-which characterised the medieval builder and his predecessors
-of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, intended<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span>
-to sweep away all the old Norman work at the west end and
-carry the line straight on with equal-sized arches, but funds
-failed and he had to join up the new with the old as best he
-could; and we have cause to be thankful for this, since it
-has preserved for us the original and most interesting work of
-Remigius.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE TRANSEPTS</div>
-
-<p>Before we leave our place beneath the tower, we must look at
-the two great transepts. These have piers, triforium and
-clerestory similar to those in the choir, and each has three
-chapels along the eastern wall; these, from north to south,
-are dedicated to St. Nicholas, St. Denis, St. Thomas; and in
-the south transept to St. Edward, St. John and St. Giles. Of
-these, St. Edward’s is called the chanters’ chapel, and it has
-four little figures of singers carved in stone, two on each side of
-the door. This was fitted up for use and opened in August,
-1913, for a choristers’ chapel, the tombstone of Precentor
-Smith, 1717, being introduced for an altar. Everybody is
-attracted by the rose windows. That to the north has
-beneath it five lancet windows, something like those at York,
-filled with white silvery glass, but the rose above has still its
-original Early English stained glass, and is a notable example
-of the work of the period. A central quatrefoil has four trefoils
-outside it and sixteen circles round, all filled with tall bold figures
-and strongly coloured. It is best seen from the triforium.
-Below is the dean’s door, with a lancet window on either side,
-and over it a clock with a canopy, given in 1324 by Thomas of
-Louth. This canopy was carried off by the robber archdeacon,
-Dr. Bailey, and used as a pulpit-top in his church at Messingham,
-but was restored by the aid of Bishop Trollope.</p>
-
-<p>The south transept, where Bishop John of Dalderby was
-buried, contains what no one sees without a feeling of delight,
-and wonder that such lovely work could ever have been executed
-in stone,—the great rose window with its twin ovals and its leaf-like
-reticulations, which attract the eye more than the medley
-of good old glass with which it is filled, but which gives it a
-beautiful richness of effect. Below this are four lancets with
-similar glass.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE FONT</div>
-
-<p>The aisles of the nave are vaulted, the groins springing from
-the nave pillars on the inner, and from groups of five shafts on
-the outer side. Behind these runs a beautiful wall arcade on
-detached shafts, continuous in the north aisle, but only repeated<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span>
-in portions of the south aisle, with bosses of foliage at the spring
-of the arches. In the aisle at the second bay from the west is
-the grand old Norman font, resembling that at Winchester.
-There is another at <i>Thornton Curtis</i> in the north-east of the
-county. Neither of the Lincolnshire specimens are so elaborately
-carved as that at Winchester, which is filled with scenes
-from the life of St. Nicholas, but all are of the same massive
-type, with dragons, etc., carved on the sides of a great block
-of black basalt resting on a round base of the same, with four
-detached corner pillars leading down to a square black base.
-These early basalt fonts, of which Hampshire has four, Lincolnshire
-two, the other being at Ipswich, Dean Kitchin conclusively
-proved to have all come from Tournai, in Belgium, and to
-date from the middle of the twelfth century, a time coinciding
-with the episcopacy of Bishops Alexander and De Chesney at
-Lincoln, and Henry de Blois at Winchester. The one at
-St. Mary Bourne is the biggest, and has only clusters of grapes
-on it and doves. The other two are at East Meon and at
-St. Michael’s, Southampton, and have monsters carved on them
-like the Lincolnshire specimens.</p>
-
-<p>Of brasses, in which the cathedral before the Reformation
-was specially rich, having two hundred, only one now remains,
-that of Bishop Russell, 1494, which is now in the cathedral
-library; but in a record made in 1641 by Sir W. Dugdale and
-Robert Sanderson, afterwards Bishop, is the following most
-charming little inscription to John Marshall, Canon of the
-cathedral, 1446, beneath the figure of a rose:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Ut rosa pallescit ubi solem sentit abesse</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Sic homo vanescit; nunc est, nunc desinit esse.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">which may be Englished</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“As the rose loses colour not kissed by the sun,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">So man fades and passes; now here, and now gone.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The ascent of the towers gives magnificent views; from the
-central tower one may see “Boston Stump” on one hand,
-and on the other Newark spire. The big bell, too, has its attractions,
-but the greatest curiosity is the elastic stone beam, a very
-flat arch connecting the two western towers, made of twenty-three
-stones with coarse mortar joints, which only rises sixteen
-inches, and vibrates when jumped on. Its purpose is not clear,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span>
-possibly to gauge the settlement of the towers. The north end
-now is thirteen inches lower than the south. A gallery in the
-thickness of the wall between the great west window and the
-Cinquefoil above it, allows a wonderful view of the whole length
-of the cathedral. It is called Sir Joseph Banks’ view.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE BISHOP’S PALACE</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE CHANCERY</div>
-
-<p>Within the Close, as we passed along looking at the cathedral,
-we had our backs to the canons’ houses. First comes the precentory
-and the sub-deanery near the Exchequer Gate, next
-the Cantilupe Chantry, with a figure of the Saviour in a niche
-in the gable end, and a curious square oriel window, and then
-the entrance to the Bishop’s palace opposite the Galilee porch.
-The old palace, begun about 1150 or possibly earlier, was a
-splendid building; the ruins of it are in the palace grounds.
-Through a gateway or vaulted porch, where is now the secretary’s
-office, you descend to the site of the magnificent hall, eighty-eight
-feet by fifty-eight, built by St. Hugh, for, like Vicars
-Court, with its steep flight of steps and its charming old houses,
-it is built on the slope of the hill. Succeeding bishops added to
-the pile in which Henry VI. and Henry VIII. were royally
-lodged and entertained, and the charges which cost Queen
-Katharine Howard her life took their origin from her meetings
-here and afterwards at Gainsborough with her relative Thomas
-Culpepper. The palace was despoiled in the days of the Commonwealth,
-and little but ruins now remain, but a part of it
-has been restored and utilised as a chapel by the late Bishop
-King, perhaps the most universally beloved of Lincoln’s many
-bishops. Buckden and Nettleham and Riseholme have supplied
-a residence for successive bishops, and now the bishop is again
-lodged close to his cathedral. But, in the grandiloquent language
-of a work entitled ‘The Antiquarian and Topographical
-Cabinet, containing a series of elegant views of the most interesting
-objects of curiosity in Great Britain, 1809,’ “The place
-where once the costly banquet stood arrayed in all the ostentatious
-luxury of Ecclesiastic greatness has now its mouldering
-walls covered with trees.” The same authority, speaking of
-Thornton Abbey, has this precious reflection, which is too good
-to lose: “Here in sweet retirement the mind may indulge
-in meditating upon the instability of sublunary greatness, and
-contemplate, with secret emotion, the wrecks of ostentatious
-grandeur.” The Chancery, built by Antony Bek, 1316, faces
-the east end of the minster yard; it is distinguished outside by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span>
-an entrance arch and an oriel window. Inside, there are some
-very interesting old doorways, and a charming little chapel,
-with a wooden screen of c. 1490, the time of Bishop Russell,
-and two embattled towers on the old minster yard wall in the
-garden, of the early fourteenth century. The deanery is a
-modern building on the north side of the minster.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus25">
-<img src="images/illus25.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Pottergate, Lincoln.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was in the chapter house, probably, that Edward I. held
-his great Parliament in 1301, which secured the Confirmation
-of Magna Charta. Edward II. and Edward III. also each<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span>
-held a parliament here, and since their time certainly seven
-kings of England have visited Lincoln.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MINSTER OR CATHEDRAL?</div>
-
-<p>The cathedral precincts of Lincoln are called the “Minster
-Yard,” and the church is called the Minster, though Lincoln
-was a cathedral from the first; the term Minster being only
-properly applied to the church of a monastery, such as York,
-Canterbury, Peterborough, Ripon, and Southwell; of these,
-Canterbury is not often called a Minster, but York is always.
-Lincoln was never attached to a monastery.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X<br />
-<span class="smaller">PAULINUS AND HUGH OF LINCOLN</span></h2>
-
-<p>Pope Gregory and St. Augustine—Calumnies against the Jews—The Three
-“St. Hugh’s.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Perhaps here it may be well to say something of the life of
-Paulinus, the first Christian missionary in Lincoln. And in
-doing so I must acknowledge the debt I owe to Sir Henry
-Howorth’s most interesting book, “The Birth of the English
-Church.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">PAULINUS BISHOP OF YORK</div>
-
-<p>When Pope Gregory, having been struck by the sight of
-some fair-haired Anglian boys being sold as slaves in the Roman
-Forum, had determined to send a Mission to preach the Gospel
-in their land, he chose the prior of his own monastery of St.
-Andrew’s, which was on the site where now stands the church
-of San Gregorio on the Cælian Hill in Rome. The name of the
-prior was Augustine. With his companion monks, he set out,
-apparently in the spring of 596. They went from Ostia by sea
-to Gaul, but lingered in that country for above a year, and landed
-on the Isle of Thanet in April 597. He was well received by
-Æthelbert King of Kent and his wife Bertha, daughter of Charibert
-King of Paris. She was a Christian, and had brought her
-Christian chaplain with her. This made Augustine’s mission
-comparatively easy. Quarters were given him in Canterbury,
-and he began to build a monastery and was allowed to make
-use of the little church dedicated to St. Martin, where the
-Queen’s chaplain had officiated. Having then sent to the Pope
-for more missionaries, he received instructions from Gregory
-to establish a Metropolitan See in London and other Bishoprics
-in York and elsewhere. At the same time several recruits<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span>
-were sent to him among whom Bede particularises Mellitus,
-Justus, Paulinus, and Rufinianus. The first three became
-respectively Bishops of London, Rochester, and York, and
-Rufinianus Abbot of St. Augustine’s monastery at Canterbury.
-By the Pope’s command all these bishops were to be subject to
-Augustine during his life, and he was to be the Archbishop of
-Canterbury. Augustine died in the same year as St. Gregory,
-<span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 604. A few years later, about 616, Mellitus and Justus
-both withdrew for a year to Gaul, but were recalled by King
-Eadbald, Justus to Rochester and Mellitus to become Archbishop
-of Canterbury after Laurence, a priest whom Augustine
-himself had selected to succeed him in 604, and who died in 619.
-To this post Justus succeeded in 624, and, as Archbishop, consecrated
-Romanus to the See of Rochester. Shortly after this
-Paulinus was consecrated Bishop of York by Justus in 625, and
-he accompanied Æthelbert’s daughter Æthelberga to the Court
-of Ædwin King of Deira, who ruled from the Forth to the
-Thames and who had sought her hand, promising that she
-should be free to worship as she liked and that if on inquiry
-he found her religion better than his own he would also become
-a Christian. He discussed the matter with Paulinus, and after
-many months’ delay summoned a Witenagemote and asked each
-counsellor what he thought of the new teaching, which at present
-had no hold except in Kent. Coifi, the Chief Priest of the
-old religion, was the first to speak; he said he had not got any
-good from his own religion though none had served the gods
-more faithfully—so if the new doctrine held out better hopes
-he would advise the king to adopt it without further delay.
-Coifi was followed by another of the king’s Ealdormen. His
-speech was a very remarkable one, and is accurately rendered
-by the poet Wordsworth in his Sonnet called <i>Persuasion</i>, which
-runs thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Man’s life is like a sparrow, mighty King!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That—while at banquet with your Chiefs you sit</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Housed near a blazing fire—is seen to flit</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Safe from the wintry tempest. Fluttering,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Here did it enter; there, on hasty wing,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Flies out, and passes on from cold to cold;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But whence it came we know not, nor behold</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Whither it goes. Even such that transient thing,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The human Soul; not utterly unknown</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">While in the Body lodged, her warm abode;</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span>
- <div class="verse indent0">But from what world she came, what use or weal</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On her departure waits, no tongue hath shown;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">This mystery if the Stranger can reveal,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">His be a welcome cordially bestowed!”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE FIRST ENGLISH BISHOP</div>
-
-<p>After this the king gave Paulinus permission to preach the
-Gospel openly, and he himself renounced idolatry, and in April
-627, with a large number of his people, he was baptized at York
-in the little church which was the first to be built on the site
-of York Minster. After this Paulinus baptized in the river
-Swale, and later he came to the province of “Lindissi,” and
-spent some time in Lincoln, converting Blaecca the “Reeve”
-of the city, and baptizing in the presence of the king a great
-number of people in the Trent either at Littleborough or Torksey.</p>
-
-<p>He appears to have spent some time in Lincoln, and to have
-come back to it after 633, for early in 635 he consecrated Honorius
-the successor to Justus, and fifth Archbishop of Canterbury.
-The ceremony taking place probably in the little “church of
-stone” that he had built, possibly where St. Paul’s Church now
-stands. It was probably thatched with reeds, for eighty years
-later Bede speaks of it as being unroofed. If St. Paul’s church
-really was originally the church of Paulinus, it helps to remove
-the stigma that though Paulinus preached and baptised with
-effect, unlike Wilfrith, he founded nothing.</p>
-
-<p>In 633 King Ædwin and both his sons were killed after a
-great battle against Penda King of Mercia and Coedwalla King
-of the Britons, at Haethfelth near Doncaster, and Christianity
-in Northumbria came to an abrupt end; though, when Paulinus
-left, to escort the widowed queen back to Kent, his faithful
-deacon James remained behind him, whose memorial we probably
-have in the inscribed cross shaft with its unusual interlaced
-pattern at Hawkswell near Catterick. To York Paulinus
-never returned; but on the death of Romanus, who had been
-sent by Archbishop Justus on a mission to the Pope but was
-drowned in the Bay of Genoa, he took charge of the See of
-Rochester, and there he remained till his death on October 10,
-644, after he had been Bishop at York for eight and at Rochester
-for eleven years. Archbishop Honorius, who was consecrated
-just a year before the death of a Pope of the same name,
-ordained Ithamar to succeed Paulinus. He was a native of
-Kent and the first Englishman to be made a bishop. After the
-death of Paulinus in 644, more than four centuries passed before<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span>
-Remigius began to build the cathedral in 1075, which was
-altered and amplified so remarkably about 100 years later by
-Hugh of Lincoln.</p>
-
-<h3>HUGH OF LINCOLN</h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BISHOP HUGH OF LINCOLN</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">CANONIZED</div>
-
-<p>“Hugh of Lincoln” is a title which, like Cerberus in Sheridan’s
-play, indicates “three gentlemen at once,” and it will perhaps
-prevent confusion if I briefly distinguish the three.</p>
-
-<p>The first and greatest is the Burgundian, usually called from
-his birthplace on the frontier of Savoy “Hugh of Avalon.”
-He went to a good school in Grenoble, and, as a youth, joined
-the monastery of the Grande Chartreuse, where he rose to be
-procurator or bursar. In 1175, at the request of Henry II.
-who had, with difficulty, obtained the consent of the Archbishop
-of Grenoble, he came to England to become the first prior of
-the king’s new monastery at Witham in Somerset, the first
-Carthusian house in England. In 1186, much against his will,
-he was, by the king’s decree, elected Bishop of Lincoln, and took
-up his residence at Stow, where he at once set to work to master
-the English tongue. His rule of life was ascetic, and he made
-a practice of going every year in harvest time to live as a simple
-monk at Witham. He was a strong man, with high ideals,
-upright, unselfish and charitable, no believer in the miracles of
-the day, and so free from prejudice that he always protected
-the hated Jews, who wept sincere tears at his funeral. He
-was active in his huge diocese, and was a maker of history, for,
-besides extending and beautifying the cathedral of Remigius,
-he eventually became so powerful that he joined the Archbishops
-in excommunicating their Sovereign, and in 1197 he successfully
-opposed King Richard I. and his “Justiciar,” who was the
-great Archbishop <i>Hubert Walter</i>. Walter, when Bishop of Salisbury,
-had accompanied Richard to the crusade, where he was
-the king’s chief agent in negotiating with Saladin. He headed
-the first party of pilgrims whom the Turks admitted to the
-Holy Sepulchre, led back the English host from Palestine in
-the king’s absence to Sicily, whence he went to visit Richard in
-captivity, and repaired to England to raise the £100,000 demanded
-for his ransom. He was made by the king’s command
-Archbishop of Canterbury, crowned the king a second time in
-1194 at Winchester, and as “Justiciar” had the task of finding<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span>
-means to supply Richard’s ceaseless demands for money for his
-wars. Hence it was that he had summoned a meeting of
-bishops and barons at Oxford on December 7, 1197, at which
-he proposed that they should agree to the king’s latest demand
-and should themselves furnish him with three hundred knights
-to serve for twelve months against Philip of France, or give him
-money which would suffice to obtain them. This was strenuously
-and successfully opposed by Hugh, seconded by Herbert
-Bishop of Salisbury, and this action is spoken of by Stubbs as
-a landmark of constitutional history, being “the first clear case
-of the refusal of a money grant demanded by the Crown.” Hugh
-was in France when Henry II. died, but returned in time for
-the coronation of Richard I. He several times attended both
-Richard and John to Normandy, and when Richard died he
-buried him at Fontevrault in 1199, where Henry II. and his
-wife, Eleanora of Guienne, and John’s wife, Isabella of Angoulême,
-are also buried. He was back in England for John’s
-coronation on May 27, but, going again to visit the haunts of
-his boyhood at Grenoble, he caught a fever and, after a long
-illness, died next year in the London house of the Bishops of
-Lincoln, at the “Old Temple.” He was buried in his own
-cathedral, November 24, 1200, in the north-east transept,
-King John, who happened to be then in Lincoln, to receive the
-homage of the Scottish king, taking part as bearer in the funeral
-procession. Worship of him began at once, and was greatly
-augmented when the Pope canonized him in 1220. In 1230,
-when Richard of Gravesend had completed the angel choir,
-St. Hugh’s body was translated to it in the presence of King
-Edward I and Queen Eleanor and their children. This was ten
-years before Eleanor’s death at Harby, near Lincoln. The only
-thing recorded against Bishop Hugh is that he should have,
-upon Henry’s death, ordered the taking up of Fair Rosamond’s
-bones from Godstow Priory.</p>
-
-<p>The story of St. Hugh’s swan is curious but not incredible.
-Sir Charles Anderson says: “It seems, from the minute description
-of the bill, to have been a wild swan or whooper.” This
-swan was greatly attached to its master, and constantly
-attended him when in residence at Stow Park, where there was
-a good deal of water, and many wildfowl. It is said, also, that
-on his last visit the bird showed signs of restlessness and distress.
-Sir Charles sees no reason to withhold belief from the story, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span>
-instances the case of a gander, within his own knowledge, which
-attached itself to a farmer in the county, and used to accompany
-him daily for a mile and a half, when he went to look after his
-cattle in the meadows, waddling after him with the greatest
-diligence and satisfaction; and, whenever he stopped, fondling
-his legs with neck and bill.</p>
-
-<p>The “Magna Vita S. Hugonis” in the Bodleian, written by
-Adam, Abbot of Evesham soon after his death, is the chief
-source of our information about him; and a metrical life, also, in
-Latin, is both in the Bodleian and in the British Museum.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BISHOP HUGH OF WELLS</div>
-
-<p>Nine years after St. Hugh’s death, Hugh the Second, or
-“Hugh of Wells,” was appointed bishop. He carried out the
-plans of his namesake, and completed the aisles and transepts
-and added the nave-chapels at the west end with their circular
-windows. He added to the episcopal palace begun by St.
-Hugh, and built that at <i>Buckden</i>—a fine brick building which
-later became the sole palace. The Bishops of Lincoln had a
-visitation palace at Lyddington, near Rockingham, in which
-a singularly beautiful carved wood frieze ran all round the
-large room. In the “Metrical Life of St. Hugh” we read that
-what St. Hugh planned, but left unfinished, Hugh of Wells
-completed.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Perficietur opus primi sub Hugone secundo.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LITTLE ST. HUGH</div>
-
-<p>He died in 1235, and is buried in the north choir aisle. His
-extremely harsh treatment of the Jews leads us to the curiously
-tragic events in the life of the third Hugh, called the “Little
-St. Hugh.” He was born in 1246, and only lived nine years.
-That great man Grosteste, or Grostête, had succeeded Hugh of
-Wells, and died after an active episcopate of eighteen years, in
-1254. His successor, Henry Lexington, had procured leave to
-extend the cathedral close beyond the Roman city wall in order
-to build the beautiful presbytery or angel choir for the shrine
-of Hugh I. He was still engaged on this when the persecution
-which the Jews had long endured produced such a bitter feeling
-that they were believed to be capable of kidnapping and crucifying,
-or by less conspicuous methods, putting to death a
-Christian boy when they had a chance. Hugh was said to be
-a chorister who disappeared, and his mother, led by a dream,
-discovered his body in a well outside the Newport Gate. A
-Jew called Jopin, or Chopin, but in a French ballad Peitevin,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span>
-was accused of his murder, and is said to have confessed and to
-have been put to death with others of his nation with no small
-barbarity. He has left his memory at Lincoln in the name of
-“The Jews’ House,” which is given to the Norman building on
-the steep hill. This story was not uncommon, and told with
-much detail, as having really happened, in several places; nor
-is the belief in it yet dead. The boy’s body was given to the
-canons of the cathedral, who buried him with much solemnity
-in the south aisle of the choir, and set a small shrine over him,
-to which folk came to worship, and he received the title of “the
-Little St. Hugh.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus26">
-<img src="images/illus26.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>St. Mary’s Guild, Lincoln.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE JEWS</div>
-
-<p>This story is referred to by Chaucer, who wrote a hundred
-years later in “The Prioress’ Tale”:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“O younge Hew of Lincoln sleyn also</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With cursed Jewes, as it is notable,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For it nis but a litel whyle ago.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">His story makes the murdered boy reveal himself by singing
-“O alma Redemptoris Mater” “loude and clere,” although, as
-he says—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“My throte is cut unto my nekke-bon.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">and he does not stop singing till a ‘greyn’ is taken from his
-tongue by the abbot</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“and he yaf up the goost ful softely.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Marlowe has a similar story in his “Jew of Malta,” and ballads
-constantly were made on this theme. Sir Charles Anderson
-quotes one beginning:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The bonny boys of merry Lincoln</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Were playing at the ball,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And with them stood the sweet Sir Hugh,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The flower of them all.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Whom cursed Jews did crucify,” &amp;c.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">He was buried, in 1255, next to Bishop Grosteste, who had died
-two years before.</p>
-
-<p>The persistence of this medieval accusation against the Jews
-is singularly illustrated by a case which is reported in the papers
-of October 9, 1913, headed “Ritual Murder Trial.” The trial
-is at Kieff in Russia, of a perfectly innocent man called Beiliss,
-who has been more than two years in prison without knowing
-the reason, and is charged with the murder of a Christian boy
-called Yushinsky “to obtain blood for Jewish sacrificial rites.”
-<i>The Times</i> says that ritual murder is not now mentioned in the
-indictment. But that so monstrous a charge should be even
-hinted at shows how deeply these old malignant calumnies sank
-into the medieval mind, and how prone to superstition and how
-ready to believe evil we are even in the twentieth century of
-the Christian era. The whole idea is on a par with the abominable
-cruelties of the days when defenceless old women were
-burnt as witches, and is a cruel and absolutely baseless calumny
-on a long-suffering and law-abiding people, and yet there are
-plenty of people to-day in Russia who firmly believe in it.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI<br />
-<span class="smaller">LINCOLN.—THE CITY</span></h2>
-
-<p>The City—The Corporation—The City Swords—Tennyson’s Centenary
-and Statue—Queen Eleanor’s Cross—Brayford Pool—Afternoon Tea.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE MINSTER YARD</div>
-
-<p>The rate at which the soil of inhabited places rises from the
-various layers of debris which accumulate on the surface is well
-shown at Lincoln. In Egypt, where houses are built of mud,
-every few years an old building falls and the material is trodden
-down and a new erection made upon it. Hence the entrance
-to the temple at Esneh from the present outside floor level,
-is up among the capitals of the tall pillars; and, the temple
-being cleaned out, the floor of it and the bases of its columns
-were found to be nearly thirty feet below ground. Stone-built
-houses last much longer, but when a fire or demolition after a
-siege has taken place three or four times, a good deal of rubbish
-is left spread over the surface and it accumulates with the ages.
-Hence, in Roman Lincoln or “Lindum Colonia” pavements
-may be found whenever the soil is moved, at a depth of seven
-or eight feet at least, and often more. Thus the Roman West
-Gate came to light in 1836, after centuries of complete burial,
-but soon crumbled away; and the whole of the hill top where
-Britons, Romans, Danes, and Normans successively dwelt, is
-full of remains which can only on rare occasions ever have a
-chance of seeing the light. Still there is much for us to see
-above ground, so we may as well take a walk through the city,
-beginning at the top of the hill. Here, as you leave the west
-end of the cathedral and pass through the “Exchequer Gate”
-with its one large and two small arches, under the latter of which
-may be seen entrances to the little shopstalls where relics,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span>
-rosaries, etc., were once sold, you pass along the flat south wall
-of St. Mary Magdalen’s Church, beyond which the outer Exchequer
-Gate stood till 1800. The wall in which this and other
-gates of the cathedral close were inserted was built in the
-thirteenth or early fourteenth century, to protect the close and
-the canons. The gateways were all double, except the “Potter
-Gate,” which is the only other one now extant. It is said that
-the Romans had a pottery near it; at present the road to the
-Minster Yard goes both through it and round one side of it.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus27">
-<img src="images/illus27.jpg" width="500" height="575" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Pottergate, Lincoln.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE CASTLE</div>
-
-<p>Passing from the Exchequer Gate you see a very pretty sixteenth
-century timbered house, with projecting story, at the
-corner of <i>Bailgate</i>, now used as a bank. Hard by on your right
-is the White Hart inn, and on your left you have a peep down
-<i>Steep Street</i> to the <i>House of Aaron the Jew</i>, a money lender of
-the reign of Henry II. Near this was once the South Gate of
-the Roman city, and some of the stones are still visible in the
-pavement. The gate was destroyed in 1775. Looking straight<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span>
-ahead from the Exchequer Gate you see the east gateway of
-the castle, a Norman arch with later semi-circular turrets corbelled
-out on either side of it. Inside is a fine oriel window,
-brought from John of Gaunt’s house below the hill. The
-enclosure is an irregular square of old British earthworks, seven
-acres in extent. The west gate is walled up and the Assize
-Court within the castle enclosure is near it. In the angles on
-either side of the east gate are two towers in the curtain wall,
-one, “the observatory tower,” crowns an ancient mound,
-and on the south side is a larger mound, forty feet high, on which
-is the keep, a very good specimen of very early work, in shape an
-irregular polygon. The castle was one of the eight founded
-by the Conqueror himself, apparently never so massive a building
-as his castle, which is now being excavated at <i>Old Sarum</i>, the
-walls of which, built of the flints of the locality, are twelve feet
-thick and faced with stone. At Lincoln the Roman walls were
-ten to twelve feet thick and twenty feet high. Massive fragments
-of this wall still exist in different places, the biggest being
-near the Newport Arch. Near here too is “The Mint Wall,”
-seventy feet long by thirty feet high, and three and a half feet
-thick, which probably formed the north wall of the Basilica.
-Most of the fighting in Lincoln used to take place around this
-spot, as Stephen felt to his cost. The old West Gate of the Roman
-city was found just to the north of the castle west gate. The
-line which joined the Roman East and West Gates ran straight
-then, and crossed the Ermine Street, now called here the Bailgate,
-near the church of St. Paulinus, but the result of some
-destructive assaults must have so filled the road that the street
-now called ‘East Gate’ was deflected from its course southwards
-and has to make a sharp bend to get back to its proper
-line.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus28">
-<img src="images/illus28.jpg" width="500" height="525" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Jew’s House, Lincoln.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus29">
-<img src="images/illus29.jpg" width="500" height="575" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Remains of the Whitefriars’ Priory, Lincoln.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE JEW’S HOUSE</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE FRIARS</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ST. MARY’S GUILD</div>
-
-<p>Getting back to the ‘Bail,’ or open space between the castle
-gate and the Exchequer Gate, we can go down that bit of the old
-Ermine Street called “Steep Street” (and I don’t think any
-street can better deserve its name) and come into the High
-Street of Lincoln. If we go right down this, we shall see all
-that is of most interest in the town below the hill. First
-is the “Jew’s House” where the murderer of Little St. Hugh
-is said to have lived, a most interesting specimen of Norman
-domestic architecture, and more ornate than that at Boothby-Pagnell
-of a similar date. The house has a round-headed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span>
-doorway, with a chimney-breast starting from above the doorway
-arch, and showing that the upper floor had a fireplace.
-On either side the door now are modern shop windows. Between
-the stringcourses are two double light windows, with a plain
-tympanum under a round arch. Belaset of Wallingford, a
-Jewess, lived here in the reign of Edward I. She was hanged
-for clipping coin in 1290, the year of the Jews’ Expulsion. At
-the bottom of the street, No. 333, is another charming old
-structure called “White Friars’ House” with a projecting timbered
-front, and a passage round one end like that at the old<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span>
-“God begot” house at Winchester. All Friars, whether White
-(Carmelite), Black (Dominican), Grey (Franciscan), or Black
-and White (Augustinian), were to be found in Lincoln as well
-as at Stamford, and, with the exception of the Dominicans, at
-Boston too. One more bit of old domestic building is the hall
-of St. Mary’s Guild, commonly called John o’ Gaunt’s Stables.
-Here you may see a combination of the round and the pointed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span>
-arch, which dates it as late Norman. The house is longer than
-the other two, and the upper story mostly gone, but in Parker’s
-“Domestic Architecture” it is spoken of as “probably the
-most valuable and extensive range of buildings of the twelfth
-century that we have remaining in England.” The house
-within has round-headed windows with a mid-wall shaft, and
-a fireplace. The house just opposite was the palace built by
-John of Gaunt for Katharine Swynford; from which the oriel
-window inside the castle gateway was taken. These old Norman
-houses are all small. The really magnificent building which
-was once the boast of Lincoln was a thousand years earlier than
-these; this was the Roman Basilica, or Hall of Judgment, near<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span>
-Bailgate, perhaps, the baths at the town of Bath alone excepted,
-the finest Roman building in England. Figure to yourself a
-building 250 feet long by seventy feet wide, with a triangular
-pediment rising from a row of pillars thirty feet high, something
-like what we still see at Milan. Alas! that only the pillar
-bases of this fine hall have been found. The pillars ran along
-the west side of Bailgate facing east.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus30">
-<img src="images/illus30.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>St. Mary’s Guild and St. Peter’s at Gowts, Lincoln.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SAXON TOWERS</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ST. BENEDICT’S</div>
-
-<p>As we pass down the High Street we shall see on our left the
-Saxon towers of St. Mary le Wigford and of “St. Peters at
-Gowts.” The “gowts” or sluices were the two watercourses
-for taking the waters of the “Meres” into the Witham, originally
-there were small bridges on either side over each, with a
-ford between them for carts. These towers are tall and without
-buttresses, having the Saxon long and short work and the upper
-two-light window with the mid-wall jamb, and only small and
-irregularly placed lights below. They are in style much what
-you see in Italy, though the Italian are higher, but certainly
-none in England are so uncompromisingly plain as the towers
-at Ravenna and Bologna. St. Andrews in Scotland comes
-nearest, and bears a really extraordinary likeness to that of
-St. John the Evangelist at Ravenna. Near St. Mary le Wigford
-is the picturesque little remnant of a beautiful but disused
-church, called St. Benedict’s; only the ivy-clad chancel, a side
-chapel and the recent low tower are left, a very picturesque and
-peaceful object in the busy town. Its original tower held a
-beautifully decorated bell, called “Old Kate,” the gift of the
-Surgeon Barbers in 1585, it used to ring at 6 a.m. and 7 p.m.,
-to mark the beginning and end of the day’s labour. It now
-hangs in the tower of St. Mark’s.</p>
-
-<p>The name of ‘le Wigford,’ Wickford or Wickenford, indicates
-the suburb south of the river. In the days when kings used to
-wear their crowns, an uneasy belief in the old saying—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The crownéd head that enters Lincoln walls,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">His reign is stormy and his Kingdom falls,”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">made the monarch take it off on passing from Wickford to the
-city, and certainly of all the kings who were crowned in the
-cathedral none wore the crown outside except Stephen, and he,
-as we have seen, soon had cause to repent it. It has been supposed
-that both these early Lincoln churches were built by a
-Danish citizen called “Coleswegen,” who is mentioned in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span>
-Domesday Book as having thirty-six houses and two churches
-outside the city. But though Lincoln has not lost nearly so
-many churches and religious houses as Winchester has, yet,
-where she now has a dozen she once had fifty, so it must be extremely
-doubtful whether these two old ones that remain were
-those of Coleswegen. St. Mary’s now has a Perpendicular
-parapet, and, besides the curious tower arch, some interesting
-Early English work, and both churches have some good modern
-ironwork in pulpit, screen and rails from the Brant Broughton
-forge.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus31">
-<img src="images/illus31.jpg" width="500" height="525" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>St. Benedict’s Church, Lincoln.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus32">
-<img src="images/illus32.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>St. Mary-le-Wigford, Lincoln.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE “CONDUIT”</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE BRIDGE AND THE STONEBOW</div>
-
-<p>The woodwork in St. Peter’s was done by the parish clerk, a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span>
-pleasant feature not nearly so common now as it used to be. At
-the road side, and close to the churchyard rails of St. Mary’s,
-is a handsome carved drinking fountain, here called a “conduit,”
-partly made of stones from the demolished Whitefriars monastery
-founded 1269. Leland speaks of it as new in 1540, and it
-was repaired in 1672. The Grey Friars conduit and the High
-bridge conduit are supplied from the same chalybeate spring,
-which once sufficed to turn the mill at the monks’ house, now
-standing in ruins a mile to the east of the city. This was one
-of the good deeds of the Franciscans, to bring good drinking<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span>
-water within reach of the poor. A similar system of “conduits”
-also due to them, existed at Grantham. A serious epidemic,
-traced to the drinking water, which broke out in Lincoln a few
-years ago, caused the town to go to great expense in laying on
-a new supply which comes twenty miles in iron pipes from
-Elkesley, Notts, between Retford and Clumber, and crosses the
-Trent at Dunham on a little bridge of its own.</p>
-
-<p>The “High bridge” marks the spot where the Ermine Street
-forded the Witham. It is the only bridge left in England out
-of many which still carries houses on it. The ribbed arch is a
-very old one, twenty-two feet wide. The houses are now only
-on one side, they are quaintly timbered, and their backs, seen
-from below by the waterside, are very picturesque. On the
-other side is an obelisk, set up 150 years ago, to mark the site
-of a bridge chapel dedicated to St. Thomas of Canterbury.
-From here you get the most magnificent view that any town
-can boast, as you look up the steep street to the splendid pile
-which crowns the height, and see the cathedral in all its beauty.</p>
-
-<p>The length of the High Street is relieved by the “Stonebow.”
-There was always a gate here from Roman times onward, for
-when the Roman town was extended southward to a good deal
-more than twice its original size, it was here that the new wall
-crossed the Ermine Street. The road had crossed the swampy
-ground and forded the river, and was now about to enter the
-city and climb the hill. The mediæval gate which succeeded
-the Roman ‘porta’ was removed in the fourteenth century,
-and the present one dates from the sixteenth, and was repaired
-in 1887, at Queen Victoria’s Jubilee. It has one central and
-two side arches, with slender towers between, carried up to a
-battlemented parapet. On the east tower is a tall figure of the
-Archangel Gabriel, and in a niche on the other tower the Virgin
-Mary. The patroness of the city and cathedral is represented
-treading on a dragon. A long room above the arch with timbered
-roof is used as a Guildhall; in it are portraits of Queen
-Anne and Thomas Sutton of Knaith, founder of the Charterhouse.
-The corporation, to whom they belong, has had a long
-and distinguished existence, for municipal life in Lincoln began
-in Roman times; and when they left, and Saxons, Danes or
-Normans ruled, and the counties and towns had to adopt new
-names under each successive conqueror, Lincoln retained
-throughout her Roman name and her right of self-government.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span>
-The corporation, besides their fine Restoration mace, have three
-civic swords, one apparently made up out of two, but said to
-have been presented by Richard II. when he visited the city in
-1386, to be carried point uppermost, except in presence of the
-sovereign.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus33">
-<img src="images/illus33.jpg" width="500" height="575" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Stonebow, Lincoln.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE CIVIC SWORDS</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE “FOX”</div>
-
-<p>The facts about the swords are these: the Charles I. sword,
-supposed to have been presented to the city at the beginning
-of the Civil War, in 1642, has been mutilated to supply a new<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span>
-blade to the Richard II. sword. This was done by order of the
-mayor in 1734. The blade has on it the orb and cross mark and
-also the running wolf—a fourteenth century German mark—but
-so common was it on the foreign blades used in England in
-the sixteenth century that, the figure being taken for a fox—as
-wolves were not then common in England—the term “Fox”
-was transformed to the sword; hence in Shakespeare’s “Henry
-V.” act iv., scene 4, we have Pistol saying to his French prisoner
-on the field of battle:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“O Signieur Dew, thou diest on point of fox.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">and in one of Webster’s plays we have—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Of what a blade is’t?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A Toledo or an English fox?”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The two finest churches in Lincoln were at one time St.
-Swithun’s and St. Botolph’s. The former was burnt down, but,
-after a century, was rebuilt badly, but has now been restored
-by the munificence of Messrs. Clayton and Shuttleworth to its
-former grandeur, and has a really fine tower and spire, designed
-by Fowler, of Louth. St. Botolph’s, near the south “Bargate,”
-had to endure a similar period of decay, but was at last resuscitated,
-the south aisle being the last gift to the town of Bishop
-Christopher Wordsworth.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln’s last new building, the Carnegie Library, designed
-by Mr. Reginald Blomfield, stands in St. Swithun’s Square. It
-was opened on February 24th, 1914.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus34">
-<img src="images/illus34.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Old Inland Revenue Office, Lincoln.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Two other houses are interesting because of their inmates in
-the eighteenth century; one the old Jacobean mansion of the
-Bromheads of Thurlby, whose descendant, Captain Gonville
-Bromhead, won with Lieutenant Chard undying fame by the
-defence of Rorke’s Drift in the Zulu War, 1879. The other is
-a house called Deloraine House, in which once lived George
-Tennyson, grandfather of the poet; and we cannot quit Lincoln
-without going to see the fine bronze statue of the poet by G. F.
-Watts, which stands in the close at the east end of the cathedral.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE TENNYSON STATUE</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE POET’S WOLFHOUND</div>
-
-<p>In the autumn of 1909 the centenary of the poet’s birth was
-celebrated at Lincoln. Dean Wickham preached an eloquent
-sermon to a large congregation in the cathedral nave, after
-which, the choir, leaving the cathedral, grouped themselves round
-the statue and sang “Crossing the Bar,” and Bishop King gave<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span>
-a short and memorable address. In the evening the writer read
-a paper on Tennyson to an intently listening audience of twelve
-hundred people, which is now published by Routledge &amp; Co.,
-in a little book called “Introductions to the Poets, by W. F.
-Rawnsley.” Lincoln that day showed how fully she appreciated
-the great Lincolnshire poet. The statue, a colossal one,
-represents him looking at a flower, as described in his poem,
-“Flower in the crannied wall,” and his grand wolf-hound is
-looking up into his face. This hound was a Russian, whose
-grandfather had belonged to the Czar Alexander II., he who
-freed the serfs in 1861, and was so basely assassinated twenty
-years later. The wolf-hound was a very handsome light brindle,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span>
-with a curious black patch near the collar. She had a litter of
-thirteen, and one of these with the mother, “Lufra,” was given
-to the writer when living at Park Hill, Lyndhurst, in the New
-Forest. The puppy, “Cossack,” was Mrs. Rawnsley’s constant
-companion till he died of old age in his sleep; the mother went
-to Farringford to replace an old favourite that Tennyson had
-lately lost. Her new owner changed her name to Karenina, and
-she was his constant companion to the end. Once again, if not
-twice, she had a litter of thirteen, and the cares of her large
-family not unnaturally were at times too much for her temper.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span>
-She is now immortalised with her master in bronze, executed
-with loving care by his own old friend and quondam neighbour
-in the Isle of Wight. The inscription at the back of the pedestal
-is: “Alfred Lord Tennyson, born 1809, died 1892”; and below
-it is “George Frederick Watts, born 1817, died 1904.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus35">
-<img src="images/illus35.jpg" width="500" height="525" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>James Street, Lincoln</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Another monument which once adorned Lincoln was the first
-and one of the very best in the list of Queen Eleanor’s crosses,
-designed by the famous “Richard of Stowe,” who carved the
-figures in the angel choir. Only a fragment of this survived
-what Precentor Venables calls “the fierce religious storm of
-1645.” Before starting on its long funeral procession to Westminster,
-the Queen’s body was embalmed by the Gilbertine nuns
-of St. Catherine’s Priory, close to which, at the junction of the
-Ermine Street and Foss Way, the cross was set up, near the
-leper hospital of Remigius, called the Malandery (Fr. Maladerie)
-hospital.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE “STUFF BALL”</div>
-
-<p>Two railway stations and the many large iron and agricultural
-implement works, which have given Lincoln a name all over the
-world, occupy the lower part of the town, with buildings more
-useful than beautiful; for this industry has taken the place of
-the woollen factories which were once the mainstay of Lincoln.
-But a tall building with small windows, known as “The Old
-Factory,” still indicates the place in which the “Lincoln Stuff”
-was made, from which the Lincoln “Stuff Ball” took its name.
-In order to increase the production and popularise the wear of
-woollen material for ladies’ dresses, it was arranged to have balls
-at which no lady should be admitted who did not wear a dress
-of the Lincolnshire stuff. The first of these was held at the
-Windmill Inn, Alford, in 1785. The colour selected was orange;
-but, the room not being large enough for the number of dancers,
-in 1789 it was moved to Lincoln, where it has been held ever
-since, the lady patroness choosing the colour each year. In
-1803 the wearing of this hot material was commuted to an obligation
-to take so many yards of the stuff. The manufacture has
-long ago come to an end, but the “Stuff Ball” survives, and
-the colours are still selected.</p>
-
-<p>The swamps of the Wigford suburb have also disappeared,
-but <i>Brayford Pool</i>, beloved of artists, where the Foss Dyke joins
-the Witham, still makes a beautiful picture with the boats and
-barges and swans in front below, and the Minster towers looking
-down into it from above. This Foss Dyke was a Crown<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span>
-property, until James I., finding it to be nothing but an expense,
-with economic liberality presented it to the mayor and corporation.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus36">
-<img src="images/illus36.jpg" width="500" height="575" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Thorngate, Lincoln.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE “GREY FRIARS”</div>
-
-<p>The river was always outside of the Roman town, for the south
-wall, running east and west from the Stonebow, where are now
-Guildhall Street and Saltergate, turned up by Broadgate Street,
-and here, just inside its south-east angle, is now the interesting
-“Grey Friars,” a thirteenth century building consisting of a
-vaulted undercroft and long upper room, now used as a museum.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">AFTERNOON TEA</div>
-
-<p>I have no Lincoln notes of the eighteenth century of any
-special interest, but from this little extract it looks as if the
-institution of afternoon tea had been anticipated by a hundred
-years in Lincoln. The extract is from “A Sketch wrote Aug. 4,
-1762, at Lincoln,” and deals with housekeeping expenses. The
-entries are:—</p>
-
-<table summary="Housekeeping expenses">
- <tr>
- <td>“Three guineas a year for tea</td>
- <td class="tdr">£3</td>
- <td class="tdr">3</td>
- <td class="tdr">0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Loave sugar</td>
- <td class="tdr">3</td>
- <td class="tdr">0</td>
- <td class="tdr">0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Tea, a quarter of an ounce each morning.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Sugar, half of a quarter of a pound each morning.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Also an allowance for sometimes in the afternoon.”</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII<br />
-<span class="smaller">ROADS FROM LINCOLN, WEST AND EAST.—MARTON, STOW, COTES-BY-STOW,
-SNARFORD, AND BUSLINGTHORPE</span></h2>
-
-<p>West—The Foss-Dyke—Marton—Stow—Cotes-by-Stow. East—Fiskerton—Barlings
-Abbey—Gautby—Baumber—Snelland—Snarford and the
-St. Poll Tombs—Buslingthorpe—Early Brass—Linwood.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">PASSAGES OF THE TRENT</div>
-
-<p>Of the eight roads from Lincoln one goes west, and, passing
-over the Foss Dyke by a swing bridge at Saxilby, crosses the
-Trent between Newton and Dunham into Nottinghamshire.
-The view of Lincoln Minster from Saxilby, with the sails of the
-barges in the foreground as they slowly make their way to the
-wharves at the foot of the hill, is most picturesque. Saxilby
-preserves some interesting churchwarden’s accounts from 1551
-to 1569, and, after a gap of fifty-five years, from 1624 to 1790.
-The “Foss Dyke” is a canal made by the Romans to connect
-the Witham with the Trent and deepened by Henry I. The road
-runs alongside of it from Saxilby for two miles. Consequently
-we get glimpses now and again of the low round-nosed barges
-with widespread canvas sailing slowly past trees and hedgerows;
-then we turn north and pass by Kettlethorpe Lodge and Fenton
-village, through lanes lined with oak trees or edged with gorse,
-and amidst fields brilliant with corn-marigold, and poppy, till
-we come, all at once, on a little fleet of barges waiting with their
-picturesque unfurled sails for a passage through the lock near
-Torksey, a place of some importance in Saxon times, having
-two monastic houses. Two miles beyond Torksey is <i>Marton</i>.
-This place is also approached by the old Roman road, now
-called “Till bridge Lane,” which branched off from the Ermine
-Street ten miles above Lincoln, and went to Doncaster and
-York, crossing both arms of the river Till near <i>Thorpe-in-the-fallows</i>.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span>
-One mile from Marton this road passes out of the
-county at Littleborough ferry, the “Segelocum” of the Romans.
-The ferry is the main means of crossing the Trent where it
-touches Lincolnshire, as there are but two bridges in twenty
-miles, one at Gainsborough, and one between Dunham and
-<i>Newton-on-Trent</i>, where the view from the cliff with the bridge
-below is very picturesque.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus37">
-<img src="images/illus37.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Lincoln from the Witham.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>There is a ferry at Laneham, between Newton and Torksey;
-and below Gainsborough are half a dozen, at <i>Stockwith</i>, <i>Ouston</i>,
-<i>Althorpe</i>, <i>Keadby</i>, where a bridge is now being built, <i>Flixborough</i>,
-and <i>Burton Stather</i>, but the latter only takes foot<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span>
-passengers, and the others are all, I believe, of the same calibre.
-It is just the same on the Ouse, across which Yokefleet and
-Ousefleet look at each other about a mile apart, but to drive from
-one to the other is a matter of more than thirty miles.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MARTON</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HISTORY OF THE DIOCESE</div>
-
-<p><i>Marton</i> is a tiny place, but has a very interesting church,
-with unbuttressed tower and heavily embattled parapet to both
-nave and chancel. The tower up to the upper stringcourse
-is entirely built in Norman “Herringbone” work, this is now
-plastered over outside, but you can trace the herring-bone
-through the plaster, and inside the tower it is plain to see, and
-shows courses of thin stone laid horizontally at frequent intervals.
-Above the stringcourse is the usual two light window with
-mid-wall jamb, which, like the Long-and-Short work at the
-angles of the tower, we generally describe as Saxon. Several
-Saxon stones with interlaced work, parts of a cross probably,
-are built into the west end of the south aisle at about two feet
-from the ground outside. I always want to see these very old
-stones inside, for their better preservation. Above the present
-nave roof, but below the mark of the earlier and high-pitched
-roof, is a door which once opened from the tower into the church.
-The chancel arch is Norman, as are the two lofty bays of the north
-arcade. The rest of the church is Early English. In the
-chancel south wall is a large niche with a pedestal, evidently
-intended for a figure, perhaps of St. Margaret, the patron saint,
-and there is also a low-side window of one light with a two-light
-window above it. But the most interesting thing in the chancel
-is a little stone, nine inches by eleven, now in the north wall,
-which was lately found in part of the wall where it had been
-used as building material; this has on it a very early attenuated
-figure of the crucified Saviour, clothed in long drapery.
-It might have been part of a cross-head; certainly it is a very
-remarkable figure, and of very early date. There is a tall cross-shaft
-and pedestal, now in the churchyard, but this is said to have
-been a market cross originally. The Society for the Protection
-of Ancient Buildings were called in to do the work of repairing
-and, as usual, their work has been done in an inexpensive
-manner and on conservative lines. They found that the foundation
-of the old walls, only two feet below the surface, was just
-a trench filled with loose pebbles and sand. Three miles to the
-east of Marton stands the church which, next to the Minster, we
-may put at the head of the list of all the churches in the county.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span>
-This is what Murray rightly speaks of as “The venerable church
-of St. Mary at Stow, the mother church of the great Minster.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">STOW</div>
-
-<p><i>Stow</i> is thought to be identical with the Roman <i>Sidnacester</i>,
-and the first church was built there in 678 by the Saxon King
-Egfrith, husband of Etheldred, the foundress of Ely, at the time
-when Wilfrid’s huge Northumbrian diocese was divided. From
-627, when Paulinus, Bishop of York, preached at Lincoln,
-baptized in the Trent and built the first stone church in Lincolnshire,
-to 656, the province of Lindisse, or Lindsey, was under
-the Bishop of York. From 656 to 678 it was under the Bishops
-of Mercia, whose “Bishop-stool” was at Repton, and after 669
-at Lichfield. In 678 King Egfrith of Northumbria established
-the diocese of Lindsey, with Eadred as first bishop, with its
-“Bishop-stool,” and a church of stone built for the See at Sidnacester
-or Stow. This lasted for 192 years; then, in 870, the
-Danes overran Mercia and burnt Stow church and murdered
-Bishop Berktred. Then from 876, when England was divided
-between Edmund Ironside and Canute, Lincoln became an important
-Danish borough. This period is marked by the number
-of streets in Lincoln called ‘gates,’ and by the enormous number
-of villages in the county ending in the Danish ‘by,’ which we
-find side by side with the Saxon terminations ‘ton’ and ‘ham.’
-The Danes held Lincoln certainly till 940, during which time
-the province had no bishop. In 958 Lindsey was united with
-Leicester, and the “Bishop-stool” was fixed at Dorchester-on-Thames
-till, in 1072, it was transferred to Lincoln, and the
-province of Lindsey became part of the diocese of Lincoln under
-Remigius, the first Bishop of Lincoln. <i>Stow</i> being burnt in
-870, remained in ruins till about 1040, when Eadnoth, seventh
-Bishop of Dorchester, rebuilt it, using the materials of the older
-church as far as they would go, as may be seen in the lower
-part of the transept walls. He probably built the massive
-round-headed tower arches. Leofric, Earl of Mercia, and his
-wife, Godiva, helped liberally both with the building and the
-endowment. The Early Norman nave, and the upper parts of
-the transepts are probably the work of Bishop Remigius (1067-1093)
-who, we are told, “re-edified the Minster at Stow.” The
-chancel is late Norman, of the best kind, and, together with the
-rich doorways in the nave, may be assigned to Bishop Alexander
-(1123-1147) whose great west doorway at Lincoln is of similar
-workmanship. A few Early English windows, and the Perpendicular<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span>
-central tower, are all that has been added later, so that
-the church is of the eleventh and twelfth centuries. The tower
-rests on pointed arches, whose piers come down inside the angles
-formed by the old Norman arches, which remain, and are
-visible below and outside the pointed arches, and give the very
-remarkable appearance of double arches supporting the central
-tower.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">COTES BY STOW</div>
-
-<p>A curious loop-moulding goes round the western Norman
-arch, and is used also on a window in the south transept, and a
-similar moulding is found at <i>Coleby</i>. The chancel is surrounded
-by an arcade, and a stone seat runs all round. In restoring the
-church in 1864 Mr. Pearson left part of the north-west pier of
-the tower untouched, in order to show the red traces of the fire
-of 870, and in the north transept a mass of burnt stone is visible
-behind the organ. This is close to a fine and very early doorway
-which opens into the north aisle from the west side of the
-transept, while on the opposite side, in an altar recess, remains,
-fast fading, are seen of a fresco depicting scenes from the life of
-St. Thomas à Becket. The steep rood-loft steps start four feet
-above the pavement from the angle of the north-east pier close
-by. The stone groining of the chancel has been renewed on the
-old pattern obtained from several of the old stones which were
-found built into the walls; and in underpinning the walls in
-order to replace the groining, the bases of pillars were discovered,
-showing that a previous chancel with aisles had been either
-built or else begun and abandoned. The small windows and
-lack of buttresses give the outside a plain appearance, but the
-three Norman doorways are rich, and there is a great majesty
-about the Norman work of the spacious and lofty interior. The
-font, a very early one, is octagonal, and rests on eight circular
-shafts. It was late in the evening when we left this wonderful
-church, but we had only two miles to go to see the beautiful old
-rood screen at <i>Cotes-by-Stow</i>, which is half way between <i>Stow</i>
-and the Ermine Street. It is approached by a field road, and
-stands at the entrance to a farm, but the little chapel, built of
-small, rough stones, is so shut in by trees that the top of its
-double bell-turret is the only part of it visible. Inside is a round
-tub font, with a square base, some old oak benches, four on
-one side and three on the other; and, what no one would expect
-in such a tiny remote chapel, the most beautiful of old Perpendicular
-rood screens, with exquisite carving, and with the overhang<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span>
-complete. Moreover, the gallery is still approachable by
-the ancient rood loft staircase. The loft is about three feet
-wide, and there is a tiny pair of keyhole windows, each about
-ten inches by two, set close together, in the south wall to light
-it. Of ordinary windows the whole south side has but two,
-though there are four of different sizes with old leaded panes
-on the north side. The doorway is Early English. The building
-was restored in an excellent manner in 1884 by Mr. J. L. Pearson,
-who put back the original altar slab with its unusual number of
-six crosses.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus38">
-<img src="images/illus38.jpg" width="500" height="525" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Stow Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span></p>
-
-<p>We recrossed the field, and passing between <i>Ingham</i> and
-<i>Cammeringham</i>, climbed the hill, and, getting on to the ridge,
-turned to the right for Lincoln, distant about eight miles. As
-we went along we looked down on <i>Brattleby</i> and <i>Aisthorpe</i>, on
-<i>Scampton</i> and the <i>Carltons</i>, and passed through <i>Burton</i> to the
-minster city.</p>
-
-<p>The mists were rising in the flat country westwards, and the
-ripening corn gave a colour to the fields below us, and, as the
-sun set at the edge of the horizon, it seemed to us that it would be
-extremely difficult to find any road in England more striking, or
-from which so fine a view could be seen for so many miles on end.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FISKERTON</div>
-
-<p>Of the three eastern roads one goes by <i>Greetwell</i> and <i>Fiskerton</i>
-to <i>Gautby</i> and <i>Baumber</i>. <i>Cherry Willingham</i> lies just to the
-north where, till 1820, the vicarage was a small thatched house
-at the end of the village.</p>
-
-<p><i>Fiskerton</i> was given by Edward the Confessor to Peterborough,
-and the gift still holds. The charter was copied by
-Symon Gunton in his famous history of Peterborough, of which
-he was prebendary from 1646 to 1676, and at the same time
-rector of Fiskerton, where Dean Kipling was also rector in
-1806. Only a few years ago what is either the original charter
-of the Confessor or an early copy was discovered in the cathedral
-library. The unique chronicle of the abbey and monastery
-called ‘Swapham,’ and written in MS., was saved from Cromwell’s
-soldiers who were burning all the books, etc., by Gunton’s
-son, who tucked it under his arm, saying that it was exempt
-from destruction being a Bible, as any fool could see. That,
-too, is now one of the treasures of the cathedral library. The
-Fiskerton Register is one of the earliest, beginning in 1559. In
-that book is the following entry for 1826:—</p>
-
-<p>“The driest summer known for the last 20 years. Conduit
-water taken from Lincoln to Boston. No rain from April Fair
-20th to the 26th of June. The river was deepened this summer,
-packet went to Boston by the drain; prayers for rain during
-Hay harvest.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Barlings Abbey</i> lies three miles to the north-east, across
-Fiskerton Moor. It was founded in 1054 for Premonstratensian
-canons by Ralph de Hoya, and a grand tower, 180 feet high, was
-still standing in 1710. Half-way to Gautby we reach <i>Stainfield</i>,
-founded by Henry Percy at about the same time for Benedictine
-nuns.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span></p>
-
-<p>At <i>Gautby</i> was once a hall belonging to the Vyner family, and
-in the church are monuments dated 1672 and 1673. Here, too,
-is a slab in memory of F. G. Vyner, who was one of the party
-so infamously murdered by Greek brigands in 1870.</p>
-
-<p>From here <i>Baumber</i> is quickly reached. This church, whose
-massive tower base is Norman, is the burial place of the Duke
-of Newcastle’s family. Here, too, an old hall once stood, close
-by, in Sturton Park, just below a spur of the South Wold.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE SNELLAND SHREW</div>
-
-<p>From Baumber, going four miles south, we reach Horncastle.
-The main eastern road from Lincoln to Wragby is described
-later in the Louth-to-Lincoln route. It is the Roman road to
-Horncastle. At the seventh milestone, shortly after passing
-Sudbrooke Holme, the house of Mr. C. Sibthorpe, where the garden
-is one of the most beautifully kept and tastefully planted of
-any garden in the county, the road divides to the left for Market
-Rasen, by <i>Snelland</i>, <i>Wickenby</i>, <i>Lissington</i>, and <i>Linwood</i>; and to
-the right for Wragby, where it again divides for Louth on the
-left, and on the right for Baumber and Horncastle. The third
-of the roads takes a north-easterly direction by Dunholme to
-Market Rasen. All this route between Nettleham and Linwood
-lies in the flat strip of country some eight miles wide, which runs
-up from the Fens to the Humber, narrowing in width after
-reaching Brigg, from whence it is drained by the river Ancholme
-and the Wear dyke, which discharge into the Humber opposite
-Read’s Island, between South Ferriby and Winteringham. Half
-way across this flat-land, on the way to Market Rasen, and two
-miles to the left of the Wragby road, is <i>Snelland</i>. This place
-is called in Domesday Book Esnelent, and also Sneleslunt; and
-we find that land was held here by Thomas of Bayeux, Archbishop
-of York and chaplain to the Conqueror, while another
-land-holder was William de Percy, founder of Whitby Abbey
-and commander of the fleet which brought the Conqueror over.
-It is now the property of the Cust family. The following rhymed
-marriage entry is in the Snelland register for the year 1671,
-Mr. R. S. having presumably married a well-known scold:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The first day of November</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Robert Sherriffe may remember</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That he was marryed for all the days of his life</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">If God be not merciful to him and take his wife.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE ST. POLL TOMBS</div>
-
-<p>North of <i>Snelland</i> is <i>Snarford</i>, which we should visit, not so<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span>
-much to see the four inner arches of the church tower, which
-are Norman, as to inspect the wonderful tombs of the St. Poll
-family. The earliest is in the chancel, where Sir Thomas lies
-on an altar tomb in plate armour, with helmet under his head,
-bearing as crest an elephant and castle; he wears both sword
-and dagger, and holds in his hand a book. They seem to have
-been a literary family, for his wife, in a long flowing robe with
-girdle and a peculiar head-dress, also holds a book, and the side
-panels have a projection on each face also supporting a book.
-A son and a daughter are kneeling below; and a canopy supported
-on pillars and having a richly moulded cornice bears, over each
-pillar and between the pillars, kneeling figures—ten in all.
-Shields of arms enclosed in wreaths form further decorations,
-but both this, which is dated 1582, and the other large monument
-in the north chantry are much defaced, and the heavy
-canopies look as if they might fall and destroy the figures
-beneath them at any moment. It is no good shouting “police!”
-but where is the archdeacon? This north chantry has been
-boarded off from the church, which has an ugly effect. The
-monuments in it are first to Sir George St. Poll, 1613, and his
-wife Frances, daughter of Chief Justice Sir Christopher Wray of
-Glentworth, whom he married in 1583. This is very large, being
-eleven and a half feet in height and width. Sir George reclines
-on his elbow; he, also, is in armour, his wife is by his side; and
-below is their little daughter Mattathia, with cherubs weeping
-and resting their inverted torches on skulls. The wife, after
-putting up this monument, took for a second husband Robert
-Rich, Earl of Warwick; and opposite to the monument of herself
-and her first husband she re-appears as the Countess of
-Warwick, on a round tablet, with medallions of herself and the
-earl, her second husband, who died in 1618. His first wife was
-Lady Penelope Devereux, by whom he had two sons, Robert
-and Henry, and two daughters, Lettice and Essex. A brass on
-the south side of the chancel has a quaint Latin inscription, by
-the Snarford parson, telling us that Frances Wray, after marriage,
-was twelve years without issue, and then had a daughter who
-died before reaching her second birthday, “cut off while on her
-way to Bath.” This was a terrible loss of a most precious
-treasure, and he mentions that he had christened her Mattathia,
-and goes on to tell us that the “mother passes no day without
-tears of poignant anguish,” and ends with “How I wished,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span>
-alas in vain, that I the writer, instead of thee, had been the
-subject of a funeral elegy. John Chadwick, Sept. 9th, 1597.”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Hos tibi jam posui versus Mattathia Sct. Poll,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Qui primum in sacro nomina fonte dedi.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Quam vellem (at frustra), te nempe superstite, scriptor</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Essem funerei carminis ipse mihi.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE BUSLINGTHORPE BRASS</div>
-
-<p>Close to the St. Poll monument in the chantry is a stone in
-memory of George Brownlow Doughty, 1743, who married a
-Tichborne heiress, and took the name in addition to his own.
-From Snarford, less than four miles brings us to <i>Buslingthorpe</i>,
-where is a Crusader’s effigy, which, like the priest at Little
-Steeping, had been turned upside down and used as a paving-stone,
-possibly for the sake of saving it from destruction. This
-may be Sir John de Buslingthorpe, <i>c.</i> 1250. But the great
-treasure of the church is a brass half-effigy on a coffin-lid, which
-also had been buried, and was only recovered in 1707. This
-represents a knight in armour, holding a heart and wearing
-remarkable scaled gauntlets. The inscription in Norman French
-is without date, but reads: “Issy gyt Sire Richard le fiz sire
-John de Boselyngthorp,” and is probably not later than 1290.
-This is earlier than the somewhat similar brass in Croft Church,
-which is assigned to 1300 or 1310, but is not so early as the fine
-brass of Sir John d’Abernoun at Stoke d’Abernon in Surrey,
-which is dated 1277. Anyhow, it is the earliest in Lincolnshire.
-From here, less than four miles brings us back on to the
-Market Rasen road at Linwood, only two miles from Rasen.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LINWOOD</div>
-
-<p>Instead of going by <i>Snarford</i> and <i>Buslingthorpe</i> we might have
-reached Rasen by a more direct route from <i>Snelland</i> through
-<i>Wickenby</i> to <i>Lissington</i>. Here the road divides, the right hand
-going to <i>Legsby</i> and <i>Sixhills</i>, and then turning left-handed to
-join the Louth and Rasen road at <i>North Willingham</i>; or, if the
-day is clear, the traveller can go straight on from <i>Sixhills</i> and
-climb the Wold, which with a rise of one hundred feet will give
-him a view and bring him to the crown of the same road at
-<i>Ludford</i>. The left-hand road from <i>Lissington</i> will bring us to
-Rasen viâ <i>Linwood</i>. This is a pretty road just elevated above
-the flat, whence the church spire is visible for a long way. This
-interesting church, dedicated to St. Cornelius, Bishop of Rome,
-<span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 251, is of the Early English period with Perpendicular
-tower. The brasses, which are good, have been removed from
-the south chantry to the north aisle and placed at the west end.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span>
-We have John Lyndewode, wool stapler, and his wife, under a
-double canopy, date 1419. In his shield are three Linden leaves,
-which shows the name of the village to mean ‘the Linden (or
-Limetree) wood.’ There is also one to their son John, a wool
-stapler, dated 1421, and a figure of a bishop in the south chancel
-window, probably commemorates another son William, who
-became Bishop of St. David’s. A cross-legged effigy of a knight
-has been torn from its matrix. The old Lyndewode Manor
-once stood close to the church.</p>
-
-<p>Continuing northwards for two miles we find ourselves at
-Market Rasen.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">ROADS SOUTH FROM LINCOLN</span></h2>
-
-<p>The Foss Way—The Sleaford Road and Dunston Pillar on “The Heath”—The
-Ermine Street and the Grantham Road on “The Ridge”—Canwick—Blankney—Digby—Rowston—Brant-Broughton—Temple
-Bruer and the Knights Templars and Hospitallers—Somerton Castle
-and King John of France—Navenby—Coleby—Bracebridge.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Besides these three roads going east from Lincoln, there are
-three great roads which run along “the ridged wold” northwards,
-and two going south; but these two, as soon as they
-are clear of Lincoln, branch into a dozen, which, augmented by
-five lines of railway, all radiating from one centre and all linked
-by innumerable small roads which cross them, form, on the map,
-an exact pattern of a gigantic spider’s web. Of this dozen the
-three trunk roads southwards are the Foss Way to Newark in the
-flat country, and the Sleaford road over “the heath,” both of
-which roads avoid all villages (though the Sleaford road passes
-through Leasingham, described in Chap. <a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">VIII.</a>, about two miles
-north of Sleaford, and has that curious erection, <i>the Dunston
-pillar</i>, at the roadside about eight miles out from Lincoln,
-described in the chapter on Nocton); and thirdly, the Grantham
-road, on the ridge between the two, which has a village at every
-mile. Others run, one to <i>Skellingthorpe</i>, one to <i>Doddington</i> with
-its interesting old Hall, which we will revert to shortly; one
-all down the Witham valley to Beckingham on the border,
-going by <i>Basingham</i> with its ninth-century Saxon font, and
-<i>Norton Disney</i> with its fine Disney tombs and remarkable brass,
-also to be described later; and one to <i>Brant Broughton</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">CANWICK</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ROWSTON</div>
-
-<p>A sign-post in Lincoln points to this village, because, though<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span>
-twelve miles distant, there is nothing on the way; indeed you
-may follow up the valley of the Brant River another six miles
-to its source near <i>Hough-on-the-Hill</i>, and then go on another
-six as it curves round into <i>Grantham</i>, and not pass through anything
-but <i>Marston</i>, and there is nothing to see there but the old
-seat of the Thorold family, Marston Hall, now a farmhouse. All
-these are on the low ground to the west. Then on the ridge
-itself is “the Ermine Street,” and east of the Sleaford highway
-is a desolate road over “Lincoln Heath” to <i>Scopwick</i>, where a
-stream, crossed by several single planks, runs right through the
-village. East of this, another somewhat important road goes
-across the low and once swampy ground south of Lincoln, where
-the Witham gets through the gap in the cliff ridge to <i>Canwick</i>.
-Here the church, which has a rich Norman chancel arch and
-arcade, and an Early English arcaded reredos in the vestry,
-once a chantry chapel, rises, without any other footing, from
-a Roman pavement; here, too, from the grounds of Mr. Waldo
-Sibthorp’s house, Canwick Hall, where the cliff begins again,
-you get a most beautiful view of the minster about two miles
-distant; indeed, those who live near Lincoln and can see the
-minster may boast of a view which for grandeur has few equals
-in the land. This walk from Lincoln is a favourite one, and
-passes a well-planted cemetery of twenty-five acres, part of
-which was taken from the common, which rejoices in the delightfully
-bucolic name of “the Cowpaddle.” The road is really
-the continuation of the Wragby road, and, curving down Lindum
-road passes into Broadgate, then crossing the Witham and the
-Sincel dyke and the intersection of the Midland and Great
-Northern Railways, crosses yet two more lines before it reaches
-the cemetery. After Canwick the road goes through <i>Branston</i>
-and passes, near <i>Nocton</i>, <i>Dunston</i>, and <i>Metheringham</i>, to <i>Blankney</i>.
-The hall here, the home of Mr. Henry Chaplin, than whom no
-Lincolnshire man is better known or more popular, is now
-occupied by Lord Londesborough. The church has a curious
-tomb-slab to John de Glori, with a bearded head looking out
-of a cusped opening, and a beautiful sculpture by Boehm of
-Lady Florence Chaplin. This is one of the few churches in
-which the ringing of the Curfew-bell still obtains. After <i>Blankney</i>
-the road passes Scopwick and curves round through <i>Digby</i>,
-<i>Donnington</i> and <i>Rushington</i> to Sleaford. Of these villages
-<i>Digby</i> is worth seeing, and so is <i>Rowston</i>, lying one mile north<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span>
-of it. At <i>Digby</i> the village cross has been restored, but with a
-very indifferent top, and at the other end of the village is a
-curious stone lock-up, like a covered well-head, and hardly
-capable of holding more than one man at a time. Lingfield in
-Surrey has a larger one called ‘Ye Village Cage’; it has two
-steps up inside, and is capable of holding a dozen people. The
-tower has three stages, Early English, Decorated and Perpendicular.
-The south door is transition Norman, the north arcade
-aisle and chancel Early English, the south arcade and aisle
-Decorated, and the font, screen and clerestory Perpendicular.
-In this the six tall two-light windows are distributed in pairs.
-<i>Rowston</i>, which is dedicated to St. Clement, has a spire rising
-from a tall tower, so little wider than itself that it may safely
-be said to cover less ground than any tower in England, for it
-measures only five and a-half feet inside; it is blank except for
-a rather heavy window in the upper stage. The first thing
-that strikes you on entering is the extraordinary loud ticking
-of the clock. It has to be stopped during service, as no one can
-compete with it. The next thing is that the thirteen windows
-are all filled with painted glass and of the same type, striking in
-design, though not of quite first-rate excellence. One window
-has figures of the three Lincolnshire saints—St. Guthlac, St.
-Hugh, and St. Gilbert. The church is in very good order, having
-been recently restored, and some Saxon stones with interlaced
-work have been built into the outside wall of the chancel. It
-would have been better to have put these inside. But there is
-inside a very good head of a churchyard or village cross, and the
-base and broken shaft of one, possibly the same, is just outside
-the churchyard. This head is of the usual penthouse form,
-with a carved figure on either side; it was found quite recently
-built into a cowshed. In the nave the pillars are all different.
-The vestry was over the burial chapel of the Foster family;
-later it was, as was so often the case, used for a school. A beautiful
-bit of an old carved oak screen separates it now from the
-north aisle. A heavy timber floor cuts across the top of the tall
-tower arch, and below a very curious pillar stands against one
-side of the arch. An Early English priest’s door, with a flat-arched
-lintel, is in the south wall of the chancel. It is impossible
-to walk round the slender tower, as a garden wall runs into it
-on both the north and south sides, leaving part of the tower in
-a neighbouring garden, the owner of which once claimed half<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span>
-the tower as his property, and considered that he had a right
-to pierce a door through it for easier access to his pew.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">GRANTHAM ROAD</div>
-
-<p>We have now but one road south of Lincoln to describe—for
-what we have to say about Norton Disney and Nocton can
-come afterwards; this is the Grantham road, a road curiously
-full of villages mostly perched on the western edge of the ridge,
-whilst the Ermine Street running so near it on the east has no
-villages at all on it, and the Sleaford road over “the Heath,”
-a little to the east of the Ermine Street, is, as we have said, just
-as bare. The number of roads in Lincolnshire which have no
-villages on them is very remarkable, though not hard to explain.
-We have already, in treating of the roads from Grantham,
-through the villages of <i>Manthorpe</i>, <i>Belton</i>, <i>Syston</i>, <i>Barkstone</i>,
-<i>Honington</i>, <i>Carlton Scroop</i>, <i>Normanton</i>, <i>Caythorpe</i> and <i>Fulbeck</i>,
-brought the account of this road northwards as far as <i>Leadenham</i>.
-Here the Sleaford and Newark main road crosses it, and
-<i>Leadenham</i> spire is a fine landmark for all the neighbourhood.
-It is to be noted that, common as the Danish termination ‘by’
-is in all parts of the county, the Saxon ‘ton’ just about here
-and on the west side generally, is even more frequent.</p>
-
-<p>This spire is crocketed, but has no flying buttresses. The
-nave and arcades are lofty, with bold clustered columns, and
-the doorways, which are quite different in style, are both very
-good. There is some good Flemish glass, and a stone monument
-of the Beresford family has long been in use as an altar. <i>Wellbourn</i>,
-on an Early English tower, has one of those ugly, Perpendicular
-“sugar loaf” spires, with a sort of bulge in the middle,
-and that to a worse degree than at Caythorpe. The nave and
-aisles are the work of John of Wellbourn, the munificent
-treasurer of Lincoln in the middle of the fourteenth century.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus39">
-<img src="images/illus39.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Brant Broughton.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BRANT BROUGHTON</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE VILLAGE SMITH</div>
-
-<p>To the right and left of Wellbourn are two places which should
-not be missed. <i>Brant Broughton</i>, with its beautiful spire, and
-<i>Temple Bruer</i>, where are the remains of a preceptory of the
-Knights Templars. The church of <i>Brant Broughton</i> (pronounced
-Bruton) is a beautiful structure, and all in perfect order, the
-magnificent lofty chancel having been built to match the rest
-of the church by Bodley and Garner in 1876. To take the woodwork
-first, the tall handsome screen and the chancel stalls are
-in memory of the late rector, Canon E. H. Sutton, as is also the
-lofty carved font cover, whose doors open and display three
-carved and coloured figures, one being St. Nicholas, the patron<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span>
-saint, with the three children in a pickling tub, whom he is said
-to have raised to life after their murder by a butcher, as is so
-quaintly represented in the famous black font in Winchester
-Cathedral. The roof, which in the first instance was of a higher
-pitch, as seen by the string course, is an exact reproduction, both
-in shape and colour, of the old Perpendicular one which it replaced,
-and is in appearance upborne by figures of angels with
-outspread wings. The three tall arches of the aisle arcades and
-chancel are Early English, two of the pillars are octagonal.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span>
-These arches are very high, though not so high as those in
-<i>Hough-on-the-Hill</i>, which are of about the same date. The
-three-light clerestory windows, five on each side, and the roof
-to the nave, were added with the upper stages of the tower in
-1460, and the Perpendicular aisle windows are large and handsome,
-and have a transom running across the tracery in the
-head of each. They are filled with most interesting glass, good
-in design, and mostly good in colour, all of which was made in
-the village by the late Canon Sutton, who also filled several
-windows in Lincoln Minster. The ironwork in the church was
-also made by Mr. F. Coldron and Son at the village forge, where
-excellent work is always being done and sent to all parts of the
-country. All the work inside the church, and the chancel in
-particular, is beautifully finished in every detail, and bears the
-impress of being all the work of one mind, and as that mind was
-Bodley’s, and he took the utmost pains with it, it need hardly
-be said that it comes very near perfection.</p>
-
-<p>Among the things to notice are the long stone responds of light
-clustered pillars between each clerestory window, which support
-the roof timbers. This is seen in other churches in this part of
-the county, but is otherwise by no means common. Another
-is that at intervals on the outer moulding of some of the doors
-and windows are carved rosettes which give a very rich effect
-and are, I believe, unique. The excellent lectern eagle is a copy
-of one at Oxborough in Norfolk, and a similar one is in the
-neighbouring church of Navenby. Thus far I have spoken of the
-inside, but it is the outside of the church which gives the greatest
-delight, for it is a very perfect specimen, built of good stone, of
-the finest proportions, and richly ornamented. The nave and
-chancel have each an ornate parapet, while the nave is also embattled
-and pinnacled. The tower has the most glorious base-mouldings,
-and the pinnacled and crocketed spire soars up
-175 feet. Both tower and spire date from about 1320, the
-period of the Flowing Decorated style. But the two porches,
-which are a little later, are absolute gems of architecture. They
-have groined roofs, their parapets are pierced and ornamented,
-thickly set with gargoyles, and supported by canopied buttresses.
-Over the entrance of the south porch is a figure of
-Christ seated, and in the north porch is an ornamental roof
-ridge of carved stone. These porches are as beautiful as anything
-can well be; altogether it would be hard to find in a country<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span>
-village anything architectural, more pleasing than <i>Brant
-Broughton</i> Church.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus40">
-<img src="images/illus40.jpg" width="500" height="350" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Ermine Street at Temple Bruer.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE ERMINE STREET</div>
-
-<p>We passed through the village, visited the Coldron forge, and
-then by a road constantly turning first right then left, with fields
-of scarlet poppy or brilliant yellow corn-marigold on either hand,
-and with a stormy sky which ever and anon brought us a squall
-of rain, we drove across the flat country eastwards till we crossed
-the railway and reached the ridge. Climbing this, we come to
-<i>Wellbourn</i>, on the Grantham road, and going on eastwards over
-Wellbourn Heath we reach the Ermine Street, here only a wide
-grassy track. This we cross and go forwards through a well-cultivated,
-but almost uninhabited plain, till we see on the left
-a farm road leading over a field to a big farmyard, in the middle
-of which stands a solitary square-built Early English tower,
-with windows irregularly placed, and steps on one side. This
-is all that is left of a Preceptory of the Knights Templars,
-founded early in the thirteenth century in the reign of Henry II.
-by the Lady Elizabeth de Canz at <i>Temple Bruer</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE TEMPLARS</div>
-
-<p>One does not always like to confess one’s ignorance, but I am
-sure many people may read that word “preceptory” without<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span>
-at all knowing what it may mean, or what the difference is between
-a <i>Preceptory</i> and a <i>Commandery</i>. So we may as well say
-something about the Templars, and the kindred order of the
-Hospitallers. And here I may say that I am indebted for my
-facts to a paper read at Lincoln by Bishop Trollope in 1857.</p>
-
-<p>The first, then, of these, in point of time, were the Hospitallers.
-But as they long outlived the Templars we will take the history
-of the Templars first. This famous order, half-religious and
-half military, was founded in 1118, during the first Crusade, by
-nine French knights, whose object was to protect pilgrims to
-the Holy Sepulchre at Jerusalem. At first they were bound
-by laws of poverty, and were termed “Poor Knights,” but
-Baldwin II., having given them lodging in a part of his palace
-at Jerusalem, the abbot of the Temple Convent, which adjoined
-the palace, gave them further rooms to live in, and from
-this they got the name “Templars.” In 1128 they adopted a
-white distinctive mantle, to which a red cross on the breast
-and on their banner was added in 1166. The fame of their
-feats of arms and chivalry induced many members of noble
-houses to join the society, and land and treasure were so freely
-offered them that they became known for their wealth, as at
-first for their poverty. Their head was termed “Grand
-Master,” and their headquarters were in Palestine, until they
-moved, in 1192, to Cyprus. In other countries each section or
-“Province” was governed by a “Grand Preceptor.” They
-first came to England in the early part of Stephen’s reign, and
-had a church in London, near Southampton Buildings, called
-“The Old Temple,” from which they migrated in 1185 to the
-spot where the circular Temple Church still stands. Their
-wealth was the cause of their downfall, morally and physically;
-and the monarchs, both of France and England, becoming
-jealous, Philip IV., in 1307, seized and imprisoned every Templar
-in his dominion, 200 in number, on the vague charges of infidelity,
-sorcery, and apostasy, and eventually confiscated all
-their property and burnt more than fifty of them alive, relegating
-the rest to perpetual seclusion in some monastic house.
-Edward II. did much the same here, except that there were no
-burnings or executions. Old Fuller, the historian, was probably
-thinking of those in France when he says in his inimitable way:
-“Their lives would not have been taken if their lands could
-have been got without; but the mischief was, the honey could<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span>
-not be got without burning the bees.” In 1312 the Pope,
-Clement V., who was under Philip’s thumb at Avignon, and
-had helped him to coerce Edward II., abolished the order,
-which was found to be possessed of no less than 9,000 manors
-and 16,000 lordships, besides lands abroad. Grants were made
-to favourites, and also to those who had claims for some benefaction
-to any Templar’s estate. Thus Robert de Swines
-(Sweyne’s)-thorp was to receive 3<i>d.</i> a day for food, and another
-3<i>d.</i> for himself and 2<i>d.</i> for his groom; and his daughter,
-Alice Swinesthorpe was to have for life (and she drew it for
-thirty years) “7 white loaves, 3 squire’s loaves, 5 gals of better
-ale, 7 dishes of meat and fish on Saturday for the week following,
-and an extra dish (interferculum) of the better course of
-the brethren, at Xmas, Easter, Whitsuntide, Midsummer, The
-Assumption, and Feast of All Saints, and 3 stone of cheese
-yearly and an old gown of the brethren.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE HOSPITALLERS</div>
-
-<p>Twelve years later Edward granted the whole of their property
-to the similar society of “Knights Hospitallers.”</p>
-
-<p>This society came into existence some fifty years before the
-Templars, and originated in a band of traders from Amalfi, who
-got leave from the Caliph of Egypt to build a church and monastery
-for the Latins near the Holy Sepulchre, in order to look
-after the sick and poor pilgrims who used to come in large
-numbers to Jerusalem. Soon a hospital, or guest house, was
-added, and a chapel dedicated to St. John the Baptist; but
-the society did not take the distinctive name of Hospitallers, or
-guest receivers, until 1099, when Jerusalem was in the hands of
-the Christians. They then assumed a white cross as their badge,
-and were termed Knights of the Hospital, Knights Hospitallers,
-or Knights of St. John.</p>
-
-<p>In 1154 they procured a Papal bull, relieving them from payment
-of tithes, and exempting them from all interdicts and
-excommunications, and giving them other privileges, but binding
-them never to leave the order. These marks of Papal
-favour seem to have made them presumptuous, and great complaints
-soon arose of their insolence. They were accused before
-the Pope, but they managed to clear themselves and to keep
-their privileges. Hence we find that <i>Temple Bruer</i>, which came
-to them after the destruction of the Knights Templars, still
-remains exempt from the payment of tithe, and from episcopal
-jurisdiction, as being extra parochial.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">KNIGHTS OF MALTA</div>
-
-<p>The head of the order had the title of “Grand Prior,” and
-when the Christians were expelled from Palestine, the Knights
-retreated to Cyprus, after which they took from the Turks the
-island of Rhodes, which they held against the Sultan until 1522,
-when Solyman II., after a long siege, forced them to capitulate.
-A few years after that, the Emperor Charles V. gave them a
-home in Malta, and they thenceforth were commonly called
-Knights of Malta. They fortified the island, and imported soil
-to make it productive, and putting to sea with their galleys
-they made constant war upon all Turkish vessels. Solyman at
-length determined to drive them out of Malta. He despatched
-a fleet of 180 galleys, carrying 30,000 men. The Turks took
-the fort of St. Elmo, but with a loss of 8,000 men; and when
-the Emperor sent an army to assist the Knights, La Valette, the
-Grand Prior, a famous leader, drove the Moslems off. After
-this they remained in Malta until the order was dissolved at
-the close of the eighteenth century by order of Napoleon, when
-most of the Knights took service in the French army. Whilst
-the society existed it had branch establishments in England,
-where the chief or Prior took precedence of all the barons, and
-had a seat in Parliament. Their establishments were called
-“commanderies”—while those of the Templars, who were ruled
-by “Grand Preceptors,” were called “preceptories.” Of these
-there were three in Lincolnshire: at <i>Willoughton</i>, four miles
-south of Kirton in Lindsey; at <i>Aslackby</i>, two miles south of
-Falkingham; and at <i>Temple Bruer</i>; all three situated close to
-the Ermine Street or “High Dyke” as they call it, on Lincoln
-Heath, and it is from the heath that one of them gets its name
-<i>Templum de la bruère</i>, or the temple on the heath, shortened into
-<i>Temple Bruer</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">TEMPLE BRUER</div>
-
-<p>The lands of these Knights Templars, which were handed
-over by Edward II. in 1324 to the Knights Hospitallers, were
-all sequestrated in England at the time of the dissolution of
-the monastic and religious houses in 1538, and, like so many
-other Lincolnshire estates, granted by Henry VIII. to his relative,
-Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk. Henry, with his
-wife, Katherine Howard, dined at Temple Bruer when on his
-way to Lincoln in 1541. The buildings then were of considerable
-size, and the circular church, whose pillar bases have been
-laid bare, a little to the west of the existing tower, was fifty feet
-in diameter. It is modelled on the plan of the Holy Sepulchre<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span>
-at Jerusalem, having, as may still be seen in London, Cambridge,
-and Northampton, a corridor running round between the circular
-arcade of the church and the outer wall. The existing tower
-is of the Early English period, fifty feet high, and having three
-storeys; the walls of the lower storey are decorated by arcading
-on two sides, and the rising levels of the floor indicate that
-an altar was placed at the east end, so that it was probably the
-domestic chapel of the Grand Prior. The roof of this and the
-next storey is vaulted, and above the third storey was a parapet.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span>
-The rooms were reached by a winding staircase in the north-west
-angle. A well nine feet in diameter, and never dry, was
-in the precincts, and another, discovered in the eighteenth
-century, was found to have in it three large bells. The Earl of
-Dorset, who owned this interesting property in 1628, sold it to
-Richard Brownlow of Belton, whose daughter and co-heiress
-carried it to the family of Lord Guildford, and he sold it to the
-ancestors of Mr. Chaplin of Blankney.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus41">
-<img src="images/illus41.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Temple Bruer Tower.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">KNIGHTS AT RHODES</div>
-
-<p>It shows that the interest in the Order of the Knights of
-Jerusalem is not yet extinct when we read the following, which
-appeared in <i>The Times</i> of December 21, 1913:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="center">“HOUSE OF THE KNIGHTS AT RHODES.</p>
-
-<p class="center">“(FROM OUR OWN CORRESPONDENT.)</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Rome</span>, <i>Dec. 23</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>Tribuna</i> announces that the House of the Knights at
-Rhodes has been acquired for France by the French Ambassador
-at Constantinople, M. Bompard. The house, which is one of the
-most beautiful in the island, is a Gothic edifice dating from the
-15th century, and was originally the residence of the French
-Priors of the Order of Jerusalem.</p>
-
-<p>“⁂ This appears to refer to the Auberge of the “Langue”
-of France, with its shield-adorned façade in the famous street
-of the Knights in Rhodes, which is still preserved in fair condition.
-Under the Ottoman regime no Christian was allowed
-to own a house or to sleep within the walled town of Rhodes, and
-before the revival of the Constitution foreigners were jealously
-excluded from the majority of the medieval buildings of the
-city. It is probably due to this suspicious and exclusive attitude
-that no such step as that just taken by France has been attempted
-before. It is to be hoped that the palace of the Grand Masters
-of the Order of the Hospital, which ruled the island from 1309
-until 1522, is now no longer to be used as a common prison.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SOMERTON CASTLE</div>
-
-<p>From <i>Temple Bruer</i> we return to the “High Dyke,” and, crossing
-it, make westward for the Grantham road; but before we
-go along it, by <i>Boothby Graffoe</i> to <i>Navenby</i>, we must pause on
-the Ridge, or “Cliff,” as they call it there, and look down on a
-solitary round tower on a slight elevation about a mile across
-the flat plain which extends westward from the Wolds to the
-Trent. This tower and its grassy mounds are all that is left of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span>
-a once fine stronghold, built, about 1281, by Antony Bec,
-Archdeacon of Durham, second son of Walter Bec, Baron
-d’Eresby. He was consecrated Bishop of Durham in the
-presence of Edward I., on January 9, 1284, and he was wise
-enough, a few years later, when his growing magnificence
-excited the jealousy of his sovereign, to present <i>Somerton</i> to
-Edward I., and it remained a royal castle for some three centuries,
-passing afterwards through several families, among
-whom were the Disneys of Norton and Carlton. Edward, son
-of Thomas Disney of Carlton-le-Moorland having purchased it
-from Sir George Bromley, and being succeeded in 1595 by his
-son Thomas, who having lost both his sons, sold it to Sir Ed.
-Hussey. Hence we find that his son Charles, afterwards Sir
-Charles Hussey of Caythorpe, is described in his marriage
-licence, April 10, 1649, as Charles Hussey, Esq., of Somerton.</p>
-
-<p>After the battle of Poictiers, in 1356, John, son of Philip of
-Valois, King of France, was brought captive to London, together
-with his third son Philip. Hence, after a short residence
-at the Savoy Palace, they went to Windsor as guests of the
-King and Queen Philippa, and were subsequently sent to
-Hertford Castle. Edward III. soon thought it wiser to transfer
-them to Somerton, where they were placed under the custody
-of William, Baron d’Eyncourt of Blankney, during the years
-1359 and 1360. The expensive furnishing of the castle (<i>see</i>
-Chap. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVII">XXXVII.</a>) and the provision made for the maintenance
-of the large number of the king’s French suite, and of the officers
-and men who were appointed to guard the prisoners, and the
-style of life there, the tuns of French claret, and the enormous
-amount of sugar to make French bon-bons, together with the
-subsequent history of King John, who, on being set at liberty,
-returned in the most honourable way to England in 1363,
-because his son Louis, Duc d’Anjou, had broken his parole as
-a hostage and left England for France, is fully related by Bishop
-Trollope. King John died in 1364, at the palace of the Savoy.</p>
-
-<p><i>Somerton Castle</i>, which we must now visit, was a fortified
-dwelling-place with outer and inner moats, and with round
-towers at each corner of an irregular parallelogram, only one
-remains now at the south-west angle. This is forty-five feet
-high, and has three storeys—the lower one vaulted, the highest
-covered with a conical roof and having two chimneys, rising
-well above the plain parapet, which is still perfect, and springs<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span>
-from a bold and effective moulding. Each floor is lit by small
-lancet windows, the middle one much enlarged of late years,
-for it is still inhabited, together with some building adjoining it
-on the east, as a farm house. The large earthworks around the
-castle, which are especially noticeable on the south, are very
-remarkable, and must be much earlier than the castle, which
-seems to have been planted inside these rectangular embankments,
-of which the northern side has been levelled, probably
-at the time of the building. The earthworks are not Roman in
-character, and are probably of very great antiquity. Outside
-these are at least two round artificial hills, which have not been
-as yet explained with certainty.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">NAVENBY</div>
-
-<p>Leaving the castle, and driving over the rough field road
-which leads to it, we regain a highway which takes us up “the
-cliff” to the village of <i>Navenby</i>. This is situated on a spur
-jutting out from the edge of the cliff, with a deep little valley
-sweeping round on the south side and breaking down into the
-plain. Nestling in the curve of the hill are some picturesque
-farm buildings and stacks, and above is an old windmill; whilst
-over the horizon peeps through the trees the spire of <i>Wellingore</i>
-Church. The chancel of Navenby Church, as at Heckington, is
-as long as the nave, and almost as high; indeed, this Decorated
-chancel is as fine as any to be found, no other being built on at
-all so magnificent a scale, except Hawton in Notts, and Heckington
-and perhaps Merton at Oxford. The tower, which probably
-had a spire, fell in the eighteenth century, and the whole
-church was restored about forty years ago, by Kirk of Sleaford,
-who made the chancel roof of too high a pitch, and kept the
-nave roof too low. The pillars in the nave, of which there are
-two on each side, have shafts clustered round a central column,
-four shafts of coursed masonry alternating with four light
-detached monolithic shafts, all united under a circular capital.
-But the north-west pillar is thicker than the others, and belongs
-to the latter part of the twelfth century. The tower arch is a
-low one; the fine Decorated east window of six lights, restored
-in 1876, has superb tracery, and is nearly as fine as that at
-Heckington. There are four large chancel windows, and a good
-Early English window in the south aisle. There is also a rood-loft
-staircase, and a rood-loft with canopy, or ‘hang over,’ and
-a modern rood-beam above bearing a large crucifix and two
-almost life-size figures carved and painted. An octagon panelled<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span>
-font stands on a pedestal of slender columns. The roof of both
-nave and aisles is painted. The clerestory, added later, has five
-three-light windows. The east window is filled with white glass,
-slightly toned, and is half hidden by a tapestry screen used as
-a reredos, by no means beautiful, and twice as high as it need be.
-The Jacobean pulpit and the fine copy of an old brass eagle
-lectern, as at Brant Broughton, are to be noticed; but the main
-glories of the church are in the chancel, where, besides the
-splendid windows, there are, on the south side, three rich sedilia
-and a piscina; and on the north, just east of the canopied arch
-for the founder’s tomb, in which is now placed a trefoiled stone
-with Lombardic lettering of Richard Dewe, priest, is a priest’s
-door and a very beautiful Easter Sepulchre. This is only surpassed
-by those at Heckington, Lincoln, and Hawton, near
-Newark. It has only one compartment, with three Roman
-soldiers, with mutilated heads, below the opening, and above it,
-amongst the delicately carved foliage of the canopy, are two
-figures of women. Few churches can give more pleasure to the
-lover of church architecture than this; and its fine position on
-the edge of the cliff, with the wide view over the plain westward,
-makes a visit to Navenby very memorable.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">COLEBY</div>
-
-<p>Going on northwards along the cliff road we pass <i>Boothby
-Graffoe</i>, where the old church was actually blown down, or, as
-the Wellingore register has it, “extirpated in a hurricane,” in
-1666—and come to <i>Coleby</i>. Here is an early unbuttressed tower
-with a rude original arch over the door of the tower staircase,
-and with two keyhole windows in the south side, as in the early
-Lincoln towers or those at Hough-on-the-Hill, and Clee. Part
-of the original tower arch is visible inside the tower, which is
-entered from the nave through a very tall narrow arch supported
-by two very small pilasters with plain rectangular caps.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">TREVENEN PENROSE</div>
-
-<p>The two arches of the north arcade are Transition Norman;
-those on the south Early English, with good stiff foliage. The
-tall, plain porch had once a room over it, and retains its richly
-moulded Transition doorway. The font is of the same date,
-being a massive cylinder with Norman arcading cut on it, and
-with four equidistant pillars which give it a square appearance.
-The crocketed spire is a good one, Perpendicular in style, and of
-better stone than the tower. The three lancet windows at the
-east end are filled with good glass, and the seats are of oak with
-poppy-heads throughout. The fellows of Oriel College, Oxford,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>
-to whom the living belongs, helped in its restoration by Bodley
-and Garner in 1901. The wall at the west end of the south aisle,
-which runs up to the tower and also forms the west side of the
-porch, as the aisle has no window, is one long blank face, which
-has a singularly ugly look outside. Inside, there are some good
-bench-ends, and there is an inscription by Sir John Coleridge
-to the Rev. Trevenen Penrose, who spent the greater part of a
-long life as vicar of the parish.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus42">
-<img src="images/illus42.jpg" width="500" height="575" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Navenby.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Hall is a gabled house of 1628, built by Sir W. Lester,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span>
-now the property of the Tempest family, and having classic
-temples in the grounds, one of them adapted from the Rotunda
-in the baths of Diocletian at Rome.</p>
-
-<p><i>Harmston</i>, the next village, has a tower of the pre-Norman
-type, with a mid-wall shaft to the window of the belfry in
-which are eight bells. A brass plate commemorates Margaret
-Thorold who had a family of eight sons and eleven daughters,
-and lived to be eighty.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BRACEBRIDGE</div>
-
-<p><i>Waddington</i> has some very good Early English work in its
-clustered columns and carved capitals. Here the string of
-villages, one at every milestone, ceases, and we go on for three
-miles seeing the beautiful minster tower in front of us on the
-height, and arrive at <i>Bracebridge</i>, a very dark church, but with
-some most interesting Long-and-Short work in the tower, in
-the angles of the nave, and in the south porch, and a Norman
-west door to the tower, which is a very early one with mid-wall
-shaft to the belfry window. The Norman north door is now
-blocked. There is a curious rectangular opening, twice as wide
-as its height, in the south aisle, near the porch, which allows a
-view between the pillars and through the hagioscope or “squint”
-on the right of the chancel arch to the altar. Another squint is
-on the left side of the chancel arch, which is a very narrow and
-early one, through a thick wall.</p>
-
-<p>The nave pillars, two on each side, are cylindrical with four
-banded shafts attached. The north aisle and transept are
-modern. A fine Transition Norman font is mounted on a new
-base, and on the pulpit is still to be seen the old hour-glass stand,
-as at <i>Leasingham</i>; though there and at <i>Belton</i> in the Isle of
-Axholme it is attached to a pillar, at <i>Sapperton</i> and <i>Hammeringham</i>
-it is on the pulpit. There is also an old cracked
-Sanctus bell.</p>
-
-<p>The road over the heath unites with the Grantham road near
-<i>Bracebridge</i>, and runs into Lincoln by the Stonebow, and on up
-to the Minster Hill.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the roads east, west, and south. The roads north
-of Lincoln demand another chapter. But a few words about
-Nocton and Norton Disney shall come first.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV<br />
-<span class="smaller">PLACES OF INTEREST NEAR LINCOLN</span></h2>
-
-<p>Nocton—Norton Disney—Doddington—Kettlethorpe.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3>NOCTON</h3>
-
-<p>As an instance of what the great Roman catch-water drain
-the “Carr-dyke” effected, we may take the little village of
-Nocton, six miles south-east of Lincoln. Here is a little string
-of villages—<i>Potter Hanworth</i>, <i>Nocton</i>, <i>Dunston</i> and <i>Metheringham</i>—running
-north and south on the edge of a moor which
-drops quickly on the east to an uninhabited stretch of fen
-once all water, but now rich cornland cut into long strips by
-the drains which, aided by pumps, send the superfluous water
-down the Nocton “Delph” into the Witham River. Along the
-extreme edge of the moorland runs the “Carr-dyke” and intercepts
-all the water which would otherwise discharge into the
-already water-logged lowlands, and so makes the task of dealing
-with the fen water a possible one.</p>
-
-<p>At <i>Potter Hanworth</i> the Romans had a pottery. The church
-was rebuilt in 1857, one of the bells was re-cast in memory of
-the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria, and on it were placed
-Tennyson’s lines from “Morte d’Arthur.”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The old order changeth, yielding place to new,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And God fulfils Himself in many ways,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Lest one good custom should corrupt the world.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">On the same occasion the ringing of the Curfew bell, which had
-been continued till 1890, was given up, and a clock with four
-faces put up instead, which strikes the hours, but is not at all the
-same thing. Thus one more interesting and historic custom has<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>
-disappeared, which is much to be regretted in this utilitarian
-and unimaginative age.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE D’ARCY FAMILY</div>
-
-<p>Domesday Book tells us that <i>Nocton</i> was divided in unequal
-shares between two landlords, Ulf and Osulf; on the land of the
-former there was already a church with a priest in 1086. These
-owners had given place to one Norman de Ardreci, written later
-de Aresci, and finally D’Arcy, a companion of the Conqueror.
-Norman D’Arcy’s son granted the churches of Nocton and
-Dunston to the Benedictines of St. Mary’s Abbey, York, also
-some land to the Carthusians of Kirkstead Abbey, and himself
-founded a priory at Nocton for canons of the Orders of St.
-Augustine, who first settled in England in 1108. The buildings
-are quite gone, but the site is still called the Abbey Field, and
-the vicarage is called the Priory; the Priory well, whose water
-was said to be “remarkably good,” in 1727, was only filled up
-about fifty years ago. Why couldn’t they have let it alone, one
-wonders. To follow up the history of Nocton: in 1541 Henry
-VIII. and Katharine Howard slept there.</p>
-
-<p>The D’Arcy family and their descendants in the female line,
-whose married names were Lymbury, Pedwardine, Wymbishe
-and Towneley, held the property for three and twenty generations
-till the middle of the seventeenth century—a good innings
-of 600 years. But the losses which the Civil War brought about
-made it necessary for Robert Towneley, at the Restoration in
-1660, to sell the estate to Lord Stanhope, from whom it soon
-passed by sale to Sir William Ellys, about 1676, and in 1726—by
-the marriage of Sir Richard Ellys’ widow—to Sir Francis
-Dashwood; after whom, in 1767, it descended to a cousin,
-George Hobart, eventually third Earl of Buckinghamshire.
-He altered Nocton considerably, pulled down the church, which
-was too near the house, and set up a poor structure further off,
-where the present church stands. He also spent much in draining
-Nocton fen, and erected a windmill pump which raised the
-water and sent it into the Witham, and worked well for forty
-years till it was superseded in Frederick Robinson’s time (1834)
-by a forty-horse-power steam engine which was found to pump
-the water faster than the fens could supply it. The earl died
-in 1804; ten years later his daughter, Lady Sarah Albinia, carried
-the estate to Frederick John Robinson, second son of Lord
-Grantham, who became Prime Minister and was created
-Viscount Goodrich in 1827, and Earl of Ripon in 1833; and,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span>
-as a member of Sir Robert Peel’s cabinet, moved in the House
-of Lords the second reading of the Bill for the repeal of the
-Corn Laws in 1846. In 1834 the house at Nocton was burnt
-down, and the earl’s young son, afterwards Marquis of Ripon,
-laid the foundation stone of the present house in 1841. The
-earl died in 1859, and his widow, who survived him eight years,
-built in his memory the present fine church, which was designed
-by Sir Gilbert Scott. In 1889 Lord Ripon sold the estate to
-Mr. G. Hodgson of Bradford.</p>
-
-<p>It is interesting to hear of a school being set up in 1793 at
-Nocton; first as a private school by John Brackenbury of
-Gedney, grandson of Edward Brackenbury of Raithby, near
-Spilsby, which was continued for forty-six years after her
-father’s death in 1813, by his daughter Justinia, who became
-Mrs. Scholey. In her time it was an elementary school which
-Lady Sarah financed and managed, the children paying a penny
-a week.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">DUNSTON PILLAR</div>
-
-<p>Another thing that was set up was a land lighthouse on
-Dunston Heath. This was a lonely tract where inhabitants
-had not only been murdered by highwaymen, but had even been
-lost in the storms and snow-drifts on the desolate and roadless
-moor. Here then Sir Francis Dashwood set up the Dunston
-Pillar, ninety-two feet high with a lantern over fifteen feet high
-on the top. The date on it is 1751. The fourth Earl of Buckinghamshire,
-who as Lord Hobart was Governor of Madras,
-took down the lantern on July 18, 1810, and set up in its place
-a colossal statue of George III. to commemorate the king’s
-jubilee.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">NOCTON HALL</div>
-
-<p>The granddaughter of the third earl, whose father (The Very
-Rev. H. L. Hobart) lived at the Priory, being, <i>inter alia</i>, vicar
-of Nocton and Dean of Windsor, and also of Wolverhampton,
-tells me that the mail coaches used to pass the pillar and leave
-all the letters for the neighbourhood at one of the four little
-lodges close by. She has several interesting specimens of the
-work done by the Nocton School of Needlework under the
-guidance of Justinia, whose family were remarkable for their
-Scriptural as well as “heathen Christian names,” <i>e.g.</i>, Ceres
-and Damaris. Justinia herself always, as they say in Westmorland,
-used to “get” Justina. These specimens include a
-very clever and faithful copy in black silk needlework of an
-engraving by Hoylett from a picture by Thos. Espin of old<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span>
-Nocton Hall, which was burnt down in 1834. The needlework
-artist has done one of the trees in the picture most beautifully,
-but has given the rein to her imagination by working in two fine
-palm trees in place of the oaks of the picture. There is a sampler
-done at the vicarage by the dean’s daughter, and inscribed:—</p>
-
-<p class="center">“Nocton Priory, 1839.<br />
-Louisa C. Hobart.”</p>
-
-<p>And two large samplers with the usual pretty floral borders
-worked by Justinia’s daughters, signed “Alice Scholey, 1832,
-and Betsey Scholey, 1848.” The latter has some rather primitive
-representations of the old Hall and its two lodges; also the
-Vicarage and the School, and a libellous portrait of Lincoln
-Minster. Alice Scholey was of a more Scriptural turn of mind
-and apparently fond of birds, for she has owls in the centre of
-green bushes, and pheasants or peacocks among her flowers;
-but her central picture is the temptation, where Adam and Eve,
-worked in pink silk, <i>au naturel</i>, stand on either side of a goodly
-tree covered with fruit, a gorgeous serpent twining round the
-trunk, and one remarkably fine plum-coloured apple temptingly
-within reach of Eve’s hand.</p>
-
-<p>Certainly Justinia’s school was in advance of the time, but
-the art needlework doubtless owed much to the interest taken
-in it by Sarah Albinia, Countess of Ripon.</p>
-
-<p>Samplers of the eighteenth century are now much sought
-after. I saw one lately of 1791, on which a little mite of
-seven, in days when the “three R’s” were taught along with
-the use of the needle in the good old sensible way, had stitched
-in black silk letters:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The days were long</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The weather hot</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Sometimes I worked</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And sometimes not.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Seven years my age</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thoughtless and gay</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And often much</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Too fond of play.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The first stanza with its pathetic little picture is genuine
-enough, but the second was manifestly dictated by her elders.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SAXON ORNAMENT</div>
-
-<p>Among the treasures long preserved at Nocton was an Anglo-Saxon
-ornament of great beauty (<a href="#illus58">see illustration, Chap. XXII</a>) in
-which three discs of silver with a raised pattern of dragons, &amp;c.,
-and with pins four inches long are connected by silver links so
-as to form a cloak-chain to fasten the garment across the breast.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span>
-The pins have shoulders an inch from the sharp points to prevent
-their shaking loose. This for a time was in a museum at Lincoln,
-and on the dispersal of the collection was bought and presented
-to the British Museum, and is in the Anglo-Saxon room. In
-the same room are kept the very interesting finds from the
-Anglo-Saxon cemetery at <i>Sleaford</i>, consisting mainly of bronze
-ornaments and coloured beads. The cloak-chain was found
-in the Witham at <i>Fiskerton</i>, four miles from Lincoln, when the
-river was deepened in 1826.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE MASQUERADE</div>
-
-<p>Sir Charles Anderson, in his excellent Lincoln pocket guide,
-gives some notion of the gaiety which distinguished Nocton in
-the eighteenth century by quoting an account of a masquerade
-held there on December 29, 1767, which begins:—</p>
-
-<p>“Met at the door by a Turk, in a white Bearskin, who took
-our tickets.”</p>
-
-<p>It is curious to note the use of the word Turk for any dark-skinned
-person in a turban, for later in the list of dresses we
-have: “Mr. Amcotts, a Turk, his turban ornamented with
-diamonds. Mr. Cust, a Turk; scarlet and ermine; turban
-and collar very rich with diamonds. He represented the Great
-Mogul,” who would have been little pleased to be called a Turk,
-I imagine. Amongst more than seventy other dresses which
-are described we find: “Lady Betty Chaplin: a Chinese Lady,
-in a long robe of yellow taffety; the petticoat painted taffety.
-Her neck and hair richly ornamented with diamonds.”</p>
-
-<p>But rich jewellery was the order of the night whether it was
-proper to the costume or not, so we find “Lady Buck: a Grecian
-Lady, scarlet satin and silver gauze; her neck and head adorned
-with diamonds and pearls.”</p>
-
-<p>The host and hostess are thus described:—</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Hobart: ‘Pan.’ His dress dark brown satin, made
-quite close to his shape, shag breeches, cloven feet, a round
-shock wig, and a mask that beggars all description, a leopard
-skin over his back fastened to his shoulder by a leopard’s claw.
-In his hand a shepherd’s pipe.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Hobart; First “Imoinda,” a muslin petticoat, puffed
-very small, spotted with spangles. The arms muslin puffed
-like a dancer. Her second dress “Nysa” or “Daphne.” She
-came in footing it, and singing a song in “Midas.” Muslin
-and blue ornaments; a white chip hat and blue ribbons.”</p>
-
-<p>Several dancers had two costumes. Thus “Lord George<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span>
-Sutton. First a Pilgrim; next a Peasant Dancer; pink and
-white.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Molly Peart: a Peasant Dancer; same colours as
-Lord George.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Peart: ‘Aurora’ Blue and White. The Moon setting
-on one side of her head; the Sun rising on the other.</p>
-
-<p>Miss A. Peart: a Dancer; pink and silver.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. and Miss Hales went as a Dutchman and “a Dutchwoman,
-brown and pink,” and Mrs. Ellis as “a Polish Lady;
-pink and silver; a white cloak and a great many diamonds.”</p>
-
-<p>Another classic lady to match ‘Aurora’ was “Miss Manners:
-‘Diana’ her vest white satin and silver; her robe purple
-lute-string; a silver bow and quiver: her hair in loose curls,
-flowing behind, and a diamond crescent on her forehead.”</p>
-
-<p>I should judge that the “Eyewitness” who wrote the account
-was a Mr. Glover because of the minute particularity with which
-his own costume is set forth, thus: “Mr. Glover: a Cherokee
-Chief; a shirt and breeches in one, puffed and tied at the knees;
-a scarlet mantle, trimmed with gold, one corner across his breast;
-scarlet cloth stockings; brown leather shoes, worked with
-porcupine quills and deer’s sinews; a gold belt; gold leather
-about his neck, and before like a stomacher, and over that a
-long necklace and gorget; head-dress of long black horsehair,
-tied in locks of coloured ribbons, a single lock hanging over
-his forehead; ear-rings red and blue; plumes of black and
-scarlet feathers on his head; a scalping knife tucked into his
-girdle; a tomahawk in his hand, and a pipe to smoke tea with.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Glover went in black and yellow as a Spanish lady.</p>
-
-<p>Then we have Henry the Eighth, a shepherdess, “a Witch
-with blue gown, red petticoat and high crowned hat,” a friar
-in a mask, a Sardinian knight, a Puritan, a sailor, “Lord Vere
-Bertie a very good Falstaff,” and many Spaniards, among them
-“Dr. Willis: a Spaniard with a prodigious good mask.”</p>
-
-<h3>THE NORTON DISNEY BRASS</h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote">NORTON DISNEY</div>
-
-<p><i>Norton Disney</i> (= de Isigny, a place near Bayeux) was the
-home of a family who lived here from the thirteenth century
-to nearly the end of the seventeenth.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE BRASS</div>
-
-<p>The castle was in the field near the church, just across the
-road to the west, but has quite disappeared, as has also the seventeenth<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span>
-century manor-house. The church, which is well worth
-a visit, belonged to the Gilbertines of Sempringham (<i>see</i> Chap.
-<a href="#CHAPTER_IV">IV.</a>). The manor is now the property of Lord St. Vincent, a
-title bestowed on Admiral Sir John Jervis when he so handsomely
-defeated the Spaniards near the cape of that name on
-the coast of Portugal in 1797. On opening the door you find
-that you have to descend three steps into the church. Here
-the arcade consists of two Norman arches, and one next the
-chancel smaller and of later date. There are old carved benches
-without poppy-heads, and a very plain old oak screen with
-rood stairs on the south side. The east window is filled with
-stained glass in memory of the Lord St. Vincent who fell at
-Tel-el-Kebir. The aisle has an old roof with carved bosses, and
-there is a very deeply carved font. Outside, the look of the
-church is spoilt by some very inharmonious additions, among
-these is the north chapel to the chancel, inside which, on a
-rough brick floor, are the monuments which give the church
-its interest; these are six in number, three to ladies. One of
-them is a recumbent effigy in coif and wimple of “Joan
-d’Iseney,” 1300. One a curious sepulchral slab with the half-effigy
-of a lady at one end and her feet showing at the other,
-with Norman French inscription to “Joan Disney.” Another
-is the recumbent effigy of Hantascia Disney, a name of frequent
-use in the family. Close to this on the ground is a slab with
-the matrix of a fine brass of a knight under a canopy, while
-another knight is on an altar tomb in the chancel. These are
-all of the fourteenth century. But the most important is a
-brass of the sixteenth century. This is a thick brass plate
-three feet by two, now set in an oak frame and hinged so that
-one may see the reverse side on which is engraved a long inscription
-in Dutch recording the foundation of a chantry in
-Holland in 1518 by Adrian Ardenses and the Lady Josephine
-Van de Steine. The face of this brass is divided horizontally
-into five compartments, at the top is a pediment with a shield
-bearing the Disney arms impaling those of Joiner in the centre,
-and on either side are crests of the Disney and Hussey family—a
-lion passant regardant and a stag couchant under a tree.
-The next compartment shows the half-length figures with their
-names below of “Willm Disney Esquier” in armour and
-helmeted, and “Margaret Joiner” his wife; he in profile, she
-three-quarters face, they are kneeling at a faldstool with open<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span>
-books, their hands joined in prayer, and between them on a
-scroll: “Sufferance dothe Ease.” Behind him are four sons
-and behind her five daughters, all with hands joined in prayer
-and with their names engraved on labels above them. The
-next compartment shows three shields with the arms of Hussey,
-Disney and Ayscough, in which Hussey has three squirrels
-sitting up, Disney has three fleurs de lys, and Ayscough three
-asses coughing. In the compartment below these are the half-length
-figures of Richard Disney, full face in armour with very
-high shoulder-pieces, and his two wives who are three-quarter
-face; and below are their names engraved thus: “Nele
-daughter of Sr Wilton Husey Knyght, Richard Disney, Janne
-daughʳ of Sʳ Wilton Ayscoughe Kᵗ.” Behind the first wife are
-ranged in two tiers her seven sons and five daughters and their
-names were engraved above them. “Sara, Ester, Judeth, Judet
-and Susan” are still there, but the sons’ names are gone; a
-bit of the brass which held them, about six inches by one and
-a half, having been cut out, in connection, it is said, with a lawsuit
-arising out of Richard Disney’s will. They can be supplied
-from Gervase Holles’ MS. as William, Humphrey, John, Daniel,
-Ciriac, Zachariah and Isaac.</p>
-
-<p>The lowest compartment has this inscription:—</p>
-
-<p>“The lyfe, conversacion and seruice, of the first above named
-Willm Disney and of Richard Disney his Sonne were comendable
-amongest their Neigbours trewe and fathefull to ther
-prince and cutree and acceptable to Thallmighty of Whome we
-trust they are receved to Saluation accordinge to the Stedfast
-faythe which they had in and throughe the mercy and merit of
-Christ oʳ Savior. Thes truthes are thus sette forthe that in
-all ages God may be thankfully Glorified for thes and suche
-lyke his gracious benefites.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE DISNEYS</div>
-
-<p>No dates are given, but William Disney’s will was proved in
-1540; Richard Disney’s in 1578; and that of Jane, the second
-wife of Richard, in 1591. She was the younger sister of Anne
-Askew, who was so cruelly burnt for heresy at Smithfield in
-1546, because she had read the Bible to some poor folk in the
-cathedral. She had previously been married to George St. Poll
-of Snarford, by whom she had a son. Canon Cole, in his “Notes
-on the Ecclesiastical History of the Deanery of Graffoe during
-the 15th and 16th centuries,” says that “such demi figures as
-these are rare in the 16th century, and helmets are seldom seen<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span>
-on the heads of knights at this date,” and he shows an engraving
-of the brass, which, of course, cannot be earlier than 1578.
-Richard Disney was one of those who profited most largely by the
-dissolution of the monasteries. His first wife, Nele Hussey, was
-grand-daughter of the unfortunate John Lord Hussey, who was
-beheaded in 1537. Early in the next century one branch of the
-Disneys removed from Norton to the next parish of Carlton-le-Moorland,
-where Ursula Disney’s burial on August 22, 1615, is
-in the register; and her husband, Thomas, removed to Somerton
-Castle, three miles to the east, the lease of which he bought from
-Sir George Bromley, but, having no issue, he sold it again to
-Sir Edward Hussey. Canon Cole also notices that it was while
-the Disneys were at Carlton that the very unusual event in
-Elizabethan times, the rebuilding of a great part of the parish
-church, took place. Churches, as a rule, were getting dilapidated,
-and the archdeacon’s visitations, preserved in the bishop’s
-registry at Lincoln, some of which go back to the time of Henry
-VII., show many presentments for absence of service-books,
-decay of walls and roofs, or churchyard fences. For instance,
-at Bassingham in 1601 the churchwardens are cited “for that
-their churchyard fences toward the street are in manie places
-downe, by reason whereof their churchyard is abused by swyne
-and such unseemlie cattell.”</p>
-
-<p>The smiling youthful faces of the figures in this most remarkable
-brass, and the modern-looking whiskers and beard and
-moustache, combined with the helmet, give a singularly unancient
-look to the wearers, and irresistibly call to mind what
-one has so often seen of late in the twentieth-century pageants.</p>
-
-<h3>DODDINGTON HALL</h3>
-
-<p>Between the road which runs west from Lincoln to Saxilby,
-and the old Roman Foss Way from Lincoln to Newark, which
-went on by Leicester, Cirencester, and Bath to Axminster, a
-tongue of Nottinghamshire runs deep into the county. South
-of this and north of the Foss Way are a few villages of no particular
-importance, amongst them <i>Eagle</i>, which was once a
-preceptory of the Knights Templars. But here also, within
-six miles of Lincoln, is <i>Doddington</i>. This deserves especial
-mention for its fine Elizabethan hall, which is still very much
-as it was three hundred years ago.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">DODDINGTON HALL</div>
-
-<p>The station of Doddington and Harby is just over the border,
-and Harby village is in Nottinghamshire. A statue over the
-doorway in the church tower commemorates the fact that Here
-Queen Eleanor died. Edward I. was holding a council at
-Clipston in Sherwood Forest in 1290 when the queen was taken
-ill and was removed to the house of one of her gentlemen in
-attendance who lived at Harby. After her death her heart
-was buried in Lincoln Minster and her embalmed body was
-taken by stages to Westminster, a beautiful cross being subsequently
-ordered to be set up at each resting place, ten of the
-thirteen were either not completed or subsequently destroyed,
-all those in the county being among the number. These were
-at Lincoln, Grantham, and Stamford. The only three Eleanor
-crosses that have survived the abominable destruction of all
-beautiful things from which the country suffered, first at the
-hands of Henry VIII.’s minister Cromwell, and then from the
-acts of Parliament passed by the iconoclasts of the Reformation,
-and finally by the soldiery of the Civil War, are at Northampton,
-Geddington, and Waltham.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">AND ITS OWNERS</div>
-
-<p>The first owner of Doddington Manor that we know of was
-one Ailric, in Edward the Confessor’s time, who gave it as an endowment
-to the newly built Abbey of Westminster. The family
-of Pigot held it under the abbot, paying a rent of £12, and the
-estate remained with them till 1486, after which Sir John Pigot,
-having no heir, his widow sold it to Sir Thomas Burgh of the
-Old Hall, Gainsborough, and his family 100 years later sold it,
-in 1586, to John Savile, M.P. for Lincoln; but when, seven
-years later, he ceased to represent the town, he sold it to Thomas
-Taylor, for many years registrar to the Bishops of Lincoln.
-He was a wealthy man, and at once set to work to build the
-present hall, which was finished in 1600. It is built of red and
-black brick with stone quoins and mullions, and is approached
-by a stone gateway with two brick storeys above it and three
-gables. It stands between two quadrangles, with gardens in
-that on the west, and with a cedar-planted lawn on the east,
-and the E-shaped house is surmounted by three octagonal
-brick turrets with leaden cupolas. It is 160 feet long and
-seventy-five feet deep on the wings. There is no superfluous
-ornament, all being solidly plain but harmonious outside, and
-with fine stately rooms inside. The hall is fifty-three feet by
-twenty-two, and the long gallery on the third floor ninety-six<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span>
-feet by twenty-two, the house being all one room thick. A
-good deal of internal decoration—oak panels, a staircase, and
-marble chimney-pieces, and heavy architraves over the doors—was
-the work of Lord Delaval about 1760. The pictures are
-numerous, mostly family portraits, one being of Lord Hussey
-of Sleaford, beheaded after the Lincolnshire rebellion, 1536.
-At the south end of the long gallery is a group by Sir Joshua
-Reynolds.</p>
-
-<p>Thomas Taylor died in 1607, and his son in 1652, when the
-estate devolved on his niece, Lady Hussey of Honington. Her
-husband, whose great uncle was the man beheaded by order of
-Henry VIII., was fined as a Royalist in 1646 in the enormous
-sum of £10,200, of which £8,759 was actually paid—half of it
-in his lifetime, and the rest by his widow and his eldest son’s
-widow, Rhoda, who had for her second husband married Lord
-Fairfax. The accession to her uncle’s estate at Doddington
-just two years after she had cleared this huge debt on Honington
-must have been truly welcome to Lady Hussey, but she only
-lived to enjoy it for six years, and was succeeded by her grandson,
-Sir Thomas Hussey, who lived till 1706. Then his title
-passed to Sir Edward Hussey of Caythorpe and his estate to his
-three daughters, the last of whom, Mrs. Sarah Apreece, by will
-dated 1747, settled it on her daughter, Rhoda, the wife of Captain
-Francis Blake-Delaval, R.N., who had large estates in Northumberland,
-Seaton Delaval, Ford Castle near Flodden Field,
-and Dissington. The estate remained with the Delavals till
-1814, when Edward Hussey Delaval, a learned man of science
-and an F.R.S., died, and was buried in the nave of Westminster
-Abbey. Lord Delaval held the property for nearly forty years
-and spent much on the house, but to spite his brother Edward
-he had the meanness to cut down all the timber of any value.
-His youngest daughter was the beautiful Countess of Tyrconnel
-who died in 1800, and to her daughter he left Ford Castle. He
-himself died at the age of eighty at Seaton Delaval, and was
-buried in the family vault in St. Paul’s Chapel, Westminster
-Abbey.</p>
-
-<p>His brother Edward was only one year younger, but lived to
-the age of eighty-five. Then, in 1814, Seaton Delaval went to
-his nephew, Sir Jacob Astley, but Doddington to his widow and
-daughter, the latter of whom became Mrs. Gunman. The
-mother survived the daughter, and in 1829 it was found that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span>
-they had left all their property to a friend, Colonel George
-Ralph Payne Jarvis, who had served in the Peninsular War,
-and whose grandson, Mr. G. Eden Jarvis, is the present owner.</p>
-
-<h3>KETTLETHORPE</h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote">KETTLETHORPE</div>
-
-<p>The tongue of Nottinghamshire, mentioned above, runs into
-the county as far as Broadholme, near Skellingthorpe, within
-five miles of the city. The northern boundary of this tongue
-is the Saxilby road, between which and the Trent is <i>Kettlethorpe</i>,
-which has an interesting history, though the present
-hall was reconstructed in 1857 by Colonel Weston Cracroft
-Amcotts, father of the present Squire of Hackthorn, who dropped
-the name of Amcotts after his father’s death in 1883, and
-handed over the Kettlethorpe estate to his brother Frederick,
-whose widow is now lady of the Manors of Kettlethorpe and
-Stow.</p>
-
-<p>The name takes us back to the invasions of Ketil the Dane, and
-the old spelling of Ketilthorp is therefore the correct one.</p>
-
-<p>In 1283 Sir John de Kewn was the owner. Later it passed
-to the De Cruce or De Sancta Cruce or De la Croix or De Seynte
-Croix family.</p>
-
-<p>In 1356 John De Seynte Croix, son of William de la Croix,
-conveyed the manor and advowson to Sir Thomas Swynford,
-Knight, one of a family who had held land of the Darcys at
-Nocton in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Hugh de Swynford was employed in his wars by John of
-Gaunt, son of Edward III., and he died in 1371. His widow,
-Katharine, being placed in charge of John of Gaunt’s children,
-became his mistress and had four children by him who were
-afterwards legitimised, she took the name of Beaufort, and of
-her sons one became Earl of Somerset, one Duke of Exeter,
-one Bishop of Lincoln and of Winchester, and then Cardinal
-Beaufort, whilst Joan became Countess of Westmorland.
-Katherine Swynford was called “Lady of Ketilthorpe.” In 1394
-John of Gaunt’s second wife, Constance of Carlisle, died, and in
-1396 he married Katherine at Lincoln, and her title in Deeds of
-that time is “The Lady Katherine, Duchess of Lancaster, Lady of
-Ketilthorpe.” Her father was Sir Payne (Lat. Paganus) Roelt,
-and her sister Philippa is said to have been the wife of Geoffrey
-Chaucer.</p>
-
-<p>John of Gaunt died in 1399 at Lincoln, and Katherine, dying<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span>
-four years later, was buried on the south side of the Angel Choir,
-her son Henry being at that time Bishop of Lincoln. Later,
-the tomb of her daughter, who died in 1440, was placed near her.
-The tombs were defaced in the Civil War. The Swynfords
-remained owners of Kettlethorpe for 150 years; now only a
-fourteenth century gateway and a portion of the moat remain.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE AMCOTTS FAMILY</div>
-
-<p>Sir William Meryng was the next owner, and in 1564 it passed
-from the Meryngs to John Elwes, who in 1588 conveyed it to
-W. Meekley, whose successor sold it to Gervase Bellamy, of
-Luneham. He died in 1626, and his heirs were his two daughters,
-<i>Mary</i>, who married Gervase Sibthorp of Luneham, ancestor
-of the Sibthorps of Canwick, and <i>Abigail</i>, whose husband,
-Charles Hall, became owner of Kettlethorpe. His son, Thomas,
-married for his second wife the widow of Vincent Amcotts, of
-Harrington, who had died in 1686, and their son left the property
-to his nephew Charles Amcotts, of Amcotts, in the Isle of Axholme.
-He, in 1762, purchased from Lord Abingdon the manor of Stow,
-once the property of the Bishops of Lincoln. He enclosed the
-lordship, and, dying in 1777, his two sisters inherited. The
-husband of the survivor of these sisters, Wharton Emerson,
-of Retford, had assumed the name of Amcotts, and in 1797
-was created a baronet. He died in 1807, and his daughter
-Elizabeth married Sir John Ingilby, and their son, known as
-Sir William Ingilby Amcotts, held both the Amcotts and Ingilby
-baronetcies inherited from his grandfather Sir Wharton Amcotts,
-and from his father Sir John Ingilby. He died in 1854 and
-the baronetcies died with him, but the estate passed to his
-sister Augusta, wife of Robert Cracroft of Hackthorn, who
-took the name of Amcotts. His son, Weston Cracroft Amcotts,
-was Member of Parliament for Mid-Lincolnshire 1866-1874.
-He it was who reconstructed the hall which Sir William Ingilby
-Amcotts had allowed to get into disrepair, and rebuilt the
-tower of West Keal church, which had fallen. He died in
-1883, and was succeeded by his eldest surviving son Edward
-Weston Cracroft of Hackthorn.</p>
-
-<p>For most of my facts about Kettlethorpe and Doddington
-I am indebted to the exhaustive papers by Rev. Canon Cole,
-Prebendary of Lincoln, contributed to the Lincoln Architectural
-Society’s Journal, to whom also I owe valuable information
-about the brass at Norton Disney, which we visited together,
-and also a pleasant and profitable hour in the minster.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV<br />
-<span class="smaller">HERMITAGES AND HOSPITALS</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3>SPITAL-ON-THE-STREET</h3>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">A little lonely hermitage it was,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Down in a dale, hard by a Forest’s side,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Far from resort of people that did pass</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">In travel to and froe: a little wyde</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">There was a holy chappell edifyde,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Wherein the hermite duly went to say</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">His holy things each morne and eventyde.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">Spenser</span>, <i>Faerie Queene</i>. I. <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> 34.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><i>Spital-on-the-Street</i> is an ancient hospital situated twelve
-miles north of Lincoln on the Roman Ermine Street, which had
-its origin in a Hermitage. The Hermits or “Eremites,”
-dwellers in the Eremos or wilderness, commonly placed their
-habitats in remote spots, though some stationed themselves
-near the gates of a town where they could assist wayfarers
-with advice and gather contributions at the same time for
-their own support; others dwelt by lonely highways in order
-to extend hospitality to benighted wayfarers. A hermitage
-on the “Ermine Street” between Lincoln and the Humber
-would be of the latter sort. For the Street runs in a bee line
-for two-and-thirty miles through an absolutely tenantless
-country. Villages lie pretty continuously a few miles distant
-on either side, but with the exception of Spital itself the Street
-passes through nothing till it arrives within five miles of its
-termination. The hermitage would therefore be a welcome
-asylum to a belated traveller on a stormy night and the sound
-of the chapel bell, or the gleam of the hermit’s rushlight through<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span>
-the darkness would be just salvation to him. Probably such
-a picture was in Shakespeare’s mind when he wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">How far that little candle throws his beams!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">So shines a good deed in a naughty world.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The chapel attached to the hermitage was one of four churches
-in Lincolnshire dedicated to St. Edmund King and Martyr.<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>
-A licence was granted by Edward II. for land and rent to be
-appropriated by the Vicar of Tealby for the payment of the
-chaplain; and, by a document signed at Tealby in the year
-1323 and witnessed by nearly all the dignitaries of the Cathedral
-of Lincoln, the foundation was placed under the jurisdiction
-of the Lincoln Dean and Chapter. Ten years later we find the
-hermitage called “<i>Spital</i>-on-the-Street,” so that its uses had
-already been enlarged, though we have no documentary evidence
-of this. All we know of, is the building of a house for the chaplain
-by John of Harrington in 1333.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THOMAS DE ASTON</div>
-
-<p>In 1396 Richard II., “at the request of his dear cousin John
-de Bellomonte, grants to Master Thomas de Aston, Canon of
-Lincoln, leave to newly build a house adjoining the west side
-of the chapel of St. Edmund the King and Martyr at Spitell
-o’ the Street, for the residence of William Wyhom the Chaplain
-and of certain poor persons there resident and their successors,”
-and before the end of the fourteenth century it had
-buildings sufficient for the maintenance of these poor persons.
-As such it escaped in Henry VIII.’s time, but in the sixteenth
-century the property was seized by Elizabeth for her own use
-in the most barefaced manner and sold by her. The Sessions
-for the Kirton division of Lindsey were for many years held
-in the chapel, but subsequently it fell into disrepair and was
-pulled down by Sir William Wray in 1594, and a new sessions
-house built close by, on which was this Latin couplet,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Hæc domus odit amat punit conservat honorat</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nequitiam pacem crimina jura bonos.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">In 1660 Dr. Mapletoft, of Pembroke College, Cambridge, being
-appointed Sub-Dean of Lincoln and also Master of the Spital
-Hospital, at once rebuilt the chapel and set to work to improve
-the revenue, and when he became Dean of Ely in 1668, he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span>
-retained his Mastership of Spital, and so well did he and his
-next-but-one successor, Chancellor Mandeville do their work,
-that, whereas it had sunk to a master and two poor persons
-to whom he paid 2<i>s.</i> each, they restored it to its complement of
-seven poor people and bought land for it, which so increased in
-value that, when the Charity Commissioners took the Spital
-in hand in the reign of Queen Victoria, the revenues were estimated
-at £959, which was nearly all of it being misappropriated.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus43">
-<img src="images/illus43.jpg" width="500" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Wykeham Chapel, near Spalding.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE NEW SCHEME</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MAPLETOFT’S INSCRIPTION</div>
-
-<p>In 1858 a new scheme was drawn up, and now seven alms-people
-of each sex receive £20 a year, and besides other annual
-payments £5,500 has been spent out of the Spital funds on the
-Grammar School at Lincoln and on founding and maintaining
-a middle-class school at Market-Rasen called after the Spital’s
-founder <i>The De Aston School</i>. Of the old hospital at Spital
-only the chapel built by Mapletoft in 1662 remains; a plain
-structure with its east end to the road where the entrance door<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span>
-is, the altar being at the west end. Below the small square
-bell-cot is a stone bearing this inscription:—</p>
-
-<table summary="Inscription (in Latin)">
- <tr>
- <td>Fui Aᵒ Dni</td>
- <td>1398</td>
- <td>⎫</td>
- <td rowspan="3" class="valign">Domus Dei et Pauperum</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Non Fui</td>
- <td>1594</td>
- <td>⎬</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Sum</td>
- <td>1616</td>
- <td>⎭</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center">Qui hanc Deus hunc destruat.<br />
-G.P. 1830.</p>
-
-<p>This means:—</p>
-
-<table summary="Inscription (translated into English)">
- <tr>
- <td>I was in</td>
- <td>1398</td>
- <td>⎫</td>
- <td rowspan="3" class="valign">The House of God and of the poor</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>I was not in</td>
- <td>1594</td>
- <td>⎬</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>I am in</td>
- <td>1616</td>
- <td>⎭</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center">Whoever destroys this house may God destroy him.</p>
-
-<p>This means that it was founded by De Aston as a chantry and
-hospital in 1398,<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> pulled down by Wray in 1594 and rebuilt
-by Mapletoft in 1661. The mason who carved the date has
-transposed the two last figures in 1661.</p>
-
-<p>G.P. should be J.P. for John Pretyman, the last “Master.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI<br />
-<span class="smaller">ROADS NORTH FROM LINCOLN</span></h2>
-
-<p>Kirton-in-Lindsey—The Carrs—Broughton—Brigg—The North Wolds—Worlaby—Elsham—Saxby-All-Saints—Horkstow—South
-Ferriby—Barton-on-Humber—St.
-Peter’s and St. Mary’s—Greater care of
-Churches.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Of the three roads north from Lincoln we have spoken of the
-road on the ridge which is the continuation of the Cliff road on
-which we travelled from Navenby to Lincoln. The view is the
-notable thing on this road, for, though it looks down on a series
-of small villages below its western slope, Burton, Carlton,
-Scampton, Aisthorpe, Brattleby, Cammeringham, Ingham,
-Fillingham, Glentworth, Harpswell, Hemswell, Willoughton,
-Blyborough and Grayingham, all in a stretch of fourteen miles,
-it passes through nothing of importance but <i>Kirton-in-Lindsey</i>.
-This Kirton is a very old place, the manor being once held by
-Piers Gaveston, the favourite of Edward II., and later by the
-Black Prince. The office of Seneschal was filled at one time
-by the Burgh family of Gainsborough. The church is an interesting
-one, and has a richly carved and moulded west doorway.
-Leading from the nave to the tower is a very massive double
-Early English arch, resting on a large circular pillar, and two
-thick responds. The south doorway is like the western one,
-richly carved with tooth moulding. The porch is used as a
-baptistry. On the north wall of the nave is a wall-painting
-representing the seven sacraments and blood flowing from the
-crucified Saviour to each.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">“CLIFF” AND “CARR”</div>
-
-<p>The road east of Ermine Street goes through any number of
-villages, for it goes on the low ground, and each parish runs up
-to the Ermine Street and has its portion of high ground or
-“cliff.” Normanby Cliff, Owmby Cliff, Saxby Cliff, etc., and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span>
-from the west side each village does the same, so that we have
-in succession Brattleby, Ingham, and Hemswell Cliff. The
-winds on the ridge apparently, which “extirpated” the church
-of Boothby Graffoe, have always deterred people from building
-on the height; but none of the places on this low road which
-occur regularly at intervals of two miles are of any special importance
-except Glentham, which will be noticed later. We will
-therefore run along the middle road, the grand old Roman
-Street, which begins at Chichester and, as seen on the map,
-goes through the county north of Lincoln as straight as an arrow
-for over thirty miles. At the twelfth mile we pass Spital, and
-when, after eighteen miles we get to the latitude of Kirton-Lindsey
-on the cliff road, we shall find that the branch road to
-the right, which goes to Brigg, takes all the traffic, and the
-Ermine Street for seven or eight miles is disused. So, turning
-off, we pass <i>Redbourne</i> Hall and <i>Hibaldstow</i>, the place of St.
-Higbald, who came to Lincolnshire across the Humber with
-St. Chad to bring Christianity to the Mercians in the seventh
-century. This parish runs up to the ridge, and in the middle
-of it is an old camp at Gainsthorpe on the “Street.” At
-Scawby Park, with its fine lakes, the property of the Sutton-Nelthorpes,
-we turn eastwards and reach Brigg. This, once a
-fishing place on the Ancholme River, is now the one market
-town of all this low-lying neighbourhood. Roads from the
-four villages of <i>Scawby</i>, <i>Broughton</i>, <i>Wrawby</i> and <i>Bigby</i> unite
-here, and the great Weir Dyke or “New River Ancholme”
-which runs from the river Rase to the Humber goes through it.
-It is eleven miles from Bishopsbridge on the Rase to Brigg,
-and seven from Brandy Wharf, whence boats used to run to
-meet the Humber boats at Ferriby Sluice, ten miles north of
-Brigg. Hereabouts the fens are called “carrs.” We noticed
-the term “carr dyke” for the Roman drain near Bourn, which
-runs from the Nene to the Witham; and the map along the
-whole course of the Ancholme, which runs north for twenty
-miles, is covered with “carrs.” The villages are at the edge of
-the Wold generally, but they all have their bit of fen and all
-are called by this name, Horkstow carrs, Saxby carrs, Worlaby
-carrs, Elsham carrs, etc.</p>
-
-<p><i>Carr</i> is a north country word, and has two distinct meanings
-in Lincolnshire.</p>
-
-<p>1. The moat-like places which originally surrounded the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span>
-inaccessible islets, with which the Fenland at one time abounded;
-but now used chiefly of low-lying land apt to be flooded.</p>
-
-<p>2. A wood of alder, ash, &amp;c., in a moist boggy place, <i>e.g.</i>,
-“Keal Carrs,” near Spilsby.</p>
-
-<p>A third meaning is less common, viz., the humate of iron
-or yellow sediment in water which flows from peaty land.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BROUGHTON AND BRIGG</div>
-
-<p>Of the four parishes above mentioned which meet at Brigg,<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>
-<i>Broughton</i> on the Ermine Street is worth a visit. The pre-Norman
-church and tower, like <i>Marton</i>, has a good deal of
-herring-bone work, and, like <i>Hough-on-the-Hill</i>, an outer turret
-containing a spiral staircase. There is a small rude doorway,
-and as at Barton, the tower with its two apses probably formed
-the original church.</p>
-
-<p>The present nave is built on the Norman foundation, and the
-cable moulding is visible at the base of two of the pillars. There
-is a chapel in the north aisle, and on the north side of the chancel
-a good altar tomb with alabaster effigies of Sir H. Redford and
-his wife, 1380, and a fine brass on the floor of about the same
-date. This chancel was once sixteen feet longer. In another
-meanly built chantry is a monument to Sir Ed. Anderson,
-1660. In Broughton woods, as at Tumby, the lily of the valley
-grows wild. North of Broughton the Ermine Street becomes
-again passable, and, after running some miles through a well-wooded
-country, is crossed by the railway at Appleby Station,
-whence it becomes a good road again, but again falls into disuse
-when the road turns to the left for <i>Winterton</i>, a large village in
-which three fine Roman pavements were ploughed up in 1747.
-Here we have a large cruciform church with a very early tower.
-Afterwards the Street continues, a visible but not very serviceable
-track, to <i>Winteringham Haven</i>, the Roman “Ad Abum.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">OLD BOAT OF BRIGG</div>
-
-<p>In <i>Brigg</i> we had hoped to see the old boat which was dug out
-near the river in 1886, it is forty-eight feet long and four to
-five feet wide, hollowed out of a single tree, and could carry at
-least forty men over the Humber, though not perhaps across
-the sea. Its height at the stern was three feet nine inches, and
-it was six inches thick at the bottom. The tree trunk was open
-at the thick or stern end, and two oak boards slid into grooves
-cut in the sides and bottom to make a stern-board. It probably
-had bulwark-boards also, certainly it had three stiffening
-thwarts, and the stern end had been decked, as a ledge still<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span>
-shows on either side on which the planking rested. One very
-interesting feature in it was that the boat had been repaired,
-with a patch of oak boarding six feet by one foot, on the starboard
-side, the board being bevelled at the edges and pegged
-on with oak pins. A similar boat made out of a huge oak tree
-is in the portico of the British Museum. In this, which is fifty
-feet long and four feet wide, tapering off a little at either end,
-both the ends and two thwarts are left solid. The latter are
-not more than six inches high, but sufficient to add considerably
-to the strength of the hull. The boat is three inches thick at
-the gunwale and possibly more at the bottom, and has no keel.
-But this most interesting relic of Viking days has been removed
-from Brigg, for what reasons I know not, to the Museum at Hull,
-and is no longer in the county. A British corduroy road or
-plank causeway was also found below the mud from which the
-boat was dug out, and is therefore probably of greater age,
-though such a mud-bearing stream as the Humber can make
-a considerable deposit in a very short time. This fact is illustrated
-by the process of “warping,” which is described in the
-chapter on the Isle of Axholme.</p>
-
-<p><i>Brigg</i>, without its old boat, has little to detain us, so we can
-pass to <i>Wrawby</i>, and then desert the main road, which goes
-east through a gap in the Wold to <i>Brocklesby</i>, and turn northwards
-to <i>Elsham</i>, where we come up against the most northerly
-portion of the “Wolds” as distinguished from the “Cliff”
-or Ridge which lies more to the west. The main road or highway
-to <i>Barton</i> runs right up the hill and crosses the Wold obliquely,
-and, as usual, being on the high ground, exhibits no villages in
-the whole of its course, but we will turn sharp to the left and take
-a byway which goes by “the Villages” of which we shall pass
-through no less than half a dozen in the six miles between
-Elsham and the Humber.</p>
-
-<p>At <i>Elsham</i> is the seat of Sir John Astley. The church has a
-rich tower doorway with curious sculptured stones on either side.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SAXBY AND HORKSTOW</div>
-
-<p>Any road which runs by the edge of a curving range of hills
-is sure to be picturesque; and the continuation of the Wolds
-south of Elsham, after the Barnetby Gap, where the railway
-line gets through the Wolds without tunnelling, with the string
-of villages all ending in “by,” Bigby, Somerby, Searby, Owmby,
-Grasby, Clixby, Audleby, and Fonaby, which lead the traveller
-to <i>Caistor</i>, affords pleasant travelling. But it does not come up<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span>
-in varied charm to this western edge of the Wold, which goes
-farthest north, and ends on the plateau which overlooks the
-Humber near <i>South Ferriby</i>. On this route the first village
-from <i>Elsham</i> is <i>Worlaby</i>, and whereas <i>Elsham</i> had once a small
-house of Austin Canons founded by Beatrice de Amundeville
-before 1169, and given by Henry VIII. at the Dissolution to
-the all devouring Duke of Suffolk, <i>Worlaby</i> had its benefactor
-in John, first Lord Bellasyse, who founded in 1670 a hospital
-for poor women, of which the brick building still exists. The
-twisting road with its wooded slopes and curving hollows is
-here extremely pretty. We next reach <i>Bonby</i>, and soon after
-come to <i>Saxby All Saints</i>. This is a really delightful village,
-and evidently under the care of one owner, for all the houses
-are extremely neat and, with the exception of two proud-looking
-brick-built houses of the villa type, all have tiled roofs and
-buff-coloured walls. That the village is grateful to the landlord
-and his agent, and is also, like Mrs. John Gilpin, of a thrifty
-mind, is quaintly testified by the inscription on a drinking fountain
-in the village, with a semicircular seat round one side of it
-which tells how it was set up “in honour of the 60ᵗʰ year of
-Queen Victoria’s reign, and of Frederick Horsley, agent for
-42 years on Mr. Barton’s estate.” Each of these parishes
-extends up on to the Wold, and down across the fen, and the map
-shows this and marks Saxby or Elsham “Wolds” as well as
-Saxby or Elsham “Carrs”; and in each village a signpost
-points west “to the bridge,” which goes over the land drain
-and the Weir Dyke.</p>
-
-<p>In the next village of <i>Horkstow</i>, a big elm stands close to the
-gates of the churchyard and parsonage. Here the fine air and
-the bright breezy look of sky and landscape fill one with pleasure,
-and the snug way in which the churches nestle against
-the skirt of the wold give a charming air of peace and retirement.
-The church here is singular in its very sharp rise of
-level towards the east. You mount up six steps from the nave
-at the chancel arch, further east are two more steps and another
-arch, and again further on, two more and another arch. It
-looks as though the ground had been raised, for the capitals
-of the pillars on which these last two arches rest are only four
-feet and a half from the floor. The north arcade is transition
-Norman, the arches on the Norman pillars, instead of round,
-being slightly pointed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">QUAINT EPITAPHS</div>
-
-<p>A Colonel of the sixty-third regiment, who died in 1838, has
-a mural tablet here, which tells us that “In the discharge of
-his publick duties he was firm and just yet lenient, and as a
-private gentleman his integrity and urbanity endeared him to
-all his friends.” This is almost worthy to be placed beside that
-of the man who on ending “his social career” is stated to have
-“endeared himself to all his friends and acquaintances by the
-charm of his manner and his elegant performance on the bassoon.”
-Curious, what things people used to think proper to put up in
-churches! One of the oddest is at Harewood in Yorkshire,
-where, under a bust of Sir Thomas Denison, who is represented in
-a wig, his widow writes that “he was pressed and at last prevailed
-on to accept the office of Judge in the Kings Bench, the
-duties of which he discharged with <i>unsuspected integrity</i>.”
-Doubtless she meant with an integrity which was above suspicion,
-but it reads so very much as if those who knew him had
-never for a moment suspected him of possessing the virtue
-mentioned. For other examples see Chapter <a href="#CHAPTER_V">V.</a></p>
-
-<p>After <i>Horkstow</i> we come to <i>South Ferriby</i>, where a chalk road
-leads along the edge of the cliff towards a little landing stage
-on the water’s edge, giving a pretty view over the wide estuary
-to the Yorkshire continuation of the Wold, and the little village
-of <i>North Ferriby</i> opposite.</p>
-
-<p>The church of South Ferriby, which is dedicated, as many
-coast churches are, to St. Nicholas, the patron Saint of children
-and fishermen, has its nave running north and south, and a
-bit railed off at the north end for the altar, though that is now
-placed at the south end.</p>
-
-<p>The name suggests a ferry over the Humber, but the locality
-seems to forbid this, for in no place is the Humber wider until
-you have almost reached <i>Grimsby</i>, and from <i>Barton</i> to <i>Hessle</i>,
-about three miles further down stream, it is only about half
-the width, and there, no doubt, there was a ferry. The reason
-of this great width is that the Humber has made inroads here
-and washed away a good deal of land which used to be between
-Ferriby Hall and the water. This being partly deposited on
-the “old Warp” sand bank, once the breeding place of many
-sea birds, has formed a permanent pasture there, now claimed
-by the Crown and called “Reads Island.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE BARTON HOY</div>
-
-<p>A hundred years ago the ‘hoy,’ a sloop-rigged packet, used
-to take passengers from Barton Waterside Inn, just north of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span>
-Barton, to Hull; and Sir J. Nelthorpe notes in his pocket book,
-under date August 9th, 1793. “arrived at Scawby after a very
-bad passage over the Humber, having been on the water five
-hours, and at last forced to run on shore in Barrow Haven, not
-being able to make Barton, owing to the negligence of the boatmen
-in not leaving Hull in time; my horses, seven in number,
-remained in the boat from four o’clock in the morning till seven
-at night, before they could be landed.”</p>
-
-<p>Coming back from the Cliff Edge road, we turn up the hill
-for <i>Barton-on-Humber</i>, and from the top of the Wold, which
-here comes to an end, we get a really beautiful and extended
-view in all directions. But we must now speak of Barton,
-with its two old churches.</p>
-
-<h3>BARTON-ON-HUMBER</h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BARTON-ON-HUMBER</div>
-
-<p><i>Barton-on-Humber</i> had a market and a ferry when Domesday
-Book was compiled, and was a bigger port than Hull. At the
-Conquest it was given to the King’s nephew, Gilbert of Ghent,
-son of Baldwin Earl of Flanders, whose seat was at Folkingham.
-The ferry is still used, and the Hull cattle boats mostly start
-from Barton landing-stage, but most of the passenger traffic
-is from the railway pier at New Holland, four miles to the east.
-The town is a mile from the waterside. It has two fine churches,
-of which St. Peter’s is one of the earliest in England; curiously
-one of the same type of Saxon church is also at a Barton, Earl’s
-Barton in Northants, and not far from it is another of similar
-date, at Brixworth, which is held to be the most noteworthy
-of all the early churches in England. Barnack and Wittering
-in the same county are also of the same style and of the same
-antiquity, and at Dover, at Bradford-on-Avon, and at Worth
-and Sompting in Sussex are others similar. Stow, near Lincoln,
-Broughton near Brigg, and Hough-on-the-Hill, and the two
-Lincoln towers and Bracebridge, are of similar age, but these
-last, like Clee and so many in the neighbourhood of Grimsby,
-Caistor and Gainsborough, have little but their tower or part
-of their tower left that can be called Saxon, while at Stow, and
-some of the churches in the other counties mentioned, there
-is more to see of the original building.</p>
-
-<p>The last restoration of St. Peter’s, Barton, in 1898, has put
-the church into good condition and left the old work at the west<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>
-end much as it was a thousand years ago; probably the church
-at first was very like what we may still see at <i>Brixworth</i>. The
-tower outside is divided into panels by strips of stone, which
-go deep into the walls and project from the rubble masonry,
-as at Barnack. This has been aptly termed “Stone carpentry,”
-but cannot really be a continuation in stone of a previously
-existing method of building with a wooden framework, such
-as we see in the half-timbered houses of the south of England,
-because that method of building was later. It is possibly a
-method imported from Germany; certainly the double light
-with the mid-wall jamb came from Northern Italy to the Rhenish
-provinces, and may have come on to England from thence.
-Hence it has been termed “Teutonic Romanesque.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus44">
-<img src="images/illus44.jpg" width="500" height="475" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Avon at Barton-on-Humber.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A SAXON CHURCH</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ST. PETER’S, BARTON</div>
-
-<p>Of the four stages of the tower the lowest has an arcading of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span>
-dressed stone, as there is at Bradford-on-Avon, and on the east,
-south and west sides a round-headed doorway, and on the north
-a triangular-headed one, with massive “Long-and-Short” work.
-The next stage exhibits triangular arcading with double lights
-and a massive baluster and capital under a triangular arch.
-The third stage has no arcading, but a similar two-light window.
-The fourth stage is not Saxon but early Norman in style. From
-the west of the tower projects a sort of annexe, fifteen feet by
-twelve, of the same width as the tower and cöeval with it,
-having quoins of “Long-and-Short” work, this is pierced with
-two small rude lights north and south, and with two circular
-lights on the west. These circular lights are of extraordinary<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span>
-interest, for they still have in them, across the top of the upper
-opening and at the bottom of the lower one, a portion of the
-old original Saxon oak shutter, perforated with round holes to
-let in light and air, a thing absolutely unique. A chancel, whose
-foundations have been recently discovered, projected from the
-tower eastward, and just below the floor, near the north wall, is
-a curious bricked chamber, which might have been a small tomb.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus45">
-<img src="images/illus45.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>St. Peter’s, Barton-on-Humber.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ST. MARY’S, BARTON</div>
-
-<p>The tower has four doorways irregularly placed and all differing
-from each other: it is fitted up for daily morning service, for
-which it has been used intermittently for over a thousand years;
-for no doubt the original church consisted simply of the tower
-and the two chambers east and west of it. At present, from the
-interior of the spacious Decorated nave, with its added Perpendicular
-clerestory, when you look up at the west end and see the
-rude round-headed arches of the first and second stages of the
-tower, and the double triangular-headed light of the next stage,
-all of which come within the nave roof, you see at the same time
-two deep grooves cut in the tower face for the early steep-pitched
-roof. These start from the double light and finish by
-cutting through the upright stone strips which run like elongated
-pilasters up the whole height of the tower on either side. The
-tower and its annexe is of such absorbing interest that one hardly
-looks at the rest of the church, or stops to note its beautifully
-restored rood screen with a new canopy to it, which serves to
-hide the wide ugly chancel arch. But we shall perhaps be able
-to make up for this if we go on to St. Mary’s Church, which was
-the church of the people of Barton, and served by a secular
-priest, St. Peter’s being an appanage of Bardney Abbey. The
-churches both stand high, and are quite near one another. St.
-Mary’s was a Norman building, as the north arcade testifies;
-the south arcade was rebuilt in the Early English period, to
-which the massive tower also belongs, the parapet being later.
-Once the nave and chancel had a continuous roof till the clerestory
-was added, and were of the same width, and built of brick
-and stone intermingled and set anyhow. The four-light windows
-in the chancel are handsome. The north arcade has five
-round arches, and one, at the west end, pointed. The south
-arcade has only four arches, but larger and with slenderer
-columns, consisting of eight light shafts round a central pillar.
-On the south the chantry chapel extends the whole length of the
-chancel, and has beside the altar an aumbry and, what is very<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span>
-unusual in such a chapel, sedilia. The aisles are wide and out
-of proportion to the building in both churches. The east window
-is white, with one little bit of old glass in it, and on the floor
-is a full-sized brass of Simon Seman Sheriff of London, in Alderman’s
-gown. Some Parliamentarian soldiers’ armour is in the
-vestry of St. Peter’s. There are also two fine oak chests, one hollowed
-out of a section of a large tree with the outer slab of the tree
-several inches thick as a lid. A similar, but smaller, chest is in
-Blawith church vestry, near Coniston Lake, Lancashire.<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus46">
-<img src="images/illus46.jpg" width="500" height="525" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>St. Mary’s, Barton-on-Humber.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">INTEREST IN CHURCH HISTORY</div>
-
-<p>In Barton St. Peter’s the Rector has provided a very full
-account of the history of the church, for which all who visit it
-must be extremely grateful.</p>
-
-<p>It is very pleasant to find that the number are so decidedly
-on the increase of clergymen who take an interest in the past
-history of their churches, and write all they can find out about
-them, either in their parish magazines or in a separate pamphlet.
-Some of these, too, take pains with their old registers, and if
-only the rector, or someone in the parish whom he could trust
-to do the work with skill, care, and knowledge, would copy the
-old sixteenth and seventeenth century registers in a clear hand,
-the parish would be in possession of the most interesting of all
-local documents in a legible form, and the originals could be
-safely housed in a dry place, which is by no means the case with
-all of them at present, and no longer be subjected to the wear
-and tear of rough handling and the decay from damp which
-has been so fatal to the earliest pages of most of them.</p>
-
-<p>The printing and placing more frequently in the church of a
-card, pointing out the salient features and giving what is known
-of the history of the building, would also be a boon to those
-visitors who know something of architecture, and would stimulate
-a taste for it in others, and a respect for old work, the lack
-of which has been the cause of so much destruction under the
-specious name of restoration in the earlier half of the past
-century. Things are much better now than they were two generations
-ago, but ignorance and want of means may still cause
-irreparable damage, which, if the above suggestion were universally
-carried out, would become less and less possible.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">CHURCH PATRONAGE</div>
-
-<p>Amongst those who take the greatest interest in their churches
-I am especially indebted to the Rev. G. G. Walker, Rector of
-Somerby near Grantham, the Rev. Canon Sutton, of Brant
-Broughton, the Rev. F. McKenzie, of Great Hale near Sleaford,
-and the Rev. C. H. Laing, of Bardney, who has done such good
-work in the excavation of the famous abbey. The writer, too,
-of letters in <i>The Spilsby and Horncastle Gazette</i>, on town and
-village life in Lincolnshire, brings together much interesting
-information. From him I gather that as far back as 668, when
-Theodore was Archbishop of Canterbury, local provision was
-made for the village clergy who were then, of course, but few in
-number. His wise arrangement, that those who built a church
-should have the right of choosing their pastor, initiated the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span>
-system of private patronage and thereby encouraged the building
-and endowing of churches, so that it is not surprising to hear
-that in Domesday Book—400 years later than Theodore’s time—the
-county of Lincolnshire had no less than 226 churches.
-The original patron often gave the right of presentation to an
-abbey, which was a wise plan, as it ensured to the people a
-pastor, and to the pastor an adequate means of living, and
-provided for the building and upkeep of the church, which was
-often larger than the population of the village warranted either
-then or since.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE NORTH-WEST</span></h2>
-
-<p>Winteringham—Alkborough and “Julian’s Bower”—Burton-Stather—Scunthorpe
-and Frodingham—Fillingham and Wycliff—Glentworth
-and Sir Christopher Wray—Laughton—Corringham—Gainsborough—The
-Old Hall—Lea and Sir Charles Anderson—Knaith and Sir
-Thomas Sutton—A Group of Early Church Towers—Lincolnshire
-Roads.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It is quite a surprise to the traveller in the north of the county
-to find so much that is really pretty in what looks on the map,
-from the artistic point of view, a trifle “flat and unprofitable,”
-but really there are few prettier bits of road in the county than
-that by “the Villages” under the northern Wolds, and there is
-another little bit of cliff near the mouth of the Trent which
-affords equally picturesque bits of village scenery combined
-with fine views over the Trent, Ouse, and Humber.</p>
-
-<p>From <i>South Ferriby</i> a byway runs alongside the water to
-<i>Winteringham</i>, from whence the Romans must have had a ferry
-to <i>Brough</i>, whence their great road went on to the north.</p>
-
-<p>In <i>Winteringham</i> church there are some good Norman arches,
-and a fine effigy of a knight in armour, said to be one of the
-Marmions. The road hence takes us by innumerable turns to
-<i>West Halton</i>, where the church is dedicated to St. Etheldreda,
-who is said to have hidden here from her husband Ecgfrith,
-when she was fleeing to Ely, at which place she founded the
-first monastery, in 672, six years before the building of the
-church at Stow. Murray notes that in the “Liber Eliensis”
-Halton is called Alftham.</p>
-
-<p>Three miles to the south-east we find the large village of
-<i>Winterton</i>, just within a mile of the Ermine Street, and it is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span>
-evident that a good many Romans had villas on the high ground
-looking towards the Humber, for both here and at <i>Roxby</i>, a
-mile to the south, good Roman pavements have been found,
-and another, four miles to the east, at Horkstow. Roxby
-church shows some pre-Norman stone work at the west end
-of the north aisle, and a fine series of canopied sedilia in the
-chancel, with unusually rich and lofty pinnacles. At <i>Winterton</i>
-a Roman pavement was noticed by De la Pryme in 1699,
-and another with a figure of Ceres holding a cornucopia was
-discovered in 1797. The churchyard has an Early English
-cross, and the tower, which is engaged in the aisles, is of the
-primitive Romanesque type, with the Saxon belfry windows
-in the lower stage, and elegant Early English ones above. An
-early slab is over the west door, the nave has lofty octagonal
-pillars with bands of tooth ornament. The transepts are unusually
-wide and have rich Decorated windows. A Holy
-Family, by Raphael Mengs, forms the altarpiece.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MAZES</div>
-
-<p>From here we go west to <i>Alkborough</i>, and on a grassy headland
-overlooking the junction of the Trent with the Ouse, we find a
-saucer-shaped hollow a few feet deep and forty-four feet across,
-at the bottom of which is a maze cut in the turf by monks 800
-years ago. It is almost identical in pattern with one at Wing,
-near Uppingham, in Rutland, and unlike those “quaint mazes
-on the wanton green” mentioned in “A Midsummer Night’s
-Dream,” which “for lack of tread are undistinguishable,” it
-has been kept cleared out, and a copy of it laid down in the
-porch, as we find to be done on one of the porch piers at Lucca
-Cathedral, and in the nave of Chartres Cathedral. These
-mazes were Christian adaptations of the Egyptian and Greek
-labyrinths, and were supposed to be allegorical of the mazes
-and entanglements of sin from which man can only get free if
-assisted by the guiding hand of Providence, or of Holy Church.
-Hence in a Christian Basilica in Algeria the words “Sancta
-Ecclesia” are arranged in a complicated fashion in the centre
-of the maze. Other mazes used to exist at Appleby, Louth,
-and Horncastle in Lincolnshire, and at Ripon one of the same
-pattern, but half as large again as the Alkborough maze, was
-only ploughed up in 1827. At Asenby in Yorkshire is a similar
-one still carefully kept clear. That on St. Catherine’s Hill,
-Winchester, is quadrangular and much simpler. At Leigh in
-Dorset is a “Miz Maze.” Northants, Notts, Wilts, Beds,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span>
-Cambridge, and Gloucestershire, all had one at least. <i>Comberton</i>
-in Cambridge has one of precisely the same pattern,
-and at <i>Hilton</i>, in Huntingdonshire, is one called by the same
-name as that at Alkborough, “Julian’s bower.” This is thought
-to be a reminiscence of the intricate ‘Troy’ game described in
-Virgil, <i>Aen.</i> v., 588-593, as played on horseback by Iulus
-and his comrades:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Ut quondam Creta fertur Labyrinthus in alta</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Parietibus textum caecis iter, ancipitemque</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Mille viis habuisse dolum, qua signa sequendi</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Falleret indeprensus et irremeabilis error.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Haud alio Teucrum nati vestigia cursu</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Impediunt texuntque fugas et proelia ludo.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">And the fact that a labyrinthine figure cut in the turf near Burgh
-on the Solway by the Cumberland herdsmen was called “the
-walls of Troy” somewhat favours the interpretation. But it
-seems rather a far-fetched origin. Doubtless they served as an
-innocent recreation for the monks who lived at St. Anne’s
-chapel hard by, and the idea of such labyrinthine patterns is
-found in many churches abroad, for they are executed in coloured
-marbles, both in Rome and in the Early church of St. Vitale at
-Ravenna. The mazes formed of growing trees, as at Hampton
-Court, are more difficult to make out, as you cannot see the whole
-pattern at one time.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ALKBOROUGH</div>
-
-<p>The church at <i>Alkborough</i> was, like Croyland, a bone of
-contention between the monks of Spalding and Peterborough,
-each claiming it as a gift from the founder Thorold, in 1052.
-Tradition says that it was partly rebuilt by the three knights,
-Brito, Tracy, and Morville, who had taken refuge in this most
-remote corner of Lincolnshire, where one of them lived, after
-their murder of Becket in Canterbury Cathedral. The original
-Early tower and tower-arch remain, and a fragment of a very
-early cross is now to be seen by the north pier. One of the bells
-has this inscription:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Jesu for yi Modir sake</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Save all ye sauls that me gart make.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BURTON-STATHER</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">In the village is a really beautiful old Tudor house of brick,
-with stone mullions, called Walcot Old Hall, the property of
-J. Goulton Constable, Esq. The little isolated bit of chalk
-wold which begins near Walcot is but four miles long, and in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span>
-the centre of it is perched the village of <i>Burton-Stather</i>. The
-church stands on the very edge of the cliff, and a steep road leads
-down to the Staithe, a ferry landing stage, from which the village
-gets its name. Here, at a turn in the road, close to the village
-pump, still in universal use by the road side, we stopped to
-admire the wide and delightful view. The Trent was just
-below us. <i>Garthorpe</i>, where the other side of the ferry has its
-landing place, was in front, across the Trent lay the <i>Isle of
-Axholme</i>, green but featureless, and beyond it the sinuous Ouse,
-like a great gleaming snake, with the smoke of Goole rising up
-across the wide plain, and beyond the river, Howden tower;
-while, on a clear day, Selby Abbey and York Minster can be
-seen from the churchyard. We leave the village by an avenue
-of over-arching trees, and cross the Wold obliquely, passing
-Normanby Hall, the residence of Sir B. D. Sheffield, many of
-whose ancestors are buried in Burton-Stather church, and
-leaving the height, descend into a plain filled with smoke from
-the tall chimneys of the <i>Scunthorpe</i> and <i>Frodingham</i> iron furnaces.
-To come all at once on this recent industrial centre is
-a surprise after the bright clear atmosphere and keen air in
-which we have been revelling all day. But we soon leave the
-tall chimneys behind and find that the road divides; the left
-passing over to the “Cliff” at <i>Raventhorpe</i> near <i>Broughton</i> on
-the Ermine Street, and continuing south past <i>Manton</i>, where
-the black-headed gull, “<i>Larus Ridibundus</i>,” the commonest
-of all the gulls on the south coast of England, breeds on land
-belonging to Sir Sutton Nelthorpe of Scawby, to <i>Kirton in
-Lindsey</i>, and so by <i>Blyborough</i>, <i>Willoughton</i>, <i>Hemswell</i>, and
-<i>Harpswell</i>, to <i>Spital-on-the-Street</i>; and thence by <i>Glentworth</i>
-and <i>Fillingham</i> to Lincoln.</p>
-
-<p>Of these places <i>Blyborough</i> is curiously dedicated to St.
-Alkmund, a Northumbrian Saint, to whom also is dedicated
-a church founded in the ninth century by the daughter of
-Alfred the Great in Shrewsbury. <i>Willoughton</i> once had a
-preceptory of the Templars, founded in 1170.</p>
-
-<p><i>Harpswell</i> in its Early Norman, or possibly pre-Norman, tower
-has a mid-wall shaft carved with chevron ornament, similar to
-that in the upper of two sets of early double lights on the south
-side of the tower of Appleton-le-Strey near Malton in Yorkshire.
-It also possesses a clock which was given in memory of
-the victory at Culloden, 1746. Moreover it contains several<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span>
-fine monuments; but <i>Glentworth</i> and <i>Fillingham</i> are of more
-interest than all these. <i>Glentworth</i>, for its very interesting
-church, and <i>Fillingham</i>, because from 1361 to 1368 it was the
-home of the great John Wyclif, who held the living as a ‘fellow’
-of Balliol College, Oxford.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">WYCLIF</div>
-
-<p>Wyclif was made Master of Balliol in 1360, and became
-rector of Fillingham in the same year. In 1368 he moved to
-Ludgershall in Bucks, and in 1374 to Lutterworth, where he
-died on December 31, 1384. He was a consistent opposer of
-the doctrine of transubstantiation, for which he was condemned
-by the University of Oxford; and he renounced allegiance to
-the Pope, who issued no less than five Bulls against him. The
-Archbishop of Canterbury persecuted him in his latter years,
-and forty-four years after his death his bones were exhumed
-and burnt by order of the Synod of Constance, and the ashes
-cast into the Swift. He made the first complete translation
-of the Bible into English from the Vulgate, and in this he was
-assisted by Nicolas of Hereford, who took the Old Testament,
-Wyclif doing the New. Chaucer, who died in 1400, thus describes
-him in his Prologue to the “Canterbury Tales”:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">A good man was ther of religioun,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And was a poure Persoun of a toun;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But riche he was of holy thought and werk.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">He was also a lerned man, a clerk</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That Christes gospel trewly wolde preche.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Wide was his parische, and houses fer asonder,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But he ne lefte not for reyne ne thonder,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In sicknesse nor in mischiefe to visite</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The ferrest in his parische, muche and lite,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Upon his feet, and in his hand a staf.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">This noble ensample to his sheep he gaf,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That first he wrought and afterward be taughte.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Out of the Gospel he the wordes caughte</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And this figure he added eek thereto,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That if golde ruste, what shal iren do?</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">A better preest, I trowe, ther nowher non is,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">He wayted after no pompe and reverence,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ne maked him a spiced conscience,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But Christes lore, and his apostles twelve,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">He taught, but first he folowed it himselve.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SIR CHRISTOPHER WRAY</div>
-
-<p><i>Glentworth</i> has a typical pre-Norman tower, built of small
-stones with dressed quoins. It has the two stringcourses, the
-first being two-thirds of the way up from the ground with only<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span>
-thin slits for lights below it and with the usual mid-wall shaft
-in the belfry window above it, but with an unusual impost; a
-slab with a boldly-cut cross on it forms the jamb in the light over
-the west window, and the south side shows ornamentation
-similar to that which we noticed at Stow. Besides the tower,
-the chancel-arch and a narrow priest’s door are all that remains
-of the Early work. The monument to Sir Christopher Wray,
-who lived here from 1574 to 1592, is a very fine one. The judge is
-represented in his robes and hat, with ruff, which his wife also
-wears, she having a hood and gown with jewelled stomacher.
-Four daughters are figured kneeling below, while the son kneels
-above in armour. Marble pillars with Corinthian capitals
-support the arch over the recess in which the figures lie, and it
-was once richly coloured and enclosed by a screen of wrought
-ironwork.</p>
-
-<p>The right hand road from Scunthorpe runs down the centre
-of the plain half-way between the Cliff and the Trent, through
-a number of villages. Of these <i>Ashby</i> still maintains a Duck
-Decoy near the Trent. <i>Bottesford</i> has a fine cruciform church,
-with a handsome chancel, having narrow deep-set lancet windows
-of unusual length, ornamented with tooth moulding, a
-singular arrangement of alternate lancet and circular windows
-in the clerestory, and stone seats round the Early English arcade
-pillars, as at Claypole. <i>Messingham</i>, with its stained-glass and
-oak furniture collected by Archdeacon Bailey from various
-churches in his Archdeaconry and elsewhere, as also <i>Scotter</i>
-and <i>Scotton</i>, are but milestones on the way to <i>Northorpe</i>, where
-are two good doorways, one Norman, and one, in the south
-porch, Decorated, with fine carved foliage, and the old door
-still in use. The western bays of the arcade are built into the
-walls of the Perpendicular tower, which has been inserted
-between them. A sepulchral brass with inscription to Anthony
-Moreson, 1648, has been inserted into an old altar slab, shown as
-such by its five crosses. Thanks to Mrs. Meynell Ingram the
-church of <i>Laughton</i>, three miles west of Northorpe, was beautifully
-restored by Bodley and Garner in 1896. Here is a very
-fine brass of a knight of the Dalison (D’Alençon) family, about
-1400, which, like that of Thomas and Johanna Massingberd at
-Gunby, has been made to serve again by a parsimonious Dalison
-of a later century.</p>
-
-<p>Roads lead both from <i>Northorpe</i> and <i>Laughton</i> to <i>Corringham</i>.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span>
-This village is on the great east-and-west highway from Gainsborough
-to Market-Rasen, and here, too, the fine Transition
-Norman church has been magnificently restored by Bodley at
-the sole cost of Miss Beckett, of Somerby Hall. It now has a
-fine rood-screen, good modern stained-glass windows, and a
-painting of the adoration of the Magi for a reredos. There is
-here a brass in memory of Robert and Thomas Broxholme,
-1631, placed by their brother and sister, Henry and Mary,
-who all had “lived together above sixty years and for the most
-parte of the time in one family in most brotherly concord.”
-A long rhymed epitaph goes on to say:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Though none of them had Husband Child or Wife</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">They mist no blessings of the married life;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For to the poore they eva were insteed</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of Husband Wife and Parent at their need.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">GAINSBOROUGH</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">“THE MILL ON THE FLOSS”</div>
-
-<p>From <i>Corringham</i> a turn to the right brings us after four miles
-to <i>Gainsborough</i>. From this town on the extreme edge of the
-county four roads and four railway lines radiate, and the Trent
-runs along the edge of the town with a good wide bridge over
-it, built in 1790, for which a stiff toll is demanded. It is described
-by George Eliot in “The Mill on the Floss,” as “St. Oggs,”
-where the ‘Eagre’ or ‘bore’ is thus poetically referred to.
-“The broadening Floss hurries on between its green banks to
-the sea; and the loving tide, rushing to meet it, checks its passage
-with an impetuous embrace.” Constantly overrun by the
-Danes, the town was eventually looked on as his capital city
-by Swegen, who, with his son Canute, brought his vessels up
-the Trent in 1013, and died here, “full King of the Country,”
-in 1014. In the Civil War it was occupied first by the Royalists
-and afterwards by the Parliamentarians, and one of
-Cromwell’s first successful engagements was a cavalry skirmish
-at <i>Lea</i>, two miles to the south, when he routed and killed General
-Cavendish, whom he drove “with some of his soldiers into a
-quagmire,” still called ‘Cavendish bog.’ The place has some
-large iron works and several seed-crushing mills for oil and oil-cake,
-and much river traffic is done in large barges. Talking
-of barges, Gainsborough has the credit of having owned the first
-steam-packet seen in Lincolnshire waters. This was the ‘Caledonia,’
-built at Glasgow, and brought round by the Caledonian
-Canal, to the astonishment of all the east coast fishermen, in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span>
-1815. She was a cargo boat, but she took passengers to Hull,
-and was a great boon to the villages on the Trent.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus47">
-<img src="images/illus47.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>North Side, Old Hall, Gainsborough.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus48">
-<img src="images/illus48.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>South Side, Old Hall, Gainsborough.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE OLD HALL</div>
-
-<p>River traffic below Gainsborough is somewhat hampered
-during the time of spring tides by the Eagre, which, when the
-in-rushing tide overcomes the river current and rides on the
-surface of the stream, rising in a wave six or seven feet high,
-rolls on from the mouth of the Trent to Gainsborough, a distance
-of more than twenty miles. The long street leading to
-the bridge is so dirty and narrow that you cannot believe as
-you go down it that you are in the main artery of the town.
-But when you have crossed the bridge and look back, the long
-riverside with its wharf and red brick houses, boats, and barges,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span>
-has a very picturesque and old-world effect. The great sight
-of the town is the Old Hall, which stands on a grassy plot of
-some two acres, with a very poor iron railing round it, and a
-road all round that. In the middle of this rough grass-grown
-plot in the heart of the town is a charming old baronial hall,
-rebuilt in the times of Henry VII. and Elizabeth, after its destruction
-in 1470, and still occupied as a private residence.
-There was doubtless a building here before the time of the
-Conquest, and here it would be that Alfred the Great stopped
-on the occasion of his marriage with Ethelwith, daughter of
-Ethelred, and here, too, it would be that Swegen died, and his
-son Canute held his court. The present building is of brick<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span>
-and timber with a fine stone-built oriel on the north side, as
-the centre of a long frontage, and is of various patterns, having
-tall chimneys and buttresses on the west, and a brick tower on
-the north-east, and two wings on the south projecting from a
-magnificent central hall with much glass and woodwork, and a
-lantern. The large kitchen with its two huge fireplaces is at
-the end of this hall. Henry VIII. and Katharine Howard were
-entertained here by Lord Burgh, whose ancestor rebuilt the
-hall in Henry VII.’s time, <i>c.</i> 1480; and another of his Queens,
-Katharine Parr, was often here, being at one time the wife of
-Lord Burgh’s eldest son.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE MASTER BUILDER</div>
-
-<p>The wide area round the hall, with its untidy grass and the
-miserable iron fence, gives a singularly forlorn appearance to a
-beautiful and uncommon-looking building. It is supposed
-that the famous master-builder, “Richard de Gaynisburgh,”
-was born at Gainsborough, with whom, then styled “Richard
-de Stow,” the Dean and Chapter of Lincoln in 1306 contracted
-“to attend to and employ other masons under him for the new
-work,” at the time when the new additional east end or Angel
-Choir as well as the upper parts of the great tower and the
-transepts were being built. He contracted “to do the plain
-work by measure, and the fine carved work and images by the
-day.” One of the Pilgrim Fathers was a Gainsborough man,
-and a Congregational Chapel has been built as a memorial to
-him.</p>
-
-<p>From Gainsborough, going north, we come at once to
-<i>Thonock</i> Hall, the seat of Sir Hickman Bacon, the premier
-baronet of England, and <i>Morton</i> is just to the west, where the
-church has a very good new rood screen and five Morris windows,
-from designs by Burne-Jones. Between Morton and Thonock
-is a large Danish camp, called Castle Hills, with a double fosse.
-On the other side of the town the westernmost road of the
-county runs south by <i>Lea</i>, <i>Knaith</i>, and <i>Gate Burton</i> to <i>Marton</i>,
-and thence to <i>Torksey</i>, which in early times was a bigger place
-than Gainsborough, and so on to <i>Newark</i>, but another road
-branches off by <i>Torksey</i> to the left, for <i>Saxilby</i> and Lincoln,
-twelve miles distant.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SIR CHARLES ANDERSON</div>
-
-<p><i>Lea</i> church stands high, and has a chantry in which is a cross-legged
-knight, Sir Ranulph Trehampton, 1300, and some good
-early glass of about 1330. Of Trehampton’s manor-house
-only the site remains, but the hall, which is full of antiquarian<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span>
-treasures, was the home of that well-known Lincolnshire worthy
-Sir Charles Anderson, Bart., the county antiquarian, 1804-1891.
-He was a charming personality. The following story, referring
-to him, was told me by that delightful teller of good stories, the
-Very Rev. Reynolds Hole, Dean of Rochester. At the time
-when a railway was being cut (between Lincoln and Gainsborough
-probably, for that passes through Lea), but at all events
-in a part of the county in which Sir Charles took a great interest,
-he was visiting the works, when an insinuating Irish navvy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span>
-stopped and looked at him and then said, “So you’re Sir Charles
-Anderson, are ye? Sure now there’s scores of Andersons where
-I come from; there’s one now in Sligo, a saddler. Ach! he’s
-a good fellow is that; the rale gintleman. He gives without
-asking.” Then, after a pause, “You’ve a look of ’em.” The
-Andersons lived in Lincolnshire from the days of Richard II.,
-first at Wrawby then at Flixborough, temp. Henry VII.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus49">
-<img src="images/illus49.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Gainsborough Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><i>Knaith</i> is noticeable as being the birthplace, in 1532, of
-Thomas Sutton, the founder of the Charterhouse in London,
-where he is buried. The church has what is not at all common
-in English churches, a baldacchino over the altar, but in fact
-it is not an ordinary church, being just a part of an old Cistercian
-nunnery, founded by Ralph Evermue, about 1180.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE CHARTERHOUSE</div>
-
-<p>Thomas Sutton was of Lincoln parents. He served in the
-army and was made inspector of the King’s Artillery. Having
-leased some land in the county of Durham, he proceeded to work
-the coal there, and became very wealthy, in fact the wealthiest
-commoner in the realm, and with at least £5,000 a year, so that
-he was able to give Lord Suffolk £13,000 for the house then
-called Howard House in Middlesex, which had been the original
-Charterhouse, founded in 1371 by Sir Walter Manney and dissolved
-in 1535. This was in May, 1611. He wished to do something
-to benefit the nation, but he left the details to the Crown.
-He died in December of the same year, but his charity was
-arranged to support eighty poor folk, and to teach forty boys,
-being, like Robert Johnson’s foundation at Uppingham, both
-a hospital and a school. The hospital remains in its old buildings
-in London, the school was moved in 1872 to Godalming, where
-it greatly flourishes.</p>
-
-<p>A central road runs through the middle of the flat country,
-half-way between the Lincoln-and-Gainsborough road and the
-Ridge. This takes us from <i>Corringham</i> by a string of small
-villages to <i>Stow</i>, and thence by <i>Sturton</i> to <i>Saxilby</i>, and so back
-to Lincoln. Of those villages <i>Springthorpe</i> and <i>Heapham</i> both
-have the early unbuttressed towers, described in Chapters
-XXII. and XXIII., the former with herring-bone masonry, the
-latter, like Marton, is unfortunately covered with stucco. In the
-next village of <i>Upton</i> again we find herring-bone masonry; at
-<i>Willingham-by-Stow</i>, the base of the tower is early Norman;
-so that in spite of the ruthless way in which succeeding styles
-destroyed the work of their predecessors, we have a large group<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span>
-in this neighbourhood of churches whose early Norman or even
-Saxon work is still visible. At <i>Sturton</i> is a good brick church
-by Pearson, reminding one of that by Gilbert Scott at Fulney,
-just outside Spalding.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LINCOLNSHIRE ROADS</div>
-
-<p>A few years ago, when the first motor made its way into
-Lincolnshire, the road from Gainsborough to Louth was one
-long stretch of small loose stones. It had never even dreamt
-of a steam roller, and there were always ruts for the wheels,
-and as Lincolnshire carriage wheels were set three or four
-inches wider apart so that they could accommodate themselves
-to the cart ruts, when we brought a carriage up from Oxfordshire
-it was found impossible to use it till the axles had been
-cut and lengthened so that it could run in the ruts. But this
-was a great improvement on the days my grandmother remembered,
-when it took four stout horses to draw a carriage
-at foot’s pace from Ingoldmells to Spilsby (and this was only
-100 years ago), or when Sir Charles Anderson saw a small
-cart-load of corn stuck on the road and thatched down for the
-winter there, doubtless belonging to a small farmer who had
-but one horse, which could not draw the load home. Mention
-is made in this chapter of Scunthorpe. The iron workers there
-appear to be keen footballers, for I notice that there is now
-(December, 1913) one family there of eleven brothers between
-the ages of 18 and 43, ten of them experienced players, who
-challenge any single family anywhere to play two matches,
-one at the home of each team. I wonder if any family of eleven
-stalwart sons will be found to take them on.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE ISLE OF AXHOLME</span></h2>
-
-<p>Epworth and the Wesleys—“Warping”—Crowle—St. Oswald—St.
-Cuthbert.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Isle of Axholme</i>, or Axeyholm, is, as the name when
-stripped of its tautology signifies, a freshwater island, for <i>Isle</i>,
-<i>ey</i> and <i>holm</i> are all English, Anglo-Saxon, or Danish, for “island,”
-and <i>Ax</i> is Celtic for water. The whole region is full of Celtic
-names, for it evidently was a refuge for the Celtic inhabitants.
-Thus we have Haxey, and Crowle (or <i>Cruadh</i> = hard, <i>i.e.</i>, <i>terra
-firma</i>), also <i>Moel</i> (= a round hill), which appears in Melwood.
-Bounded by the Trent, the Idle, the Torn, and the Don, it
-fills the north-west corner of the county, and is seventeen
-miles long and seven wide. The county nowhere touches the
-Ouse, but ends just beyond <i>Garthorpe</i> and <i>Adlingfleet</i> on
-the left bank of the Trent, about a mile above the Trent falls.
-The northern boundary of the county then goes down the
-middle of the channel of the Humber estuary to the sea. Once
-a marsh abounding in fish and water-fowl, with only here and
-there a bit of dry ground, viz., at <i>Haxey</i>, <i>Epworth</i>, <i>Belton</i> and
-<i>Crowle</i>, it has now a few more villages on Trent side, and two
-lines of railway, one going south from Goole to Gainsborough,
-and one crossing from Doncaster by Scunthorpe and Frodingham
-to Grimsby.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">TWO LINCOLNSHIRE MEN</div>
-
-<p>An unfair arrangement was made by Charles I. by which
-the Dutchman Vermuyden, the famous engineer who afterwards
-constructed the “Bedford Level,” undertook to drain the
-land, some of which lies from three to eight feet below high
-water-mark, he receiving one-third of all the land he rescued,
-the king one-third, the people and owners only the other third<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span>
-between them. This gave rise to the most savage riots; and
-the Dutch settlement at <i>Sandtoft</i>, where it is said that the
-village is still largely Dutch, was the scene of endless skirmishes,
-sieges, and attacks. A good insight into the lawlessness of
-the time is obtained from a book called “The M.S.S. in a Red
-Box,” published by John Lane. The ancestors of Thomas
-Mowbray Duke of Norfolk, whose banishment with Bolingbroke
-in lieu of trial by combat, is described in the opening
-scenes of Shakespeare’s “Richard II.,” had a castle in Norman
-times near <i>Owston</i>, between Haxey and East-Ferry on the
-Trent: so that both the would-be combatants were Lincolnshire
-men.</p>
-
-<p>Bolingbroke in the play is banished</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“till twice five summers have enriched our fields,”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">and Mowbray’s sentence is pronounced by the king in these
-words:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Norfolk, for thee remains a heavier doom,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Which I with some unwillingness pronounce:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The fly-slow hours shall not determinate</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The dateless limit of thy dear exile.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The hopeless word of never to return</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Breathe I against thee, upon pain of life.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Richard II.</i>, I. 3.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Norfolk was banished in 1398, and died in Venice in the
-following year, and in Act IV., Scene 1 of the play, when Bolingbroke
-announces that he shall be “repealed”:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“and, though mine enemy, restored again</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">to all his lands and signories.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The Bishop of Carlisle answers:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“That honourable day shall ne’er be seen.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Many a time hath banished Norfolk fought</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For Jesu Christ; in glorious Christian field,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Streaming the ensign of the Christian cross</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Against black Pagans, Turks and Saracens;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And, toil’d with works of war, retired himself</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To Italy; and there at Venice gave</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">His body to that pleasant country’s earth,<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And his pure soul unto his Captain Christ,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Under whose colours he had fought so long.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE WESLEY FAMILY</div>
-
-<p>In the church of <i>Belton</i> is a fine effigy of a knight in chain
-armour, an hour-glass-stand on a pillar near the pulpit, as at
-Leasingham, and a monument to Sir Richard de Belwood.
-<i>Temple Belwood</i>, in the centre of the island, was a preceptory
-of the Knights Templars. <i>Epworth</i> is the chief town, and is
-famous as the birthplace of John Wesley. His father, Samuel,
-was the rector of S. Ormsby when he published his heroic poem
-in ten books on the Life of Christ, which caused him to be
-hailed by Nahum Tate, the Laureate of the day, as a sun new
-risen, before whom he and others would naturally and contentedly
-fade to insignificance.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“E’en we the Tribe who thought ourselves inspired</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Like glimmering stars in night’s dull reign admired,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Like stars, a numerous but feeble host,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Are gladly in your morning splendour lost.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Queen Mary, to whose “Most sacred Majesty” the poem was
-dedicated, bestowed on him the Crown living of Epworth,
-to which he was presented in 1696, two years after her death.
-But, though he owed his living to the Whigs, rather than side
-with the dissenters, he voted Tory, and was accordingly persecuted
-with great animosity by high and low, thrown into
-prison for a debt, his cattle and property damaged, and in
-1709 his home burnt down, which made a deep impression on
-his six-year-old son John, who never forgot being “plucked as
-a brand from the burning.”</p>
-
-<p>John, the fifteenth child, was the middle brother of three,
-who all had a first-rate public school and university education,
-getting scholarships both at school and college: John at
-Charterhouse, the others under Dr. Busby at Westminster,
-and all at Christchurch, Oxford, whence John, at the age of
-seventeen, wrote to his mother “I propose To be busy as long
-as I live.” Eventually he became a Fellow of Lincoln. The
-whole family were as clever as could be, and the seven daughters
-had a first-rate education from their father and mother at
-home. Mrs. Wesley was a remarkable woman, a Jacobite—which
-was somewhat disconcerting to her husband, who had
-written in defence of the Revolution—and a person of strong
-independence of spirit. Of her daughters, Hetty was the
-cleverest; and she is the only one who gives no account of the
-famous “Epworth Ghost,” which is significant, when both
-her parents and all her sisters wrote a full account of it.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span>
-Hetty’s poems are of a very high standard of excellence, and
-it is more than likely that she wrote the verse part—for it is
-partly in prose dialogue—of “Eupolis’ Hymn to the Creator,”
-which is far better than anything else attributed to Sam Wesley.
-He died in 1735, and John, who had been curate to him at
-Epworth and <i>Wroot</i> (the livings went together), left the neighbourhood;
-and the place which had been the home of one of
-Lincolnshire’s most remarkable families for nearly forty years
-knew them no more. (<i>See</i> <a href="#APPENDIX_I">Appendix I.</a>)</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">JOHN WESLEY</div>
-
-<p>Lincoln, however, saw John Wesley, for he preached in the
-Castle yard in 1780, as his father had done seventy-five years
-earlier, when he was spitefully imprisoned for debt. He was
-preaching at Lincoln again in 1788, and again in July, 1790,
-in the new Wesleyan Chapel. Eight months later he died.
-His last sermon was preached at Leatherhead, February 23,
-1791, and his last letter was written on the following day to
-Dr. John Whitehead. He died on March 2, aged 88, having,
-as he said, during the whole of his life “never once lost a
-night’s sleep.” A memorial tablet to John and his brother
-Charles was placed in 1876 in Westminster Abbey. But there
-is also a fine statue of him as a preacher in gown and bands,
-showing a strong, rugged and kindly face, and at the base
-an inscription: “The world is my parish.” This is in front
-of the City Road Chapel, which he had built in Moorfields,
-and where he was buried, but not till 10,000 people had filed
-past to take their last look at the well-known face as he lay
-in the chapel.</p>
-
-<p>Dean Stanley visiting this once, said that he would give a
-great deal to preach in the pulpit there, and when, to his query
-whether the ground was consecrated and by whom, the attendant
-answered, “Yes; by holding the body of John Wesley,” he
-rejoined, “A very good answer.”</p>
-
-<p>John Wesley himself had been denied access to Church of
-England pulpits for fifty years, 1738-1788. Even when he
-preached at Epworth in 1742, it was from his father’s tombstone;
-and in most cases his congregations, which were often
-very large, were gathered together in the open air. We hear
-of him preaching to a large assemblage in the rain at North
-Elkington, on April 6, 1759; and also at Scawby, Tealby,
-Louth, Brigg and Cleethorpes; but in June, 1788, he notes
-in his diary: “Preached in church at Grimsby, the Vicar<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span>
-reading prayers (a notable change this), not so crowded in
-the memory of man.” Each president of the Wesleyan Conference
-sits in Wesley’s chair on his inauguration, and has
-Wesley’s Bible handed to him to hold, as John Wesley himself
-holds it in his left hand in the statue.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">WARPING</div>
-
-<p>We have alluded to the process of <i>warping</i> which is practised
-in the isle. The word is derived from the Anglo-Saxon
-<i>Weorpan</i> (= to turn aside); it indicates the method by which
-the tide-water from the river, when nearly at its highest, is
-turned in through sluices upon the flat, low lands, and there
-retained by artificial banks until a sufficient deposit has been
-secured, when the more or less clarified water is turned back
-into the river at low tide, and the process may be continuously
-repeated for one, two, or three years. The water coming up
-with the tide is heavily charged with mud washed from the
-Humber banks, and this silt is deposited to the depth of some
-feet in places, and has always proved to be of the utmost
-fertility. The process is a rather difficult and expensive one,
-costing £10 an acre, but it needs doing only once in fourteen
-years or so. A wet season is bad for warping, and 1912 was
-as bad as 1913 was good.</p>
-
-<p>At <i>Crowle</i> is a church of some importance, for in it is a bit
-of very early Anglian carving, probably of the seventh century.
-It is part of the stem of a cross, and has been used by the
-builders of the Norman church as a lintel for their tower arch.
-On it are represented a man on horseback (such as we see on
-the Gosforth cross, and on others in Northumbria), some interlacing
-work and a serpent with its tail in its mouth. Also
-two figures which I have nowhere seen accurately explained,
-but explanation is easy, for if you go and examine the great
-Anglian cross at Ruthwell in Dumfriesshire, you will find just
-such a pair of figures with their names written over them thus:
-“S. Paulus et S. Antonius panem fregerunt in Deserto.” The
-figures are so similar that they would seem to have been carved
-by the same hand, and the cross at Ruthwell can be dated on
-good evidence as but a year or two later than that at Bewcastle,
-whose undoubted date is 670.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ST. OSWALD</div>
-
-<p>The church is dedicated to <i>St. Oswald</i>, not the archbishop
-of York who died in 992 and was buried at Worcester, but
-the sainted king of Northumbria who died in battle, slain by
-Penda, King of Mercia, at Maserfield, <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 642. His head,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span>
-arms and hands were cut off, and set up as trophies, but were
-afterwards kept as holy relics, the hands at Bamborough, while
-one arm was for a time at Peterborough. The head was at
-Bamborough, and later at Lindisfarne in St. Cuthbert’s
-Cathedral, where the monks placed it in St. Cuthbert’s coffin.
-He had died in 687, and this coffin, when the Danes pillaged the
-cathedral, was taken away by the monks to Cumberland and
-carried by them from place to place in their flight, according
-to St. Cuthbert’s dying wish; and from 690 to 998, when it
-finally rested in the cathedral, it was kept in the coffin which
-is now in Durham Library. For 100 years, 783 to 893, it rested
-at Chester, and then passed to Ripon, and so to Durham, where
-it was enshrined and visited by hundreds of pilgrims. The
-marks of their feet are plain to see still. In 1104 the coffin
-was opened, and St. Oswald’s head seen in it. In 1542 the
-shrine being defaced, the body was buried beneath the pavement.
-In 1826 it was again opened, and some relics then taken
-out are now in the Cathedral Library—a ring, a cup and
-patten, the latter about six inches square, of oak with a thin
-plate of silver over it, and a stole. This was beautifully
-worked by the nuns at Winchester 1,000 years ago, and intended
-for Wulfstan, but on his death given by them to King Athelstan,
-and by him to St. Cuthbert’s followers.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ST. CUTHBERT’S TOMB</div>
-
-<p>The late Dean Kitchin described to me how, in company
-with a Roman Catholic bishop and a medical man, he had
-opened what was supposed to be St. Cuthbert’s tomb about
-the beginning of this century. The old chronicler had related
-how he was slain in battle, how the body was hastily covered
-with sand and afterwards taken up, and for fear of desecration
-was carried about by the monks whithersoever they went,
-until at last it was laid in a tomb, and a shrine built over it in
-Durham Cathedral. He also said that the saint suffered from
-a tumour in the breast, the result of the plague in 661, which
-latterly had got better. It was known where the shrine was
-and the reputed tomb was close by. The tomb slab was
-removed; beneath it were bones enough to form the greater
-part of one skeleton, and there were two skulls. “What
-do you think of that?” asked the dean; the bishop at once
-replied “St. Oswald’s head.” The doctor then said, “This
-body has never been buried.” “How do you make that
-out?” “Because the skin has not decayed but dried on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span>
-to the limbs as you see, as if it had been dried in sand,” just
-as tradition said. “Also,” he said, “there is a hole in the
-breast here which has partly filled up, evidence probably of
-a tumour or abscess which was healing,” again just what the
-chronicler stated. One of the skulls showed a cut right through
-the bone, like the cut of axe or sword, again corroborating
-the story of the death of St. Oswald in battle. The whole
-account seemed to me to be most interesting, and certainly
-it would be difficult to obtain more conclusive proof of the
-veracity in every detail of the old chronicler.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE NORTH-EAST OF THE COUNTY</span></h2>
-
-<p>Thornton Curtis—Barrow—The Hull-to-Holland Ferry—Goxhill—Thornton
-Abbey—Immingham—The New Docks—Stallingborough—The
-Ayscough Tombs—Great Cotes—Grimsby—The Docks—The Church,
-Cleethorpes—Legend of Havelock the Dane.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>We will now return to the north-east of the county.</p>
-
-<p>From <i>Brocklesby</i> a good road runs north by <i>Ulceby</i>, with
-its ridiculously thin, tall spire, and <i>Wootton</i>, to <i>Thornton Curtis</i>
-and <i>Barrow-on-Humber</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THORNTON CURTIS</div>
-
-<p><i>Thornton Curtis</i> is a place to be visited, because it possesses
-one of the seven black marble Tournai fonts like those at
-Lincoln and Winchester. This stands in a wide open space
-at the west end of the church, mounted on a square three-stepped
-pedestal. The four corner shafts, like those at Ipswich,
-are of lighter colour than the central pillar and the top. The
-latter has suffered several fractures owing to its having been
-more than once moved, and the base is much worn as if it
-had been exposed to the weather. The sides are sculptured
-with griffins and monsters, and on the top at each corner is a
-bird. Of the church the groined porch has been renewed,
-but the doorway is old and good, and part of the ancient oak
-door remains with the original fine hinges, and a design in iron
-round the head of the door. On the floor near the south-west
-corner of the church is a sepulchral stone slab with a
-half effigy of a lady in deep relief showing at the head end.
-There is a fine wide Early English tower arch, and the handsome
-arches of the nave are borne on clustered pillars, which
-are all alike on the north side, but of different patterns on the
-south side, and with excellent boldly cut foliage capitals,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span>
-the western capital and respond being especially fine. The
-north aisle is very wide, and the church unusually roomy.
-The pine roof and the oak seats were all new about thirty
-years ago. The light and graceful rood screen is also new,
-and has deep buttress-like returns on the western side, as at
-Grimoldby. The chancel has late twelfth century lancets, one
-with a Norman arch, the others pointed, showing the transition
-period; once the church was all Norman, but it was extended
-westwards early in the thirteenth century. There are two
-charming piscinas of the same period, with Norman pilasters
-and round-headed arches, but the western one has had a later
-pointed arch, apparently put on in more recent times.</p>
-
-<p>In the north aisle wall there are three arched niches for
-tombs, and on the north side of the chancel outside is a wide
-Norman arch with a flat buttress curiously carried up from
-above the centre of the archway, as in the Jews’ House at
-Lincoln. Near the south porch is a mural tablet carved in
-oak, with old English lettering, which reads thus:—</p>
-
-<p class="center">In the yer yat all the stalles<br />
-In thys chyrch was mayd<br />
-Thomas Kyrkbe Jho Shreb<br />
-byn Hew Roston Jho Smyth<br />
-Kyrk Masters in the yer of<br />
-Our Lorde God MCCCCCXXXII.</p>
-
-<p>In the churchyard is half of the shaft of a cross, octagonal,
-with rosettes carved at intervals on the four smaller sides.
-Like the font, it is mounted on a broad, square three-stepped
-pedestal.</p>
-
-<p>At <i>Barrow</i>, two miles further north, there was once a monastery,
-founded in the seventh century by St. Ceadda, or Chad,
-on land given by Wulfhere King of Mercia. This is an interesting
-corner of the county. New Holland, where the steam
-ferry from Hull lands you, is but three miles to the north,
-and near <i>Barrow Haven</i> station, between the ferry pier and
-Barton, is a remarkable ancient Danish or British earthwork
-called “The Castles”—a large tumulus-topped mound with
-a wide fosse, and with other mounds and ditches grouped
-round it, which, when occupied, were surrounded by marshes
-and only approachable by a channel from the Humber. The
-claim that this is the site of the great battle of Brunanburh
-in 937 cannot be looked upon as more than the merest conjecture.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span>
-Both <i>Barton</i> and <i>Barrow</i> have been claimed for it; and
-“Barrow Castles” might or might not have had some connection
-with the great battle, which certainly is referred to as
-near the Humber in Robert de Brunne’s chronicle, as follows:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“He brought the King Anlaf up the Humber</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With seven hundred ships and fifteen, so great was the number.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Athelstan here saw all the great host,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">He and Edward his brother hurried to the coast.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">At Brunnisburgh on Humber they gave them assault,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From Morning to Evening lasted the battle,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">At the last to their ships the King gave them chase</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">All fled away, that was of God’s grace.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE HULL FERRY</div>
-
-<p>The Great Northern Railway runs south from Holland pier
-to Ulceby, and then splits right and left to Brigg and Grimsby;
-and here let me warn anyone who thinks to bring a motor
-over by the ferry to or from Hull. The sloping stage at New
-Holland is fairly easy, though the boats’ moveable gangway
-is not provided with an inclined approach board, the simplest
-thing in the world, but each car or truck has to bump on and
-off it with a four-inch rise, and an extra man or two are required
-to lift the wheels of each loaded truck on or off—a childishly
-stupid arrangement which reflects no credit on the brains of
-the officers of the Central Railway, who own the ferry service;
-but on the Hull side matters are much worse, and I don’t
-think that any method of loading or unloading even in a remote
-Asiatic port can be so barbaric and out-of-date as that which
-the Central Railway provides for its long-suffering customers.
-To get a motor on board from Hull is both difficult and
-dangerous; after threading an intricate maze of close-set pillars
-a car has to go down a very steep and slippery gangway, and
-when at the bottom has to turn at right angles with no room
-to back, and across a moveable gangway so narrow that the
-side railing has to be taken off and a loose plank added to take
-the wheels; then, whilst the car hangs over the water on the
-slippery slope, several men lift the front part round to the left
-and then, with a great effort, drag the back wheels round to
-the right, and after filling up a yawning gap between the slope
-and the gang-plank by putting a piece of board of some kind,
-but with no fit, to prevent the wheel from dropping through
-or the car going headlong into the sea, the machine is got on
-to the deck; and then all sorts of heavy goods on hand-barrows<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span>
-are brought on, four men having to hang on to each
-down the slippery planks, and these are piled all round the
-motor, and all are taken off on the other side with incredible
-exertions before the motor has a chance to move. The crossing
-itself takes but twenty minutes, but the whole process of getting
-on, crossing and getting off, occupied us two hours, and a really
-big car would never have been able to get over at all. No
-one at the Hull Corporation pier seems to know anything about
-the use of a crane for loading purposes, and it is evident that
-passenger traffic with any form of vehicle is not to receive any
-encouragement from this anything but up-to-date railway
-company. Why do not the Hull Corporation insist on something
-very much better? The parallelogram between the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[219]</span>
-railway and Humber, when it turns south opposite Hull, has
-a belt of marsh along the river side, and because it was in old
-times so inaccessible, it contains some fine monastic buildings.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus50">
-<img src="images/illus50.jpg" width="500" height="475" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Great Goxhill Priory.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">GOXHILL</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THORNTON ABBEY</div>
-
-<p>Two miles west of Barrow is <i>Goxhill</i>. Here there is a fine
-church tower, with a delicate parapet, and a mile south is
-the so-called “Priory,” which was probably only a memorial
-chapel served by a hermit in the pay of the De Spenser family.
-Murray gives this entry from the bishop’s registers for 1368:
-“Thomas De Tykhill, hermit, clerk, presented by Philip
-Despenser to the chapel of St. Andrew in the parish of Goxhill,
-on the death of Thomas, the last hermit.” It is now a picturesque
-ruin of two stories, the lower one vaulted and with three large
-Decorated windows at the sides, and a large double round-headed
-one at the end, all now blocked, the building being
-used for a barn. Two miles from this, and near Thornton
-Abbey Station, is all that is left of <i>Thornton Abbey</i>. A fine
-gateway, second only to that at Battle Abbey, and two sides
-of a beautiful octagonal chapter-house, with very rich arcading
-beneath the lovely three-light windows. Founded in 1139,
-for a prior and twelve Augustinian canons, it became an abbey in
-1149, and in 1517 a “mitred” abbey, the only one in the county
-except Croyland. And these two are now the most notable
-of all the monastic remains in Lincolnshire. One of its abbots
-was said to have been walled up alive, and Bishop Tanner,
-in his MS. account of the abbey, now in the Bodleian, says
-of Abbot Walter Multon, 1443: “He died, but by what death
-I know not. He hath no obit, as other Abbots have, and the
-place of his burial hath not been found,” and Stukeley, 1687-1765,
-says that on taking down a wall in his time a skeleton
-was found in a sitting posture, with a table and a lamp, but
-I am glad to think that though the tradition is not infrequent,—probably
-as an echo from the days of the Roman Vestal
-Virgins—there is no positive evidence of anyone ever being
-immured alive; though an inconvenient dead body was doubtless
-got rid of at times in that way.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE ABBEY GATE</div>
-
-<p>The principal remaining part of the abbey is the fine grey
-stone gateway, a beautiful arch flanked by octagon turrets,
-with a passage through them, and then other arches on each
-side, and beyond these two corner towers. Above the central
-archway there are two rows of statues in niches with canopies.
-The Virgin being crowned by the Holy Trinity is flanked by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span>
-full-length statues of St. Antony and St. Augustine. Other
-figures are above these, but not easy to make out. Inside
-the gateway are guard rooms, and a winding staircase leading
-to the large refectory hall. An oriel in this contained an altar,
-as the piscina and a squint from an adjoining chamber testify.
-The approach over the ditch up to the gateway is by a curious
-range of massive brickwork, with coved recesses and battlements,
-all along on each side. The ruin is owned by Lord
-Yarborough, and is kept locked, but an attendant is always on
-the spot, as both the abbey and Brocklesby Park are favourite
-objects for excursions from Hull, Grimsby, and Cleethorpes.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus51">
-<img src="images/illus51.jpg" width="500" height="450" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Thornton Abbey Gateway.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE CHAPTER HOUSE</div>
-
-<p>The abbey was a very magnificent one, occupying 100 acres.
-Henry VIII. was so well entertained there in 1541 that when
-he had suppressed the abbey he bestowed the greater part
-of the land on a new foundation in the same building, a college<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[221]</span>
-of the Holy Trinity; but a few years later, either in 1547 or
-1553, that in turn was dissolved, and the land granted to the
-pitifully subservient Bishop Henry Holbeche. Inside the
-gateway is a large square, on the east side of which stood the
-chapter-house, a handsome octagonal building, of which two sides
-remain, as does also a fragment of the beautiful south transept,
-and, still further south, the abbot’s lodging, now in use as a farmhouse.
-The church was 235 feet long and sixty-two feet wide,
-the transepts being double of that. The architecture was mainly
-of the best Decorated period. There are many slabs with incised
-crosses still to be seen, one of Robert Girdyk, 1363.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus52">
-<img src="images/illus52.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Remains of Chapter House, Thornton Abbey.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><i>East Halton</i> lies east of the abbey, whence the road runs<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[222]</span>
-through <i>North</i> and <i>South Killingholme</i>, at the corner of which
-is a picturesque old brick manor-house of the Tudor period,
-with linen-pattern oak panelling and grotesque heads over
-the doors inside, and outside a remarkably fine chimney-stack
-and some fine old yew trees. The church has a very large
-Norman tower-arch, an interesting old roof and the remains
-of a delicately carved rood-screen. From here we go to <i>Habrough</i>
-and <i>Immingham</i>, where some curious paintings of the Apostles
-are set between the clerestory windows.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">IMMINGHAM DOCK</div>
-
-<p><i>Immingham</i> village is more than two miles from the haven,
-and here the most enormous works have long been in progress.
-Indeed, at <i>Immingham</i> a new port has sprung up in the last
-five years, and to this the Great Central Railway, who so utterly
-neglect the convenience of passengers with vehicles at the
-Hull ferry, have given the most enlightened attention, and by
-using the latest inventions and all the most advanced methods
-and laying out their docks in a large and forward-looking way
-to cover an enormous area, have created a dock which can
-compete successfully with any provincial port in England.</p>
-
-<p>A deep-water channel leads to the lock gates on the north
-side of what is the deepest dock on the east coast, with forty-five
-acres of water over thirty feet deep. It runs east and west,
-and it is about half a mile long. A quay 1,250 feet long, projects
-into the western half of this, leaving room for vessels to
-load or unload on either side of it, direct from or into the
-railway trucks. A timber-quay occupies the north-west side
-of the dock, and the grain elevator is at the east end, while all
-along the whole of the south side runs the coaling quay. There
-are at least twenty-seven cranes able to lift two, three, five,
-ten, and one even fifty tons on the various quays, and on the
-coaling-quay eight hoists, on to which the trucks are lifted
-and the coal shot into the vessels, after which the truck returns
-to the yard by gravitation automatically. Each of these
-hoists can deal with 700 tons of coal an hour, and as each hoist
-has eight sidings allotted to it there are 320 waggons ready for
-each. One of these hoists is moveable so that two holds of a
-vessel can be worked simultaneously. The means for quick
-and easy handling of the trucks, full and empty, by hydraulic
-power, and light for the whole dock also is supplied from a
-gigantic installation in the power-house, near the north-west
-corner of the dock; and this quick handling is essential, for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[223]</span>
-the many miles of sidings can hold 11,600 waggons, carrying
-116,000 tons of coal or more, besides finding room for empties.
-The coal is brought from Yorkshire, Derbyshire, Notts, and
-Lincolnshire, and not far short of 3,000,000 tons of coal will
-be now sent out of England from this port alone.<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> It seems
-to the writer that to send away at this tremendous rate from
-all our big coaling ports the article on which all our industries
-virtually depend is a folly which no words are too strong to
-condemn. With coal England has the means of supplying
-all her own wants for many generations, but it is not inexhaustible,
-and when it is gone, where will England be? Will anything
-that may be found ever take its place? And, unless we are
-able to reassure ourselves on this point, is this not just a case
-in which a wise State would step in and prohibit export, and
-not allow the nation to cut its own throat like a pig swimming?
-Large store sheds are now (1914) being built for wool to be landed
-direct from Australia. Thus Immingham will compete with
-Liverpool, where I have seen bales so tightly packed that when
-you knock with your knuckles on the clean-cut end of one it
-resounds like a board.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">STALLINGBOROUGH</div>
-
-<p>Going on south from Immingham village we come, after
-three miles, to <i>Stallingborough</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE AYSCOUGH TOMBS</div>
-
-<p>The old church having fallen, the present brick parallelogram,
-with tower and campanile, was built in 1780. Inside,
-though destitute of any touch of church architecture, it is
-beautifully clean, and if you penetrate up to the very end you
-will be rewarded by seeing what the organ absolutely obscures
-till you reach the altar rail—a really wonderful alabaster tomb
-of the Ayscoughe, Ayscugh, or Askew family, at the north-east
-corner, inside the chancel rail. Above is part of a bust of
-Francis, the father, who lived at South Kelsey, near Caister,
-and who so basely, in terror for himself, betrayed his sister
-Anne’s hiding-place, which resulted in her being first tortured
-and then burnt at Smithfield in 1546, her crime being that
-she had read the Bible to poor folk in Lincoln Minster. The
-whole story is too horrible to dwell upon. This cowardly brother
-is portrayed half length, in a recess, leaning his head on his
-left hand and holding in his right a spear. From this it will be
-seen that this is no ordinary sepulchral monument, but a work of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[224]</span>
-art. Below him his son, Edward of Kelsey, 1612, lies supine
-in plate armour and a ruff, with bare head pillowed on a cushion,
-while on a raised platform, just behind him, his wife Esther,
-daughter of Thomas Grantham, Esq., leans on her right elbow;
-she, too, in a ruff with hair done high and with a tight bodice
-and much-pleated skirt. The faces look like portraits, and
-Sir Edward has a singularly feeble, but not unpleasant, face,
-with small, low forehead. On the wall at his wife’s feet is
-a painted coat of arms on a lozenge, with nineteen quarterings,
-and a real helmet is placed on the tomb slab below it. The
-slab is a very massive one, and below it is an inscription in gold
-letters on a black ground in Latin, which is from Psalm CXXVIII.
-“Thy wife shall be as the fruitful vine upon the walls of thine
-house, thy children like the olive branches round about thy table,
-lo thus shall the man be blessed that feareth the Lord”; and
-beneath this, on the side of the tomb, are the kneeling effigies
-of six sons and six daughters. The whole thing—both the
-effigies and the inscription—is similar to the Tyrwhit tomb
-at <i>Bigby</i>. Above the mural monument of the father is the
-Ayscoughe crest, a little grey ass coughing, and under his half-effigy
-is a later inscription, which doubtless refers to his son, and
-not to himself, the poor, unhappy cause of his sister’s dreadful
-sufferings. It runs thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Clarus imaginibus proavum, sed mentis honestae</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Clarior exemplis, integritate, fide.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Una tibi conjux uni quae juncta beatas</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Fecerat et noctes et sine lite dies.</div>
- <div class="verse indent14">Praemissi non amissi.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">And a thing called on the monument an “Anigram,” which
-is past the understanding of ordinary men, is also part of the
-inscription. The extraordinary state of preservation of the
-whole group is a marvel.</p>
-
-<p>Other inscriptions and brasses are in the church, though partly
-hidden by the organ and the altar, one to the second wife of
-Anne’s father, Sir William, along with others of the sixteenth
-and seventeenth centuries. In the churchyard is the stem
-of a cross.</p>
-
-<p>Four miles further south the fine broad fifteenth-century
-tower of <i>Great Cotes</i> of rich yellow stone, attracts anyone who
-is passing from Goxhill to Grimsby, and it is a church which
-well repays a visit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[225]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">GREAT COTES</div>
-
-<p>In the churchyard, after passing under a yew-tree arch,
-you see a magnificent walnut on a small green mound. There
-is no porch. You enter by a small, deeply moulded doorway
-at the north-west end of the north aisle. The pillars of the
-arcades are clusters of four rather thick shafts, some with
-unusually large round capitals, but others various in shape,
-and all of a bluish grey stone. There are four bays, three
-big and one a small one next the tower at the west end. There
-is a flat ceiling, both in nave and chancel, which cuts off the top
-of the Early English tower arch; hence the nave and aisles
-are covered, as at Swaton, near Helpringham, by one low,
-broad slate roof, reminding one of that at Grasmere. The
-chancel arch, if it can be called an arch at all, is the meanest
-I ever saw, and only equalled by the miserable, and apparently
-wooden, tracery of the east window. The chancel,
-which is nearly as long as the nave, is built of rough stones
-and has Decorated windows. On the floor is a curious brass
-of local workmanship probably, to Isabella, wife of Roger
-Barnadiston, <i>c.</i> 1420, and the artist seems to have handed on
-his craft, for the attraction of the church is a singular seventeenth
-century brass before the altar, to Sir Thomas Barnadiston,
-Kt. of Mikkylcotes, and his wife Dame Elizabeth, and
-their eight sons and seven daughters. The children kneel
-behind their kneeling parents, who are, however, on a larger
-scale, and have scrolls proceeding from their mouths. Above
-them is a picture of the Saviour, with nimbus, rising from
-a rectangular tomb of disproportionately small dimensions,
-while Roman soldiers are sleeping around. A defaced inscription
-runs all round the edge of the brass, and in the centre
-is the inscription in old lettering: “In the worschypp of the
-Resurrectio of o̅r Lord and the blessed sepulcur pray for the
-souls of Sir Thos Barnadiston Kt. and Dame Elizabeth his
-wife</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">and of yʳ charite say a pʳ noster ave and cred</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">and ye schall have a C days of p~don to yoʳ med”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">GRIMSBY</div>
-
-<p>Another six miles brings us to the outskirts of <i>Grimsby</i>, the birthplace,
-in 1530, of John Whitgift, Queen Elizabeth’s Archbishop of
-Canterbury. This is not at all an imposing or handsome town,
-but the length of the timber docks, and the size and varied
-life in the great fish docks, the pontoons which project into
-the river and are crowded with fishing boats, discharging tons<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[226]</span>
-of fish and taking in quantities of ice, are a wonderful sight.
-165,510 tons of fish were dealt with in 1902—it is probably
-170,000 now; and 300 tons of ice a day is made close by. The
-old church is a fine cruciform building, with a pair of ugly
-turrets at the end of nave, chancel, and transepts. Inside
-it is fine and spacious, and in effect cathedral-like. The transepts
-have doorways and two rows of three-light windows
-with tooth moulding round the upper lights and the gables.
-A corbel table with carved heads runs all round the church.</p>
-
-<p>The south transept Early-English porch had eight shafts
-on either side, in most cases only the capitals now remain.
-The south aisle porch is good, but less rich. The tower arches
-are supported on octagonal pillars, which run into and form
-part of the transept walls. They are decorated by mouldings
-running up the whole length. The nave has six bays, and tall,
-slender clustered columns and plain capitals, with deeply
-moulded arches. Dreadful to relate, the columns and capitals
-are all painted grey.</p>
-
-<p>There is a unique arrangement of combined triforium and clerestory,
-the small clerestory windows being inserted in the triforium
-into the taller central arches of the groups of three, which all have
-slender clustered shafts. This triforium goes round both nave,
-chancel and transepts, a very well carved modern oak pulpit
-rests on a marble base with surrounding shafts. The lectern
-is an eagle of the more artistic form, with one leg advanced
-and head turned sideways and looking upwards. I wonder
-that this is not more common, for I see it is figured in the
-A. and N. Stores catalogue. The sedilia rises in steps, as at
-Temple Bruer. A raised tomb carries the effigy of Sir Thomas
-Haslerton, brought from St. Leonard’s nunnery; he is in chain
-armour with helmet. A chapel in the north aisle has a squint
-looking to the high altar. This chapel is entered by a beautiful
-double arch from the transept, with Early capital to the mid
-pillar. The proportions of the whole church are pleasing, and
-its size is very striking. The tower has an arcaded parapet,
-and on each side two windows set in a recess under a big arch,
-between them a buttress runs up from the apex of a broad and
-deep gable-coping, which goes down each side of the tower,
-forming the hood-mould into which the gables of the nave
-transepts and chancel fit. All the doors, curiously enough,
-are painted green outside. There is in the churchyard a pillar<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[227]</span>
-with clustered shafts and carved capital, the base of which
-rests on a panelled block, which looks like an old font. Many
-bits from the old church, which was restored throughout in
-1885, are ranged on the low wall of the churchyard walk, some
-of which look worthy of a better place.</p>
-
-<p>The line from the docks runs along by the shore to <i>Cleethorpes</i>,
-where the Humber begins to merge into the sea. The wide,
-firm sands and the rippling shallow wavelets of the brown seawater
-are the delight of thousands of children; the air is fresh,
-food and drink are plentiful, and all things conspire to make
-a trippers’ paradise, while the Dolphin Hotel, which, like the
-others, looks out on the sea, is no bad place for a short sojourn
-in the off season.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE CORPORATION SEALS</div>
-
-<p>The corporation had in old times two seals, one the common
-seal, and one the mayor’s seal; the latter showed a boar
-charged by a dog and a huntsman winding his horn, an allusion
-to an ancient privilege of the mayor and burgesses of hunting
-in the adjacent woods of Bradley Manor. The common seal
-bore a gigantic figure of a man with drawn sword and round
-shield, and the name ‘Gryem,’ the reputed founder of the
-town; on his right a youth crowned, and the name ‘Habloc,’
-and on his left a female figure with a diadem and the legend
-“Goldeburgh,” the name of the princess he is said to have
-married.</p>
-
-<p>These two interesting and distinctive old seals have, sad to
-say, been discarded for one bearing the arms of the corporation,
-just like what any mushroom town might adopt.</p>
-
-<p>The figures on the old seal alluded to the tradition embodied
-in the old Anglo-Danish ballad of Havelock the Dane, which
-was borrowed from a French romance of the twelfth century,
-called “Le lai de Aveloc,” which in turn was probably taken
-from an Anglo-Saxon original. It tells how Havelock, son
-of the Danish King Birkabeen, was treacherously put to sea
-and saved by one Grim, a Lincolnshire fisherman, who brought
-up the waif as his own. He grew to be of huge stature and
-strength and of great beauty, and, from serving as a scullion
-in the king’s kitchen, he became betrothed to the king’s
-daughter; and his royal descent being discovered, the Danish
-king rewarded Grim with a sum of money with which he built
-a village on the coast and called it Grim’s town or Grimsby.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[228]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX<br />
-<span class="smaller">CAISTOR</span></h2>
-
-<p>The Roman Castrum—The Church and the Hundon Tombs—Rothwell
-and the Caistor Groups of Early Church Towers, “Riby,” “Wold,”
-“Cliff” and “Top”—Pelham Pillar—Grasby and the Tennyson-Turners—Barnetby—Bigby—The
-Tyrwhit Tombs—Brocklesby—The
-Mausoleum—The Pelham Buckle.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">CAISTOR</div>
-
-<p><i>Caistor</i> is the centre from which roads radiate in all directions,
-so much so that if you describe a circle from Caistor as your
-centre at the distance of <i>Swallow</i> it will cut across seventeen
-roads, and if you shorten the distance to a two-mile radius, it
-will still cross eleven, though not more than four or five of them
-will separately enter the old Roman town. For the town has
-grown round a Roman “Castrum,” and the church is actually
-planted in the centre of the walled camp. A portion of the
-solidly grouted core of their wall shows on the southern boundary
-of the churchyard, and bits of it still exist to the east and west
-just beyond the churchyard boundary, and also a little further
-from the church on the north. Even the well which the
-Roman soldiers used, one of many springs coming out of the
-chalk, for Caistor is on the slope of the Wold, is still in use to
-the south-east of the church, and was included within the
-walls of the “Castrum.”</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Fraser of Caistor, who takes a keen interest in the subject,
-kindly showed me a plan on which such portions of the wall
-as have been laid bare, in some half-a-dozen spots, were marked.
-He lives in a house belonging to the Tennyson family, the
-poet’s uncle and his brother Charles having both tenanted it.
-The place has a long history. It was a hill fort of the early<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[229]</span>
-Britons, then it was occupied by the Romans till late in the
-fourth century, and, after their departure, it was a stronghold
-of the Angles, who called it, according to Bede, Tunna-Ceaster
-or Thong-caster, which might refer to its being placed on a
-projecting tongue of the Wold, just as Hyrn-Ceaster or Horncastle
-is so named, because it is on a horn or peninsular, formed
-by the river. In 829 Ecgberht, King of Wessex, defeated the
-Mercians in a battle here, and offered a portion of the spoil
-to the church, if a stone dug up about 150 years ago with part
-of an inscription apparently to that effect can be trusted. Earl
-Morcar, who had land near Stamford, was lord of the manor
-in Norman times, and the Conqueror gave the church to
-Remigius for his proposed Cathedral.</p>
-
-<p>For the present church inside the Roman camp goes back
-to probably pre-Norman times. The tower has a Norman
-doorway, and has also a very early round arch, absolutely
-plain, leading from the tower to the nave, and it shows in its
-successive stages Norman, Early English, Decorated, and
-Perpendicular work. The lower part of the tower has angle
-buttresses and two string-courses, and, except the battlements,
-which are of hard whitish stone, the whole building is, like all
-the churches in the north-east of the county, made of a rich
-yellow sandy ironstone with fossils in it. This gives a beautiful
-tone of colour and also, from its friable nature, an appearance
-of immense antiquity. The north porch has good ball-flower
-decoration, but is not so good as the Early English south door
-with its tooth ornaments; here the old door with its original
-hinges is still in use. The octagonal pillars stand on a wide
-square base two feet high with a top, a foot wide, forming a
-stone seat round the pillar, as at Claypole and Bottesford.
-The nave arcade of four bays is Early English with nail-head
-ornament. Since Butterfield removed the flat ceiling and put
-a red roof with green tie-beams and covered the chancel arch
-and walls with the painted patterns which he loved, the seats,
-like the porch doors at Grimsby, have all been green! This,
-to my mind, always gives a garden woodwork atmosphere.
-In the north aisle is a side altar, and near it are the interesting
-tombs of the Hundon family, while in the south aisle, behind
-the organ, is a fine marble monument with a kneeling figure
-in armour of Sir Edward Maddison, of Unthank Hall, Durham,
-and of Fonaby, who died in his 100th year, <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1553. His<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[230]</span>
-second wife was Ann Roper, sister-in-law to Margaret Roper,
-who was the daughter of Sir Thomas More, and who—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent10">“clasped in her last trance</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Her murdered father’s head.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE HUNDON TOMBS</div>
-
-<p>The Hundon tombs have recumbent stone effigies under
-recessed arches in the North wall, one being of Sir W. de Hundon
-cross-legged, with shield, and clad in chain-mail from head
-to foot. He fought in the last crusade, 1270. Another, in
-a recess massively cusped, is of Sir John de Hundon, High
-Sheriff of Lincolnshire in 1343, and Lady Hundon his wife,
-in a wimple and the dress of the period. Sir John is in plate
-armour, with chain hauberk, and girt with both sword and
-dagger, and both wear ruffs. She has a cushion at her head,
-and a lion at her feet. He lies on a plaited straw mattress rolled
-at each end, and wears a very rich sword-belt and huge spurs,
-but no helmet.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">PRE-NORMAN TOWERS</div>
-
-<p>The singular cluster of very early church towers near Caistor
-are similar to those near Gainsborough, and to another group
-just south of Grimsby (<i>see</i> Chapter <a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">XXIII.</a>). South of Caistor
-is <i>Rothwell</i>, which we hoped to reach in a couple of miles from
-Cabourn, but could only find a bridle road, unless we were
-prepared to go two miles east to Swallow, or two miles west
-to Caistor, and then make a further round of three miles from
-either place. The church, which keeps the register of marriages
-taken in Cromwell’s time before Theophilus Harneis, Esq., J.P.,
-after publication of banns “on three succeeding Lord’s Days,
-at the close of the morning exercise, and no opposition alleged
-to the contrary,” has two very massive Norman arches, the
-western bays with cable moulding. The tower is of the unbuttressed
-kind, and exhibits some more unmistakable “Long-and-Short”
-work than is at all common in the Saxon-built towers
-of Lincolnshire churches, built, that is to say, if not by Saxon
-hands, at least in the Saxon style, and in the earliest Norman
-days. The village is in a depression between two spurs of the
-Wold, and a road from it, which is the eastern one of three,
-all running south along the Wold, leads to Binbrook. The
-middle road is the “High Dyke,” the Roman road from
-Caistor to Horncastle, and has no villages on it. The western
-one goes by <i>Normanby le Wold</i>, Walesby, and Tealby, and joins
-the Louth-and-Rasen road at North-Willingham. From this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[231]</span>
-road you get a fine view over the flats in the centre of the
-county, as indeed you do if you go by the main road from Caistor
-to Rasen. This takes you through <i>Nettleton</i>, where there is
-another of these early towers, but not so remarkably old-looking
-a specimen as some. A buttress against the south wall of the
-tower is noticeable, being carefully devised by the mediæval
-builders so as not to block the little window. <i>Usselby</i>, three
-miles north of Rasen, lies hidden behind “The Hall,” and is
-the tiniest church in the county. It has a nave and chancel
-of stone, and a bell-turret, and hideous brick-headed windows.
-At <i>Claxby</i>, close by, some fine fossils have been found. The
-eastern main road to Grimsby has most to show us, for on it
-we pass <i>Cabourn</i> and <i>Swallow</i>, both of which have towers
-like Rothwell, as also has <i>Cuxwold</i>, which is half-way between
-Swallow and Rothwell. All these unbuttressed towers are
-built of the same yellow sandy stone, and generally have the
-same two-light belfry window with a midwall jamb. <i>Cabourn</i>
-was the only church we found locked, and we could not see why,
-and as the absence of the rector’s key keeps people from seeing
-the inside, so the presence of his garden fence, which runs
-right up to the tower on both sides, keeps them from seeing
-the west end outside—a horrid arrangement, not unlike that
-at Rowston. The tower has a pointed tiled roof, like a pigeon
-cote, a very small blocked low-side window is at the south-west
-end of the chancel, and the bowl of a Norman font with
-cable moulding, found under the floor of the church, has been
-placed on the top of the old plain cylinder which did duty as
-a font till lately. The view from Cabourn hill, which drops
-down to Caistor, is a magnificent one. To the north the lofty
-Pelham Pillar, a tribute to a family distinguished as early
-as the reign of Edward III., stands up out of the oak woods,
-a landmark for many a mile.</p>
-
-<p><i>Swallow</i> has no jamb to its belfry window. But it has a very
-good Norman door, and round-headed windows. The south
-aisle arches have been built up. During the recent restoration
-two piscinas, Norman and Early English, were found, the
-former with a deep square bowl set on a pillar. The next
-church has the singular name of <i>Irby-on-Humber</i>, though the
-Humber is eight miles distant. Here we find Norman arcades
-of two arches with massive central pillars, thicker on the north
-side than the south, and Early English tower and chancel<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[232]</span>
-arches. An incised slab on the floor has figures of John and
-Elianora Malet, of the late fourteenth or early fifteenth centuries.
-In the south aisle there is a blocked doorway to the rood loft,
-and a piscina. The east window is of three lancets. All the
-woodwork in the church is new and everything in beautiful
-order. <i>Laceby</i> Church, two miles further on, has a Transition
-tower, and an Early English arcade with one Norman arch in
-the middle. There are some blow-wells in the parish, as at
-<i>Tetney</i>. John Whitgift, Archbishop of Canterbury, at the end
-of Elizabeth’s reign, was formerly rector here.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LINCOLN LONGWOOLS</div>
-
-<p>A mile to the left as we go from Irby to Laceby, lies the fine
-and well-wooded park of Riby Grove, the seat of Captain
-Pretyman, M.P. The Royalists won a battle here in 1645, in
-which Colonel Harrison, the Parliamentary leader, was slain.
-He was buried at Stallingborough. Riby of late years has been
-famous for the flocks and herds of the late Mr. Henry Dudding,
-which at their dispersal in July, 1913, realised in a two days’
-sale 16,644 guineas. Over 1,800 Lincolnshire long-wool sheep
-were sold, the highest price being 600 guineas for the champion
-ram at the Bristol and Nottingham shows, who has gone to
-South America, in company with another stud ram who made
-eighty guineas, and several more of the best animals. But
-though the ram lambs made double figures, as the best had
-been secured before the sale the prices on the whole were not
-high, the sheep on the first day averaging just over £4 9<i>s.</i>
-Among the shorthorns 160 guineas was the highest price; this
-was given for a heifer whose destination was Germany. It
-is owing to men like Mr. Dudding that Lincolnshire farming
-and Lincolnshire flock and stock breeding has so great a name.</p>
-
-<p>About five miles further, we come to the suburbs of Grimsby,
-and the road runs on past <i>Clee</i> to <i>Cleethorpes</i>.</p>
-
-<p>It is curious how different localities, though in the same
-neighbourhood, have their own special and different terms for
-the same thing, thus: alongside the ridge north of Lincoln,
-each village has its bit of “Cliff,” and from Elsham to the
-Humber each has its bit of “Wold,” while on the continuation
-of the Wold near Caistor from Barnetby to Burgh-on-Bain
-the same thing is called neither “Cliff” nor “Wold,” but
-“top”; and we have Somerby, Owmby, Grasby, Audleby,
-Fornaby, Rothwell, Orby, Binbrook, Girsby and Burgh “top,”
-etc. There is an Owmby “Cliff” as well as an Owmby “top,”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[233]</span>
-but the words sufficiently indicate the position of the villages—one
-(near Fillingham) on the Ermine Street, and one (near
-Grasby) north of Caistor.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE PELHAM PILLAR</div>
-
-<p>There is no view, I think, in the county so wide all round
-as that from the top of the Pelham Pillar. It stands on one
-of the highest points of the Wold, from whence the ground
-falls on three sides. In front are the woods of Brocklesby
-and the mausoleum, with the Humber and Hull in the distance;
-on the right Grimsby, the Spurn Point, and the grand spire of
-Patrington in Holderness, and on the left the wide mid-Lincolnshire
-plain as far as “the Cliff.” Of the Wold villages
-between Caistor and Barnetby, where the Wold stops for a
-couple of miles and lets the railway and the Brigg-to-Brocklesby
-road through on the level, none affords a better view than Grasby.
-But the whole of this road is one not to be missed. As we
-pass along it we first reach <i>Clixby</i>, which shows, or rather hides,
-a tiny church in a thick clump of trees by the road side, where
-is a churchyard cross, restored after the model of Somersby.
-The little stone church has been once very dilapidated, and is
-now renewed with a double bell-turret in brick—no wonder it
-hides itself in the trees. There is also a remarkable modern
-graveyard cross of dark stone, of a very early primitive shape,
-such as is seen on some of the incised grave stones of Northumbria.
-North of <i>Clixby</i> is <i>Grasby</i>. This church was the home for over
-forty years of the poet’s brother Charles Tennyson-Turner,
-the author, with Alfred, of the “Poems by Two Brothers,”
-and afterwards of many sonnets written at Grasby. It would
-be difficult to surpass the charm of one called ‘Letty’s Globe’:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center">LETTY’S GLOBE.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When Letty had scarce passed her third glad year,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And her young artless words began to flow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">One day we gave the child a coloured sphere</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of the wide earth, that she might mark and know,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">By tint and outline, all its sea and land.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">She patted all the world; old empires peeped</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Between her baby fingers; her soft hand</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Was welcome at all frontiers. How she leap’d</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And laugh’d and prattled in her world-wide bliss,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But when we turned her sweet unlearned eye</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On our own isle, she raised a joyous cry,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Oh! yes, I see it, Letty’s home is there!’</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And while she hid all England with a kiss,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Bright over Europe fell her golden hair.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[234]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">CHARLES TENNYSON TURNER</div>
-
-<p>A white marble tablet of chaste design on the wall of the
-nave shows a couple of sprays of bay or laurel beneath the
-Christian monogram, bending to right and left over the inscription,
-on the left to “Charles Tennyson Turner, Vicar and Patron
-of Grasby, who died April 25, 1879.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">True poet surely to be found</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When truth is found again.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">and on the right to “Louisa his wife, died May 20, 1879.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">More than conquerors through him that loved us.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">They rest with Charlotte Tennyson in the cemetery at
-Cheltenham.” Charlotte was his brother Horatio’s first wife;
-his wife Louisa was the sister of Lady Tennyson, the two
-brothers having married two Miss Sellwoods, nieces of Sir John
-Franklin. Tennyson’s grandfather had married Mary Turner of
-Caistor, and Charles succeeded his uncle Sam Turner.</p>
-
-<p>The church, with its low broached spire, has a nave and a
-north aisle, but has little of the old left in it, except the south
-doorway and some Early English clustered pillars, and a
-curious plain font set on four little square legs mounted on steps.
-The church was rebuilt, and the schools and vicarage built
-<i>de novo</i> by the Tennyson-Turners, for until his time the vicar
-had lived at Caistor. Under the east window outside is a stone
-let into the wall with three dedication crosses on it.</p>
-
-<p>We must follow this Caistor and Brigg highway along the
-edge of the Wold to Bigby, where it turns to the left, and only
-a byway runs north to <i>Barnetby le Wold</i> which looks down on
-<i>Melton Ross</i>, so named from the Ros family to whom Belvoir
-came by marriage with a d’Albini heiress in the thirteenth
-century. Sir Thomas Manners—Lord Ros—was created Earl
-of Rutland in the sixteenth century.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE TYRWHIT TOMBS</div>
-
-<p><i>Barnetby</i> Church has a most ancient appearance; it stands
-high in a field by itself, the village lying below. A long, high
-wall of brick and stone, grey with lichen, a low tower and a
-flat roof and windows irregularly placed, make up a building
-of undoubted antiquity. Inside, and lately recovered
-from the coal-hole, is a Norman lead font, thirty-two inches
-across. This is unique in Lincolnshire, though twenty-eight
-others are known in other counties, the best being that at
-Dorchester-on-Thames. From Barnetby we must retrace our
-steps for a couple of miles to see <i>Bigby</i>, which is well placed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[235]</span>
-on the edge of the Wold. The church has corbels all round,
-as at Grantham, under a parapet of later build and of a lighter-coloured
-and harder stone. The old thick tower is of the yellow
-stone, with a good two-light window to the west. The porch
-is of oak with panelled sides. The nave has an Early English
-arcade of three bays, with slender octagonal pillars. The
-tower arch is low, the chancel arch lofty. Here we find two
-fonts, not superimposed, as at Cabourn, but one in each aisle.
-One is low and formed of grey marble, the other has an old
-carved stone bowl of <i>nine</i> panels on a new pedestal. This
-number of sides is unique. Near it is placed an incised slab
-showing the figure of a lady of the Skipwyth family, 1374, and
-another lady of the same name has a recumbent effigy in the
-chancel, <i>c.</i> 1400. The nave and chancel roof are one,<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> and in
-the chancel are some more interesting monuments. On the
-floor a brass of Elizabeth Tyrwhit, wife of William Skipwyth
-of Ormsby, <i>c.</i> 1520. On the north side a large altar tomb
-with alabaster effigies of Sir Robert Tyrwhit of Kettelbie, 1581,
-and his wife. He is on a plaited mattress rolled at each end
-for his head and feet, and below his feet a wild man or “Wode-howse”
-on all fours and covered with hair. Two of these
-support the feet of Ralph Lord Treasurer Cromwell in the fine
-brass at Tattershall, and the Willoughby chapel at Spilsby
-shows one. His wife lies nearest the wall, with a lion at her
-feet and a cushion for her head; both wear ruffs, and he is in
-armour, but without helmet. In many respects the monument
-resembles the tomb of Sir John and Lady Hundon at Caistor,
-but is still more like the Ayscoughe tomb at Stallingborough.</p>
-
-<p>On the two ends and front of the tomb are figures of their
-children, twenty-two in number, two or three infants in cradles,
-the rest all kneeling, and above them is the old metrical version
-of the 128th Psalm, running round three sides of the tomb. The
-front or middle portion bears the following lines:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Like fruitful vine on thy house side</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">So doth thy wife spring out.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thy children stand like Oliveplantes</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thy table round about.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thus art thou blest that fearest God,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And he shall let thee see</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The promiesed Hierusalem and his felicitie.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[236]</span></p>
-
-<p>Inside the chancel rails is a mural monument with life-size
-figures of a man and his wife kneeling, but the lady’s head is
-gone. The man is Robert Tyrwhit, who made a runaway match
-with Lady Bridget Manners, maid of honour to Queen Elizabeth,
-who was highly incensed at it, and doubtless used language
-appropriate to the occasion. At the back of the sedilia two
-or three little brasses have been inserted, one to Edward Nayler,
-rector 1632, with wife and seven children. He is described
-as “a painefull minister of God’s word.”</p>
-
-<p>From Bigby four miles brings us to Brigg, passing near <i>Kettleby</i>,
-the home of the Tyrwhits, who kept up a blood feud with the
-Ros family till the beginning of the seventeenth century—not
-a very neighbourly proceeding—and as they only lived four
-miles apart their combats and murders were perpetual.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BROCKLESBY</div>
-
-<p>The road which runs north from Caistor goes along the top
-of the Wold as far as “Pelham’s Pillar,” where the real High
-Wold stops. It is then 460 feet above sea level. Caistor itself,
-on the western slope, is only 150 feet up, but the High Wold
-keeps rising south of Caistor till it attains its highest point
-between Normanby-le-Wold and Stainton-le-Vale, at about
-525 feet. From “Pelham’s Pillar” the road forks into three,
-and runs down into the flat at <i>Riby</i>, <i>Brocklesby</i>, and <i>Kirmington</i>,
-where there is a church with a bright green spire sheathed
-with copper. <i>Brocklesby</i>, Lord Yarborough’s seat, has a deer
-park more than two miles long. It is entered on the west
-side through a well-designed classical arch, erected by the
-tenantry in memory of the third lord. Extensive drives
-through the woods planted by the first lord, who married Miss
-Aufrere of Chelsea, and was created Baron Yarborough in
-1794, reach as far as the “Pelham Pillar,” some six miles
-from Brocklesby. On the pillar it is recorded that twelve and
-a half million trees were planted. The planter, who rivals
-“Planter John,” he who laid out the many miles of avenue at
-Boughton near Kettering, was an Anderson, whose grandmother
-was sister of Charles, the last of the Pelhams, hence the family
-name now is Anderson-Pelham.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus53">
-<img src="images/illus53.jpg" width="500" height="450" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Welland, near Fulney, Spalding.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE KOH-I-NOOR</div>
-
-<p>The mausoleum on the south side, designed by Wyatt in
-1794 in memory of Sophia, first Countess of Yarborough, is in
-the classical style, with a flat dome rising from a circular balustrade
-supported on twelve fluted Doric columns. It stands
-on an ancient barrow, in it is a monument by Nollekens, of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[237]</span>
-Countess. The house, part of which was rebuilt after a fire in
-1898, has the appearance of a brick and stone Queen Anne
-mansion. In it are some of the exquisite wood carvings by
-Wallis of Louth, some of whose work was admired in the first
-“Great Exhibition” of 1851, attracting almost as much
-attention as the Koh-i-noor Diamond, then in its rough form,
-as worn by “Akbar the Great,” by Nadir Shah, and by “The
-Lion of the Punjab,” Runjeet Sing. It is now in the crown
-of the Queen of England, and, being re-cut, is much smaller,
-but far more brilliant. In addition to a fine hall and staircase
-there is a picture gallery built in 1807 to take the paintings
-and sculptures which had been collected by Mr. John Aufrere
-of Chelsea, father-in-law of the first Lord Yarborough. The
-gem of this collection is the antique bust of Niobe, purchased
-in Rome by Nollekens the sculptor, who has himself contributed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238"></a>[238]</span>
-a fine bust of the first earl’s wife. In a conservatory are portions
-of another once famous collection of antiques, tombs, altars,
-and statues, made by Sir Richard Worsley and kept as a kind
-of classical museum till 1855 at Appuldurcombe in the Isle
-of Wight.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE PELHAM BUCKLE</div>
-
-<p>Religious houses abounded here. Thornton Abbey is only
-five miles off, and here, outside the park to the north-west,
-is Newsham Abbey, 1143, perhaps the earliest Premonstratensian
-house in England. On the east was the Cistercian
-nunnery of Colham, and just at the south of the park, in the
-village of Limber, was an alien priory belonging to the Cistercian
-house of Aulnay in Normandy. Newsham abbey, which was worth
-twice what the other two were, became part of the spoil which
-was absorbed by Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk. The gardens
-have some fine cedars, and the church with its curious tower
-and small spire is in the garden grounds. There are some
-Pelham monuments in it of the sixteenth and seventeenth
-century: one to Sir John and one to Sir William and Lady
-Pelham and their seventeen children. At her feet is the head
-of a king and the Pelham “Buckle,” commemorating the
-seizure by a Pelham of King John of France, at the battle of
-Poictiers.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus54">
-<img src="images/illus54.jpg" width="500" height="275" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Thornton Abbey Gateway.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[239]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI<br />
-<span class="smaller">LOUTH AND ITS NEIGHBOURHOOD</span></h2>
-
-<p>Louth Church—“The Weder-Coke”—The Pilgrimage of Grace—Letter
-read in Lincoln Chapter-House from Henry VIII—“The Lyttel
-Clause”—The Blue Stone—Turner’s Horse-fair—The Louth Spire—Louth
-Park Abbey—Kiddington—Roads from Louth—Cawthorpe and
-Haugham—Dr. Trought’s Jump—Well Vale—Starlings.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LOUTH</div>
-
-<p>Louth spire is one of the sights of Lincolnshire; it is a few
-feet higher than Grantham, which it much resembles, and
-in beauty of proportions and elegance of design one feels, as
-one looks at it, that it has really no rival, for Moulton, near
-Spalding, though on the same lines, is so much smaller.</p>
-
-<p>The way in which it bursts upon the view as the traveller
-approaches it from Kenwick, which lies to the southward, is
-a thing impossible to forget. Taking the place of originally
-a small Norman, and later a thirteenth century building, the
-present church of St. James dates from the fifteenth century.
-Louth once had two, if not three, other small churches, dedicated
-to St. John, St. Mary, and St. Herefrid; but no certain
-traces of these remain, and only the north and south doorways
-of the thirteenth century church are now visible. Excavations
-made at the last restoration in 1867 revealed the pillar
-bases of this church and some fragments of eleventh century
-moulding of the earlier one. The present building has nothing
-of interest inside—it is only the shell from which the living
-tenant has long been absent. Once its long aisles were filled
-with rich chapels, and the chancel arch was furnished with
-a rood-loft and screen, and the church was unusually rich in
-altars, vessels, vestments, and books, of which only the inventory
-remains. In the vestry an oak cupboard has medallions carved<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240"></a>[240]</span>
-in the panels of Henry VII. and Elizabeth of York; and that
-is all. The steeple, with its large belfry windows, was doubtless
-built for its clock and bells; there were at first but three,
-which in 1726 were increased to a full peal of eight, but the
-clock and its chime was there as early as 1500. The spire was
-not completed till 1815; the weathercock was fixed then, but
-no lightning-rod until 1844 after the spire had been struck
-and damaged three times, in the sixteenth, seventeenth and
-nineteenth centuries; in the eighteenth it escaped.</p>
-
-<p>The first of the Louth churchwardens’ books has an ill-written
-entry of the year 1515-16, the time of the second (or
-thirteenth century) church, which tells us that one Thomas
-Taylor, a draper, bought a copper basin in York and had it
-made at Lincoln into a “Wedercoke” for the church. This
-is very interesting, for the basin had been part of the spoil
-taken from the King of Scots at Flodden.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE KING’S LETTER</div>
-
-<p>Twenty years later the vicar of Louth was hanged with
-others, at Tyburn, for his part in the Lincolnshire rebellion,
-when 20,000 men took up arms in defence of the pillaged
-monasteries. Concerning this rebellion, there is a graphic
-account of the receipt of Henry VIIIth’s letter in response to
-the people’s petition, which was read in the chapter-house at
-Lincoln, on October 10, 1556. Moyne tells how, when they
-thought to have read the letter secretly among themselves
-in the chapter-house, a mob burst in and insisted on hearing
-it: “And therefore,” he goes on to say, “I redd the Kynges
-letter openly and by cause there was a lyttyl clause therein
-that we feared wolde styr the Commons I did leave that clause
-unredd, which was persayved by a Chanon beying the parson
-of Snelland, and he sayde there openly that the letter was
-falsely redd be cause whereof I was like to be slayn.” Eventually
-they got out by the south door to the Chancellor’s house,
-while the men waited to murder them at the great West door,
-“And when the Commons persayved that wee were gone from
-theym another way, they departed to ther lodgings in a gret
-furye, determynyng to kill us the morowe after onles wee wolde
-go forwards with theym.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[241]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;" id="illus55">
-<img src="images/illus55.jpg" width="450" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Bridge Street, Louth.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[242]</span></p>
-
-<p>The “lyttyl clause” referred to as likely to “styr the
-Commons,” was wisely omitted, for it is that in which the
-king expresses his amazement at the presumption of the “rude
-commons of one shire, and that one of the most brute and
-beastly of the whole realm and of least experience, to take
-upon them to rule their prince whom they were bound to obey
-and serve.”</p>
-
-<p>This rebellion, which was called the Pilgrimage of Grace,
-brought disaster on many Lincolnshire families. Over sixty
-of all conditions were put to death for it in Louth alone, and
-others at Alford, Spilsby and Boston, and at all the monasteries,
-and the vicars of Cockerington, Louth, Croft, Biscathorpe,
-Donington and Snelland and some others, as well as John Lord
-Hussey at Sleaford, suffered for their religion and were canonized
-as martyrs by the Pope. A list of more than one hundred
-victims is given in “Notes and Queries,” III., 84.</p>
-
-<p>The town has a museum of some interest, and outside of it
-may be seen a large boulder of some foreign stone, probably
-brought by an icefloe from Denmark or Norway. This used
-to stand at a street corner in the town, but was afterwards
-removed to the inn-yard at the back, and painted blue, and was
-known for many years as the blue stone. Speaking of stone,
-we have a record that a good deal of the stone for building
-the church spire in the sixteenth century was landed at Dogdyke,
-and drawn thence on wheels or carried on pack horses
-on flag pavements across the fen. The stone is of good quality
-and adapted for carving.</p>
-
-<p>There is notably good openwork on the east gable of the
-church, much resembling that at Grimoldby and Theddlethorpe-in-the-Marsh,
-a few miles to the east of Louth. Turner’s
-picture of the horse fair at Louth shows the spire, which was
-no doubt the motive of the picture, and until one has seen it,
-both from a distance and from the street of Louth itself, one
-can have no notion how beautiful a thing a well-proportioned
-spire can be, one is never tired of looking at it.</p>
-
-<p>An old statue of Edward VI. over a doorway in the Westgate
-indicates the grammar school where Alfred and Charles
-Tennyson spent a few uncomfortable years. The school seal
-shows a boy being birched, with the motto “Qui parcit virgam
-odit filium,” and date 1552. Among other pupils were Governor
-Eyre, one of the victims of British sentimentality, and Hobart
-Pasha. Thomas of Louth gave a clock to Lincoln Minster
-in 1324, and William de Lindsey, Bishop of Ely, 1290, who has
-there a beautiful monument, was also a Louth native.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus56">
-<img src="images/illus56.jpg" width="500" height="475" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Hubbards Mill, Louth.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LOUTH PARK ABBEY</div>
-
-<p>Louth Park Abbey, about a mile and a half to the east of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[243]</span>
-town, was built on a site belonging to the Bishops of Lincoln,
-and was given to the Cistercian colony from Fountains Abbey,
-who found Haverholme too damp for comfort, by Bishop
-Alexander in 1139. The Cistercians built themselves a large
-church, 256 feet long and sixty-one feet in width, with transepts
-which more than doubled this; parts of these and the chancel,
-also a portion of the west front and one nave pillar, are all that
-is left of it, but the ground plan has been excavated, which
-shows that there were no fewer than ten bays to the nave, and
-massive circular piers. There was a cloister on the south,
-surrounded by monastic buildings, and east of these a chapter-house
-with groined roof springing from six pillars. A very
-large gateway stood at the south-west, and outside was a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[244]</span>
-double moat to which the water from St. Helen’s Spring was
-conducted by what is still known as “the Monk’s Dyke.”
-It flourished greatly at the beginning of the fourteenth century,
-having then sixty-six monks and 150 lay brethren. The Louth
-Park Abbey Chronicle, though very valuable, is not exactly
-contemporaneous with the things it mentions, for it was all
-written by a scribe in the fifteenth century. It covers the
-years from 1066 to the death of Henry IV. in 1413.</p>
-
-<p>Near the abbey, but on the other side of the canal, is
-<i>Keddington</i>, where the arch of the organ chamber is made of
-carved stones, no doubt brought from the abbey. The church,
-which is built of chalk and greensand, is older than any in
-the immediate neighbourhood, and has a Norman south door.
-It has a remarkable lancet window on the south side, in the
-upper part of which is a carved dragon, and has also what is
-very rare, a wooden mediæval eagle lectern.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ROADS FROM LOUTH</div>
-
-<p>Half-a-dozen main roads radiate from Louth, one might
-call it eight, for two of the half-dozen divide, one within a
-mile, and one at a distance of two miles from the town. They
-go, one north to Grimsby, twenty miles of level road along the
-marsh, and one west to Market Rasen, by the Ludfords and
-North Willingham, fifteen and a half miles. One mile out,
-this road divides and goes west and then south to Wragby by
-South Willingham, sixteen and a half miles. Both of these
-roads, as well as that which runs south-west to Horncastle,
-fourteen and a half miles, cross the Wolds and are distinctly
-hilly, rising and falling nearly four hundred feet. The fifth
-road, which goes due south to Spilsby, sixteen miles, though
-seldom as much as 250 feet higher than Louth, which stands
-about seventy-five feet above sea level, affords fine views, and
-is a very pleasant road to travel. But all these highways
-must be dealt with in detail later. The sixth road from Louth
-runs south-east to Alford, and keeps on the level of the marsh,
-and the seventh and eighth roads run eastwards across the
-marsh to the sea, one branching off the Alford road at Kenwick
-and avoiding all villages, comes to the coast at Saltfleet; the
-other, starting out from Louth by Keddington and Alvingham,
-loses itself in many small and endlessly twisting roads which
-connect the various villages and reaches the sea eventually
-at Donna Nook and Saltfleet, places five miles apart, with no
-passage to the sea between them—nothing but mud flats,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[245]</span>
-samphire beds and sea birds. There is a charm about “the
-waste enormous marsh,” and also about the high and windy
-Wolds, which never palls, but before we journey along either
-of the highways from Louth I should like to introduce one of
-those byways which form the chief delight of people who love
-the country.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SOME BYWAYS</div>
-
-<p>We will leave Louth, then, by the Spilsby road, and when
-we reach the second milestone, 147 miles from London, turn
-and look at the beautiful spire of Louth Church rising from
-a group of elms in the middle distance of a wide panorama.
-From our height of 300 feet we look across the whole marsh to
-the sea, ten miles to the east, and far on beyond Louth we
-look northwards towards Grimsby and the Humber, the
-perpetually shifting lights and shades caused by the great
-cumulus clouds in these fine level views, the many farmsteads
-and occasional church towers—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The crowded farms and lessening towers”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">of our own Lincolnshire poet—all combine to make a very
-satisfactory picture to which the wonderfully wide extent which
-lies unrolled before us, lends enchantment; and always the eye
-reverts to rest with delight on that perfect spire standing so
-high above the trees by the banks of the river Lud.</p>
-
-<p>At length we turn and pursue our way, but soon quit the
-Spilsby road and go down the hill to the left, past the entrance
-to Kenwick Hall, till we reach the Alford road, and, turning
-to the right, come to the pretty little village of <i>Cawthorpe</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">DR. TROUGHT’S JUMP</div>
-
-<p>This is not a bad centre for country walks. You can walk
-on a raised footpath all along the side of the curious water-lane,
-and if you go out in the opposite direction the road to
-<i>Haugham</i> takes you through two miles of as pretty a road as you
-could desire; it is called “Haugham Pastures,” but it is really
-a road through a wood, without hedges, reminding one of the
-New Forest or the “Dukeries.” On the right, going from
-Cawthorpe, the trees extend some distance with oak and fern
-and all that makes the beauty of an English wood; on the
-other side it is only a belt of trees through which at intervals
-a grassy tract curves off from the road and leads to the fields;
-and as we passed in September we could see the corn-laden
-waggons moving up towards us or the teams going afield among
-the sheaves. No county could supply a prettier series of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[246]</span>
-pictures of simple pastoral beauty than this byway through
-“Haugham Pastures.” A deep lane near the little brick-built
-manor-house is noticeable as the site of a famous jump.
-The roadway is about fifteen feet wide, with steep sides and
-a low hedge, the top of which is nine or ten feet above the
-roadway. Over these Dr. Trought of Louth, on a famed hunter,
-once jumped for a wager, flying from field to field, a distance
-of some twenty feet.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus57">
-<img src="images/illus57.jpg" width="500" height="475" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Lud at Louth.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>One of the charming peculiarities of Cawthorpe is that here
-the “Long Eau” stream runs between hedge-banks over a
-level sand and gravel bed and forms a water street, which extends
-for about a furlong. There is a similar thing at Swaby, six
-miles to the south, where the “Great Eau” runs along a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[247]</span>
-street or road through the village. At Cawthorpe the water
-is always running and usually about six inches deep. The
-village lies in a hollow with curiously twisting little roads in
-it, and is very picturesque with its farms and trees and quaint
-little brick manor-house standing near the church at the three
-cross ways.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A BEAUTIFUL ROAD</div>
-
-<p>Rising from the hollow, the small byway runs with here
-and there beautiful trees and often on the right a tall hedge
-or narrow strip of plantation, reminding one of the roadside
-“shaws” in Hampshire, while on the left there is always a
-view down over cornfields and beyond the tops of the Tothill
-oak woods right across the fertile belt of the marsh to the
-shining line of the distant sea. With many a twist the byway
-runs on through <i>Muckton</i> village to <i>Belleau</i>, where it crosses
-the above-mentioned Swaby or Calceby beck and looks down
-on the picturesque church, standing in the grassy meadows,
-and on the brick turret and groined archways of the old Manor-house,
-and so on to <i>South Thoresby</i>, where the broken ground
-and the fine trees tell of an old mansion which stood there till
-last century; and past <i>Rigsby</i>, till it meets the Spilsby and
-Alford highway just below Miles-cross-Hill, whence it runs on
-through the avenue of elms to <i>Well</i>. And all the way, as it
-has run along the top of the eastern escarpment of the Wold,
-it has afforded us an outlook over a wide expanse of the
-marsh such as none of the other roads on the high wolds can
-equal. True, the Lincoln cliff road gives a finer view and
-runs further, but I don’t think there is any prettier ten-mile
-stretch in the county than this ‘Middle road’ from Well to
-Louth.</p>
-
-<p>At the entrance gate of Well Vale Hall the road divides,
-either route ending at Alford. <i>Well Vale</i>, a fine sporting estate
-and also a famous stronghold for foxes, the residence of Mr.
-Walter H. Rawnsley, is, I venture to think, the prettiest spot
-in the county. For a mile or more a grassy track descends
-from the top of Miles-Cross-Hill through a wooded valley
-where fine beeches stretch out their long arms, and pines and
-larch crown the chalky turf-clad sides, till the mouth of the
-Vale opens out into a park, whose rolling slopes are studded
-with handsome trees, and as you near the mansion, the front
-of which looks out across its brilliant flower-beds and quaint
-pinnacled gateway upon the little church flanked by branching<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[248]</span>
-elms on the summit of a grassy hill, you see a fine sheet of water
-fed by a copious chalk stream which passes the house and is
-then conducted to a still larger lake on the garden side, stretching
-with a double curve from the giant cedars on the lawn to
-a vanishing point, of which glimpses only are caught through
-the stems of the Scotch firs and oaks in the distance. The
-history of Well goes back to Roman times, and has been told
-fully by the Rev. E. H. R. Tatham, Rector of the neighbouring
-parish of <i>Claxby</i>, where the site of a Roman camp is still visible,
-another being at <i>Willoughby</i>, two miles off eastwards in the
-levels, where the marsh begins.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HISTORY OF WELL</div>
-
-<p>The name was derived in Saxon times from the strong spring
-which wells out from the chalk and feeds the lakes on either
-side the house. The names Burwell and Belleau in the immediate
-neighbourhood are of similar origin, though the latter
-is a Norman name. At the time of the Conquest <i>Well</i> and
-<i>Belleau</i> were both bestowed on Gilbert de Gaunt, the Conqueror’s
-nephew, and were let by him to one Ragener, whose
-family took the addition “de Welle” and lived here for four
-centuries. In the thirteenth century we hear of a church at
-Well, and William de Welle (the third of the name) in 1283
-obtained a licence for a market and fair at Alford. His son
-Adam was summoned to Parliament as a baron in 1299. In
-the fifteenth century the name was changed from Welle to
-Welles, and Leo Lord Welles fell at Towton in 1461. The title
-was now combined with that of Willoughby d’Eresby, and
-Leo’s son, Richard, who took it <i>jure uxoris</i>, he having married
-the Willoughby heiress, was the Lord Welles who was so
-basely put to death in 1470 by Edward IV. for complicity
-in the Lincolnshire rebellion, together with his son-in-law,
-T. Dymoke, and his son Robert. <i>See</i> Chap. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII">XXXIII.</a></p>
-
-<p>Leo, who fell at Towton, had married for his second wife,
-Margaret Duchess of Somerset, and her son John joined
-Henry VII., and after the battle of Bosworth the king restored
-to him the Welles estate which had been forfeited after Robert’s
-execution, made him a viscount, and gave him the hand of
-Cicely, daughter of Edward IV. and sister to his own queen,
-in marriage. It is interesting to read in Mr. Tatham’s paper
-that “This lady carried the heir-apparent, Prince Arthur, at
-his baptism at Winchester in 1486.” She subsequently married
-one of the Kyme family of Kyme Tower near Boston. John<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[249]</span>
-Viscount Welles died in 1499, and the male line of the Welles
-became extinct, but the Willoughby line went on, for Cicely,
-the sister of the unfortunate Richard Welles, had married Sir
-R. Willoughby, and her grandson William succeeded to that
-title as the ninth Lord Willoughby. He was the father of
-Catharine Duchess of Suffolk and subsequently wife of Richard
-Bertie, whose monument occupies so large a space in the
-Willoughby chapel at Spilsby. The Welles estate remained
-with the Willoughbys (who in 1626 were created Earls of
-Lindsey) till 1650, when the extortionate fines levied on Royalist
-families by the Parliament made it necessary for Belleau and
-Welle to be sold. Belleau went to Sir H. Vane, and Well to
-W. Wolley, who sold it about 1700 to Anthony Weltden, a man
-who had a romantic career in the early days of the Hon. East
-India Company. From him Well passed to James Bateman,
-one of whose sons became Lord Bateman. Another, James,
-succeeded to the estate and built the present house about
-1725, a wing of which was pulled down about 1845. This
-James married Anne, daughter of Sir Robert Chaplin of Tathwell,
-who also came to live and die at Well. Bateman’s daughter
-and heiress married a Dashwood in 1744—probably it was he
-who planted the Vale (he died in 1825)—and in 1838 the estate
-was purchased by Mr. Christopher Nisbet Hamilton, whose
-daughter, Mrs. Hamilton Ogilvy, has just sold it to Mr. Walter
-H. Rawnsley.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">WELL VALE</div>
-
-<p>The following lines were written on the gate at the top of
-Well Vale by a traveller taking his yearly tramp from Horncastle
-for a dip in the sea at Mablethorpe, a good twenty miles.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Some say “All’s well that ends well,”</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But here Well begins well.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">They say too “Truth is in a well,”</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But here there is in truth a Well.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Welcome then Well! since I well come along to her,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For well I’ve known Well and the charms that belong to her</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Passing well to the view looks the Vale of fair Well,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And I, passing Well too, must bid her farewell</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">’Till again I’m this way; or perhaps for aye.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Farewell then (or ‘vale’) to fair Well Vale.</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Farewell! Fair Well!</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">This is more than a mere assemblage of puns—there is some
-poetry in the old fellow, and the penultimate line has an added
-pathos from the fact that only a few months later the poet<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[250]</span>
-bid his final farewell to life, on November 10, in the same year,
-at the age of seventy-six.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE STARLINGS</div>
-
-<p>Speaking of Well Vale, I think I have seen and heard more
-starlings collected together in a young larch plantation there
-than I ever came across at once elsewhere. The only multitude
-of birds at all comparable to it was the army of cranes I have
-seen covering half a mile or more of sandbank in the Nile, near
-Komombos, while clouds of them kept dropping from the sky.
-They have black wings and white bodies, so that aloft they
-looked black, but standing on the sandbank as close as they
-could pack they looked all white.</p>
-
-<p>But to return to our starlings. It is a very curious thing
-this massing of countless thousands of these birds amongst the
-osiers<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> in the fenny parts of the county, or in some of the plantations
-in the Wolds. If you take your stand about sunset near
-one of these, when the wood pigeons, after much noisy flapping
-of their wings, have settled down to rest, a loud whirring noise
-will make you look up to see the sky darkened by a cloud of
-these birds, which will be only the advance portion of the multitudes
-that will quickly be converging from all sides to their
-roosting quarters. They have been feeding in many places,
-often at a considerable distance; but each night they assemble,
-and for a quarter of an hour or more the noise of their chattering
-and fluttering as each successive flight comes in will be
-indescribable. If a disturbing noise is made, myriads will
-rise with one loud rush, but nothing will prevent their return
-and, when the noise and movement has at length subsided,
-the trees will be black with their living load, which will sleep till
-sunrise, and then again disperse for the day in quest of food,
-returning every night for several weeks, till the call of spring
-scatters them for good.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[251]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII</h2>
-
-<p>Anglo-Saxon, Norman and Mediæval Art—Fonts.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>When we talk of Anglo-Saxon art it is not to be implied
-that no artistic work was done before Saxon time in Britain.
-But if we speak of churches, though doubtless British churches
-were once to be found here, there are certainly none now existing,
-and we cannot get back beyond Saxon times. The British
-churches were built probably of wattle, or at the best of stones
-without mortar, and so were not likely to be long-lived. Still,
-Stonehenge is British work, and domed huts, like beehives,
-similar to but smaller and ruder than those to be still seen in
-Greece, were made by the ancient Britons. It was the Romans
-who first introduced architecture to our land. They had learnt
-it from those wonderful people, the pioneers of so much that
-we all value, the Greeks, who in turn had got their lessons from
-Egypt and Assyria. That takes us back eight thousand years,
-and we still profit by the art thus handed down through the
-centuries. When the Romans left us, all the arts at once
-declined in our islands, and notably the art of building.</p>
-
-<p>In speaking of the churches in the south of the county, I drew
-attention to the number in which traces of Saxon work were
-still visible and spoke of the two remarkable specimens only
-three miles over the border at Wittering and Barnack. It is
-pleasant to hear so good an authority as Mr. Hamilton Thompson
-say that Lincolnshire is more rich than any other county in
-churches which, though only in few instances of a date indisputably
-earlier than the Conquest, yet retain traces of an
-architecture of a distinctly pre-Norman character. We do not
-vie with Kent and Northumbria, for we cannot show anything
-which can be referred to the first century of Anglo-Saxon<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[252]</span>
-Christianity associated with the name of Augustine,
-nor had St. Ninian, St. Kentigern, St. Oswald, St. Cuthbert,
-or St. Wilfrid any work to do in Lincolnshire. St. Paulinus
-alone, by his visit to Lincoln, connected the province of Lindsey,
-which was part of his diocese of York, with the religious life
-of Northumbria. But the only existing trace of this is the
-dedication of the church in Lincoln to St. Paul, <i>i.e.</i>, St. Paulinus.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SAXON TOWERS</div>
-
-<p>Still, Saxon architecture was a real thing in the two centuries
-preceding the Norman invasion, and we have in Lincolnshire
-an unusually large number of churches (I can mention no
-less than thirty-eight at once), which represent a late state
-of Saxon architecture carried out probably by Saxon workmen
-for Norman employers and bearing traces of Norman
-influence. At Stow, near Lincoln, is some very fine Saxon
-work, but there the Norman overlies the Saxon more decidedly
-than it does in the notable church of Barton-on-Humber;
-both of these have been discussed in previous chapters. But
-we may here draw attention to the less magnificent Saxon
-remains in the county, and notice how often the churches
-with Saxon work still visible, lie in groups. Thus, quite in
-the north we have Barton, Winterton, and Alkborough, with
-Worlaby not far off. Then in the course of ten miles along
-the road from Caistor to Grimsby we have Caistor, Cabourn,
-Nettleton, Rothwell, Cuxwold, Swallow, Laceby, Scartho, and
-Clee; with Holton-le-Clay and Waith just to the south on the
-road to Louth. On the west, near Gainsborough, we have
-a group of five close together at Corringham, Springthorpe,
-Harpswell, Heapham, and Glentworth; and Marton and Stow are
-not far away, one by the Trent and the other on the central
-road between the Trent and the ‘Cliff.’</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">“LONG-AND-SHORT” WORK</div>
-
-<p>Lincoln has its two famous church towers of St. Mary-le-Wigfords
-and St. Peters-at-Gowts. Near it, to the south,
-are Bracebridge, Bramston, Harmston and Coleby, the two
-latter close together, and all with traces of “Long-and-Short”
-work; and if we continue our way southwards, we shall pass
-Hough-on-the-Hill between Grantham and Newark, with its
-interesting pre-Conquest stair turret, and so finish our Saxon
-tour by visiting three churches on or near the river Glen, at
-Boothby-Pagnell, Little Bytham and Thurlby. This is not
-an exhaustive list, for Great Hale near Heckington must be
-included, and Cranwell near Sleaford and Ropsley near Grantham,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[253]</span>
-both show “Long-and-Short” work. But the more closely the
-churches mentioned are examined, the more clear it becomes
-that, though the dates of the building, when we can get at
-them, mostly point us to the eleventh century, the art is of a
-pre-Conquest type, and could only have been executed before
-the general spread of Norman influence which that century
-witnessed. We are therefore quite justified in speaking of
-this work as Saxon.</p>
-
-<p>Here, perhaps, the term “Long-and-Short” work should
-be explained.</p>
-
-<p>It is often said that the Saxon architecture was the development
-in stone of the building which had previously been done
-in timber and wattle, and thus in Barnack, and Barton, and
-at Stow, but nowhere else in Lincolnshire, parallel strips of
-stone run up the tower at intervals of a couple of feet, as if
-representing the upright timbers. This theory, perhaps, will
-not bear pressing; still, though the arch over a window is often
-triangular, made by leaning two slabs one against another,
-not unfrequently a square-ended stone projects from the top
-of a rounded arch, which seems to be a reminiscence in stone
-of the end of a wooden beam. This may be seen at Barnack
-on the south side of the tower. The towers have no buttresses,
-and though the stones between the upright strips are small
-and rubbley, the stones at the angles of the tower are fairly
-large and squared. When these are long-shaped, but set
-alternately perpendicular and horizontal, this is called “Long-and-Short”
-work, and is definitely “Saxon,” even though
-built by Norman hands. The herring-bone work, as seen at
-Marton, is Romanesque and a sign of Norman builders. They
-also copied the Romans in facing a rubble core with dressed
-stone, whereas the Saxons only used dressed stones at the
-angles.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="illus58">
-<img src="images/illus58.jpg" width="700" height="300" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Ancient Saxon Ornament found in 1826 in cleaning out
-the Witham, near the village of Fiskerton, four miles east of Lincoln.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SAXON ORNAMENTS</div>
-
-<p>The enormous activity of the Norman builders in every part
-of the kingdom has thrown previous architectural efforts into
-the shade; but the Normans found in England a by no
-means barbarous people. Anglo-Saxon or Anglian art had
-exhibited developments in many directions, in metal work and
-jewellery, in illumination of MSS., in needlework, in stone-carving,
-as well as in architecture; and when Augustine
-landed in 597 it was not to a nation of barbarous savages,
-but to people quite equal in many ways to those he had lived<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[254]</span>
-among in Italy
-or conversed with
-in Gaul, that he
-had to preach the
-tenets of Christianity.
-As proof
-of this we can
-point to the beautiful
-carved stonework
-of the
-Anglians of Northumbria
-on the
-great crosses of
-Bewcastle and
-Ruthwell, and the
-cross of Bishop
-Acca of Hexham,
-now in the Durham
-library, all of the
-seventh century;
-and to the Lindisfarne
-Gospels of
-St. Wilfred’s time
-which was only
-some fifty years
-later; whilst to
-show the continuity
-of Anglo-Saxon
-art we have
-the St. Cuthbert
-stole in the Durham
-Cathedral
-library, a triumph
-of needlework by
-the nuns of Winchester
-in the
-days of Athelstan;
-and, besides
-the celebrated
-Alfred Jewel,
-a silver trefoil<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255"></a>[255]</span>
-brooch<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> found at Kirkoswald in Cumberland, which, for
-purity of design, richness of ornamentation and beauty of
-execution, it would be difficult to match in any age or
-country, and the cloak chain, found at Fiskerton, described in
-Chapter <a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">XIV.</a>; all these are quite first-rate in their different
-lines, and should make us speak with respect of our Saxon
-ancestors.</p>
-
-<p>Having already noted the Gainsborough group (Chap. <a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">XVII.</a>)
-and the Caistor group (Chap. <a href="#CHAPTER_XX">XX.</a>), we will now make our way
-towards a third group of pre-Norman towers to be seen on the
-Louth and Grimsby road.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">NORMAN DWELLINGS</div>
-
-<p>In Norman times strongholds and churches were built all
-over the country, and doubtless many domestic houses which
-did not aspire to be more than ordinary dwelling-places. It
-is curious how almost entirely these have vanished; one at
-Boothby Pagnell and three in Lincoln are among the very few
-left. In Lincoln ‘The Jews’ House,’ ‘Aaron’s House,’ and
-‘John of Gaunt’s Stables’ or ‘St. Mary’s Guild’ go back to
-the beginning of the twelfth century. They none of them
-would satisfy our modern notions of comfort, but neither do
-the much later houses, such as the mediæval merchant’s house
-called “Strangers’ Hall,” in Norwich, which is so interesting
-and so obviously uncomfortable. When King John of France
-was confined at Somerby Castle in the fourteenth century
-he had to import furniture from France to take the place of
-the benches and trestles which was all that the castle boasted,
-and to hang draperies and tapestries on the bare walls; and
-though some of these were supplied him by his captor, comfortable
-furniture seems to have been not even dreamt of at that
-time in England.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ROOD-SCREENS</div>
-
-<p>For the churches the Normans did surprisingly well, as far
-as the building and stonework went, but the beautiful woodwork,
-which is the glory of our Lincolnshire marsh churches,
-is mostly the work of the men of the fifteenth and early sixteenth
-century. We see this mediæval workmanship sometimes
-in the bench ends and stalls and miserere seats, but most
-notably in such of the rood screens as have escaped the successive
-onslaughts made on them in the sixteenth and seventeenth
-centuries, whilst the shameful neglect of the eighteenth and
-the shocking ignorance of both clergy and laity in that and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[256]</span>
-first part of the nineteenth century, have swept away much
-that was historically of the utmost interest, and which the
-better informed and more responsible guardians of the churches
-to-day would have preserved and treasured. This mediæval
-woodwork is found most frequently in the more remote parts
-of the country. The best rood loft I have ever seen is in a little
-church in Wales, near Towyn, and some of the finest rood screens
-with canopies are in the churches of Devon; of these, Mr.
-Hubert Congreve, in his paper contributed to the Worcester
-Archæological Society, notes that at <i>Stoke-in-Teignhead</i> there
-is one of the fourteenth century, carved in the reign of Richard II.
-From this the loft has been removed, and it was generally the
-case that when this was taken away as idolatrous, the screen
-itself was not objected to.</p>
-
-<p>Many of these screens in the Devon churches have an
-extremely rich and deep cornice, and they often extend right
-across the nave and both the aisles. Perhaps the finest of these
-is in the famous parson Jack Russell’s church at <i>Swymbridge</i>.
-This is of the fifteenth century. From the same source we
-learn that <i>Bovey Tracey</i> has a similar screen, but it has had to
-be greatly restored since the Commonwealth destruction, and
-that <i>Atherington</i> has a lovely screen in the north aisle, with fan-shaped
-coving springing from figures of angels holding shields.
-The cornice is delicately carved, and there is some fine canopy
-work over the parapet, with niches which once held figures
-of the saints. This screen was originally in the chapel at
-Umberleigh Manor, and is perhaps the only screen in the county
-which has never been painted. When I visited lately the
-quaint little town of <i>Totnes</i> I saw what is most uncommon—a
-stone screen. This dates from 1479, and richly and
-beautifully carved, much after the pattern of the screen in the
-Lady Chapel at Exeter Cathedral.</p>
-
-<p>All this fine mediæval work suffered terribly from the ultra-Protestant
-mania for iconoclasm which exhibited itself in the
-reign of Edward VI., in 1547, and again under Elizabeth in 1561.
-Finally, under the Parliament both in 1643 and 1644, was
-issued “An ordinance of the Lords and Commons assembled
-in Parliament for the utter demolishing, removing and taking
-away of all Monuments of superstition and idolatry.”</p>
-
-<p>This Act provided specifically for the taking away of all
-altar rails and the levelling of the “Chancel-ground” and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257"></a>[257]</span>
-removal of the Communion table from the east end, and the
-destruction of all stone altars, so that it is always noticeable
-when we find one such, either in a side chapel or in the pavement,
-with its five and occasionally six dedication crosses cut
-on the stone. Norwich has one in which a small black slab
-bearing the crosses is let into the large altar slab.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ICONOCLASM</div>
-
-<p>All images, “representative of the persons of the Trinity
-or of any Angell or Saint” were to be “utterly demolished,”
-and all vestments “defaced”; with the quaint proviso that
-the order should “not extend to any image, picture or coat-of-arms
-set up or graven onely for a Monument of any King,
-Prince or Nobleman, or other dead person <i>which hath not been
-commonly reputed or taken for a saint</i>.”</p>
-
-<h3>FONTS.</h3>
-
-<p>In our English churches the most noticeable bit of mediæval
-work is in many cases the font, which has often escaped when
-all the rest of the building inside and out has been defaced by
-neglect or destroyed by restoration. Much destruction followed
-on the Reformation, and even in Elizabeth’s reign, in spite
-of a royal mandate to preserve the old form of baptism “at
-the font and not with a bason,” attacks were constantly made
-on the fonts, and especially on the font-covers, which makes
-the preservation of the <i>Frieston</i> font-cover with a figure of the
-Virgin Mary on the top very remarkable. We have in the
-churchwardens’ accounts in various places this contemptuous
-entry:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Item. For takynge doune <i>ye thynge ower the funt</i> XIIᵈ.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Parliamentarian soldiers went to greater lengths and broke
-up the font itself in very many churches. The bowls were
-often cast out or buried in the churchyard. At <i>Ambleston</i>
-in Wales the font pedestal was only ten years ago found in use
-by a farmer as a cheese-press, and the bowl on another farm
-doing duty as a pig-trough.</p>
-
-<p>Still many have escaped with the loss of their carved covers,
-and how great the loss is can be judged when we see the beauty
-of such work as the cover which we still have at Ufford in
-Suffolk, eighteen feet high, or the similar ones at <i>Grantham</i>
-and <i>Fosdyke</i> and <i>Frieston</i> in our own county, or at <i>Ewelme</i>
-(Oxon), and <i>Thaxted</i> (Essex), and again in Suffolk at <i>Sudbury St. Gregory</i><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258"></a>[258]</span>
-and <i>Hepworth</i>, and one at <i>Thirsk</i> in Yorkshire
-which rises to the height of twenty-one feet. Sometimes the
-cover takes the form of a canopy, as at <i>Swymbridge</i> in Devon,
-and more beautifully in that erected by Bishop Cosin at <i>Durham</i>
-in 1663. The <i>Sudbury</i> font-cover has doors in it, as we see in
-the Jacobean cover in <i>Burgh-le-Marsh</i> church, and in the
-beautiful modern cover at <i>Brant Broughton</i>, both in Lincolnshire.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FONTS, SAXON AND NORMAN</div>
-
-<p>There were at one time many Saxon fonts, most of which
-were swept away and replaced in a different form by the Normans.
-One of the earliest we have is in <i>St. Martin’s Church, Canterbury</i>,
-the lower part of which, built of twenty-eight wedge-shaped
-stones, is Saxon or Romano-British, the upper part being
-Norman put on to heighten it, with the old Saxon rim crowning
-it, though by some this is called Transitional. This font was
-inside the church when King Ethelbert was baptised by St.
-Augustine in the ninth century. But we get back still further
-when we find runic inscriptions, as on the wonderful square
-tub font at <i>Bridekirk</i>, Cumberland, and on the little low
-hollowed stone at <i>Bingley</i>, Yorkshire, attributed to the eighth
-century, and having three lines of runes which are read thus:—</p>
-
-<p>“Eadbert, King, ordered to hew this dipstone for us, pray
-you for his soul.” He reigned 737 to 758, when as Æthelred
-King of Mercia in 675, had done at Bardney Abbey in the
-previous century, he resigned the crown and took the tonsure.
-<i>Mellor</i>, in Derbyshire, has a Saxon font, but without inscription.</p>
-
-<p>The remarkable font at <i>Bag Enderby</i>, Lincolnshire (<i>see</i>
-Chap. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">XXX.</a>), with its Scandinavian myth, is unique among
-fonts, though it has counterparts on many of the pre-Norman
-crosses in Northumbria. The font at <i>Deerhurst</i>, Gloucestershire,
-is also a very early one, and covered with Celtic scroll-work,
-this, though of the same kind, is bigger than the usual
-plain little stone tubs which, as a rule, mark the Saxon period.</p>
-
-<p>The Norman fonts also are mainly of tub form, but often
-ornamented with cable moulding and arcading, as at <i>Silk
-Willoughby</i>, Lincolnshire.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LINCOLNSHIRE FONTS</div>
-
-<p>The lead fonts, twenty-nine of which are in existence, are all
-Norman; most of these have arcading all round and figures
-within the arches; perhaps the best is at <i>Dorchester</i>, Oxon,
-showing the apostles. But at <i>Brookland</i>, in Romney Marsh,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259"></a>[259]</span>
-there is a double row of arcading with the signs of the Zodiac
-above, and figures cleverly emblematic of the months below.
-At <i>Childrey</i>, Berks, the figures are without arcading and
-represent bishops with crosiers, all quaintly of the same
-attenuated shape, and in very high relief. Berkshire and
-Oxon have several of these lead fonts, and Gloucestershire
-exhibits six, all cast in the same mould; Lincolnshire has
-only one at <i>Barnetby-le-Wold</i>, which is noticeable, however,
-as being the largest of them all, thirty-two inches in diameter;
-that at <i>Brookland</i> being the deepest with sixteen inches.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Tournai</i> group of black marble or basalt with thick
-central pedestal and four corner shafts, of which that at
-Winchester is the best, are described under Lincoln, in Chap.
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">XIX.</a> This form of support is pretty general through the
-thirteenth century, often with much massive carving and
-ornamentation on bowl and shafts, until the shafts developed,
-in some cases, into an open arcade round the central pillar,
-as best seen at <i>Barnack</i>, Northants. The tallest fonts and
-finest in design are of the fifteenth century, and are mostly
-octagonal pedestal fonts and frequently mounted on steps
-as in the churches of the Marsh near Boston, <i>e.g.</i>, <i>Benington</i>
-and <i>Leverton</i>. Some bowls are found with seven panels as at
-<i>Hundleby</i>, six as at <i>Ewerby</i>, <i>Heckington</i> and <i>Sleaford</i>, nine as
-at <i>Orleton</i>, in Herefordshire, and at <i>Bigby</i>, in Lincolnshire,
-thus giving eight panels for figures, and allowing one to be
-placed against a wall or pillar; and ten, twelve, fourteen, and
-sixteen are not unknown. In our own county we have mentioned
-the font in nearly every case when describing a church,
-and will only now recall a few instances of the best. In addition
-to the <i>Tournai</i> font at <i>Thornton Curtis</i> and that of lead at
-<i>Barnetby</i>, the finest specimens of Early English will be found
-at <i>Thorpe St. Peter’s</i> near Wainfleet—a very chaste design;
-the supporting shafts are gone, but the capitals show heads of
-bishop, king, and knight, and a knot of flowers supporting the
-bowl; and at <i>Weston</i>, near Spalding, where is one of singularly
-graceful form, standing on steps with a broad platform for the
-priest. At <i>Thurlby</i>, near Bourne, is a tub of Barnack stone
-which has pilasters all round it, and curious carved work
-dividing the panels, the whole being set on four square stone
-legs.</p>
-
-<p>Of Decorated fonts, <i>Ewerby</i> is remarkable; hexagonal, with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260"></a>[260]</span>
-sides going straight down from the bowl, each panel representing
-a window with tracery, tending in design to Perpendicular,
-so that it probably dates from the end of the fourteenth century.
-The windows are filled with diaper work, and surrounded by
-a border of quatre-foils and flowing foliage. Other good
-Decorated fonts are at <i>Strubby</i> and <i>Maltby-le-Marsh</i> and <i>Huttoft</i>,
-all near Alford. The Perpendicular period is best seen at
-<i>Covenham St. Mary</i>, <i>North Somercotes</i>, <i>Bourne</i>, <i>Pinchbeck</i>,
-<i>Leverton</i>, and <i>Benington</i>.</p>
-
-<p>It is on the panels of the handsome fifteenth century fonts
-that the seven sacraments are carved, leaving one panel for
-any appropriate subject, and these panels are often real
-pictures of the methods of the time, and form most valuable
-records; the pedestal usually has its panels filled with Apostolic
-figures.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">EAST ANGLIAN FONTS</div>
-
-<p>It is curious that nearly all the thirty “seven sacrament
-fonts” in the kingdom are found in East Anglia; those of
-<i>Walsoken</i>, <i>Little Walsingham</i>, <i>East Dereham</i>, and <i>Great Glenham</i>
-in Norfolk, and <i>Westall</i> in Suffolk, are specially fine. And the
-churchwarden’s accounts for <i>East Dereham</i> show that no
-expense was spared on the making; the total of £12 14<i>s.</i> 2<i>d.</i>,
-being equivalent to over £200 of our money.</p>
-
-<p>The sacraments depicted are Baptism, Confirmation, Penance,
-The Eucharist, Holy Orders, Holy Matrimony, and Extreme
-Unction. But to return to our own county.</p>
-
-<p><i>Utterby</i>, near Louth, has an open channel to drain the water
-off from the font into the churchyard—a very uncommon
-feature.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wickenby</i>, near Wragby, retains the old bar and staple to
-secure the font cover, at the time when the fonts were all
-ordered to be locked to prevent possibility of the water being
-tainted by magic. “Water bewitched” is a familiar expression
-for weak tea. I wonder if it comes from this.</p>
-
-<p>Of later fonts the quaintest is in <i>Moulton</i> church, near Spalding,
-and now disused. It represents the trunk of a tree carved
-in stone, the branches going round the bowl and the serpent
-round the trunk, with Adam and Eve, rather more than half
-life size, discussing the apple. It dates from 1830, and seems
-to be a copy of one in the church of St. James’, Piccadilly,
-said to have been carved in marble by Grinling Gibbons.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Francis Bond, in his charming book on porches and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261"></a>[261]</span>
-fonts, says that some of the fonts in our most ancient Lincolnshire
-churches, <i>Cabourn</i>, <i>Waith</i>, <i>Scartho</i> and <i>Clee</i>, look older
-than they are by reason of their coarse workmanship. He
-notes that the cover of the <i>Skirbeck</i> font belonged to a larger
-one destroyed by the Puritans, the present font having been
-put up in 1662.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">WOODEN FONTS</div>
-
-<p>The material of all the fonts described above is either stone
-or lead. We have very few of any other material, but of these
-by far the most interesting are those made of solid oak, of
-which specimens are extant at <i>Dinas-Mawddwy</i> (pronounced
-Mouthy) and <i>Evenechtyd</i> in Wales. But one might go on long
-enough talking about fonts, and I would only urge readers to go
-themselves and study them, and if they would pick out a few
-of the finest they should visit the fonts and font covers we have
-mentioned, and especially such typical fonts as are to be found
-at <i>Winchester</i> and <i>Durham</i>, at <i>Walsoken</i> in Norfolk, at <i>Fishlake</i>
-in Yorkshire, and <i>Bridekirk</i> in Cumberland, whenever they
-happen to be in those neighbourhoods.</p>
-
-<p>The worst of fonts is that they are so easily removable.
-Even in such out-of-the-way places as <i>Crowle</i> the font has not
-remained, though the Norman south wall with its beautiful
-doorway is in quite good repair.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262"></a>[262]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">ROADS FROM LOUTH, NORTH AND WEST</span></h2>
-
-<p>The Grimsby Group of Pre-Norman Towers—Waith—Holton-le-Clay—Scartho—Clee—Humberstone—Tetney—Ravendale—Ashby-cum-Fenby—Roads
-to Lincoln and Horncastle—Hainton—Glentham—West
-Rasen—The Pack-horse Bridge—Toft-next-Newton and Newton-by-Toft—Gibbet-posts—Middle
-Rasen—The Labourer—Market Rasen—North
-Willingham—Tealby and Bayons Manor—Bishop Odo—South
-Elkington—Road from Horncastle—The South Wolds—Tathwell—Jane
-Chaplin.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">JUNE FLOWERS</div>
-
-<p>The road from Louth to Grimsby, in its first part, is described
-elsewhere; but north of Ludborough it passes through a
-succession of small villages in each of which is a very early
-church tower. These are all somewhat similar to the two
-primitive churches in Lincoln and to the famous one at Barton-on-Humber,
-but they have no “Long-and-Short” work which
-is distinctive of the <i>Saxon</i> towers, and so the term <i>Romanesque</i>
-perhaps best describes them. They are certainly pre-Norman.
-Similar groups have been described near Caistor and Gainsborough
-in Chaps. <a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">XVII.</a> and <a href="#CHAPTER_XX">XX.</a>, and others mentioned
-in Chap. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">XXII.</a> It was a bright and breezy morning early in
-June when we set out from Well to visit this remarkable group.
-The trees were at their best, chestnuts and may trees still in
-bloom, and in the wayside gardens the laburnum with its
-“dropping-wells of fire” was a joy to see. As we passed
-along the wind brought the strong scent of the mustard fields
-and the delicious perfume of the beans, not badly described
-by the Barber to his wife as “just like the very most delicious
-hair-oil, my dear.” The pastures were golden with buttercups,
-but the most wonderful sight of all was the profusion<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263"></a>[263]</span>
-of chervil, or cow-parsley (<i>Anthriscus</i>), which, with its lace-like
-flowers, at times filled the space of grass between the road
-and the hedge with mile upon mile of its delicate white blossom,
-and in places lined every hedge, showing above the ordinary
-low-cut Lincolnshire fence, or, where the hedge was higher,
-whitening the lower half in lines of flowery loveliness. It
-nowhere encroached on the cultivated land, but every hedge
-and ditch and roadside was marked out by it in a profusion
-of soft white blossoms which was quite astonishing. We note
-that the “tender ash” is still, as our Lincolnshire poet has it,
-delaying ‘to clothe herself when all the woods are green,’ but
-a few days of such balmy sunshine will woo even her leaves
-from out the bud, and full summer will be with us. The red
-cattle are feeding in little herds, and the sheep, white from
-the hands of the shearer, are dotted about the fields. The
-labourers seem, most of them, to be at the same work, weeding
-the corn; but as we get further on to the heavy lands whence
-<i>Holton-le-Clay</i> so aptly gets its name, we see teams of four
-horses abreast harnessed to the “Drags,” by which the great
-clods are broken up.</p>
-
-<p>The first of the group of towers we look at is <i>Waith</i>, a small
-cruciform building in a churchyard thickly planted with trees,
-two fine cedars among them. There are some Early English
-arcades to the nave, but outside, the tower alone is ancient.
-This originally was just the width of the nave, and has no
-openings in the north and south walls. It is also built, not
-of rubble with quoins, but of dressed stones throughout, solidly
-but roughly built, with a tiny opening low down; and above
-the invariable string course, a double light of two small round-headed
-arches supported by a stout mid-wall shaft with heavy
-impost. Coming away, we note on a tombstone the curious
-and possibly Roman surname ‘Porcass.’ Two miles south-west
-is <i>Grainsby</i> where, as at Clee and Scartho, the stones bear
-the red marks of Danish fire, and where, inside the tower, is
-an old boulder stone. Two miles north, on the Grimsby road,
-is <i>Holton-le-Clay</i>, where the tower of the church is of similar
-antiquity, all but the top storey above the string-course. The
-west side has only one very small window, but it has on the east
-side a good tall Romanesque tower-arch, and there is an Early
-Norman or Saxon font. The rest of the church is of the poorest
-in all respects.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264"></a>[264]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SCARTHO</div>
-
-<p>As we proceed, the tall windmill with six sails shows above
-the <i>Waltham</i> woods on our left, and we pass a roadside inn
-with the sign of “The Old Pop Shop.” Three miles more
-and we reach <i>Scartho</i>, a village which is beginning to take
-the overflow of Grimsby and is full of new buildings. This
-is the only living in the north or east of England which belongs
-to Jesus College, Oxford. The church is very interesting on
-account of its tower, which is Saxon in all but the absence
-of “Long-and-Short” work. The stones of the tower are of
-all shapes and kinds, the quoins alone being of hewn stone.
-Below are only the tiny windows common to all Saxon towers,
-and above, the belfry has two-light windows with the usual
-mid-wall shaft. In the west of the tower is a doorway with a
-round head of large stones and massive imposts.</p>
-
-<p>There is a deep, narrow archway from the nave into the tower,
-with a little window looking into the nave, and there have
-been originally tall arches in both the north and south walls,
-narrow of necessity so as to leave wall enough at each angle
-for the tower to stand on. A charming original font is there,
-but hideously placed on a modern inverted stone bowl. The
-tower and the font are the only things worth looking at, but
-both of these are of unusual interest. The parapet is Perpendicular
-and built of different stone, and it is easy to see from
-the red appearance of many calcined stones used in the tower
-that it has been rebuilt from the old materials after a former
-church had been burnt by that scourge of Lincolnshire—the
-Dane. The principal entrance is now through a big doorway,
-but in the thirteenth century was in the south wall of the tower.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving <i>Scartho</i> we quickly reach the outskirts of Grimsby,
-and, turning to the right on the Cleethorpes road, we come in
-a couple of miles to the church of <i>Clee</i>. This is the best of the
-group we have been visiting. It is one of the earliest churches
-in the county, and is highly interesting, not only for the venerable
-antiquity of its tower, but for the fine and varied early
-Norman and Transition architecture in the body of the church.
-As a rule there is nothing left of any antiquity in these pre-Norman
-churches but the tower.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">CLEE</div>
-
-<p>There is a narrow western doorway and a much taller one
-of similar character opening into the nave; each has Voussoirs
-set in double rows. Just above the belfry on the west
-face is a keyhole light made of top and side stones, and a circular<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265"></a>[265]</span>
-light in the south face. Mr. Jeans, in Murray’s “Lincolnshire,”
-notes that they have all similar characteristics—“Rubble
-walling with large quoins, a bold string-course dividing them
-into stages, tall, narrow doorways with rude imposts and
-coupled belfry windows with a massive mid-wall shaft.” All
-this we find at <i>Clee</i>, and the red calcined stones in the wall tell
-of the Danish fire here as at Scartho. The early Norman arcade
-in the north of the nave has square piers with shafts at the
-corners, one of them twisted, like the work in Durham Cathedral.
-All are different in their structure and in the carving of their
-capitals. The south arcade has thick round columns of later
-Norman work with chevron, billet, and very thick cable
-moulding. The arches are round, and the stones of the
-moulding, as at Somerby, being cut by various hands and
-without plan or drawing, fit together, but are hardly any two
-of them of the same sized pattern. This is quite usual in
-Norman arch mouldings. I noticed it lately over the west
-doorway of the fine tower of New Romney, Kent. The arches
-at the east of each aisle which give upon the transepts are pointed,
-but with Norman mouldings, and the transept arches are the
-same; the transepts themselves and the low central tower
-and the chancel are all modern. The old tower is, as usual,
-at the west end. On the shaft of one of the south arcade
-pillars is a very interesting record of two notable Bishops of
-Lincoln. It is in Latin, cut on a small tablet of marble about
-six inches by eight, and let in flush with the pillar. It says
-that “the Church was dedicated in honour of the Holy Trinity
-and the blessed Virgin by Hugh Bishop of Lincoln in the year
-1192, in the time of King Richard and re-dedicated after
-restoration by Bishop Christopher Wordsworth in 1888.”
-1192 was the same year in which Bishop Hugh began the choir
-at Lincoln, which is pure Early English, but doubtless the
-nave at Clee was built some years before it was dedicated.
-The font is a massive Norman one, and a portion of the shaft
-of an early cross stands just inside the door.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus59">
-<img src="images/illus59.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Clee Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">PRE-NORMAN TOWER</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ASHBY-CUM-FENBY</div>
-
-<p>The pathway to the church is lined on either side with tall
-fuschias, not a usual sight near the east coast. This church
-is the old parish church of <i>Cleethorpes</i>, which is the most crowded
-of the Lincolnshire watering-places, the goal of endless excursions
-from all the neighbouring counties, but not a place of
-any attraction for residents. Six miles due east across the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266"></a>[266]</span>
-river Humber is the revolving light of the Spurn Head lighthouse,
-plainly seen from the hill above Alford, thirty miles away.
-Between the Louth and Grimsby main road and the sea another
-road runs south from Clee by Humberstone and Tetney, thence
-to Covenham and Alvingham and so to Louth. <i>Humberstone</i>
-is a parish which goes with Holton-le-Clay, though they are
-about three miles apart. It is remarkable for its fine avenues
-of trees, and has a good Perpendicular tower. But in this
-respect it is surpassed by the extremely well-built and well-designed
-tower at the next village of Tetney. This, unlike the body<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267"></a>[267]</span>
-of the church, is entirely of good, hard, grey Yorkshire stone.
-Some “Blow Wells,” which are circular pits of very blue water
-100 feet deep, are in a field half a mile to the south-east of the
-church. There are others at <i>Laceby</i> and <i>Little Cotes</i>, both
-in the valley of the Freshney river, six miles off. The water
-comes through faults in the limestone ridge four or five miles
-to the west. A stream also flows through Tetney, which
-comes out of the Croxby pond near <i>Hatcliffe</i>, the only piece of
-water in the neighbourhood. The roads we have been writing
-of are all entirely in the flat ground, but from the Louth and
-Grimsby main road a branch goes off to the left, after crossing
-a fourteenth century bridge with ribbed arches, at <i>Utterby</i>, which
-runs north along the western edge of the Wold past Brocklesby
-to Barrow on Humber. This, when it is opposite to Waith,
-has on its left a place called Ravendale, and, on its right, a little
-hidden away village, called Ashby-cum-Fenby. At <i>Ravendale</i>
-there was once a priory belonging to a Premonstratensian
-abbey in Brittany. It was seized by the Crown with other
-alien priories in 1337 to form part of the dowry of Joan of
-Navarre, Queen of Henry IV. <i>Ashby-cum-Fenby</i> has very
-pretty Early-English two-light windows in the belfry, set
-round with dog-tooth moulding. A Crusader effigy of 1300 is
-at the west end of the tower, and two fine monuments to two
-sisters of the Drury family are in good preservation; one to
-Sir F. and Lady Wray closely resembles the Irby monument
-at Whaplode, and, as the families are related, probably the work
-is by the same sculptor. That of Susannah Drury in the
-chancel is a good piece of sculpture, but the whole has literally
-been whitewashed, which does not improve it. The churchyard
-is for the most part deplorably neglected, and a few
-sheep would greatly improve it. A row of almshouses with
-tiny gardens, made like the Workmen’s row at Tattershall,
-adjoins the west side of the churchyard.</p>
-
-<p>The road after this passes nothing of importance near it,
-till it reaches Brocklesby.</p>
-
-<p>Close to the bell ropes in the tower at Tetney is a neat little
-brass which aptly commemorates a fine old parishioner as
-follows:—</p>
-
-<p class="center">Matthew Lakin<br />
-born 1801 died 1899 One of the regular bellringers of<br />
-Tetney for 84 years and sometime Clerk and Sexton.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268"></a>[268]</span></p>
-
-<p>The highway which goes out of Louth on the west, after
-passing Thorpe Hall, within a mile of the town, soon splits into
-two, the one going up the hill to the right has, at first, a north-easterly
-course, but after passing through South Elkington
-leaves North Elkington on the right and goes on due east to
-Market Rasen and Gainsborough, and is the great east-and-west
-road of North Lincolnshire: the only other roads which
-take that direction being the Boston-Sleaford-and-Newark
-and the Donington-and-Grantham roads in the southern part
-of the county, and the great Sutton-Holbeach-Spalding-Bourne-and-Colsterworth
-road. But none of these run so straight.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HAINTON</div>
-
-<p>The other road from the foot of South Elkington hill goes
-on at first due west till, passing Welton-le-Wold on the right
-and Gayton-le-Wold on the left, it drops into the picturesque
-little village of Burgh-on-Bain (pronounced Bruff). So far we
-have had a wide Wold view, but no blue distances over fen
-or marsh; but <i>Grimblethorpe</i> and <i>Burgh-on-Bain</i> are in two
-parallel little valleys, and when the road turns here, at seven
-miles distance from Louth, to the south-west, a quite different
-type of country is entered, beginning with the woods of <i>Girsby</i>,
-the seat of Mr. J. Fox, quondam joint Master of the Southwold
-Hounds, and <i>Hainton</i> Hall and park, where the Heneage
-family have been seated since the time of Henry III. The
-church tower has some of the characteristics of the early
-Norman or pre-Norman groups, and both church and chantry-chapel
-are rich in monuments of the sixteenth and seventeenth
-centuries, and brasses of still earlier date. The altar tombs
-of 1553 and 1595 are magnificent, and the kneeling effigies
-of 1559 and 1610 are in excellent preservation. The helmets
-and spurs over the effigy of John (1559), and the gilded armour
-of Sir George (1595), are especially noticeable, as also are the
-varied spellings of the name—in 1435 Henege, in 1530 Hennage,
-and in 1553 Henneage.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">GLENTHAM</div>
-
-<p>From here a road leads to the left to <i>South Willingham</i> and
-<i>Benniworth</i>, but the main road runs through <i>East and West
-Barkwith</i>, with those fine grass borders, each wider than the
-road, which are characteristic of the Wold highways, for five
-miles to <i>Wragby</i>, eleven miles from Lincoln. Near East Barkwith
-Station is Mr. Turnor’s residence, Panton Hall, and from
-West Barkwith a road goes to the <i>Torringtons</i>. Here Gilbert
-of Sempringham was rector, and established one of his Gilbertine<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269"></a>[269]</span>
-houses. The road on either side of the rather town-like village
-of <i>Wragby</i> is uninteresting, till suddenly, at a distance of eight
-miles, the towers of Lincoln Minster appear, not in front, but
-away to the left, and then again disappear from view. But
-the road turns, and after four miles, lo! again the Minster,
-straight in front; and as you approach from the north-east
-you see all three towers at the end of the long road, getting
-ever finer as you approach and are able to make out the details
-of the architecture. Only too quickly you come to the top of
-the hill, and gaze at the splendid upper windows of the great
-bell tower, now close on your right, then sweep down the curve
-and, passing through the Minster yard by the Potter and
-Exchequer gates, go out northwards by the old Roman Ermine
-Street. We soon reach the turn to Riseholme, where from
-1830, when Buckden was given up, the bishops resided, until
-Bishop King built the present house in the Old Palace grounds
-in Lincoln, and where in the churchyard are the tombs of her
-much-revered Bishops Kaye and Wordsworth, though their
-monuments are in the cathedral. After this we pass nothing,
-the road running straight on for over thirty miles, and on much
-the same level all the way. But we will only go to the thirteenth
-milestone and turn to the right at <i>Caenby</i> Corner, where
-the Gainsborough and Louth road crosses the Ermine Street,
-and so make our way back by Market Rasen. The first village
-we shall come to is <i>Glentham</i>, which contains in chancel and
-chantry several monuments of the Tourney family from 1452.
-It is believed that the church was originally dedicated to “Our
-Lady of Pity,” hence, over the porch is a beautiful little
-carving of the Virgin holding the dead Christ, and the Tourney
-arms below it. A brass to Ann Tourney has the following
-play on words:—</p>
-
-<p class="center">“Abiit non obiit, preiit non periit.”</p>
-
-<p>Till the early part of last century, a rent charge on some
-land in the village provided a shilling each for seven old maids
-every Good Friday for washing the recumbent effigy of a lady
-of the Tourney family which is under the gallery, with water
-from “The New Well.” This singular survival of the custom
-of washing an effigy of the dead Christ for a representation
-of the entombment is now abandoned, as the land was sold
-in 1852 without reservation of the rent charge on it. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270"></a>[270]</span>
-effigy was known as “Molly Grime,” a corruption of “Malgraen,”
-which means in some ancient tongue or dialect the
-‘Holy-Image-Washing.’ (“Lincs. Notes and Queries.” I., 125.)</p>
-
-<p>The church is rather a curiosity, being seated throughout
-with box pens and having a gallery at the west end. Even
-the font is painted, and is a cheese-shaped stone on three legs
-placed on a round block. The door is old and has an unmistakable
-sanctuary ring on it, as at Durham, and the porch
-has a pretty little two-light window on each side.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE TOURNAYS</div>
-
-<p>The Tournays of Caenby are one of the genuine old county
-families, having held land in it certainly since 1328. John
-Tournay, in the sixteenth century, married a Talboys co-heiress,
-and was brother-in-law to Sir Christopher Willoughby and
-Sir Edward Dymoke.</p>
-
-<p>The manor of Caenby-cum-Glentham, given in the thirteenth
-century to Barlings Abbey, and at the dissolution, along with
-so many other things, bestowed by Henry VIII. on Charles
-Brandon, Duke of Suffolk, was purchased by Edward Tournay
-in 1675, but he had inherited another manor in Caenby, or
-Cavenby through a long line of ancestors from the family of
-Thornton, of whom one Gilbert de Thornton was Lord Chief
-Justice of the King’s Bench, 1289-1295. The present representative
-of the Tournays, or Tornys, who, to suit both
-spellings, have a tower for a crest and a chevron between
-three Bulls for their coat of arms, is Sir Arthur Middleton of
-Belsay Castle, Northumberland, who parted with the property
-at Caenby in 1871.</p>
-
-<p>Three miles beyond Glentham we reach “Bishops’ Bridge”
-inn. Here a fourteenth century bridge crosses the stream at
-the junction of the River Rase with the Ancholme. Thence,
-after several turns, the road reaches <i>West Rasen</i>, where there
-is a most picturesque and interesting Pack Horse Bridge of
-the same date, with three ribbed arches, placed at right angles
-to the present road. The church has heavy embattled turrets
-and some curious carved figures in the chancel.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE ‘GOOD OLD DAYS’</div>
-
-<p>Going south from here, a roundabout road takes you to
-<i>Buslingthorpe</i>, passing by the two oddly-named villages of
-<i>Toft-next-Newton</i> and <i>Newton-by-Toft</i>, each apparently, like
-Tweedledum and Tweedledee, leaning for support on the other.
-Two miles to the west, on the Normanby road, is Gibbet-posthouse.
-The name Gibbet-post or Gibbet-hill is not uncommon,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271"></a>[271]</span>
-but I doubt if a single post remains. Eighty years ago some
-still held their ghastly record. My uncle, Edward Rawnsley,
-who was born in 1815, told me once that he had passed one
-with a skeleton hanging in chains, as he rode from Bourne to
-Wisbech. The Melton Ross gallows was renewed in 1830.</p>
-
-<p>Only two miles east of West Rasen we reach <i>Middle Rasen</i>,
-which has an interesting church. It once had two, one on each
-side of the stream; the existing one, which belonged to Tupholme
-Abbey, has a very fine Norman south door and Norman
-piers to the chancel arch, and a deeply moulded Early English
-arcade, on which is a singular beaded moulding. There is also
-a low-side window and a beautiful Perpendicular rood screen,
-also a fourteenth-century effigy of a priest with vestments
-and chalice. In the churchyard is the font of the other church.</p>
-
-<p>In the days of toll-bars there were two at Middle Rasen;
-usually they were let to the highest bidder, and the man who took
-the main road gate in the year 1845 is still living, at the age
-of eighty-nine, in 1912. A toll-bar keeper in the days before
-railways, when all the corn went to market by road, had little
-rest at night, as waggons full or empty passed through at all
-hours. In his early days food was dear—tea eight shillings
-a pound—and wages were low, and bread and water and barley-chaff
-dumpling were the common fare. He is now a rate-collector
-and, of course, can read and write, but he never went
-to school, and at eight years of age he began to earn a little
-by “scaring crows.” At fifteen he was mowing and using the
-flail at his native village of Legbourne. In a field, near where
-the station now is, he remembers a man mowing wheat for
-six days on bread and water, and the crop yielded six quarters
-to the acre. A woman of ninety-three, now living in the Wolds,
-remembers when flour was 4<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> a stone, and a loaf cost 11½<i>d.</i>
-instead of 2½<i>d.</i> They mixed rye with wheat flour and baked
-at home; and a labourer who earned enough to buy a stone
-of flour a day thought he could live well.</p>
-
-<p>Only the other day I heard of a labouring family living just
-between the Wold and the Marsh, seven sons of a retired
-Crimean soldier. The clergyman used to make them a present
-at the christening if he might choose the name, and he gave
-them grand historic names for them to live up to, <i>e.g.</i>, Washington
-and Wellington, and the plan certainly answered, for
-they all took to the land and by steadiness, hard work and good<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272"></a>[272]</span>
-sense raised themselves first to a foreman’s position and then
-to that of small occupiers, with the result that the family now
-farms three or four hundred acres between them. Yet they,
-as children, had had a hard struggle, and never knew either
-luxury or comfort. Their cottage had but two rooms, and
-half the family having gone to bed with the sun, habitually got
-up when night was but half over and came and sat round the
-fire whilst the other half went to bed. The conditions of life
-have improved since then, but the men of to-day can’t have more
-of the right stuff in them.</p>
-
-<p>Another instance of the same kind which goes to prove that
-no walk of life is without its chances, if only the man is
-strenuous and sober and gifted with good sense, is that of a
-family in the Louth neighbourhood, three grandsons of a
-labouring man, who in two generations have raised themselves
-to such purpose that they now farm between them some
-10,000 acres. Of course the great factors in such successful
-careers are steadiness and industry, and that shrewd good
-sense which is so characteristic of the best Lincolnshire natives.</p>
-
-<p>Not many years ago I talked with a small farmer in Hampshire,
-whose wages as a labourer used to be ten and sixpence
-a week, when a pair of boots cost eighteen shillings; but then,
-he said, they did wear well. The family lived, year in year out,
-on hot water with barley in it and a sprinkling of salt. And
-yet, incredible as it may seem, he and his wife had brought up
-a family of ten. There was some grit in those people.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MARKET RASEN</div>
-
-<p>From <i>Middle Rasen</i> it is little more than a mile to <i>Market
-Rasen</i>. Men still living there can recall the Shrove Tuesday
-football, when the whole male population of the village, aided
-by friends from outside, spent some strenuous hours in trying
-to get the ball into Middle Rasen. The windows were boarded
-up all along the road, and the struggle of hundreds of rough
-fellows was more concerned in pushing their opponents into
-the beck by the roadside than in keeping on the ball.</p>
-
-<p>The town has an unusual number of schools in it. The De
-Aston School, founded 1401 at Spital, was set up here in 1862
-as a middle-class school, and has been most successful; and
-the church school and still larger Wesleyan school between
-them can accommodate nearly 400 children.</p>
-
-<p>From Market Rasen three miles of low country brings us
-to <i>North Willingham</i>. The Hall, the home of Mr. Wright,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273"></a>[273]</span>
-was for over a hundred years the residence of the family of
-Boucherett, whose former mansion stood a couple of miles
-to the west. The present house with its pretty bit of water
-faces the road. In the village we may see a blacksmith who,
-at the age of ninety, can still shoe a horse. We are now twelve
-miles from Louth; a road to the left goes to Tealby and Bayons
-Manor, and to the right by <i>Sixhills</i> to Hainton; and here,
-instead of going right on up the sweep of the hill, we will make
-the round by Tealby and come back to the high road at Ludford
-Parva.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BAYONS MANOR</div>
-
-<p><i>Tealby</i> is quite an ideal village, with beautiful trees, a fine
-and well-placed church, a stream and bridges and picturesque
-cottages. One road leads from it up the steep “Bully hill,” a
-300 feet rise, another road takes us to <i>Bayons Manor</i>, the seat
-of the Tennyson d’Eyncourt family. Originally there was an
-old eleventh or twelfth century fortified dwelling about a
-hundred yards up the hill, traces of which may still be seen
-in bank or dyke. This was replaced about the sixteenth century
-by a fairly large house, at one time thatched; part of this
-remains as the nucleus of the present castellated mansion built
-in the romantic era of the Waverley novels and completed
-with drawbridge and barbican in the middle of the last century
-by Charles Tennyson, M.P., uncle of the poet, who, after the
-death of his father, George Tennyson, took the name of
-d’Eyncourt. His grandson, E. Tennyson d’Eyncourt, now
-lives there. The house has a fine open-roofed hall, and is
-replete with interesting mementoes of the Tennysons as well as
-of the ancient family of d’Eyncourt. The site is good, with
-a charming garden sloping to the park, in which is a fine piece
-of water. The name Bayons is derived from its first Norman
-possessor, Odo, Bishop of Bayeux. He was half-brother to
-William the Conqueror on the mother’s side, and he was so
-exalted a personage that he was called “Totius Angliae Vice-dominus,
-sub rege.” Thus he was on occasions the king’s
-representative, and seems to have had as much land in Lincolnshire
-and elsewhere granted to him by William, as Charles
-Brandon Duke of Suffolk had under Henry VIII., for we hear
-that he held seventy-six manors in the county and 463 in other
-parts.</p>
-
-<p>It is interesting to know that Bulwer Lytton in 1848, when
-he was trying to recover his seat for Lincoln, wrote his historical<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274"></a>[274]</span>
-romance “Harold” here, making good use of his friend Mr.
-Tennyson d’Eyncourt’s fine collection of early English chronicles.</p>
-
-<p>A little north of Tealby is the temporarily disused church
-of <i>Walesby</i>, where once Robert Burton (1577-1640), author
-of the “Anatomy of Melancholy,” was rector, before he went
-to Segrave in Leicestershire. It is hoped that this church
-may soon be in use again.</p>
-
-<p>One of the many roads across the Wolds from Rasen to
-Grimsby passes through <i>Walesby</i> to <i>Stainton-le-Vale</i> and
-<i>Thorganby</i>, another goes through <i>Tealby</i>, <i>Kirmond-le-Mire</i>,
-and <i>Binbrook</i>, once a market town, and near to <i>Swinhope</i>,
-the ancestral seat of the Alingtons. Both roads after this
-unite and pass by <i>East Ravendale</i>, <i>Brigsley</i>, <i>Waltham</i> and <i>Scartho</i>.</p>
-
-<p>A clear stream flows north through a narrow valley from
-Kirmond top through Swinhope, Thorganby, Croxby pond,
-Hatcliffe, and almost to Barnoldsby, and thence east to
-Brigsley, and so across the marsh to Tetney Haven.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SOUTH ELKINGTON</div>
-
-<p>Leaving Tealby, we climb to the top of the Ludford ridge, and,
-turning to the right, come to the Market Rasen and Louth
-highway at Willingham Corner, thence, to the left, by <i>Ludford
-Magna</i> with its cruciform church on the infant ‘Bain.’ To
-the right we notice Wykeham Hall, further on to the left the
-church of <i>Kelstern</i>, standing solitary in a field, and soon we
-reach the singularly beautiful and well-wooded approach to
-Louth by <i>South Elkington</i>, the seat of Mr. W. Smyth. The
-church here, whose patronage goes with the Elkington estate,
-was given about 1250 to the convent at Ormsby, which presented
-to it until the dissolution, when it fell to the Crown,
-and was given, in 1601, by Queen Elizabeth to the famous
-John Bolle of Thorpe Hall. This Hall we now pass on our
-approach to Louth, and a splendid picture awaits us when
-we see that lovely spire of Louth church, standing up out of
-a grove of trees, and eventually presenting itself to our eyes,
-in its full height and beautiful proportions, as we come into the
-town by the west gate.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LOUTH SPIRE</div>
-
-<p>The highway from Louth to Horncastle is best traversed
-the reverse way. Starting from Horncastle with its little river—the
-Bain—its cobble-paved streets and its pretty little thatched
-hostel, the King’s Head, the Louth road brings us soon to West
-Ashby. Then, at a distance of four miles from Horncastle,
-we come suddenly on the unpretending buildings of the Southwold<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275"></a>[275]</span>
-Hunt kennels. These are in the parish of <i>Belchford</i>,
-which lies half a mile to the right.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus60">
-<img src="images/illus60.jpg" width="500" height="625" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Westgate, Louth.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>We now climb 300 feet up Flint Hill, a name which tells us
-that we are on an outlier of the chalk wolds, and a fine view
-opens out on the left which we can enjoy for a mile, after which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276"></a>[276]</span>
-the road turns to the right and discloses a totally different
-scene. In front lies the snug village of <i>Scamblesby</i>, and behind
-it the south-eastern portion of the South Wolds, sweeping
-round from Oxcombe’s wooded slope in a wide curve to Redhill,
-behind which the Louth and Lincoln railway emerges near
-<i>Donington-on-Bain</i>. It is a fine landscape.</p>
-
-<p>We descend to the village, and passing in the wide valley
-the turn to Asterby and Goulceby on the left, set ourselves
-to climb the main ridge of the Wolds by <i>Cawkwell</i>. On the
-top of the hill we pass a cross road which runs for many miles
-right and left without coming to anything in the shape of a
-village; and naturally so, for the road like the Roman streets
-in the Lake District, keeps sturdily along the highest ground,
-and who would care to live on a wind-swept ridge?</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">TATHWELL</div>
-
-<p>To the right the Wold runs up to nearly 500 feet, but our road
-only crosses it, and after little more than a mile we see the
-level of the marsh and the tall spire of Louth five miles ahead
-of us. The road here forks, and forsaking the direct route
-by Raithby we will take the right-hand road and in a couple
-of miles find ourselves dropping to the village of <i>Tathwell</i>.
-This we circle round and arrive at the lane which leads to the
-church.</p>
-
-<p>This little church, dedicated to St. Vedast, who was Bishop
-of Arras and Cambray (<i>circa</i> 500), was once a Norman building,
-but the Norman pilasters supporting the round tower-arch
-of the eleventh century are all that is left of that period,
-unless the four courses nearest the ground of large stones of
-a hard, grey, sandstone grit can be referred to it. Upon
-these now is built a structure of brick with a broad tower at
-the west and an apse at the east; but the charm of the place
-is its situation, on a steep little hill overlooking a good sheet
-of clear chalk-stream water. You look westwards across this
-to a pathway running up the slope opposite which is fringed
-with a fine row of beeches, and just below you at the edge of
-the little graveyard you see the thatched roof of a primitive
-cottage, whilst beyond it the ground is broken into steep little
-grass fields, the whole most picturesquely grouped.</p>
-
-<p>We leave the secluded little village, and turning to the
-right, pass between the Danish camp on Orgarth Hill and the
-six long barrows on Bully Hill (the second hill of the name, the
-other being near Tealby). These are all probably of the same<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277"></a>[277]</span>
-date; the latter in a field adjoining the road. A mile more
-and we turn to the left at Haugham, where is another and
-larger tumulus, after passing which, on the left, we soon come
-to the main Louth and Spilsby road.</p>
-
-<p>The number six seems to have been a favourite one with the
-Vikings. Eleven miles to the west of Bully Hill is “Sixhills,”
-between Hainton and North Willingham, and another place
-of the same name near Stevenage in Hertfordshire shows a
-fine row of six tumuli close to the road side.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">JANE CHAPLIN</div>
-
-<p>On October 25 there was a funeral in the Tathwell churchyard,
-when, in presence of her surviving grand-children and
-great-grandchildren Jane Chaplin was laid to rest beside
-the husband who had died forty years before. She was not
-only of a remarkable age—it is seldom that a coffin plate bears
-such an inscription:—</p>
-
-<p class="center">“Jane Chaplin, born 24th June, 1811, died 21st October, 1913”—</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">but during all that long life she was always cheerful and
-kindly and full of interest, and up to the very last, within
-two hours of her death, she was bright and happy, lively with
-talk and merriment, and in full possession of all her faculties.
-On her 102nd birthday she received her relatives and delighted
-them with her reminiscences of the days before they were
-born, telling the writer how she remembered Alfred Tennyson
-asking her to dance at the local ball, and adding that she was
-still able to read and to paint, though she had of late years given
-up reading by candlelight for fear of trying her eyes, and saying
-how thankful she was that she felt so well and had no pains
-and was, in fact, much better than she used to be fifty years
-ago. She had left Lincolnshire and lived of late years at
-Bournemouth and then at Cheltenham, where she literally
-‘fell on sleep’ and passed from this life to the next, without
-any illness or struggle, in the happiest possible manner. Truly,
-we may say with Milton—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Nothing is here for tears, nothing to wail</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Or knock the breast.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278"></a>[278]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV<br />
-<span class="smaller">LINCOLNSHIRE BYWAYS</span></h2>
-
-<p>Willoughby and Captain John Smith—Grimoldby—South Cockerington—Sir
-Adrian Scrope’s Tomb—Alvingham—Two Churches in one Churchyard—Yarborough—The
-Covenhams—Hog-back View—Milescross
-Hill to Gunby—Skendleby—South Ormsby and Walmsgate—Belchford—Thorpe
-Hall—The Elkingtons.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Romans had a road from the sea probably by Burgh
-and Gunby and then on the ridge by Ulceby cross-roads to
-Louth, and so on the east edge of the Wold north to the Humber.</p>
-
-<p>It is not a particularly interesting route, but if at Gunby
-we turn to the right we shall pass <i>Willoughby</i> with its old sandstone
-church in a well-kept churchyard, a somewhat rare thing
-on this route. The church (St. Helen’s) has some Saxon
-stones in the south wall of the tower, and a double arch on
-the north side of the chancel, a Norman arch in front of a fourteenth
-century one. Here, in 1579, was born the redoubtable
-Captain John Smith, president of Virginia and the hero of the
-famous Pocahontas<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> story, a man whose life was more full of
-adventure than perhaps any in history. The interest which
-Pocahontas created when she came to England is evinced by
-the number of inn signs of “The belle Sauvage.” The church
-has a singular slab with the head and shoulders of a man,
-name unknown, in relief cut on it at one end—his feet showing
-at the other, something after the fashion of a “sandwich-man.”
-The huge belfry ladder is also noteworthy, being made of two
-trees, whole, with stout, rough timber spiked to them for steps.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">GRIMOLDBY</div>
-
-<p>From <i>Willoughby</i> to <i>Alford</i> and on by <i>Saleby</i>, <i>Withern</i>,
-<i>Gayton-le-Marsh</i>, <i>Great</i> and <i>Little Carlton</i>, and <i>Manby</i>, the
-road is not remarkable; but, after crossing the main road<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279"></a>[279]</span>
-from Horncastle to Saltfleet, which has come over the Wold
-<i>viâ</i> Scamblesby, Cawkwell and Tathwell, it arrives at <i>Grimoldby</i>.
-Here the church is noteworthy for the size and excellence of
-its gargoyles. Outside it has heavy battlemented parapets,
-a good gable-cross with pent-house over it, as on the Somersby
-cross, and the entire shaft of a churchyard cross. Inside,
-the nave is whitewashed, but the fine old roof remains, and
-on one of the beams is the pulley block for the rood light, as
-at Addlethorpe and Winthorpe. The door is old and has
-been enriched with carving and there is the lower part of a good
-rood screen with three returns, possibly for lights, projecting
-twelve inches westwards. This arrangement is also found in
-the rood screen at Thornton Curtis. In the north porch is
-a fine holy water stoup.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus61">
-<img src="images/illus61.jpg" width="500" height="325" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Manby.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>For the next six miles churches are to be found at every mile.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SIR ADRIAN SCROPE</div>
-
-<p><i>South Cockerington</i> has a little holy water stoup just inside
-the door. Part of a handsome rood screen is stowed away
-under the tower, the rest being in <i>Manby</i> Church. The church
-has had a profusion of consecration crosses—a dozen have
-been noticed, some of which still remain cut in the stone and
-filled with dark cement. Nearly all the churches about here
-are in two styles—Decorated and Perpendicular; and though<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280"></a>[280]</span>
-<i>Grimoldby</i> exhibits only one style, it is the transition between
-these two. The most noticeable thing in the church is the
-alabaster altar tomb to Sir Adrian Scrope, with effigies of his
-five sons over whom is the legend ‘similis in prole resurgo,’ and
-two daughters and an infant, over whom is written ‘Pares et
-impares.’ Does this mean “Like in face but different in
-character,” or “Like their father but not so good-looking”?
-The knight is represented armed and half reclining on one
-elbow, with his helmet behind him and his mailed glove by
-his knee, the head and face very life-like, the hands and fingers
-extremely delicate. On a brass plate he is described as the thrice
-honourable Adrian Scrope, Kt., etc., and this verse follows:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Tombs are but dumb day-books, they will not keepe</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">There names alive who in these wombes doe sleepe,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But who would pen the virtues of this knight</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A story not an epitaph must write.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was not easy to find the way to <i>South Cockerington</i> as the
-road to it literally forms a square, and then passes on from the
-churchyard gate right through a farm; but to reach <i>North
-Cockerington</i> you seem to go round at least five sides of a square
-or squares, then cross the Louth River, and then a bridge
-just above a water mill, and passing by two gates through
-a farmyard you arrive in a grass field, in which, devoid of any
-sort of fence on the north and west sides, the plain-looking
-church of <i>Alvingham</i> stands; a gate leads to the south door,
-near which a few yards of grass is mown, but the rest of the
-churchyard is a tangle of long grass and tall nettles; and amongst
-them, within a stone’s throw, stands a second and larger church
-of <i>North Cockerington</i>, in which no service is held. “There <i>is</i>
-some wildernesses!” was the apt remark of our driver as we
-reached the churchyard gate.</p>
-
-<p>Two churches in one churchyard are to be found at Evesham
-in Worcestershire, and at Reepham in Norfolk. These I have
-seen; others are at Willingate in Essex, and at Trimley in
-Suffolk. At Evesham there is even a third tower for the bells.
-This is of stone, but in a few other places, as at Brookland in
-Romney Marsh, the bell tower is a separate timber erection.
-The reason for two here was that Alvingham, dedicated to St.
-Adelwold, is the parish church, but there was once a Gilbertine
-priory for monks and nuns close by, to which the other church
-served as a chapel. This was also the parish church of North<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281"></a>[281]</span>
-Cockerington at a very early date, mention being made of
-it in a charter of about 1150.</p>
-
-<p>The Alvingham Cartulary or priory book, once in possession
-of F. G. Ingoldby, Esq., is now in Louth Museum, and among
-the charters is a curious entry of an agreement between the
-joint occupiers of a meadow that their men should meet on
-a certain day at Cockerington Church and there fix a day for
-beginning to mow.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">YARBOROUGH WEST DOOR</div>
-
-<p>The next village is one which gives his title to Lord <i>Yarborough</i>.
-The church, like so many in this neighbourhood, Grimoldby
-and South Cockerington being honourable exceptions, is locked,
-but the chief point of interest is to be seen outside. This is
-a beautiful example of a richly carved doorway. The mouldings
-of the square head are good and set with little ornaments, and
-very bold and original carvings run round the arch of the doorway.
-The space between the arch and the outer square head
-mould is filled with shallow carved work representing on the
-left, the fall, with Adam, Eve, the Serpent, and much good
-foliage carving; and on the right the Lamb and the emblems
-of the Passion. An old English inscription runs round the
-arch of the doorway, but is only in part decipherable; the stone
-is a white hardish sandstone, and the surface a good deal worn,
-but the whole design is most elegant and unusual.</p>
-
-<p>A mile more brings us to the two churches of <i>Covenham</i>,
-within a quarter of a mile of each other, and both locked.
-Covenham <i>St. Mary</i> seems to be built of a hard chalk. There
-are mason-marks high up on each pilaster of the porch. The
-other church, of <i>St. Bartholomew</i>, was once a cruciform building.
-It is made of the same white material, but the tower is now
-covered with Welsh slate, and one transept is gone. The fonts
-in both churches are good. That in St. Mary’s is, for beauty
-of design and boldness of execution, the best in the neighbourhood,
-but they do not compare for beauty and size with
-those in the Fen churches, which are lofty and set on wide
-octagonal basements of three or four steps. Here, the brass
-to Sir John Skipwyth, who died at, or in the year of, Agincourt,
-1415, is in exceptionally good condition. He is armed and has
-both the long dagger and sword, the latter suspended from his
-left arm by a strap. The tail of the lion on which he stands
-is erect between the leg of the knight and his sword.</p>
-
-<p>The rest of the route by <i>Fulston</i>, <i>Tetney</i> and <i>Humberston</i><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282"></a>[282]</span>
-to Grimsby is not of any interest until we come to <i>Clee</i>, which,
-with its interesting Saxon church tower, we have already
-described.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A ROMAN ‘HOG’S BACK’</div>
-
-<p>In the Wold country the main roads usually run along the
-ridges of the Wolds and afford views on either side. One of
-the best of these, “Hog’s Back” views is obtained from one
-of the byways which starts from the Spilsby and Alford road
-at the top of Milescross hill, and runs south till it reaches Gunby.
-It skirts the wooded belt of the Well Vale estate, and drops into
-the village of <i>Ulceby</i> which, like most of the tiny Wold villages,
-lies on the bank of a small stream in a wooded hollow, where
-the church and farm and a few cottages form a pleasing picture
-of rural retirement.</p>
-
-<p>Mounting again, the road turns to the left and goes straight
-ahead on what is evidently a portion of a Roman “street,”
-giving on the left a view of the “Marsh” towards Mablethorpe,
-with its grey shimmering line which denotes “the bounding
-main,” and on the right a still more distant prospect over the
-flat “fen” lands in the direction of Boston, whose columnar
-tower rises far up into the sky. The blue haze of the marsh,
-the purple distance over the fens, with, in the autumn, the
-long, drifting lines of grey smoke from the burning “quitch,”
-or “twitch” as they usually call it here, make a delightful
-impression; and then if we turn fenwards we drop into the
-leafy hollow of <i>Skendleby</i> village, where once the Conqueror’s
-friend, Gilbert de Gaunt, resided, and to which William of
-Waynfleet, the famous Bishop of Winchester, was presented as
-vicar by the convent of Bardney in 1430. It is a pretty village
-with its church and manor-house, and thatched, white-washed
-cottages bright with flowers, and its well-stocked farm. A tall
-windmill crowns the next height; this is Grebby Mill, and it
-is interesting to find that there has been a windmill there for
-600 years.</p>
-
-<p>For <i>Grebby</i> is old enough to be mentioned in Domesday Book,
-and in 1317 we have mention of a windmill there belonging to
-Robert de Willoughby and Margaret his wife.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE FLOODED FEN</div>
-
-<p>From the windmill one looks down to the old brick tower
-of <i>Scremby</i> church, which is the last building on the edge of the
-slope from which the endless levels of the fen begin and run
-south till they reach Crowland and Peterborough. From whence
-the great cathedral, with its splendid west front, looked out<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283"></a>[283]</span>
-in the disastrous August of 1912 over miles and miles of corn-land
-where the tall sheaves stood up out of a vast expanse of
-water, the result of the abnormal rains and the burst dyke
-which made Whittlesea Mere once more resume its ancient
-appearance.</p>
-
-<p>Below Scremby the road runs to the left to <i>Candlesby</i>, and
-so rejoins that starting-place of so many byways—<i>Gunby</i>.</p>
-
-<p>There was a church at Scremby in Norman times; at the
-dissolution the manor came to the all-acquiring Duke of
-Suffolk. Now-a-days the handbook dismisses it as “of no
-special interest,” but eighty-five years ago it was thought
-worth while to mention that “at the west end of the nave
-is a neat and commodious singing-gallery.”</p>
-
-<p>Those who wish to see the beauties of the country must
-leave the high ridge every here and there and make a round
-into the little villages which lie at the foot of the Wolds,
-mostly on the western slopes where they escape the strong sea
-winds.</p>
-
-<p>From the Spilsby-and-Louth road a byway branches westwards,
-close to <i>Walmsgate</i>, which will illustrate this, for it
-quickly drops into the pretty village of <i>South Ormsby</i>, and,
-skirting the park on two sides, runs on to the village of <i>Tetford</i>
-with its red roofs and grey-green church tower nestling under
-the hill. Thence the white line of road goes north over Tetford
-hill to <i>Buckland</i> and <i>Haugham</i>, and so rejoins the main road
-again about four miles north of Walmsgate.</p>
-
-<p>But before leaving Tetford we should take a look at the
-fine grassy eminence of “Nab hill” with its entrenched camp,
-behind which lie the kennels of the Southwold hounds at
-<i>Belchford</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The road from Alford to Louth, by <i>Belleau</i> and <i>Cawthorpe</i>,
-which runs along the eastern edge of the South Wold and gives
-such a fine view over the marsh, is interrupted at Louth, and
-you must go out for the first four miles on the Louth and
-Grimsby main road, but on reaching Utterby a turn to the left
-will bring you to a road which goes all the way to Brocklesby
-without passing through any village but <i>Keelby</i> in the whole
-sixteen miles. This solitary road begins better than it ends
-for when it gets opposite to <i>Barnoldby-le-Beck</i>, which is just
-half way, it sinks to the level of the marsh.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FOTHERBY TOP</div>
-
-<p>There are plenty of roads between Louth and Caistor, to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284"></a>[284]</span>
-north-west, along the Wolds, which are here some eight miles
-wide; and it would be well worth while for the sake of the view
-over the marsh to take a little round from Louth, starting out on
-the Lincoln road by Thorpe Hall, the interesting home of the
-Bolles family, the ffytches, and, later, of some of the Tennysons.
-By this route you soon come to the parting of the ways
-to Wragby and Market Rasen, and taking the right hand road
-by <i>South Elkington</i>, the charming residence of Mr. W. Smyth,
-you climb up to a height of 400 feet, and taking the road to the
-right by <i>North Elkington</i>—whose church has a fine pulpit
-copied from one still to be seen at Tupholme Abbey, near
-Bardney—reach <i>Fotherby top</i>, from which for a couple of
-miles you can command as fine a view of the marsh from
-Grimsby to Mablethorpe as you can desire. Then leaving
-the height you can go eastward by <i>North Ormsby</i>, and, joining
-the Grimsby-and-Louth road at <i>Utterby</i>, run back to Louth.
-All approaches to Louth are rendered beautiful by the splendid
-views you get of that marvellous spire; and as the road drops
-steeply into the town you will hardly know whether the approach
-from this northern side or from Kenwick on the south forms
-the most striking picture.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285"></a>[285]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE BOLLES FAMILY</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The byway which runs west from the Spilsby and Alford
-road, at the foot of Milescross hill near Alford station, after
-passing Rigsby, comes to a farm with an old manor-house
-and tiny church in a green hollow to the left. A deep sort
-of cutting on this side of the church has, along its steep grassy
-brow, a line of very old yew trees, not now leading to anything.
-This is all there is of the hamlet from which an ancient and
-notable family derived its title, the Bolles of Haugh.</p>
-
-<p><i>Haugh</i> church is a small barn-like building of chalk; the
-nave twenty-four feet, and the chancel twenty-one feet long,
-with an enormously thick, small, round-headed arch between
-them. The chancel is floored with old sepulchral slabs and
-stone coffin tops, several with Lombardic lettering, and all
-apparently of the Bolle or Bolles family who lived partly at
-Haugh in the old manor close to the church, and partly at
-Thorpe Hall, Louth.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SIR JOHN BOLLES</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">COLONEL BOLLES AT ALTON</div>
-
-<p>The family of Bolle seemed to have lived at Bolle Hall,
-Swineshead, from the thirteenth century till the close of the
-reign of Edward IV., 1483, when, by an intermarriage with the
-heiress of the Hough family, the elder branch became settled at
-Hough or Haugh, near Alford, and one of the younger branches
-settled at Gosberkirke (Gosberton) and spelt their name Bolles.
-The men of both branches were active both in civil and military
-positions. Sir George of Gosberton succeeded to the manor
-of Scampton, near Lincoln, from his father-in-law, Sir John
-Hart, Lord Mayor of London, 1590. He too became Lord
-Mayor in 1617, both men being members of the Grocers’ Company.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286"></a>[286]</span>
-He was knighted by James I., after withstanding his
-majesty in the matter of travelling through the city of London
-on a Sunday, on which occasion his conduct somewhat recalls
-that of Judge Gascoigne in Shakespeare’s “Henry IV.” He
-died in 1621, and his monument is in St. Swithin’s church,
-London. His son John was made a baronet by Charles I.,
-and <i>his</i> son George is commemorated on a monument opposite
-to that of his grandfather, in a pretty Latin inscription
-beginning—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Nil opus hos cineres florum decorare corollis;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Flos, hic compositus qui jacet, ipse fuit.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>We hear of a Sir George Bolle being killed at Winceby in 1643,
-fighting against Cromwell; certainly George’s brother, Sir
-Robert of Scampton, was one of the jury in 1660 for trying
-the regicides, and at the death of his son, Sir John, in 1714 the
-title became extinct. The distinctions of the elder branch,
-who settled at Haugh, were more military than civil. Their
-name also has passed away, their lineal descendants being
-named Bush, Ingilby, Bosville and Towne. The earliest
-monument to this branch is on a brass plate in Boston Church
-to Richard Bolle of Haugh, 1591, son of Richard Bolle of Haugh
-and Maria, daughter and heiress of John Fitzwilliams of
-Mablethorpe. He was thrice married, and his only son Charles
-died a year before him, 1590, and is commemorated at Haugh.
-His daughter Anne married Leonard Cracroft, the others
-married John and Leonard Kirkman of Keel. His son Charles,
-whose mother was a Skipworth of South Ormsby, had four
-wives, his first wife a daughter of Ed. Dymoke of Scrivelsby,
-and his fourth a daughter of Thomas Dymoke of Friskney.
-His only son, John, was the son of number two, Brigitt Fane;
-and his daughter Elizabeth of number three, Mary Powtrell.
-To this son John, there is also in Haugh Church a well-preserved
-monument, which shows him kneeling with his wife, attended
-by their three sons and five daughters, in the usual Jacobean
-style; date 1606, Aet. suæ 46. Sir John built Thorpe Hall,
-and was a famous Elizabethan captain. He was at the siege
-of Cadiz under Essex, 1596, and had custody of the young
-lady of high position who goes by the title of the Spanish Lady
-or the Green Lady, and whose story is told in Percy’s “Reliques”
-in the ballad of “The Spanish Lady’s love for an Englishman.”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287"></a>[287]</span>
-Sir John Bolle is the hero of the story. The lady fell in love
-with him, but on hearing that he had a wife at home, she
-retired to a nunnery and sent rich presents to his wife of
-tapestry, plate and jewels, and her picture in a green dress.
-The jewels are now in the hands of many of Lady Bolle’s
-descendants, the necklet of 298 pearls being, it is said, in the
-Bosvile family at Ravensfield Park, Yorkshire. The last
-warden of Winchester College was called Godfrey Bolles Lee,
-and was related to the Bosviles; and, curiously enough, in
-the Cathedral of Winchester is a brass plate giving an account
-of the death of Colonel John Bolles. It seems that Charles,
-the elder of the three sons whose effigies are on Sir John’s
-monument in the quaint little church of Haugh, was a Royalist,
-living at Thorpe Hall, Louth, where he raised a regiment of
-foot, which was commanded by his brother John, a soldier
-of unusual gallantry. Charles once saved his life when pursued,
-by hiding under the bridge at Louth. The regiment was
-engaged at Edgehill and other places, and finally cut to pieces
-in a most bloody engagement inside Alton Church in Hampshire.
-Clarendon tells us that Sir William Waller, finding
-that Lord Hopton’s troops lay quartered at too great distance
-from each other, had, by a night march, come suddenly upon
-the Royalist forces at Alton. The horse made good their
-escape to Winchester, and Colonel Bolles, who was in command
-of his own regiment of 500 men, being outnumbered, retired
-with some four score men into the church, hoping to defend
-it till succour arrived. But the enemy, as he had not had time to
-barricade the doors, entered with him, and some sixty of his
-men were killed before the rest asked for quarter; this was
-granted, but Colonel Bolles refused the offer, and was killed
-fighting. Alton is seventeen miles from Winchester, and the
-little brass plate on the eastern pillar of the north arcade of the
-nave in Winchester Cathedral, just where the steps go up to
-the choir, has a counterpart in Alton Church. The inscription
-on it was composed almost fifty years after the event by a
-relative who describes himself M.A., but he does no credit to
-the learning of the time, for it is full of errors, both of spelling
-and of facts; for instance, he calls the gallant Colonel, Richard
-instead of John, and gives the date of the fight as 1641 instead
-of December, 1643; but it is too quaint a thing not to be
-transcribed in full.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288"></a>[288]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE WINCHESTER BRASS</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="center">A Memoriall.</p>
-
-<p>For this renowned Martialist Richard Boles of ye Right
-Worshipful family of the Bolleses in Linkhornsheire; collonell
-of a ridgment of Foot of 1300 who for his gratious King Charles
-ye first did Wounders att the Battell of Edgehill: his last
-action, to omit all others, was at Alton in this County of Soughthampton,
-was sirprised by five or six thousand of the Rebells,
-which caused him there Quartered, to fly to the church, with
-near fourscore of his men, who there fought them six or seven
-houers, and then the Rebells breaking in upon him he slew
-with his sword six or seven of them, and then was slayne himselfe,
-with sixty of his men about him.</p>
-
-<p class="center">1641</p>
-
-<p>His Gratiouse Souveraigne, hearing of his death, gave him his
-high comendation in ye pationate expression. Bring me a
-Moorning Scarffe; i have Lost one of the best Comanders in
-this Kingdome.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Alton will tell you of that famous Fight</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Which ye man made and bade this world goodnight,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">His Verteous life feared not Mortalyty,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">His body might, his Vertues cannot die.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Because his blood was there so nobly spent</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">This is his Tombe, that church his Monument.</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Ricardus Boles Wiltoniensis in Art Mag:</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">Composuit Posuitque dolens</div>
- <div class="verse indent18">An Dom 1689.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>A somewhat similar bit of spelling is this from a private
-diary:—</p>
-
-<p>“The iiii day of Sept 1551 ded my lade Admerell wyffe in
-Linkolneshire and ther bered.”</p>
-
-<p>The third brother, Edward, died and was buried at Louth,
-1680 <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span>, at the age of seventy-seven. He left £600 to purchase
-land, the rents “to be divided among the poorest people of
-Louth at Christmas, Easter and Whitsuntide for ever, and to
-be disposed of ‘in other charitable and pious uses for the good
-of the said Toune.’” The income of the bequest is now worth
-£85 a year.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE GREEN LADY</div>
-
-<p>Sir Charles, the elder brother, had a son and a grandson called
-John, the last of the name. This John’s half-sister, Elizabeth,
-whose mother was a Vesci, married Thomas Bosvile, rector<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289"></a>[289]</span>
-of Ufford, and was buried at Louth in 1740; their daughter
-Bridget also marrying a Bosvile. The children of Bridget’s
-elder sister Elizabeth married into the families of the Ingilbys
-and the Massingberds, while another sister, Margaret, married
-James Birch, James Birch’s daughter married a Lee, and his
-grandson, Captain Thos. Birch, assumed the name of Bosvile
-and sold Thorpe Hall. He died in 1829. Sir Charles also had
-a daughter Elizabeth, who married Thomas Elye of Utterby,
-whose granddaughter Sarah married Richard Wright of Louth,
-whence are descended the Wrights of Wrangle. Canon Wright,
-her great great grandson, has a picture of this Sarah Elye in
-which she is represented as wearing a ring which was one of the
-Spanish jewels, some of which are in possession of the Canon’s
-family now. The picture of the Green Lady was unfortunately
-sold at the Thorpe Hall sale, and it is said that another small
-picture of her, painted in the corner of a portrait of Sir John
-Bolles by Zucchero, was lost when the picture was restored and
-considerably cut down, in the last century.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290"></a>[290]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE MARSH CHURCHES OF EAST LINDSEY</span></h2>
-
-<p>West Theddlethorpe—Saltfleetby—All Saints—Skidbrook—South Somercotes—Grainthorpe—Marsh
-Chapel.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3>THE PLAGUE-STONE</h3>
-
-<p>An inconspicuous little byway starts from near Alford
-station and runs parallel with the line about a mile northwards
-to <i>Tothby</i>, where it bends round and loses itself in a network
-of lanes near <i>South Thoresby</i>. At Tothby, under a weeping
-ash tree on the lawn in front of the old Manor House farm,
-is an interesting relic of bygone days. It is a stone about a
-yard square and half a yard thick, once shaped at the corners
-and with a socket in it. Evidently it is the base of an old churchyard,
-wayside, or market cross of pre-reformation times. And
-it has been put to use later as a plague-stone, having been for
-that purpose placed on its edge and half buried probably, and
-a hole seven inches by five, and two and a half inches deep,
-cut in the upper side. This was to hold vinegar into which
-the townspeople put the money they gave for the farm produce
-brought from the country in times of plague.</p>
-
-<p>The great desire was to avoid contact with possibly plague-stricken
-people. So the country folk brought their poultry,
-eggs, etc., laid them out at fixed prices near the stone and then
-retired. Then the town caterer came out and took what was
-wanted, placing the money in the vinegar, and on his retiring
-in turn, the vendors came and took their money, which was
-disinfected by its vinegar bath. The buyers, of course, had to
-pay honestly or the country folk would cut off the supplies,
-and <i>they</i> probably appointed one of their number as salesman.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291"></a>[291]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE PLAGUE-STONE</div>
-
-<p>On the whole the plan is said to have answered well enough,
-and the stone is an interesting relic of the time. There is one
-<i>in situ</i> at Winchester, not so big as this, and now built in as
-part of the basis to the Plague Monument outside the West
-Gate of the city. It is, I believe, plain to distinguish, being
-of a darker colour than the rest of the monument; but you
-cannot now see the hole in it any more. That stone was used
-in 1666, the year after the great plague in London. The Croft
-register speaks of 1630 as the plague year, but a plague seems
-to have visited Partney in 1616; at Louth 754 people died in
-eight months in 1631. At Alford the plague year was 1630.
-On the 2nd of July in that year the vicar, opposite the entry
-of Maria Brown’s burial has written “Incipit pestis” (the
-plague begins), and between this date and the end of February,
-1631, 132 out of a population of about 1,000, died, the average
-number of burials for Alford being 19 per annum, so that the
-rate was 100 above normal for the nineteen months; indeed,
-for the rest of 1631 only eight burials are registered in ten
-months. July and August were the worst months, six deaths
-occurring in one family in eleven days. It has been said that
-the stone was placed on the top of Miles-Cross hill, whence the
-folk from Spilsby and the villages of the Wolds, when they
-brought their produce, could look down on the plague-stricken
-town from a safe distance. But that would be a long pull
-for the poor Alford people, and it is more likely that it was
-placed near where the railway now crosses the high road;
-certainly the Winchester stone was barely 100 yards from the
-Gate.</p>
-
-<p>We can now go back to Alford and start again on the Louth
-road. To get to the fine Marsh churches of the east Lindsey
-district, four miles out we turn off to the right near Withern,
-and pass two little churches on the border of the district called
-<i>Strubby</i> and <i>Maltby-le-Marsh</i>. Each of these has, like <i>Huttoft</i>,
-a remarkable font, but that at <i>Maltby</i> is extraordinarily good—angels
-at each corner are holding open books, and their wings
-join and cover the bowl of the font, below an apostle guards
-each corner of a square base. There is in this church, too, a
-cross-legged effigy of a knight. In <i>Strubby</i> are some good
-poppy-head bench ends and a fourteenth century effigy without
-a head, and on the south wall near the door a curious inscription
-in old English letters hard to decipher. There is also a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292"></a>[292]</span>
-small re-painted Jacobean monument with effigies of Alderman
-W. Bailett, aged ninety-nine, his two wives and nine children.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus62">
-<img src="images/illus62.jpg" width="500" height="450" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Mablethorpe Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MABLETHORPE</div>
-
-<p>The whole of the region between the Alford-and-Louth
-road and the coast is a network of roads with dykes on either
-side, which never go straight to any place, but turn repeatedly
-at right angles, so that you often have to go right away from
-the point you are aiming at. That point is always a church
-steeple standing up with its cluster of trees from the wide
-extent of surrounding pasture-land. The only direct road in
-the district is that which runs north-east to <i>Mablethorpe</i>, close
-on the sea. This is quite a frequented watering-place. Here,
-as at Trusthorpe and Sutton, the sea has swallowed up the
-original church, but the present one, half a mile inland, has
-some sixteenth century tombs and brasses; one notable one
-of Elizabeth Fitzwilliam, 1522, which represents her with long,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293"></a>[293]</span>
-flowing hair as in that of Lady Willoughby in Tattershall
-Church, and Sir Robert Dymoke at Scrivelsby. There is here
-a seaside open-air school for invalid children.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THEDDLETHORPE</div>
-
-<p>Three miles north is <i>West Theddlethorpe</i> (All Saints), one of
-the largest and finest of all the Marsh churches. Here, as
-elsewhere, the green-sand, patched with brick, on which the
-sea air favours the growth of grey lichen, gives a delightful
-colour to the tower. The battlemented parapets are of
-Ancaster stone, and were once surmounted at short intervals
-by carved pinnacles, and the nave gable, as at Louth, is beautifully
-pierced and worked, with carved bosses and rosettes set
-in the lower moulding. There are five two-light clerestory
-windows on either side, and inside are many good bench ends,
-both old and new, and a Perpendicular chancel screen with doors,
-and two chantries, each still keeping its altar slab in position,
-and having good oak screens ornamented with rich and unusual
-Renaissance carved open-work panels. In one of these chantries
-is a shallow recess with a beautiful carved stone canopy which
-once held a memorial tablet. A list of the vicars from 1241
-to 1403 gives first the name of William Le Moyne (the monk),
-and in 1349 we have Nicholas de Spaigne on the nomination of
-Edward III. An important little brass of Robert Hayton, 1424,
-shows, as Mr. Jeans tells us, the latest instance of “Mail Camail.”
-In the churchyard is a most singular tombstone to Rebecca
-French, 1862, the stump of a willow carved in stone about
-four feet high with broken branches and—symbol of decay—a
-large toadstool growing from the trunk.</p>
-
-<p>Three miles further north, and still close by the sea bank, we
-come to the church of <i>Saltfleetby-All-Saints</i>. A most provoking
-habit prevails, possibly with reason, but none the less
-trying to those who come to see the churches, of keeping the
-keys of the locked-up church at some distance off, even when
-there is a cottage close at hand. The church is in a sadly
-ruinous condition, and the picturesque porch literally falling
-to bits. On it is a shield bearing a crucifixion. The tower,
-which leans badly to the north-west, has two Early English
-lancet lights to the west and double two-light windows above.
-The gargoyles are very fine, and cut, as usual, in Ancaster stone.
-In the north aisle are two beautiful three-light windows with
-square heads and embattled transoms. There are some Norman
-pillars and capitals, also a good rood screen and a handsome<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294"></a>[294]</span>
-Decorated font set on a reversed later font. This church,
-like so many in the Marsh, is only half seated, though even
-so it is too big for the population, as probably it always has been.</p>
-
-<p>Within a mile to the north-east we pass <i>Saltfleetby-St.-Clements</i>,
-a church which has been moved from a site two
-fields off, and very carefully rebuilt in 1885, and shows an
-arcade of five small arches beautifully moulded resting on massive
-circular columns. It has also a good font on a central shaft
-with clustered columns round it, and in the vestry, part of a
-very early cross shaft. Hence we soon reach the sea at <i>Saltfleet</i>
-on a tidal channel, as the name indicates. Here is a
-remarkable old manor-house.</p>
-
-<p>The parish church of Saltfleet is at <i>Skidbroke</i>, which stands
-in the fields a mile inland. In the churchyard is a tall granite
-cross in memory of Canon Overton of Peterborough. The
-church is of Ancaster stone which has a much longer life than
-the green-sand, but the parapets of the nave are of brick now,
-with stone coping. The belfry of all these churches is approached
-by rough and massive ladders. In the west of the tower is
-a good doorway. The chancel is a poor one.</p>
-
-<p>Two miles through the rich meadows brings us to <i>South
-Somercotes</i>, remarkable as having a spire, but of later date than
-the tower. Here the chancel is absolutely bare, with painted
-dado and red tiled floor and no fittings of any kind. It looks
-something like a G.N.R. waiting-room, without the table.
-There is a very elegant rood screen, and an exceptionally tall
-belfry ladder or “stee,” also, as in the two churches just visited,
-ancient tablets in memory of the family of Freshney. The
-family still flourishes; and at the Alford foal show, September
-1912, a Freshney of South Somercotes carried off several
-prizes. Unlike Skidbrooke, the church has houses and even
-shops close to it. We saw here a fell-monger’s trolley drive
-up with a strange assorted cargo from the station of Saltfleetby-St.-Peters.
-There were several packages and, sitting amongst
-them, several people all huddled together. It stopped at the
-village corner to deliver a long parcel draped in sacking—it
-was a coffin.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE GRAINTHORPE BRASS</div>
-
-<p>A few miles north is <i>Grainthorpe</i>, the old roof lately renovated.
-The whole church well cared for, and in the chancel
-a mutilated but once very beautiful brass, with a foliated
-cross, probably in memory of Stephen-le-See, who was the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295"></a>[295]</span>
-vicar about 1400. The stem is gone, the head shows some
-very delicate work, and the base stands on a rock in the sea
-with five various fishes depicted swimming. It was once
-seven feet high; and, if perfect, would be the most beautiful
-brass cross extant.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE HARPHAM TABLET</div>
-
-<p>Three miles north we reach the fine church of <i>Marsh Chapel</i>.
-This was once a hamlet of <i>Fulstow</i>, four miles to the west
-on the road to Ludborough. It is Perpendicular from the
-foundation. Here, as at Grainthorpe, is a rood screen partly
-coloured, the lower part being new. The church is seated
-throughout in oak, and evidently used by a large congregation.
-The capitals of both arcades are battlemented. On the chancel
-wall is an exquisite little alabaster tablet put up in 1628,
-representing Sir Walter Harpham, his wife and little daughter—quite
-a gem of monumental sculpture. The parents died
-in 1607 and 1617. The lofty tower has a turret staircase
-with a spirelet—a rare feature in Lincolnshire, though common
-in Somersetshire—and the church is all built of Ancaster
-stone.</p>
-
-<p>Going north we reach <i>North Cotes</i> and Tetney lock, where
-we can see part of the Roman sea bank, though Tetney haven
-now is almost two miles distant. The Louth river, which is
-cut straight and turned into the Louth Navigation Canal,
-runs out here.</p>
-
-<p>The by-road we have been following from the south ends
-here; but a branch running due west passes to <i>Tetney</i> village
-and thence joins the Louth and Grimsby highway at Holton-le-Clay.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296"></a>[296]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII<br />
-<span class="smaller">LINCOLNSHIRE FOLKSONG</span></h2>
-
-<p>Dan Gunby and The Ballad of the Swan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>There is no great quantity of native verse in this county,
-and children’s songs of any antiquity are by no means so
-common with us as they are in Northumbria, but there is <i>The
-Lincolnshire Poacher</i> with its refrain, “For ’tis my delight
-of a shiny night in the season of the year,” the marching tune
-of the Lincolnshire Regiment; and there is an old quatrain
-here and there connected with some town, such as that of
-Boston, and that is all.</p>
-
-<p>It was my luck, however, to know, fifty years ago, a man who
-wrote genuine ballad verses, some of which I took down from
-his lips. They have never been printed before, but seem to
-me to be full of interest, for the man who wrote them was a
-typical east-coast native, a manifest Dane, as so many of these
-men are—unusually tall, upright, with long nose and grey
-eyes, and a most independent, almost proud, bearing. He
-was a solitary man, and made his living, as his earliest forefathers
-might have done, by taking fish and wild fowl as best
-he could; and, for recreation, drinking and singing and playing
-his beloved fiddle. It seemed as if the runes of his Scandinavian
-ancestors were in his blood, so ardently did he enjoy
-music and so strongly, in spite of every difficulty, for he had
-had little education, did he feel the impulse to put the deeds
-he admired into verse.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">R. L. NETTLESHIP</div>
-
-<p>It is something to be thankful for that, in spite of railways
-and Board Schools, original characters are still to be found
-in Lincolnshire. They were more abundant two generations
-ago, but they are still to be met with, and one of the most<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297"></a>[297]</span>
-remarkable that I have personally known was this typical
-east-coaster, whose name was Dan Gunby. It was in September,
-1874, when I was a house master at Uppingham, under the
-ever-famous Edward Thring, that my dear friend, R. L.
-Nettleship, then a fellow of Balliol, came to our house at Halton,
-and after a day or two there, we passed by Burgh over the
-marsh to Skegness, eleven miles off.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus63">
-<img src="images/illus63.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Southend, Boston.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>We were making for the old thatched house by the Roman
-bank, for this belonged to our family, and here, with one old
-woman to “do” for us, and with the few supplies we had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298"></a>[298]</span>
-brought with us and the leg of a Lincolnshire sheep in the
-larder, we felt we could hold out for a week whilst we read,
-unmolested by even a passing tradesman. Sundays we spent
-at Halton, walking up on Saturday and down again on Monday,
-after which we took off our boots for the rest of the week.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">DAN GUNBY</div>
-
-<p>One night about ten o’clock, as we were sitting over our
-books, a step was heard on the plank bridge, and a loud knock
-resounded through the house. I went to the door and opened
-it. It was pitch dark, and from the darkness above my head,
-for Dan was a tall man, came a voice: “Ah’ve browt ye sum
-dooks. Ye knaw me, Dan Gunby.” We gratefully welcomed
-them as a relief from the sheep, and after a talk we agreed
-to go over and see Dan in his home at Gibraltar Point, where
-the Somersby Brook, “a rivulet then a river,” runs out into
-Wainfleet haven. Accordingly, on the 12th of September,
-1874, we set off, going along on the flat dyke top for four miles
-till we came to what seemed the end of the habitable world.
-Here the level, muddy flat stretched out far into the distant
-shallow sea, groups of wading shore-birds were visible here and
-there, and an occasional curlew flew, with his melancholy cry,
-overhead, or a lonely sea-gull passed us—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“With one waft of the wing.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>We came to a small river channel with steep, slimy banks;
-just beyond it was an old boat half roofed over, and, sitting
-on it, was our friend Dan mending a net. We shouted to ask
-how we were to get to him, and he said, “Cum along o’er,
-bottoms sound.” We pulled off our boots and got down without
-much difficulty, but to get up, “Hic labor, hoc opus est.” But
-Dan shouted encouragement: “Now then, stick your toäs in,
-and goo it.” We did ‘goo it,’ and soon landed by the old
-boat, and sitting on it, we asked him if he always slept there,
-and what he did for a living. He answered “Yees, this is my
-plaäce, an’ it’s snug, an all. Ye see I hev a bit of a stoäve here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is that your duck-shout (the name for a sort of canoe
-for duck shooting) and gun?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yees, ye sees I’m a bit of a gunner, an’ a bit of a fisherman,
-an’ a bit of a fiddler.”</p>
-
-<p>“And a bit of a poet, too, aren’t you, Dan?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I puts things down sometimes in the winter evenings
-like.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299"></a>[299]</span></p>
-
-<p>“About your shooting, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yees, moästlins.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you have got tunes to them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yees. It’s easy to maäke the tunes up o’ the fiddle, but
-the words is a straänge hard job oftens.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well now, will you let us hear one of them?”</p>
-
-<p>“To be sewer I will,” and he took his fiddle and sat on the
-gunwale, while we listened to the following:—</p>
-
-<p>It was in the iambic metre—which befits a ballad—with
-occasional anapæsts.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE SWAN</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">YOUNG JIM HALL</div>
-
-<p>“It’s called The Swan this ’ere un,” he said, and, with a
-preliminary flourish on the fiddle, he went off.</p>
-
-<p>I should say that we got the words in his own writing afterwards
-spelt as I give them.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center">THE SWAN.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Now it Gentel men hall cum lisen to me,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And ile tell you of a spre,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When Sam and Tom Gose in there boats,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tha never dise a Gre.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center"><span class="smcap">Chorus.</span></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">For the Halls they are upon the spre,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tha’ll do the best tha can,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Am when tha goä to seä my boys</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tha meäns to shoot a Swan.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Then a storking down clay-’ole,<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And laying as snug as tha can,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For it’ Slap Bang went both the guns</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And down come the Swan.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Now Sam and Tom ’as got this Swan,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tha do not now repent;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tha will pull up to Fosedyke Brige,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And sell him to Hary Kemp.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Now Sam and Tom they got a shere</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tha dow not see no Feer,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tha will call too the Public-house,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">An git a Galling of Beer.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Sam says to Tom here’s luck my lad,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We will drink hall we can;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And then wele pull down Spalding sett</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To loke for another Swan.</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300"></a>[300]</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">There’s young Jim Hall he has a fine gun</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tha say it weighs a ton,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And he will pull down Spalding Set</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To have a bit of fun.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center"><span class="smcap">Chorus.</span></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">For the Halls they are upon the spre,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tha’ll do the best tha can,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And when tha goä to seä my boys</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tha means to shoot a swan.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">And when tha hev got side by side</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tha moastly scheme and plan,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tha meän to shoot either duck or goose</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Or else another swan.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Jim, Bill an Tom was storking</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">At thousands of geese in a line,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tha fired three guns before daylight</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">An killed ninety-nine.</div>
- <div class="verse indent10">(My eye! they did an’ all.)</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The old man larned the boys to shoot</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Without any fere or doubt,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And young Jim Hall he was the man</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Who made the Gun and Shout.<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">There’s young Ted Hall he’s fond of life,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">His diet is beäf and creäm</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">He cares nothing about shooting</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">He’d rayther goä by steäm.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Captain Rice, he’s deäd an gone,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We hope he is at rest,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">All his delight was guns and boäts,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And he always did his best.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">He was a hearty old cock</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">As ever sailed on the sea.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">He has paid for many a galling of ale</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When he was in company.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center"><span class="smcap">Chorus.</span></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">For the Halls tha are upon the spre,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tha’ll do the best tha can,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">An when tha goä to seä my boys</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tha meäns to shoot a swan.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301"></a>[301]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">CAPTAIN RICE</div>
-
-<p>Dan paused for some time after he had finished the ballad,
-and then said with much feeling in look and voice, “Captain
-Rice, poor chap, he died after I’d gotten yon lines finished,
-and I had to alter them, ye knaw. It took me three weeks to
-get ’em altered.”</p>
-
-<p>The captain was well remembered; he had “paid for many
-a galling of ale.” But the family that Dan most admired
-were the Halls, the old man and his three eldest sons—Jim,
-Bill and Tom. Young Ted he despised; he cared nothing
-about shooting, he would rather sit in a train!</p>
-
-<p>He tells in two other short ballads of how they hunted the
-seal on the bar or on the long sand, and there is a poetic touch
-in the way he makes the seals talk, and in the description of
-their eyes and teeth.</p>
-
-<p>But “The Swan” is Dan’s great achievement, and is a real
-good folk song, and has lines with the true ballad ring. “Down
-come the swan” is a fine expressive line, and “He was a hearty
-old cock, As ever sailed on the sea” has a ring in it like <i>Sir
-Patrick Spens</i>.</p>
-
-<p>When Dan came to the astonishing kill of ninety-nine he
-never failed to make the ejaculation I have given above; the
-geese were Brent geese and were feeding in a creek or wet
-furrow. There was a big gun used in the “Gruft holes” or
-deep channels in the sands going seaward, where the gunner
-sat waiting for the “flighting” of the ducks. This was called
-a “raille,” and was fired from the shoulder. The gun which
-weighed a ton is a poetic exaggeration; but the old duck-shout
-guns were more than one man would care to lift, and
-about six to eight feet long. The man lay on a board to sight
-and fire this miniature cannon or demi-culverin, which was loaded
-to the muzzle, and the rusty piece of ordnance shot back
-with the recoil underneath him; had it been made fast to the
-canoe or duck-shout it would have torn the little boat to bits.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE SEALS</div>
-
-<p>The ballads of the seals are as follows:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center">SEALS ON THE BAR.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center">1.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">There is two seäls upon the bar,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Tha lay like lumps of lead.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When tha see Sam and Tom coming</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Tha begins to shaäke their head.</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302"></a>[302]</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center"><span class="smcap">Chorus.</span></div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For the Halls tha are upon the look out</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Tha love to see a seäl,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">An when tha git well in my boys</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">He’s bound to taäste a meäl.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center">2.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The owd seäl said unto his wife,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Yon’s sumthing coming sudden,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We must soon muster out o’ this</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Or we shall get plum-pudden.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center"><span class="smcap">Chorus.</span></div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For the Halls they are upon the look out</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Tha love to see a seäl,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">An when they git well in my boys</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">He’s bound to taäste a meäl.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center">SEÄLS ON THE LONG SAND.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center">1.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Bill and Jim was shoving down the North</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And keepin close to the land,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Jim says to Bill, we’ll pull across,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Right ower to the Long Sand.<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center"><span class="smcap">Chorus</span>, <i>after each verse</i>.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For the Halls tha are upon the look out,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Tha love to see a seäl,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">An when tha git well in my boys,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">He’s bound to taäste a meäl.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center">2.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And when tha hed got ower</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Tha hed a cheerful feel.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Bill says to Jim “What greät heäd’s yon?”</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">It must be a monstrous seäl.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center">3.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For his eyes like fire they did shine</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">An his teeth was long an white,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Then slap bang went boäth the guns,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">An he wished ’em boäth good-night.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center">4.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Well done, my lad! We’ve hit ’im hard,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">He’ll niver git ashore,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For I knaw his head will ake to-day</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And ’twill be very sore.</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_303"></a>[303]</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center"><span class="smcap">Chorus.</span></div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For the Halls tha are upon the look out,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Tha love to see a seäl,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">An when tha git well in my boys</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">He’s bound to taäste a meäl.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Seals are more common on this coast than one would think.
-Only this autumn, 1913, great complaints have been made
-by the fishermen of the destruction of soles, etc., in the ‘Wash’
-by the increased number of these unwelcome visitors.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">NORTH COUNTRY HUMOUR</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">NATURE’S POETS</div>
-
-<p>Dan Gunby, in spite of his fiddling and attendance at all the
-dances in the neighbourhood, was not of a jovial nature. His
-life was hard and his outlook on it was always serious, and
-any humour which he had was of the dry order, which is so
-frequent in the northern counties. Terse remarks with a
-touch of humour, sly or grim, he doubtless showed at times,
-but a real hearty laugh he would seldom allow himself. We
-find this same almost unconscious habit of saying a biting
-thing in a sly way frequent in the counties north of Lincolnshire,
-as for instance, when in Westmorland a man meeting
-a friend says, “I hear Jock has gotten marriet” and the
-rejoinder, which expresses so much in so few words, both
-about the man in question and the subject of matrimony
-generally, is “Ah’m gled o’ that, ah niver liked Jock.”
-Another time, a man meets a ‘pal’ and for a bit of news says,
-“We’m gotten a chain for oor Mayor,” and the answer, “Han
-yo? We let yon beggar of ourn go loose” is far more funny
-than was ever intended. But Gunby and his likes, of whom
-there are more in the regions of the hills and fells than elsewhere,
-have not only the seriousness of those who live solitary
-and have leisure to do a deal o’ thinking, but dwelling apart
-in places where they can commune with Nature and the stars
-they get the poetic touch from their surroundings. The
-mountain shepherd goes up on to the heights and spends long
-hours with his dog and sheep. He marks the great clouds
-move by, and listens to the voice of the streams. He knows
-“the silence that is in the starry sky;” the great constellations
-are his companions; he sees the rising moon, and the splendours
-of the dawn and sunset. Those sights which fill us with such
-delight and wonder when beheld now and then in a lifetime,
-are before his eyes repeatedly. Now he watches the storm
-near at hand in all its fury, the thunder echoing round him<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304"></a>[304]</span>
-from crag to crag; soon the clouds roll off and disclose the
-brilliant arch of the rainbow across the glistening valley, each
-perfect in its different way. At one time he must be out on
-the slopes sparkling with snow, at another his heart gladdens
-at the approach of spring, and he feels himself one with it all.
-And so the changing seasons of the year cannot fail to touch
-him more than most men, and what the heart feels the lips will
-strive to utter. In the same way Dan Gunby used to watch
-the wide sunsets across the marsh, and see the floods of golden
-light on the shore, and the ebbing and flowing of the far-spread
-tide about his anchored cabin. He saw, at one time, the ripples
-crested with gold by the sun’s last rays, at another the red orb
-rising from the sea on a clear morning; or, in the mist which
-closed him in, he listened to the cries of the sea-birds sweeping
-by invisible. At times, when the wind was up and the tide
-high, he heard the roar of the waves dashed on the sand; or,
-upon a calm night, he looked out on a gently moving water led
-by the changing moon. There were always some voices of the
-night, and usually some visions both at eve and morn; and
-with his observant eye and ear, and his leisure to reflect, while
-Nature was his one companion, how could he fail to be in some
-sort a poet?</p>
-
-<p>I lately heard of a shepherd or crofter who was quite a case
-in point; but as he was not a Lincolnshire native but lived
-in the Scotch Lowlands, I put the account of him and his poetry,
-which, by the help of a Scotch lady, I have succeeded in collecting,
-small in quantity but some of it very good, I think, in
-quality, into an appendix at the end of the volume.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_305"></a>[305]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE MARSH CHURCHES IN SOUTH LINDSEY</span></h2>
-
-<p>Alford—Markby—Hogsthorpe—Addlethorpe—Ingoldmells—Winthorpe—Skegness—The
-Bond Epitaph—Croft—The Parish Books—Burgh-le-Marsh—Palmer
-Epitaph—Bratoft—The Armada—Gunby—The
-Massingberd Brasses.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Starting from <i>Alford</i>, a little town with several low thatched
-houses in the main street, and a delightful old thatched ivy-clad
-manor, we will first look into the church which stands
-on a mound in the centre of the town, to see the very fine rood
-screen. Before reaching the south porch with its sacristy or
-priests’ room above, and its good old door, we pass an excellent
-square-headed window. Inside, the bold foliage carving on
-the capitals at once arrests the eye. The pillars, as in most of
-these churches, are lofty, slender and octagonal. The steps
-to the rood loft remain, and a squint to the altar in the north
-aisle chapel. On the other side is a carved Jacobean pulpit
-of great beauty, east of which is a low-side window, and east
-of that again a tomb with recumbent alabaster figures of Sir
-Robert Christopher and his wife, date 1668, in perfect condition.</p>
-
-<p>From Alford a road goes north to Louth, branching to the
-right three miles out, to run to Mablethorpe, the favourite
-seaside resort of the Tennysons when living at Somersby.
-But we will follow the road to <i>Bilsby</i>, where Professor Barnard
-keeps his unapproachable collection of Early English water-colours.
-From here we can reach <i>Markby</i>, a curious thatched
-chapel standing inside a moat, and now disused. Then we
-can look in at <i>Huttoft</i> to see the extremely fine font which
-resembles that at Covenham St. Mary, and Low Toynton,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_306"></a>[306]</span>
-near Horncastle; after which, passing by <i>Mumby</i>, we will make
-for the first of the typical Marsh churches at <i>Hogsthorpe</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Markby vicarage goes with <i>Hannah-cum-Hagnaby</i> rectory.
-Once there was an Austin or Black Friars priory at Markby,
-and at Hagnaby—a hamlet in Hannah or Hannay—an abbey
-of Premonstratensian or White Canons, which was founded
-in 1175 by Herbert de Orreby and dedicated to St. Thomas
-the Martyr.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus64">
-<img src="images/illus64.jpg" width="500" height="350" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Markby Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The registers at <i>Markby</i> are among the earliest in the
-kingdom, beginning in 1558, those in Hannay dating from 1559.
-The first year of their institution was 1838.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE HUTTOFT FONT</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Huttoft</i> font is of the fourteenth century, and is four
-feet eight inches high, so it needs a step like those at Wrangle,
-Benington, and Frieston, and that at Skendleby. On the bowl
-are represented the Holy Trinity, the Virgin and Child, the
-Virgin holding a bunch of lilies, and the Child an apple. On
-six of the panels are the Apostles in pairs, as at Covenham
-St. Mary. The under part has angel figures all round supporting
-the bowl. The shaft has eight panels with figures of popes,
-bishops, and holy women, and at the base are symbols of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_307"></a>[307]</span>
-four evangelists. The string-courses show three different roofs
-to the nave.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HOGSTHORPE</div>
-
-<p><i>Hogsthorpe</i>, like most of the churches in the neighbourhood,
-is built of the soft local green-sand, which is found near the
-edge of the marsh where the Wolds die away into the level. The
-tower shows patches of brickwork which give a warm and
-picturesque appearance. The south porch is here, as is the rule,
-built of a harder stone, and is handsome and interesting. A
-pair of oblong stones of no great size are built in on either side
-above the arch with an inscription in old English letters,
-beginning, oddly enough, both in this church and in one at
-Winthorpe a few miles off, with the right hand stone and finishing
-on the left. The words are, “Orate pro animabus Fratrum
-et Sororum Guilde Sᶜᵗᵃᵉ Mariæ hujus Ecclesiæ quorum expensis
-et sumptibus fabricata est haec porticus.” The church has
-had its roof renewed in pine wood. It also has the worst
-coloured window glass I have ever seen, an error of local piety.<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a>
-The registers begin in 1558.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ADDLETHORPE</div>
-
-<p>From here the road, with countless right-angled turns, runs
-between the reedy dykes to the Perpendicular church of
-<i>Addlethorpe</i> (St. Nicolas). Here the south porch is unusually
-good, with figures of angels on the buttresses and beautiful
-foliage work carved on the parapet. On the apex is a well-cut
-crucifix and, as at Somersby, on the back is a small figure
-of the Virgin and Child. A large holy-water stoup stands
-just within the door. There is a window in the porch, also a
-niche and a slab with the following inscription:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The Cryst that suffered</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Grette pangs and hard</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">hafe mercy on the sowle</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">of John Godard</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That thys porche made</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">and many oder thynges dede</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">There-for Jsu Cryst</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Qwyte hym hys mede.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Over the buttresses of the north aisle are gargoyles holding
-scrolls; one has on it “Of Gods saying comes no ill,” another—</p>
-
-<p class="center">God : for : ihs : m’̅c̅y : bryng : he̅ : to : blys :<br />
-Yᵗ : ha̅ : p̅d̅ : to : ys :</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_308"></a>[308]</span></p>
-
-<p>Cut with a knife on the western pilaster of the porch is—</p>
-
-<p class="center">“January 1686<br />
-Praise God.”</p>
-
-<p>The glory of this church is its wealth of old wood work, in
-which it is not surpassed by any in the county, though its neighbour,
-Winthorpe, runs it hard.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus65">
-<img src="images/illus65.jpg" width="500" height="375" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Addlethorpe and Ingoldmells.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The chancel here, as at the older Decorated church of
-Ingoldmells, which is within half a mile, has been pulled down,
-and the rood screen acts as a reredos. There are two extremely
-good parclose screens, and old benches with carved ends throughout
-the church. Another fine oak screen goes across the tower
-arch, inscribed, “Orate pro animabus Johannis Dudeck Senior
-et uxor̅ ejus.” The noble roof is the original one. The pulley-block
-for lowering the rood light is still visible on the easternmost
-tie-beam but one, as it is also at Winthorpe and Grimoldby.
-A new rafter at the west end has painted on it, “Struck by
-fireball June 27, 1850.”</p>
-
-<p>The Boston wool trade is alluded to in the epitaph<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_309"></a>[309]</span>
-“Hic jacet Ricardus Ward qdm. Mr̅ctor Stapali Calais
-MCCCCXXXIII.”</p>
-
-<p>A slab in the north aisle to Thomas Ely, 1783, has a singular
-inscription on it:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Plain in his form but rich he was in mind,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Religious, quiet, honest, meek and kind.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Evidently a real good fellow though he <i>was</i> plain.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">CHURCHWARDEN’S ACCOUNTS</div>
-
-<p>The following extracts from the churchwarden’s accounts
-between the years 1540 and 1580 are curious.</p>
-
-<table summary="Extracts from the churchwarden’s accounts">
- <tr>
- <td>Itm payde to the Scolemʳ (Schoolmaster) of Allforde for wryting of
- Thoms Jacson Wylle</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">iiijᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Itm payde unto Thoms Wryghte for dressynge the crosse</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">ijᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Itm payde for a horsse skyne for bellstryngs</td>
- <td class="tdr">ijˢ</td>
- <td class="tdr">iᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Itm payde to the players</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">iiijᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Itm reseuyd (received) for ye Sepuller lyghte gatheryd in ye cherche</td>
- <td class="tdr">iiˢ</td>
- <td class="tdr">iᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Itm reseuyd for ye wyttworde<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> of Rycharde Grene</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">xijᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Itm Receuyd of Anthony Orby for his wyffs yereday
- <a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">xijᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Itm payde un to Wyllm Craycrofte for the rente of ye Kyrke platte</td>
- <td class="tdr">ijˢ</td>
- <td class="tdr">vᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Itm payde for washing the corporaxys<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">iiijᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Itm payd for a ynglyghe sultʳ [an English psalter]</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">xxᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Receuyd of Thomas Thorye for o̅n̅ thrughestone</td>
- <td class="tdr">iijˢ</td>
- <td class="tdr">iiijᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Itm payde for the Sepulcre</td>
- <td class="tdr">xˢ</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Itm for a paire of Sensors</td>
- <td class="tdr">xˢ</td>
- <td class="tdr">iiijᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Receuyd of John Curtus for his Wyff lying in ye churche</td>
- <td class="tdr">viˢ</td>
- <td class="tdr">viijᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Receuyd<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a>
- of ye said John for o̅n̅ thrughstone</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">xxᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>It Recd for ye sowll of John Dodyke</td>
- <td class="tdr">xiiiˢ</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>It Recd for ye sowll of Syr Gregory Wylk</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">viᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Impmus [In primis] payd for certeffyenge of
- <span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_310"></a>[310]</span> ye Rodloffe</td>
- <td class="tdr">xijˢ</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Itm payd for dyssygerenge [<i>query</i> dressing] of ye Rod loffte</td>
- <td class="tdr">iijˢ</td>
- <td class="tdr">iiijᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>It given to ye men of mumbye chappelle for carryinge of ye lytle
- belle to Lincolne</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">xijᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>It Layde oute for a lytle booke of prayer for Wednesdays and frydayes</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">iijᵈ</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>The church has six bells.</p>
-
-<p>From the account of the charities left in Addlethorpe we
-find that in 1554 a gift of land was sold for £4 an acre, but in
-1653 an acre situated in Steeping let for 15<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">INGOLDMELLS</div>
-
-<p>The adjoining parish with its mellifluous name of <i>Ingoldmells</i>,
-(pronounced Ingomells), has had its suffix derived from the
-Norse <i>melr</i>, said to mean the curious long grass of the sandhills.
-It might perhaps be more correctly considered as the same
-suffix which we have on the Norse-settled Cumbrian coast at
-Eskmeals, or Meols, where it is said to mean a sandy hill or
-dune, a name which would well fit in with the locality here.
-Thus the whole name would mean the sand-dunes of Ingulf,
-a Norse invader of the ninth century. A farmer we met at
-Winthorpe, next parish to Ingoldmells, alluded to these sandhills
-when he said, “It is a sträange thing, wi’ all yon sand
-nobbut häfe a mile off, that we cant hav nowt but this mucky
-owd cläy hereabouts: not fit for owt.” But the Romans found
-the clay very useful for making their great embankment along
-the coast.</p>
-
-<p><i>Ingoldmells</i> church, though good, is not so fine as Addlethorpe;
-but it has a very interesting little brass, dated 1520, to “William
-Palmer wyth ye stylt,” a very rare instance of an infirmity
-being alluded to on a brass. The brass shows a crutched stick
-at his side. The porch has a quatrefoil opening on either side,
-and a niche; and a curious apse-like line of stones in the brick
-paving goes round all but the east side of the fine front. Round
-the base of the churchyard cross is a later inscription cut in
-1600, J. O. Clerk. “Christus solus mihi salus,” and figures
-run round three sides of the base, beginning on the north
-1, 2, 3; and on the east 4, 5, 6; none on the south, but on the
-west 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, at the corner 10; and again on the north,
-11, 12. Doubtless it was a form of sundial, the cross shaft
-throwing its shadow in the direction of the figures. Of the
-four bells one has fallen and lies on the belfry floor. One has<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_311"></a>[311]</span>
-on it, according to Oldfield, “Wainfleet and the Wapentake
-of Candleshoe, 1829,” “Catarina vocata sum rosa <i>pulsata</i>
-mundi” (I am called Catherine, the beaten rose of the world);
-and on another is the rhyme—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“John Barns churchwarden being then alive</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Caused us to be cast 1705:”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">At Partney a bell has the same Catarina legend, but with
-<i>dulcata</i> (= sweet) instead of <i>pulsata</i>. S and C are often interchanged,
-and I think the ‘p’ is really a ‘d’ upside down on
-the Ingoldmells bell, especially as the bell is of about the
-same date and was also cast by the same man—Penn of
-Peterborough. I must admit, however, that <i>pulsata</i> on a bell
-with a clapper has something to be said for it; still, <i>dulcata</i>
-(sweet) is the obviously proper epithet for rose.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus66">
-<img src="images/illus66.jpg" width="500" height="350" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Roman Bank at Winthorpe.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE SEA BANKS</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">RICH OAK CARVING</div>
-
-<p>From this church the road runs to the sea bank near Chapel,
-and gets quite close to it. You can walk up the sandy path
-amongst the tall sand-grass and the grey-leaved buckthorn,
-set with sharp thorns and a profusion of lovely orange berries,
-till from the top you look over to the long brown sands and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_312"></a>[312]</span>
-gleaming shore, where a retiring tide is tumbling the cream-coloured
-breakers of a brown sea. Returning to the road we go
-for some distance along the old Roman bank, which we leave
-before reaching Skegness in order to get to <i>Winthorpe</i> (<i>St. Mary</i>).
-This Decorated church was restored in 1881 by the untiring
-energy of “Annie Walls of Boothby,” but not so as to spoil
-its old woodwork, which is remarkably fine. In the body of
-the church all the seats have their old carved fifteenth century
-bench ends, and in the chancel are four elaborately carved
-stall-ends. In one of these, amidst a mass of foliage, St. Hubert
-is represented kneeling, as in Albert Dürer’s picture, before
-a stag who has a crucifix between his antlers, from which the
-Devil, who appears just behind him, in human shape but
-horned, is turning away. The poppyhead above this panel
-is exquisitely carved with oak leaves and acorns, and little
-birds, with manikins climbing after them. The old roof, with
-the rood-light pulley-block visible on one of the tie-beams,
-still remains, and the rood screen, too, though its doors have
-been foolishly transferred to another screen at the west end,
-and ought to be put back in their place; and at the end of
-each aisle, as at Addlethorpe, are good parclose screens. Within
-one of these, the roof of the north aisle has a painted pattern
-on the rafters and good carved bosses once painted and gilt.</p>
-
-<p>The seventeen steps to the rood loft are all there, also an
-aumbrey; and we are told that one of the chantries was founded
-and endowed by Walter De Friskney, 1316, and dedicated to
-St. James.</p>
-
-<p>In the south wall of the tower is a singular fireplace, originally
-used for baking the wafers.</p>
-
-<p>In the north chantry is an altar slab with three consecration
-crosses on it, and a sepulchral slab to “Ricardus Arglys
-(Argles?), Presbyter, De Bynington” (near Boston) who died
-on the 20th of November, 1497; and there are, in the nave,
-brasses to Richard Barowe with his wife Batarick and their
-three children, 1505, and to Robert Palmer, 1515, doubtless
-a relative of “W. Palmer with ye stylt” in Ingoldmells.</p>
-
-<p>The inscription on the former is “Richard Barowe sumtyme
-marchant of the stapyll of Calys, and Batarick his wyfe, the
-which Richard decissyd the XX day of Apryle the yere of
-owre Lord A.MCCCCC and fyve, on whose soullys Ihu̅ have
-mercy Amen for charitie.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_313"></a>[313]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Barrows were an old and notable family, one of them was
-Master of the Rolls and Keeper of the Great Seal, 1485. They
-were long settled at Winthorpe, and in 1670 Isaac Barrow was
-Bishop of St. Asaph, and his nephew was well known to history
-as the Master of Trinity, 1672-1677, and a celebrated divine.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">WINTHORPE</div>
-
-<p>One of Robert Palmer’s descendants, Elizabeth of Winthorpe,
-married George Sharpe, who was Archbishop of York in 1676,
-so Winthorpe furnished a bishop and an archbishop’s wife in
-the same decade.</p>
-
-<p>William Palmer was apparently part donor of the south
-porch of Winthorpe, which is very like those at Addlethorpe
-and Hogsthorpe, having a gabled and crocketed parapet carved
-with graceful flowing foliage; and on the two stones, lettered
-in Early English as at Hogsthorpe, are the lines:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Robert Lungnay and Wyll’ P</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">alm’: thay payd for thys</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">God in hys mercy</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">bryng them to his blys.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Over the east gable of the nave is a sanctus bell-cot, and in
-the tower are four good bells, three of which are thus inscribed:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">1. 1604 I sweetly tolling do men call</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">to taste of meat that feeds the soul.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">2. Jesus be our speed.</p>
-
-<p class="center">3. Antonius monet ut Campana bene sonet.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In the west of the south aisle is the well-carved head of the
-churchyard cross, of which, as usual, only half of the shaft
-remains. On the head is a crucifixion, and on the other side
-the Virgin and Child. This head was found in 1910 a mile
-and a quarter from the church. It closely resembles that still
-standing intact at Somersby.</p>
-
-<p>Opposite, in the west end of the north aisle, are two bases
-of columns belonging to a former church of the thirteenth
-century, which church is first mentioned in the donation of it
-by William de Kyme to the abbey of Bardney, 1256.</p>
-
-<p>The registers of the church begin in 1551.</p>
-
-<p>From the foregoing it will be seen how extremely interesting
-these Marsh churches are, and these four are not the only ones
-in this part of the Marsh, <i>Croft</i> and <i>Burgh</i> being both within
-three or four miles of <i>Winthorpe</i>. <i>Theddlethorpe</i>, north of
-these, is a finer building, as is <i>Burgh-le-Marsh</i>; but I doubt<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_314"></a>[314]</span>
-if any other church has such a wealth of old carved woodwork
-as Addlethorpe or Winthorpe. There is, cut on the
-south-east angle of Winthorpe tower, a deep horizontal line
-with the letters “H.W. 1837.” This indicates the level of
-high-water mark on the other side of the sea bank, and as the
-mark on the tower is eight feet nine inches from the ground,
-though the 1837 tide was an exceptionally high one, it gives
-some idea of what this part of the Marsh must at times have
-been in the days before the Romans made their great embankment.
-A plan for improving the drainage of the land at Winthorpe
-was made as early as 1367, and a rate was exacted of
-1<i>s.</i> an acre.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SKEGNESS HOUSE</div>
-
-<p><i>Skegness</i>, now, next to Cleethorpes, the best known and
-most frequented by excursion “trippers” of all the east coast
-places, used to be fifty years ago only a little settlement of
-fishermen who lived in cabins built on the strip of ground
-between the road and the ditches on each side. A lifeboat
-shed and an old sea-boat set up on its gunwale for a shelter,
-with a seat in it, and a flagstaff close by, used chiefly for signalling
-to a collier to come in, were on the sea bank. Behind it
-was an hotel, and one thatched house just inside the Roman
-bank, built by Mr. Edward Walls about 1780. This was
-cleverly contrived so that not an inch of space was wasted anywhere.
-It was only one room thick, so that from the same
-room you could see the sun rise over the sea and set over the
-Marsh. It was here that Tennyson saw those “wide-winged
-sunsets of the misty marsh” that he speaks of in “The Last
-Tournament,” and took delight in their marvellous colouring.</p>
-
-<p>The house rose up from the level behind and below the bank,
-and the back door was on the ground floor, with a porch and
-hinged leaves to shut out the terrific wind from N. and E.
-or N. and W. as required, but on the sea front, access was
-obtained by a removable plank bridge from the bank top
-which landed you on the first floor. Here was the summer
-home of all our family—a children’s paradise—when you
-ran straight out bare-foot on to the sandy bank and so
-across the beautiful hard sands and through the salt-water
-creeks down to the sea. This at high water was close at hand
-with tumbling waves and seething waters, but at low tide, far
-as eye could reach was nothing but sand, with the fisherman’s
-pony and cart, and his donkey and boy at the other end of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_315"></a>[315]</span>
-the shrimp net, moving slowly like specks in the distance along
-the edge of the far-retreating sea.</p>
-
-<p>This enchanting desolation is now the trippers’ play ground,
-with stalls and donkeys and swings and sham niggers and a
-pier and lines of shops. It must be admitted that it has all
-its old health-giving breezes, and also a fine garden and a cricket
-field and golf links of the very best. A new line from Lincoln
-has just been opened (July 1st, 1913), which runs through
-Coningsby, New Bolingbroke and Stickney, to join the old
-loop line between Eastville and Steeping, and for a shilling fare
-will bring thousands from Lincoln, Sheffield and Retford, to
-have a happy day of nine hours at what the natives call
-“Skegsnest.”</p>
-
-<p>We have seen that the Romans had a bank all along this
-coast to keep out the sea, and besides their five roads from
-Lincoln, one of which went to Horncastle, they had a road from
-Horncastle to Wainfleet; and a road, part of which we have
-noticed, from Ulceby to Burgh and Skegness. Skegness lies
-midway between Ingoldmells, which is the most easterly point
-of the county, and <i>Gibraltar Point</i>, from which the coast sweeps
-inland and forms the northern shore of the Wash. Across,
-on the further side of this, was the Roman camp at Brancaster
-(Branodunum), and here at Skegness there seems to have
-been a Roman fort which has now been swallowed up by the
-sea.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">OLD POTTERIES</div>
-
-<p>Near Ingoldmells, about fifty years ago, the sea, at low water,
-laid bare some Roman potteries, so called, from which the
-Rev. Edward Elmhirst got several specimens of what were
-called “thumb bricks.” These were just bits of clay the size
-of sausages, but twice as thick, some as much as two and a half
-inches thick and four inches high, which had been squeezed
-in the hand, the impress of the fingers and thumb being plainly
-visible; the extremities, being more than the hand could take,
-were rather bigger than the middle. They were flat enough at
-each end to stand, and had doubtless been used to place the
-pottery on when being burnt in the kiln.</p>
-
-<p>It is more than probable that these potteries were pre-Roman.
-They are about a quarter of a mile south of the Ingoldmells
-outfall drain, and half way between high and low-water mark.
-They are only exposed now and then, and appear to be circular
-kilns about fifteen feet in diameter, with walls two feet thick,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_316"></a>[316]</span>
-and now only a foot high. The reason of their existence is
-found in a bed of dark clay which underlies all this coast.</p>
-
-<p>The only pot found has been a rough, hand-made jar with
-rolled edge and marks of the stick or bone with which the
-outside had been scraped and trimmed. Now, doubtless the
-Romans used the wheel. Moreover, these kilns are far outside
-the Roman bank, and not likely, therefore, to be for Roman
-use. Tree roots are found in the walls and inside the circle
-of the kilns, of the same sort as those of which at one time
-a perfect forest existed, the stumps of which are sometimes
-visible at low tide. At the time the Romans made their sea
-bank the sea must have come right over this forest, so that
-we may perhaps say that those thumb-bricks bear the impress
-of the fingers of the earliest inhabitants of Britain, and are
-therefore of extraordinary interest.</p>
-
-<p>On the eastern side of South Lindsey the running out of the
-roads, from Burgh and Wainfleet, to the coast always seemed
-to point to the existence of some Roman terminus near Skegness.
-Some years after he had noted this as probable, the Rev. E. H. R.
-Tatham, who has made a study of Roman roads in Lincolnshire,
-discovered that in the court rolls of the manor of Ingoldmells,
-the mention is made of a piece of land called indifferently
-in a document dated 1345, “Chesterland,” or “Castelland”;
-and again in 1422, four acres of land in “Chesterland” are
-mentioned as being surrendered by one William Skalflete
-(Court Rolls, p. 248), this land is never mentioned again, and
-the presumption is that it was swallowed by the sea. And
-in 1540 Leland mentions a statement made to him, that
-Skegness once had a haven town with a “castle,” but that
-these had been “clene consumed and eaten up with the se.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ROMAN CASTRUM</div>
-
-<p>These terms “Chester” and “caster” point to a Roman
-fort or “castrum,” and the fact that the names “Chesterland”
-and “Castelland” exist in medieval documents dealing with
-the land in the immediate neighbourhood seems to go a long
-way towards confirming Mr. Tatham’s conjecture of the existence
-of a Roman fort near Skegness, over which the sea has now
-encroached.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">AN EARLY BRASS</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">CROFT</div>
-
-<p>From Skegness we will now turn inland, and after about
-four miles reach <i>Croft</i> (All Saints) by a road which keeps
-turning at right angles and only by slow degrees brings a
-traveller perceptibly nearer to the clump of big, shady trees<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_317"></a>[317]</span>
-which hide the church, parsonage and school. Large trees
-grow in all parts of the forlorn churchyard, and the church
-when opened has a musty, charnel-house smell, but one soon
-forgets that in amazement at the fine and spacious fourteenth
-century nave and clerestory, its grand tower and its large
-and lofty fifteenth century Perpendicular chancel and aisles.
-The wide ten-foot passage up the nave between the old poppy-head
-seats fitly corresponds to the large open space round the
-font, which rises from an octagonal stone platform as big as
-that of a market cross. There is a quantity of old woodwork
-besides the seats. A good rood-screen—though like all the
-others, minus its coved top and rood-loft—shows traces yet
-of its ancient colouring; birds and beasts of various kinds
-are carved both as crockets above and also in relief on the panels
-below, and two good chantry screens fill the eastern ends of
-the aisles. A very fine Jacobean pulpit and tester was put
-up by Dr. Worship, the vicar from 1599 to 1625, in memory
-of his wife Agnes, whom he describes in a brass on her tomb,
-dated 1615, as “a woman matchless both for wisdom and
-godlyness.” The two greatest treasures in brass are the
-extremely fine eagle lectern, its base supported by three small
-lions, which was found in the moat of the old Hall, the seat
-of the Browne family, flung there probably for safety and then
-forgotten; and a notable half-effigy, head and arms only, of
-a knight in banded mail, with a tunic over the hauberk, and
-hands joined in prayer. The legend round him is in Norman
-French, but his name is lost; the date is said to be 1300, so that
-this is, next to that at Buslingthorpe, the earliest brass in
-the county.</p>
-
-<p>The Browne family are perpetuated in the chancel, where
-on the north wall are two similar monuments of kneeling
-figures facing each other, both erected about 1630. The first
-is to Valentine Browne, a man with a very aquiline nose, and
-his wife Elizabeth (Monson), with effigies in relief of their
-fifteen children. He is described as “Treasurer and Vittleter
-of Barwick, and Dyed Treasurer of Ireland.” Barwick is
-“The March town of Berwick-on-Tweed.” The tomb was
-erected <i>c.</i> 1600 by his second son John who lived at Croft,
-and whose effigy is on the other tomb along with his wife
-Cicely (Kirkman), of whom we are told “she lived with him
-but 20 weeks and dye without issue ætatis 21 Ano Domini<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_318"></a>[318]</span>
-1614,” just a year before Agnes Worship, the vicar’s wife.
-Another monument, a marble slab eighteen inches square, has
-this inscription:—</p>
-
-<p>“Here lyeth Willyam Bonde Gentleman, whoe dyed An̅o
-Dom̅ 1559 leaving two sonnes, Nicolas Docter in Divinitie,
-and George Docter in physicke, the elder sonne, who dyed
-the ____ et etatis ____ and here is buryed. THE
-which in remembrance of his most kynd father haith erected
-this lytle moniment”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Bondus eram Doctor Medicus nunc vermibus esca,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Corpus terra tegit, spiritus astra petit,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ardua scrutando, cura, morbis, senioque</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Vita Molesta fuit: Mors mihi grata quies.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The guide-books say that this was erected by Nicolas, D.D.,
-who afterwards became president of Magdalen College, Oxford.
-But clearly it was by George the M.D., and he left spaces for
-his own death date, which were never filled; perhaps he is
-not buried at Croft, but he must have been near his end when
-he wrote the Latin lines which are all about himself, and may
-be thus translated—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">I was Bond a Physician, now I am food for worms,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The earth covers my body, my spirit seeks the stars,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From difficult studies, anxiety, diseases and old age</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Life was a burden; death is a welcome rest to me.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">There is a note in the church accounts to the effect that the old
-bell was (re-)cast at Peterborough by Henry Penn in 1706 and
-inscribed “prepare to die.”</p>
-
-<p>This church is, for spaciousness and for the amount of good
-old woodwork, and for its monuments, one of the very best.
-As we leave it we notice carved on the door, “God save the
-King 1633.”</p>
-
-<p>I believe that Bishop Hugh-de-Wells who was appointed
-Bishop of Lincoln in 1209, but who, mistrusting King John,
-did not take up the work of his See till 1218, when John was
-dead, was a native of Croft.</p>
-
-<p>The parish books of <i>Croft</i> show “The dues and duties belonginge
-and appertaininge unto the office of the clarkes of Crofte.
-A.D. 1626.”</p>
-
-<p>He collected the Easter gratuities of the neighbours in the
-parish; he got twenty shillings a year for looking after the
-clock, “to be paid by the churchwards.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_319"></a>[319]</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“For skowringe and furbishinge the eagle or ‘brazen lectorie’
-2/6 by the yeare. Sixpence for ‘evry marriadge,’ fourpence
-‘for the passinge bell ringeinge for every inhabitant &amp;c. that
-are deceased.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>And “Item the privilege of makeinge the graves for the
-deceased before any other yf he will take the paines and canne
-doe yt.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE PARISH CLERK</div>
-
-<p>Evidently the clerks were old men and not always capable
-of wielding the spade and pick; and now comes an entry which
-lets one into the secret of why the registers were often so ill-kept.
-Instead of the entries being made by the parson at the
-time, the clerk put them down “from time to time,” and
-they were copied from his notes once a year. Under this system,
-of course, there were both mistakes and omissions, often for
-many months and even years together.</p>
-
-<p>This is the entry:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Itm for the Register keepinge from tyme to tyme of all
-Christnings Marriadges and burialles from Ladyday to Ladyday
-until they be ingrossed: two shillings and sixpence a year.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Possibly “from tyme to tyme” may mean on each occasion,
-but it sounds precarious.</p>
-
-<p>His fixed salary, besides fees, was, in 1773, thirty shillings
-and two strikes (—4 bushels) of corn out of the two quarters
-(—sixteen bushels) which was given from the glebe every
-Easter to the poor by the parson.</p>
-
-<p>The Sexton’s wages at the same date were given thus:—</p>
-
-<table summary="The Sexton’s wages">
- <tr>
- <td>as Sexton</td>
- <td class="tdr">2.</td>
- <td class="tdr">10.</td>
- <td class="tdr">0.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>for dogs wipping</td>
- <td class="tdr">0.</td>
- <td class="tdr">7.</td>
- <td class="tdr">6.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Dressing church round</td>
- <td class="tdr">0.</td>
- <td class="tdr">2.</td>
- <td class="tdr">0.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>For oyle</td>
- <td class="tdr">0.</td>
- <td class="tdr">2.</td>
- <td class="tdr">4.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>For ringing the bell at 8 and 4</td>
- <td class="tdr">1.</td>
- <td class="tdr">0.</td>
- <td class="tdr">0.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="tdr bt">04.</td>
- <td class="tdr bt">01.</td>
- <td class="tdr bt">10.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>The “Parish Clerk” in Lincolnshire was, as a rule, a rougher-looking
-individual than he appears in Gainsborough’s splendid
-picture in the National Gallery, but he was generally an original
-character, both in word and deed. I heard of one in Ireland<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_320"></a>[320]</span>
-who announced, “There will be no sarmon this afternoon as
-the Bishop has been providentially prevented from praching,”
-and many a quaint saying is recorded of those Lincolnshire
-clerks of the last century. Boys were their special aversion.
-In the old days at Spilsby the clerk kept a stick, and during
-the sermon would go down to the west end of the building,
-and the sound of his weapon on the boys’ heads quite waked
-up the slumberers in the seats nearer the pulpit. One hears
-of a clerk putting a stop to what he considered an unnecessary
-afternoon service and saying to the clergyman, “We ha’en’t
-no call to hev sarvice just for you and me, sir.” “Oh, but I
-thought I saw some people coming in.” “Just a parcel of
-boys, sir; but I soon started they.” But it is not the clerks
-only who show an intelligent interest in the parson and the
-services, though from generations of somewhat slovenly performance,
-the churchgoers had difficulty at first in appreciating
-the high-church ritual which here and there they saw for the
-first time. One kindly old woman on seeing in one of the Fen
-churches some unexpected genuflexions and bows, said afterwards,
-“I <i>was</i> sorry for poor Mr. C., he was that bad of his
-inside that he couldn’t howd hissen up.” And another I knew
-of who, when asked how they got on with the new ritualistic
-clergyman, and whether he hadn’t introduced some new methods,
-replied, “Oh, yis, he antics a bit; but we looves him soä we
-antics along wi’ him.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BURGH-LE-MARSH</div>
-
-<p>From Croft we turn north to <i>Burgh-le-Marsh</i> (SS. Peter and
-Paul) whose fine lofty tower, with its grand peal of eight bells,
-stands on the extreme edge of the Wold and overlooks the
-marsh, and, like “Boston Stump,” is visible far out to sea,
-The exterior is very fine, and the church, like Croft, has retained
-its chancel, so ruthlessly destroyed in the case of Addlethorpe
-and Ingoldmells. The nave is wide and lofty, but the pillars
-poor. It is all Perpendicular, and has much interesting screen
-work which has been a good deal pulled about, even as late as
-1865, the year in which similar destruction was wrought at
-Ingoldmells. The rood screen now stands across the tower
-arch, and the chancel screen is a patchwork. There are two
-porches, north and south, the latter of brick, a good pulpit
-and a canopied font-cover which opens with double doors,
-dated 1623. On the north aisle wall is a plain brass plate
-with the following dialogue in Latin hexameters:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_321"></a>[321]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Quis jacet hic? Leonardus Palmerus Generosus.<br />
-Quae conjux dilecta fuit? Catherina. Quis haeres?<br />
-Christopherus (cui nupta Anna est). Quis filius alter?<br />
-Robertus. Gnatae quot erant? Tres, Elizabetha<br />
-Ac Maria, ac Helena. An superant? Superant. Ubi mens est<br />
-Defuncti? Rogitas. Dubio procul astra petivit.<br />
-obiit Die Martis octavo<br />
-Anno Domi 1610.<br />
-ætatis suæ 70.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Who lies here? Leonard Palmer, Gentleman.<br />
-Who was his beloved wife? Catherine. Who his heir?<br />
-Christopher (whose wife was Anna). Who was his second son?<br />
-Robert. How many daughters were there? Three, Elizabeth<br />
-and Mary and Helen. Are they living? Yes. Where is the spirit<br />
-of the departed? You ask. Doubtless it has sought the stars.<br />
-He died Mar. 8, 1610, aged 70.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BRATOFT</div>
-
-<p>At Burgh the straight road from Skegness to Gunby turns
-to the left to pass through <i>Bratoft</i>. This church with picturesque
-ivy-clad tower has a good font, a chancel and parclose
-screens, and the rood-loft doorway. It has been well restored
-in memory of C. Massingberd, Squire of Gunby, and contains
-a very curious painting on wood which now hangs in the tower;
-it was once over the chancel arch, and by its irregular shape
-it is clear that it was originally made to fit elsewhere. It is
-signed Robert Stephenson. The Armada is shown as a red
-dragon, between four points of land marked England, Scotland,
-Ireland and France with the following lines:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Spaine’s proud Armado with great strength and power</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Great Britain’s state came gapeing to devour,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">This dragon’s guts, like Pharoa’s scattered hoast</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Lay splitt and drowned upon the Irish coast.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For of eight score save too ships sent from Spaine</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But twenty-five scarce sound returned again non Nobis Domine.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Bratoft Hall, the residence of the Bratofts and Massingberds,
-was built in a square moated enclosure of two acres,
-which stood in a deer park of two hundred acres. It was taken
-down in 1698, and the Hall at Gunby built about the same
-time. The bridge over the moat of two brick arches was
-standing in 1830 intact.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_322"></a>[322]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">GUNBY</div>
-
-<p>The twisting byeways lead from here back into the Skegness,
-Burgh, and Spilsby road. The Hall at <i>Gunby</i><a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> is a fine brick
-mansion, the home of the Massingberds. A pretty little church
-stands in the park, in which are two very valuable brasses of
-the Massingberd family, one dated 1405, of a knight, Sir Thomas,
-in camail and pointed Bascinet, and his lady Johanna, in a
-tight dress and mantle. The other of William Lodyngton,
-Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, in his judicial robes, 1419.
-The Massingberd brass has had its incised inscription beaten
-out, and, with a new inscription in raised letters, has been
-made to serve for another Thomas and Johanna Massingberd
-in 1552, the figures, costumed as in 1400, serving for their
-parsimonious descendants of 150 years later. A precisely
-similar case of appropriation by two Dallisons with dates 1400
-and 1546 and 1549, may be seen in Laughton church near
-Gainsborough; and again on a stone slab of the Watson family
-in Lyddington, Rutland. About 1800 Elizabeth Massingberd,
-sole heiress of Gunby, married her neighbour, Peregrine Langton,
-son of Bennet Langton, the friend of Dr. Johnson, who on
-marriage took the name of Massingberd. Their grandson
-was the Algernon Massingberd, born 1828, who left England
-in 1852, and since June, 1855, was never again heard of. In
-1862 his uncle, Charles Langton Massingberd, took possession
-of the estate.</p>
-
-<p>From Gunby various small by-roads lead literally in all
-directions; you can take your choice of eight within half a mile
-of the park gates, and Burgh station, on the Boston and Grimsby
-line, is only just outside the boundary.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_323"></a>[323]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX<br />
-<span class="smaller">CHURCHES IN SOUTH LINDSEY</span></h2>
-
-<p>Spilsby to Wainfleet—Little Steeping—Tomas-de-Reding—Monksthorpe—The
-Baptists—Thomas Grantham—Firsby—Thorpe—Churchwarden’s
-Book—The “Dyxonary”—Wainfleet—William of Waynflete—Halton
-Holgate—Sire Walter Bec—Village Carpentry.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The record of the churches in the marsh land of the South
-Lindsey division would not be complete without some mention
-of Wainfleet. The Somersby brook, which, winding “with
-many a curve” through Partney and Halton, becomes at last
-“the Steeping river,” is thence cut into a straight canal as
-far as Wainfleet, and then, resuming its proper river-character,
-goes out through the flats at Wainfleet Haven, near that positive
-end of the world, “Gibraltar Point.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Little Steeping</i> has just undergone a most satisfactory restoration
-in memory of its once rector, Bishop Steere, who succeeded
-Bishop Tozer of Burgh-le-Marsh as the third missionary bishop
-in Central Africa, and there did a great work as a missionary,
-and also built the first Central African cathedral in what had
-previously been the greatest slave market of the world—Zanzibar.
-The restorers have had a most interesting find this
-year (1912), for the chancel step, when taken up, proved to be
-the back of a fine recumbent effigy of a fourteenth century
-rector. Doubtless the monument was taken from the arched
-recess in the north wall of the chancel and thus hidden to save
-it from destruction in the sixteenth or seventeenth century.
-The masons who fitted it into its new bed had no scruple in
-knocking off the inscribed moulding on one side, and a bit of
-the carved stone got broken off and was found in the rectory
-garden.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_324"></a>[324]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LITTLE STEEPING</div>
-
-<p>The figure represents a robed priest, with feet curiously
-clothed in what look like socks. The face is good and in excellent
-preservation. The work was probably local, for the ear
-is of enormous size. The mutilated inscription read originally:
-“Tomas de Red<i>ing priez qe Dieu pour sa grace</i> de sa alme eyt
-merci.” The letters in italics are missing. Thomas de Reding
-was presented to Little Steeping in 1328. There is a very
-good font, and the south porch outer arch is remarkable for
-the very unusual depth of its hollowed moulding on both of
-the outer porch pilasters. The canopied work over the head
-of the inner doorway is good, but quite of a different character,
-and the wide projection of the north arcade capitals is noticeable.
-A stone on the outer wall marked “1638 W P &amp; R G”
-gives the date of a destructive restoration, when tomb slabs
-were cut up for window-sills and some ruthless patchwork
-put in on the north side of both aisle and chancel. A good
-rood screen with canopy has been put in, old work being used
-where possible, and a new churchyard cross erected on the
-old base, with figures of St. Andrew and the Crucifixion, under
-a canopy like that at Somersby. The octagonal font in rich
-yellow stone has figures difficult to make out, and a small niche
-over the north-east pier of the nave arcade is to be noted;
-probably it contained some relic or image. The stone brackets
-for the rood loft remain, but there is no trace left of the staircase.
-The seats and pulpit of dark stained deal are interesting,
-as they were all made by Bishop Steere himself. The tower is
-patched with the old two-inch bricks, which always look well,
-and with some of the larger modern kind, which seldom do.</p>
-
-<p>Our best way now is to return to the Spilsby-and-Firsby
-road at <i>Great Steeping</i>, which will take us past <i>Irby</i> to <i>Thorpe-St.-Peter</i>
-and <i>Wainfleet</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE BAPTISTS</div>
-
-<p>The hamlet of <i>Monksthorpe</i> in Great Steeping parish indicates
-by its name the fact that Bardney Abbey had an estate here.
-No trace now remains of the manor built by Robert de Waynflete,
-when he retired in 1317 from the abbey and had the
-proceeds of the estates in Steeping and Firsby and two cells
-in Partney and Skendleby assigned to him for the maintenance
-and clothing of himself and family. But part of the moat
-is visible, and one may see here in a chapel enclosure a baptist’s
-pool bricked and railed round on three sides with one end open
-and sloping to the water, for the Baptists walked into the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_325"></a>[325]</span>
-pool and did not believe in the efficacy of infant baptism. This
-was doubtless one of the places which was ministered to by the
-famous leader of the “General Baptist Church” who suffered
-such shameful and repeated persecution in the days of Cromwell
-and Charles II., Thomas Grantham, for he was a native of
-Halton, where the name still exists, and throughout a long
-life showed himself a man of a truly religious and eminently
-courageous heart, of whom his native village may well be proud.
-He died in 1692, aged seventy-eight, at Norwich, and was
-buried inside the church of St. Stephen, as a memorial to
-him set up therein states, “to prevent the indecencies threatened
-to his corpse,” such as, we read on a tombstone in Croft
-churchyard, had been perpetrated on the body of his friend
-and fellow-Baptist, Robert Shalders, whose body was disinterred
-on the very day of his funeral by inhabitants of Croft, and
-dragged on a sledge and left at his own gates. Doubtless the
-clergyman was privy to this, so hot was the feeling for religious
-persecution in those days, and took credit to himself for it,
-for in the parish book of Croft we may read as follows:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Dec 20th, 1663. These persons here underwritten, viz.
-Roger Faune, Gent., Robert Shalders, Anne Montgomerie,
-Cicilie Barker, Alice Egger, were excommunicated in the parish
-church of Croft the day and year above written,</p>
-
-<table summary="signatures">
- <tr>
- <td>“per me R. Clarke</td>
- <td></td>
- <td>Curate Ibid</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Philip Neave</td>
- <td>⎫</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="valign">Churchwardens.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">John Wells</td>
- <td>⎭</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THORPE</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">CHURCHWARDEN’S BOOK</div>
-
-<p>Two miles east of Steeping a good road to the right goes to
-<i>Firsby</i>, where is a small church built by Mr. G. E. Street to
-show how an entirely satisfactory building adapted to the
-needs of quite a small parish could be put up at a very small
-cost. The whole church cost under £1,000, and was built in
-less than six months, and opened November 5, 1857. In
-<i>Thorpe</i> we find a graceful font, a well-carved Perpendicular
-screen and a good Jacobean pulpit. The place belonged after
-the Conquest to the Kyme family. The Thorpe churchwardens’
-book commences in 1545, and in 1546 contains such items as
-these about the rood light and the light in the Easter Sepulchre:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="center">“Anᵒ regᵒ regˢ Hen. VIII, xxxvij.</p>
-
-<p>“By thys dothe ytt appr what Symon Wylly̅son &amp; Roger Hopster hath payᵈ &amp; layd for the cherche cocernyng the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_326"></a>[326]</span> rode lyght &amp; ye Sepulture lyght in ye xxxvj yere of ye rene off ower Soffera̅t lorde king He̅r̅y ye viij.</p>
-
-<table summary="Extracts from the churchwarden’s accounts">
- <tr>
- <td>fyrst payd by yᵉ hands off yᵉ forsayd Rogʳ for one powd waxe
- makyng and a half agenst lent</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">j½d</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Item payd to Gu̅rwycke Wyffe for brede and ale to ye waxe makyng
- for yᵉ supulture lyght</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">xiiijd</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Item payd for j powde waxe maykyng for the rode lyght aga̅s̅t estʳ</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">jd</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Item payd to yᵉ clark for kepping off yᵉ sepulture lyght</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">ijd.”</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In the reign of Edward VI the churchwardens seem to have
-had a jumble sale of all the odds and ends in the church, which
-they called the “offalment” or rubbish.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="center">“Anᵒ Reg E. VIᵗⁱ Vᵗᵒ.</p>
-
-<p>“Howffulment in the church soulde &amp; delyvered by ye
-hands of John Greene &amp; Robert Emme cherche masters.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Amongst the various items of metal and woodwork, vestments,
-chests, books, &amp;c., we have:—</p>
-
-<table summary="Extracts from the churchwarden’s accounts">
- <tr>
- <td>“Item off John Wolbe yᵉ elder for an Albe and an old pantyd cloth</td>
- <td class="tdr">iiijˢ</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Item to John Wolbe all yᵉ boks in yᵉ cherche</td>
- <td class="tdr">ijˢ</td>
- <td class="tdr">iiijᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Item sowlde to Wᵐ Keele ij altar clothes, a robe</td>
- <td class="tdr">vˢ</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Item sowlde to Sir John Westmels curate, ij robes</td>
- <td class="tdr">iiijˢ</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Item Sowlde Wᵐ Sawer ij corporaxs<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> wᵗ otre ofelment</td>
- <td class="tdr">iijˢ</td>
- <td class="tdr">vijiᵈ”</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>They were probably restoring their church, for we have
-two years later:—</p>
-
-<table summary="Extracts from the churchwarden’s accounts">
- <tr>
- <td>“Itᵐ pᵈ for a wayn and iiij beasts for sand to the cherche</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">viijᵈ”</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>This was in the first and second year of Queen Mary, and
-they were then busy putting back what they had sold in
-Edward’s reign, making side altars, etc., hence we find:—</p>
-
-<table summary="Extracts from the churchwarden’s accounts">
- <tr>
- <td>“Itᵐ pᵈ for yᵉ clothe yᵉ roode was paynted on</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">xiiijᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Itᵐ pᵈ for paentyng off the roode</td>
- <td class="tdr">ijˢ</td>
- <td class="tdr">viijᵈ<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_327"></a>[327]</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Itᵐ pᵈ to yᵉ man that mayd the syd aulters in wageys</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">xijᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Itᵐ pᵈ to Thomas hymlyn Wyffe for meat &amp; dryncke too them
- that mayd the saide aulters</td>
- <td class="tdr">ijˢ</td>
- <td class="tdr">viijᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Itᵐ pᵈ to yᵉ man that makg. the Roode in prte of paementt</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">xijᵈ”</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>Other interesting items are—</p>
-
-<table summary="Extracts from the churchwarden’s accounts">
- <tr>
- <td>“Itᵐ payd to yᵉ players off ca̅dylmesse day</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">viijᵈ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Itᵐ payd in yᵉ same year to yᵉ players whytche playd off yᵉ Sonday
- next after Sant Mathyes day</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td class="tdr">vjᵈ”</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>One might make quite an amusing “story of a dictionary”
-from the various entries in the Thorpe churchwardens’ book
-about an Elliott’s Dictionary which, in the middle of
-the sixteenth century the vicar bequeathed to his successors
-<i>in perpetuo</i>. It is described as “one boke called a dyxonary,”
-and evidently exercised both vicar and wardens a good deal
-until one vicar bethought him of the device of “delivering”
-it to the parish to be kept along with various volumes of
-homilies, and expositions and the paraphrases of Erasmus.</p>
-
-<p>But it is time to leave Thorpe; and two miles will bring
-us to <i>Wainfleet</i> which, as its name declares, though now a
-couple of miles from the sea, was once a haven for sea-going
-ships, for “Fleet” means a navigable creek. This little place
-gave its name in the fifteenth century to a great man, William
-of Wainfleet, or Waynflete, Headmaster of Winchester, and
-first headmaster and Provost of Eton, successor to Cardinal
-Beaufort as Bishop of Winchester and Lord Chancellor of
-England under Henry VI. He was a great builder, for he
-possibly planned, and certainly completed, Tattershall Castle,
-built Tattershall church, and founded Magdalen College, Oxford,
-in 1457, the first college to admit commoners, a wise and far-seeing
-innovation of Waynflete’s; and in his native town erected
-in 1484 the Magdalen College School, a fine brick building
-seventy-six feet by twenty-six with its gateway flanked by
-polygonal towers recalling the entrance to Eton College. In
-the south tower is a remarkable staircase, and in the north a
-bell.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">WAINFLEET</div>
-
-<p>His adoption of St. Mary Magdalen as the patron of his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_328"></a>[328]</span>
-school at Wainfleet and his college at Oxford may have
-originated in his having been appointed by Cardinal Beaufort
-to the mastership and chantry of St. Mary Magdalen hospital
-on Magdalen Down outside Winchester.</p>
-
-<p>The bishop lived to the reign of Richard III., and died
-in 1486. He erected a monument to his father, Richard
-Patten. The son is called either Patten or Barbour, for he
-bore both names indifferently, though he soon discarded them
-both for the name of his birthplace, as was commonly done
-from the eleventh to the sixteenth century; his brother also
-taking the name of Waynflete. This monument was in the original
-church of All Saints, for the second church of St. Thomas had
-long been destroyed. But All Saints’ church, built cruciform
-and with a light wooden spire on account of the soft nature
-of the soil on which it stood, was destined to the same fate,
-for the foolish inhabitants having, in 1718, put a heavy brick
-tower to it, with five bells in it, the weight brought a great
-part of the building to ruin. Subsequently it was pulled down,
-and the present church was set up at some distance from the
-old site in 1820, when the inhabitants added vandalism to their
-folly and wantonly demolished this fine tomb. The broken
-bits were collected and placed in the Magdalen School, and
-later were, by the intervention of the rector of Halton Holgate,
-Rev. T. H. Rawnsley, obtained for the President and Fellows
-of the Bishop’s College at Oxford, and are now on the north
-side of the altar in the College Chapel. The figure has its
-feet resting on a bank of flowers and its head on a cushion
-and pillow supported by his two sons, John the Monk and
-William the Bishop. The face of the latter resembles the
-father, but is not so broad or so old as that of John. It is
-to be noted that Lincolnshire has produced two Bishops of
-Winchester, each of them the founder of a college at Oxford—Bishop
-Fox and Bishop Waynflete.</p>
-
-<p>The town is older than Boston and existed in Roman days,
-possibly under the name of Vannona, and apparently a
-Roman road ran from Doncaster to Wainfleet, passing through
-Horncastle and Lusby. Certainly “Salters road,” which crosses
-the East Fen, was a Roman road, and the Romans made a good
-deal of salt from the sea-water in the immediate neighbourhood
-of Wainfleet. In the charter rolls of Bardney Abbey
-(<i>temp.</i> Henry III.) we read that Matthew, son of Milo de<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_329"></a>[329]</span>
-Wenflet, paid annually “to God, Saint Oswald and the Monks
-of Bardney 4 shillings and eighteen sextaires of salt by the
-old measure” for the land he held in the village of Friskney.</p>
-
-<p>Later we find that (<i>temp.</i> Edward II.) Hugh le Despencer
-held lands in Wainfleet in 1327, and we know that a Robert
-le Despencer did so in Burgh in the time of Edward I. In the
-reign of Edward III. Wainfleet furnished two ships and forty
-seamen for the invasion of Brittany.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wainfleet St. Mary’s</i> lies one and a half miles to the south.
-The church is a massive structure with five arches on the north
-and four on the south of the nave.</p>
-
-<p>We have now completed the round of the Marsh churches,
-and in so doing, on leaving Gunby, we struck into the Spilsby
-and Wainfleet road, just where the Somersby brook, there
-called the Halton river, is crossed by an iron bridge. This
-we did not cross, but keeping always to the left bank we
-followed the stream to Wainfleet. We must now go back
-and cross this iron bridge, and trace the road thence for four
-miles and a half to Spilsby. This will take us on to the Wold.
-We shall only pass one village, but this is one of infinite charm.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HALTON HOLGATE</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE HOLLOW-GATE BRIDGE</div>
-
-<p><i>Halton Holgate</i> stands on the very edge of the Wold, where
-the green-sand terminates, and looks far across the Fen to
-Boston. The name of the village is always properly pronounced
-by the natives Halton Hollygate, <i>i.e.</i>, hollow gate or way;
-for the descending road has been cut through the green-sand
-rock, and where the cutting is deepest a pretty timber footbridge
-is thrown over it, leading from the rectory to the churchyard.
-The garden lawn has, or had, two fine old mulberry trees.
-These were once more common—for in the reign of James I.
-an order went out for the planting of mulberry trees in all
-rectory gardens with a view to the encouragement of the silk
-trade by the breeding and feeding of silkworms, whose favourite
-diet is the mulberry leaf. From the garden, “Boston stump”
-is visible eighteen miles to the south. The church is a particularly
-handsome one with massive well-proportioned tower,
-and large belfry windows, eight three-light clerestory windows
-on either side and a fine south porch of Ancaster stone. The
-rest is built of the beautifully tinted local green-sand, with quoins
-of harder Clipsham stone. Inside it is spacious, with lofty
-octagonal pillars. It is seated throughout with oak, and has
-several good old oak poppy-heads and some large modern<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_330"></a>[330]</span>
-ones copied from Winthorpe and carved by a Halton carpenter.
-Here it is worth notice that for the last hundred years Halton
-has never been without wood-workers of unusual talent.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus67">
-<img src="images/illus67.jpg" width="500" height="350" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Bridge over the Hollow-Gate.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HALTON CHURCH</div>
-
-<p>South of the chancel two tall blocked arcades, leading to a
-Lady chapel long pulled down, were opened by the Rev. T.
-Sale, rector in 1894, who had reseated the chancel and filled
-the east window with good stained glass. The chapel, which
-now holds the organ, was rebuilt in memory of the two previous
-rectors, Rev. T. H. Rawnsley (1825-1861) and R. D. B. Rawnsley
-(1861-1882), and their wives Sophia Walls and Catharine
-Franklin. The fine effigy of a Crusader, called Henry de
-Halton, had been buried for safety and forgotten, like that
-of the priest at Little Steeping, and the sepulchral slab with
-Lombardic lettering, of Sir Walter Bec, of the late twelfth
-or early thirteenth century, is the oldest monument in the
-neighbourhood. The inscription is: “Sire Walter Bec jist
-ici de ki alme Dieu ait merci.” There is a fine peal of six bells,
-and a “tingtang,” a thing very common in Lincolnshire, and
-reminiscent of the pre-Reformation Sanctus bell.</p>
-
-<p>We have so often seen, owing to the negligence of church<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_331"></a>[331]</span>
-authorities, damp church walls, and wet streaming down from
-gutter or stack-pipe, which is blocked with growing grass or
-sparrows’ nests, to the great detriment of the building, that
-it is pleasant to record the useful activity of the Halton
-churchwardens, of whom one has carved, and the other put
-together, a fine oak screen, with the names and dates of all
-the known rectors, churchwardens and clerks of the parish.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus68">
-<img src="images/illus68.jpg" width="500" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Halton Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the north wall of the chancel is a priest’s door, which has
-always been in constant use. It is a beautiful bit of Perpendicular
-work with an exceptionally good hood-moulding and
-lovely carving of waved foliage in the spandrels. These north
-side doors are sometimes called “Devils’ doors,” as they were
-not only to let the priest in but also to let the Devil out, being
-left open at baptisms to let him fly out when the infant
-renounces the Devil and all his works, and becomes the child
-of grace. The idea that the north was the Devil’s side had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_332"></a>[332]</span>
-possibly something to do with the repugnance, hardly yet
-quite overcome, to a burial on that side of the churchyard.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LOCAL WORKMANSHIP</div>
-
-<p>An avenue of elms, planted by the Rev. T. H. Rawnsley
-about 1830, starting from the “Church Wongs,”<a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> leads past
-the tower at the west to the Hollow-gate road, close to where
-a pit was dug by the roadside to get the sandstone for repairing
-the tower; and to-day, as we pass along to Spilsby, we shall
-see a wall of sandstone rock exposed on the right of the road,
-and a lot of blocks cut out and hardening in the air preparatory
-for use at Little Steeping, and we shall naturally be reminded
-of the words of Isaiah, “Look unto the rock whence ye are
-hewn, and to the hole of the pit whence ye are digged.”</p>
-
-<p>We have said that the restoration of Halton Holgate church
-was carried out by the Rev. T. H. Rawnsley about 1845, and
-it is remarkable that it was done so extremely well; for at
-that particular time the art of architectural restoration was
-almost at its lowest. As far as they went there were no
-mistakes made by the restorers at Halton, and the carved work
-for the seats was copied from the best models to be seen in
-any Lincolnshire church, and executed under the eye of the
-rector and his son, Drummond Rawnsley, by a Halton
-carpenter. That is just as it should be, and just as it used to
-be, but it is not often possible of attainment now.</p>
-
-<p>Jesus College chapel at Cambridge underwent a much needed
-restoration at the same bad period, <i>i.e.</i>, in 1849, and here too,
-by the genius of the architect, excellent work was done, some
-good old carving being preserved and very cleverly matched
-with new work well executed, and by a very curious coincidence,
-the shape of some of the poppy-heads and the plan of
-the panel carving is almost identical with that which was
-executed at Halton, after the Winthorpe pattern.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_333"></a>[333]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX<br />
-<span class="smaller">SPILSBY AND ITS BYWAYS</span></h2>
-
-<p>Spilsby Market-town—The Churches and Willoughby Chapel—The Franklins—The
-Talk of the Market—Lincolnshire Stories and Others—Byways—Old
-Bolingbroke—Harrington Church—The Copledike
-Tombs—The Hall—Bag-Enderby—Remarkable Font—Somersby—The
-Churchyard Cross—The Brook—Ashby Puerorum.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SPILSBY CHURCH</div>
-
-<p>Spilsby is the head of a petty-sessional division in the parts
-of Lindsey. The name is thought by some to be a corruption
-of Spellows-by, to which the name of Spellows hill in the
-neighbourhood gives some colour. The old gaol, built in 1825,
-had a really good classic portico with four fluted columns and
-massive pediment. Most of the buildings behind this imposing
-entrance were pulled down after fifty years, and all
-that it leads to now is the Sessions House and police station.
-The long market-place is interrupted in one place by a block
-of shops, and in another by a mean-looking Corn Exchange;
-but at one end of it still stands an elegant, restored market
-cross, and at the other a bronze statue by Noble of Sir John
-Franklin, the most famous of Spilsby’s sons, the discoverer
-of the “North West Passage.” His hand rests on an anchor,
-and on the pedestal are the words: “They forged the last
-link with their lives.” Just beyond the town a fine elm-tree
-avenue leads to Eresby, the seat whence the Willoughby
-family take their title. In Domesday Book, 1086, Spilsby
-and Eresby are said to belong to the Bishop of Durham. His
-tenant Pinco, or one of his sons, the Fitz Pincos, acquired it;
-and about 1166 a Pinco heiress married Walter Bec, whose
-grandson has a sepulchral slab in Halton church, <i>c.</i> 1243. In
-1295 a John, the son of Walter, was created Baron Bec of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_334"></a>[334]</span>
-Eresby, the younger brothers being Antony, Bishop of Durham,
-and Thomas, who was consecrated Bishop of St. David’s at
-Lincoln in 1280. Lord Bec died in 1302, in which year Sir
-William of Willoughby (near Alford), who had married his
-daughter and heiress Alice, obtained a charter for a market
-at Spilsby every Monday. Their son Robert was the first
-Baron Willoughby De Eresby, who died in 1316. His son
-John fought at Crécy 1346, and in 1348 founded the College
-of the Holy Trinity at Spilsby, and the chantry which, when
-he and his successors in the fourteenth and sixteenth centuries
-with their huge altar tombs filled up the chancel of the old
-church, even blocking up the entire chancel arch with the
-stone screen of the Bertie monument, became eventually the
-chancel of the parish church. For the old church consisted
-of a nave and chancel into which the west door opened direct;
-it had probably a narrow north aisle, and certainly a large
-south aisle was added with the Trinity chapel at the east end
-of it. This aisle and chapel are now the nave and chancel
-of the church, which was restored in Ancaster stone in 1879,
-and a new south aisle added, the tower alone remaining of
-green-sand with lofty hard-stone pinnacles. In this the bells
-have just been re-hung, in December, 1913. John, second
-Baron Willoughby (1348), also the third (1372), who fought
-at Poictiers, and the fourth, with his second wife, Lady Neville,
-at his side (1380), have huge altar tombs with effigies in armour;
-he died 1389. A brass commemorates his third wife (1391),
-and another fine one, said to be Lincolnshire work, the fifth
-baron and his first wife (1410). Both these ladies being of
-the family of Lord Zouch. The gap between the fifth and
-the tenth Lord Willoughby is accounted for thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">WILLOUGHBY D’ERESBY</div>
-
-<p>The sixth Lord was created Earl of Vendome and Beaumont
-and died 1451. His second wife was Maud Stanhope, co-heiress
-of Lord Cromwell of Tattershall. The seventh and eighth,
-best known by their other title of Lord Welles, were both put
-to death for heading the Lincolnshire rebellion against
-Edward IV., the father by an act of bad faith on the king’s
-part, who had taken him, together with Dymoke the Champion,
-out of the Sanctuary in Westminster; and the son because,
-in revenge, joining Sir Thomas de la Launde, he had fought
-the Yorkists and been defeated at the battle of Loose-coatfield
-near Stamford, 1470. The ninth lord was William, who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_335"></a>[335]</span>
-was descended from a younger son of the fifth Baron Willoughby,
-since Richard Hastings, whom Joan, the sister and heiress of
-the eighth Lord Welles, had married, left no issue. There is
-a monument in Ashby church near Spilsby, though in a very
-fragmentary condition, to William and also to Joan and
-Richard Hastings. William married Katherine of Aragon’s
-maid-of-honour, Lady Mary Salines, for his second wife, and
-by a will, dated Eresby 1526, desired to be buried and have
-a monument erected to himself and his wife at Spilsby, but
-this was never done. The stone screen with its supporting
-figures of a hermit, a crowned Saracen, and a wild man, erect,
-set up in 1580, is in memory of his daughter and heiress,
-Katherine Duchess of Suffolk, and her second husband, Richard
-Bertie, her first husband being that Charles Brandon who
-obtained so huge a share of the estates confiscated by Henry VIII.
-in Lincolnshire. They lived at Grimsthorpe, on the west side
-of the county, which the king had given to Katherine’s parents;
-and thenceforth that became the chief seat of the Willoughby
-family, and the series of monuments is continued in Edenham
-church. But there is one more monument, in what is now
-called the Willoughby chapel at Spilsby. This is to a son
-of the duchess, Peregrine Bertie, tenth Baron Willoughby;
-he died at Berwick in 1601, and was buried at Spilsby as directed
-in his will; his daughter, Lady Watson, died in 1610, and,
-as she wished to be buried near her father, Sir Lewis Watson
-of Rockingham erected a monument to both father and
-daughter, the latter reclining on her elbow, with the baby,
-which caused her death, in a little square cot at her feet.
-Peregrine was so named because he was born abroad, his
-parents having fled from the Marian persecutions. His wife
-was the Lady Mary Vere who brought the office of chamberlain
-into the Willoughby family. It was claimed by her son Robert,
-the eleventh baron, who in 1630 was made Earl of Lindsey,
-and thus the barony became merged in the earldom, the fourth
-earl being subsequently created Duke of Ancaster.</p>
-
-<p>Eresby Manor was burnt down in 1769, and only the moat
-and garden wall and, at the end of the avenue, one tall brick-and-stone
-gate-pillar surmounted by a stone vase remain.
-At the suppression of the college and chantries the Grammar
-School was founded on the site of the college, just to the north
-of the church, Robert Latham being the first master, in 1550.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_336"></a>[336]</span></p>
-
-<p>At the south-west end of the church are three tablets to
-three remarkable brothers born in Spilsby towards the end
-of the eighteenth century.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE FRANKLINS</div>
-
-<p>Major James Franklin, who made the first military survey
-of India, and contributed a paper to the Geological Society
-in 1828, died in 1834. Sir Willingham Franklin who, after
-a distinguished career at Westminster and Oxford, died, with
-wife and daughter, of cholera, 1824, at Madras, where he was
-judge of the Supreme Court. And Sir John Franklin, the
-famous Arctic navigator, who fought at Trafalgar and Copenhagen,
-and died in the Arctic regions on June 11, 1847, before
-the historic disaster had overtaken the crews of the <i>Erebus</i>
-and <i>Terror</i>. His statue stands in his native town, and also
-in Hobart Town, where he lived for a time as Governor of
-Tasmania, and is one of the two statues in London which were
-set up by the nation. On his monument in Westminster
-Abbey are the beautiful lines by his friend and neighbour,
-and relative by marriage, Alfred Tennyson.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Not here! the white North has thy bones; and thou,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Heroic sailor-soul,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Art passing on thy happier Voyage now</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Towards no earthly pole.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The other brother, Thomas Adams Franklin, raised the Spilsby
-and Burgh battalion of volunteer infantry in 1801. Major
-Booth followed his good example and raised a company at
-Wainfleet to resist the invasion by Napoleon, and the men
-of the companies presented each of them with a handsome
-silver cup. Five Franklin sisters married and settled in the
-neighbourhood; and Catharine, the daughter of Sir Willingham,
-married Drummond, the son of the Rev. T. H. Rawnsley,
-vicar of Spilsby. Thus quite a clan was created, insomuch
-that forty cousins have been counted at one Spilsby ball.
-Drummond succeeded his father as rector of Halton, and very
-appropriately preached the last sermon in the old church at
-Spilsby at the closing service previous to its restoration,
-speaking from the pulpit which his father had occupied from
-1813 to 1825. His sermon, a very fine one, called “The Last
-Time,” was from 1 St. John ii. 18, and was delivered on
-Trinity Sunday, 1878.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LINCOLNSHIRE STORIES</div>
-
-<p>The time to visit Spilsby is on market day, when, round the
-butter cross, besides eggs, butter and poultry, pottery is displayed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_337"></a>[337]</span>
-“on the stones,” stalls are set up where one may buy
-plants and clothes, and things hard to digest like “bull’s eyes,”
-as well as boots and braces, and near “the Statue” at the
-other end, are farm requisites, sacks, tools, and the delightful-smelling
-tarred twine, as well as all sorts of old iron, chains,
-bolts, hinges, etc., which it seems to be worth someone’s while
-to carry from market to market. It is here that the humours
-of the petty auctioneer are to be heard, and the broad Doric
-of the Lincolnshire peasant. In the pig market below the
-church hill you may hear a man trying to sell some pigs, and
-to the objection that they are “Stränge an’ small,” he replies,
-“Mebbe just now; but I tell ye them pigs ’ull be greät ’uns,”
-then, in a pause, comes the voice from a little old woman who
-is looking on without the least idea of buying, “It ’ull be a
-straänge long while fust,” and in a burst of laughter the chance
-of selling that lot is snuffed out, or, as they say at the Westmorland
-dog trials, “blown off.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MORE STORIES</div>
-
-<p>There is an unconscious humour about the older Lincolnshire
-peasants which makes it very amusing to be about among
-them, whether in market, field or home. My father never
-returned from visiting his parish without some rich instance
-of dialect or some humorous speech that he had heard.
-Finding a woman flushed with anger outside her cottage
-once, and asking her what was amiss, he was told “It’s them
-Hell-cats.” “Who do you call by such a name?” “Them
-Johnsons yonder.” “Why? What have they been doing?”
-“They’ve been calling me.” “That’s very wrong; what have
-they been calling you?” “They’ve bin calling me Skinny.”
-At another time a woman, in the most cutting tones, alluding
-to her next-door neighbours who had an afflicted child, said,
-“We may-be poor, and Wanty [her husband] says we <i>are</i>
-poor, destitutely poor, and there’s no disgraäce in being poor,
-but <i>our</i> Mary-Ann doant hev fits.” Another time, when my
-sister was recommending a book from the lending library
-describing a voyage round the world, and called “Chasing
-the Sun,” a little old woman looked at the title and said, “Naäy,
-I weänt ha’ that: I doänt howd wi sich doings. Chaäsing the
-Sun indeed; the A’mighty will soon let ’em know if they gets
-a chevying him.” In the same village I got into conversation
-one autumn day with a small freeholder whose cow had been
-ill, and asked him how he had cured her, he said, “I got haafe a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_338"></a>[338]</span>
-pound o’ sulphur and mixed it wi’ warm watter and bottled
-it into her. Eh! it’s a fine thing I reckon is sulphur for owt
-that’s badly, cow or pig or the missis or anythink.” Then,
-with a serious look he went on, “There’s a straänge thing
-happened wi’ beans, Mr. Rownsley.” “What’s that?”
-“Why, the beans is turned i’ the swad” (= pod). “No!”
-“Yees they hev.” “How do you mean?” “Why they
-used to be black ends uppermost and now they’r ’tother waay
-on.” “Well, that’s just how they always have been.” “Naay
-they warn’t. It was ’81 they turned.” They <i>do</i> lie with the
-attachment of each bean to the pod, just the way you would
-not expect, and having noticed this he was convinced that
-up to then they had really lain the way he had always
-supposed they did, so difficult is it to separate fact from imagination.
-The similes used by a Lincolnshire native are often
-quite Homeric, as when an old fellow, who was cutting his
-crop of beans, the haulm of which is notoriously tough, resting
-on his scythe said, “I’d rayther plow wi two dogs nor haulm
-beans.” Then they have often a quiet, slow way of saying
-things, which is in itself humorous. I remember a labourer
-who was very deaf, but he had been much annoyed by the
-mother of a man whose place he had succeeded to. He was
-working alongside of his master and <i>apropos</i> of nothing but
-his own thoughts, he said, “Scriptur saäys we should forgive
-one another; but I doänt knoä. If yon owd ’ooman fell i’
-the dyke I doänt think <i>I</i> should pull her out. I mowt tell some
-’un on her, but I doänt think I should pull her out howiver.”
-There is some kindliness in that, though in quantity it is rather
-like the Irishman’s news: “I’ve come to tell you that I have
-nothing to tell you, and there’s some news in that.” But the
-Lincolnshire native is a trifle stern; even the mother’s hand
-is more apt to be punitive than caressing. “I’ll leather you
-well when I gets you home, my lad,” I have heard a mother
-say to a very small boy, and I have heard tell of a mother
-who, when informed that her little girl had fallen down the
-well, angrily exclaimed, “Drat the children, they’re allus i’
-mischief; and now she’s bin and drownded hersen I suppose.”</p>
-
-<p>In Westmorland it is the husband who <i>will</i> take too much
-at market on whom the vials of the wrath of the missis are
-outpoured, and they generally know how to “sarve” him.
-One good lady, on being asked “How<i>ever</i> did you get him ower<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_339"></a>[339]</span>
-t’wall, Betty?” replied “I didna get him ower at a’—I just
-threshed him through th’ hog-hole” (the hole in the wall for
-the sheep, or hoggetts, to pass through).</p>
-
-<p>Speaking of tippling, there is no more delightful story than
-this from Westmorland, of a mouse which had fallen into a
-beer vat and was swimming round in despair, when a cat looked
-over, and the mouse cried out, “If ye’ll git me oot o’ this ye
-may hev me.” The cat let down her tail and the mouse
-climbed up, and shaking herself on the edge of the vat, jumped
-off and went down her hole, and on being reproached by the
-cat as not being a mouse of her word, answered, “Eh! but
-ivry body knaws folks will say owt when they’re i’ drink.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">OLD BOLINGBROKE</div>
-
-<p>There are several pretty little bits of country near Spilsby,
-but the most interesting of the by-ways leads off from the
-Horncastle road at Mavis Enderby, and, going down a steep hill,
-brings us to <i>Old Bolingbroke</i>, a picturesque village with a
-labyrinth of lanes circling about the mounded ruins of the
-castle, where, in 1366, Henry IV. “of Bolingbroke” was born.
-It was built in 1140 by William de Romara, first Earl of Lincoln,
-and was, till 1643, when Winceby battle took place, a moated
-square of embattled walls, with a round tower at each corner.
-Here Chaucer used to visit John of Gaunt and the Duchess
-Blanche of Lancaster, on whose death, in 1369, he wrote his
-“Book of the Duchess.” The castle, after the Civil Wars,
-sank into decay, and the gate-house, the last of the masonry,
-fell in 1815. The road onwards comes out opposite Hagnaby
-Priory. William de Romara, who three years later founded
-Revesby Abbey, had for his wife the second Lady Lucia, the
-heiress of the Saxon Thorolds, an honoured name among
-Lincolnshire families. She brought him, among other possessions,
-the manor of Bolingbroke. Her second husband was
-the Norman noble, Ranulph, afterwards earl of Chester. The
-Thorolds were descended from Turold, brother of the Lady
-Godiva. There apparently were two <i>Lady Lucias</i>, whose
-histories are rather mixed up by the ancient chroniclers. The
-earlier of the two was, it seems, the sister of the Saxon nobles,
-Edwin and Morcar, and of King Harold’s queen Ealdgyth.
-Her hand was bestowed by the conqueror upon his nephew,
-Ivo de Taillebois (= Underwood), who became, according to
-Ingulphus and others, a monster of cruelty, and died in 1114.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HARRINGTON</div>
-
-<p>There are several by-ways to the north-west of Spilsby, which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_340"></a>[340]</span>
-all converge on <i>Harrington</i>. Here the church contains several
-monuments of interest. At the east end of the nave, a knight
-in chain armour with crossed legs and shield is said to be Sir
-John Harrington (<i>circa</i> 1300); and against the chancel wall,
-but formerly on the pavement, is the brass of Margaret Copledike
-(1480). Her husband’s effigy is missing. Under the
-tower window is the monument to Sir John Copledike (1557),
-and in the chancel south wall a canopied tomb with a brass
-of Sir John Copledike (1585). Opposite is a Jacobean monument,
-which testifies to the illiteracy of the age with regard to
-spelling, to Francis Kopaldyk, his wife and two children (1599).
-In the time of Henry III. it was spelt Cuppeldick. A Perpendicular
-font with the Copledike arms stands against the tower
-arch.</p>
-
-<p>Close to the church is Harrington Hall, with its fine old
-brick front and projecting porch. Hanging over the doorway
-is a large dial with the Amcotts arms, a curiously shaped
-indicator, and the date 1681. On either side of the porch
-which runs up the whole height of the house, are twelve
-windows, under deep, projecting, corbelled eaves. Inside is
-an old oak-panelled room, most richly carved. The house is
-the property of the Ingilby family, and at present the residence
-of E. P. Rawnsley, Esq., who has been for many years Master
-of the Southwold Hunt.</p>
-
-<p>Somersby is but two miles off, and we may without hesitation
-turn our thoughts to the terraced garden of this delightful
-old hall when we read in Tennyson’s “Maud”:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Birds in the high Hall-garden</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">When twilight was falling,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Maud, Maud, Maud, Maud,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">They were crying and calling.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The poet loved to tell how, when he was reading this and
-paused to ask, “Do you know what birds those were?” a
-lady, clasping her hands, said, “Oh, Mr. Tennyson, was it the
-nightingale?” though in reading it he had carefully given
-the harsh caw of the rooks.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BAG ENDERBY</div>
-
-<p>To get from here to <i>Somersby</i> you pass through <i>Bag Enderby</i>,
-where there is a fine church, now in a very ruinous state. The
-very interesting old font, which stands on two broken Enderby
-tombstones, has some unusual devices carved on it, such as
-David with a viol, and the Virgin with the dead Christ. One,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_341"></a>[341]</span>
-the most remarkable of all, is a running hart turning back
-its head to lick off with its long tongue some leaves from the
-tree of life growing from its back. This symbolism is purely
-Scandinavian; and that it could be used on a Christian font
-shows how thoroughly the two peoples and their two religions were
-commingling.<a id="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> The large number of villages about here ending
-in “by”—Danish for hamlet—is sufficient evidence of the
-number of settlers from over the North Sea who had taken
-up their abode in this part of the county.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus69">
-<img src="images/illus69.jpg" width="500" height="325" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Somersby Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The green-sand, which underlies the chalk, and of which
-almost all the churches are built, crops out by the roadside
-in fine masses both here and at Somersby and Salmonby, as
-it does too at Raithby, Halton, Keal, all in the immediate
-neighbourhood of the chalk wolds. Inside the church, slabs
-on the floor of the chancel retain their brass inscriptions to
-Thomas and Agnes Enderby (1390), and Albinus de Enderby,
-builder of the tower (1407); and on the wall is a monument
-to John and Andrew Gedney (1533 and 1591). The latter<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_342"></a>[342]</span>
-represented in armour and with his wife and family of two
-sons and two daughters. The wife, whose name is spelt first
-Dorithe, then Dorathe, “died the 7th of June 1591 and
-Andrew ____” the blank being left unfilled.</p>
-
-<p>The knives and scourges of Crowland Abbey (<i>see</i> Chap. <a href="#CHAPTER_XLI">XLI.</a>)
-are seen in the old glass. The custom of giving little knives
-to all comers at Crowland on St. Bartholomew’s Day was
-abolished by Abbot John de Wisbeche in the reign of Edward IV.
-In the tower is a fine peal of disused bells.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SOMERSBY CROSS</div>
-
-<p>Dr. Tennyson held this living with <i>Somersby</i>. This is a
-smaller building, but it retains in the churchyard a remarkable
-and perfect cross, a tall, slender shaft with pedimented
-tabernacle, under which are figures, as on the gable cross at
-Addlethorpe and on the head of the broken churchyard cross
-at Winthorpe—the Crucifixion is on one side and the Virgin
-and Child on the other.</p>
-
-<p>From Somersby there are two roads to Horncastle—each
-passes over the brook immortalised in “In Memoriam” and
-in the lovely little lyric, “Flow down cold rivulet to the sea,”
-and branching to the left, one passes through Salmonby, where
-Bishop William of Waynflete is said to have been rector. This
-is doubtful, but probably he was presented to the vicarage of
-Skendleby by the Prior of Bardney in 1430. The other and
-prettier road goes by <i>Ashby Puerorum</i> and <i>Greetham</i>, and both
-run out into the Spilsby and Horncastle road near <i>High
-Toynton</i>. Ashby Puerorum (or Boys’ Ashby) gets its name
-from an estate here bequeathed to support the Lincoln Minster
-choir boys. At this place, and again close by Somersby, the
-hollows in the Wold which this road passes through are among
-the prettiest bits of Lincolnshire.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_343"></a>[343]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXI">CHAPTER XXXI<br />
-<span class="smaller">SOMERSBY AND THE TENNYSONS</span></h2>
-
-<p>Tennyson’s Poetry descriptive of his home—Bronze Bust of the Poet—Dedication
-Festival—A Long-lived Family—Dialect poems.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This little quiet village, tucked away in a fold of the hills,
-with the eastern ridge of the Wolds at its back and the broad
-meadow valley stretching away in front of it and disappearing
-eastwards in the direction of the sea, had no history till now.
-It was only in 1808 that Dr. George Clayton Tennyson came
-to Somersby as rector of Somersby and Bag Enderby, incumbent
-of Beniworth and Vicar of Great Grimsby. He came as a
-disappointed man, for his father, not approving, it is said,
-of his marriage with Miss ffytche of Louth (a reason most
-unreasonable if it was so) had disinherited him in favour of
-his younger brother Charles, who became accordingly Charles
-Tennyson d’Eyncourt of Bayons Manor near Tealby.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Tennyson’s eldest son George was born in the parsonage
-at Tealby, in 1806, but died an infant. Frederick was born
-at Louth in 1807, and the other ten children at Somersby.
-Of these, the first two were Charles (1808) and Alfred (1809).</p>
-
-<p>They were a family of poets; their father wrote good verse,
-and their grandmother, once Mary Turner of Caister, always
-claimed that Alfred got all his poetry through her. Her
-husband George was a member of Parliament and lived in the
-<i>old</i> house at Bayons Manor.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE TENNYSONS</div>
-
-<p>From the fourteenth century the Tennysons, like their
-neighbours the Rawnsleys, had lived in Yorkshire; but Dr.
-Tennyson’s great-grandfather, Ralph, had come south of the
-Humber about 1700 to Barton and Wrawby near Brigg, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_344"></a>[344]</span>
-each succeeding generation moved south again. Thus, Michael,
-who married Elizabeth Clayton, lived at Lincoln, and was the
-father of George, the first Tennyson occupant of Bayons Manor.
-He had four children: George Clayton, the poet’s father;
-Charles, who took the name of Tennyson d’Eyncourt; Elizabeth,
-the “Aunt Russell” that the poet and his brothers and
-sisters were so fond of; and Mary, the wife of John Bourne of
-Dalby, of whom, though she lived so near to them, the Somersby
-children were content to see very little, for she was a rigid
-Calvinist, and once said to her nephew, “Alfred, when I look
-at you I think of the words of Holy Scripture, ‘Depart from me,
-ye cursed, into everlasting fire.’” At Somersby, then, the poet
-and all the children after Frederick were born in this order:
-Charles, Alfred, Mary, Emilia, Edward, Arthur, Septimus,
-Matilda, Cecilia, Horatio. They were a singularly fine family,
-tall and handsome, taking after their father in stature (he
-was six feet two inches) and after their mother (a small and
-gentle person, whose good looks had secured her no less than
-twenty-five offers of marriage) in their dark eyes and Spanish
-colouring. She was idolised by her eight tall sons and her
-three handsome daughters, of whom Mary, who became
-Mrs. Ker, was a wonderfully beautiful woman. Frederick,
-who outlived all his brothers, dying at the age of ninety-one
-after publishing a volume of poems in his ninetieth year, alone
-of the family had fair hair and blue eyes. Matilda is alive still
-at the age of ninety-eight.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">DR. KEATE AND WELLINGTON</div>
-
-<p>The three elder sons all went to the Grammar School at
-Louth in 1813, when Alfred was but seven. Frederick went
-thence to Eton in 1817, and to St. John’s, Cambridge, in 1826;
-Charles and Alfred stayed at Louth till 1820, and they left it
-with pleasure for home teaching. Few could have been better
-qualified to teach than the Doctor. He had a good library
-and he was a classical scholar; could read Hebrew and was not
-without a knowledge of mathematics, natural science and
-modern languages; also he was a rigid disciplinarian, and, like
-all good schoolmasters, was held in considerable awe by his
-pupils. I should like to have heard him had anyone in his
-day outlined to him as the method of the future the Montessori
-system. This power of terrifying a whole class and causing
-each one of a set of ordinarily plucky English lads to feel for
-the space of half an hour that his heart was either in his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_345"></a>[345]</span>
-mouth or in his shoes, would be incredible, were it not that
-there are so many English gentlemen now living who have
-experience of it. How well I remember the terrible, if irrational,
-state of funk which the whole of any class below the upper
-sixth was always in, when going up for their weekly lesson
-to that really most genial of men, Edward Thring, and it was
-the same elsewhere, and given the same sort of circumstances,
-the grown-up man could feel as frightened as the boy; witness
-this delightful story of the Iron Duke. No one could call him
-a coward, but on his return from Waterloo he went down on
-the fourth of June to Eton, and first told some one in his club
-that he meant to confess to Keate that he was the boy who
-had painted the Founder’s Statue or some such iniquity, the
-perpetrator of which Keate had been unable to discover. His
-friend extracted a promise that after his interview he would
-come and report at the club. He came, and being questioned
-by a group of deeply interested old Etonians, he said, “Well,
-it was all different, not at all like what I expected. I seized
-the opportunity when Keate came to speak with me by the
-window and said, “You remember the Founder’s Statue
-being defaced, sir?” “Certainly. Do you know anything
-about it?” he said sharply. “<i>No, sir.</i>” “You don’t mean
-to say you said that?” “Certainly I do, and what is more,
-every one of you would, in the circumstances, have said just
-the same,” and then and there they all admitted it; so difficult
-is it to shake off the feelings of earlier days. And yet he was not
-naturally terrible, and I who write this, never having been under
-him, have, as a small boy, spoken to Keate without a shadow
-of fear.</p>
-
-<p>This reminds me of a remark of Gladstone’s, who was giving
-us some delightful reminiscences of his days at Eton, and,
-speaking enthusiastically of Alfred Tennyson’s friend, Arthur
-Hallam, when on my saying that I had spoken with Keate,
-he turned half round in his chair and said, “Well, if you say
-you have seen Keate I must believe you, but I should not
-have thought it possible.” He had forgotten for the moment
-that Keate, after retiring from Eton, lived thirteen years at
-Hartley Westpall (near Strathfieldsaye), where my father was
-curate.</p>
-
-<p>To return to Somersby. We read in the memoir of the
-poet an amusing account, by Arthur Tennyson, of how the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_346"></a>[346]</span>
-Doctor’s approach when they were skylarking would make
-the boys scatter.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">EARLY VOLUMES</div>
-
-<p>In 1828 Charles and Alfred went up to Trinity, Cambridge.
-Frederick was already a University prize-winner, having got
-the gold medal for the Greek ode, and Charles subsequently
-got the Bell Scholarship, and Alfred the English Verse prize.
-The boys’ first poetical venture was the volume “Poems by
-Two Brothers,” published in 1826 by Jackson of Louth, who
-gave them £20, more than half to be taken out in books. To
-this volume Frederick contributed four pieces, the rest were
-by Charles and Alfred. The latter used very properly to speak
-with impatience of it in later years as his “early rot.” And
-it is quite remarkable how comparatively superior is the work
-done by Alfred as a boy of fourteen, and how little one can
-trace in the two brothers’ volume of that lyrical ability which
-in 1830 produced <i>Mariana</i> and <i>The Arabian Nights</i>, <i>The Merman</i>,
-<i>The Dying Swan</i> and the <i>Ode to Memory</i>. The majority of these
-poems were written at Cambridge, but there is much reference
-to Somersby in at least two of them, and the song, “A Spirit
-haunts the year’s last hours,” was, we know, written in the
-garden there with its border of hollyhocks and tiger-lilies. In
-the <i>Ode to Memory</i> he invokes her to arise and come, not from
-vineyards, waterfalls, or purple cliffs, but to</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Come from the Woods that belt the grey hill side,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The seven elms, the poplars four</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That stand beside my father’s door,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And chiefly from the brook that loves</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To purl o’er matted cress and ribbèd sand.</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">...</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">O! hither lead thy feet!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Pour round mine ears the livelong bleat</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of the thick fleecèd sheep from wattled folds,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Upon the ridgèd wolds.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">This is reminiscent of Somersby.</p>
-
-<p>Then again, Memory calls up the pictures of “the sand-built
-ridge of heaped hills that mound the sea” at Mablethorpe,
-and the view over “the waste enormous marsh.”</p>
-
-<p>In 1831 Dr. Tennyson died, aged fifty-two, and his sons left
-Cambridge. His widow lived on for thirty-four years, dying
-at the age of eighty-four, in 1865. They stayed on in the
-Somersby home till 1837, and a new volume came out in 1832,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_347"></a>[347]</span>
-with a whole array of poems of rare merit, showing how much
-the poet’s mind had matured in that last year at Cambridge.
-This volume, like the Louth volume, is dated for the year
-after that in which it was really published. It carried Alfred
-to the front rank at once, for in it was <i>The Lady of Shalott</i>,
-<i>The Palace of Art</i>, <i>The Miller’s Daughter</i>, <i>Œnone</i>, <i>The May
-Queen</i>, <i>New Year’s Eve</i>, <i>The Lotus Eaters</i>, <i>A Dream of Fair
-Women</i>, and the <i>Lines to James Spedding</i>, on the death of
-his brother Edward. Only think of all these wonderful poems
-in a thin book of 162 pages written before he was twenty-three.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE LINCOLNSHIRE COAST</div>
-
-<p>To Mablethorpe and Skegness on the Lincolnshire coast
-we find frequent allusions in many poems, <i>e.g.</i>, he speaks in
-<i>The Last Tournament</i> of “the wide-winged sunset of the misty
-marsh,” and when the Red Knight in drunken passion, trying
-to strike the King overbalances himself, he falls—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent14">“As the crest of some slow arching wave,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Heard in dead night along that table shore,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Drops flat, and after, the great waters break</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Whitening for half-a-league, and thin themselves,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Far over sands marbled with moon and cloud,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From less and less to nothing.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">A most accurate picture of that flat Lincolnshire coast with its
-“league-long rollers,” and hard, wet sands shining in the moonlight.
-In another place he speaks of “The long low dune
-and lazy-plunging sea.”</p>
-
-<p>In his volume of 1832 there are many pictures drawn from
-this familiar coast, <i>e.g.</i>, in <i>The Lotus Eaters</i>, <i>The Palace of Art</i>,
-<i>The Dream of Fair Women</i>; and in his 1842 volumes he
-speaks of</p>
-
-<p>“Locksley Hall that in the distance overlooks the sandy flats
-And the hollow ocean ridges roaring into cataracts.”</p>
-
-<p>A relative of mine was once reading this poem to the family
-of one of those Marsh farmers who had known “Mr. Alfred”
-when a youth, and who lived in the remotest part of that coast
-near the sandy dunes and far-spread flats between Skegness
-and “Gibraltar Point”; but she had not got far when at the
-line—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Here about the beach I wandered, nourishing a youth sublime,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With the fairy tales of science——”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">she was stopped by the farmer’s wife. “Don’t you believe
-him, Miss, there’s nothing hereabouts to nourish onybody,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_348"></a>[348]</span>
-’cepting it be an owd rabbit, and it ain’t oftens you can get
-howd of them.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">IN MEMORIAM</div>
-
-<p><i>In Memoriam</i> has many cantos descriptive of Somersby,
-both of the happy summer evenings on the lawn, when Mary</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent8">“brought the harp and flung</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A ballad to the bright’ning moon,”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">or of the walks about home with Arthur Hallam—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">by “Gray old grange or lonely fold,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Or low morass and whispering reed,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Or simple stile from mead to mead,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Or sheepwalk up the windy wold.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Or the winter nights when</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The Christmas bells from hill to hill</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Answer each other in the mist.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">And nothing could be more full of tender feeling than this farewell
-to the old home in Canto CI., beginning—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Unwatched, the garden bough shall sway,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The tender blossom flutter down,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Unloved, that beech will gather brown,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">This maple burn itself away.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">And in Canto CII.—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“We leave the well-beloved place</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Where first we gazed upon the sky;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The roofs that heard our earliest cry</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Will shelter one of stranger race.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">We go, but ere we go from home</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">As down the garden walks I move,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Two spirits of a diverse love</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Contend for loving masterdom.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">One whispers ‘here thy boyhood sung</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Long since its matin song, and heard</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The low love-language of the bird</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In native hazels tassel-hung.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The other answers, ‘yea, but here</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Thy feet have strayed in after hours</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">With thy lost friend among the bowers,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And this hath made them trebly dear.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">These two have striven half the day,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And each prefers his separate claim,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Poor rivals in a loving game,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That will not yield each other way.</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_349"></a>[349]</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">I turn to go: my feet are set</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">To leave the pleasant fields and farms;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">They mix in one another’s arms</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To one pure image of regret.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ARTHUR HALLAM</div>
-
-<p>Other sections speak of Arthur Hallam, and as each Christmas
-comes round, or each birthday of his friend, the poet’s feelings
-are voiced in such a way that, if we read it with care, the poem
-gives us a good deal of the author’s own life history.</p>
-
-<p>Arthur Hallam died on September 15, 1833, at Vienna, and
-his remains were brought home at the end of the year and
-interred at Clevedon in Somersetshire on January 4, 1834.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The Danube to the Severn gave</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The darken’d heart that beat no more;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">They laid him by the pleasant shore</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And in the hearing of the wave.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Immediately after his death Tennyson had turned to work
-as the one solace in his overwhelming grief, although, but for
-those dependent on his aid, such as his sister Emily who was
-betrothed to Hallam, he said that he himself would have gladly
-died. He wrote the fine classic poem <i>Ulysses</i>, in which he
-voiced the need he felt of going forward and braving the struggle
-of life, and then, before it had reached England, he wrote the
-first section of <i>In Memoriam</i> No. 9 addressed to the ship with
-its sad burden.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Fair ship that from the Italian shore</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Sailest the placid ocean plains</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">With my lost Arthur’s loved remains,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Spread thy full wings and waft him o’er.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">At some later time, possibly many years later, for <i>In Memoriam</i>
-was sixteen years in the making, he added section 10—“I hear
-the noise about thy keel”—which carries on the subject, and
-also alludes to Somersby church</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent8">“where the kneeling hamlet drains</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The chalice of the grapes of God.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>For the time he wrote no more sections, but busied himself
-with <i>The Two Voices</i>, only towards the end of 1834 he wrote
-section 30, which he afterwards prefaced by sections 28 and 29,
-all describing the sad first Christmas of 1833, the first since
-Arthur’s death. In 28 he hears the bells of four village steeples
-near Somersby rising and sinking on the wind. He had more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_350"></a>[350]</span>
-than once wished that he might never hear the Christmas bells
-again, but the sound of church bells had always touched him
-from boyhood, just as the words “far, far away” which
-always set him dreaming. In section 29 he bids his sisters,
-after decorating the church, make one more wreath for old
-sake’s sake, to hang within the house.</p>
-
-<p>Then section 30 tells how they wove it.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“With trembling fingers did we weave</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The holly round the Christmas hearth;”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">After this we hear how they made a “vain pretence”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Of gladness with an awful sense</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of one mute Shadow watching all.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">They attempt the usual Christmas games, but they have no
-heart for them, and all pause and listen to the wind in the
-tree-tops and the rain beating on the window panes. Afterwards
-they sit in a circle and think of Arthur, they try to sing,
-but the carols only bring tears to their eyes, for only last year
-he, too, was singing with them. After this Alfred sits alone
-and watches for the dawn which rises, bringing light and hope.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LEAVING SOMERSBY</div>
-
-<p>Section 104 brings us to another Christmas. Four years
-have elapsed since that last described. The Tennysons have
-left Somersby, with what regret they did so is beautifully
-told in the four sections immediately preceding this. And
-now, listening as of old for the Christmas bells, he hears not
-“four voices of four hamlets round,” but only</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“A single peal of bells below,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">That wakens at this hour of rest</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">A single murmur in the breast,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That these are not the bells I know.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The following section continues the subject. They are living
-at High Beech in Essex “within the stranger’s land.” He
-thinks of the old home and garden and his father’s grave.
-The flowers will bloom as usual, but there, too, are strangers,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“And year by year our memory fades</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From all the circle of the hills.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The change of place</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Has broke the bond of dying use.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">They put up no Christmas evergreens, they attempt no games
-and no charades. His sister Mary does not touch the harp<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_351"></a>[351]</span>
-and they indulge in no dancing, though it was a pastime of
-which they were extremely fond. But as of old Alfred looks
-out into the night and sees the stars rise, “The rising worlds
-by yonder wood,” and receives comfort. All this points to
-the sad year 1837, when they left the well-beloved place of
-his birth. And now in section 106 we have a New Year’s
-hymn of a very different character. It has a jubilant sound,
-and was certainly written some years after its predecessors.
-In 1837 he was in no mood to say “Ring happy bells across
-the snow.” But there is no allusion in this splendid hymn to
-Arthur Hallam at all, and in the following section they keep
-Arthur’s birthday, not any more in sadness, but</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“We keep the day, with festal cheer,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">With books and music, surely we</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Will drink to him, whate’er he be</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And sing the songs he loved to hear.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">But to return to Somersby.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus70">
-<img src="images/illus70.jpg" width="500" height="300" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Tennyson’s Home, Somersby.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE OLD HOME</div>
-
-<p>The quaint house with its narrow passages and many tiny
-rooms, the brothers’ own particular little western attic with
-its small window from which they could see the ‘golden globes’
-in the dewy grass which had “dropped in the silent autumn
-night,” the dining-room and its tall gothic windows with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_352"></a>[352]</span>
-carved heads and graceful gables, the low grey tower patched
-with brick, just across the road, (for the “noble tall towered
-churches” spoken of in <i>The Memoir</i> are not in this part of
-the county,) and the pre-Reformation (not “Norman”) cross
-near the porch, all these may still be seen much as they were
-one hundred years ago.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE CHURCH RE-OPENED</div>
-
-<p>True, the church has been lately put in good repair, and a
-fine bronze bust of the poet placed in the chancel. This was
-unveiled, and the church re-opened on Sunday, April 6, 1911,
-being the fulfilment of the plan projected on the occasion of
-the centenary celebration two years previously. On that
-Sunday the little church was more than filled with neighbours
-and relatives who listened to sermons from the Bishop of
-Lincoln and the Rev. Canon Rawnsley. Next day was Bank
-Holiday, and in a field near the rectory hundreds of Lincolnshire
-folk of every kind—farmers, tradespeople, gentry,
-holiday makers—assembled to do honour to their own Lincolnshire
-poet, and for a couple of hours listened intently to speeches
-about him and laughed with a will at the humours of the
-“Northern Farmer” read in their own native dialect, just as
-the poet intended; whilst the relatives of the poet and those
-who were familiar with his works looked with glad interest
-upon a scene of rural beauty which brought to the mind the
-descriptions in <i>The Lady of Shalott</i>, seeing on the slopes before
-them the promise of crops soon to “clothe the wold and meet
-the sky,” while far away to the left stretched the valley which
-pointed to Horncastle, the home of the poet’s bride, and on
-the right was the churchyard where the stern “owd Doctor”
-rests, and the church where for five and twenty years he
-ministered. The whole was a remarkable assemblage and a
-remarkable tribute, and the setting was a picture of quiet
-English rural life, one which the poet himself must often have
-actually looked out upon, and such as he has himself beautifully
-described in <i>The Palace of Art</i>:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“And one an English home—gray twilight pour’d</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">On dewy pastures, dewy trees,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Softer than sleep—all things in order stored,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">A haunt of ancient Peace.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A LONG-LIVED FAMILY</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The spirit of the poet seemed still to be a haunting presence
-in the place, and as then, so now and for all time his works
-speak to us. But three-quarters of a century have passed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_353"></a>[353]</span>
-since a Tennyson has had his home in Somersby. They left
-in 1837, and though Mary went back at times to see the
-“beloved place,” Alfred never set eyes on it again. Charles
-married in that year Louisa Sellwood, whose mother was a
-sister of Sir John Franklin, and thirteen years later Alfred
-married her sister Emily. They left Somersby; but Lincolnshire
-still kept possession of Charles, who took the name
-of Turner in addition to his own, and ministered happily at
-Grasby near Caistor, being both vicar and patron of the living;
-and he and his wife both died there in the spring of 1879,
-at the comparatively early age, for a Tennyson, of seventy-one,
-for the family have been a remarkably long-lived one.</p>
-
-<table summary="Lifespans of members of the Tennyson family">
- <tr>
- <td>The Mother</td>
- <td>died in 1865,</td>
- <td>aged</td>
- <td class="tdr">84</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Charles</td>
- <td><span class="ditto">”</span> <span class="ditto">”</span> 1879</td>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">71</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Mary</td>
- <td><span class="ditto">”</span> <span class="ditto">”</span> 1884</td>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">74</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Emilia</td>
- <td><span class="ditto">”</span> <span class="ditto">”</span> 1889</td>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">78</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Alfred</td>
- <td>died on October 6, 1892</td>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">83</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Emily Lady Tennyson</td>
- <td>died in 1896</td>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">83</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Frederick</td>
- <td><span class="ditto">”</span> <span class="ditto">”</span> 1898</td>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">91</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Arthur</td>
- <td>died in June, 1899</td>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">85</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Horatio</td>
- <td>died in October, 1899</td>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">80</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Cecilia</td>
- <td>died in 1909</td>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">92</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>Matilda, who was born before Cecilia and Horatio, still survives.
-I went to see her in the summer of 1913. I found
-her well and full of early memories. She was a girl in the
-schoolroom when she first saw Arthur Hallam, an event of
-which she had a vivid recollection. I said, “I suppose you get
-out every fine day for a drive.” “Oh,” she said, “I go out for
-a walk every day and take the dog.” I thought that rather
-wonderful at her age. “Yes, I am ninety-seven,” she said,
-“and I mean to live to be 105.” I told her how Queen
-Victoria, who was always looking forward to reunion with
-the dear departed—but ever a ceaseless worker—used to say,
-“my dear, you should always act as if you were going to live
-for ever.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE MASTER’S OPINION</div>
-
-<p>Alfred, who succeeded Wordsworth as Poet Laureate in 1850,
-was raised to the Upper House in 1884. He is buried in
-Westminster Abbey side by side with his great contemporary,
-Robert Browning, and on his grave was laid a wreath of bay-leaves
-from a tree derived from the bay which flourishes over<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_354"></a>[354]</span>
-Virgil’s tomb near Naples, and on the wreath were Tennyson’s
-own magnificent lines, written at the request of the Mantuans
-for the nineteenth centenary of their poet’s death (1881).</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“I salute thee, Mantovano,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">I that loved thee since my day began,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Wielder of the stateliest measure</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Ever moulded by the lips of man.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE POET’S RANGE OF KNOWLEDGE</div>
-
-<p>The recent appearance (October, 1913) of a notable volume
-of Tennyson’s poems, introduced by a Memoir and concluding
-with the poet’s own notes, may well serve as the text for some
-remarks on his poems generally. The volume bound in green
-cloth is priced at 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> The Memoir is somewhat abbreviated
-from the two interesting volumes published by his son in 1897,
-which appeared again as the first four volumes of Messrs.
-Macmillan’s fine twelve-volume edition of 1898. There are,
-however, a few additions, notably a letter from the Master of
-Trinity, Cambridge, telling how he once, years ago, asked
-Dr. Thompson, the Master, whether he could say, not from
-later evidence, but from his recollection of what he thought
-at the time, which of the two friends had the greater intellect,
-Hallam or Tennyson. “Oh, Tennyson,” he said at once,
-with strong emphasis, as if the matter was not open to doubt.
-This is very high praise indeed, for Gladstone said that Hallam
-was far ahead of anyone at Eton in his day, and Monckton
-Milnes thought him the only man at Cambridge to whom he
-“bowed in conscious inferiority in all things.” The Notes
-first appeared in the very pleasant “Annotated Edition”
-edited also by Hallam Lord Tennyson within the last five years.
-The present generation can never know the delight of getting
-each of those little green volumes which came out between
-’32 and ’55, and sequels to which kept following till ’92. But
-for general purposes it is far more convenient to have a one-volume
-edition, such as we have had for some time now. This
-new edition, however, with its Memoir, gives us what, as the
-years go by, is more and more valuable, enabling us to read
-the poet in his verses and to know what manner of man he was,
-and how his environment affected him at the different stages
-of his life. The Notes add an interest, and though it is seldom
-that in any but the <i>In Memoriam</i> Cantos any explanation
-is needed to poems that are so clear and so easily intelligible,
-one gains information and finds oneself here and there let into<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_355"></a>[355]</span>
-the author’s secrets, which is always pleasant. The book
-runs to over a thousand pages, and is so beautifully bound
-that it lies open at any page you choose. There is an interesting
-appendix to the Notes, giving the music to “The Silent Voices,”
-composed by Lady Tennyson and arranged for four voices
-by Dr. Bridge for Lord Tennyson’s funeral at the Abbey,
-October 12, 1892. Also a previously unpublished poem of
-his later years, entitled “Reticence.” She is called the half-sister
-of Silence, and is thus beautifully described:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Not like Silence shall she stand,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Finger-lipt, but with right hand</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Moving toward her lip, and there</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Hovering, thoughtful, poised in air.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Then comes a facsimile of the poet’s MS. of “Crossing the
-Bar,” finally, besides the usual index of first lines, the book
-ends with an index to <i>In Memoriam</i>, and, what we have always
-wanted, an index to the songs.</p>
-
-<p>Undoubtedly in the future this new edition will be the
-Tennyson for the library shelf, and a very complete and compact
-volume it is. Personally, I like the little old green volumes,
-but if I were now recommending an edition not in one volume,
-I would say, “Have the Eversley or Annotated Edition in
-nine volumes, which exactly reproduces the page and type
-of those old original volumes with the added advantage of
-the Notes.” It is hardly to be expected that the spell with
-which Tennyson bound all English-speaking people for three
-generations should not in a measure be relaxed, but though
-we have a fuller chorus of singers than ever before, and an
-unusually appreciative public, the attempt so constantly made
-to decry Tennyson has no effect on those who have for years
-found in him a charm which no poet has surpassed, and,
-indeed, it will be long before a poet arises who has, as Sir
-Norman Lockyer observes, “such a wide range of knowledge
-and so unceasing an interest in the causes of things and the
-working out of Nature’s laws, combined with such accuracy
-of observation and exquisite felicity of language.” Let me
-give one more criticism, and this time by a noted scholar,
-Mr. A. Sidgwick, who speaks of his “inborn instinct for the
-subtle power of language and for musical sound; that feeling
-for beauty in phrase and thought, and that perfection of form
-which, taken all together, we call poetry.” That perfection<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_356"></a>[356]</span>
-was the result of labour as well as of instinct. He had an ear
-which never played him false, hence he was a master of melody
-and metre, and he was never in a hurry to publish until he had
-got each line and each word right. “I think it wisest,” he
-wrote to one of his American admirers, “for a man to do his
-work in the world as quietly and as well as he can, without
-much heeding the praise or dispraise.” He was a lover of the
-classics, and in addressing Virgil on the nineteenth centenary
-of his death, as quoted above, he himself alludes to this.
-Without being what we call a great scholar, in his classic poems
-he is hard to beat, while in his translations of Homer he
-certainly has no equal. Then in his experiments in classic
-metres, whether in the “Metre of Catullus” or in the Alcaics
-in praise of Milton, his perfect accuracy is best understood if
-we turn to the similar experiments by living poets, who never
-go far without a blunder, at least none that I have ever read do.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE DIALECT POEMS</div>
-
-<p>To the Lincolnshire folk, his dialect poems, written in the
-dialect which was current in his youth at Spilsby and in the
-country about it (and still used there, I am glad to say, though
-not so universally or so markedly as of yore), give genuine
-pleasure, and are full of humour and of character, and it is a
-tribute to his accurate ear and memory that, after an absence
-of some twenty-seven years, he should have got the Lincolnshire
-so correct. He did it all right, but for fear he might have
-forgotten and got wrong, he asked a friend to look at it and
-criticise; unfortunately the friend lived in the north of the
-county and knew not the dialect of “Spilsbyshire,” so he
-altered it all to that which was spoken about Brigg, which
-is more like Yorkshire, and it had to be put back again. But
-some of the northern dialect has stuck, and in “The Northern
-Farmer Old Style” the ‘o’ is seen in ‘moind,’ ‘doy,’ ‘almoighty,’
-etc., where the Spilsby sound would be better rendered by
-using an ‘a.’ This ‘o’ is never found in any of his subsequent
-dialect poems, and in a note to the text in the “Northern
-Cobbler” the poet points out that the proper sound is given
-by ‘ai.’</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FAMILIAR QUOTATIONS</div>
-
-<p>One sign of the remarkable way in which our Lincolnshire
-poet has made himself the poet of the English-speaking race
-is the extraordinary number of familiar quotations which he
-has given us. For the last fifty years in book and newspaper,
-in speech and sermon, some line or some phrase of his has<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_357"></a>[357]</span>
-constantly occurred which the user felt certain that his hearer
-or readers would recognise, until our literature has become
-tessellated with Tennysonian expressions, and they have
-always given that satisfaction which results from feeling that
-in using his words we have said the thing we wished to say in
-a form which could not be improved upon. In this respect
-of “daily popularity and application,” I think Shakespeare
-alone excels him, though Pope and Wordsworth may run him
-close.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus71">
-<img src="images/illus71.jpg" width="500" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Little Steeping.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_358"></a>[358]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXII">CHAPTER XXXII<br />
-<span class="smaller">ROADS FROM SPILSBY</span></h2>
-
-<p>Road to Louth—Partney—Dr. Johnson—His letter on Death of Peregrine
-Langton—Dalby—Langton and Saucethorpe—View from Keal Hill
-with Boston Stump—“Stickfoot Stickknee and Stickneck”—The
-Hundleby Miracle—Raithby—Mavis Enderby—Lusby—Hameringham—The
-Hourglass Stand—Winceby—Horncastle—The Horse Fair—The
-Sleaford Road—Hagnaby—East Kirkby—Miningsby—Revesby
-Abbey—Moorby—Wood Enderby—Haltham—Tumby Wood—Coningsby—Tattershall—Billinghay—Haverholme
-Priory.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The four roads from Spilsby go north to Louth, and south to
-Boston, each sixteen miles; east to Wainfleet, eight miles; and
-west to Horncastle, ten miles. The Wainfleet one we have
-already described and two-thirds of that from Louth. The
-remaining third, starting from Spilsby, only goes through
-two villages—Partney and Dalby. <i>Partney</i> lies low in the
-valley of Tennyson’s “Cold rivulet,” and those who have
-driven across the flat meadows between the village and the
-mill after sundown know how piercingly cold it always seems.</p>
-
-<p>The place has a very long history. Bede, who died in 725,
-writing twelve hundred years ago and speaking of the Christianising
-of Northumbria by Paulinus, who was consecrated Bishop
-of York in 625, and his visit to the province of Lindissi, <i>i.e.</i>,
-“the parts of Lindsey” and Lincoln in particular, says that
-the Abbot of Peartaney (= Partney, near Spilsby, which was
-a cell of Bardney) spoke to him once of a man called Deda,
-who was afterwards, in 730, Abbot of Bardney and a very
-truthful man, “presbyter veracissimus,” and said that Deda
-told him that he had talked with an aged man who had been
-baptised by Bishop Paulinus in the presence of King Ædwin,
-in the middle of the day, and with him a multitude of people,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_359"></a>[359]</span>
-in the River Treenta, near a city called in the language of the
-Angles, Tiovulfingaceaster; this was in 627. Many have
-taken the place to be Torksey, though that in the Anglo-Saxon
-chronicle is Turcesig. Green suggested it was at the ford of
-Farndon beyond Newark, but it was far more likely to be
-at Littleborough Ferry, two miles north of Torksey, where
-the Roman road (“Till bridge Lane”) from Lincoln crossed
-the river. But certainly Torksey is the nearest point of the
-river to Lincoln, and the Fossdyke went to it, as well as a road,
-so that communication was easy and inexpensive, and on the
-whole I should be inclined to say that Torksey was the place
-of baptism.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">PARTNEY</div>
-
-<p>But to return to Partney. In addition to its being a ‘cell’
-of Bardney Abbey, we know there was a very fine hospital at
-Partney, dedicated to St. Mary Magdalene, before 1138, and
-among the tombs recently uncovered at Bardney is one of
-Thomas Clark, rector of Partney, 1505. It appears to have been
-a market town when Domesday Book was compiled, at a time
-when Spilsby was of no account; but the Black Death in 1349
-or the plague in 1631, when Louth registered 500 deaths in
-two months, and in the Alford neighbourhood Willoughby
-also suffered, severely decimated the place, and tradition has
-it that some clothing dug up eighty years after burial
-caused a fresh and violent outbreak. Whenever it happened,
-for no records exist, the consequence was that the glory of
-Partney as the next market town to Bolingbroke departed,
-and Spilsby grew as Partney dwindled. Of course the healthy
-situation of Spilsby had much to do with it. Yet Partney
-still retains the two sheep fairs on August 1 for fat lambs and
-September 19 for sheep, and they are the biggest sheep fairs
-in the neighbourhood. Two other fairs take place, on August 25
-and at Michaelmas, and it is noticeable that three of the four
-are held on the eve of the festivals of the Virgin Mary and
-Mary Magdalen. In 1437 we find that Matilda, wife of
-Thomas Chaucer, the eldest son of the poet, had a share of an
-eighteenth part of the Partney market tolls. Fine brasses to
-her and her husband exist in Ewelme church, near Oxford.
-On fair days sheep are penned all along the streets and in
-adjoining fields, and “Beast” on the second day are standing
-for half a mile down the Scremby road.</p>
-
-<p>The church is dedicated to St. Nicolas, the most popular of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_360"></a>[360]</span>
-all church patrons, who was Bishop of Myra in Lycia in the
-fourth century. As patron of fishermen he has many sea
-coast churches, and he is also the peculiar saint of children,
-who know him by his Dutch name of Santa Klaus. One of the
-oldest oaks in England is in the churchyard. The chiming
-church clock, put in in 1869, is a monument to the skill of a
-clever amateur, Sidney Maddison, Esq., who fitted it with
-“Dennison’s three-legged escapement,” which was then a
-new and ingenious invention of the late Lord Grimthorpe.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">DR. JOHNSON</div>
-
-<p>In 1764 Dr. Johnson walked over from <i>Langton</i> with his
-friend, Bennet Langton, to see Bennet’s Uncle Peregrine. He
-died two years later aged eighty-four, and the doctor wrote
-to his friend: “In supposing that I should be more than
-commonly affected by the death of Peregrine Langton you were
-not mistaken: he was one of those I loved at once by instinct
-and by reason. I have seldom indulged more hope of anything
-than of being able to improve our acquaintance to
-friendship. Many a time have I placed myself again at Langton,
-and imagined the pleasure with which I should walk to Partney
-in a summer morning, but this is no longer possible. We
-must now endeavour to preserve what is left us, his example
-of piety and economy. I hope you make what enquiries you
-can and write down what is told you. The little things
-which distinguish domestic character are soon forgotten: if
-you delay to enquire you will have no information: if you
-neglect to write, information will be in vain. His art of life
-certainly deserves to be known and studied. He lived in
-plenty and elegance upon an income which to many would
-appear indigent, and to most, scanty. How he lived, therefore,
-every man has an interest in knowing. His death I hope
-was peaceful: it was surely happy.”</p>
-
-<p>After Partney the road goes up the hill to <i>Dalby</i>. Here the
-old house where Tennyson’s aunt, Mrs. Bourne, lived, was
-burnt down in 1841, and the thatched barn-like church swept
-away in 1862. The charm of the present house lies in its
-beautiful garden.</p>
-
-<p>Having got on to the chalk wold a fine view opens over the
-wide vale to the left as far as the next ridge, which stretches
-from Spilsby to Hagworthingham. About a mile further on,
-a road goes sharply down to the left into Langton, and across
-a watersplash to Colonel Swan’s residence at <i>Sausthorpe</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_361"></a>[361]</span>
-where again we find cross-roads near the pretty little church
-built by Gilbert Scott, with a crocketed spire, the only spire
-in the neighbourhood. The roads lead back to Partney, on
-to Raithby over the stream, to Horncastle and to Harrington,
-all by-ways. But to return to our Spilsby and Louth highway.
-From the turn to Langton we keep rising and see some tumuli
-on our left, and then another left turn to Brinkhill, where,
-from a steep and curiously scarped hillside, roads descend
-right and left to Ormsby and Harrington; but we will keep
-on the highway for another mile till we find that the Louth
-road by Haugh goes off to the left, and the Roman road to
-Burgh to the right, and the way straight forward comes to
-Well Vale and Milecross hill, and so drops into Alford. The
-rest of the road to Louth we have described in the Louth
-chapter.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">KEAL HILL</div>
-
-<p>The other roads from Spilsby are, south to Boston and west
-to Horncastle. The Boston road is noticeable for the wonderful
-view of the fen, with the “Stump” standing far up into
-the sky, which you get from Keal Hill, where the green-sand
-ends and the road drops into a plain which is without a hill
-or even a rise for the next fifty or sixty miles. After Keal
-the road passes by <i>Stickford</i>, <i>Stickney</i> and <i>Sibsey</i>—the last having
-a very handsome transition Norman tower, and a ring of eight
-bells—and comes into Boston by Wide Bargate. The road is
-uninteresting throughout, and so monotonous that a story is
-told of someone driving in a coach in years gone by, when
-roads were deep and miry, who put his head out and asked
-the name of each place they came to. “What is this?”
-“Stickford, sir.” “And this?” “Stickney, sir.” “Stick-foot!
-Stick-knee! we shall come to Stick-neck next; you had
-better turn back.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus72">
-<img src="images/illus72.jpg" width="500" height="475" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Sibsey.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">WESLEY’S CHAPEL</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LUSBY</div>
-
-<p>The Horncastle road from Spilsby goes out along the green-sand
-by <i>Hundleby</i>, from the tower of which I remember a man falling
-to the ground and receiving no hurt at all, the nearest approach
-to a miracle any one need wish to experience. Much of the
-money for the re-building of the church was raised by the
-untiring industry and beautiful needlework of Mrs. Ed.
-Rawnsley of Raithby; for <i>Raithby</i>, with its pretty broken
-ground and ornamental water and its beautifully kept church
-filled with good modern glass, was for half a century the home
-of the Rev. Edward Rawnsley. The old stable adjoins the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_362"></a>[362]</span>
-churchyard, and by an anomalous arrangement the loft over
-the stable is fitted up as a Wesleyan chapel, the use of it for
-that purpose having been granted <i>in perpetuo</i> to John Wesley
-by his friends, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Carr Brackenbury. The
-road goes on straight from here by <i>Hagworthingham</i> or turns
-to the left to <i>Mavis Enderby</i>, and so strikes a parallel route,
-both of them unite at the top of the hill which runs down by
-High Toynton into Horncastle. The name <i>Mavis</i> was originally
-Malbyse, a name more characteristic than complimentary,
-for it means evil beast. The word byse, or bys, exists in Bison,
-and the name of the unpleasant one is found again in the village
-of Acaster Malbis, near York. There is nothing of special
-interest on the “Hag” road, but the Mavis Enderby road leads<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_363"></a>[363]</span>
-us to Lusby and Winceby; of these <i>Lusby</i> has a most interesting
-little church, thoroughly well restored, with a good deal
-of Norman work and some unmistakable Saxon work in it.
-There are two blocked doorways on the north-west, one with
-Norman zigzag moulding in green-sand showing how durable
-a material it is when properly laid and not exposed to wet.
-Some singular arcading of a very early type is seen on the
-west of the walls on either side of the round-headed chancel
-arch, which is not in the centre of the wall. It has been
-renewed in green-sand of various colours. This work may have
-been Saxon, for there was a church here when Domesday
-Book was written, and there is certainly a definite bit of
-“Long and Short” work on the right hand side of the blocked
-south doorway, and a fragment of a Saxon stone inside, closely
-resembling the Miningsby Stone, but it is difficult to speak
-with certainty, as the early Normans made use of Saxon ornamentation.
-Outside there are two courses of big basement
-stones running on both sides of the nave—one bevelled and set
-back a little. Inside is a low-side window, two or three
-aumbreys, two arched recesses for tombs, a niche near the
-chancel arch, and a very good stone head of a queen projecting
-from the south-east window in the nave. There is also a
-remarkable little “Keyhole” window high up in the north wall
-of the chancel. The masonry is rough and amorphous, but
-very solid. The old rood-screen of three arches is very handsome.
-Under the Communion table is a sepulchral slab with
-an inscription in old lettering, mostly obliterated, from which
-the brass tablet has been removed and put up on the wall.
-It is singular, being a dialogue between a deceased wife and her
-husband:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">[<span class="smcap">She</span>] My fleshe in hope doth rest and slepe</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">In earth here to remain;</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">My spirit to Christ I give to kepe</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Till I do rise againe.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">[<span class="smcap">He</span>] And I with you in hope agre</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Though I yet here abide;</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">In full purpose if Goddes will be</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">To ly doune by your side.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Going on two miles along the Roman road to Horncastle
-we come to <i>Hameringham</i>. Here, as at <i>Lusby</i>, there is no tower,
-but a little slated bell-turret. Two large arches and one beautiful<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_364"></a>[364]</span>
-little pointed arch at the west end on small octagonal pillars
-divide the nave from the aisle. The western pillar is of the
-local green-sand, and dates from the thirteenth century. The
-other pillar is of whitish stone, and the small eastern respond
-is of the same. These date from the fourteenth century, and
-have boldly foliaged capitals. Close together on the abacus
-are two distinct marks of bullets which must have come in
-through the aisle window. There is a good fifteenth century
-font, and on the Jacobean pulpit is the original hour-glass stand,
-and with an old church hour-glass in it. These stands are still
-to be seen at Bracebridge, Leasingham, Sapperton and Belton
-in the Isle of Axholme. The traces of a blocked priest’s door
-are visible on the north side. Oddly enough the dressings
-of the porch, etc., are of red sandstone from Dumfries. It
-is a good hard stone, but there is much to be said for always,
-if possible, using the stone of the country.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">WINCEBY FIGHT</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HORNCASTLE</div>
-
-<p>The next village is <i>Winceby</i>, where “Slash Lane” commemorates
-the place of Cromwell’s cavalry-battle in 1643.
-In the south chapel of <i>Horncastle</i> church, some four miles on,
-we shall see a goodly array of scythes on long straight handles,
-which are said to have been used with deadly effect in this fight.
-This church has five three-light clerestory windows on each side
-of the nave, but in the chancel, six on the south and only five
-on the north side, the eastmost one being larger than the rest.
-There is an outside belfry staircase with a cone to it built against
-the middle of the south wall of the tower. Inside, the pilasters
-of the tower arch die away into the arch moulding without
-capitals. The brass in the north wall, to Lionel Dymoke, is
-remarkable (date 1519); and in the north chapel a tomb to
-Sir Ingram Hopton “who paid his debt to Nature and duty
-to his King and Country in the attempt of seizing the arch
-rebel in the bloody skirmish near Winceby, October 6, 1643.”
-This should be October 11. The arch rebel was Cromwell,
-who was unhorsed and nearly taken prisoner by Sir Ingram.
-He afterwards slept at Horncastle in a house in West Street.
-This battle secured Lindsey and the Wolds for Cromwell, Boston
-and the Fens were never Royalist. The River Bain, which
-rises in Kelston near the Louth and Rasen road, gave its name
-to the Roman station of Banovallum. It flows through Gayton-le-Wold,
-Biscathorpe, Donington-on-Bain and Goulceby to
-Horncastle, and out by Coningsby and Tattershall to the River<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_365"></a>[365]</span>
-Witham, and it makes a peninsula at Horncastle, whence
-the name of Hyrn-ceaster, = the camp at the horn or bend.
-Portions of a Roman wall still exist near the market-place,
-and at the south-west corner of the churchyard. The manor
-was sold in 1230 to the Bishop of Carlisle for the use of the
-see; it served as a refuge when border invasions made the
-diocese of Carlisle undesirable as a peaceful home, and during
-the fourteenth century was the usual episcopal residence.</p>
-
-<p>The celebrated horse fair is not what it used to be. Lincoln
-fair is more accessible, and is now the more important of the
-two. But it still affords two or three days of wild excitement,
-with horses tearing about the streets. At one time the
-fair lasted three weeks. August was a thirsty month, and the
-number of beer-houses had to be increased <i>pro. tem.</i> to meet
-the need of both buyers and sellers; so five-shilling licenses were
-issued called bush or bough licenses, a bush being hung out for
-a sign, a custom once common in England and still prevalent
-on the Continent. Hence, the proverb, “Good wine needs
-no bush,” <i>i.e.</i>, no advertisement. The Hon. Edward Stanhope
-of Revesby, who was Minister for War in 1868, has a statue
-in the market-place, near the house in which the Sellwoods
-lived, two of whom, Louisa and Emily, married Charles and
-Alfred Tennyson.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving the market-place for the Lincoln road you pass what
-is an unusual feature in a town—an elm tree overhanging the
-street, and having in it several rooks’ nests. It is near the
-“Fighting Cocks” inn. There is a similar tree loaded with
-nests in the town of Staines.</p>
-
-<p>When the river was used for navigation there was a high
-arched bridge with a towing-path under it, and the bridge,
-though now flat, is still called “the bow bridge.”</p>
-
-<p>At that time the church was filled with box pews and lofts,
-and the front row of pews in the lofts were sold to different
-families by auction and would fetch as much as £80, the second
-row reaching £40. But though there were ardent churchgoers
-in the town, the villages around were very indifferently
-served, having in quite a dozen instances in that one neighbourhood
-no parsonage house and consequently no resident
-parson.</p>
-
-<p>It is interesting to know that a good deal of the carving in
-the church was done less than fifty years ago by a carpentry<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_366"></a>[366]</span>
-class of young men who took lessons for the purpose from a
-clever carver called Thomas Scrivener.</p>
-
-<p>But we have one other road to speak of, which is the way from
-Spilsby to Sleaford.</p>
-
-<p>The Boston road from Spilsby, after it reaches the edge of
-the green-sand, where it suddenly breaks down at West Keal
-into the level fen, divides at the foot of the hill, and the right-hand
-road goes westwards by Hagnaby, East Kirkby, Revesby,
-Coningsby, Tattershall and Billinghay to Sleaford. This is all
-a level road. <i>Hagnaby Priory</i>, two miles from West Keal,
-is the residence of Mrs. Pocklington Coltman. The house is
-modern, in fact, there never was a priory here, but near Alford
-there was once an abbey of Hagnaby, so the name is suggestive
-of Priors.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">EAST KIRKBY</div>
-
-<p>Another two miles brings us to <i>East Kirkby</i>; the turn to the
-right takes us to the church which, having been entrusted to
-the capable hands of Mr. W. D. Caröe, is a model of what
-church restoration should be. He has put square-headed
-clerestory windows in the chancel with good effect. The
-tower has a beautiful two-light early Decorated window. The
-piers of the nave are remarkably slender. There is a good font,
-and the early Perpendicular rood screen is a very graceful one.
-In the north wall of the chancel is a two-light low-side window
-and a curious recess, possibly an Easter Sepulchre. It is
-covered with diaper work, and with wild geranium, oak leaves
-and acorns excellently carved in stone, and below this, some
-half-figures of the three Maries, each holding a heart-shaped
-casket, of spices perhaps for embalming. A basin projecting
-from the front is thought to have been a receptacle for the
-Easter offerings. A similar basin, as Mr. Jeans in Murray’s
-Guide points out, is attached to the tomb of Edward II. at
-Gloucester. A little further on is the tiny church of <i>Miningsby</i>,
-only to be approached by footpaths over grass fields. It
-has in it a pre-Norman slab of very uncommon character with
-figure-of-eight intertwined knot work and a herring-bone border.
-A fragment with similar figure-of-eight work is in Mavis Enderby
-church, on a coped stone which has been cut to make a door-step,
-and a smaller bit like it is in Lusby church—probably all
-the work of the same Saxon mason. In a house near the
-church is a stone with the initials “L. G., 1544,” which must
-refer to the Goodrich family; for East Kirkby was the birthplace<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_367"></a>[367]</span>
-of Thomas Goodrich, Bishop of Ely, 1534, Lord Chancellor,
-1550, and coadjutor in the first Communion Office with
-Cranmer.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">REVESBY</div>
-
-<p>The next place on the Spilsby and Sleaford road is <i>Revesby
-Abbey</i> (Hon. R. Stanhope), a fine deer park with a modern
-house, built by J. Banks-Stanhope, Esq., 1848. The previous
-house had been the residence of the great naturalist, Sir Joseph
-Banks, P.R.S., who died in 1820, and took part with Rennie
-in devising and carrying out the drainage of the East Fen.
-The abbey, founded in 1143 by W. de Romara, Earl of Lincoln,
-was colonised from Rievaulx, and was itself the parent of Cleeve
-Abbey in Somerset. The abbey was a quarter of a mile south-east
-of the present church, in which are preserved the few
-fragments now extant of a building which was once 120 feet
-long and sixty feet wide. The Hon. Edward Stanhope in
-1870 discovered the tombs and bodies of the founder and his
-two sons. The founder, who had become a monk, had requested
-to be buried “before the high Altar,” and his tomb was inscribed,
-“Hic jacet in tumba Wiellielmus de Romare, comes Lincolniae,
-Fundator istius Monasterii Sancti Laurentii de Reivisbye.”
-The site of his re-burial is marked by a granite stone. Among
-the abbey deeds is one by which the Lady Lucia’s second
-husband, Ranulph Earl of Chester, gives to the abbey “his
-servant Roger son of Thorewood of Sibsey with all his property
-and chatells.” I don’t suppose that Roger found the abbey
-folk bad to work for; they certainly did much for the good of
-the neighbourhood, notably in keeping up the roads and bridges,
-which was one of the recognised duties of religious houses; but
-all this came to an end when in 1539, like so many other Lincolnshire
-estates, it was granted by Henry VIII. to his brother-in-law
-the Duke of Suffolk. The Duke died in 1545, and was
-buried at Windsor; his two sons both died in one day, July 16,
-1551, in the Bishop of Lincoln’s house at Buckden.</p>
-
-<p>The road past the park gates is very wide, with broad grass
-borders on either side, and a fine row of wych elms bordering
-the park, at each end of which are some model farm buildings
-of the best Lincolnshire kind; and, to take us more than a
-thousand years back, we have two large tumuli quite close to
-the road. There were three, but one, after being examined
-by Sir Joseph Banks in 1780, was levelled in 1892; later the
-existing two were explored and one was found to contain a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_368"></a>[368]</span>
-clay sarcophagus, which possibly once contained the remains
-of a British king.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MOORBY</div>
-
-<p>Just past the tumuli is the inn, at the four cross-roads. That
-to the left runs absolutely straight for eleven miles to Boston;
-to the right is the Horncastle road through Moorby and
-Scrivelsby, with the barn-like church of <i>Wilksby</i> in a grass
-field behind Moorby. Both these churches have good fonts;
-that at <i>Moorby</i> is the later of the two, having two crowned and
-two mitred heads at the four corners, and with very remarkable
-figures of the Virgin and Child learning, with open book
-and scourge; the sun and moon being depicted on either side
-looking on complacently, evidently they had never heard of
-the Montessori system, also there are six kneeling figures and
-two angels watching the dead body of the donor. A stone
-in the vestry, about fourteen inches by eight, exhibits two
-women and a man vigorously dancing hand in hand to the
-bagpipes, all in fifteenth century head-dresses and costumes.
-Moorby is in the gift of the Bishop of Manchester, it having
-been assigned presumably by Carlisle when the new see was
-carved out of parts of older ones. How Carlisle came to have
-patronage here may be briefly told. On St. George’s Day,
-April 23—a day memorable as the birth and death day of
-Shakespeare, and the death day of Wordsworth—in the year
-1292, John-de-Halton, who may well have come of the family
-who gave the name to Halton Holgate near Spilsby, being then
-Canon of Carlisle, was elected bishop. Within a month, a fire
-having destroyed the cathedral and all the town, he set to
-work and rebuilt the cathedral, and encouraged others to
-rebuild the town; and by the year 1297 Robert Bruce swore
-fealty to the king in his presence in the newly risen pile. He
-was a man of mark, and was mediator between Edward I.
-and John of Balliol in the claim to the Scottish throne. He
-planned Rose Castle, the palace of the Bishops of Carlisle.
-In 1307 he received at his cathedral, from the sick king’s hands,
-the horse-litter which had brought him to the north; and
-within a few days saw the king, who had bravely mounted his
-charger at the cathedral door, borne back a dead man on the
-shoulders of his knights from Burgh Marsh (pronounced Berg)
-on the Solway shore. In 1318 he was driven from his diocese
-by Robert the Bruce, and came to the manor of Horncastle,
-which, as mentioned above, had belonged to the see since 1230,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_369"></a>[369]</span>
-and got the Pope to attach the living of Horncastle and with
-it that of Moorby and probably some others to his see as a
-means of support for him whilst in exile and poverty, and up
-to the middle of last century Horncastle so remained, whilst
-Moorby is now in the gift of the Bishop of Manchester. John
-de Halton died in the year 1324.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus73">
-<img src="images/illus73.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Coningsby.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">WOOD ENDERBY AND HALTHAM</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">CONINGSBY</div>
-
-<p>If we went west from Moorby we should pass by <i>Wood Enderby</i>,
-the only church in this neighbourhood with a spire, as Sausthorpe
-is in the Spilsby neighbourhood, and should reach <i>Haltham</i>
-on the road from Horncastle to Coningsby. Here the small
-church with its old oak seats has an early Norman doorway
-with a quaintly carved tympanum. Going north from Moorby<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_370"></a>[370]</span>
-we should pass Scrivelsby, but this must have a chapter to
-itself, so we will get back to the main road at Revesby and go
-through <i>Mareham-le-fen</i> to <i>Coningsby</i>, passing <i>Tumby</i> Wood,
-the home of the wild lily-of-the-valley and the rare little
-smilacina or <i>Maianthemum bifolium</i>, which also grows near
-Horncastle. Across the entrance to Coningsby, the Great
-Northern Railway Company have just built a new line from
-Lincoln to Skegness, by which tens of thousands of “trippers”
-will be taken for a shilling and turned out to enjoy the sea
-shore and the splendid expanse of hard sand. Skegness, once
-a delightful solitude, is now disfigured by all that appertains
-to those who cater for the hungry multitudes.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus74">
-<img src="images/illus74.jpg" width="500" height="425" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Tattershall and Coningsby.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HAVERHOLME PRIORY</div>
-
-<p>From the bridge over the Bain at the other end of Coningsby
-village a pretty picture of water and willows is crowned by the
-view of Tattershall church and castle, both of which are
-described later. <i>Coningsby</i> church, built, like Tattershall, all<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_371"></a>[371]</span>
-of Ancaster stone, has a singular tower which stands on tall
-arches and allows free passage under it from three sides. In
-the west of this tower is a large circular window. Passing
-through <i>Tattershall</i> village with its open space and market cross,
-near which three roads meet, and where the Horncastle canal
-unites the Bain and Witham, we cross the Lincoln and Boston
-railway, and also the River Witham which, from the next
-station of Dogdyke, was cut straight by Rennie, and runs like
-a great dyke to Langrick, and then with only two bends to
-Boston. At Dogdyke is a bit of undrained swamp, the home
-of several good bog-plants, such as the bladderwort, water-violet,
-meadow-rue (Ophelia’s “Herb o’ Grace”) and the bog-stitchwort.
-The road on to Sleaford, across the fen for fourteen
-miles, is quite uninteresting, except for the very Dutch appearance
-of the village of <i>Billinghay</i> on the banks of a large drain
-called the Billinghay Skirth, near which, at <i>North Kyme</i>, we
-pass alongside the old Roman Carr Dyke, and, crossing it,
-arrive at <i>Anwick</i>, which has a pretty church with broach spire
-and good Early English doorway. Here, on our left, on the
-River Slea, is <i>Haverholme Priory</i> (Countess of Winchelsea),
-founded 1137 by Bishop Alexander, who afterwards moved
-the rheumatic Monks to Louth Park, and gave the priory
-to his chaplain Gilbert, founder of the order of Gilbertines,
-who had also a priory at Alvingham near Louth. There is
-nothing left of the priory, in which it is said that Archbishop
-Thomas à Becket once took refuge from Henry II. Four
-more miles bring us to Sleaford, whose spire has long been
-visible across the flats.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus75">
-<img src="images/illus75.jpg" width="500" height="275" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Tattershall Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_372"></a>[372]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXIII">CHAPTER XXXIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">SCRIVELSBY, DRIBY, TUMBY AND TATTERSHALL</span></h2>
-
-<p>The Hereditary Grand Champion of England—History of the Dymokes—Siward
-the Saxon—Simon de Dryby—The Abbot of Kirkstead—Robert
-de Tateshalle—John and William de Bernac—Ralph, Baron
-Cromwell builds the brick Castle and founds the College and Almshouses
-at Tattershall—The Carved Mantelpieces—Bishop Waynflete’s
-brick buildings—Esher Place—Tattershall Church—Stained Glass
-Windows—The Brasses—The Castle safe at last.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Scrivelsby.</span></h3>
-
-<p>The manor which carried with it the title for its possessor
-of “Hereditary Grand Champion of England,” was a very
-interesting old house till the year of the Coronation of George III.,
-when it was destroyed by fire. An arched gateway remains
-near the house, where once a moat, drawbridge, and portcullis
-protected the courtyard. The picturesque Lion Gateway at
-the entrance to the park from the Horncastle road, opposite
-to which under some trees are seen the village stocks, was set
-up by Robert Dimoke about 1530. It is built of rough stones
-but has a fine stone lion, passant and crowned, above it, and
-a rebus of an oak tree (Dim oak) carved at the side of the archway.
-The manor with this peculiar privilege attached was
-given by the Conqueror to his steward “Robert the Dispenser,”
-Lord of Fontenaye and ancestor of the De Spencers and the
-Marmions.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Walter Scott speaks of the Marmion of his poem, though
-he was an imaginary character and of much later date, as—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent18">“Lord of Fontenaye</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of Lutterward and Scrivelbaye</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of Tamworth tower and town.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MARMIONS OF SCRIVELSBY</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">DYMOKES OF SCRIVELSBY</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">In the Scrivelsby parish church of St. Benedict is a mutilated<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_373"></a>[373]</span>
-recumbent stone figure clad in chain-mail with sword and
-shield, and by his side a lady in the severe costume of the time,
-with muffled chin and plain head-dress. The warrior is Philip
-Marmion, the last of the Marmions of Scrivelsby, who died
-1292, the family having acted as champions from the time
-of William the Conqueror to Henry III. Together with the
-championship, Philip Marmion had the right of free-warren
-and gallows at his manor at Scrivelsby.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus76">
-<img src="images/illus76.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Lion Gate at Scrivelsby.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Philip having no son, his estates were divided among his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_374"></a>[374]</span>
-four daughters. His second daughter, Mazera, married a
-Ralph Cromwell, ancestor of the Lord Cromwell who built
-Tattershall Castle, and the Scrivelsby estate fell to Joan, the
-youngest, who married Sir Thomas Ludlow. His son, Thomas,
-left one daughter, Margaret, who married Sir John Dymoke
-and brought the Championship in 1350 into the family, which
-has held it now for upwards of 560 years. It was probably
-their son John who married the daughter of Sir Thomas
-Friskney, whence descended the Dymokes of Friskney and
-Fulletby.</p>
-
-<p>At the coronation of Edward II., 1307, and Edward III.,
-1327, the Championship appears to have been in commission,
-but at that of Richard II., 1377, Sir John Dymoke claimed
-it in right of his wife. Baldwin Freville counter-claimed as
-Lord of Tamworth, but the office was awarded to Sir John.</p>
-
-<p>There are many Dymokes buried both in the church and
-churchyard, the most notable monument being an altar tomb
-in the chancel with a brass on it of Sir Robert Demoke.
-Edward IV. had beheaded his father along with Lord Welles
-after he had taken them under pledge of safety out of sanctuary
-at Westminster, and he tried to make amends by heaping
-favours on the son, who lived in five reigns—Edward IV.,
-Edward V., Richard III., Henry VII., and Henry VIII.; and
-acted as Champion at the coronation of the last three, in 1483,
-1485, and 1509. The brass presents him in armour and spurred,
-but bareheaded and with short neck, long flowing hair, and a
-huge beard; he stands on a lion, and the inscription runs
-thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Here liethe the body of Sir Robert Demoke of Scrivelsby
-Knight and Baronet who departed out of this present
-lyfe the XV day of April in ye yere of our Lord God
-MDXLV upon whose sowle almighte god have m’ci Amen.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The words “Knight and Baronet” have puzzled many, but in
-spite of the fact that Sir Brien Stapilton at Burton Joice,
-Notts., and Sir Thomas Vyner at Gautby, Lincolnshire, 1672,
-are described as Knight and Baronet, and though they may
-have been first Knights and then Baronets, in this case of Sir
-Robert Dymoke, of 1545, it can hardly have been so, for the
-title baronet was not in use until after 1603, and we must
-suppose that the words were originally “Knight Banneret,” a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_375"></a>[375]</span>
-distinction which was conferred on Sir Robert by Henry VIII.,
-and that the present wording was probably a correction by
-an ignorant restorer in the seventeenth century, after damage
-done in the civil wars. The eldest son of the Champion who
-had been so unjustifiably put to death by Edward IV., was
-Lionel, who died before his father, and whose brass in Horncastle
-church represents him kneeling on a cushion in full
-armour, holding a scroll in his hand, date 1519. The figure
-is kneeling in a stiff attitude, armed and spurred, and bareheaded,
-a scroll from his mouth says:—</p>
-
-<p class="center">“<i>S’cta Trinitas Unus Deus Miserere nob</i>:”</p>
-
-<p>The inscription on the brass is:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“<i>In honore S’cte et individue Trinita̅s orate p’ ’aia Leonis
-Dymoke milit’ q’ obijit xvij die Me’se Augusti ao D’ni M’cccccxlx:
-cui ai’e p’ piciet’ DE’ Amen.</i>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Below on either side were figures of two sons and three daughters.
-The sons are now missing.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE CHAMPION</div>
-
-<p>Lionel’s brother Robert was only ten when he obtained the
-title. He was succeeded by his son Edward, who performed
-the office of Champion for the three children of Henry VIII.
-His son Robert, though never acting at any coronation, deserves
-mention as a martyr, in Elizabeth’s reign, to his religious
-convictions. This queen, always dreading a Romish reaction
-in favour of her rival, Mary Queen of Scots, allowed a Puritanical
-bishop to persecute any Catholic in his diocese, and
-Robert, though in feeble health, was stout of heart and kept
-firm to his faith and died a prisoner at Lincoln, 1580.</p>
-
-<p>The mother of Edward Dymoke who was Champion to
-Charles II. was buried at Leverton in 1640. Sir Edward
-was summoned in 1660 before the Parliamentarians at Westminster
-and accused of “delinquency” because he bore the
-Royalist title of King’s Champion. He was fined £7,000, an
-enormous sum for the time, and he had to pay between four
-and five thousand. Hence the impoverishment of the Dymoke
-family. He lived to see the Restoration, and officiated for
-Charles II. in 1660, dying in 1663. He was knighted in 1661
-“for his loyalty and great sufferings both in person and estate.”</p>
-
-<p>A brass plate commemorates his son, Sir Charles Dymoke,
-who died in 1686. He officiated at the coronation of James II.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_376"></a>[376]</span>
-in 1685, and getting off his horse in order to walk up to kiss
-the king’s hand he fell full length. Whereupon the queen
-said, “See, love, what a weak Champion you have!” He
-was buried at Scrivelsby, November, 1686.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">WESTMINSTER HALL</div>
-
-<p>Of other memorials there is a marble bust to Lewis, the
-Champion to George I. and II., in 1714 and 1727, who died in
-1760, Ætat. 90. His widow Jane endowed a school at Hemingby
-“to teach the children of the poor of the parish to read, write,
-spin and card wool.” Finally, there is a memorial to John,
-Champion in 1761 to George III. Henry Dymoke who acted
-for his father, a clergyman, on the accession of George IV., 1821,
-was the last who rode into Westminster Hall in bright armour
-and flung down his glove and dared to mortal combat any
-who disputed the right and title of the king. Then, having
-backed a little, he turned his horse and rode out, holding in his
-hand the gold cup in which the king had pledged him and he
-had in turn drunk to the health of his majesty. Since then
-the quaint historic ceremony has fallen into abeyance, but the
-title of “the Hon. the King’s Champion” remains, and
-at the coronation of Edward VII. he was appointed to carry
-the royal banners. <i>Sic transit gloria mundi.</i></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE CEREMONY</div>
-
-<p>The following is a description of the championship ceremony
-at the banquet in Westminster Hall written at the time of the
-coronation of George IV., 1821, and taken from Allen’s History
-of the County:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Before the second course was brought in the deputy appointed
-to officiate as King’s Champion (this was the son of the champion,
-who was himself disqualified, being a clerk in holy orders),
-in his full suit of bright armour, mounted on a horse richly
-caparisoned, appeared under the porch of the triumphal arch,
-at the bottom of Westminster Hall. Everything being in
-readiness, the procession moved in the following order:—</p>
-
-<p>“Two trumpeters with the Champion’s arms on their banners,</p>
-
-<p>“The Sergeant Trumpeter with his mace on his shoulder,</p>
-
-<p>“Two Sergeants-at-Arms with their maces on their shoulders,</p>
-
-<p>“The Champion’s two Esquires, in half armour, one on the
-right hand bearing the Champion’s lance, the other on the left
-hand with the Champion’s target and the arms of Dymoke
-depicted thereon.</p>
-
-<p>“A Herald, with a paper in his hand, containing the Challenge.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_377"></a>[377]</span></p>
-
-<table summary="next in the procession">
- <tr>
- <td><p>“The Deputy
-Earl Marshall (Lord
-Howard of Effingham)
-on horseback,
-in his Robes and
-Coronet, with the
-Earl Marshall’s
-staff in his hand,
-attended by a page.</p>
- </td>
- <td>
-<p>“The Champion
-(Henry Dymoke,
-Esq.) on Horseback,
-in a complete
-suit of Bright
-Armour, with a
-Gauntlet in his
-hand, his Helmet
-on his head,
-adorned with a
-plume of feathers.</p>
- </td>
- <td>
-<p>“The Lord High
-Constable (The
-Duke of Wellington),
-in his Robes
-and Coronet and
-Collar of his Order,
-on Horseback, with
-the Constable’s
-Staff, attended by
-two pages.</p>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>“Four Pages richly apparelled, attendants on the Champion.
-At the entrance into the Hall, the Trumpets sounded thrice, and
-the passage to the King’s table being cleared by the Knight
-Marshall, the Herald, with a loud voice proclaimed the
-Champion’s Challenge, in the words following:—</p>
-
-<p>“‘If any person of what degree soever, high or low, shall
-deny or gainsay our sovereign Lord King George the fourth,
-of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Defender
-of the Faith, son and next heir to our Sovereign Lord King
-George the third, the last King, deceased, to be the right heir
-to the Imperial Crown of this United Kingdom, or that he ought
-not to enjoy the same, here is his Champion, who saith that
-he lieth, and is a false traitor, being ready in person to combat
-with him, and in the quarrel will adventure his life against
-him on what day soever he shall be appointed.’</p>
-
-<p>“Whereupon the Champion threw down his gauntlet: which
-having lain a short time upon the ground, the Herald took it up,
-and delivered it again to the Champion. They then advanced
-to the middle of the Hall, where the ceremony was again performed
-in the same manner.</p>
-
-<p>“Lastly they advanced to the steps of the throne, where the
-Herald with those who preceded him ascended to the middle of
-the steps, and proclaimed the challenge in the like manner; when
-the Champion having thrown down his gauntlet and received
-it again from the Herald, made a low obeisance to the King:
-Whereupon the Cupbearer, having received from the officer of
-the Jewel-house a Gold Cup and Cover filled with Wine, presented
-the same to the King, and his Majesty drank to the Champion,
-and sent to him by the Cupbearer the said Cup, which the
-Champion (having put on his gauntlet) received, and having<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_378"></a>[378]</span>
-made a low obeisance to the King drank the Wine; after
-which, making another low obeisance to his Majesty and being
-accompanied as before, he departed out of the Hall, taking
-with him the said Cup and Cover as his fee.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Driby, Tumby, and Tattershall.</span></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote">NORMAN ACTIVITY</div>
-
-<p>The amount of work done by the Normans in England has
-always astonished me. Not only did they build castles and
-strongholds, but in every county they set up churches built
-of stone, and not here and there but literally everywhere. They
-apportioned and registered the land, measured it and settled
-the rent, and, though hard task masters, they showed themselves
-efficient guardians, nor was any title or property too
-small for the king and his officers to inquire into. Hence,
-in quite small out-of-the-way places in the county we find monuments
-in little and almost unknown churches which attest
-the activity of our Norman forefathers and which, when examined
-by the aid of documents from the Public Record Office or the
-abbey or manor rolls, old wills and all the early parchments in
-which the industrious bookworm revels, often unfold chapters
-of early history of extraordinary interest, if not for the general
-public, at least for students and for the local gentry who still
-haunt the places where once the armed heel of the knight rang
-and the monastery dispensed the unstinted doles of a period
-which would have held up both hands in astonishment at the
-luxury of our poor laws, the excellence of our roads and the
-enormity of our rates and taxes. Take, for instance, the little
-village of <i>Driby</i> in the Lincolnshire wolds, a village the early
-denizens of which my old friend, the late W. C. Massingberd,
-has taken the trouble to make acquaintance with, and to whose
-labours I am indebted for what little I know about it. He
-tells us how even in Saxon times a notable man lived at Driby,
-one Siward, not perhaps the great Northumbrian Thegn
-mentioned in <i>Macbeth</i>, but a later Siward who helped Hereward
-and his fenmen to oppose the Normans at Ely. Whoever he
-was, he held Scrivelsby and a large acreage in the Wolds. Next
-we find the great Lincolnshire Baron, Gilbert de Gaunt,
-succeeding Siward at Driby, holding, as Domesday Book (1086)
-shows, direct from the king.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE ABBOT OF KIRKSTEAD</div>
-
-<p>Early in the next century Simon de Driby comes before us;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_379"></a>[379]</span>
-and his son Robert—the eldest son was nearly always alternately
-Simon or Robert—grants some lands in <i>Tumby</i> to the
-abbey of Kirkstead. Robert’s father is called sometimes
-Symon de Tumbi and sometimes Simon de Driby, and it seems
-that he had obtained disposal of this land in Tumby by a grant
-from Robert, son of Hugh de Tattershall, just as his forefather
-had held land in Driby by the grant of Gilbert de Gaunt. On
-February 25, 1216, a Simon de Driby made his submission to
-King John at Lincoln, and Ralph de Cromwell, whose descendant
-of the same name eventually married the heiress of the Simon
-de Dribys and held the castle of Tattershall, also submitted
-at Stamford on the 28th and gave his own eldest daughter as a
-hostage for his good behaviour. The submissive Simon died
-in 1213, and his son, the inevitable Robert, made an agreement
-with Hugh, the Abbot of Kirkstead, by which the abbot
-was allowed to have his big cattle and sheep dogs, mastiffs
-they were termed, in the warren of Tumby at all times of the
-year, but no greyhounds or lurchers (<i>leporarios vel alios canes
-preter mastivos</i>), and if the latter turned riotous and chased
-game they were to be removed and others put in their place.</p>
-
-<p>Robert’s son Simon obtained by marriage additional lands
-near Driby, at <i>Tetford</i>, <i>Bag Enderby</i>, <i>Stainsby</i>, and <i>Ashby
-Puerorum</i> on the wolds, as well as some of the rich marsh land
-at <i>Wainfleet</i>. Henry III. granted to Robert Tateshalle license
-to crenelate his house at Tateshall, “quod possit kernelare
-mansum suum” in 1239; and we may here note that Tattershall
-Castle in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries and
-half of the fifteenth was a stone building. Just at the close
-of the reign of Edward I. a Robert de Driby married Joan,
-one of the three co-heiresses of Robert de Tateshale or Tattershall,
-the last male representative of the family, and Joan tried
-to settle the castle and manor of Tattershall on her youngest
-son, Robert, instead of on the rightful heir. Until the heir
-was of age Edward had granted them to his wife, Queen
-Margaret, a sign that the property was valuable. She, moreover,
-when a widow, had the manor of Tumby for her dower house.</p>
-
-<p>When the third Edward was on the throne one of the parsons
-who served Driby was a fellow of Merton College, Oxford,
-William Merle by name, who is worthy to be remembered
-because he was the first Englishman to keep a diary of the
-weather. He was appointed in 1330, and at that time one<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_380"></a>[380]</span>
-Gilbert de Bernak was the parson at Tattershall, whose relative
-William de Bernak, Kt., married Alice, the daughter of Robert
-de Driby and Joan Tattershall, and, her three brothers dying
-without issue, Alice came into possession of the manor of Driby.
-Their son, Robert de Bernak, presented a man of the same name
-to Driby in 1347, who died probably of the Black Death, for he
-presented again two years later. Robert in some way made
-himself unpopular, and in 1369 we hear of his being spoiled
-and beaten at Driby, with many of his men grievously wounded,
-and his reeve and his butler both killed.</p>
-
-<p>In 1374 he founded a chantry in Driby church endowed
-<i>inter alia</i> with rents from land in Driby and Friskney. His
-wife is called in his will Katherine de Friskney. This Robert
-de Bernak was the only one of the name who held the manor
-of Driby, for his elder brother John appears not to have done
-so, and to have died in 1346.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MATILDA DE BERNAK</div>
-
-<p>The uncle of these de Bernaks, John de Driby, shortly before
-his death had granted the castle of Tattershall and the manors
-of Tattershall and Tumby away from his sister Alice to John
-de Kirton, who was knighted by Edward II., and summoned to
-Parliament in the sixteenth year of Edward III., 1343; so none
-of the de Bernaks ever held Tattershall, and it was through
-the direct interposition of the king that the descendants in the
-female line of the Driby and Bernak families got the property
-back. The way it came into the female line was this: The
-John de Bernak, eldest son of William de Bernak and Alice
-de Driby, had married Joan, the daughter of John Marmion
-of Wintringham, and had two sons and a daughter Matilda,
-who eventually was his sole heiress. She married Ralph
-second Baron Cromwell, and the presentation to her uncle,
-Robert de Bernak’s, chantry at Driby was left to her and to
-her son Robert Cromwell after her.</p>
-
-<p>Then, at her mother’s death in 1360, she succeeded to her
-mother’s property in Norfolk, Tumby Manor and Tattershall
-Manor and Castle reverted to her on the death of John de
-Kirton in 1367 and Driby Manor with Brynkyl on her uncle,
-Robert De Bernak’s, death in 1387; so she held Driby, Tumby,
-and Tattershall, as well as property in Norfolk.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MARRIES RALPH CROMWELL</div>
-
-<p>In 1395 and 1399 we find her husband, Ralph Cromwell,
-presenting to the chantry of the Holy Trinity in the church
-at Driby. They were large landholders, for, in addition to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_381"></a>[381]</span>
-manor of Cromwell and his other lands in Notts., he and his
-wife held the manor of ‘Kirkeby in Bayne’ with what are called
-the appurtenances to those various manors, <i>i.e.</i>, lands in many
-parts of the wolds and marsh.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus77">
-<img src="images/illus77.jpg" width="500" height="525" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Tattershall Church and the Bain.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Matilda died in 1419. Her son, Ralph Cromwell, was baptised
-on July 15, 1414, a day memorable for a very high tide on the
-Lincolnshire coast which inundated all the land about Huttoft.
-He only lived to be twenty-eight, and was succeeded by his
-cousin, Ralph third Baron Cromwell, the grandson of Matilda.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HER GRANDSON LORD HIGH TREASURER</div>
-
-<p>This Ralph Lord Cromwell had been appointed Lord High<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_382"></a>[382]</span>
-Treasurer of England under Henry VI. in 1433. He married
-Margaret, daughter of John fifth and last Baron d’Eyncourt,
-but had no issue. He it was who replaced the old castle by the
-splendid brick building which was, and is, the finest in England.
-He presented to Driby in 1449, and was the founder of the college
-and the almshouse at Tattershall, for which he obtained leave
-from the Crown to turn the parish church into a collegiate
-church in 1439, when he rebuilt it from the ground and endowed
-it with<a id="FNanchor_26" href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> several manors, Driby being one, so in 1461 and until
-1543 the warden of the college of Tattershall was the patron
-of Driby. The almshouse has still an endowment of £30.
-He died in 1455, as the brass in Tattershall church records,
-and his nieces, the daughters of Sir Richard Stanhope, succeeded
-to his estates, but Driby remained with the warden of Tattershall.
-The nieces were Joan Lady Cromwell (for her husband
-Humphrey Bourchier, son of the first Earl of Essex, was
-summoned to Parliament as Baron Cromwell <i>jure uxoris</i>) and
-Matilda Lady Willoughby d’Eresby. One of his executors,
-William of Waynflete, the famous Bishop of Winchester, held
-the manor of Candlesby in 1477 for the use of this Lady
-Matilda, and soon afterwards obtained a grant of it to his newly
-founded college of Magdalen, Oxford, with whom it remains.
-Matilda Lady de Willoughby presented to Candlesby in 1494,
-eight years after the bishop’s death. Since then the living has
-been in the gift of the college.</p>
-
-<p>At the dissolution of the monasteries, in 1545, Driby was
-granted to the Duke of Suffolk, then it passed to Sir Henry
-Sidney of Penshurst, who sold it to the Prescotts, a Lancashire
-family, about 1580, with appurtenances of lands and rents
-in “Brynkhill, Belchford, Orebye, Grenwyke, Ingolmells,
-Bagenderbie, Asbie Puerorum, ffulletsbye, West Saltfletby
-alias Sallaby, Sallaby Allsaints, Golderbye, Tathwell, Thorpe
-next Waynflet, Sutterbye and Scamlesbye.” There are two<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_383"></a>[383]</span>
-small brasses in the church to James Prescott and his wife,
-who was a Molineux of Lancashire. They died in 1581 and
-1583. In 1636 Sir W. Prescott sold the manor of Driby to
-Sir John Bolles, and in 1715 it was bought by Burrell Massingberd
-and still goes with the Ormsby estate of that family.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BUILDS TATTERSHALL</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE CASTLE</div>
-
-<p>A few words must be added about <i>Tattershall</i>. The great
-brick building which rises so magnificently out of the flat is
-one of the most impressive things in this or any country. I have
-walked all day partridge shooting on the estate, and however
-far you went you never seemed able to get away from the immediate
-presence of the magnificent pile; you only had to look
-round and it was apparently just at your shoulder all day long.
-Then if you enter it and go up, for even the first floor is several
-feet above the level of the quadrangle, you are astonished at
-the size of the great chambers one above the other, thirty-eight
-feet by twenty-two, and seventeen feet high; and finally
-you come on the second, third, and fourth story to the most
-beautiful brick vaulting and mouldings in the small rooms
-and galleries running round the big central rooms in the thickness
-of the walls. The whole is of exquisite workmanship,
-and finished by very deep and handsome machicolations and
-battlements. The bricks are apparently Flemish, thinner and
-of finer quality than the English bricks; similar ones were used
-in building Halstead Hall, Stixwould. The windows are dressed
-with stone, these are large and arched, having mullions and
-the heads filled with stone tracery like church windows. This
-shows how the nobleman’s castle was changing into the nobleman’s
-palace or mansion. The building is at one corner of a
-quadrangle, and is itself a parallelogram, and, including the
-turret bases, eighty-seven feet long by sixty-nine wide, and
-112 feet high to the parapet of the angle turret. The walls,
-which are built on massive brick vaulting, are immensely
-thick, being fifteen feet above, and even more on the ground
-floor. The windows of the basement chambers are close on
-the water of the moat, for several small chambers were made
-in the thickness of the walls, in which, too, are the four chimneys.
-The spiral staircase is in the south-east turret, and has a continuous
-stone handrail let into the brick wall, very cleverly
-contrived, and giving a firm and easy grasp. Each turret is
-octagonal, going up all the way from the ground and being
-finished with a cone. In each turret is a fireplace—a comfort<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_384"></a>[384]</span>
-to the warders, and useful at a pinch for heating the supplies
-of oil and lead which could be poured down through the machicolations
-on the heads of a too assiduous foe. From turret to
-turret, and projecting somewhat over these machicolations,
-runs a loopholed gallery, and here, too, the vaulting and the
-rich brick mouldings are better than anything else of the kind
-in England, with the exception of the smaller but elaborately
-enriched wall surfaces of Barsham, near Walsingham in Norfolk.
-There are little rooms in the turrets, on each floor, and the
-galleries on the second and third are divided into rooms, so that
-in the whole building there were some forty-eight rooms. The
-large central rooms would be hung with tapestry, the lowest
-being used for an entrance-hall, meals being served in the fine
-banqueting hall adjoining, the second for a hall of audience
-or withdrawing room, and the third for the state bedroom.
-The fireplaces are, in the large rooms, of great width, and the
-restored mantelpieces, the barbarous removal of which lately
-caused such a stir, show a number of most interesting coats-of-arms
-of the families who have been connected with Tattershall
-down to the time of Henry VI. The treasurer’s purse figures
-alternately with the shields, which bear the arms of the Cromwells,
-Tattershalls, and d’Eyncourts, of Marmion, Driby, Bernak,
-and Clifton; and on the second floor one panel represents the
-combat between Hugh de Neville and a lion. Neville and
-Clifton were the second and third husbands of Matilda Lady
-Willoughby, which points to the fact that these mantelpieces
-were not carved until after the Lord Treasurer’s death, 1455,
-when Bishop Waynflete was in charge of the work. Sir Thomas
-Neville was killed at the battle of Wakefield, 1460, and Sir
-Gervasse Clifton at Tewkesbury in 1471.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus78">
-<img src="images/illus78.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Tattershall Church and Castle.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ESHER PLACE</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">TATTERSHALL CHURCH</div>
-
-<p>There are three other brick buildings, which always strike
-me as being worthy to rank along with Tattershall. The first,
-but following <i>longo intervallo</i>, is the Bishop of Lincoln’s palace
-at Buckden in Hunts., built by Bishop Hugh of Wells about
-1225. Another is the beautiful old Tudor manor-house already
-alluded to at Barsham, near Walsingham, which Lord Hastings
-has just advertised for sale (November, 1913). This has more
-exquisite brick diaper work and mouldings on the outside of
-both house and gate-house than Tattershall Castle has even
-in the passages and vaulted rooms on the upper floor inside,
-and is a miracle of lovely brick building. But it is not nearly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_385"></a>[385]</span>
-so big as Tattershall. The other bit of fine bricklaying which
-is of the same rather severe character as Tattershall and
-Magdalen School at Wainfleet, is the gate-house of Esher Place,
-occupied by Cardinal Wolsey October, 1529, to February, 1530.
-It belonged to the Bishops of Winchester, and Wolsey then held
-that see together with York. Waynflete, who was bishop
-1447-1486, and finished Tattershall about 1456, a year after
-the Lord Treasurer Cromwell’s death, had partly re-built Esher
-Place in his inimitable brickwork, about seventy years before.
-He used bricks for the lintels and mouldings, and even put
-in the same sunk spiral handrail, which we have noticed as
-so clever and remarkable a device in the turret staircase at
-Tattershall. Waynflete’s arms, the lilies, so familiar to us
-at Eton and Magdalen, were found by the Rev. F. K. Floyer,
-F.S.A., only last year (1912), when some plaster was removed,
-on the keystone of the curiously contrived vaulting over the
-porch. It is noticeable that Henry Pelham, who bought the
-house in 1729, has introduced also his family badge, the Pelham
-buckle, which is cut on the stone capitals of the door. This
-badge we have spoken of in the chapter on Brocklesby. So
-we have two Lincolnshire families of note, each of which has
-left his cognisance on the gateway of the once proud Esher
-Place, the “Asher House” in that magnificent scene of Act III.
-in Shakespeare’s “Henry VIII.”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0"><i>Norfolk.</i> “Hear the king’s pleasure, cardinal; who commands you</div>
- <div class="verse indent10">To render up the great seal presently</div>
- <div class="verse indent10">Into our hands: and to confine yourself</div>
- <div class="verse indent10">To Asher-house, my lord of Winchester’s,</div>
- <div class="verse indent10">Till you hear farther from his highness.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Tattershall had a double moat, the outer one reaching to the
-River Bain. Over both of them the entrance would probably
-be, as it certainly was over the inner one, protected by a drawbridge
-and portcullis. This was still to be seen in 1726 at
-the north-east corner of the quadrangle. All that is now left
-is this one great pile of the Lord Treasurer’s and one guard-house
-of the fifteenth century. The original castle was begun
-200 years earlier, when Robert, the direct descendant of Hugh
-Fitz Eudo—founder in 1138 of the Cistercian abbey of Kirkstead,
-who had received the estate from William the Conqueror—obtained
-leave from Henry III. to build a castle there. We
-have seen how the castle became the property of Joan who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_386"></a>[386]</span>
-married Sir Robert Driby, whose daughter Alice consigned
-it at her marriage to Sir W. Bernak, and their daughter Matilda
-married Lord Cromwell, whose grandson was the High Treasurer
-to Henry VI. He built the brick castle, but died soon after
-doing so, leaving his collegiate church to be finished by his
-executors. The college he had founded was to consist of a
-warden, a provost, six priests, six lay clerks, and six choristers,
-and the almshouse was for thirteen poor of either sex. The
-original building for this still exists, and is of very humble
-appearance, having, it is said, been put up to serve first as a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_387"></a>[387]</span>
-lodgment for the masons engaged on the castle and church.
-Of these the latter is singularly well built, as any building
-supervised by Bishop William of Waynflete was sure to be,
-and evidently of very good stone; and the two buildings being
-close together are striking specimens of the secular and ecclesiastical
-architecture of the period.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE BRASSES</div>
-
-<p>The Treasurer’s wife, who was sister and coheir of William
-fifth Baron d’Eyncourt, died a year before her husband. They
-are buried in the church, and two very fine brasses once marked
-the spot. He was a K.G., and this shows him with the Garter
-and Mantle of his Order, but the brass is sadly mutilated now;
-while her effigy is, sad to say, lost entirely.</p>
-
-<p>Two other fine brasses of this family are in the church. One,
-of the Treasurer’s niece, Joan Stanhope, who married first Sir
-Humphrey Bourchier, son of the Earl of Essex, who was made
-fourth Baron Cromwell in her right in 1469; and secondly, after
-her first husband had been slain at the battle of Barnet, 1471, Sir
-Robert Ratcliffe. She died in 1479, and was succeeded in the
-property by her sister Matilda, who had married Lord Willoughby
-d’Eresby. Her brass has also been a particularly fine one.
-She died in 1497, and ten years before this the Tattershall
-estate had passed to the Crown. The inscription on her brass
-is filled in by a later and inferior hand, and no mention is made
-of her two next husbands.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE WINDOWS</div>
-
-<p>There is a very fine brass also of one of the last provosts or
-wardens of the college, probable date between 1510 and 1520.
-In 1487 Henry VIII. granted the manor to his mother, Margaret
-Countess of Richmond, and, the Duke of Richmond having no
-issue, Henry VIII., in 1520, granted it with many other manors
-in the neighbourhood to Charles Duke of Suffolk. This grant
-was confirmed by Edward VI. on his accession in 1547, but the
-duke and his two sons having died, he granted it, in 1551, to
-Edward Lord Clinton, afterwards Earl of Lincoln. The Clintons
-held it till 1692, when it passed, through a cousin Bridget, to
-the Fortescue family under whom both church and castle
-have suffered severely. Amongst other vandalisms, Lord
-Exeter, when living at Revesby, was allowed to remove the
-fine stained glass windows to his church of St. Martin’s in
-Stamford, in 1757. He paid £24 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> to his steward for
-white glass to be put in in their stead, but the glass was not
-put in, and for eighty years the church was open to the wind<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_388"></a>[388]</span>
-and rain. The removal at all was a disgraceful business, and
-no wonder the Tattershall folk threatened to kill the glazier
-who was employed to take the windows out.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus79">
-<img src="images/illus79.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Tattershall Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The castle is now (1912) the property of Lord Curzon, who is
-putting it into repair. The story of its sale quite recently
-to a speculator, and the ruthless tearing out by his creditors
-of the fine historic mantelpieces is one which reflects little credit
-on any concerned in it. They are now replaced.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE KEEP RESTORED</div>
-
-<p>But “All’s well that ends well,” and Lincolnshire may congratulate
-herself that the finest old brick building in the country
-is in such good hands, and that the needed restoration is being
-carried out so admirably. It was no easy task to find oak trees<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_389"></a>[389]</span>
-to supply the beams which carry the floors, as each had to be
-twenty-four feet long and eighteen inches square.<a id="FNanchor_27" href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> The floors
-are now in, and the roof, which had been off for 250 years,
-reinstated. In the inner ward the ground plan of the kitchen
-has been laid bare; this was close outside the south-east angle
-of the keep and connected with it by a covered passage leading
-from the staircase turret. The turrets and parapets are repaired,
-and the floors and roof being again in place and the moat refilled
-with water, though not what one would call a comfortable
-residence, it will be a most interesting place to visit, and never
-again, we trust, be likely to fall into the neglect which it has
-suffered for the last two hundred years. Enough pottery and
-metal has been found to form the nucleus of a collection which
-will be preserved for visitors to see. But no collection will
-ever be half as interesting as the sight of this magnificent brick
-building itself, and the close examination of all its structural
-details.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus80">
-<img src="images/illus80.jpg" width="500" height="525" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Scrivelsby Stocks.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_390"></a>[390]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXIV">CHAPTER XXXIV<br />
-<span class="smaller">BARDNEY ABBEY</span></h2>
-
-<p>The Excavations—The Title “Dominus”—Barlings—Stainfield—Tupholme—Stixwould—Kirkstead
-Abbey—Kirkstead Chapel—Woodhall Spa—Tower-on-the-Moor—Charles
-Brandon Duke of Suffolk.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The fens were always a difficulty to the various conquerors
-of England, and, probably owing to the security which they gave,
-they, from the earliest times, attracted the monastic bodies.
-Hence we find on the eastern edge of the Branston, Nocton, and
-Blankney fens, and just off the left bank of the Witham river
-when it turns to the south, an extraordinary number of abbeys.
-For Kirkstead, Stixwould, Tupholme and Bardney, with Stainfield
-and Barlings just a mile or two north of the river valley,
-are all within a ten mile drive. Of these, Kirkstead was
-Cistercian, and Stixwould and Stainfield were nunneries. They
-were all most ruthlessly and utterly destroyed by Thomas
-Cromwell at the dissolution, so it is only the history of them
-that we can speak about.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus81">
-<img src="images/illus81.jpg" width="500" height="375" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Kirkstead Chapel.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Stixwould and Kirkstead were originally as much in the fen
-as Bardney; but since the “Dales Head Dyke” was cut
-parallel with the Witham and about a mile to the west from
-“Metheringham Delph” to “Billinghay Skirth,” the land between
-it and the river is known as the “Dales.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ST. OSWALD</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A ROYAL ABBOT</div>
-
-<p>By far the oldest and the biggest and most interesting of
-the group was the great Benedictine Abbey of Bardney. This
-was founded not later than the seventh century. Some of the
-chronicles say by Æthelred, son of Penda, the pagan king of
-Mercia; but it may have been by his brother Wulfhere, who
-reigned before him. Æthelred’s Queen Osfrida, niece of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_391"></a>[391]</span>
-sainted Oswald, the Northumbrian king who had defeated
-Cædwalla at Hevenfield in 635 and was himself killed in battle
-by Penda at Maserfield in 642—had before her marriage brought
-the relics of her uncle in 672 to Bardney, where they became
-the centre of attraction for pilgrims, and St. Oswald’s name as
-patron was added to those of St. Peter and St. Paul to whom
-the abbey was dedicated. Osfrida herself having been murdered
-by the Danes in 697, was buried here, and Æthelred, who in
-701 founded Evesham Abbey, following the example of half-a-dozen
-Anglian and Saxon kings, gave up his throne after a
-reign of thirty years and entered Bardney as a monk in 704.
-In the quaint words of the chronicle he “was shorn a religious,”
-i.e., adopted the tonsure, and died twelve years later, after
-ruling for four years as Abbot of Bardney. One of the frescoes
-in Friskney church represents him resigning his crown to
-become a monk. St. Oswald’s arm, which had been preserved
-in St. Peter’s church at Bamborough, and which never withered,
-was afterwards transferred to Peterborough Abbey, according<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_392"></a>[392]</span>
-to Gunton, a little before the Conquest. A monk of the period
-wrote the following lines about it:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Nullo verme perit, nulla putredine tabet</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Dextra viri, nullo constringi frigore, nullo</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Dissolvi fervore potest, sed semper eodem</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Immutata statu persistit, mortua vivit.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">In which the monk, as usual, made a “false quantity.” In
-870 Hingvar and Hubba, the Danes, in spite of its fancied
-security, utterly destroyed the abbey and put some 300 monks
-to death. They also destroyed Peterborough, Croyland, Ely,
-Huntingdon, Winchester, and other fine and wealthy monastic
-houses in the same barbarous manner. Bardney after this
-lay desolate for 200 years; after which, Gilbert De Gaunt, on
-whom the Conqueror had bestowed much land in mid-Lincolnshire,
-with the aid of the famous Bishop Remigius of Lincoln,
-restored it, and endowed it with revenues from at least a dozen
-different villages, amongst them Willingham, Southrey, Partney,
-Steeping, Firsby, Skendleby, Willoughby, Lusby, Winceby,
-Hagworthingham, Folkingham, and Heckington. This would
-be about 1080. In 1406 we read of Henry IV., our Lincolnshire
-king, spending a Saturday-to-Monday there, riding from
-Horncastle with his two sons and three captive earls of the
-Scots, Douglas, Fyfe, and Orkney, and a goodly company.
-The Bishop of Lincoln “with 24 horses” and the “venerable
-Lord Willoughby” came to do homage in the afternoon. The
-abbey stood on slightly rising ground, with a moat and
-deep ditch lined with brick, as at Tattershall, and enclosing
-twenty-four acres. It was half a mile from the present church.
-On the east side of the abbey is a large barrow on which was
-once a handsome cross in memory of King Æthelred, who is
-supposed to have been buried there, and it is quite possible
-that he was. The name of a field close by “Coney garth”
-is no doubt a corruption of Koenig Garth, which is much the
-same as the “King’s Mead fields” near Bath Abbey, immortalised
-in Sheridan’s “Rivals,” as the place of meeting between
-Captain Absolute and Bob Acres, and where Sir Lucius O’Trigger
-inhumanly asks Acres “In case of accident ... would you
-choose to be pickled and sent home? or would it be the same
-to you to lie here in the Abbey? I’m told there is very snug
-lying in the Abbey.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BARDNEY ABBEY</div>
-
-<p>The site of the abbey when excavations were begun in 1909<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_393"></a>[393]</span>
-was apparently a grass field with a moat; but since then the
-whole of the great monastic church has been laid bare to the
-floor pavement, which was about four and a half feet below
-the surface. The Norman bases of the eight chancel columns
-and twenty pillars of the nave are now visible, and also of
-the four large piers which supported the tower arches; these
-must have been very beautiful, each nave pillar having round
-a solid core a cluster of twelve, and the tower piers of sixteen,
-columns. All down the church, which is 254 feet long and over
-sixty-one feet wide, tombs were found <i>in situ</i>, with inscriptions,
-the earliest being that of Johanna, wife of John Browne of
-Bardney, merchant, 1334, and the handsomest that of Richard
-Horncastel, abbot, 1508, which measures eight feet by four, is
-seven inches thick, and weighs three tons. This had been
-already moved, and it is now fixed against the south wall of
-Bardney church. Adjoining the south side of the nave is the
-cloister; and the chapter-house, parlour, dormitory, dining-hall,
-cellar, kitchen, well and guest-house are all contiguous. A
-little way off are the infirmary-hall and chapel, with three fireplaces
-and some tile paving. Not much statuary was found,
-but various carved heads and iron tools, pottery, etc., one
-headless figure three feet high of St. Laurence and, most interesting
-of all, the reverse of the abbey seal which was in use in
-1348, showing St. Peter and St. Paul beneath a canopy and the
-half figure of an abbot with crozier below. We know that
-the obverse had on it a figure of St. Oswald, but that has not
-yet been found. It is made of bronze or latten.</p>
-
-<p>The huge extent of the buildings and the beauty of the column
-bases and the plan of this, the earliest of English monasteries,
-with its moat enclosing the whole twenty-five acres, and its
-king’s tumulus, make a visit to the site very interesting, and
-the vicar, Rev. C. E. Laing, has worked hard with his four men
-each year since 1909, and with the help of kind friends has
-managed to purchase three acres, but is greatly hampered
-by want of funds, which at present only reach one quarter of
-the sum required.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE TITLE “DOMINUS”</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Laing has published a little shilling guide to the excavations
-at Bardney, with photographs, which explain the work
-very clearly and show the tombs with their inscriptions. From
-this it will be noticed that Abbot Horncastel is called on his
-tomb “Dompnus,” <i>i.e.</i>, Dominus, and Thomas Clark, rector<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_394"></a>[394]</span>
-of Partney, has this title “Dns.,” and also Thomas Goldburgh,
-soldier, has the same. This is the same name as that on the
-old Grimsby Corporation seal of the princess, who is said to
-have married Havelock the Dane (<i>see</i> Chap. <a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">XIX.</a>). Dominus
-is a difficult title to translate, for if we call it ‘Sir,’ as the old
-registers often do, it is misleading, as it has no knightly significance,
-and it probably meant no more than “The Rev.,” or
-in the case of a soldier “Esq.” or “Gent.” It certainly does
-not imply here that the owners of the title belonged to “the
-lower order of clergy,” and yet that is the recognised meaning
-of it in many old church registers, <i>e.g.</i>, in the list of rectors,
-vicars, and chantry priests of Heckington, taken from the
-episcopal records at Lincoln. Some of the vicars and most of
-the chantry priests are called “Sir,” and this generally implies
-a non-graduate. So also in the chapter on the clergy with the
-list of rectors and curates given in Miss Armitt’s interesting book,
-“The Church of Grasmere” (published 1912), pp. 57-60 and
-p. 81, we find that the tythe-taking rector is termed “Master,”
-and bears the suffix “Clerk”; while “Sir” is reserved for the
-curate, his deputy, who has not graduated at either university.
-This view is upheld in Dr. Cox’s “Parish Registers of England,”
-p. 251. The Grasmere book speaks of “<i>Magister</i> George
-Plumpton,” who was son of Sir William Plumpton, of Plumpton,
-Knight, and rector of Grasmere, 1438-9. In 1554 Gabriel Croft
-is called rector, and his three curates for the outlying hamlets
-are put down as—</p>
-
-<p>“Dns. William Jackson, called in his will ‘late Curate of
-Grasmer.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Dns. John Hunter.</p>
-
-<p>“Dns. Hugo Walters.”</p>
-
-<p>This entry is followed by—</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Sirre</i> Thomas Benson curate” who witnesses a will in
-1563; and in 1569 we have “<i>Master</i> John Benson Rector.”
-In 1645 we have a “Mr. Benson” doing the duty as rector during
-the Commonwealth, and in 1646 we have “Sir Christopher
-Rawling,” who had probably served as curate for some years,
-as he is, at his child’s baptism in 1641, styled “Clericus.”
-Clearly this word “Sir” is here the translation of the Latin
-“Dominus,” and the previous entries bear out the statement
-that the prefix ‘Sir’ here betokens the lower order of clergy
-who had not graduated at either university. But that this was not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_395"></a>[395]</span>
-a plan universally followed is made quite clear from the monuments
-at Bardney, where we find a rector and an abbot and a
-soldier all called “Dominus.” Perhaps in neither of these
-cases is it necessary to translate the word by ‘Sir,’ why not
-leave it at “Dominus”? From a letter in <i>The Times</i>, May,
-1913, I gather that this word “Dominus” is responsible for the
-title “Lord Mayor.” The words “Dominus Major” are first
-found among the City of London Records for 1486, in an order
-issued for the destruction of unlawful nets and coal sacks of
-insufficient size. The words only meant “Sir Mayor,” but in
-course of time they came to be translated “The Lord The
-Mayor,” which easily passed into “The Lord Mayor,” a title
-which did not come into general use till 1535.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BARLINGS ABBEY</div>
-
-<p><i>Barlings Abbey</i> stood a mile west of the Benedictine nunnery
-of <i>Stainfield</i>, which was founded by Henry Percy in the twelfth
-century. The abbey was founded about the same time by
-Ralph de Hoya for Premonstratensian canons. This term is
-derived from the “<i>Premonstratum</i>” Abbey in Picardy, <i>i.e.</i>,
-built in a place “pointed out” by the Blessed Virgin to be
-the headquarters of the Order. This was in 1120, and the
-Order first came to England in 1140. At the dissolution they
-seem to have had thirty-five houses here, Tupholme Abbey
-being one of them. The canons lived according to the rule of
-St. Augustine, and wore a white robe. In the revolt against
-the suppression of the smaller houses, known as “the Lincolnshire
-Rebellion,” or “the Pilgrimage of Grace,” in 1537, the
-prior of Barlings, Dr. Matthew Makkerell, a D.D. of Cambridge,
-took a prominent part, and under the name of Captain Cobbler,
-for he took that disguise, he led 20,000 men. They were dispersed
-by Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk, and the prior was
-hanged at his own gate.</p>
-
-<p>The abbey is sometimes called Oxeney, because the founders
-removed the canons from Barling Grange to a place called
-Oxeney in another part of the village, but the name followed
-them and Oxeney became Barlings.</p>
-
-<p><i>Barlings</i> and <i>Stainfield</i> are both near Bardney to the north,
-and <i>Tupholme</i> and <i>Stixwould</i> just as near on the south.
-<i>Tupholme</i>, like Barlings, has a Premonstratensian house,
-founded 1160. A wall of the refectory with lancet window,
-and a beautiful stone pulpit for the reader during meals is all
-that is left. It is close to the road from Horncastle to Bardney.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_396"></a>[396]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus82">
-<img src="images/illus82.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Remains of Kirkstead Abbey Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">KIRKSTEAD ABBEY</div>
-
-<p><i>Stixwould</i> is three miles to the south, and was, like Stainfield,
-a nunnery. It was founded by Lucia the first, the wife
-of Ivo Taillebois. Nothing is left of it; but in the parish church
-are some stone coffins, a good parclose screen, used as a reredos,
-and a remarkable font, whose panels, bearing emblems of the
-Evangelists and of the first four months of the year, are divided
-by richly carved pinnacles with figures of lions and flowers.
-Near by is <i>Halstead Hall</i> (“Hawstead”), a fifteenth century
-moated house of the Welby family, from which Lincoln, Boston,
-and Heckington are all visible.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_397"></a>[397]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">KIRKSTEAD CHAPEL</div>
-
-<p><i>Kirkstead</i> is three miles further south, and here is one of the
-most beautiful little thirteenth-century buildings in the county.
-It is near the ruin of the abbey, of which only a gaunt fragment
-remains. This chapel of St. Leonard is a real gem of Early
-English architecture. It is an oblong chamber with vaulted
-roof adorned with tooth and nail-head ornament, springing
-from bosses low down in the wall. The wall is arcaded all round,
-and the capitals exquisitely carved. Bishop Trollope speaks
-of the western door as “one of the most lovely doorways imaginable,
-its jambs being first enriched by an inner pair of pillars
-having caps from which spring vigorously and yet most delicately
-carved foliage, and then, after a little interval, two more pairs
-of similar pillars carrying a beautifully moulded arch, one
-member of which is worked with the tooth moulding. Above
-this lovely doorway, in which still hangs the cöeval delicately
-ironed oak door, is an arcade of similar work, in the centre
-of which is a pointed oval window of beautiful design. The
-inside is still more beautiful than without.”</p>
-
-<p>Inside, part of a rood screen with lancet arcading is earlier
-than anything of the kind in England, except the plain Norman
-screen in the room above the altar in Compton Church, Surrey.
-A mutilated effigy of a knight with a cylindrical saucepan-shaped
-helmet and a hauberk of banded mail, shows a rare
-instance of thirteenth-century armour. It is thought to be
-Robert, second Lord of Tattershall, who died about 1212.</p>
-
-<p>The ruinous state of this lovely little building, which was
-used for public worship until Bishop Wordsworth prohibited
-it, as the building was unsafe, has long been a crying scandal;
-the owner always refusing to allow it to be made safe by others,
-and doing nothing to prevent its imminent downfall himself.
-The present Act of 1913 has, it is devoutly hoped, come in time
-to enable proper and prompt measures to be taken to put it
-into a sound condition.<a id="FNanchor_28" href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a></p>
-
-<p>Quite near to Kirkstead is the newest Lincolnshire watering-place—<i>Woodhall
-Spa</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">WOODHALL SPA</div>
-
-<p>A deep boring for coal in 1811 found no coal but struck a
-spring or flow of water, which is more highly charged with
-iodine and bromine than any known spa. This has been
-utilised, and a fine range of baths, on the principle of those at
-Bath, has been set up, though the water, unlike that at Bath,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_398"></a>[398]</span>
-or at Acqui near Genoa, does not gush out boiling hot, but has
-to be pumped up 400 feet and then heated. All the various
-kinds of baths and appliances for the treatment of rheumatism,
-etc., are now installed, and quite a town has arisen on what
-was not long ago a desolate moor. The air is fine, the soil dry
-and sandy, the heather is beautiful around the place, and the
-Scotch fir woods and the picturesque “Tower-on-the-Moor”—a
-watch-tower or part of a hunting-lodge built by the Cromwells
-of Tattershall—add a charm to the landscape, though the
-“greate ponde or lake brickid about,” mentioned by Leland,
-is gone.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus83">
-<img src="images/illus83.jpg" width="500" height="525" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Kirkstead Chapel.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">CHARLES BRANDON DUKE OF SUFFOLK</div>
-
-<p>The Duke of Suffolk, to whom his sovereign gave so many
-Lincolnshire manors, was son of Sir W. Brandon, the king’s
-standard-bearer who fell at Bosworth field. Henry VIII. had
-a great liking for him and made him Master of the Horse, a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_399"></a>[399]</span>
-viscount, and afterwards a duke. Like his royal master, he
-was the husband of several wives, the third of four being Mary
-Queen of France, widow of Louis XII. and second sister of
-Henry VIII. He resembled the king, too, in being a big man;
-indeed he was remarkable for his bodily strength and feats of
-arms, and was victor in several tournaments. The pains he
-took to quell the Lincolnshire Rebellion greatly pleased the
-king, who showered rewards on him with lavish hands. He is
-said to have somewhat resembled him, his countenance being
-bluff and his beard white and cut like the king’s. He was
-good-tempered and fortunate in never giving offence. Hence,
-on his portrait at Woburn Abbey he is said to have been
-“Gratiose withe Henry VIII. Voide of Despyte, moste fortunate
-to the end, never in displeasure with his Kynge.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_400"></a>[400]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE FENS</span></h2>
-
-<p>Brothertoft or Goosetoft—In Holland Fen—John Taylor’s Poem—Fen
-Skating.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Primitive peoples have been always rather prone to establishing
-themselves on swampy ground, probably because they
-felt secure from attack in such places. They passed in their
-coracles easily from one little island of dry ground to another
-and found plenty of employment in taking fish and waterfowl,
-in cutting grass for fodder or hay, reeds for thatch and
-bedding, willows to make their wattled huts, and peat for fuel,
-all of which were close at hand and free to everyone. It was
-not such a bad life after all.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE ROMANS IN BRITAIN</div>
-
-<p>The earliest inhabitants of the Lincolnshire fens came from
-the mouths of the Meuse, Rhine, and Scheldt, so they lived by
-choice in low land and knew how to make the most of the situation.
-They clung for habitation to the islands of higher
-ground, and the names of many villages in the low part of the
-county, though no longer surrounded by water, bear witness
-by their termination to their insular origin, <i>e.g.</i>, Bardney,
-Gedney, Friskney, Stickney, Sibsey, <i>ey</i>, as in the word ‘eyot’
-(pronounced ait, <i>e.g.</i>, Chiswick Eyot), meaning <i>island</i>. In time
-the knots of houses grew to village settlements, and raised causeways
-were made from one to another, which served also as
-banks to keep out the sea at high tides. And we know that
-they did this effectually; hence we find the churches mostly
-placed for safety on that side of the causeway bank which is
-furthest from the sea. You will see this to be the case as you
-go along the road from Boston to Wainfleet, where the churches
-are all west of the road, or from Spalding to Long Sutton, where<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_401"></a>[401]</span>
-they are all south of the road, and this explains how the Lincolnshire
-name for a high road is “ramper,” <i>i.e.</i>, rampart. There
-are other sea banks which were thrown up purposely to keep
-out the sea, not necessarily as roads. These are very large and
-important works, fifty miles in length and at a varying distance
-from the sea, girdling the land with but little intermission from
-Norfolk to the Humber. Such large undertakings could only
-have been carried out by the Romans.</p>
-
-<p>This bank, when made, had to be watched; for both in
-the earliest ages, and also in Jacobean times when the fens
-were drained, all embanking and draining works were violently
-opposed by the fen-men who lived by fishing and fowling, and
-had no desire to see the land brought into cultivation.</p>
-
-<p>The Romans were great colonisers; they made good roads
-through the country wherever they went to stay, and in Lincolnshire
-they began the existing system of “Catchwater” drains
-which has been the means of converting a marshy waste into
-the finest agricultural land in the kingdom. The Roman Carr
-(or fen) dyke joined the Witham with the Welland, so making
-a navigable waterway from Lincoln in the centre to Market
-Deeping in the extreme south of the county; and by catching
-the water from the hills to the west it prevented the overflowing
-streams from flooding the low-lying lands, and discharged them
-into the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Rennie, at the beginning of last century, used the same
-method in the east fen; but modern engineers have this
-advantage over the Romans that they are able by pumping
-stations to raise the water which lies below the level of the sea
-to a higher level from which it can run off by natural gravitation.
-Still the Romans did wonderfully, and when they
-had to leave England, after 400 years of beneficent occupation,
-England lost its best friends, for, not only was he a great road
-and dyke builder but, as the child’s “Very First History Book”
-says,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“If he just chose, there could be no man</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nicer and kinder than a Roman.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Romans themselves were quite aware of the beneficial
-nature of their rule, as far as their colonies were concerned,
-and were proud of it. Who can fail to see this feeling if he
-reads the charming lines on Rome which Claudian wrote, about
-400 <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span>, when the Romans were still in Britain.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_402"></a>[402]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Hæc est in gremium victos quae sola recepit,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Humanumque genus communi nomine fovit</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Matris non Dominae ritu, civesque vocavit</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Quos domuit, nexuque pio longinqua revinxit.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Alone her captives to her heart she pressed,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Gave to the human race one common name,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And—mother more than sovereign—fondly called</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Each son though far away her citizen.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right">W. F. R.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE SAXONS</div>
-
-<p>The whole country soon became a prey to the freebooters
-who crossed the North Sea in search of plunder. Of these,
-the Saxons under Cedric besieged Lincoln about 497 and, the
-Angles from the Elbe joining with them, made a strong settlement
-there which became the capital of Mercia and received a
-Saxon king. To these invaders, who came as plunderers but
-remained as colonists, we also owe much. In east Lincolnshire
-they certainly fostered agriculture, and like the Romans made
-salt-pans for getting the salt from sea water by evaporation.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus84">
-<img src="images/illus84.jpg" width="500" height="525" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Darlow’s Yard, Sleaford.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE DANES</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE NORMANS</div>
-
-<p>The Saxons dominated the country for about the same time
-as the Romans, and were then themselves ousted with much
-cruelty and bloodshed by the Danes or Norsemen. But during
-their time Christianity had been introduced at the instance
-of Pope Gregory I., who sent Augustine and forty monks to
-Britain at the end of the sixth century to convert the Anglo-Saxons,
-and as Bertha, wife of Æthelbert, King of Kent,
-was a Christian, he met with considerable success, and became
-the first Archbishop of Canterbury. He was followed early
-in the seventh century by Paulinus, who came from York and
-built the first stone church at Lincoln. When, a hundred and
-fifty years later, the Danes made their appearance they found
-in several places monasteries and cathedrals or churches which
-they ruthlessly pillaged and destroyed; and they too, having
-come for plunder, remained as indwellers, settling in the eastern
-counties, not only near the coast but far inland, just as the Norsemen
-settled and introduced industrial arts on the west coast in
-Cumberland. Dane and Saxon struggled long and fiercely,
-the Danes being beaten in Alfred’s great battle at Ethandune
-in Wilts, 878, but only to return in Edmund’s reign and defeat
-the Saxons at Assandun in Essex under King Canute, 1016,
-after which, by agreement, they divided the country with
-Edmund Ironsides, and withdrew from Wessex, the region south-west<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_403"></a>[403]</span>
-of <i>Watling Street</i>, but the whole country north-eastwards
-from the Tees to the Thames was given over to them and called
-the Danelagh, or country under Dane law. Thus Lincoln
-became a Danish burgh, and in the next year, on Edmund’s
-death, Canute became sole King of England. None of the
-Fenmen of Lincolnshire had been subdued till in 1013 Swegen,
-King of Denmark, invaded the county in force and pillaged
-and burnt St. Botolph’s town (Boston), and they appear to have
-maintained their independence all through the Norman times.
-For the dynasty of Danish kings did not last long, and both
-they and the kings of the restored Saxon line were effaced by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_404"></a>[404]</span>
-the Norman invaders who, like all their predecessors, found the
-Fenmen a hard nut to crack. Hereward, who was not son of
-Leofric, but a Lincolnshire man, had many a fight for liberty,
-and held the Isle of Ely against the repeated attacks of the
-Normans, and, when at last the Fenmen were beaten, they
-still maintained a sort of independence, and instead of becoming
-Normans in manners and language they are said to have kept
-their own methods and their own speech, so that there may
-well be some truth in the boast that the ordinary speech of
-the East Lincolnshire men of “the Fens” and “the Marsh”
-is the purest English in the land.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Holland Fen and Fen Skating.</span></h3>
-
-<p>In the Fens there were always some tracts of ground raised
-above the waters which at times inundated the lower levels
-there. These are indicated by such names as Mount Pleasant,
-or by the termination ‘toft,’ as in Langtoft, Fishtoft, Brothertoft,
-and Wigtoft in the Fens; and similarly in the Isle of
-Axholme, Eastoft, Sandtoft, and Beltoft. Toft is a Scandinavian
-word connected with top, and means a knoll of rising
-ground. When the staple commodities of the Fens were
-“feathers, wool, and wildfowl,” these knolls were centres of
-industry. Sheep might roam at large, but in hard weather
-always liked to have some higher ground to make for, and
-human beings have a preference for a dry site, hence a cottage
-or two and, if there was room, a collection of houses and possibly
-a church would come into existence, and the grassy knoll would
-be often white with the flocks of geese which were kept, not
-so much for eating as for plucking; and we know that the
-monasteries always had ‘vacheries’ or cow-pastures either on
-these isolated knolls or on rising ground at the edge of the
-fen. One of the most notable of these island villages was
-called at one time Goosetoft, now Brothertoft, in the Holland
-Fen about four miles west of Boston. Here on the 8th of July,
-O.S., all sheep “found in their wool,” <i>i.e.</i>, who had not been
-clipped and marked, were driven up to be claimed by their
-owners, fourpence a head being exacted from all who had no
-common rights.</p>
-
-<p>The custom survives in Westmorland, where in November
-of every year all stray Herdwick sheep are brought in to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_405"></a>[405]</span>
-shepherds’ meeting at the ‘Dun Bull’ at Mardale, near Hawes-Water,
-and after they are claimed, the men settle down to a
-strenuous day, or rather two nights and a day, of enjoyment;
-a fox hunt on foot, and a hound trail whatever the weather
-may be, followed by feasting and songs at night, keep them
-all “as merry as grigs.” But where there are ten people at the
-Dun Bull there were one hundred or more at Brothertoft,
-people coming out from Boston for the day or even for the week,
-and all being lodged and fed in some thirty large tents.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">GOOSETOFT</div>
-
-<p>John Taylor, ‘the water poet,’ wrote in 1640 an account
-of Goosetoft which is worth preserving:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">In Lincolnshire an ancient town doth stand</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Called Goosetoft, that hath neither fallow’d land</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Or woods or any fertile pasture ground,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But is with wat’ry fens incompast round.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The people there have neither horse nor cowe,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nor sheep, nor oxe, nor asse, nor pig, nor sowe;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nor cream, curds, whig, whey, buttermilk or cheese,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nor any other living thing but geese.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The parson of the parish takes great paines,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And tythe-geese only are his labour’s gaines;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">If any charges there must be defrayed</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Or imposition on the towne is lay’d,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">As subsidies or fifteenes<a id="FNanchor_29" href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> for the King,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Or to mend bridges, churches, anything,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Then those that have of geese the greatest store</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Must to these taxes pay so much the more.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nor can a man be raised to dignity</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But as his geese increase and multiply;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And as men’s geese do multiply and breed</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From office unto office they proceed.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A man that hath but with twelve geese began</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In time hath come to be a tythingman;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And with great credit past that office thorough,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">His geese increasing he hath been Headborough,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Then, as his flock in number are accounted,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Unto a Constable he hath been mounted;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And so from place to place he doth aspire,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And as his geese grow more hee’s raisèd higher.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">’Tis onely geese then that doe men prefer,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And ’tis a rule no geese no officer.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Fen Skating.</span></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FEN SKATING</div>
-
-<p>The Fen skaters of Lincolnshire have been famous for
-centuries. In the Peterborough Museum you may see two<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_406"></a>[406]</span>
-bone skates made of the shin bones of an ox and a deer ground
-to a smooth flat surface on one side and pierced at either end
-with holes, or grooved, for attachment thongs. The regular
-fen skates, which are only now being ousted by the more convenient
-modern form were like the Dutch skates of Teniers’
-pictures, long, projecting blades twice as long as a man’s
-foot, turned up high at the end and cut off square at the heel.
-They were called “Whittlesea runners,” and were supposed
-to be the best form of skate for pace straight ahead; and no
-man who lived at Ramsey 100 to 200 years ago or at Peterborough
-or Croyland was without a pair. The writer has been
-on Cowbit Wash (pronounced Cubbit), near Spalding, when
-the great frozen plain was in places black with the crowds of
-Lincolnshire fenmen, mostly agricultural labourers, all on
-skates and all thoroughly enjoying themselves, whilst ever and
-anon a course was cleared, and with a swish of the sounding
-“pattens” a couple of men came racing down the long lane
-bordered with spectators with both arms swinging in time to
-the long vigorous strokes which is the fenman’s style. The
-most remarkable thing about the gathering was the splendid
-physique of the crowd. Could they all have been taken and
-drilled for military service they would have made a regiment
-of which Peter the Great would have been proud.</p>
-
-<p>The best ice fields for racing purposes are Littleport in
-Cambridgeshire, and Lingay Fen and Cowbit Wash in Lincolnshire.
-Before it was drained in 1849, Whittlesea Mere in
-Huntingdonshire was the great meeting ground, and the Ramsey
-and Whittlesea men were famous skaters. By dyke or river
-one could go from Cambridge to Ramsey on skates all the way.
-The best speed skaters—and speed was the only aim of the
-fen skater—for many years were the Smarts of Welney, near
-Littleport. “Turkey” Smart beat Southery, who won the
-championship in the last match on Whittlesea Mere from
-Watkinson of Ramsey, and after him “Fish” Smart held the
-record at Cowbit Wash for a whole generation from 1881 to
-1912.</p>
-
-<p>In 1878 and 1879 the frost was long and hard, and the prizes
-at the great skating match near Ramsey took the form of food
-and clothing for the frozen-out labourers. The course was
-down a road which a heavy fall of snow, followed first by a
-thaw and then by a frost, had made into an ideal skating course.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_407"></a>[407]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE CHAMPIONSHIPS</div>
-
-<p>Whatever year you take you will find that the prize-winners
-for fen skating come from the same district and the same
-villages; Welney, Whaplode, Gedney, Cowbit, and Croyland
-are perpetually recurring names, the last four being all situated
-in the south-eastern corner of Lincolnshire which abuts on the
-Wash between the outfall of the Welland and the Nene.</p>
-
-<p>In the severe frost of 1912, which lasted from January 29
-to February 5, the thermometer on the night of February 3
-going down to zero, Cowbit Wash saw the contest for both the
-professional and the amateur championship for Lincolnshire.
-The Lincolnshire professional race on Saturday, February 3,
-over a course of one mile and a half with one turn in it brought
-out two Croyland men, H. Slater first and G. Pepper second,
-F. Ward of Whaplode being third. The winning time was
-4 minutes 50 seconds.</p>
-
-<p>On Monday, February 5, W. W. Pridgeon of Whaplode won
-the Lincolnshire amateur championship over a mile course
-with a turn and a terrific wind in 3 minutes 40 seconds, two
-Boston men coming next. On the following day, February 6,
-the ice from the thaw, though wet, had a beautiful surface,
-and in the great “one mile straightaway” race open to amateurs
-and professionals alike, eight men entered, all of whom beat
-Fish Smart’s record of 3 minutes. F. W. Dix, the British
-amateur champion winning in 2 minutes 27¼ seconds, with
-S. Greenhall, the British professional champion, second in
-2 minutes 32²⁄₁₅ seconds.</p>
-
-<p>F. W. Dix showed himself to be first-rate at all distances,
-for besides this mile race, he won the mile and a half on
-February 2 at Littleport, with five turns in 4 minutes 40 seconds,
-and next day at the Welsh Harp he secured the prize for 220
-yards in 22⅘ seconds. S. Greenhall had won the British professional
-championship on the previous day at Lingay Fen
-over a course of one and a half miles, coming in first by 170 yards
-in 4 minutes 44⅘ seconds.</p>
-
-<p>In all these races the wind was blowing a gale, and those
-who won the toss, and could run close up under the lee of the
-line of spectators had a decided advantage, and as a matter of
-fact they won in every case.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A WORLD’S RECORD</div>
-
-<p>Since this Dix has won in the Swiss skating matches of 1913,
-and here it may be of interest to add the following, which
-appeared in <i>The Times</i> of February 3, 1913:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_408"></a>[408]</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="center">“SPEED-SKATING.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">International Race in Christiania.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">(From our Correspondent.)</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Christiania, Feb. 1.</span></p>
-
-<p>“The International Skating Race held here to-day over a
-course of 10,000 metres was won by the Norwegian skater,
-Oscar Mathieson. His time was 17 min. 22⁶⁄₁₀ sec., which is
-a world’s ‘record.’ The Russian, Ipolitow, was second, his
-time being 17 min. 35⁵⁄₁₀ sec. The previous world’s ‘record’
-was 17 min. 36⅗ sec.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>‘Metres’ fairly beat me, but I take it that 10,000 of them
-would be about six miles.</p>
-
-<p>But anyone who likes to worry it out can postulate that the
-length of a metre is 39·37079 inches. This was originally
-adopted as a “Natural unit,” being one ten-millionth of the
-distance between a pole and the Equator. But, as an error
-has been found in the measurement of this distance, it is no
-longer a “Natural unit,” but just the length of a certain rod
-of platinum kept at Paris, as the yard is the length of a rod
-kept at Westminster.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_409"></a>[409]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXVI">CHAPTER XXXVI<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE FEN CHURCHES—NORTHERN DIVISION</span></h2>
-
-<p>Friskney—Frescoes in the Church—Its Decoys—Wrangle—John Reed’s
-Epitaph—Leake—Leverton—Benington—Frieston—The Font-Cover—Frieston
-Shore—Rare Flowers—Fishtoft—Skirbeck—Boston—The
-Church.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The two centres for “The parts of Holland” are Spalding
-and Boston. From the latter we go both north and south,
-from Spalding only eastwards, and in each case we shall pass
-few residential places of importance, but many exceptionally
-fine churches.</p>
-
-<p>We will take the district north of Boston first.</p>
-
-<p>Friskney, which is but three and a half miles south of Wainfleet,
-where we ended our south Lindsey excursion, is really
-in Lindsey. It stands between the Marsh and the Fen. The
-road from Wainfleet to Boston bounds the inhabited area
-of the parish on the east, and another from Burgh, which runs
-for ten miles without passing a single village till it reaches
-Wrangle, does the same on the west. Outside of these roads
-on the west is the great “East Fen,” reclaimed little more
-than 100 years ago, and on the east is the “Old Marsh,” along
-which went the Roman Bank, and east of which again is the
-“New Marsh,” and beyond it the huge stretch of the “Friskney
-flats,” over which the sea ebbs and flows for a distance of from
-three to four miles; the haunt of innumerable sea birds, plovers
-(locally pyewipes), curlew, redshanks, knots, dunlins, stints,
-etc., as well as duck and geese of many kinds and even, at times,
-the lordly swan.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FRISKNEY</div>
-
-<p>Thus surrounded, <i>Friskney</i> stands solitary about half way
-between Wainfleet and Wrangle, and if only the northern
-boundary of Holland had been made the “Black Dyke” and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_410"></a>[410]</span>
-“Gout” as would have been most natural, Friskney would have
-been the north-eastern point of Holland, instead of being the
-south-eastern point of Lindsey. Since their discovery by the
-late rector, the Rev. H. J. Cheales, the most noticeable thing in
-the fine Perpendicular church is the series of wall paintings
-above the arcades of the nave, date 1320, most of them are faint
-and hard to make out, but there are drawings of them, and
-an account was published in 1884 and 1905 in the “Archæologia,”
-vols. 48 and 50. The subjects are the Annunciation,
-Nativity, Resurrection, and Ascension, and the Assumption
-of the Virgin, on the north arcade; on the south are the Offering
-of Melchizedek, the Gathering of the Manna, the Last Supper,
-one possibly of Pope Gregory, one of King Æthelred entering
-Bardney Abbey, and a most curious one of Jews stabbing the
-Host. There are two Norman arches in the aisle wall, and a
-beautiful tower arch with steps from the nave down into the
-tower, the lower part of which is transition Norman, the next
-stage Early English, and the next Perpendicular; there are
-six bells in it. The nave is very high, the clerestory, on which
-the paintings are, having been added early in the fourteenth
-century. The old roof has been preserved, and the chancel
-screen and two chantry screens, which are unusually high to
-match the nave. The rood stairs, as at Wrangle and Leake,
-are on the south side. The pulpit is dated 1659. The north
-chantry is entered by a half arch, and there is a squint and a
-curious low-side window placed oddly on the north side of the
-chancel arch. Some unusually fine sedilia with diaper work
-at the back, and a trefoiled aumbry and piscina are in the chancel,
-which has been nearly ruined by bad restoration with a new
-roof in 1849. It has large handsome windows and finely canopied
-niches on each buttress, with ornamentation carved in Ancaster
-stone. This chancel was the gift of John Mitchell of Friskney
-in 1566.</p>
-
-<p>An effigy of a knight of the Freshney family (a local pronunciation
-of Friskney), of whom we have seen so many
-monuments in the Marsh churches at Somercoats, Saltfleetby
-and Skidbrooke, is at the west end, and a restored churchyard
-cross stands near the south door.</p>
-
-<p>The family of Kyme, who had a manor near Boston and two
-villages called after them between Sleaford and Dogdyke, held
-land in Friskney through the thirteenth century and until<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_411"></a>[411]</span>
-1339, when it passed by marriage to Gilbert Umfraville, whose
-son, the Earl of Angus, married Maud, daughter of Lord Lucy.
-She afterwards became the second wife of Henry Percy, first
-Earl of Northumberland, father of the famous “Hotspur,”
-whose wife, together with her second husband, Baron Camoys,
-has such a fine monument in Trotton church near Midhurst,
-Sussex. Hence, in the east window of the north aisle of
-the church at Friskney are the arms, amongst others, of
-Northumberland, Lucy, and Umfraville.</p>
-
-<p>The Earl’s grandson, the second Earl of Northumberland,
-who was killed at the battle of St. Albans fighting for Henry VI.,
-May 22, 1455, possessed no less than fifty-seven manors in
-Lincolnshire, many of them inherited from the Kymes.</p>
-
-<p>William de Kyme, uncle of Gilbert Umfraville, left a widow
-Joan who married Nicolas de Cantelupe. He founded a chantry
-dedicated to St. Nicolas in Lincoln Cathedral, and she, one
-dedicated to St. Paul.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LOST INDUSTRIES</div>
-
-<p>It is melancholy to hear of old-fashioned employments fading
-away, but it is the penalty paid by civilisation all the world
-over. Friskney in particular may be called the home of lost
-industries. For instance, “Mossberry or Cranberry Fen,” in
-this parish, was so named from the immense quantity of cranberries
-which grew on it, and of which the inhabitants made
-no use until a Westmorland man, knowing their excellence,
-taught them; and thence, until the drainage of the fens,
-thousands of pecks were picked and sent into Cambridgeshire,
-Yorkshire, and Lancashire every year, 5<i>s.</i> a peck being paid
-to the gatherers. After the drainage they became very scarce
-and fetched up to 50<i>s.</i> a peck.</p>
-
-<p>Similarly, before the enclosure of the fens there were at least
-ten <i>Duck Decoys</i> in this part of the county, of which five were
-in Friskney, and they sent to the London market in one season
-over 31,000 ducks. Eighty years ago there were still two in
-Friskney and one in Wainfleet St. Mary’s, and I remember one
-in Friskney which still maintained itself, in the sixties, though
-each year the wild fowl came to it in diminishing numbers.</p>
-
-<p>Bryant’s large map of 1828 shows a decoy near Cowbit Wash,
-no less than five near the right bank of the River Glen in the
-angle formed by the “Horseshoe Drove” and the “Counter
-Drain,” and two on the left bank of the Glen, all the seven
-being within a two-mile square, and two more further north<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_412"></a>[412]</span>
-in the Dowsby Fen, and four in the Sempringham Fen probably
-made by the Gilbertines.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE DECOY</div>
-
-<p>The decoy was a piece of water quite hidden by trees, and
-only to be approached by a plank across the moat which surrounded
-it, and with a large tract of marshy uncultivated ground
-extending all round it, the absence of disturbing noises being
-an essential, for the birds slept there during the day and only
-took their flight to the coast at evening for feeding. The
-method of taking them was as follows. The pond had half-a-dozen
-arms like a star-fish, but all curving to the right, over
-which nets were arched on bent rods; and these pipes, leading
-down each in a different direction and gradually narrowing,
-ended in a purse of netting. All along the pipes were screens,
-so set that the ducks could not see the man till they had passed
-him, and lest they should wind him he always held a bit of
-burning turf before his mouth. Decoy birds enticed by hemp
-and other floating seed flung to them over the screens kept
-swimming up the pipes followed by the wild birds, and a little
-dog was trained to enter the water and pass in and out of the
-reed screens. The ducks, being curious, would swim up, and
-the dog, who was rewarded with little bits of cheese, kept
-reappearing ahead of them, and so led them on to follow
-the decoys. At last the man showed himself, and the birds—ducks,
-teal, and widgeon—rushed up the pipe into the purse
-and were taken. The decoy was only used in November,
-December, and January, and it is not in use now at all. But
-there are still two of the woods left round the ponds at Friskney,
-each about twelve acres, and the water is there to some extent,
-but the arms are grown over with weeds and are barely traceable.
-Indeed it is a hundred years and rather more since the
-famous old decoy man, George Skelton, lived and worked here
-with his four sons. His great grandson was the last to follow
-the occupation, but when the numbers caught came to be only
-three and four a day, it was clear that the business had “given
-out.” Absolute quiet and freedom from all the little noises
-which arise wherever the lowliest and smallest of human
-habitations exist was necessary, for at least a mile all round
-the wood, and as cultivation spread this could not be obtained.
-Nothing is so shy as wild-fowl; and Skelton said that even
-the smell of a saucepan of burnt milk would scare all the duck
-away. The mode of taking birds in “flight nets” is still<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_413"></a>[413]</span>
-practised on the coast, the nets being stretched on poles at
-several feet above the ground, and the birds flying into them
-and getting entangled. Plover are taken in this way, and the
-smaller birds which fly low in companies along by the edge
-of the sea, or across the mud flats.</p>
-
-<p>A decoy still exists near Croyland, and another at Ashby
-west of Brigg, in the lower reaches of the Trent; and formerly
-there were many in Deeping Fen and other parts of Holland.
-But wild-fowl were not the only birds the Fenmen had to rely
-on, and Cooper’s “Tame Villatic Fowl,” and the goose and
-turkey in particular, are a steady source of income, as the
-Christmas markets in the Fens testify.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">WRANGLE</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE REED EPITAPH</div>
-
-<p>From <i>Friskney</i> we run on about four miles to <i>Wrangle</i>.
-What the road used to be we may guess from the constable’s
-accounts for the parish of Friskney, in which the expenses for
-a journey to Boston are charged for two days and a night “being
-in the winter time.” The distance is thirteen miles. In the
-eighteenth century corn was still conveyed to market on the
-backs of horses tied in strings, head to tail, like the camels in
-eastern caravans. The name of <i>Wrangle</i> is Weranghe, or
-Werangle, in Domesday, said to mean the lake or mere of
-reeds, from “wear,” a lake, and “hangel,” a reed. A friend
-of mine passing Old Leake station (which was first called “Hobhole
-drain,” but, at the request of the Wrangle parishioners,
-because the name deterred visitors, was altered afterwards
-to Leake-and-Wrangle), observed that this name reminded
-him of the words of Solomon that the beginning of strife is
-like the letting out of water.<a id="FNanchor_30" href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> The place used to be a haven
-on a large sea creek, and furnished to Edward III. for the invasion
-of France, in 1359, one ship and eight men, Liverpool
-at that time being assessed at one ship and five men. The
-church is large, and the rectors have been for over a hundred years
-members of the family of Canon Wright of Coningsby, a nephew
-of Sir John Franklin. The outer doorway of the south porch
-has a beautiful trefoiled arch with tooth moulding, and curious
-carvings at the angles. Near this is a fine octagonal font with
-three steps and a raised stone, called a ‘stall,’ for the priest to
-stand on. This is not uncommon in all these lofty Early
-English fonts. The tower was once much higher, as is shown
-by the fine tower arch with its very singular moulding. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_414"></a>[414]</span>
-tracery in the clerestory windows marks a period of transition,
-being alternately flowing and Perpendicular. There is a good
-deal of old glass of the fourteenth century in the north aisle,
-quite two-thirds of the east window of the aisle being old,
-with the inscription “Thomas de Weyversty, Abbas de Waltham
-me fieri fecit.” There is a turret staircase for the rood-loft
-stair at the junction of the south aisle and chancel, hence the
-door to the rood loft is on that side. The pulpit is Elizabethan.
-The Reed family have several monuments here, and it is probable
-that the three first known parsons of Wrangle—William (1342),
-John (1378), and Nicolas (1387)—were chaplains to that family.
-On a large slab in the chancel pavement to “John Reed sum
-time Marchant of Calys and Margaret his wyfe,” date 1503,
-are these lines:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">This for man, when ye winde blows</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Make the mill grind,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But ever on thyn oune soul</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Have thou in mind,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That thou givys with thy hand</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Yt thou shalt finde,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And yt thou levys thy executor</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Comys far behynde.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Do thou for thy selfe while ye have space.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To pray Jesu of mercy and grace,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In heaven to have a place.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Sir John Reade, the great-grandson of John and Margaret,
-who died in 1626, is described as “eques aureus vereque Xianus
-eirenarcha prudens,” etc., the last substantive meaning Justice
-of the Peace.</p>
-
-<p>There is an old Bede-house founded 1555, which we shall
-pass now on our way to <i>Leake</i>, and we may perhaps trace
-the old sea-bank just behind it. There was once one also at
-Benington, a few miles further on, called “Benington Bede.”
-But before leaving so much that is old we may delight our
-eyes, if we are lucky enough to find Mr. Barker (the vicar) or his
-wife in the church, with a sight of some most exquisite modern
-church embroidery in the form of an altar cloth, lately made
-by the ladies of the rectory.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus85">
-<img src="images/illus85.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Leake Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LEAKE</div>
-
-<p><i>Leake</i>, little more than a mile from Wrangle, has a most
-massive Perpendicular tower which was fifty-seven years
-building and never completed; here, too, there was a seaway
-to the coast. The south aisle of the church and the nave<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_415"></a>[415]</span>
-have been restored, but the north aisle is still in a ruinous
-condition, and reflects little credit on the patrons who are,
-or were, the governors of Oakham and Uppingham schools.
-There is a magnificent clerestory of six windows with carved
-and canopied niches between each window, giving a very rich
-effect; and, as at Wrangle, there is an octagonal rood turret
-and spirelet at the south-east of the nave. The wavy parapet
-of the nave gable reminds one of the similar work round the
-eastern chapel at Peterborough Cathedral, and the tall nave
-pillars resemble those at Boston. Only a very little Norman<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_416"></a>[416]</span>
-work remains from an earlier church. A knight in alabaster, a
-good Jacobean pulpit, and a remarkable old alms-box made
-out of a solid oak stem are in the church, and round the churchyard
-is a moat with a very large lych-gate on the bridge across
-it. A mile and a half east of this are the remains of an old
-stone building of early date, called the Moat House.</p>
-
-<p>Two of the Conington family were vicars here in the seventeenth
-century, and a Thomas Arnold was curate in 1794.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LEVERTON</div>
-
-<p><i>Leverton</i> is but two miles from Leake, and <i>Benington</i> only
-one mile further. The churches in this district have no
-pinnacles. Leverton was thatched until 1884, when the present
-clerestory was built. The chancel has some beautiful canopied
-sedilia, which are spoken of by Marrat in his “History of
-Lincolnshire” as “three stone stalls of most exquisite workmanship,
-to describe the beauties of which the pen seems not
-to possess an adequate power.” At the back of one of these
-is an aumbrey, or locker. The windows are square-headed,
-the font is tall and handsome, but the greatest charm of the
-building is the sacristy or Lady chapel to the south of the
-chancel—a perfect gem of architecture, the carved stone work
-of which is rich and tasteful. Crucifixes surmount both gables
-of this, and also that at the chancel end, this profusion being
-a consequence of the church being dedicated to St. Helena.
-Whether she was the daughter of a Bithynian innkeeper or
-a British princess, she was the wife of Constantius Chlorus and
-mother of Constantine the Great; and the legend is that,
-being admonished in a dream to search for the Cross of Christ,
-she journeyed to Jerusalem, and, employing men to dig at
-Golgotha, found three crosses, and having applied each of them
-to a dead person, one of the crosses raised the dead to life, so
-she knew that that was the one she was searching for. The
-church of North Ormsby is also dedicated to her. At Leverton
-the rood-loft steps exist on the south of the chancel arch, and
-the churchwarden’s book, which begins in 1535, gives the bill
-for putting up the rood loft and also for taking it down. At
-the beginning of last century Mrs. A. Skeath, of Boston, made
-a new sea-bank three miles long, which effectually reclaimed
-from the sea 390 acres for this parish.</p>
-
-<p>The village of <i>Benington</i> has a fine church with a good porch
-and a turret stairway to the north-east of the nave. The roof
-retains its old timbers with carved angels. In the chancel<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_417"></a>[417]</span>
-are the springers for a stone roof. The pillars of the nave
-have a very wide circular base, and in the Early English chancel
-are sedilia with aumbries and piscina, and also an arched recess
-which may have been used for an Easter sepulchre. The tall
-red sandstone font is singularly fine, both bowl and pedestal
-being richly carved with figures under canopies.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus86">
-<img src="images/illus86.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Leverton Windmill.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The practice of putting inscriptions into rhyme is exemplified
-in the windows of these churches.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BENINGTON</div>
-
-<p>Benington has a Latin couplet:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Ad loca Stellata</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Duc me Katherina beata</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Leverton one in Norman French:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Pour l’amour de Jhesu Christ</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Priez par luy q moy fatre fist.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">(Pray for him who caused me to be made.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BUTTERWICK AND FRIESTON</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FRIESTON SHORE</div>
-
-<p>A lane here leads eastwards to Benington-Sea-End, which is
-close on the Roman bank. And, as the main road to Boston<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_418"></a>[418]</span>
-is devoid of interest, we will bend to the left hand, and pass
-through Butterwick to Frieston and so to the shore. An old
-register records in rhyme the planting of the fine sycamore
-tree in <i>Butterwick</i> churchyard, in 1653. The name Butterwick
-occurs in the East Riding of Yorkshire, and is derived
-probably from the Dane Buthar, as are Buttermere in Cumberland,
-and Butterlip-How in Grasmere. At <i>Frieston</i>, which,
-like Friskney and Firsby, is said to indicate a colony of Frieslanders,
-the present church is the nave of a fine old priory
-church of the twelfth century founded by Alan de Creon for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_419"></a>[419]</span>
-Benedictines and attached as a cell to Croyland, where his
-brother was abbot. It had a central tower adjoining the east
-of the present building; the west piers of this tower are visible
-outside. Inside there are six Norman and three pointed arches,
-the latter leading to a massive western tower with a stone
-figure in a niche dating from the fifteenth century. The south
-aisle is now all of brick, the Norman stone corbelling being
-replaced above the eight large three light clerestory windows.
-The most remarkable thing in the church is the beautiful carved
-wood font-cover, at least twelve feet high, and surmounted by
-a figure of the Virgin. This is similar, but superior, to that
-at Fosdyke, but in no way equal to the beautiful and richly
-carved example ten feet in height at Ufford church in Suffolk.
-The font itself has carved panels and two kneeling-steps for
-priest and sponsor. The churchyard is an extremely large
-one. The sea once came close up to Frieston, the coast bending
-round to Fishtoft and towards Skirbeck; at the present time
-the Frieston shore is two and a half miles off. The road runs
-close up to the sea-bank. A long old-fashioned hostelry, with
-a range of stables telling of days gone by, stands under the
-shelter of the bank, on mounting which you find a bench on a
-level with the bedroom windows of the inn, whence you look out
-towards the sea, which forms a shining line in the far distance,
-for it is over two miles to ‘Boston deeps,’ far over a singular
-stretch of foreshore channelled with a network of deep clefts by
-which the retreating tide drains seaward through the glistening
-mud. The first part of this desolate shore is green with sea-grasses,
-visited daily by the salt water, and along the fringe
-of it there are here many rather uncommon flowers growing
-just below high-water mark, such as the yellow variety of the
-sea aster (<i>Aster tripolium var. discoideus</i>), and the rare <i>Suæda
-fruticosa</i>; and in the ditches leading inland the handsome
-marsh-mallow (<i>Althæa officinalis</i>) flourishes, as it does on
-Romney Marsh, near Rye. At high water all looks quite
-different; and a sunrise over the lagoon-like shallow water
-gives a picture of colour which is not easily forgotten.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus87">
-<img src="images/illus87.jpg" width="500" height="525" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Frieston Priory Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>From Frieston shore one gets by a circuitous three-mile route
-to <i>Fishtoft</i>. Here once was a Norman church. The present
-one has two rood screens; one, at the west end, having been
-purchased from Frieston, which, however, retained its two
-aisle screens. There is a good small figure of St. Guthlac,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_420"></a>[420]</span>
-the patron saint, over the west window of the tower, much
-like that at Frieston. On a tombstone in the churchyard is
-the following:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Interred here lies Anne the wife</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of Bryon Johnson during life</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The 25ᵗʰ day of November</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In 68 he lost this member.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">He only survived her two months, and the next inscription is:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Now Bryon is laid down by Anne</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">’Till God does raise them up again.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">This rhyme might do for Norfolk or Devonshire, but is not
-Lincolnshire.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BOSTON STUMP</div>
-
-<p>And now two miles more bring us to <i>Skirbeck</i> on the outskirts
-of Boston. The only interesting feature of the church
-here is in the columns of the nave, which have four cylinders
-round a massive centre pillar, all four quite detached except
-at the bases and capitals, which last are richly carved. We
-shall find exactly similar ones at Weston, near Spalding. We
-now follow the curving line of the Haven with its grassy banks
-right into Boston. The splendid parish church, the sight of
-whose tower is a never-failing source of delight and inspiration,
-stands with its east end in the market-place, and its tall
-tower close on the bank of the river. It has no transepts as
-the Great Yarmouth church has, but, apart from its unapproachable
-steeple, it is longer and higher and greater in cubic contents
-than any parish church in the kingdom. The tower, 288 feet,
-is taller than Lincoln tower or Grantham spire, and is only
-exceeded in height by Louth spire, which is 300 feet. The
-view of it from across the river is one of the most entirely
-satisfying sights in the world.<a id="FNanchor_31" href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> The extreme height is so well
-proportioned, and each stage leads up so beautifully to the next,
-that one is never tired of gazing on it. Add to this that it is
-visible to all the dwellers in the Marsh and Fen for twenty miles
-round and from the distant Wolds, and again far out to sea,
-and is as familiar to all as their own shadow, and you can guess
-at the affection which stirs the hearts of all Lincolnshire men
-when they think or speak of the ‘Owd Stump,’ a curious title
-for a beloved object, but so slightly does it decrease in size
-as it soars upwards from basement to lantern, that in the
-distance it looks more like a thick mast or the headless stem
-of a gigantic tree than a church steeple.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_421"></a>[421]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus88">
-<img src="images/illus88.jpg" width="500" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Boston Church from the N.E.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_422"></a>[422]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE BUILDING OF THE CHURCH</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE INTERIOR</div>
-
-<p>There was once here a church of the type of Sibsey, said to
-date from 1150, of which but little has been discovered. The
-present building was begun in 1309, when the digging for the
-foundation of the tower began “on ye Monday after Palm
-Sunday in the 3ʳᵈ yr of Ed. II.” They went down thirty feet
-to a bed of stone five feet below the level of the river bed, overlying
-“a spring of sand,” under which again was a bed of clay
-of unknown thickness. The excavation was a very big job,
-and the “first stone” was not laid till the feast of St. John the
-Baptist (Midsummer Day) by Dame Margaret Tilney, and she
-and Sir John Truesdale, then parson of Boston, and Richard
-Stevenson, a Boston merchant, each laid £5 on the stone “which
-was all ye gifts given at that time” towards the expense which,
-we are told, was, for the whole tower, under £500 of the money
-of those days. Leland, Vol. VIII., 204, says: “Mawde Tilney
-who layed the first stone of the goodly steeple of the paroche
-chirch of Boston lyith buried under it.” The work of building
-up the tower was interrupted for fifty years, and the body of
-the church was taken in hand, the present tower arch serving
-as a west window. Then the tower began to rise, but it was
-finished without the lantern. In the middle of the fifteenth
-century the chancel was lengthened by two bays, and the parapets
-and pinnacles added to the aisles. The parapet at the east end
-of the north aisle is very curious and elaborate, being pierced
-with tracery of nearly the same design as that on the flying
-buttresses of Henry VII.’s Chapel at Westminster. There were
-several statues round the building on tall pedestals rising from
-the lowest coping of the buttresses to about the height of the
-nave parapets; one is conspicuous still at the south-east
-corner of the tower and above the south porch. The tower
-has three stages, arranged as in Louth church, and then the
-lantern above. In the first stage a very large west window
-rises above the west doorway, and similar ones on the north
-and south of the tower, and all the surface is enriched with
-panelling both on tower and buttresses. The next stage is
-lighted by a pair of windows of great height, finely canopied
-and divided by a transom, on each side of the tower; this forms
-the ringing chamber, and a gallery runs round it in the thickness<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_423"></a>[423]</span>
-of the wall communicating with the two staircases. On the
-door of one of these is a remarkable handle, a ring formed by
-two bronze lizards depending from a lion’s mouth. The clustered
-shafts and springers of the stone vault were built at the beginning,
-but the handsome groined roof with its enormous central
-boss 156 feet from the ground was not completed until 1852.
-The next story has large single-arched windows of a decidedly
-plain type. These are the only things one can possibly find
-fault with, but probably when the tower had no lantern the
-intention was to exhibit the light from this story, the bells
-being hung below and rung from the ground. Eventually
-the eight bells were hung in the third story, and the lantern,
-by far the finest in England, was added, which gives so queenly
-an effect to the tall tower. Before this was done four very
-high pinnacles finished the building, subsequently arches were
-turned diagonally over the angles of the tower so as to make
-the base of the octagonal lantern. The roof of the tower and
-the gutters round it are of stone and curiously contrived. The
-lantern has eight windows like those in the second stage of
-the tower, but each one pane longer, and the corners are supported
-by flying buttresses springing in pairs from each tower
-pinnacle. The whole is crowned with a lofty parapet with
-pierced tracery and eight pinnacles with an ornamented gable
-between each pair of pinnacles. Inside was a lantern lighted
-at night for a sea mark. The church of All Saints, York, has
-a very similar one, and there the hook for the lantern pulley
-is still to be seen.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BOSTON, U.S.A.</div>
-
-<p>Inside, one is struck by the ample size and height of the
-church and its vast proportions. The choir has five windows
-on each side. But the nave is spoilt by a false wooden roof
-which cuts off half of the clerestory windows. It is a pity
-this is not removed and the old open timber roof replaced.
-In the chancel are sixty-four stalls of good carved work, and
-the old and curiously designed miserere seats, often showing
-humorous subjects as at Lincoln, are of exceptional interest.
-Of the once numerous brasses most are gone, but two very fine
-ones are on either side the altar: one to Walter Peascod,
-merchant, 1390, and one to a priest in a cope, <i>c.</i> 1400; an
-incised slab of 1340 is at the west of the north aisle. The
-Conington tablet in memory of John Conington, Corpus Professor
-of Latin in the University of Oxford, on the south wall<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_424"></a>[424]</span>
-of the chancel is to be noticed, and the Bolles monument in the
-south aisle, and, near the south porch, the chapel which was
-restored by the Bostonians of the United States as a recognition
-of their Lincolnshire origin. Close to this is a curious
-epitaph painted on a wooden panel, which reads as follows:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">My corps with Kings and Monarchs sleeps in bedd,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My soul with sight of Christ in heaven is fedd,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">This lumpe that lampe shall meet, and shine more bright</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Than Phœbus when he streams his clearest light,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Omnes sic ibant sic imus ibitis ibunt.</div>
- <div class="verse indent32">Rich. Smith obiit</div>
- <div class="verse indent36">Anno salutis 1626.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus89">
-<img src="images/illus89.jpg" width="500" height="450" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Boston Stump.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_425"></a>[425]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXVII">CHAPTER XXXVII<br />
-<span class="smaller">ST. BOTOLPH’S TOWN</span></h2>
-
-<p>The River Witham—Drayton’s Polyolbion—The Steeple at Boston—Monastic
-Houses—Merchants’ Guilds—Dykes and Sluices—The Fens
-reclaimed—Great Floods—High Tides—The Hussey and Kyme
-Towers—John Fox—Hallam and Conington—Jean Ingelow—Lincolnshire
-Stories.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A not unapt parallel has been drawn between Boston and
-Venice for, like the Campanile, Boston steeple is a sort of
-Queen of the Waters, and before the draining of the Fens she
-often looked down on a waste of waters which stretched in all
-directions.</p>
-
-<p>Leland, who wrote in the reign of Henry VIII., in Vol. VII.
-of his Itinerary, speaks of “the great Steple of Boston,” and
-describes the town thus: “Bosstolpstoune stondeth harde on
-the river Lindis (Witham). The greate and chifiest parte of
-the toune is on the este side of the ryver, where is a faire market
-place, and a crosse with a square toure. Al the buildings of
-this side of the toune is fayre, and Marchuntes duelle yn it;
-and a staple of wulle is used there. There is a bridg of wood
-to cum over Lindis, into this parte of the toune, and a pile of
-stone set yn the myddle of the ryver. The streame of yt is
-sumtymes as swifte as it were an arrow. On the West side of
-Lindis is one long strete, on the same side is the White Freies.
-The mayne sea ys VI miles of Boston. Dyverse good shipps
-and other vessells ryde there.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE RIVER WITHAM</div>
-
-<p>Michael Drayton, who wrote in Elizabeth’s reign, was quite
-enthusiastic about the merits of the Witham, which runs out
-at Boston, and makes her speak in her own person thus:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_426"></a>[426]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">From Witham, mine own town, first water’d with my source,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">As to the Eastern sea I hasten on my course,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Who sees so pleasant plains or is of fairer seen?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Whose swains in shepherd’s gray and girls in Lincoln green,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Whilst some the ring of bells, and some the bagpipes play,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Dance many a merry round, and many a hydegy.<a id="FNanchor_32" href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a></div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I envy, any brook should in my pleasure share,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Yet for my dainty pikes, I am without compare.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">No land floods can me force to over proud a height;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nor am I in my course too crooked or too streight;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My depths fall by descents, too long nor yet too broad,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My fords with pebbles, clear as orient pearls, are strow’d,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My gentle winding banks with sundry flowers are dress’d,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My higher rising heaths hold distance with my breast.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thus to her proper song the burthen still she bare;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Yet for my dainty pikes I am without compare.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">By this to Lincoln town, upon whose lofty scite</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Whilst wistly Wytham looks with wonderful delight,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Enamour’d of the state and beauty of the place</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That her of all the rest especially doth grace,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Leaving her former course, in which she first set forth,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Which seem’d to have been directly to the North,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">She runs her silver front into the muddy fen</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Which lies into the east, in the deep journey when</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Clear Bane, a pretty brook, from Lindsey, coming down</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Delicious Wytham leads to lively Botulph’s town,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Where proudly she puts in, among the great resort</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That there appearance make, in Neptune’s Wat’ry Court.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right">Polyolbion. Song 25.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SKIRBECK</div>
-
-<p>We have no definite information of what Boston was in
-Roman times, but as the Witham was the river on which their
-colony at Lincoln stood, it is more than probable that they
-had a station at Boston to defend the river-mouth, and whatever
-<i>they</i> may have called it, it is certain that it has got its
-name of Boston or Botolph’s town from an English saint who
-is said to have founded a monastery here in 654, which was
-destroyed by the Danes in 870. St. Botolph was buried in
-his monastery in 680, and his remains moved in 870, part to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_427"></a>[427]</span>
-Ely and part to Thorney Abbey. The name as a town does
-not appear in Domesday Book, though “Skirbec” does, and
-Skirbeck covered all the ground that Boston does, and almost
-surrounded it. As the old distich declares—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Though Boston be a proud town</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Skirbeck compasseth it around.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BOSTON PORT</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">This name for pride or conceit, whether deserved or not, seems
-to have stuck to Boston, for a rhyme of later day runs thus:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_428"></a>[428]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Boston Boston Boston!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thou hast nought to boast on</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But a grand sluice, and a high steeple,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And a proud conceited ignorant people,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And a coast which souls get lost on.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">And certainly Boston once had some reason to be proud, for
-though the town was quite an infant till the beginning of the
-twelfth century, in 1113 “Fergus, a brazier of St. Botolph’s
-town” was able, according to Ingulphus in his “Chronicles
-of Croyland Abbey,” “to give 2 <i>Skillets</i> (Skilletas) which
-supplied the loss of their bells and tower.” The gift, whatever
-it was (probably small bells), must have been of considerable
-value to Croyland, which had been burnt down in 1091,
-and argues much prosperity among Boston tradespeople.
-Indeed, the town and its trade rose with such rapidity during
-the next hundred years that when, in the reign of King John,
-a tax or tythe of a fifteenth was levied on merchants’ goods,
-Boston’s contribution was £780, being second only to the £836
-of London. For the next two centuries it was a commercial
-port of the first rank, and merchants from Flanders and most
-of the great Continental towns had houses there.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus90">
-<img src="images/illus90.jpg" width="500" height="575" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Custom House Quay, Boston.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>When in 1304 Edward I. granted his wife Queen Margaret
-the castle and manor of Tattershall to hold till the heir was of
-age, he added to it the manor of St. Botolph and the duties
-levied on the weighing of the wool there. This was set down
-as worth £12 a year. A wool sack was very large—one sees
-them now at Winchester, each large enough to fill the whole
-bed of a Hampshire waggon—but at 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> a sack the duties
-must have been often worth more than £12, for there was no
-other staple in the county but at Lincoln, and that was afterwards,
-under Edward III. in 1370, transferred to Boston, and
-whether at Boston or Lincoln, when weighed and sealed by the
-mayor of the staple, it was from Boston that it was all exported.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE STAPLE</div>
-
-<p>When a staple of wool, leather, lead, etc., was established
-at any town or port it was directed that the commodities should
-be brought thither from all the neighbourhood and weighed,
-marked and sealed. Then they could be delivered to any other
-port, where they were again checked. In 1353, during the
-long reign of Edward III., the staple was appointed to be held
-in Newcastle, York, Lincoln, Norwich, Westminster, Canterbury,
-Chichester, Winchester, Exeter and Bristol. Of these, York<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_429"></a>[429]</span>
-and Lincoln sent all the produce when weighed to Hull and
-Boston, Norwich to Yarmouth, Westminster to London Port,
-Canterbury to Sandwich, and Winchester (by water or road)
-to Southampton. In 1370 some of the inland towns—York,
-Lincoln and Norwich—were deprived of their staple, and Hull
-and Queensborough were added to the list; and, though
-Nottingham, Leicester and Derby petitioned to have the
-staple at Lincoln, which was much more convenient to them,
-the answer they got was that it should continue at St. Botolph’s
-during the king’s pleasure.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus91">
-<img src="images/illus91.jpg" width="500" height="475" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>South Square, Boston.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In Henry VIII.’s time, when the king passed through Lincolnshire
-after “the pilgrimage of grace” and the chief towns made
-submission and paid a fine, Boston paid £50, while Stamford
-and Lincoln paid £20 and £40 respectively.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_430"></a>[430]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FRIARIES AND GUILDS</div>
-
-<p>In 1288 a church of the Dominican or Black Friars which had
-been recently built was burnt down, and a few years later a
-friary was re-established, which was one of the many Lincolnshire
-religious houses granted by Henry VIII. to Charles Brandon
-Duke of Suffolk. In 1301, under Edward I., a Carmelite, or
-White Friars, monastic house and priory was founded; and
-in the next reign, 1307, an Augustinian, or “Austin,” friary;
-and only a few years later, under Edward III., a Franciscan,
-or Grey Friars, friary was established. All these three were
-granted by Henry at the dissolution to the mayor and burgesses
-of Boston. He also granted the town their charter under the
-great Seal of England, to make amends for the losses they
-sustained by the destruction of the religious houses. It is a
-document with fifty-seven clauses, making the town a free
-borough with a market on Wednesday and Saturday, and two
-fairs annually of three days each, to which are added two
-“marts” for horses and cattle. The ground where the grammar
-school stands is still called the Mart-yard, and there you may
-still see the beautiful iron gate which was once part of a screen
-in the church, and is a very notable piece of good seventeenth-century
-work.</p>
-
-<p>The charter also gave the corporation, among other things,
-“power to assess the inhabitants, as well unfree as free, with a
-tax for making a safeguard and defence of the borough and
-church there against the violence of the waters and rage of the
-sea.”</p>
-
-<p>In the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries there were no less
-than fifteen guilds in the town, six of them with charters. The
-hall of St. Mary’s guild still exists, the names of St. George’s
-Lane and Corpus Christi Lane is all that is left of the others,
-but the old names indicate the localities.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE WINE-CELLARS</div>
-
-<p>In 1360 we have mention on the corporation records of
-William de Spayne, one of a family of merchants of repute,
-after whom Spayne’s Place and what is now Spain Lane were
-named. William was an alderman of the Corpus Christi Guild,
-and sheriff of the county in 1378. Spain Lane had a row of great
-cellars, some of which were rented by the abbeys, and a quantity
-of wine was shipped from Bordeaux to Boston. King John of
-France had 140 tuns at one time, the carriage of which to
-Boston, and some part of it to the place of his detention at
-Somerton Castle (<i>see</i> Chap. <a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">XIII.</a>), cost close upon £500. This<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_431"></a>[431]</span>
-large supply was sent to him from France, partly for his own
-consumption and partly to be sold in order to bring in money
-to keep up his royal state, and when we read of the silk curtains
-and tapestries, the French furniture for dining-hall and bedrooms
-which displaced the benches and trestles of an English
-castle, the horse trappings and stable fittings, and the enormous
-amount of stores and confectionery used at Somerton, we
-realise that his daily expenditure must have been a very large
-one. The cellars which stowed these large cargoes of wine
-were in Spain (or Spayne) Lane, and most of them were, in
-1590, in accordance with Boston’s usual suicidal custom,
-destroyed, though the corporation still held two in 1640 which
-had once belonged to Kirkstead Abbey.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus92">
-<img src="images/illus92.jpg" width="500" height="475" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Spain Lane, Boston.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_432"></a>[432]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE SILTING OF THE RIVER</div>
-
-<p>In the sixteenth century several trade companies—cordwainers,
-glovers, etc.—received charters. In this century
-Queen Elizabeth gave the mayor and burgesses a “Charter of
-Admiralty” over the whole of the “Norman Deeps” to enable
-them to repair and maintain the sea marks, and to levy tolls
-on all ships entering the port. But trade was then declining
-owing to the silting up of the river. This, in 1569, when the
-town was made a <i>Staple</i> town, had been in good order, and
-navigable for seagoing ships of some size, the tide water running
-up two miles inland as far as Dockdyke (now Dogdyke), and
-then a large trade was done in wool and woollen goods between
-Boston and Flanders. Hence it was that when, in the reign
-of Henry VII., a council was held to discuss the two great needs
-of the town, <i>viz.</i>, the restraining the sea water from flooding the
-land, and the delivery of the inland waters speedily to the sea, it
-was to Flanders that the Boston men turned for an engineer,
-one Mahave Hall, who built them a dam and sluice in the year
-1500. This is called the Old Sluice, and was effectual for a
-time. But in Queen Elizabeth’s reign the river below Boston
-was getting so silted up again that the waters of South Holland
-were brought by means of two “gowts” (go outs), or “clows,”
-one into the Witham above Boston at Langrick, and one below
-into the harbour at Skirbeck, to scour out the channel. The
-Kesteven men, from a sense of being robbed of their waters,
-opposed, but their objections were over-ruled by the chief
-justices. In 1568-9 the “Maud Foster” drain was cut and
-named after the owner, who gave easement over her land on
-very favourable terms.</p>
-
-<p>In the map to the first volume of the “History of Lincolnshire,”
-published by Saunders in 1834, the Langrick Gowt
-(or gote) finds no place; but the “Holland Dyke” is probably
-meant for it. The Skirbeck dyke is marked very big and
-called “The South Forty-foot,” which, along with the North
-Forty-foot and Hobhole drains, and others of large size, aided
-by powerful steam pumps, have made the Fens into a vast
-agricultural garden.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE GRAND SLUICE</div>
-
-<p>But the Elizabethan expedient was only successful for a time,
-and in 1751 a small sloop of forty to fifty tons and drawing about
-six feet of water could only get up to Boston on a spring tide.
-To remedy this and also to keep the floods down, which, when
-the cutfall was choked, extended in wet seasons west of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_433"></a>[433]</span>
-town as far as eye could see, an Act of Parliament was passed
-to empower Boston to cut the Witham channel straight and
-set to work on a new sluice. This “Grand Sluice,” designed
-by Langley Edwardes, had its foundation carried down twenty
-feet, on to a bed of stiff clay. Here, just as, near the old Skirbeck
-sluice, where Hammond beck enters the haven, at a depth
-of sixteen feet sound gravel and soil was met with, in which
-trees had grown; and at Skirbeck it is said that a smith’s
-forge, with all its tools, horseshoes, etc., complete, was found at
-that depth below the surface, showing how much silt had been
-deposited within no great number of years. The foundation
-stone of the present Grand sluice was laid by Charles Amcotts,
-then Member of Parliament and Mayor of Boston, in 1764,
-and opened two years later in the presence of a concourse
-of some ten thousand people. He died in 1777, and the Amcotts
-family in the male line died with him. In Jacobean times
-much good embankment work under Dutch engineers had been
-begun, and had met with fierce opposition from the Fen men,
-and the same spirit was still in existence a hundred and fifty
-years later, for when, in 1767, an Act was passed for the enclosure
-of Holland, the works gave rise to the most determined
-and fierce riots which were carried to the most unscrupulous
-length of murder, cattle maiming, and destruction of valuable
-property, and lasted from 1770 to 1773. But at length common
-sense prevailed, and a very large and fertile tract of land to
-the south-east of Boston was acquired, which helped again
-to raise the fortunes of the town to prosperity. Following
-on this in 1802 a still larger area was reclaimed on the other
-side of Boston in the East, West, and Wildmore Fens. But,
-as in all low-lying lands near the coast which are below the level
-of high-water mark, constant look-out has to be kept even now,
-both to prevent the irruption of the sea and the flooding of the
-land from storm-water not getting away quickly enough.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">GREAT FLOODS</div>
-
-<p>The Louth Abbey “Chronicle,” a most interesting document,
-extending from 1066 to the death of Henry IV., 1413, records
-disastrous floods in the Marsh in 1253 and 1315, and a bad
-outbreak of cattle plague in 1321. From other sources we
-have notice of a great flood at Boston in 1285; another in
-‘Holland,’ 1467; and again at Boston in 1571 a violent tempest,
-with rain, wind, and high tide combining, did enormous damage.
-Sixty vessels were wrecked between Newcastle and Boston,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_434"></a>[434]</span>
-many thousands of sheep and cattle were drowned in the
-Marsh, the village of Mumby-Chapel was washed into the sea
-and only three cottages and the steeple of the church left
-standing. One “Maister Pelham had eleven hundred sheep
-drowned there.” At the same time “a shippe” was driven
-against a house in the village, and the men, saving themselves
-by clambering out on to the roof, were just in time to save a
-poor woman in the cottage from the death by drowning which
-overtook her husband and child. So sudden and violent was
-the rise of the flood that at Wansford on the Nene three arches
-of the bridge were washed away, and “Maister Smith at the
-Swanne there hadde his house, being three stories high, overflowed
-into the third storie,” while the walls of the stable were
-broken down, and the horses tied to the manger were all
-drowned.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time the water reached half way up Bourne
-church tower. This shows the tremendous extent of the flood,
-for those two places are forty-four miles apart. This is the
-“High tide on the Lincolnshire Coast” sung by our Lincolnshire
-poetess, Jean Ingelow. She speaks of the Boston bells
-giving the alarm by ringing the tune called “The Brides of
-Mavis Enderby.”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The old Mayor climbed the belfry tower,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The ringers ran by two by three;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Pull if ye never pulled before,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Good ringers, pull your best,’ quoth he.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Play uppe play uppe, O Boston bells;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Ply all your changes, all your swells,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Play uppe “The Brides of Enderby.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This tune, which Miss Ingelow only imagined, was subsequently
-composed, and is now well known at Boston, for,
-besides the ring of eight bells, the tower has a set of carillons
-like those at Antwerp. They were set up in 1867, thirty-six
-in number, by Van Aerschodt, of Louvain, but not proving
-to be a success, were changed in 1897 for something less complex,
-and now can be heard at 9 a.m., and every third hour of the
-day playing “The Brides of Mavis Enderby.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">AND HIGH TIDES</div>
-
-<p>A violent gale is recorded on February 16, 1735, which did
-much damage, and in 1763-4 there was a great flood, not owing
-to any high tide but simply, as in 1912, from continued heavy
-rains, and we are told that the flood lasted for many weeks.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_435"></a>[435]</span>
-Just lately, in 1912, this was aggravated by the bursting of a
-dyke in the Bedford level which flooded miles of fenland. In
-August, 1913, the land was parched by drought, but in 1912
-it was a melancholy sight to see, in August, on both sides of
-the railway between Huntingdon and Spalding the corn sheaves
-standing up out of the water, and the farm buildings entirely
-surrounded, while the rain continued to fall daily. Even after
-three weeks of fine weather in September, though the drenched
-sheaves had been got away, water still covered the fields,
-stretching sometimes as far as eye could see. In 1779, when
-the reclamation of the Holland ‘Fens’ had been carried out,
-many vessels are said to have been driven by a violent gale
-nearly two miles inland on the ‘Marsh.’ This was long spoken
-of as “The New Year’s Gale.”</p>
-
-<p>Exceptionally high tides, each four inches higher than its
-predecessor, in the streets of Boston are recorded for October 19,
-1801, November 30, 1807, and November 10, 1810. This last
-accompanied by a storm of wind and rain. On this occasion
-the water was all over the streets of Boston and flowed up the
-nave of the church as far as the chancel step, being nearly a
-yard deep at the west end. Since then high-water marks
-were cut on the base of the tower showing how deep the nave
-was flooded in 1883 and 1896. In 1813 another high tide
-caused the sea-bank assessment to rise to 13<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> an acre, the
-normal rate then, as it is now, for the drainage tax in the east
-fen, amounting to 3<i>s.</i> an acre. Even that seems to be pretty
-stiff, £15 a year on a hundred acre farm! Of course it is an
-absolute necessity, and has been recognised from the earliest
-times. We know that in the reign of Edward I. an assessment
-was levied on all who had land to keep the drains in repair.
-This was as long ago as 1298.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">PICTURESQUE BOSTON</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE GUILDHALL</div>
-
-<p>The great feature of Boston is the wonderful church tower.
-But the town is from many points very picturesque. The
-deep-cut channel of the tidal river goes right through it.
-Passing close up against the western side of the great steeple,
-it goes with houses almost overhanging its eastern bank down
-to the bridge, a structure of no beauty. After this it runs
-alongside the street. From the windows you look across and
-see the masts of the small sea-going craft tied up to the bank,
-which, with all the old weed-grown timbers of landing-stage
-and jetty, the natural accompaniments of a tidal river, make<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_436"></a>[436]</span>
-quaint and effective pictures. In another street the boys in
-their old-fashioned blue coats and brass buttons let you into
-the secret of Boston’s many educational charities. One is in
-Wormgate (or Withamsgate), one in White Friars Lane, dating
-from the beginning of the sixteenth century, and another in
-Shodfriars Lane. The very names of the streets in Boston
-are full of history, and the recently-restored “Shod Friars
-Hall,” to the south-east of the Market Place, helps, with its<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_437"></a>[437]</span>
-abundant timbers and carved gables, to take one right back
-to the fourteenth century, though the name was only recently
-bestowed on this particular building.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus93">
-<img src="images/illus93.jpg" width="500" height="575" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Haven, Boston.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus94">
-<img src="images/illus94.jpg" width="500" height="600" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Guildhall, Boston.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>But alas, not only all the monastic buildings, but nearly all
-the domestic buildings which once made Boston like a medieval
-Dutch town are gone, though the fifteenth-century brick Guildhall<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_438"></a>[438]</span>
-remains. The citizens seem to have had a fatal mania
-for pulling down all that was most worth preserving of their
-old buildings. Gone, too, is much else which Bostonians
-might well have preserved. Such, for instance, as “the prodigious
-clock bell which could be heard many miles round,
-and was knocked to pieces in the year 1710.” It is but a few
-years ago that some of the Boston Corporation plate was sold
-in London for immense prices, and when astonished people
-asked how it came to the hammer they heard a miserable tale
-how the fine collection of civic plate, and it was unusually fine,
-had been sold in 1837 for £600, nothing approaching to its value,
-by the corporation itself, for the purpose of liquidating some
-civic debt. But any sin Boston may commit, such as the crude
-colouring of the interior of the much-renovated Guildhall, and
-painting and graining of the deal panels only last year, will be
-forgiven, so long as they have their uniquely glorious church
-tower to plead for them.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Hussey’s tower and the Kyme tower are ruins, built
-about the end of the fifteenth century, and at the end of the
-eighteenth century a big house was still standing which may
-have been Lord Hussey’s. The brick tower stands near the
-school fields, not far from the Public Gardens, which are a credit
-to Boston, and have some first-rate salt-water baths close by,
-which belong to the corporation.</p>
-
-<p>The Kyme tower is also called the Rochford tower, that family
-having held it before the Kymes. It is a massive tower, also
-of brick, as may be seen from the illustration. It stands about
-two miles outside the town to the east.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FAMOUS BOSTONIANS</div>
-
-<p>Of celebrated folk born in Boston we have, to begin with,
-John Fox, author of the “Book of Martyrs,” who was born there
-in 1517. He was sent to Brasenose, Oxford, and worked very
-hard, but was expelled as a heretic when he forsook the Roman
-Catholic religion. The Warwickshire family of Sir Thomas
-Lucie, a name made famous by Shakespeare, gave him shelter
-and employment as a tutor; and later he tutored the children
-of the Earl of Surrey who, in the reign of Queen Mary, helped
-him to escape from Bishop Gardiner’s deadly clutches. Like
-so many who suffered persecution for their religion, he made
-his home at Basle till Elizabeth’s accession allowed of his return.
-He then spent eleven years on his “Acts and Monuments,”
-and died in 1587.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_439"></a>[439]</span></p>
-
-<p>At about this time the plague raged at Boston, 1585, and broke
-out again in 1603. Boston and Frampton had, as the Registers
-show, suffered an unusual mortality in 1568-9. The water was
-not good, and as late as 1783 a boring to a depth of 478 feet was
-made in a vain search for a better supply. The town was at
-that time supplied from the west fen through wooden pipes.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus95">
-<img src="images/illus95.jpg" width="500" height="425" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Hussey’s Tower, Boston.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">CROMWELL AT BOSTON</div>
-
-<p>Hallam, the historian, and Professor John Conington, whose
-monuments are in the church, were both of Boston families,
-as was also Jean Ingelow; and the statue near the church
-preserves the memory of John Ingram, Member of Parliament
-for the town, and founder of the <i>Illustrated London News</i>.
-Saunders tells us that Oliver Cromwell lay at Boston the night
-before he fought the battle of Winceby, near Horncastle,
-October 10, 1643. He must have been up betimes, for a crow
-couldn’t make the distance less than sixteen miles, and fen
-roads at that time were a caution.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">“MY OWD SON”</div>
-
-<p>Boston is a great centre for the fen farmers, and, as at Peterborough,
-you may see and hear in the market much that is
-original. It was at Peterborough that the “converted” sailor
-made his famous petition when asked to do a bit of praying
-in the open: “O Lord! bless this people! bless their fathers
-and mothers! and bless the children! O Lord bless this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_440"></a>[440]</span>
-place! make it prosperous, send thy blessing upon it and make
-it—make it, O Lord! a sea-poort-town!” Boston having
-the Marsh farmers as well as the Fen-men meeting in her market,
-preserves a more racy dialect. I was once in the Boston Station
-waiting-room as it was getting dusk on a winter evening;
-three people of the sea-faring class were there—a tall, elderly
-man standing up, his son asleep on the floor, and the son’s
-wife sitting and apparently not much concerned with anything.
-The father, seeing me look at the sleeper, said “He’ll be all
-right after a bit. My owd son yon is. He’s a bit droonk
-now, but he’s my owd son. A strange good hand in a boat
-he is, I tell ye. They was out lass Friday i’ the Noorth Sea
-and it cam on a gale o’ wind, they puts abowt you knooa, an’
-runs for poort. The seäs was monstrous high, they was, and the
-gale was a rum un, an’ the booat she was gaff-hallyards under.
-The tother men ‘She’s gooing!’ they says, ‘She’s gooing!’
-But my owd son he hed the tiller. ‘<i>She’s</i> all right,’ he säys,
-and mind ye she was gaff-hallyards under, but ‘<i>She’s</i> all right,’
-he säys, and he brings her right in. Aye he’s a rare un wi’ a
-booat is my owd son, noan to touch him. He’s a bit droonk
-now, but he’s my owd son.”</p>
-
-<p>On another occasion at Boston I heard one farmer greet
-another with “Well, Mr. Smith, how’s pigs?” a very common
-inquiry, for in Lincolnshire pigs fill a large space on the agricultural
-horizon. Witness the reply of an aged farmer, probably
-a little unmanned by market-day potations, to a vegetarian
-who, with a cruelty hardly to be suspected in the votary of so
-mild a diet, had attacked him with “How will you feel at the
-day of Judgment when confronted by a whole row of oxen whose
-flesh you have eaten?” “’Taint the beasts I’d be scared on;
-it’s the pigs; I’ve yetten a vast o’ pigs.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_441"></a>[441]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXVIII">CHAPTER XXXVIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">SPALDING AND THE CHURCHES NORTH OF IT</span></h2>
-
-<p>Potato Trade—Bulb-growing—The Welland—Ayscough Fee Hall—The
-Gentleman’s Society—The Church—Pinchbeck—Heraldic Tombs—The
-Custs—Surfleet—Leaning Tower—Gosberton—Churchyard Sheep—Cressy
-Hall—Quadring—Donington—Hemp and Flax—Swineshead—Bicker—Sutterton—Algarkirk.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Three main roads enter the town of <i>Spalding</i>, the last town
-on the Welland before it runs out into Fosdyke Wash. They
-come from the north, south, and east. The west has none,
-being one huge fen which, till comparatively recent times,
-admitted of locomotion only by boat. The southern road
-comes from Peterborough and enters the county by the bridge
-over the Welland at Market Deeping, a pleasant-looking little
-town with wide market-like streets and its four-armed signpost
-pointing to Peterborough and Spalding ten miles, and
-Bourne and Stamford seven miles.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE WELLAND</div>
-
-<p>From Deeping to Spalding the road is a typical fen road—three
-little inns and a few farm cottages and the occasional
-line of white smoke on the perfectly straight Peterborough
-and Boston railway is all there is to see save the crops or the
-long potato graves which are mostly by the road side.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus96">
-<img src="images/illus96.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Welland at Cowbit Road, Spalding.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus97">
-<img src="images/illus97.jpg" width="500" height="450" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Welland at High Street, Spalding.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BULB-GROWING</div>
-
-<p>The potato trade is a very large one. Every cart or waggon
-we passed at Easter-time on the roads between Deeping and
-Kirton-in-Holland was loaded with sacks of potatoes, and all
-the farm hands were busy uncovering the pits and sorting the
-tubers. Donington and Kirton seemed to be the centres of
-the trade, Kirton being the home of the man who is known
-as the potato king, and has many thousands of acres of fenland
-used for this crop alone. Spalding itself is the centre of the
-daffodil market, and quantities of bulbs are grown here and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_442"></a>[442]</span>
-annually exported to Holland, it is said, to find their way back
-to England in the autumn as Dutch bulbs. I do not vouch
-for the truth of this, but certainly the business, which has
-been for years a speciality of Holland, where the lie of the
-land and the soil are much the same as in the South Lincolnshire
-and Cambridgeshire Fens, is now a large and lucrative
-industry here, and is each year expanding. The Channel and
-Scilly Islands and Cornwall can, of course, owing to their
-climate, get their narcissus into bloom earlier, but the conditions
-of soil are better in the Fens. Still, a liberal supply
-of manure is needed to insure fine blooms, and sixty or seventy
-tons to the acre is none too much, a crop of mustard or potatoes
-being taken off after its application before planting the bulbs.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_443"></a>[443]</span>
-Hyacinths are still left to Holland, in one part of which, at
-Hillegom, near Haarlem, the soil has just that amount of sand
-and lime which that particular bulb demands. Tulips, however,
-are grown in England with great success; crocuses are
-seldom planted as they make such a small return on the outlay.
-For this outlay is very considerable, nine or ten women are
-needed to each plough for planting, which alone costs 45<i>s.</i>
-an acre, and then there is the constant weeding and cleaning
-of the ground, the picking, bunching and packing, which needs
-many hands at once; also there is the heavy cost of the bulbs
-themselves for planting, Narcissus poeticus will cost £50 an
-acre of 400,000 bulbs, but 270,000 of Golden Spur will cost
-£300 and fill the same space; others will cost prices halfway
-between these two. Tulips want more room, and at 180,000
-to the acre some will cost as much as £500. Growers like to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_444"></a>[444]</span>
-advertise big bulbs, but the harder and smaller English-grown
-bulb will often give as fine a bloom as the larger imported article.
-The whole industry is comparatively new, and a very pleasant
-one for the many women who are employed.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A DISTRIBUTING CENTRE</div>
-
-<p>The town is a very old one, and the Welland going through
-it with trees along its banks and the shipping close to the roadway
-gives it rather a Dutch appearance. It is noteworthy
-as being the centre from which we shall be able to see more
-fine churches, all within easy distance, than we can in any other
-part of the county or kingdom. As early as 860 the fisheries
-of the Welland, together with a wooden chapel of St. Mary
-here, which became the site afterwards of the priory, were
-given by Earl Alfgar to Croyland. Ivo Taillebois, the Conqueror’s
-nephew, with his wife Lucia the first, lived here in the
-castle in some magnificence as Lord of Holland. They
-were both buried in the priory church, founded by Lady
-Godiva’s brother, Thorold of Bokenhale, and over possession
-of which Spalding and Croyland had frequent disputes. One
-of the priors subsequently built Wykeham chapel. The Kings
-Edward I. and II. stayed at the priory, and from Bolingbroke,
-John of Gaunt and Chaucer were not infrequent visitors. The
-building was on the south side of the Market-place, and a shop
-there with a vaulted roof to one of its rooms had probably some
-connection with it. At the dissolution it was valued at £878,
-a very large sum, and next only to Croyland, which was by far
-the richest house in the county and valued at £1,100 or £1,200.
-Thornton Abbey was only set at £730.</p>
-
-<p>The river is navigable for small sea-going vessels, and
-many large barges may generally be found tied up along
-its course through the town, discharging oil cake and cotton
-cake, and taking in cargoes of potatoes, both being transhipped
-at Fosdyke from or into coasting steamers running between
-Hull and London.</p>
-
-<p>But water carriage though cheap is limited in that it only
-goes between two points, whereas Spalding is the meeting-place
-of at least three railways, making six exits for Spalding
-goods to come and go to and from all the main big towns in
-Northamptonshire, Cambridgeshire or Norfolk, as well as to
-all those in our own county. Thus there are twice as many
-ways out of Spalding by rail as there are by road.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus98">
-<img src="images/illus98.jpg" width="500" height="525" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Ayscough Fee Hall Gardens, Spalding.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">AYSCOUGH FEE HALL</div>
-
-<p>The Welland, carefully banked by the Romans, is now bridged<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_445"></a>[445]</span>
-for one railway after another, and runs with a street on either
-side of it and rows of trees along it right through the town.
-On your right as you enter from the south you see across the
-river, looking over the top of a picturesque old brick wall, the
-well-clipped masses of ancient yew trees which form the shaded
-walks in the pretty grounds of <i>Ayscough Fee Hall</i>. The house,
-built in 1429, but terribly modernised, is now used as a museum,
-and the grounds form a public garden for the town. Murray
-tells us that Maurice Johnson once lived in it, who helped to
-found the Society of Antiquaries in 1717, and founded in 1710
-the “Gentleman’s Society of Spalding,” which still flourishes.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_446"></a>[446]</span>
-Among its many distinguished members it numbered Newton,
-Bentley, Pope, Gay, Addison, Stukeley, and Sir Hans Sloane,
-and Captain Perry, engineer to the Czar, Peter the Great, who
-was engaged in the drainage of Deeping Fen.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SPALDING CHURCH</div>
-
-<p>Close to it is the fine old church, the body of which is as wide
-as it is long owing to its having double aisles on either side of the
-nave. It was founded to take the place of an earlier one which
-was falling to ruins, in the market-place. It dates from 1284,
-and was once cruciform in plan, with a tower at the north-west
-corner of the nave. The transepts, which now do not project
-beyond the double north and south aisles, had each two narrow
-transept aisles, but the western ones have been thrown into
-the aisles of the nave. The inner nave aisles are the same
-length as the nave, but the outer ones only go as far west as the
-north and south porches, the tower filling up the angle beyond
-the south porch. The chancel is so large that it was used by
-Bishop Fleming (1420-30) for episcopal ordinations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_447"></a>[447]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus99">
-<img src="images/illus99.jpg" width="500" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Spalding Church from the S.E.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE “HOLE IN THE WALL”</div>
-
-<p>The east end wall is not rectangular, but the south chancel wall
-runs out two feet further east than the north wall, as it does
-also in the church of Coulsdon, near Reigate, in Surrey. The
-reason of this is that it is built on the foundation of an older
-chapel. The flat Norman buttresses are still to be seen outside
-the east end. The tower leans to the east, and when
-examined it was found to have been built flat on the surface
-of the ground with no foundation whatever. It seems incredible,
-but the intelligent verger was positive about it. The
-spire has beautiful canopied openings in three tiers, the lower
-ones having two lights and being unusually graceful. Standing
-inside the south porch and near the tower, and looking up the
-church, you get a most picturesque effect, for the church has
-so many aisles that you can see no less than twenty-three
-different arches. The north porch is handsome, and had three
-canopied niches over both the outer and the inner doorway,
-and a vaulted roof supporting a room over the entrance. A
-five-light window over the chancel arch is curious. There is
-a rood-loft and a staircase leading to it, and going on up to the
-roof. The Perpendicular west window is very large and has
-seven lights. This dates from the fifteenth century, when the
-nave was lengthened and the pillars of the nave considerably
-heightened and the old caps used again, and what had previously
-been an “early Decorated” church with only a nave and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_448"></a>[448]</span>
-transepts, had Perpendicular aisles added. The large south-east
-chapel which, until 1874 was used as a school, was founded
-in 1311. An erect life-size marble figure commemorates Elizabeth
-Johnson, 1843. There are no other important monuments.
-The tower has eight bells and a Sanctus bell-cot at the east
-end of the nave. There are stone steps to enable people to
-get over the brick churchyard wall, as there are also at Kirton
-and Friskney. Some stone coffin-lids curiously out of place
-are let into one of the boundary walls of the churchyard. Close
-by is the White Horse, a picturesque old thatched and gabled
-inn. There is another inn here called “The Hole in the Wall.”
-I wonder if this title is derived from Shakespeare’s play, “The
-tedious brief scene of young Pyramus and Thisbe,” who, says
-the story, “did talk through the chink of a wall,” or does it
-refer to some breach in the sea wall? To come from fancy to
-fact, the real name seems to have been Holy Trinity Wall,
-the house having been built up against a wall of that church
-which, with half a score of others in Spalding, has been
-dismantled and utterly swept away. Another puzzling sign
-I passed lately was “The New Found out.” The writer of an
-article in <i>The Times</i> of April 8, on the fire at Little Chesterford,
-thinks the sign of one of the burnt public-houses, “The Bushel
-and Strike,” a very singular one, not knowing that the strike,
-like the bushel, is a measure of corn.</p>
-
-<p><i>St. Paul’s, Fulney</i>, to the north of the town, is a handsome
-new brick-and-stone church, by Sir Gilbert Scott, who also
-restored the old church and removed every sort of hideous
-inside fitting, where galleries all round the nave came within
-four feet of the heads of the worshippers in the box pews. At
-that time £11,000 was spent on the restoration. This was in
-1866, in which year the vicar, the Rev. William Moore, died,
-and he and his wife are buried in the nave; his parents, who
-had done so much for the church, are buried at Weston.</p>
-
-<p>About two miles from Fulney is Wykeham chapel,<a id="FNanchor_33" href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> built
-in 1310 and attached to a country residence of the priors of
-Spalding; it is now only a ruin.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus100">
-<img src="images/illus100.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>N. Side, Spalding Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">PAINTED PILLARS</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">PINCHBECK</div>
-
-<p>Going out of Spalding northwards, three miles bring us to
-<i>Pinchbeck</i>, which was an important village in Saxon times,
-and attached to Croyland Abbey, where a fine tower with six
-bells leans to the north-west. It is approached by a lime avenue.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_449"></a>[449]</span>
-There are two rows of diaper carved work round the base of
-the tower, and large canopied niches on either side of the west
-door. The old roof on the north aisle is good, the pillars of
-the nave are spoilt by a hideous coat of purple paint. A
-delightful old brass weathercock is preserved in the church,
-and over the south porch is a dial. The high narrow tower-arch
-is a pleasure to look on. The altar tomb of Sir Thomas
-Pinchbeck (1500) has heraldic shields all round it, but is quite
-outdone by a brass of Margaret Lambert, a very ugly one, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_450"></a>[450]</span>
-adorned with twenty-seven heraldic coats of arms of her
-husband and fifteen of her own. The ten fine Perpendicular
-clerestory windows of three lights give the church a handsome
-appearance, and show the large wooden angels in the roof,
-who used to hold shields bearing the achievements of the house
-of “Pynchebek.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus101">
-<img src="images/illus101.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Pinchbeck.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Custs.</span></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE CUST FAMILY</div>
-
-<p>There is another name connected with this place, for
-one of the oldest Lincolnshire families is that of the Custs,
-or Costes, who have held land in Pinchbeck and near Bicker
-Haven for fourteen generations: though the first known<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_451"></a>[451]</span>
-mention of the name is not in the fens but at Navenby,
-where one Osbert Coste had held land in King John’s reign.</p>
-
-<p>The neighbourhood of Croyland Abbey, of Spalding Priory,
-and of Boston Haven, with its large wool trade, made “Holland”
-a district of considerable importance, and led some of the more
-enterprising mercantile families to settle in the neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<p>The same causes occasioned the building of the fine fen
-churches, which still remain, though the great houses have
-disappeared. Custs settled in Gosberton and Boston as well
-as at Pinchbeck. At the latter place, what is now the River
-Glen was in the fifteenth century called the “Bourne Ee,”
-or Eau, and the road by it was the “Ee Gate.” Here Robert
-Cust in 1479 lived in “The Great House at Croswithand,” in
-which was a large hall open to the roof and strewed with rushes,
-with hangings in it to partition off sleeping places for the guests
-or the sons of the house, the daughters sharing the parlour
-with their parents. Robert is called a “Flaxman,” that being
-the crop by which men began to make their fortunes in Pinchbeck
-Fen. He continually added small holdings to his modest
-property as opportunity arose, and his son Hugh, succeeding
-in 1492, did the same; buying two acres from “Thomas
-Sykylbrys Franklin” for 50<i>s.</i> and one and a half from Robert
-Sparowe for £5, and so on. Hugh is styled in 1494 “flax
-chapman,” in 1500 he had advanced to “Yeoman.” He then
-had three farms of sixty-nine acres, and by economy and industry
-he not only lived, but lived comfortably, and had money to
-buy fresh land, though his will shows that things were on a
-small scale still, so that individual mention is made of his
-“black colt with two white feet behind.” After the death
-of his two sons, Hugh’s grandson Richard succeeded in 1554,
-and married the juvenile widow, Milicent Slefurth <i>née</i> Beele,
-who brought him the lands of R. Pereson, the wealthy vicar
-of Quadring, with a house at Moneybridge on the Glen, which
-she left eventually to her second son, Richard. His grandson
-Samuel took to the legal profession, and, disdaining the parts
-of Holland after life in London, left the house there to his
-brother Joshua, who was the last Cust to live at Pinchbeck.
-The family were by this time wealthy, and had a good deal
-of land round Boston and elsewhere. Samuel’s son, Richard,
-married in 1641 Beatrice Pury, and had a son called Pury,
-whence spring the Purey Custs. The Pury family then lived<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_452"></a>[452]</span>
-at Kirton, near Boston. He left the law for a soldier’s life,
-and was “captain of a Trained Band in the Wapentake of
-Skirbeck in the parts of Holland.” He succeeded his father
-in 1663 and lived, after the Restoration, at Stamford. In 1677,
-by interest and the payment of £1,000, he obtained a baronetcy.
-His son, Sir Pury Cust, who had been knighted by William III.
-in 1690, after the battle of the Boyne, in which he commanded
-a troop of horse under the Duke of Schomberg, died in 1698,
-two years before his father. His wife, Ursula, the heiress of
-the Woodcock family of Newtimber, had died at the age of
-twenty-four in 1683. Her monument is in St. George’s church,
-Stamford. She traced back her family to Joan, “the fair maid
-of Kent,” through Joan’s second husband, John Lord Holland,
-if we are to take it that she was really married first, and not
-simply engaged when a girl to Lord Salisbury. At all events,
-her last husband was the Black Prince, by whom she was mother
-of Richard II. Her father was Edmund of Woodstock, Earl
-of Kent, the sixth son of Edward I.</p>
-
-<p>In 1768 Sir John Cust was Speaker of the House of Commons.
-The present head of the Cust family is the Earl of Brownlow.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus102">
-<img src="images/illus102.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Surfleet.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">GOSBERTON</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE LEANING TOWER</div>
-
-<p>Close to Pinchbeck, on whose already sinking tower the
-builders had not dared to place their intended spire, is <i>Surfleet</i>,
-where the tower and spire lean in a most threatening manner.
-Arches have been built up to support it, and by the well-known
-power of old buildings known as “Sticktion,” it may last for
-many generations, but it presents a very uncomfortable appearance.
-For the next twenty miles we shall be constantly
-crossing the great dykes which drain the fens, all running eastwards.
-The road which divides after crossing the Hammond
-Beck and the Rise-Gate-Eau passes through <i>Gosberton</i>, once
-called Gosberdekirk, a large village with a very fine Perpendicular
-church. You enter by a richly moulded doorway from
-a very wide porch, over the entrance to which is a figure. To
-the right of the porch, arched recesses are seen under each
-south aisle window. There is a central tower with large
-transepts and a lofty crocketed spire. A Lady chapel adjoins
-the south transept. The clerestory is a later addition, and
-the ground has been filled up so that the beautifully carved
-bases of the nave pillars are two feet below the present paving.
-A trap-door is lifted to show one of them. The rood staircase
-is on the south side, and in the south transept is a particularly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_453"></a>[453]</span>
-fine window, with two carved cross-mullions. The
-moulding of the nave arches is carried right down the pillars,
-which deprives them of capitals and gives them a very feeble
-appearance. A similar absence of capitals is found in the
-tower arches at Horncastle. The roof under the belfry is
-groined, and a fine screen separates the chapel of St. Katherine
-from the body of the church. In this, there is an old plain
-chest with three iron bands. An elegant recumbent stone
-effigy of a lady and another of a knight in armour, with a shield
-bearing a Red Cross, are the only monuments of interest. As
-early as 1409, in the reign of Henry IV., Gosberton was a fat
-living, for in that year we find that the warden of the hospital
-of St. Nicholas at Pontefract exchanged the manor of Methley<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_454"></a>[454]</span>
-in Yorkshire for the advowsons of Gosberkirk, Lincolnshire,
-and Wathe, Yorkshire. This manor, before the end of that
-century, became the property of Sir Thomas Dymoke.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SHEEP IN CHURCHYARDS</div>
-
-<p>The church is very well cared for, and I was glad to see sheep
-in the churchyard, the only way of keeping the grass tidy
-without going to an unwarrantable expense.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus103">
-<img src="images/illus103.jpg" width="500" height="525" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Surfleet Windmill.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>I know quite well the objections which can reasonably be
-urged to this plan, that the sheep make the paths and the porch
-dirty and may damage the tombstones; but the porch can have
-wire netting doors, and the paths can be cleaned up and the
-sheep excluded for Sunday; and in those churchyards which
-are worst cared for there are generally no tombstones which
-would be liable to any hurt.</p>
-
-<p>Certainly in one churchyard where I have seen sheep for
-many years I never knew of any damage, and they did keep
-the grass neat where it would have cost much to keep it trimmed
-up by hand.</p>
-
-<p>Not far from Gosberton station is Cressy Hall, a modern red<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_455"></a>[455]</span>
-brick house, built on the site of a very ancient one. It had
-been a manor of the Creci family from Norman times, and passed
-from them to Sir John Markham, who entertained there the
-Lady Margaret, mother of Henry VII.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Stukeley, towards the end of the eighteenth century,
-saw the old oak bedstead on which she slept. It was then in
-a farm-house, called Wrigbolt, in the parish of Gosberton, and
-was very large and shut in all round with oak panels carved
-outside, two holes being left at the foot big enough to admit
-a full-grown person—a sort of hutch in fact. The property
-subsequently came to the Heron family, who lived there for
-three centuries. They kept up a large heronry there, and we
-read of as many as eighty nests in one tree, but since the family
-left the manor, at the beginning of last century, the birds have
-been dispersed.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">QUADRING</div>
-
-<p>The next village to Gosberton is <i>Quadring</i>, a curious name,
-said to be derived from the Celtic Coed (= wood). The western
-tower and spire are well proportioned, and the tower is quite
-remarkable for the way in which it draws in, narrowing all the
-way up from the ground to the spire. The rich embattled
-nave parapet and the rood turrets and staircase are also noticeable,
-and, as usual with these Lincolnshire churches, a fine row
-of large clerestory windows gives a very handsome appearance.
-This church has in it a fine chest; as have Gosberton and
-Sutterton. The latter very plain, and both with three iron
-straps and locks, while at Swineshead is a good iron chest of
-the Nuremberg pattern.</p>
-
-<p>Four miles will bring us to <i>Donington</i>, once a market town
-and the centre of the local hemp and flax trade, of which considerable
-quantities were grown both here and round Pinchbeck.
-It was the flax trade that attracted the Custs to Pinchbeck
-in the fifteenth century.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">DONINGTON</div>
-
-<p>Up to the last century Donington had three hemp fairs in
-the year, in May, September, and October, and the land being
-mostly wet fen, the villagers kept large flocks of geese, one man
-owning as many as 1,000 “old geese.” These, besides goslings,
-yielded a crop of quills and feathers, and the poor birds were
-plucked five times a year. The sea shells in the soil indicate
-that before the sea banks were made the land was just a salt-water
-fen, and it is probable that the men of Donington had
-a navigable cut to the sea near Bicker or Wigtoft, for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_456"></a>[456]</span>
-Roman sea-bank from Frieston curved inland to Wigtoft and
-thence ran to Fossdyke, and the sea water no doubt came up
-to the bank.</p>
-
-<p>The Romans did much for this village, which lies between
-their sea-bank and the Carr Dyke. The former kept out the
-sea water, and the latter intercepted the flood water from the
-hills. This was more effectually done later by the Hammond
-Beck, which, coming from Spalding, ran northwards a parallel
-course to the Roman Dyke, and with the same purpose, but
-some four or five miles nearer to Donington, after passing which
-place it bends round to the east and goes out at Boston. Thus
-farming was made possible, and potatoes now have taken the
-place of flax and hemp.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FLINDERS AND FRANKLIN</div>
-
-<p>A large green, bordered by big school buildings, now fills the
-Market Square. The church, dedicated to St. Mary and the
-Holy Rood, is late Decorated and Perpendicular, and has a
-splendid tower and spire 240 feet high, which stands in a semi-detached
-way at the south-east of the south aisle and is surmounted
-by a very fine ball and weathercock. The lower
-stage forms a groined south porch, over which as well as on
-each buttress are large canopied niches for statues, and over
-the inner door is a figure of our Lord. The pillars in the nave
-are octagonal. There is a large rood bracket, and the rood
-staircase starts, not from behind the pulpit, but from the top
-of the chancel step. The walls of the Early English chancel
-are of rough stone, with no windows on the north, but the
-east window is a grand five-light Perpendicular one, and three
-large windows of the same style are at the west end. In all of
-these the tracery is unusually good. A doorway at each side
-of the altar shows that the chancel once extended further,
-and there is a curious arched recess at the north-east corner
-with high steps, the meaning of which is a puzzle. A little
-kneeling stone figure is seen in the wall of the north aisle. The
-responds of the nave arcades, both east and west, have very
-large carved bosses. The roof is old and quite plain. In the
-church are many memorial slabs to members of the Flinders
-family, among them one to Captain Matthew Flinders,<a id="FNanchor_34" href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> 1814,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_457"></a>[457]</span>
-one of the early explorers, who, in the beginning of last century,
-was sent to map the coast of Australia, and having been
-captured by the French, was kept for some years in prison in
-Mauritius.</p>
-
-<p>The Blacksmith’s epitaph, mentioned in the account of
-Bourne Abbey, is also found in the churchyard here, with
-bellows, forge, and anvil engraved on the stone.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SWINESHEAD</div>
-
-<p><i>Swineshead</i> is but four miles further on, with <i>Bicker</i> half
-way. The latter has a far older church than any in the neighbourhood.
-It is dedicated to St. Swithun. It is a twelfth-century
-cruciform building with massive piers and cushion
-capitals and fine moulding to its Norman arches over the two
-western bays of the nave. The clerestory has Norman arcading
-in triplets with glass in the centre light. The east window
-consists of three tall Early English lancets. A turret staircase
-in the south aisle gives access to another in the tower.
-The north aisle oak seats have been made out of portions of
-the rood screen. The Early English font, being supported on
-four short feet, is interesting, as is a holy water stoup in the
-porch. This church has been well restored by the Rev. H. T.
-Fletcher, now ninety-three years of age, who has been rector
-for half a century. In the last half of the thirteenth century
-a Christopher Massingberd was the incumbent. It is kept
-locked on account of recent thefts in the neighbourhood. As
-you go to <i>Swineshead</i> you pass a roadside pond with a notice,
-“Beware of the Swans.” The village, like Donington, was
-once a market town, and has still the remains of its market
-cross and stocks. The low spire of the church rises from a
-beautiful battlemented octagon which crowns the tower and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_458"></a>[458]</span>
-is <i>the</i> feature of the building. There is a similar one at the base
-of the spire of the grand church of Patrington in Holderness.
-The tower is at the west end of the nave, and at each of its
-corners are very high pinnacles. The belfry is lighted by
-unusually large three-light Perpendicular windows, and the
-clerestory by large windows with Decorated tracery. The
-south aisle windows, too, are Decorated, those in the north aisle
-Perpendicular. The roof is old, and though plain in the nave,
-is richer in the north aisle. The clustered columns in the nave
-are slender, and the long pointed chancel arch, having no<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_459"></a>[459]</span>
-shoulders, is curiously ugly. The old iron chest has been
-already mentioned.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus104">
-<img src="images/illus104.jpg" width="500" height="525" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>The Welland at Marsh Road, Spalding.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SUTTERTON</div>
-
-<p>At Swineshead the road goes east to Boston and west to
-Sleaford. This we will speak of when we describe the six roads
-out of Sleaford, of which the Swineshead road is by far the most
-interesting. But we must go back by <i>Bicker</i>, to which the
-sea once came close up, as testified by the remains of the
-Roman sea-bank only two miles off; and perhaps, too, by the
-name “Fishmere End,” near the neighbouring village of Wigton.
-After seeing <i>Bicker</i> we will retrace our steps through Donington
-by Quadring and Gosberton, till we reach the “Gate Eau,”
-then turning to the left, strike the direct Spalding and Boston
-road. This, after crossing “Quadring Eau-Dyke”—a name
-which tells a fenny tale—passes over the Roman bank as it
-leaves Bicker, and making eastwards after its long inland curve
-from Frieston, proceeds to <i>Sutterton</i> and <i>Algarkirk</i>. The names
-go together as a station on the Great Northern Railway loop line,
-and the villages are not far apart. They were both endowed
-as early as 868, as mentioned in the Arundel MSS. The churches
-of both are cruciform. <i>Sutterton</i> has a tall spire thickly
-crocketed, and a charming Transition doorway in the south
-porch. That of the north is of the same date. The Early
-English arcades have rich bands of carving under the capitals
-of their round pillars; the two eastern pillars, from the thrust
-of the tower, lean considerably to the west; and, showing
-how much of the building was done in the Transition Norman
-time, the pointed arch of the chancel is enriched with Norman
-moulding. The large Perpendicular windows are very good,
-but the tracery of the Decorated west window is not attractive.
-The level of the floor has been so filled up that the narrow
-transept-arch pillars are now buried as much as three feet.
-The fittings are all pinewood, which gives one a kind of shock
-in so fine an old church. There are eight bells and a thirteenth-century
-Sanctus bell with inscription in Lombardic letters.
-The wood of the massive old iron-bound chest is sadly decayed.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus105">
-<img src="images/illus105.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Algarkirk.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE MAGNIFICENT WINDOWS</div>
-
-<p><i>Algarkirk</i>, the church of Earl Alfgar, stands within half a
-mile of Sutterton, in a park. The parish is a huge one, and the
-living was, till recently, worth £2,000 a year, but having been
-purchased from the Berridge family and presented to the Bishop
-of Lincoln, its revenues have gone largely to endow new churches
-in Grimsby, and the present incumbent has only one quarter<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_460"></a>[460]</span>
-of what his predecessors had. Like Spalding, Algarkirk had
-double aisles to the transepts, but the eastern aisle on the south
-side has been thrown into the transept. The Decorated windows
-of each transept are very fine ones, and those at the east and
-west ends of the nave are extremely large and good, that at
-the west filling the whole of the wall space. The clerestory
-has ten three-light windows, and the transepts have similar
-ones. Outside, the nave, aisles and transepts are all battlemented,
-which gives a very rich appearance. The fittings
-are all of oak, and there are six bells. Every window below
-the clerestory has good modern stained glass, and, taken as a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_461"></a>[461]</span>
-whole, the church is one of the most beautiful in the
-county.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">AT ALGARKIRK</div>
-
-<p>It was Easter time when we visited Algarkirk, and the rookery
-in the park at the edge of the churchyard was giving abundant
-signs of busy life. The delightful cawing of the rooks is always
-associated in my mind with the bright spring time in villages
-of the Lincolnshire wolds. In the churchyard I noticed the
-name of Phœbe more than once, but I doubt if the parents,
-when bestowing this pretty classic name on their infant daughter
-at the font, ever thought of her adding to it, as the tombstone
-says she did, the prosaic name of Weatherbogg.</p>
-
-<p>At Sutterton two main roads cross, one from Swineshead to
-Holbeach, crossing the Welland near Fosdyke; the other
-from Boston to Spalding, crossing the Glen at Surfleet.</p>
-
-<p>From Swineshead two very dull roads run west to Sleaford,
-and north to Coningsby and Tattershall, to join the Sleaford
-and Horncastle road. This, after crossing the old Hammond
-Beck, sends an off-shoot eastwards to Boston, whose tower is
-seen about four miles off. It then crosses the great South-Forty-foot
-drain at Hubbert’s bridge, named after Hubba the
-Dane, and the North-Forty-foot less than a mile further on,
-and, passing by Brothertoft to the Witham, which it crosses
-at Langrick, runs in a perfectly straight line through Thornton-le-Fen
-to Coningsby. An equally straight road goes parallel
-to, but four miles east of it, from Boston by New Bolingbroke
-to Revesby.</p>
-
-<p>From what we have said it will be seen that the road from
-Spalding northwards is thickly set with fine churches; but that
-which goes eastwards boasts another group which are grander
-still. They are all figured in the volume of “Lincolnshire
-Churches,” which deals with the division of Holland. This
-was published in 1843 by T. N. Morton of Boston, the excellent
-drawings being by Stephen Lewin. His drawing of Kirton Old
-Church shows what an extremely handsome building it was before
-Hayward destroyed it in 1804.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MEANING OF ‘PINCHBECK’</div>
-
-<p>One ought not to close this Chapter without some reference
-to the term “pinchbeck,” meaning <i>sham</i>, literally base metal,
-looking like gold, and used for watchcases.<a id="FNanchor_35" href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> Some Pinchbeck
-natives still have it that it was a yellow metal found rather<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_462"></a>[462]</span>
-more than a century ago near Pinchbeck, and now exhausted.
-But fen soil has no minerals, and really it was a London
-watchmaker, who was either a native of Pinchbeck or else
-called Pinchbeck, who invented the alloy of 80 parts copper
-to 20 of zinc. I remember hearing of a case at Spilsby sessions,
-where a man was accused of stealing a watch. The robbed
-man was asked, “What was your watch? a gold one?”
-“Nöa, it wëant gowd.” “Silver then?” “Näay, it wëant
-silver, nither.” “Then what was it?” “Why, it wor pinchbeck.”</p>
-
-<p>On a later occasion the thief, asking the same “lawyer
-feller” to defend him, said, by way of introduction, “You
-remember you got me off before for stealing a watch.” “For
-the <i>alleged</i> stealing of a watch, you mean.” “Alleged be
-blowed! I’ve got the watch at home now.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus106">
-<img src="images/illus106.jpg" width="500" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>At Fulney.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_463"></a>[463]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXIX">CHAPTER XXXIX<br />
-<span class="smaller">CHURCHES OF HOLLAND, EAST OF SPALDING</span></h2>
-
-<p>Weston—The Font—Fertile Country—Colman’s Factory—The Woad Plant—’Twixt
-Marsh and Fen—Moulton—The Spire—The Elloe Stone—Whaplode—Holbeach—Fleet—Gedney—The
-Mustard Fields—Long
-Sutton—Groups of Churches—Fossdyke Old Bridge—Kirton—Frampton—Wyberton—A
-Storm—Agricultural Statistics, 1913—A
-Legend of Holbeach.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The road which runs east from Spalding passes out of the
-county to reach King’s Lynn. But before it does so, it goes
-through a line of villages along which, within a distance of ten
-miles, are six of the finest churches which even Lincolnshire
-can show. Going out through Fulney we begin, less than four
-miles from Spalding, with <i>Weston</i>, where we find an unusually
-fine south porch with arcading and stone seats on either side.
-At the east end are three lancet lights of perfect Early English
-work and four slender buttresses. The nave dates from the
-middle of the twelfth century, and has stout round pillars in
-the south and octagonal in the north arcades, each set round
-with slender detached shafts as at Skirbeck, united under
-capitals carved with good stiff foliage. The aisles and transepts
-are later, and the tower later again.</p>
-
-<p>The Early English font is a splendid specimen and stands
-on its original octagonal steps with half of the circle occupied
-by a broad platform for the priest. Two good old oak chests
-stand on either side of the tower arch, and near the south door
-two curious musical instruments of the oboe type are hanging,
-and seem to be worthy of more careful preservation.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">‘MARSH’ AND ‘FEN’</div>
-
-<p>The whole of our route to-day lies through a perfectly flat
-land, mostly arable and of extraordinary fertility. The corn
-crops at the end of May were standing nearly two feet high,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_464"></a>[464]</span>
-and all around bright squares of yellow made the air heavy
-with the scent of the mustard flower. I lately went all over
-the great mustard factory of Messrs. Colman at Norwich, in
-which the beauty and ingenuity of the machinery for making
-and labelling the tins, for filling bags and boxes, or for sorting
-and folding up in their proper papers the cubes of blue (of
-which there is a factory contiguous) were a perfect marvel.
-The works cover thirty-two acres, and everything needed for
-the business is made on the premises. The mustard of commerce
-is a mixture of the brown and the white, both of which, and
-especially the best brown, are grown in the greatest perfection
-in the fields round Holbeach. It is a valuable crop. In
-October, 1912, I saw a quotation of 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> to 13<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> a
-bushel for brown, and 8<i>s.</i> to 8<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> for white; 1913 was a
-much better year, and so I suppose prices ruled higher. But
-to return.</p>
-
-<p>Here and there we passed a field with an unfamiliar crop
-of stiff purplish plants which showed where the cultivation of
-the <i>Isatis tinctoria</i>, the woad plant, which added so much to
-the attractiveness of our earliest British ancestors, was still
-kept going. This flat country is not without its trees, and
-near the villages park-like meadows, the remains of ancient
-manors, showed a beautiful wealth of chestnut bloom, whilst
-the cottage gardens were gay with laburnum and pink May.
-This was especially the case with the most easterly villages of
-Holbeach, Gedney and Long Sutton, but all along this line
-of road from Weston to Sutton there were, at one time, manors
-of the Irby, Welby, Littlebury, and other families, of which
-nothing now remains but this heritage of trees. The line of
-road is a very remarkable one, for it divides what once might
-have been described as the waters that were above from the
-waters that were below; in other words the Fen from the Marsh.
-If you look at a good map you will see to the north of the road,
-from west to east successively, Pinchbeck Marsh, Spalding
-Marsh, Weston Marsh, Moulton Marsh, Whaplode Marsh,
-Holbeach Marsh, Gedney Marsh, Sutton Marsh, and Wingland
-Marsh. The last of these lies between Sutton Bridge and
-Cross-Keys, on the county boundary; and since the new
-outfall of the river Nene was cut, a rich tract has been gained
-for cultivation where once the sea had possession, and just
-where King John lost his baggage and treasure in his disastrous<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_465"></a>[465]</span>
-crossing of the Cross-Keys Wash, at low tide, shortly before his
-death in 1216. There is now a good road there.</p>
-
-<p>Now look at the map again and you will see to the south of
-this Holbeach road the same names, but with <i>Fen</i> instead of
-<i>Marsh</i>—Moulton, Whaplode, Holbeach, and Gedney <i>Fen</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">RETIREMENT OF THE WASH</div>
-
-<p>The Marsh country is far the most interesting, and it is clear
-both from the nature of the land and from the names of the places
-that the Wash used to come several miles further inland than
-it does now, running up between Algarkirk and Gosberton as
-far as Bicker, and penetrating up the Welland estuary to
-“Surfleet seas end,” and up the Moulton river to “Moulton
-seas end,” to Holbeach Clough, to Lutton Gowt, which is north
-of Long Sutton on the Leam, and to the Roman bank which
-is still visible at Fleet and again further east between Cross-Keys
-and Walpole. This bank probably came by <i>Tydd
-St. Mary</i>, through which a Roman road from Cowbit also
-passed. But this was long ago, and many centuries elapsed
-before this Spalding and Lynn road, passing between Marsh
-and Fen, came into being, with its many magnificent churches,
-mostly the work of great monastic institutions between the
-twelfth and fifteenth centuries, and therefore built with exceptional
-magnificence.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MOULTON</div>
-
-<p>After <i>Weston</i> less than two miles, through a country brightened
-by the many red and white chestnut trees in bloom,
-brings us to <i>Moulton</i>, lying a little to the south of the main road.
-Here we have a beautiful Perpendicular tower and crocketed
-spire, reminding one, by its graceful proportions, of Louth,
-though not much more than half the height. The nave has
-six bays of Transition Norman work with pillars both round
-and clustered, resting on large millstone-like bases, the two
-western piers having tall responds built into them, which probably
-supported the arch of an earlier tower. The Early
-English carved foliage on the capitals is like that at Skirbeck,
-or in the Galilee Porch at Ely and the transept of York Cathedral.
-Some most graceful old work has been restored in the lower
-part of the rood-screen, and a new and well-designed canopy
-added. The doorway to this rood-loft is on the south side.
-A curious old oak alms-box is near the south door, and against
-the western pier of the north arcade is a singular font which
-has been displaced by a modern square one of no particular
-merit. In the older one the bowl stands on the trunk of a tree<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_466"></a>[466]</span>
-carved in stone, on either side of which are figures about three
-feet high of Adam and Eve, and the Serpent is curling round
-the tree.<a id="FNanchor_36" href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> The wooden cover with the figure of a stout Rubens
-angel flying and grasping the top has fallen into disrepair. A
-list of the vicars from 1237 is in the north aisle.</p>
-
-<p>The clerestory windows are handsomely arcaded outside,
-with round Norman arcading on the south and pointed arcades
-on the north side, and ugly Perpendicular windows inserted
-at intervals which occupy the space of two arcades.</p>
-
-<p>The great beauty of the church is the Perpendicular tower
-and spire, built about 1380. It has four stages, and over the
-great west window are some canopied niches, two of which still
-contain their statues. The buttresses have also niches and
-canopies, and the tower finishes with a rich battlement and
-pinnacles which are connected with the spire by light flying-buttresses;
-the whole is beautifully proportioned, and as it
-stands in a very wide street one can get a satisfactory view of it.</p>
-
-<p>The dividing of each side by set-off string courses, three on
-the west and four on the north and south sides, the canopy
-work of the buttresses at each stage, the pleasing varieties
-in the size of the windows, the canopied arcading on the west
-front, the panelled parapet and deep cornice, the elegant pinnacles
-at the corners of the coped battlements from which the light
-flying-buttresses spring up to the richly ornamented spire,
-all help to delight and satisfy the eye in a manner which few
-churches in any county can hope to rival.</p>
-
-<p>In a bridge half a mile from the church on the south side
-of a lane called ‘Old Spalding Gate,’ or ‘Elloe Stone lane,’
-at the fifth milestone from Spalding, still stands <i>the Elloe Stone</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The Shire Mote or hundred court of the Elloe Wapentake,
-which is a huge one embracing the whole of Holland between
-the Welland and the Nene, used to be held at the four cross-roads
-near this stone, in pre-Norman times. The manor courts
-were introduced by the Normans.</p>
-
-<p>Boy Scouts were very much in evidence when we were in
-Moulton; they number over thirty there alone, and I never
-saw a smarter lot.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">WHAPLODE</div>
-
-<p>From Moulton we get back to the main road and go on two
-short miles to <i>Whaplode</i>. In Domesday Book this is spelt
-Quappelode, the cape on the lode or creek, the village being<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_467"></a>[467]</span>
-built on a spit of land elevated above the fens and encircled by
-drains, or lodes, to keep it free from inundation.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus107">
-<img src="images/illus107.jpg" width="500" height="575" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Whaplode Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The church here was built by the abbot of Croyland in rivalry
-with Moulton, which was the work of the prior of Spalding.
-The nave, of no less than seven bays, is narrow and 110 feet
-long, and exhibits in the low chancel arch and four adjoining
-arcades quite the most interesting Norman work in ‘Holland.’
-The massive Norman pillars are built in pairs of different
-patterns. The three western arches are Transitional and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_468"></a>[468]</span>
-pointed; of this period the chief feature is the west door with
-a fine series of mouldings and a double row of eight detached
-shafts on either side, set one behind the other.</p>
-
-<p>The tower is very fine and is in a most unusual position,
-being south of the eastmost bay of the south aisle and almost
-detached, though once joined by a transept. We quite agree
-with Mr. Jeans when he says “Probably it was intended to
-have two transeptal towers like Exeter and Ottery, the only
-two churches in England with them, but a late Perpendicular
-transept occupies the place of the North one.” The lower Transition
-stage is richly arcaded, the next two Early English stages
-have lancet arcading, and the belfry stage, which is early
-Decorated, has coupled lights and a parapet above them. The
-choir-screen stood, curiously, a bay in front of the rood loft,
-the stairs to which are on the south side. The pulpit is Jacobean,
-the font a copy of a Norman one, the chancel is of the meanest,
-and all the windows except one at the east of the north aisle
-are incredibly ugly. Some stone coffins are placed in the west
-end, where also is the fine canopied monument of Sir Anthony
-and Lady Elizabeth Irby with large figures of their children
-kneeling at the side. See <i>Ashby-cum-Fenby</i>, p. 267.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HOLBEACH</div>
-
-<p>Another three miles along this wonderful line of grand churches
-brings us to the church of All Saints, <i>Holbeach</i>, a magnificent
-building all in the latest Decorated style throughout. The
-spire without crockets, though higher than Moulton, is rather
-dwarfed by the large tower without pinnacles. The nave is
-very spacious and light, having large aisle windows with no
-stained glass, and no less than fourteen pairs of clerestory
-windows. The flamboyant tracery in the east window is very
-good. The nave has seven very lofty bays on tall, light, clustered
-pillars, and the eastern bay does not reach the chancel arch,
-but leaves a wall space of six feet to accommodate the requirements
-of the rood loft. There is a very large north porch of
-singular construction, with heavy, round battlemented turrets
-like the flanking bastions of a castle gateway. Above is a
-parvise. In the north aisle is a well-preserved altar tomb to
-Sir Humphrey Littlebury, <i>c.</i> 1400, and two brasses; one of
-Joanna Welbye, 1458, for both these families once had manors
-at Holbeach.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_469"></a>[469]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus108">
-<img src="images/illus108.jpg" width="500" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Fleet Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_470"></a>[470]</span></p>
-
-<p>The approach to the town is through a well-wooded country,
-and a row of pink chestnuts in bloom lined the churchyard,
-as we saw it early in June. Like Moulton, the parish is a very
-large one, containing, according to Murray, 21,000 acres of
-land and 14,000 of water. Somewhere in this huge parish
-was born, in 1687, William Stukeley, the antiquarian, who
-became in his later years the rector of Somerby, near Grantham.</p>
-
-<p>The “Legend of Holbeach” was probably unknown to him,
-but it is of some antiquity, and it is printed at the end of the
-chapter in the rhyming form which was given to it more than
-a hundred years ago by Thomas Rawnsley of Bourne, D.L.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A DETACHED SPIRE</div>
-
-<p>A mile off the road to the right, is seen the spire of <i>Fleet</i>
-church. This, too, is mainly in the Decorated style with Early
-English arcades and a Perpendicular west window. The tower
-stands apart from the rest of the church at an interval of fifteen
-feet. Other instances of detached towers are at Evesham in
-Worcestershire, at Elstow near Bedford, and, I think, at
-Terrington in Norfolk; but a detached spire is very rarely seen.</p>
-
-<p>All the churches on the main road are at intervals of three
-miles, and that distance will bring us to the tall slender Giotto-like
-tower of <i>Gedney</i>, ninety feet high with very small buttresses.
-This, like Whaplode, was built, by the abbots of Croyland. The
-spacious nave has twelve Perpendicular three-light clerestory
-windows of unusual beauty, divided by pinnacles rising above
-the parapet. There are six lofty bays and a fine Early English
-tower arch. As at Holbeach and Sutton, there is a parvise
-over the south porch. The tower was to have had a spire
-instead of its present little spirelet, but only the base of it was
-built. Possibly this was because the foundations were not
-trustworthy, and, indeed, it may be said to have no foundations
-but to be built on a raft in the peat bog on which it floats
-securely, as did Winchester Cathedral before the deep drainage
-trench was cut along the north side of the close. At Gedney,
-if you jump on the floor of the porch you will distinctly perceive
-the vibration of the ground.</p>
-
-<p>It is enriched at the first stage by lancet windows, then by
-an arcading with pointed arches, above which come beautiful
-twin windows, each with two lights; and the upper, Decorated,
-stage of the tower—above the line where the Black Death so
-obviously and effectually stopped the work, as described in the
-next chapter—has two lofty canopied and transomed windows
-in each face, which give a very handsome appearance. There
-is no west door.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_471"></a>[471]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus109">
-<img src="images/illus109.jpg" width="500" height="650" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Gedney Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">GEDNEY</div>
-
-<p>Within is a ‘low-side’ window at the south-west end of the
-chancel which is sometimes called an ‘Ichnoscope,’ and in the
-vestry is a ‘squint.’ A thirteenth-century cross-legged knight,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_472"></a>[472]</span>
-the fine brass of a lady (1390), recently discovered, and the
-richly coloured alabaster monument of Adlard and Cassandra
-Welby (1590) are all worthy of notice; while the abbots’
-inscription over the door, “Pax Xti sit huic domui et omnibus
-habitantibus in ea, hic requies nostra,” is to be contrasted with
-the worldly-wise motto of John Petty on the old bell-metal
-door lock, “Be Ware before, avyseth Johannes Pette.” Let
-into the door is a very remarkable crucifixion in ivory.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE MUSTARD FIELDS</div>
-
-<p>As we left Gedney and looked back over the fields the tall
-and Italian-looking campanile, whose bells, however, cannot
-vie with the eight bells of Holbeach, made a unique and memorable
-picture. I doubt if there is anything quite like it in
-England. We passed on eastwards another three miles by
-Gedney Marsh, with its “Cock and Magpie” inn, while the
-strong summer scent of the brilliant mustard fields recalled
-the apt description of our great Lincolnshire poet:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent6">“All the land in flowery squares,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Beneath a broad and equal-blowing wind,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Smelt of the coming Summer.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>As with Shakespeare, once let anything be described by
-Tennyson, and no other form of words can ever again seem
-so fit and inevitable. How often does one notice this!</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">GROUPS OF FINE CHURCHES</div>
-
-<p>But now we are at <i>Long Sutton</i>, or Sutton St. Mary’s, and
-find there perhaps the most interesting of this wonderful sequence
-of exceptional churches.</p>
-
-<p>Again we have a long nave of seven bays, with Norman
-pillars, both round and octagonal. A flat Norman arch to the
-chancel, and on each side of the chancel a slender column and
-two tall arches leading to chancel transepts. The rood staircase
-goes up from the pulpit on the north side, and above the
-nave arcades is a Transitional clerestory with arcading, which
-now serves as a triforium, being surmounted by another
-clerestory of the Perpendicular period; indeed the outside of
-the church, from its aisle and clerestory windows, has just the
-appearance of a Perpendicular building, so that when on
-entering one finds oneself in a fine Norman nave, the sight,
-as Mr. Jeans says, is quite startling.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_473"></a>[473]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;" id="illus110">
-<img src="images/illus110.jpg" width="400" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Long Sutton Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_474"></a>[474]</span></p>
-
-<p>At the north-east angle is a curious two-storied octagonal
-vestry, or sacristy, with a winding stair of fourteenth century
-date, having a small window into the chancel. The tower
-is Early English and is curiously placed at the south-west
-angle of the south aisle. That at Whaplode is at the south-east
-angle. Both tower and spire are in their original condition
-(the latter of timber covered with lead) and are the best
-and earliest specimens of their period. The tower stands on
-four magnificent arches now blocked, above which outside is
-a rich arcading like that in the north transept of Wells Cathedral.
-Above this the belfry windows are double, having a three-light
-window inside, with a two-light window outside, the
-mullion coming down to the outer edge of the splay; a very
-unusual arrangement. The spire is clasped at each corner by
-a spirelet, and rises to the height of 162 feet. Altogether this
-church is the fitting crown to our long string of stately churches.
-There are larger single churches with twelve to even twenty
-clerestory windows in Norfolk and Suffolk, but I doubt if any
-group in the kingdom can rival these, though the Sleaford
-group runs them hard. And certainly the Marsh churches
-between Boston and Wainfleet, and the still more characteristic
-group round Burgh-le-Marsh and Theddlethorpe have a charm—owing
-a good deal to their old oak fittings—which “can only
-be described in superlatives.” Next to these for interest I
-would put the Pinchbeck group in the triangle formed by
-Boston, Spalding, and Donington, and the group of old pre-Norman
-towers like Clee which are found near together to the
-south and west of Grimsby. Of course, Lincoln Minster with
-Stow, Grantham with Hough-on-the-Hill, Boston Stump, and
-Louth spire, stand outside every group in unapproachable
-greatness. Long Sutton is not without neighbours. Two miles
-to the north is <i>Lutton</i>, where Dr. Busby, the famous headmaster
-of Westminster, was born. He died in 1695. The large inlaid
-Italian pulpit with elegant canopy, put up in 1702, was probably
-his gift.</p>
-
-<p>Three miles east is <i>Sutton bridge</i>, only separated from
-Norfolk by the uninhabited Wingland Marsh, while three miles
-to the south is the village of <i>Tydd-St.-Mary</i>, the last village
-on the Wisbech road which is in Lincolnshire, <i>Tydd-St.-Giles</i>
-being over the border in Cambridgeshire; for both Norfolk
-and Cambridge here touch the county; Wisbech, which is
-itself the centre of a grand group of churches, being in the latter
-county.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_475"></a>[475]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">OLD FOSDYKE BRIDGE</div>
-
-<p>To finish our day and get into “the parts of Lindsey,” we
-take the north road from Holbeach over Fosdyke bridge to
-Boston. In the church at <i>Fosdyke</i> we may see a remarkable
-font with a tall Perpendicular oak cover similar, but not equal
-in beauty, to that at Frieston.</p>
-
-<p>Before 1814, people who wished to go from Boston into the
-eastern half of Holland and on to Cambridge and Norfolk had
-to cross the Welland estuary by ferry or go round by Spalding,
-but in 1811 an Act was passed for erecting a bridge at Fosdyke
-Wash and making a causeway to it over the sands. The work
-was designed by Rennie, who had an excellent patron in Sir
-Joseph Banks. The account of it, written at the time, is curious.
-The bridge was 300 feet long and had eight openings, the three
-in mid-stream being thirty feet wide, and the centre one opened
-with two leaves, which, having a counterpoise, were easily
-moved from a horizontal to a perpendicular position by means
-of a large rack-wheel and pinion wound by a common hand-winch.
-The nine piers were each made of oak trees driven
-in whole in clusters of six. These trees were none of them
-less than thirty feet long and eighteen inches in diameter,
-rather larger than the beams used to carry the floors in Tattershall
-Castle.<a id="FNanchor_37" href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> Those in the four central piers were enormous,
-being forty-two feet long and nineteen inches in diameter.
-They were driven in twenty to twenty-two feet below the
-bottom of the river and bolted together with timbers a foot
-thick. All was carried out in oak, the roadway planks being
-three inches thick. I went to see this stout old timber bridge
-and was disgusted to find that a grey-painted iron structure
-had taken its place.</p>
-
-<p>From Fosdyke the road passes Algarkirk and strikes the
-Spalding and Boston main road at Sutterton, where it turns
-north to <i>Kirton</i>. After passing Kirton—the magnificent church
-of which place was so strangely altered and mutilated by a
-ruthless architect called Hayward, in 1804, who pulled down
-its noble central tower and its double-aisled transept and built
-of the old materials a handsome but new tower at the west
-end—we soon see on the right, first Frampton and then Wyberton,
-the latter only about a mile south of Boston.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_476"></a>[476]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FRAMPTON AND WYBERTON</div>
-
-<p><i>Frampton</i>, once cruciform with a good tower and spire, has
-lost its north transept, its tall Early English pillars now support
-arches of a later style, but a fine oak roof and tall screen remain.
-There is an odd monument of ecclesiastical power on a buttress
-outside at the angle of the transept. A figurehead grotesquely
-carved, with the inscription, “Wot ye whi I sta̅d her [know
-ye, why I stand here] for I forswor my Savior ego Ricardus
-in Angulo,” probably a lasting reference to some ecclesiastical
-penance.</p>
-
-<p>Frampton Hall, a good Queen Anne house, is close to the
-church. Here, as in several of the Marsh churches, rings to
-tie horses to during service may be seen in the wall. Not a
-mile away northwards is <i>Wyberton</i>, which, if built as planned,
-would have been a very fine edifice. When it was restored
-by G. Scott, Jun., in 1881, the floor of the chancel being lowered
-brought to light two magnificent pillar bases. These, with
-the grand chancel arch, are indications that a fine cruciform
-church was projected but apparently never carried out. Tall
-arcades with clustered and octagonal columns and a good
-Perpendicular roof with carved bosses and angels are there
-now, and signs that an earlier building existed are visible in
-stones either lying loose or built into the walls. A slab to Adam
-Frampton is dated 1325.</p>
-
-<p>The font is a very rich one of the same period as those to
-the north-east of Boston, at Benington and Leverton. <i>The
-registers begin as early as 1538.</i> We pass now through Boston,
-and crossing the sluice bridge, get a fine view of the tall
-tower by the water-side and soon strike the Sibsey and Spilsby
-road.</p>
-
-<p>A grand black thunder-cloud rolls up across the fen, and
-having discharged a tempest of hailstones on the Wolds,
-descends upon us between Sibsey and Stickney in torrents
-of rain. It passes, and the bright sunshine—the “clear shining
-after rain” of the Hebrew prophet—contrasted with the darkness
-of the moving thunder-clouds as they roll seawards, makes
-a fine picture, and one which in that flat land you can watch
-for miles as it moves.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">AGRICULTURAL RETURNS</div>
-
-<p>The agricultural statistics for Lincolnshire in 1913 show
-that there were in Lindsey about 860,000, in Kesteven 419,560,
-and in Holland 243,200 acres under cultivation. The various
-crops in each were in thousands of acres as follows:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_477"></a>[477]</span></p>
-
-<table summary="Crops grown in Lincolnshire in 1913" class="borders">
- <tr>
- <th></th>
- <th>Wheat.</th>
- <th>Oats.</th>
- <th>Barley.</th>
- <th>Beans and Peas.</th>
- <th>“Roots.”</th>
- <th>Potatoes.</th>
- <th>Clover, Vetches &amp;c.</th>
- <th>Other crops.</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>In Lindsey</td>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">79</span></td>
- <td class="tdr">69½</td>
- <td class="tdr">125½</td>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">24</span></td>
- <td class="tdr">83¼</td>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">27</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">109</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">7</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="ditto">”</span> Kesteven</td>
- <td class="tdr">44½</td>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">24</span></td>
- <td class="tdr">67½</td>
- <td class="tdr">17½</td>
- <td class="tdr">34½</td>
- <td class="tdr">8½</td>
- <td class="tdr">46¼</td>
- <td class="tdr">3¾</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="ditto">”</span> Holland</td>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">35</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">23</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">18</span></td>
- <td class="tdr">17¼</td>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">7</span></td>
- <td class="tdr">40⅓</td>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">15</span></td>
- <td class="tdr">12¾</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>The table shows that Holland grows a good deal of wheat
-and oats, but not much barley compared with the two other
-divisions, and very few “roots.” But in 1913 it grew 40,370
-acres of potatoes, which is 5,000 acres more than all the rest
-of the county; and this was a decrease on the previous year’s
-crop of 2,479 acres. Then the big item in Holland under “other
-crops” shows the mustard, while 2,500 acres in that column for
-Lindsey are taken up with “rape.” The amount of bare fallow
-last year was, in Lindsey, 22,940 acres; in Kesteven, 15,385;
-and in Holland, 5,311. This, and the number of horses employed
-on the land—Lindsey, 26,930; Kesteven, 12,412; Holland,
-10,892—when it is remembered that the acreage of the three
-divisions is in the proportion of 4, 2, and 1, shows how highly
-cultivated the Lincolnshire fen-land in Holland is. The arable
-land in that division is more than two-thirds of the whole
-acreage.</p>
-
-<p>Another thing this report brings out is the marked decrease
-in 1913 in the number of cattle, sheep and pigs, and especially
-of sheep in every part of the county. This decrease was—</p>
-
-<table summary="Decrease in 1913 in the number of cattle, sheep and pigs" class="borders">
- <tr>
- <th></th>
- <th>Cattle.</th>
- <th>Sheep.</th>
- <th>Pigs.</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>In Lindsey</td>
- <td class="tdr">8,672</td>
- <td class="tdr">35,516</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,002</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="ditto">”</span> Kesteven</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,675</td>
- <td class="tdr">10,462</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,801</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="ditto">”</span> Holland</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,664</td>
- <td class="tdr">9,587</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,638</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr">18,011</td>
- <td class="tdr">55,565</td>
- <td class="tdr">8,441</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>This shows that Holland suffered more decrease in proportion
-than the other two divisions in all respects, and especially in
-the number of pigs. Of course the season must always be
-answerable for a good deal, and the numbers may all go up this
-year. But the enormous drop in the number of cattle and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_478"></a>[478]</span>
-sheep, telling a tale of the absence of “roots” and “feed,”
-will hardly be made good in one year.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE REVELLERS</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">“A LEGEND OF HOLBECH”</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center">“A LEGEND OF HOLBECH”</div>
- <div class="verse center smaller">a true story.</div>
- <div class="verse center smaller">Made into this rhyme by Mr. Rawnsley of Bourne, about the year 1800.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">In the bleak noxious Fen that to Lincoln pertains</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Where agues assert their fell sway,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">There the Bittern hoarse moans and the seamew complains</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">As she flits o’er the watery way.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">While with strains thus discordant, the natives of air</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">With screams and with shrieks the ear strike,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The toad and the frog croaking notes of despair</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Join the din, from the bog and the dyke.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Mid scenes that the senses annoy and appal</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Sad and sullen old Holbech appears,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">As if doomed to bewail her hard fate from the Fall,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Like a Niobe washed with her tears.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">From fogs pestilential that hovered around,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">To ward off despair and disease,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The juice of the grape was most generous found,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Source of comfort, of joy, and of ease.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">At the “Chequers” long famed to quaff then did delight</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The Burghers both ancient and young,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With smoking and cards, passed the dull winter night,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">They joked and they laughed and they sung.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Three revellers left, when the midnight was come,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Unable their game to pursue,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Repaired, most unhallowed, to visit the tomb</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Where enshrouded lay one of their crew.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">For <i>he</i>, late-departed, renowned was at whist,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The marsh-men still tell of his fame,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Till Death with a spade struck the cards from his fist</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And spoiled both his hand and his game.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Cold and damp was the night; thro’ the churchyard they prowled,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">As wolves by fierce hunger subdued,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">’Gainst the doors they huge gravestones impetuous rolled</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Which recoiled at such violence rude.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">From the sepulchre’s jaws their old comrade uncased,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">(How chilling the tale to relate),</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Upreared ’gainst the wall on the table was placed</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">A corpse, in funereal state.</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_479"></a>[479]</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">By a taper’s faint blaze and with Luna’s faint light</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">That would sometimes emit them a ray,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The cards were produced, and they cut with delight</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">To know who with “<i>Dumby</i>” should play.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Exalted on basses the bravoes kneeled round</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Exulting and proud of the deed,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To Dumby they bent with respect most profound</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And said “Sir! it is <i>your</i> turn to lead.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The game then commenced, when one offered him aid,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And affected to guide his cold hand</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">While another cried out, “Bravo! Dumby, well played,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">I see you’ve the cards at command.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Thus impious, they jokèd devoid of all grace,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">When dread sounds shook the walls of the church,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And lo! Dumby sank down, and a ghost in his place</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Shrieked dismal “Haste! haste! save your lurch!”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Astounded they stared; but the fiend disappeared</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And Dumby again took his seat,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">So they deemed ’twas but fancy, nor longer they feared</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">But swore that “Old Dumb should be beat.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Eight to nine was the game, Dumby’s partner called loud</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">“Speak once, my old friend, or we’re done</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Remember our stake ’tis my coat or your shroud</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Now answer and win—<i>can you one?</i>”<a id="FNanchor_38" href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“What silent, my Dumby, when most I you need</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Dame Fortune our wishes has crossed,”</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When a voice from beneath, howled, “your fate is decreed</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The game and the gamesters are lost.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Then strange! most terrific and horrid to view!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Three Demons thro’ earth burst their way:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Each one chose his partner, his arms round him threw</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And vanished in smoke with his prey.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_480"></a>[480]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XL">CHAPTER XL<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE BLACK DEATH</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Mention being made in the last chapter of the Black Death,
-the disastrous effects of which were so visible in the tower
-of Gedney, it will be not inappropriate to give some short
-account of it here.</p>
-
-<p>Edward the Third had been twenty years on the throne when
-a great change came over the country. The introduction of
-leases of lands and houses by the lord of the manor had created
-a class of “farmers”—the word was a new one—by which the
-old feudal system of land-tenure was disturbed, the old tie of
-personal dependence of the serf on his lord being broken,
-and the lord of the manor reduced to the position of a modern
-landlord. And not only was an independent class of tenants
-coming into existence who were able to rise to a position of
-apparent equality with their former masters, but among the
-labourers, too, a greater freedom was growing, which was
-gradually loosing them from their local bondage to the soil,
-and giving them power to choose what place of employment
-and what master they pleased. This rise of the free labourer
-following naturally on the enfranchisement of the serf had
-made it necessary for the landlord to rely on hired labour, and
-just when it was most essential for them to have an abundant
-supply of hands seeking employment, all at once the supply
-absolutely and entirely failed.</p>
-
-<p>The cause of this was the Black Death, which, starting in
-Asia, swept over the whole of Europe and speedily reached
-these shores in the autumn of 1348. No such swift and universally
-devastating plague had ever been known. One half of the
-population of every European country perished, and in England
-more than half. In one London burying-place above 50,000
-corpses were interred.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_481"></a>[481]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE BLACK DEATH</div>
-
-<p>In Norwich, then the chief east-coast port north of the
-Thames, we hear of 60,000 deaths. We hear, too, of whole
-villages being wiped out, and nowhere were sufficient hands
-left to cultivate the soil.</p>
-
-<p>Crops were ungathered, cattle roamed at will. The pestilence
-lasted through the whole of 1349, after which, though
-occasionally recurring, it died away.</p>
-
-<p>In Lincolnshire it was very bad, and some knowledge of it
-can be gathered from the memoranda of the Bishop of Lincoln,
-John Gynewell, who held office from September 23, 1347, to
-August 5, 1362; the appalling frequency of the institutions to
-the various benefices in his diocese give some measure of the
-severity of this dreadful visitation.</p>
-
-<p>It began at Melcombe Regis in Dorset in the month of July,
-1348, but did not reach Lincoln until May, 1349. It got to
-London in January of that year, and was at its height there
-in March, April, and May. In May, in the town of Newark, we
-read that “it waxes day by day more and more, insomuch that
-the Churchyard will not suffice for the men that die in that place.”</p>
-
-<p>From his palace at Liddington, in Rutland, Bishop Gynewell
-went in May to consecrate a burial ground at Great Easton,
-which, being only a chapelry to the parish of Bringhurst, had
-no burial ground of its own. The licence was granted only
-during the duration of the pestilence. The bishop in his
-preamble says: “There increases among you, as in other places
-of our Diocese, a mortality of men such as has not been seen
-or heard aforetime from the beginning of the world, so that
-the old grave-yard of your church [Bringhurst] is not sufficient
-to receive the bodies of the dead.”</p>
-
-<p>The enormous number of clergy who died in the Diocese of
-Lincoln is attested by the fact that in July alone 250 institutions
-were made and all but fifteen owing to deaths, a number
-which is considerably more than the whole for the first eighteen
-months of Bishop Gynewell’s episcopate. The average is over
-eight a day.</p>
-
-<p>The most singular thing which the statistics point to, is that,
-on the high ground round Lincoln and in the parts of Lindsey
-the mortality among the clergy was far higher than in other
-parts of the diocese, whilst in the low lands and fens round
-Peterborough, and in the parts of Holland, the percentage of
-deaths was almost invariably low, twenty-seven and twenty-four<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_482"></a>[482]</span>
-per cent. as compared with fifty-seven for Stamford and
-sixty for Lincoln. The worst months in Lincolnshire were
-July and August, yet even then, in spite of the severity of the
-plague and the disorganisation which it occasioned in all the
-social and religious life of the age, ordinary business, we are told,
-went on, and the bishop never ceased his constant journeys
-and visitations to all parts of his enormous diocese, reaching as
-it did from Henley on the Thames to the Humber, and including
-besides Lincoln, the counties of Northampton, Rutland, Leicester,
-Huntingdon, Bedford, Hertford, Buckingham, and Oxford.</p>
-
-<p>That the nation was not more depressed by this state of things
-was doubtless due to the feeling of national exaltation occasioned
-by the battle of Cressy in 1346, and the capture of Calais in the
-next year and the subsequent truce with France.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ITS EFFECT ON BUILDING</div>
-
-<p>One of the results of this plague was the absolute cessation
-of work for want of hands, which threw land out of cultivation
-and suspended all building operations. At Gedney, as the
-architect who restored the church in 1898, Mr. W. D. Caröe,
-pointed out to me, the history of the Black Death is distinctly
-written on the tower, and you may plainly see where the fourteenth-century
-builders ceased and how, above the present
-clock, the work was recommenced by different hands, with
-altered design and quite other materials.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus111">
-<img src="images/illus111.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Gedney, from Fleet.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_483"></a>[483]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLI">CHAPTER XLI<br />
-<span class="smaller">CROYLAND</span></h2>
-
-<p>St. Guthlac—Abbot Joffrid—Boundary Crosses—The Triangular Bridge—Figure
-with Sceptre and Ball—Lincolnshire swan-marks.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>As you pass in the train along the line from Peterborough
-to Spalding, and have got a mile or two north of Deeping
-St. James station, you can see to the east in a cluster of trees
-a broad tower with a short, thick spire standing out as the only
-feature in a wide, flat landscape. This, for all who know it,
-has a mysterious attraction, for it is the sorrowful ruin of a
-once magnificent building, a far-famed centre of light and
-learning from whence came the brains, the piety, and the wealth
-which, issuing over the fens of south-east Lincolnshire, not
-only supplied the first lecturers to Cambridge, but planted
-those splendid churches for which the “parts of Holland”
-are famous to this day. For this is the great Abbey of Crowland,
-or Croyland, the home of the good St. Guthlac, to whose
-memory this and many another church was dedicated, and to
-whose shrine pilgrimage was made for several centuries. It
-stands alone on a once desolate and still sparsely inhabited
-and seemingly endless fen, and past it the Welland flows down
-to the long serpentine lake beloved of skaters, which is spelt
-Cowbit, but called by all Lincolnshire folk “Cubbit Wash.”</p>
-
-<p>Croyland is an older name than Crowland, and the fine church
-and monastery to which it owes its fame was set up in the
-eighth century, by King Æthelbald, in grateful memory of
-St. Guthlac. Now St. Guthlac is no legendary saint; he was
-a member of the Mercian royal house, who, tired of soldiering,
-sought a retirement from the world; and certainly few better
-places could be found than what was then a desolate, reedy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_484"></a>[484]</span>
-waste of waters at the point where Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire
-and Lincolnshire meet by the edge of Deeping Fen.
-No road led to it, and the fenmen’s boats were the only means
-of passage.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus112">
-<img src="images/illus112.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Cowbit Church.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ST. GUTHLAC</div>
-
-<p>Guthlac was, we are told, the son of Penwald, a Mercian
-nobleman, and he was very likely born not far from Croyland.
-After nine years’ military service he entered the monastery of
-Hrypadon, or Repton, and after two years’ study resolved to
-take up the life of an Anchorite. So, in defiance of the evil
-spirits who were reputed to have their abode there, and who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_485"></a>[485]</span>
-were probably nothing but the shrieking sea-gulls and the
-melancholy cries of the bittern and curlew, he landed on a bit
-of dry ground two miles to the north-east of Croyland, now called
-Anchor-Church-Hill, just east of the Spalding road. Here were
-some British or Saxon burial mounds, on one of which he set
-up his hut and chapel, while his sister Pega established herself
-a few miles to the south-west, at Peakirk. He had landed on his
-island on St. Bartholomew’s Day, August 24, 699, a young man
-of twenty-six, and here he was visited by Bishop Hædda, who
-ordained him in 705. In 709 Æthelbald being outlawed by his
-cousin King Coelred, took sanctuary with St. Guthlac, who
-prophesied to him that he would one day be king, and without
-bloodshed. St. Guthlac died in 713 or 714, but Æthelbald,
-who had vowed to build a monastery for Guthlac if ever he
-could, did become king in 716, and in gratitude built the first
-stone church and endowed a monastery for Benedictines at
-Croyland. Naturally St. Guthlac was the patron saint, and to
-him was joined St. Bartholomew, on whose day he had first
-come to Croyland.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FOUNDATIONS OF THE ABBEY</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ABBOTS OF CROYLAND</div>
-
-<p><i>St. Guthlac</i> is represented in his statue as bearing the scourge
-of St. Bartholomew, on whose feast day each year little knives
-were given away emblematic of his martyrdom by flaying.
-The custom was not abolished till 1476. Pictures of the scourge
-and knives are found in the stained glass of old windows; for
-instance, at Bag-Enderby, near Somersby. In 866 the Danes
-burnt the monastery. Eighty years later the chancellor of
-King Edred, whose name is variously given as Turketyl, or
-<i>Thurcytel</i>, restored the church and monastery, and became the
-first abbot in 946, about which time he founded the Croyland
-library. The first church was built on a peat bog; oak piles
-five and a half feet long being driven through the peat on to
-gravel, and above the piles recent digging has shown alternate
-layers of loose stone and quarry-dust, above which the stone
-foundations of the tower were found to go down fifteen inches
-below the surface, and to rest on a mixture of rubble and stiff
-soil which was brought in boats a distance of nine miles.
-Thurcytel’s church, which was cruciform and of considerable
-size and held one large bell, has almost, if not entirely, disappeared.
-The monastery was finished after his death by
-his successor, <i>Egelric</i>, who added six other bells in 976. The
-Danes, by cruel and repeated exactions, ruined the abbey<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_486"></a>[486]</span>
-which Thurcytel had left so richly endowed, in the time of
-Egelric’s successor, <i>Godric</i>, about 1010. This Egelric must not
-be confused with the Peterborough abbot of the same name,
-who became Bishop of Durham and made the great causeway
-from Deeping to Spalding in 1052, probably to give work to
-the peasantry in the year of the dreadful famine, 1051.</p>
-
-<p>On so treacherous a foundation the monks wisely built in
-wood rather than stone when possible, but they had no preservatives
-for wood in those days, hence, in 1061, Abbot <i>Ulfcytel</i>
-had to rebuild the wooden erections which were attached to the
-monastery. He was greatly helped by the famous Waltheof,
-Earl of Northampton and Huntingdon, and when, on the
-false accusation of his infamous wife Judith, sister of William I.,
-Waltheof was beheaded at Winchester, the monks got leave
-from the Conqueror to have his body buried at Croyland. In
-1076 <i>Ingulphus</i> became abbot, and, owing to the carelessness
-of some plumbers—an old and ever-recurring story—the whole
-of the buildings were again burnt down and the library of
-700 MSS. destroyed. It is to the Chronicle of Ingulphus that
-we owe most of our knowledge of the early history of Croyland,
-and even if the Chronicle were written three centuries after
-his death, it still contains much sound and reliable information.
-Certainly after the fire his building was patched up for a generation,
-and the Abbot Joffrid, a man of extraordinary learning,
-zeal, and skill, built in 1109 what may well be called the third
-abbey. Most of Thurcytel’s work which had escaped the fire
-was taken down, and the foundations carried down to the
-gravel bed below the peat. Of this building, which was carried
-out by Arnold, a lay monk and a very skilful mason, the two
-western piers and arch of the central tower remain, but an
-earthquake in 1113 damaged the nave, and when in 1143 it was
-partly burnt down again, for the third time, Abbot Edward
-restored it. King Henry had sent for Joffrid (or Geoffrey)
-from Normandy. Among other remarkable deeds he sent four
-learned monks to give a course of lectures on grammar, logic,
-rhetoric and philosophy in a barn which they hired in Cambridge,
-or Grantbridge as it was then called. Sermons were also
-preached there in French and Latin, both by the monk Gilbert
-and by the abbot himself, of whom we are told that, though his
-numerous hearers understood neither language, the force of his
-subject and his comely person excited them to give amply<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_487"></a>[487]</span>
-towards his building fund. The account of the laying of the
-first stones of his new abbey is very remarkable. Five thousand
-persons were assembled and feasted on the spot, and many
-distinguished people took part, each laying one stone and
-placing on it a handsome offering of money, or titles to property,
-or patronage, or land, or possession of yearly tithes of sheep,
-gifts of corn or malt or stone, or the service for so many years
-of quarriers at the stone pits, with carriage of stone in boats.</p>
-
-<p>Croyland lost a good friend by the death of Queen Maud,
-wife of Henry I., in 1118. She had been the especial patroness
-of the abbot Joffrid, and had founded the first Austin priory
-in England in 1108. Twenty years later King Stephen gave
-a fresh charter to the abbey, in the time of Abbot <i>Edward</i>,
-who commenced to re-build the abbey in 1145. The beautiful
-west front of the nave, some of which remains, was possibly
-planned by <i>Henry de Longchamp</i> in 1190, but was not finished
-till the time of <i>Richard de Upton</i>, 1417-1427. His predecessor,
-<i>Thomas de Overton</i>, had rebuilt the nave in 1405, and
-it was during his abbacy that Croyland became a mitred abbey.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE MASTER MASON</div>
-
-<p>The architect and master mason under Richard de Upton
-was one William de Wernington, or William de Croyland,
-whose monument is in the tower now. The effigy wears a
-monk’s cowl and long robe, and holds a builder’s square and
-compasses and has this inscription: “ICI : GIST : MESTRE :
-WILLM : DE : WERMIGTON : LE : MASON : A :
-LALME : DE : KY : DEVY : P″SA : GRACE : DOVNEZ :
-ABSOLVTION.”</p>
-
-<p>The noble west window, which has lost all its mullions and
-tracery, must have been one of the very finest in England.</p>
-
-<p>In the days of Henry II. a dispute arose between the Abbot
-of Croyland and the Prior of Spalding, the prior going so far
-as to claim Croyland as a cell to Spalding. This quarrel continued
-through the reigns of Richard I. and John, when the Abbot
-of Peterborough joined the fray with a fresh dispute about the
-rights of common and pasture, and the payment of tolls at
-Croyland bridge. In these controversies Croyland generally
-was worsted.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus113">
-<img src="images/illus113.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Croyland Abbey.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE RUINS</div>
-
-<p><i>John de Lytlyngton</i> succeeded Abbot Upton and ruled for
-forty years. In his time Henry VI. and Edward IV. both visited
-Croyland, the latter being on his way to Fotheringay. A three
-months’ frost, followed by two years of famine, and later a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_488"></a>[488]</span>
-great flood, followed by a pestilence and a fire which destroyed
-nearly all the village, but spared the abbey, are among the
-records of his abbacy. He vaulted the roofs of the aisles,
-glazed the windows, had the bells recast, and gave the choir
-an organ; also he built the great west tower for the bells and
-the porch with its parvise. He died in 1469. The short steeple
-was added to the tower later. The last abbot was <i>John Welles</i>,
-<i>alias</i> Bridges. Another campanile had been built beyond the
-east end of the choir by Abbot <i>Ralph Marshe</i>, 1260, which gave
-the abbey two separate peals, as once at Lincoln. After these
-many vicissitudes the greater part of the beautiful building<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_489"></a>[489]</span>
-was destroyed at the dissolution in 1539, the nave, of nine
-bays, being preserved for a parish church. The north aisle
-had been used for the purpose before, and is so still. Besides
-this there is left now the west front, consisting of a tower with
-short spire and a very fine Perpendicular window, and all but
-the gable and window tracery of the beautiful ornate west end
-of the nave. This had originally no less than twenty-nine
-statues under canopies, in seven tiers, covering the wall on
-either side of the doorway and window, and also above the
-window. The handsome doorway is entered by a deeply
-moulded single arch enclosing two smaller ones, and in the
-tympanum is a large quatrefoil illustrating the life of St. Guthlac.
-The tower has a western porch under a six-light window. Much
-has been done by the rector, the Rev. T. H. Le Bœuf, to preserve
-this magnificent ruin, and since 1860, under Sir G. Scott
-and Mr. J. L. Pearson, sound restoration has been carried out.
-Besides the west front and the western tower and spire,
-one of the most remarkable parts of the abbey still existing
-is the stone screen which, contrary to usual custom, filled the
-west arch of the central tower, and is pierced by two doors,
-one on either side of the altar. Of this the side looking west
-is plain and probably had wooden panelling, but the eastern
-side is handsomely carved and panelled in stone. The north
-aisle has Lytlyngton’s groined roof, five large Perpendicular
-windows, and a rood-screen. Of St. Guthlac’s Shrine, which
-was destroyed in 870 and newly erected in 1136, and moved
-in 1196, nothing remains.</p>
-
-<p>Of the old glass fragments have lately been found buried in
-the churchyard.</p>
-
-<p>An epitaph on the north wall, dated 1715, has the following
-apt lines:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Man’s life is like unto a winter’s day,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Some brake their fast and so departs away;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Others stay dinner then departs full fed,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The longest age but supps and goes to bed.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus114">
-<img src="images/illus114.jpg" width="500" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>Croyland Bridge.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE BOUNDARY CROSSES</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">TRIANGULAR BRIDGE</div>
-
-<p>The boundaries of Croyland, which in Æthelbald’s Charter
-were rivers, were staked out more definitely when disputes
-between this abbey and Peterborough arose, by stone crosses;
-and though these are in part destroyed or broken down, six
-crosses, or parts of them, are still standing in fields or hedges,
-which are all mentioned by name, in later charters. One of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_490"></a>[490]</span>
-them, “Turketyls or Thurcytels Cross,” is placed at the
-junction of Lincolnshire and Cambridgeshire. In this, as in
-all the others, the cross is missing. The shaft is of obelisk
-form, on a shapely base, and has been restored. Parts of other
-crosses are “Guthlac’s Stone,” near the Assendyke, four miles
-from Croyland; “Finestone,” or “Fynset,” “Greynes,”
-“Folwardstaking,” and “Kenulph’s Stone.” One of the
-boundaries mentioned as early as the charter of Edred, <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 943,
-is “The Triangular Bridge.” The present is an extremely
-curious thirteenth- or fourteenth-century structure, doubtless
-replacing an earlier one. Like the triangular lodge near Rothwell,
-in Northamptonshire, it was probably intended to be emblematic
-of the Trinity. It has three pointed arches, with a way for a
-stream to flow under each, and three roadways over the arches,
-but the arches are too low, and the roadways too narrow for
-vehicles and too steep for any convenient traffic. Hence it
-may have been the basement of a large cross approached by
-three flights of steps, where now we have the steep inclines.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_491"></a>[491]</span>
-The parapet walls are perhaps a later addition. Still it served
-as a bridge too. Roads from Stamford, Peterborough and
-Spalding meet at the bridge, and tributaries of the Welland
-and Nene, now covered in, flow under it. The height of the
-arches is nine feet, and their span sixteen and a half. It would
-not require that span now, but the streams were bigger when
-this bridge was built, for we are told that Henry VI. came to
-Croyland by water in 1460, and that Edward IV. embarked
-at the wharf just below the bridge, in 1468, for Fotheringay
-Castle, which is on the banks of the Nene, a distance of some
-two and twenty miles by water.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FIGURE ON THE BRIDGE</div>
-
-<p>There is a stone bench along the left side of the bridge parapet,
-as you approach from Peterborough, and on this you find an
-ancient stone figure seated: it is often called Æthelbald holding
-a globe in his hand or a loaf of bread; but it is far more likely
-that it is the figure of our Lord, from the centre of the gable
-above the great west window of the nave, holding in his hands
-what Shakespeare in the lines below calls “the sceptre and the
-ball.” The shallowness of the statue and its height—six feet
-when seated but even the knees only projecting ten inches—make
-it certain that it was only meant to be seen from the
-front and at a good height. Moreover, the workmanship of
-the statue corresponds with that of the other statues on the
-west front of the abbey.</p>
-
-<p>The rector states as a fact that the west gable of this west
-front was taken down in 1720, and the statue placed on the
-bridge, where it must be admitted that it looks very much out
-of place and uncomfortable. The bridge is said to be in three
-counties—Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire and Northamptonshire—so,
-though the abbey is entirely in Lincolnshire, we can in
-a few steps leave the county of which Croyland is the last place
-we have to describe.</p>
-
-<p>The “ball,” or orb, is carried by the monarch at the coronation
-service in one hand and the sceptre in the other as symbols
-of imperial power. There is no finer passage in English literature
-than the soliloquy of King Henry V. on the eve of the
-battle of Agincourt, the last part of which runs thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">’Tis not the balm, the sceptre and the ball,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The sword, the mace, the crown imperial,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The intertissued robe of gold and pearl,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The farced title running ’fore the king,</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_492"></a>[492]</span>
- <div class="verse indent0">The throne he sits on, nor the tide of pomp</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That beats upon the high shore of this world,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">No, not all these, thrice-gorgeous ceremony,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Not all these, laid in bed majestical,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Can sleep so soundly as the wretched slave,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Who with a body fill’d and vacant mind</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Gets him to rest, cramm’d with distressful bread;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Never sees horrid night, the child of hell,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But, like a lackey, from the rise to set</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Sweats in the eye of Phœbus, and all night</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Sleeps in Elysium; next day after dawn,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Doth rise and help Hyperion to his horse,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And follows so the ever-running year,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With profitable labour, to his grave:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And, but for ceremony, such a wretch,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Winding up days with toil and nights with sleep,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Had the fore-hand and vantage of a king.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The slave, a member of the country’s peace,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Enjoys it; but in gross brain little wots</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">What watch the king keeps to maintain the peace,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Whose hours the peasant best advantages.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Henry V.</i>, Act IV. Scene 1.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LINCOLNSHIRE SWAN-MARKS</div>
-
-<p>In the Museum of the Record-office is a long brown-paper
-roll with a double column of swans’ heads, the bills painted red
-and showing in black the marks of the different owners in two
-counties, of which Lincolnshire is one. These marks were in
-use in the years 1497-1504, a few being added for the
-year 1515.</p>
-
-<p>One of the plainest to read is the name of Carolus Stanefeld
-de Bolyngbroke; among others are the marks of the parsons of
-Leek and Leverton, the vicars of Waynflete, Frekeney and
-Sybsa, the Bayly of Croft, the abbot of Revysbye and Philip
-abbas de Croyland.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_493"></a>[493]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLII">CHAPTER XLII<br />
-<span class="smaller">LINCOLNSHIRE FOX-HOUNDS<br />
-BY E. P. RAWNSLEY, ESQ., M.F.H.</span></h2>
-
-<p>Brocklesby—Burton—Blankney and Southwold—Note by Author.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE BROCKLESBY</div>
-
-<p>Except the fen country and a small corner in the extreme
-north-west, the whole of Lincolnshire is hunted by fox-hounds.
-Four packs, namely, the <i>Brocklesby</i> (Lord Yarborough’s), the
-<i>Burton</i>, <i>Blankney</i> and <i>Southwold</i> hunt entirely in Lincolnshire;
-while the Belvoir and Cottesmore hunt partly in Lincolnshire.
-Premier position must be given to the <i>Brocklesby</i>. It
-is one of the very few packs maintained entirely by the master,
-and for over 150 years the Earls of Yarborough have done this
-for the benefit of the residents and farmers in the large tract
-of country they hunt over. The country hunted extends from
-the Humber on the north to a line drawn from Louth to Market-Rasen
-on the south, and from the sea on the east to the river
-Ancholme on the west. The country is mostly wold, and
-consequently plough, but very open, the only big woods being
-those that surround Brocklesby itself. The hounds having
-been so long in one family are of the best, and there are few
-kennels in England but have a large infusion of the Brocklesby
-blood, famous for nose, tongue, and stoutness. For upwards
-of 100 years the family of Smith carried the horn and did much
-to establish the notoriety of the pack, while in more recent
-years Will Dale, a great huntsman and houndman, and Jem
-Smith, no relation of the former huntsman, have kept it up.
-Possibly sport in the country was never better than when
-W. Dale and Mr. Maunsell-Richardson each hunted one pack;
-when one was hunting the other was always out to render
-assistance, and as both knew the country perfectly, the result<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_494"></a>[494]</span>
-was more good runs and more foxes caught at the end of them
-than was ever done in the country before or since.</p>
-
-<p>With the exception of Brocklesby there are not many
-residences in the country, though the Upplebys of Barrow,
-the Alingtons of Swinhope, the Nelthorpes of Scawby in old
-days joined the chase; and it is related of the first, grandfather
-of the present owner of Barrow, that after a good run he was
-found riding on his pillow shouting at the top of his voice,
-“Mind you keep your eye on Blossom,” a noted bitch at that
-time in the pack. At the present time a great supporter is
-Mr. Haigh of Grainsby, who cannot have too many foxes,
-though he does all his hunting on foot. Mr. Pretyman’s covers
-at Riby are equally well stocked; while Bradley Wood, the
-property of Mr. Sutton-Nelthorpe, is the key of all that side
-of the country. Probably hunting will continue longer over
-cultivated country, such as the Brocklesby, than in most parts
-of England. There are few railways, the country is not adapted
-to small holdings, the farmers are all sportsmen, and occupy
-large farms, delighted to have a litter of cubs reared on their
-land and to see a couple of fox-hound puppies playing in their
-yards, while such a thing as a complaint about hounds and field
-crossing their land is unknown.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE BURTON AND THE BLANKNEY</div>
-
-<p><i>The Burton</i> comes next in point of antiquity, and takes its
-name from Burton, Lord Monson’s place near Lincoln, where
-Lord Monson first started the hounds in 1774. Many notable
-sportsmen have held the mastership. The old Burton country
-was of very wide extent, stretching from Brigg on the north
-to Sleaford on the south, and from Stourton by Horncastle
-on the east to the Trent on the west. It is now divided into
-<i>Burton</i> and <i>Blankney</i>, the present southern boundary of the
-Burton being the river Witham and the Fossdyke. The most
-notable Masters of the country when undivided were Mr. Assheton-Smith,
-Sir Richard Sutton, Lord Henry Bentinck, who bred
-a pack of hounds which for work were unequalled, and their
-blood is still treasured in many kennels, and Mr. Henry
-Chaplin, to whom Lord Henry gave his hounds, and when the
-old Burton country was divided Mr. Chaplin took this pack with
-him. The Burton country as it is now was established in 1871;
-Mr. F. Foljambe being the first master, a great houndman
-with a thorough knowledge of the science of hunting, he very
-soon established a pack, and with Will Dale as huntsman,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_495"></a>[495]</span>
-sport of the highest order was the result. Mr. Foljambe was
-succeeded by Mr. Wemyss, Mr. Shrubb and again Mr. Wemyss
-for short periods; then Mr. T. Wilson came, and for twenty-four
-years presided over the country. He bred an excellent
-pack of hounds, and sport, especially during the latter part of
-his reign, was very good; the country, when he gave up, being
-better off for foxes than it had ever been; this was in 1912.
-Sir M. Cholmeley succeeded Mr. Wilson. The Burton country
-is a fair mixture of grass and plough, with some very fine woodlands
-on the east side of it, known as the Wragby woods. It
-is far the best scenting country in Lincolnshire, and being little
-cut up with railways or rivers, is the best hunting country
-in all the shire. There are not many residences in the country,
-but excellent support in the way of foxes is given by the landowners.
-The Bacons of Thonock have ever assisted; then the
-Amcotts family of Hackthorn and Kettlethorpe, the Wrights of
-Brattleby, the owners of most of the Wragby woods, and of
-Toft, Newton and Nevile’s gorses are perhaps most conspicuous;
-but the whole country is well provided.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Blankney</i> was first formed as a separate country in 1871,
-when Mr. Henry Chaplin took command, and as he brought
-the pack given to him by Lord H. Bentinck, and H. Dawkins
-as huntsman, very good sport was shown. On Mr. Chaplin
-giving up he was succeeded by Major Tempest. Then followed
-Mr. Cockburn, and for a short time Lord Londesborough joined
-him; Mr. Lubbock followed, then an old name in Lord Charles
-Bentinck; Mr. R. Swan came next and is still in command.
-Changes have been rather frequent, as in many countries.</p>
-
-<p>The Blankney country is now a good deal intersected by
-railways, and the vale towards the Trent has two rivers, the
-Brant and Witham, which cut it up further. The Wellingore
-vale is looked on as the best part, having a large proportion of
-grass, “the heath,” in the centre, is all light plough and very
-bad scenting country, while on the east there is a strip of country
-bordering on the fen of good hunting character, and a portion
-of the Belvoir country towards Sleaford, which is lent to the
-Blankney, is also very fair.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE SOUTHWOLD</div>
-
-<p><i>The Southwold</i> was the last part of Lincolnshire to be established
-as a separate country (later, that is, than either the
-Brocklesby or the Burton); it was not till 1823 that it was hunted
-regularly. It has a wide range, extending from the sea on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_496"></a>[496]</span>
-east to the river Witham on the west, and from Market-Rasen
-and Louth on the north to the fens on the south. It is probably
-more varied than any part of Lincolnshire. The marsh with
-its wide ditches comes on the east; the wolds, mostly light
-plough, in the centre; while on the west they dip into a mixed
-country of grass and plough. The fen country, all ditches
-and plough, is in the south; hounds, however, only occasionally
-get into it, as there are hardly any covers. Very short masterships
-have been the rule, but a committee ruled for nearly
-twenty years (1857-76), at the end of which time foxes were
-very scarce in the country. Mr. Crowder then came for four
-years, and in 1880 Mr. E. P. Rawnsley took the country, and is
-still master. With latterly the aid of Mr. J. S. V. Fox, and now
-of Sir W. Cooke, so great an alteration has taken place that whereas
-formerly four days a week sufficed to hunt the country, now it
-is always hunted six days, Sir W. Cooke taking the north side
-and Mr. Rawnsley the south. Sir W. Cooke has a pack of his
-own, while Mr. Rawnsley hunts the pack which belongs to the
-country and has been bred from all the best working strains
-of blood obtainable. Though there are some very big woods
-on the edges of the country, the centre is all open; there are
-few railways and no rivers, the scenting conditions are fair,
-and it is probably the second best hunting country in Lincolnshire.</p>
-
-<p>Conspicuous supporters of the hunt are the Heneages of
-Hainton, and the large extent of covers and country owned by
-them has always been open to hounds. The Foxes of Girsby
-and Mr. Walter Rawnsley of Well Vale have been the same.
-The late Captain J. W. Fox was for many years chairman
-of the committee when it ruled the affairs of the hunt, and his
-son was for seven years joint master with Mr. Rawnsley, during
-which time the sport was of higher average merit than it had
-ever attained. Many more residents now come out than was
-formerly the case, and everywhere the stock of foxes is far
-better than thirty years ago.</p>
-
-<p>Somersby, the birthplace of Tennyson, is situated in the
-centre of the hunt, but we never heard of the Poet Laureate
-joining the chase in his young days. Then Spilsby, the birthplace
-of Sir John Franklin, and Tattershall Castle, noted as one
-of the finest brick buildings in England, are both of them in
-the Southwold country.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_497"></a>[497]</span></p>
-
-<h3>NOTE<br />
-<span class="smcap">By Author</span></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MASTERS OF THE SOUTHWOLD</div>
-
-<p>It appears that Mr. Charles Pelham, who was the last of the
-Brocklesby Pelhams, was the first M.F.H. of <i>The Brocklesby</i>,
-at first as joint and then as sole master, till his death in 1763.
-Also that Lord Yarborough hunted what is now the Southwold
-country for a month at a time in spring and autumn, having
-kennels at Ketsby until 1795, by which time his gorse covers
-round Brocklesby had grown up and he was able to dispense
-with the country south of Louth. Then till 1820 a pack of
-trencher-fed harriers hunted fox and hare indiscriminately.
-These from 1820 to 1822 were called “<i>The Gillingham</i>” and
-were hunted by Mr. Brackenbury from Scremby, after which
-the kennels were transferred to Hundleby and the name changed
-to “<i>The Southwold</i>.” They now kept to fox entirely, and the
-Hon. George Pelham, then living at Legbourne, was the first
-master.</p>
-
-<p>The following is a complete list of the masters of the Southwold
-up to the present date, 1914:—</p>
-
-<table summary="List of the masters of the Southwold Hunt, and their dates">
- <tr>
- <td>Hon. G. Pelham</td>
- <td>1823-6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Lord Kintore</td>
- <td>1826</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Mr. Joseph Brackenbury</td>
- <td>1827-9</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Sir Richard Sutton, combining it with the Burton</td>
- <td>1829-30</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Captain Freeman, who brought hounds from “The Vine”</td>
- <td>1830-32</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Mr. Parker</td>
- <td>1832-35</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Mr. Heanley, who brought his own hounds</td>
- <td>1835-41</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Mr. Musters, who brought his own hounds</td>
- <td>1841-43</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Mr. Hellier</td>
- <td>1843-52</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Mr. Henley Greaves</td>
- <td>1852-53</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Mr. Cooke</td>
- <td>1853-57</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>A Committee, presided over part of the time by Captain Dallas York</td>
- <td>1857-76</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Mr. F. Crowder</td>
- <td>1876-80</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Mr. E. Preston Rawnsley</td>
- <td>1880</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_498"></a>[498]</span></p>
-
-<p>From this it will be seen that until the days of the committee
-no one hunted the pack for even five years, with the exception
-of Mr. Heanley and Mr. Hellier, until the present master,
-Mr. E. P. Rawnsley.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BELCHFORD KENNELS</div>
-
-<p>With the reign of the committee central kennels were established
-for the hunt at Belchford in 1857. Previously each master
-fixed his kennels as it suited him, either at Louth, Horncastle,
-Hundleby or Harrington.</p>
-
-<p>Now, April 1914, Sir William Cooke having given up, Lord
-Charles Bentinck has succeeded him. He brings his own pack
-with him, and the country no longer is divided into north and
-south, but hunted as a whole again.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_499"></a>[499]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_I">APPENDIX I</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The altar tombstone from which John preached is near the
-chancel door. Epworth people will tell you that the mark of his
-heels is still visible on the stone. Really they are segments of two
-ironstone nodules in the sandstone slab. The inscription is a
-remarkable one:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Here lieth all that was mortal of Samuel Wesley, A.M., who
-was Rector of Epworth for 39 years and departed this life 15th of
-April, 1735, aged 72.</p>
-
-<p>As he lived so he died, in the true Catholic faith of the Holy
-Trinity in Unity, and that Jesus Christ is God incarnate and the
-only Saviour of mankind.—Acts 4, 12.</p>
-
-<p>Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord: yea, saith the
-Spirit, that they may rest from their labours; and their works do
-follow them.—Rev. 14, 13.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_500"></a>[500]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_II">APPENDIX II</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Dr. Wm. Stukeley, 1687-1765, was a famous Lincolnshire
-antiquarian. He practised medicine, first at Boston and then at
-Grantham from 1710 to 1726. He was made an F.R.S. in 1717, and
-in that or the following year he helped to establish the Society of
-Antiquaries in London, and was for the first nine years secretary
-to that Society. In 1719 he became an M.D. of Cambridge and
-was made a member of the “Spalding Gentlemen’s Society” in
-1722. In 1727 he took Holy Orders and from 1730 to 1748 officiated
-as Vicar of All Saints at Stamford, where he founded the short-lived
-“Brazenose Society.” He was a great friend of Sir Isaac
-Newton and kept up his interest in scientific matters to the end,
-inasmuch as he put off his service on one occasion in order that his
-congregation might watch an eclipse of the sun. Whilst still Vicar
-of Stamford he was made Rector of Somerby near Grantham,
-1739-1747, but he retired from both livings in 1748, and spent the
-rest of his life in London, where at the age of 75 he preached his
-first sermon in spectacles, taking as his text “Now we see through
-a glass darkly.” He wrote five volumes of Notes of the proceedings
-of the “Royal Society,” which are now in the library of the
-“Spalding Gentlemen’s Society,” and he dedicated his “<i>Itinerarium
-curiosum</i>” to Maurice Johnson, the founder of that society. He
-took, for many years, antiquarian tours all over England; writing
-at some length on Stonehenge and the Roman Wall, and often
-illustrating his articles, for he was a skilful draughtsman. He died
-in London in his seventy-ninth year.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_501"></a>[501]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_III">APPENDIX III<br />
-<span class="smaller">A LOWLAND PEASANT POET</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>I had not long ago a couple of poems put into my hands by one
-who, knowing the author, told me something of his life and circumstances.
-Being much struck by the poems I set to work to
-make inquiries in the hope of getting something further. But he
-seems to have written very little. His nephew copied out and
-sent <i>The Auld Blasted Tree</i> and added “I made inquiry of my
-aunt if she had any more; she says those you have seen along with
-this one I now enclose were all he wrote, at least the best of them.”
-The relatives allowed me to see the account of his funeral with an
-appreciation of the man as it appeared in the local newspaper. It
-ran as follows, and was published in <i>The Peebleshire Advertiser</i>,
-July 7, 1906.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="center">THE LATE MR. FARQUHARSON, LONELYBIELD.</p>
-
-<p>Our obituary of Saturday last contained the name of one whose
-memory will be for long in this district. We refer to the late
-Alexander Forrester Farquharson. His “mid name” takes us
-back to the first baptismal scene of by-gone long occupants of
-Linton Manse, viz., the Rev. Alexander Forrester, whose father,
-too, was minister before. Born in Carlops sixty-nine years ago,
-there are but few now amongst us who were children then. When
-six years old, his father, of the same vocation as himself, removed
-to the picturesque hamlet at the foot of the “Howe,” and here his
-lifetime was spent. Married to one of a family of long pastoral
-connection with our district, who still survives to cherish the happy
-memories of their long sojourn together, in this, their quiet and
-peaceful home, they reared their family. By his departure, there
-has gone from amongst us one of the finest types of Scotchmen
-that our country districts develop, both, it may be said, in lineaments
-of feature and character. But, added to the possession
-generally of the best features of our race, there was in him truly a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_502"></a>[502]</span>
-special element, which seemed to be gathered from the classic
-scenes in which he was reared. It is not too much to say that his
-manner and language (quaint to a degree) were a living, embodied
-personification of the genius of the place, as pictured in the pages
-of the immortal Pastoral of Ramsay. Gifted with musical powers
-and some inspiration from the Muses—which, however, not often
-saw the light—these were fostered in his wanderings amid the
-lovely scenes, o’er moor and fell, whither his daily vocations led.
-And with such characteristics, added to his stores of local lore and
-story, and knowledge of bird, beast, and fossil, it may be gathered
-how entertaining were the “cracks” in the homesteads he visited,
-and how much these would be looked forward to and welcomed.
-And not less so were those in the cosy home in the “Bield,”<a id="FNanchor_39" href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> to
-which many a one of kindred spirit specially pilgrimaged. Evidence
-of this was ample from the large gathering from all parts to
-his resting-place with his “forbears” in Linton’s “auld kirkyaird.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus far the newspaper of 1906; and a correspondent who knew
-the family writes under date March 18, 1912, “Alexander Forrester
-Farquharson (the subject of the foregoing notice) was born on
-Sept. 26, 1836, and was named Forrester after the minister of West
-Linton Parish. He was the son of Andrew Farquharson, mole
-catcher and small Farmer, and Isabella Cairns, both natives of the
-Carlops district who lived there at a house called Lonely Bield.
-Alexander lived in the same house, and followed his father’s occupation.
-His son died lately and the mother has now left the House.”
-From this somewhat meagre account we may gather that the whole
-of his life was spent in Nature’s lonely places</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“up on the mountains, in among the hills”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">and in this respect he resembles Allan Ramsay who drank in
-the poetry of Nature when a boy at Leadhills high up on the
-Crawford moor in Lanarkshire, where hills, glens, and burns,
-with birds and flowers and ever-changing skies were his to
-watch and study and take delight in, at the impressionable
-season of boyhood; whereby Nature herself laid the foundations
-of his poetic fancies. And this opportunity to walk with
-Nature came also to Farquharson, in even a greater measure than
-it did to Ramsay; for he, like Burns, lived and laboured in the
-country after he had grown to manhood. But Farquharson had
-not so good an education as the other two, nor did it fall to him, as
-it did to them, to have at the outset of his career books put into
-his hands which directed his attention more especially to poetry.
-Thus, what the selection of English Songs, which he called his
-<i>Vade mecum</i>, did for Burns, Watson’s collection of Scottish poems
-did for Ramsay, and among these, notably, one by Robt. Semphill<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_503"></a>[503]</span>
-called “The life and death of the Piper of Kilbarchan” and another
-by Hamilton of Gilbertfield, “The last dying words of Bonnie
-Heck.” Later, Hamilton, who by this poem first inspired Ramsay
-with the desire to write in verse, heartily recognised his merit and
-himself wrote of him</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“O fam’d and celebrated Allan!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Renowned Ramsay! canty callan!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">There’s nouther Hieland man nor Lawlan</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">In poetrie,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But may as soon ding doun Tantallan</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">As match wi’ thee.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">This source of inspiration from books of poetry never, as far as we
-know, fell to the lot of Farquharson, whose education was
-altogether on a lower plane. He was born and died just a
-Scottish peasant; but his communing with Nature gave him the
-power of observation, whilst the love of reading, which has for
-generations been the heritage of the Scots even in the humblest
-walks of life, taught him how to express the thoughts which came
-to him, and he had undoubtedly a gift for verse. His poems on
-his old “Hardie” fiddle, and on the Sundew are so good that they
-might have been written by Burns. But, like Burns and Ramsay
-too, he is best when he sticks to the vernacular. When he begins
-to write English he is less convincing. It is well to remember that
-Ramsay could owe nothing to Burns, as he died in 1758, the year
-before Burns was born; but Farquharson, whose widow is still
-alive, died only the other day, and was acquainted with the works
-certainly of one and probably of both of them. This does not,
-however, make him less deserving of notice; for little as he wrote,
-the two poems just mentioned show, I cannot help thinking, a high
-degree of poetic merit, being not merely surprising as the work of
-a peasant, but—extremely good <i>per se</i>, and serve to show how the
-true poetic gift may lurk unsuspected in a country village. In his
-poems <i>Fair Habbies Howe</i> (or hollow) and <i>Monk’s Burn</i> he refers to
-the fact that the descriptions of Nature in Allan Ramsay’s pastoral
-<i>The Gentle Shepherd</i> are taken from the Carlops district, about
-twelve miles from Edinburgh, in which he himself lived. The second
-scene of the first act of <i>The Gentle Shepherd</i> begins thus:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0"><i>Jenny.</i> Come, Meg, let’s fa’ to wark upon this green,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">This shining day will bleach our linen clean;</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">The waters clear, the lift’s unclouded blue</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Will make them like a lily wet wi’ dew.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0"><i>Peggy.</i> Gae farer up the burn to Habbie’s Howe,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Where a’ the sweets o’ spring an’ simmer grow:</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Between two birks, out o’er a little lin,<a id="FNanchor_40" href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a></div>
- <div class="verse indent8">The water fa’s an’ maks a singan din:</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_504"></a>[504]</span>
- <div class="verse indent8">A pool breast-deep, beneath as clear as glass,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Kisses wi’ easy whirls the bord’ring grass.</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">We’ll end our washing while the morning’s cool;</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">An’ when the day grows het, we’ll to the pool,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">There wash oursells—’tis healthfu’ now as May,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">An sweetly cauler on sae warm a day.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent"><i>The Gentle Shepherd</i>, the poem on which Allan Ramsay’s reputation
-is mainly founded, is a pastoral of great beauty and charm.
-The original MS. was presented by the author to the Countess of
-Eglinton. It is a folio Vol. of 105 pages, clearly written by his
-own hand, and has a few comic pen-and-ink sketches added at the
-beginning or end of the acts, and at the close is this note:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Finished the 29ᵗʰ of April, 1725, just as eleven o’clock strikes,
-by Allan Ramsay.</p>
-
-<p>All glory be to God. Amen.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>We will now turn to the seven bits of verse we have been able to
-collect by the Shepherd of Lonely Bield.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center">FAIR HABBIE’S HOWE.</div>
- <div class="verse center smaller">(May be sung to the tune “Craigielea,” with first verse as the Chorus).</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">O Habbie’s Howe! Fair Habbie’s Howe,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Where wimplin’ burnies<a id="FNanchor_41" href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> sweetly row;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Where aft I’ve tasted nature’s joys,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">O Habbie’s Howe! Fair Habbie’s Howe.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Roond thee my youthfu’ days I spent,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Amang thy cliffs aft ha’e I speil’d.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thou theme o’ Ramsay’s pastoral lay;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">O hoary, moss-clad Craigy Bield.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The auld oak bower, wi’ ivy twined,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Adorns thy weather-furrowed brow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A trysting-place where lovers met</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">When tenting flocks in Habbie’s Howe.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">When April’s suns glint through the trees,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The mavis lilts his mellow lay;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And, deep amid thy sombre shades</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The owlet screams at close of day.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Amang thy cosy, mossy chinks,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The fern now shows its gentle form</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And through thy caves the ousel darts,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">To build his nest in early morn.</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_505"></a>[505]</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The scented birk, and glossy beech,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Hang o’er thee for thy simmer veil;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And gowany haughs<a id="FNanchor_42" href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> aroond thee bloom,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Where shepherds tauld love’s tender tale.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Sweet Esk, glide o’er thy rocky path,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And echo through thy classic glen;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Where can we match, in flowery May,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Fair Habbie’s Howe, and Hawthornden?</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">Alex. Farquharson.</span></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Lanely Bield. Carlops, 1885.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center">MONK’S BURN.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Doon in Monk’s bonnie verdant glen</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A sparklin’ birnie murmurs through</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Dark waving pines, ’mang hazel shaws</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Decked with the hawk-weed’s golden hue.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">It ripples aft ’neath ferny banks</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With fragrant birks and briers spread</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Till o’er the linn its echo sings,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Deep cradled in a rocky bed.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Here Auld Dame Nature gaily haps</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Frae ilka side her crystal streams;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And soaring high o’er leafy bowers,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On hovering wing, the falcon screams.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Aboon Glaud’s yaird the burnie meets</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Esk dancing to the morning sun,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">An’ glintin’ bonnie through Monk’s Haugh,<a id="FNanchor_43" href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a></div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Where Pate and Peggie<a id="FNanchor_44" href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> aft hae run;</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Noo joined wi’ silv’ry limpid Esk,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Gangs merrily singing tae the sea.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ilk bird and flower the chorus join</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Till wilds and braes resound wi’ glee.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Sing on, ye warblers ’mang the trees,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Bloom fair, ye blue-bells on the plains,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And deck the banks of infant rills</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That wander through my native glens.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">Alex. Farquharson.</span></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Lanely Bield, <i>16th January 1886</i>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_506"></a>[506]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center">THE AULD BLASTED TREE.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The blasted ash tree that langsyne grew its lane,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Whilk Ramsay has pictured in his pawky strain,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Wi’ Bauldy aboon’t on the tap o’ the knowe,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Glowrin’ doon at auld Mause<a id="FNanchor_45" href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> in aneath, spinnin’ tow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Is noo whommilt doon ower the Back Buckie Brae,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Baith helpless, an’ lifeless, an’ sair crummilt away,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">’Mang the bonnie blue speedwell that coortit its beild,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tho’ its scant tap e’en growin’ but little could yield.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">For years—nigh twa hunner—it markit the spot</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Whaur Mause the witch dwalt in her lanely wee cot;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But dour Eichty-sax sent a drivin’ snaw blast,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">An’ the storied link brak ’tween the present an’ past.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tho’ in summer ’twas bare, an’ had lang tint its charms,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Scarce a leaf e’er was seen on’t to hap its grey arms,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Yet it clang to the brae,<a id="FNanchor_46" href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> rockit sair, sair, I ween,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Wi’ the loud howlin’ winds that blaw doon the Linn Dean.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">An’ mony a squall warsled at the deid ’oor o’ nicht.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When Mause took in her noddle to raise ane for a flicht,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On her auld besom shank, lowin’ at the ae en’,<a id="FNanchor_47" href="#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a></div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That she played sic pranks on when she dwalt i’ the glen;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Some alloo she could loup on’t clean ower Carlops toon,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Gawn as heich i’ the air as Dale wi’ his balloon,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Wi’ nocht on but her sark an’ a white squiny much—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A dress greatly in vogue in thae days wi’ a wutch.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">But thae fashions, like wutches, hae gane oot o’ date</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">E’en the black bandit squiny has shared the same fate,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The lint-wheels they span on are just keepit for fun,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Or tae let lasses see the wey hand-cloots were spun.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Feint a trace o’ the carlin’ there’s noo left ava—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Her wee hoosie’s doon, an’ the auld tree an’ a’,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That waggit ayont it for mony a year</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ere anither bit timmer took thocht to grow here.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">A. Farquharson.</span></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Lanely Bield (1887?).</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center">EPISTAL TO ALAN REID. EDINBURGH. 1888.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Gin August wiles oot wi’ her smile</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Auld Reekie’s sons when freed frae toil,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">There ane’ comes here tae bide awhile,</div>
- <div class="verse indent18">A clever chield;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ilk place he’s paintit in grand style,</div>
- <div class="verse indent18">E’en oor wee bield.</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_507"></a>[507]</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">He’s craigs an’ castles, cots an’ ha’s,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Lint mills, auld brigs, an’ water fa’s,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Auld stumps o’ trees an’ cowpit wa’s<a id="FNanchor_48" href="#Footnote_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a></div>
- <div class="verse indent18">A treat to see’t.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">O’er vera hills he’s gi’en a ca’,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Frae Rullion Green yont ta’ Mentma’;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">An’ brawer pictures I ne’er saw,</div>
- <div class="verse indent18">They’re fair perfection:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">They’d even mense<a id="FNanchor_49" href="#Footnote_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> a baron’s ha’</div>
- <div class="verse indent18">That rare collection.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Thanks tae ye, noo, for paintin’ bonnie</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The “Lanely Bield,” whaur dwells a cronie,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Wha likes a nicht wi’ ane sae funny</div>
- <div class="verse indent18">An’ fu’ o’ glee:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I trow Auld Reekie has nae mony</div>
- <div class="verse indent18">Tae match wi’ thee.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">It mak’s me dowie the news I hear</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That ye’re no comin’ oot this year;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">They tell me that ye’re gaun tae steer</div>
- <div class="verse indent18">For Lunnon toon:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Losh, man, I’ll miss ye sair I fear</div>
- <div class="verse indent18">No’ comin’ doon.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">But gif I’m spared wi’ health ava,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A holiday, or may be twa,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I’ll tak’ an’ come tae see ye a’,</div>
- <div class="verse indent18">An’ bide a’ nicht;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">An’ faith we’ll sing tae the cock’s craw</div>
- <div class="verse indent18">At “grey daylicht.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">Alex. Farquharson.</span></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Lanely Bield.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center">ADDRESS TO THE SUNDEW.</div>
- <div class="verse center smaller">(One of the insect-eating plants).</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Wha e’er wad think sae fair a flow’r</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Wad be sae pawky<a id="FNanchor_50" href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> as to lure</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A midge intae its genty bow’r</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">O’ bristles bricht,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">An’ syne at leisure clean devour</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">It oot o’ sicht?</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Your crimson colour’s sae enticin’</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In simmer gin the sun be risin’</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I daursay they’ll need nae advisin’</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Tae step in ow’r</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tae view an’ find the plan surprisin’</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">O sic a bow’r.</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_508"></a>[508]</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">For oot again they canna wun;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tho’ wee an’ gleg,<a id="FNanchor_51" href="#Footnote_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> they’re fairly done,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I wad they’ll get an awfu’ stun</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Gin its deteckit</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">They’ve death tae face an’ no’ the fun</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">That they expeckit.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">It serves them richt, the wicked crew,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">De’il gin the lave were in your mou’!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For oh! they’re ill tae thole the noo</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">When bitin’ keen,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Dingin’ their beaks intae ane’s broo</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Up tae the een!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Ilk foggy<a id="FNanchor_52" href="#Footnote_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> sheugh aroond ye scan,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">An’ nip as mony as ye can,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">’Twill help a wee tae gar ye stan’</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">The winter weather,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For fient a midge ye’ll pree<a id="FNanchor_53" href="#Footnote_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a> gin than</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Amang the heather.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">I kenna hoo ye’ll fend ava</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Gin a’ the muirs are clad wi’ snaw.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I doot ye’ll hae tae snooze awa’</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Sax months at least,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">An’ aiblins then your chance is sma’</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Tae get a feast.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">But gin I happen ere tae stray</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Neist August roond by Jenny’s Brae,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I hope tae see ye fresh an’ gay,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Wee muirlan’ plantie!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Wi’ routh<a id="FNanchor_54" href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a> o’ midges then tae slay</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Tae keep ye cantie.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right">A. F.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Lanely Bield.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center">ADDRESS TAE A MATTHEW HARDIE FIDDLE.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Ae blink at you an’ ane could tell</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That ye’re nae foreign factory shell,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But a Scotch mak’, an’, like mysel’,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Made gey and sturdy;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">An’ as for tone, there’ll few excel</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Ma guid auld Hardie.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Ye’ve been ma hobbie late and sune,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Noo sax an’ twenty years come June,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">An’ noo and than I tak’ a tune;</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Yet gin I weary.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Altho’ it’s but a kin’ o’ croon,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">It keeps ane cheery.</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_509"></a>[509]</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Gin ower ye’re thairms<a id="FNanchor_55" href="#Footnote_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a> I jink the bow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Bright notions bizz intae ma pow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For worl’y cares ye them can cow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">An’ a’ gangs richt,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When ower I stump<a id="FNanchor_56" href="#Footnote_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a> ‘Nathaniel Gow,’</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Or ‘Grey daylicht.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Wi’ reek an’ rozet noo ye’re black</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">An scarted sair aboot the back,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But what tho’ tawdry ye’re ne’er slack</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Tae lilt a spring<a id="FNanchor_57" href="#Footnote_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a></div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Wi’ ony far fecht fancy crack</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">They e’er will bring.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">In silk-lined cases ower the seas</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Scrawled oot an’ in wi’ foreign lees</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Aboot their S’s, scrolls, an’ C’s,<a id="FNanchor_58" href="#Footnote_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a></div>
- <div class="verse indent6">An’ eke a name</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Wad tak’ a child that’s ta’en degrees</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Tae read that same.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">An’ nocht but bum-clocks<a id="FNanchor_59" href="#Footnote_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> at the best</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Wi’ shinin’ coats o’ amber drest;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Och! what o’ that? their tones but test!</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Sic dandie dummies!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Lyin’ in braw boxes at their rest,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Row’d up like mummies.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">For a’ the sprees ye hae been at,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Haech! nae sic guide-ship e’er ye gat,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But took your chance tho’ it was wat,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Ay, e’en wat snaw</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I’ve seen or noo a denty brat<a id="FNanchor_60" href="#Footnote_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a></div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Oot ower ye a’.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">I never kent ye tak’ the gee,<a id="FNanchor_61" href="#Footnote_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a></div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But aye sang sweet at ilka spree,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tho’ I played wild at times a wee</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Gin I gat fou.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The fau’t lay wi’ the wee drap bree,<a id="FNanchor_62" href="#Footnote_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a></div>
- <div class="verse indent6">An’ no’ wi’ you.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Sae noo I trust gin I’m nae mair,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Some fiddlin’ frien’ will tak’ guid care,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And see that ye’re nae dauded<a id="FNanchor_63" href="#Footnote_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a> sair,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">When frail an’ auld;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For Hardies noo are unco rare</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Sae that I’m tauld.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right">A. F.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Lanely Bield.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_510"></a>[510]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center">SONNET IN MEMORY OF ELEANORA BROWN.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Gone! noble spirit, from our mortal view,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The still form shaded by the sombre yew</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In Mary’s Bower, a spot remote from din,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Save when in flood the shrill gush of the linn</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From wailing waves is wafted o’er her tomb,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Retiring soft round her parental home,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Where trained with pious care to womanhood,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Henceforth her motto, Ever doing good;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Gentle with youth, and comforting the old,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In faith and hope to gain the promised Fold.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Alas! the link has snapped in Friendship’s chain.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Kind Ora’s call we’ll sigh for now in vain,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Amid her native flora laid to rest,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The modest speedwell a remembrance on her breast.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">A. Farquharson.</span></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Lanely Bield.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">FOOTNOTES</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> Or Medeshamstede = Meadow homestead.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> He claimed the Earldom of Oxford and the Great Chamberlainship of
-England in right of his mother, Lady Mary Vere, sister and heiress of
-Edward, seventeenth Earl of Oxford, but succeeded in establishing his
-claim to the Chamberlainship only.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a> Defeated and slain at Flodden Field, 1513.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a> The others are Riby, Sutton St. Edmund, and one in Lincoln, now
-destroyed.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[5]</a> The Hermitage which dated from 1323 was absorbed into the Hospital.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[6]</a> Originally “Glanford briggs.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[7]</a> At Mellor in Derbyshire is a pulpit of very early date, hollowed out of
-the trunk of a tree and carved in panels.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[8]</a> Nearly five hundred years later his tombstone was discovered in the
-pavement of St. Mark’s and brought to England.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">[9]</a> The coal output in the United Kingdom in 1913 was 287,411,869 tons,
-an increase of 27 millions on the previous year.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">[10]</a> As at Grantham.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">[11]</a> Where there were no osiers they took to the reeds. A Ramsay man,
-now in his 95th year (1914), remembers the reed-harvest at Whittlesey Mere
-being frequently injured by the clouds of starlings who roosted in them.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">[12]</a> Figured in Lyson’s Cumberland p. ccvii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">[13]</a> She saved Smith’s life, subsequently married an Englishman, John
-Rolfe, and died at Gravesend, where two windows have just—July, 1914—been
-put up to her memory. Her most distinguished descendant is
-Sir R. S. Baden-Powell.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">[14]</a> Near Boston Haven.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">[15]</a> The ‘shout’ was a sort of flat-bottomed canoe, sometimes covered
-fore and aft with canvas painted grey in which one man lay with his hands
-over the sides so that by using short paddles he could approach the ducks
-unseen. It is not likely that Hall <i>made</i> the gun, but no doubt he fitted it
-to the shout.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">[16]</a> On the outer side of Boston Deeps opposite Friskney Flats.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">[17]</a> The gift of a late parish clerk.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">[18]</a> <i>Wytteworde</i> may have meant the warning notice of a funeral.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">[19]</a> <i>Yereday</i> = the anniversary of a death.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">[20]</a> Corporaxys is the plural of corporax = a linen
-cloth for the consecrated elements. (<i>See</i> Chap. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">XXIII.</a>)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">[21]</a> Spelt indifferently Reseuyd, Receuyd, Reseauyd, reseueade, Resauyd,
-resevyd, Recevyd.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="label">[22]</a> This is Gunby St. Peter; Gunby St. Nicholas is between N. Witham
-and the Leicestershire border.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="label">[23]</a> The corporax or corporal was the linen cloth to go under or over the
-vessel containing the consecrated elements.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_24" href="#FNanchor_24" class="label">[24]</a> Wong = field. In Horncastle there is a street called “The Wong.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_25" href="#FNanchor_25" class="label">[25]</a> The most notable instance of this is on the Gosforth Cross in Cumberland,
-where the same figure represents both Odin and Christ. Here too
-was a permanent Norse settlement.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_26" href="#FNanchor_26" class="label">[26]</a> The astounding list of Manors and advowsons handed over to “the
-Master or custodian and the Chaplains of the College and almshouse of
-the Holy Trinity of Tattershall and to their successors” was the following:—“The
-Manors of Wasshyngburgh, Ledenham, ffulbeck, and Driby, and
-the advowsons of the Churches of the same Manors, and the Manors of
-Brinkyll, ffoletby, Boston, Ashby Puerorum, Withcall Souche, Withcall
-Skypwyth, Bynbroke, called Northall, Woodenderby, Moreby, Wylkesby,
-Conyngesbye, Holtham, the moiety of the Manors of Swynhope, Willughton,
-Billingey and Walcote and the advowson of the Church of Swynhope.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_27" href="#FNanchor_27" class="label">[27]</a> They all came from Lord Middleton’s park in Nottinghamshire.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_28" href="#FNanchor_28" class="label">[28]</a> This is now being done.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_29" href="#FNanchor_29" class="label">[29]</a> A tax of a fifteenth levied on merchants’ goods in King John’s reign.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_30" href="#FNanchor_30" class="label">[30]</a> Prov. 17. 14.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_31" href="#FNanchor_31" class="label">[31]</a> See <a href="#illus1">Frontispiece</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_32" href="#FNanchor_32" class="label">[32]</a> <i>Hydegy</i> Hay-de-guy or guise lit. Hay of Guy or Guise, a particular
-kind of hay or dance in the 16th and early 17th century. Spenser, Shepherd’s
-Calendar “Heydeguyes”; Drayton, Polyolbion, “dance hy-day-gies”
-among the hills. Robin Goodfellow in “Percy Reliques,” &amp;c. English
-Dictionary, Murray. <i>Hay</i> (of uncertain origin) a country dance with winding
-movement of the nature of a reel.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_33" href="#FNanchor_33" class="label">[33]</a> See <a href="#illus43">Illustration, page 180</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_34" href="#FNanchor_34" class="label">[34]</a> This Matthew Flinders, of Donington, was a notable hydrographer. He
-was sent as lieutenant in command of an old ship the <i>Xenophon</i>, renamed
-the <i>Investigator</i>, to explore and chart the coast of S. Australia in 1801-3.
-And he took with him his young cousin John Franklin who had just
-returned from the battle of Copenhagen where he distinguished himself as
-a midshipman on the <i>Polyphemus</i>,—Captain John Lawford. Under
-Flinders he showed great aptitude for Nautical and Astronomical observations
-and was made assistant at the Sydney observatory, the Governor,
-Mr. King, usually addressing him as “Mr. Tycho Brahe.” These two
-natives of Lincolnshire, Flinders and Franklin, are of course responsible
-for such names on the Australian Coast as <i>Franklin Isles</i>, <i>Spilsby Island</i>
-in the <i>Sir Joseph Banks</i> group, <i>Port Lincoln</i>, <i>Boston Island</i>, <i>Cape Donington</i>,
-<i>Spalding Cove</i>, <i>Grantham Island</i>, <i>Flinders Bay</i>, <i>&amp;c.</i></p>
-
-<p>The <i>Investigator</i> proving unseaworthy, Flinders, with part of his crew,
-sailed homewards on the <i>Cumberland</i>; and touching at St. Mauritius was
-detained by the French Governor because his passport was made out for
-the <i>Investigator</i>. He was set free after seven tedious years on the island,
-1803-1810, and died at Donington 1814.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_35" href="#FNanchor_35" class="label">[35]</a> The <i>Times</i>, alluding to the Ulster Plot, spoke of “The Pinchbeck
-Napoleons of the Cabinet.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_36" href="#FNanchor_36" class="label">[36]</a> See Chap. <a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">XXII.</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_37" href="#FNanchor_37" class="label">[37]</a> These were cut in Nottinghamshire; but I see that Sussex is to supply
-the oak for the roof timbers of Westminster Hall.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_38" href="#FNanchor_38" class="label">[38]</a> An expression used in “Long whist.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_39" href="#FNanchor_39" class="label">[39]</a> Or “Shelter,” which, from its name, “Lonely Bield,” was probably far
-from any other human habitation.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_40" href="#FNanchor_40" class="label">[40]</a> Waterfall.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_41" href="#FNanchor_41" class="label">[41]</a> “A trotting burnie wimpling thro’ the ground,” Allan Ramsay’s
-<i>Gentle Shepherd</i>, Act I., Sc. 2.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_42" href="#FNanchor_42" class="label">[42]</a> Daisied slopes.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_43" href="#FNanchor_43" class="label">[43]</a> Vale.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_44" href="#FNanchor_44" class="label">[44]</a> Characters in <i>The Gentle Shepherd</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_45" href="#FNanchor_45" class="label">[45]</a> Characters in <i>The Gentle Shepherd</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_46" href="#FNanchor_46" class="label">[46]</a> Brow.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_47" href="#FNanchor_47" class="label">[47]</a> Flaming at one end.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_48" href="#FNanchor_48" class="label">[48]</a> Ruinous walls.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_49" href="#FNanchor_49" class="label">[49]</a> Grace.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_50" href="#FNanchor_50" class="label">[50]</a> Cunning.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_51" href="#FNanchor_51" class="label">[51]</a> Quick.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_52" href="#FNanchor_52" class="label">[52]</a> Hollow.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_53" href="#FNanchor_53" class="label">[53]</a> Taste.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_54" href="#FNanchor_54" class="label">[54]</a> Plenty.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_55" href="#FNanchor_55" class="label">[55]</a> Catgut, fiddlestrings.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_56" href="#FNanchor_56" class="label">[56]</a> Play.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_57" href="#FNanchor_57" class="label">[57]</a> A tune.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_58" href="#FNanchor_58" class="label">[58]</a> Stradivariuses and Cremonas.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_59" href="#FNanchor_59" class="label">[59]</a> Chafers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_60" href="#FNanchor_60" class="label">[60]</a> Thick covering (of snow).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_61" href="#FNanchor_61" class="label">[61]</a> Offence.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_62" href="#FNanchor_62" class="label">[62]</a> Brew = whisky.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_63" href="#FNanchor_63" class="label">[63]</a> Knocked about.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_511"></a>[511]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="INDEX">INDEX</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">Compiled mainly by Miss Rotha Clay, author of <i>Mediæval Hospitals of England</i>
-and <i>Hermits and Anchorites of England.</i></p>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li class="ifrst">A</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Addlethorpe, <a href="#Page_307">307-12</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ædwin, King, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Agricultural returns, <a href="#Page_477">477</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alexander, Bp., <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alford, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Algarkirk, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_459">459-61</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alkborough, <a href="#Page_196">196-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Allington, E. and W., <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alms-box, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Almshouses, <a href="#Page_13">13-14</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> <a href="#Hospitals">Hospitals</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Altar stone, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alton church fight, <a href="#Page_287">287</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alvingham, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anatomy of Melancholy, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ancaster, <a href="#Page_88">88-9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ancholme, R., <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anderson, Sir Charles, <a href="#Page_205">205-6</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Angel Hotel, Grantham, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anglo-Saxon ornaments, <a href="#Page_254">254-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anglo-Saxon remains, <a href="#Page_168">168-9</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> <a href="#Architecture">Architecture</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anwick, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aragon, Katherine of, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Architecture">Architecture, Different Styles, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Saxon and Early Romanesque, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71-2</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188-9</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251-5</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252-4</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1">Norman Domestic, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Armada picture of Bratoft Church, <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arras and Cambray, St. Vedast, Bp. of, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ashby near Spilsby, <a href="#Page_335">335</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ashby-cum-Fenby, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ashby Puerorum, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Askew (Ayscoughe), family of, <a href="#Page_223">223-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Axholme, Isle of, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208-12</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ayscoughe Fee Hall, Spalding, <a href="#Page_445">445</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">B</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baden-Powell, Sir R. S., <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Footnote_13">note</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bain, R., <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364-5</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bacon, Sir Hickman, of Thonock, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_405">405</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baptists in Lincolnshire, <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bardney, <a href="#Page_390">390-3</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barholm, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barkston, <a href="#Page_65">65-6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barkwith, East and West, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barlings Abbey, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_395">395</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barnadiston, family of, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barnetby-le-Wold, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barnoldby-le-Beck, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barrow-on-Humber, <a href="#Page_216">216-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barrowby, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barton-on-Humber, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188-93</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barsham, Norfolk, <a href="#Page_384">384</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bassingham Saxon font, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bassingthorpe, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baston, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baumber, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bayons Manor, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beacon, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_423">423</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beaufort, Lady Margaret, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bec, Sir Walter’s grave, Halton, <a href="#Page_330">330</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Thomas and Antony, Bishops, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Belchford, S. W. H. Kennels, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Belleau, <a href="#Page_247">247-48</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bells, <a href="#Page_19">19-20</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>, <a href="#Page_459">459</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Belton, <a href="#Page_64">64-5</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Belvoir Castle, <a href="#Page_69">69-70</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Benington, <a href="#Page_416">416-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Benniworth, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bertie, family of, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30-1</a>, <a href="#Page_335">335</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bicker, <a href="#Page_457">457</a>, <a href="#Page_459">459</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bigby, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_512"></a>[512]</span>Bigby font and Tyrwhit Monuments, <a href="#Page_235">235-6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Billingborough, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bilsby, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bitchfield, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Binbrook, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Black Death, <a href="#Page_480">480-2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blankney, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bloody Oaks, battle of, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blow wells, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boat, ancient, <a href="#Page_184">184-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bolingbroke, Old, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bolles, family of, <a href="#Page_284">284-8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bond family monuments at Croft, <a href="#Page_318">318</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Books, chained, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boothby Graffoe, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boothby Pagnell, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bore, the, <a href="#Page_201">201-2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boston, <a href="#Page_420">420-40</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“stump,” <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_420">420-3</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">guilds, <a href="#Page_430">430</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">religious houses, <a href="#Page_430">430</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">silting of the river, <a href="#Page_432">432-3</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bottesford, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Botolph, St., <a href="#Page_426">426</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boucherett, family, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bourne Town and Abbey, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">manor, <a href="#Page_21">21-4</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Braceborough Spa, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bracebridge, <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Braceby, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bramfield, Sub-dean, Murder of, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brandon, Chas., Duke of Suffolk, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brant, Broughton, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brasenose Coll., Stamford, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brasses, <a href="#Page_171">171-2</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_294">294-5</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>, <a href="#Page_387">387</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brasses, earliest in County, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brasses twice used, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bratoft, <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bridges, ancient, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_490">490</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brigg, old boat at, <a href="#Page_184">184-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brigsley, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brocklesby, <a href="#Page_236">236-8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bromhead and Chard, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brothertoft, <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Broughton near Brigg, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Browne family, Monuments at Croft, <a href="#Page_317">317</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Browne, William, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brownlow family, <a href="#Page_64">64-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buckden, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_384">384</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buckland, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bulb trade, Spalding, <a href="#Page_441">441-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bull-running, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bully Hill, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burgh-le-Marsh, <a href="#Page_320">320</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burgh-on-Bain, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burghley House, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burleigh, Lord of, <a href="#Page_16">16-17</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burton Coggles, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burton Pedwardine, <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burton Stather, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buslingthorpe, early brass, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Butterwick, <a href="#Page_418">418</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bytham, Castle, <a href="#Page_44">44-5</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">maypole ladder, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bytham, Little, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bytham farmers’ motto, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Byways, <a href="#Page_245">245-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">C</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cabourn Hill, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Caenby, <a href="#Page_269">269-270</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Caistor, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228-30</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Callis, (Almshouse), <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Candlesby, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_382">382</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Canwick, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Careby and Carlby, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carlton Scroop, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carlton Gt. and Little, <a href="#Page_278">278</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carr, use of word, <a href="#Page_183">183-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Carr_Dyke">Carr Dyke, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28-9</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>, <a href="#Page_401">401</a>, <a href="#Page_456">456</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carre Family, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Casewick Hall, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Casterton, Great, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cathedrals Compared, <a href="#Page_98">98-9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cawdron Monuments, <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cawkwell, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cawthorpe, <a href="#Page_245">245-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Caythorpe, <a href="#Page_67">67-8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ceremony of Championship, <a href="#Page_376">376-8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chalice, Priest’s, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Champion of England, Grand, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>, <a href="#Page_372">372-8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chantries, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chaplin, Jane, aged 102, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cartulary, Alvingham, <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Charterhouse, Founder of, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chaucer, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>, <a href="#Page_444">444</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cherry Willingham, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Church Clock at Rowston, <a href="#Page_150">150</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Churchwardens’ Books, <a href="#Page_83">83-4</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309-10</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318-19</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Claxby, near Alford, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Claxby, near Rasen, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Claypole, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74-75</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clee, <a href="#Page_264">264-6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cleethorpes, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Cliff,” <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232-3</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clixby, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cockerington, (North, South), <a href="#Page_279">279-81</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coifi, Chief Priest, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coleby, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162-3</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Colsterworth, Newton Chapel, <a href="#Page_46">46-47</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Compton Church, Surrey, <a href="#Page_397">397</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coningsby, <a href="#Page_370">370-1</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Conington, Prof., <a href="#Page_423">423</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Corby, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Corringham, <a href="#Page_200">200-1</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cotes-by-Stow, <a href="#Page_141">141-2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cotes, Great, and Barnadiston Brasses, <a href="#Page_224">224-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cotes, Little, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cotes, North, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Country Seats near Grantham, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Covenham, St. M. and St. B., <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cowbit, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cowpaddle, The, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crabbe, Rector of Allington, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_513"></a>[513]</span>Cranwell, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cressy Hall, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_454">454-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Creeton, Stone coffins at, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cripple, Memorial Brass to, <a href="#Page_310">310</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Croft, <a href="#Page_316">316-19</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cromwell, Oliver, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>, <a href="#Page_439">439</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">his letters, <a href="#Page_54">54-55</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>, <a href="#Page_439">439</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cromwell, Ralph, <a href="#Page_380">380-382</a>, <a href="#Page_384">384-385</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crosses, Stone, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Queen Eleanor, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Boundary, <a href="#Page_489">489-90</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crowle, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Croxby Pond, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Croyland Abbey, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483-9</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Bridge, <a href="#Page_490">490-1</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Curfew, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cust, Family of, <a href="#Page_64">64-5</a>, <a href="#Page_450">450-2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cuthbert Bede, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cuthbert, St., <a href="#Page_213">213-14</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cuxwold, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">D</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dalby, <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Danegelt, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Danish occupation, <a href="#Page_8">8-9</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263-5</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_402">402-3</a>, <a href="#Page_485">485</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dashwoods and Batemans at Well, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Deeping Fen, <a href="#Page_21">21-2</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">St. James, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Denton, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Devil’s door, the, <a href="#Page_331">331</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Devil looking over Lincoln, <a href="#Page_101">101</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dictionary, Elliott’s, <a href="#Page_327">327</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Digby, <a href="#Page_150">150</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Disney, family of, <a href="#Page_171">171-3</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Doddington Hall, <a href="#Page_173">173-6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dog-whipping in church, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_319">319</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Dominus</i>, use of word, <a href="#Page_394">394-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Donington, <a href="#Page_455">455-6</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">on Bain, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dorchester (Oxon), bishopric of, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Draining">Drainage and embankments in fen and marsh, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_432">432-5</a>, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>, <a href="#Page_456">456</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> <a href="#Roman_Works">Roman Works</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drainage opposed by Fenmen, <a href="#Page_433">433</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drayton, M., quoted, <a href="#Page_426">426</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Driby, <a href="#Page_378">378-83</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Droves,” all E. and W., <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Duck-decoys, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_411">411-13</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dunham Bridge, <a href="#Page_137">137-8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dunsby and Dowsby, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dunston pillar, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Durham priory, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Durobrivæ Roman station, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dymoke, family of, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>, <a href="#Page_372">372-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">E</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eagle, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Eagre” or bore in R. Trent, <a href="#Page_201">201-2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Early church towers, group of, <a href="#Page_198">198-9</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Easter Sepulchre, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Easton, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eden, R., <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Edenham, <a href="#Page_29">29-30</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eleanor, Queen, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elkington, South, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">North, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elloe stone, <a href="#Page_466">466</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elsham, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185-6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Empingham, battle at, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Enderby, Bag, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Enderby, Mavis, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>, <a href="#Page_434">434</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Enderby Wood, <a href="#Page_369">369</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Epworth, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eresby, <a href="#Page_335">335</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Ermine_Street">Ermine Street, High Dyke, <a href="#Page_3">3-4</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182-4</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ewerby, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78-9</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">F</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Farquharson, A. F., <a href="#Page_501">501-10</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fens, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34-35</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400-8</a>, <a href="#Page_464">464-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ferriby, South and North, <a href="#Page_186">186-7</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ferries over the Trent, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ferry at Hull, <a href="#Page_217">217-8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fillingham, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Firsby, <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fishtoft, <a href="#Page_419">419-20</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fiskerton, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168-9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fleet, <a href="#Page_470">470</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flinders, Matthew, <a href="#Page_456">456-7</a>, <a href="#Footnote_34">note</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flodden Field, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Floods, in the fen, <a href="#Page_433">433-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Floss, mill on, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flowers in June, <a href="#Page_262">262-3</a>, <a href="#Page_464">464</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Rare, <a href="#Page_370">370-1</a>, <a href="#Page_419">419</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Folkingham, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Folk-song, Lincolnshire, <a href="#Page_296">296-303</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Font covers, <a href="#Page_257">257-8</a>, <a href="#Page_419">419</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fonts, <a href="#Page_64">64-5</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234-5</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257-61</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_340">340-1</a>, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>, <a href="#Page_465">465-6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Football, a family team, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fosdyke, Rennie’s Bridge at, <a href="#Page_475">475</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Foss_Dyke">Foss Dyke, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Foss_Way">Foss Way, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fotherby Top, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fox, John, born at Boston, <a href="#Page_438">438</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fox-hounds, <a href="#Page_493">493-8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Frampton, <a href="#Page_476">476</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Franklin, family of, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>, <a href="#Page_457">457</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Friaries, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_430">430</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Frieston, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_418">418-9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Friskney, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409-11</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">duck decoy, <a href="#Page_411">411-12</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Frodingham, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fulbeck, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fulney, <a href="#Page_448">448</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fulston, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">G</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gainsborough, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_514"></a>[514]</span>Gautby, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gaynisburgh, Richard de, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gayton-le-Marsh, <a href="#Page_278">278</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gayton-le-Wold, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gedney, <a href="#Page_470">470-2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gelston Cross, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gentleman’s Soc. of Spalding, <a href="#Page_445">445-6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Giantess, Lincolnshire, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gibbets, <a href="#Page_270">270-1</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gibraltar Point, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gilbert de Gaunt, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gilbert of Sempringham, St., <a href="#Page_35">35-8</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Girsby, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glass, ancient, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glen, R., <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39-41</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43-4</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glentham, <a href="#Page_269">269-70</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glentworth, <a href="#Page_199">199-200</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gobaud family, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Godiva, Lady, <a href="#Page_444">444</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gonerby Hill, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Goosetoft, <a href="#Page_404">404-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gosberton, <a href="#Page_452">452-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gowts, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_432">432</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Goxhill, <a href="#Page_218">218-19</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grainsby, <a href="#Page_263">263</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grainthorpe, <a href="#Page_294">294-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grandiloquent writing, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grantham, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52-63</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grantham, Thomas, of Halton Baptist, <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grasby, <a href="#Page_233">233-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Great Humby, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grebby, <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Green lady, the, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Greetham, <a href="#Page_342">342</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gretford, <a href="#Page_19">19-20</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grey friars at Grantham and Lincoln, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grimblethorpe, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grimoldby, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grimsby, <a href="#Page_225">225-7</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Corporation seals, <a href="#Page_227">227</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grimsthorpe, <a href="#Page_30">30-1</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grinling Gibbons, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guilds and charters, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>, <a href="#Page_432">432</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gunby, Dan, <a href="#Page_296">296</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gulls breeding at Manton, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gunby St. Peter, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guthlac, St., <a href="#Page_483">483-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gynewell, Bishop, <a href="#Page_481">481</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">H</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Habrough, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hacconby, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Haceby, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hagnaby, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_366">366</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hagworthingham, <a href="#Page_362">362</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hainton, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hale, Great, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hallam, historian, <a href="#Page_439">439</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Halstead Hall, <a href="#Page_396">396</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Haltham, <a href="#Page_369">369</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Halton, East, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Halton, West, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Halton Holgate, <a href="#Page_329">329-32</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Halton, John de, Bp. of Carlisle, <a href="#Page_368">368-9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hameringham, <a href="#Page_363">363-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harlaxton, <a href="#Page_68">68-9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harmston, <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harpswell, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harrington, <a href="#Page_340">340</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hatcliffe, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Haugh, <a href="#Page_285">285</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Haugham, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Havelock, The Dane, Story of, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_394">394</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Haverholme, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hawysia, de Trikingham, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Haydor, good stained glass, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heapham, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heckington, <a href="#Page_80">80-3</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Helpringham, <a href="#Page_85">85-6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heneage, family of, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Henry VIII., <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hereward the Wake, <a href="#Page_23">23-4</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hermits, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hexham, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hibaldstow, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">High Dyke, alias Ermine St., <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">From Caistor, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hogsthorpe, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holbeach, <a href="#Page_468">468-70</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Legend of, <a href="#Page_478">478-9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holdingham, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holland Fen, <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holton-le-Clay, <a href="#Page_263">263</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holywell, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Honington, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Horbling, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Horkstow, <a href="#Page_186">186-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Horncastle, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Hospitals">Hospitals and Almshouses, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12-14</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178-81</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hough-on-the-Hill, <a href="#Page_71">71-4</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hour-Glasses, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Houses, beautiful, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Howell, <a href="#Page_79">79-80</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Howorth, Sir Henry’s interesting book, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hubbert’s Bridge, why so called, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hugh of Lincoln, St., <a href="#Page_96">96-117</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hugh of Wells, <a href="#Page_96">96-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hugh, “Little St. Hugh,” <a href="#Page_118">118-9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Humber, R., <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Humberstone, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hundleby, <a href="#Page_361">361</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hundon, Tombs, Caistor, <a href="#Page_229">229-30</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hussey, Ld., <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_438">438</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Huttoft, <a href="#Page_306">306</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">I</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Iconoclasm, <a href="#Page_256">256-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Immingham, <a href="#Page_222">222-3</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Imp, The Lincoln, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ingelow, Jean, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>, <a href="#Page_439">439</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ingoldmells, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_515"></a>[515]</span>Ingoldsby, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Inscriptions">Inscriptions in Churches, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>, <a href="#Page_487">487</a>, <a href="#Page_489">489</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">On Jubilee Memorial, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">On Bells, <a href="#Page_511">511</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irby, <a href="#Page_324">324</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irby-on-Humber, <a href="#Page_231">231-2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irby family monuments, <a href="#Page_468">468</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irnham, <a href="#Page_40">40-1</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ithamar, first English Bp., <a href="#Page_114">114</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">J</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jesus Coll. Chapel bench ends, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jews, persecution of, <a href="#Page_117">117-9</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Joffrid, Abbot of Croyland, <a href="#Page_486">486-7</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">sends Lecturers to Cambridge, <a href="#Page_486">486</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">lays first stone of the third abbey, <a href="#Page_487">487</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">John, King of England, at Kingscliffe, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">John, King of France, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Johnson, Archdeacon, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Johnson, Dr., <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jump, famous, of Dr. Trought, <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">K</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Katherine Howard, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Keate, Dr., <a href="#Page_345">345</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Keddington, <a href="#Page_244">244</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Keelby, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kelstern, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kettleby, <a href="#Page_235">235-6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kettlethorpe Hall, <a href="#Page_176">176-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Killingholme, North, South, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Kings_Street">King’s Street, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kirkby-Underwood, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kirkby, East, <a href="#Page_366">366</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kirkstead, Abbey and Chapel, <a href="#Page_396">396-8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kirmington, Green Spire, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kirmond-le-mire, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kirton, <a href="#Page_475">475</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kirton-in-Lindsey, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knaith, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knights Hospitallers, alias of Jerusalem and of St. John, <a href="#Page_155">155-9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knights Templars, <a href="#Page_155">155-9</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> <a href="#Temple_Belwood">Temple Belwood</a>, <a href="#Temple_Bruer">Temple Bruer</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Koh-i-noor (mt. of light), diamond, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kyme, North and South, <a href="#Page_87">87-9</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">tower, <a href="#Page_438">438</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">L</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Laceby, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lady Lucia, <a href="#Page_339">339</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lambert, Daniel, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Langton, <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Langtoft, <a href="#Page_20">20-1</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Laughton, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lea, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leadenham, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leake, <a href="#Page_413">413-6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leasingham, <a href="#Page_89">89-90</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lenton or Lavington, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leverton, <a href="#Page_416">416-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Liddington, <a href="#Page_481">481</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lincoln—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Lindum Colonia, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
-<li class="isub2">Afternoon tea at, <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1762, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Bishop’s palaces, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Cathedral, <a href="#Page_91">91-111</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Chancery, <a href="#Page_109">109-10</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Chapter-house, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Churches, <a href="#Page_126">126-7</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Corporation, <a href="#Page_129">129-31</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Conduits, <a href="#Page_128">128-9</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Friaries, <a href="#Page_123">123-4</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Gates, <a href="#Page_91">91-2</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120-2</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Guild, <a href="#Page_124">124-5</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">High bridge, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Hospitals, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Jews’ houses, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121-3</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Library, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Stonebow, <a href="#Page_129">129-30</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lincoln, Bishops of, <a href="#Page_95">95-8</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103-8</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Parliaments of, <a href="#Page_110">110-11</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Heath, <a href="#Page_148">148-9</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lincoln Stuff ball, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lincolnshire flocks, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lincolnshire, divisions of, <a href="#Page_4">4-5</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lincolnshire Rebellion, <a href="#Page_240">240-2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lincolnshire Roads, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Slope of the land, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lincolnshire stories, <a href="#Page_337">337-8</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339-40</a>, <a href="#Page_462">462</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Linwood, <a href="#Page_146">146-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Littleborough, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lock-up house, <a href="#Page_150">150</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Long and short” work, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Long Bennington, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lord High Treasurer Cromwell, <a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII">Chapter XXXIII</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Louth, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239-45</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Grammar School, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Louth Park Abbey, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242-4</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Chronicle, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_433">433</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Roads, <a href="#Page_244">244</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lud, R., <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ludford Magna, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lusby, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Lyttyl clause,” the, <a href="#Page_240">240-2</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">M</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mablethorpe, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maddison, Canon, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maltby-le-Marsh, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Manby, <a href="#Page_278">278-9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mappa Mundi, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mareham-le-fen, <a href="#Page_370">370</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Markby, <a href="#Page_306">306</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Markham, Mrs., <a href="#Page_102">102</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marquis of Granby, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_516"></a>[516]</span>Marsh, the, <a href="#Page_2">2-3</a>, <a href="#Page_464">464-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marsh Chapel, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marton, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marston, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Martyrs, Clerical, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Masquerade at Nocton, <a href="#Page_169">169-70</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Massingberd family, <a href="#Page_322">322</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mausoleum at Brocklesby, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mavis Enderby, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>, <a href="#Page_434">434</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maypole, use of, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mazes, <a href="#Page_196">196-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Melton Ross, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mercia, kings of, <a href="#Page_7">7-8</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Messingham, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Miningsby, <a href="#Page_366">366</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Miserere seats, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_423">423</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Molly Grime,” <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Monksthorpe, <a href="#Page_324">324</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Monumental effigies, &amp;c., <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145-7</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171-3</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223-6</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229-30</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235-6</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267-9</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280-1</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292-5</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322-4</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>, <a href="#Page_372">372-5</a>, <a href="#Page_423">423</a>, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471-2</a>, <a href="#Page_487">487</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Monumental epitaphs, <a href="#Page_26">26-7</a>, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>, <a href="#Page_457">457</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> <a href="#Inscriptions">Inscriptions in Churches</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moorby, <a href="#Page_368">368</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morton, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moulton, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_465">465-6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Muckton, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mustard, cultivation of, <a href="#Page_463">463-4</a>, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Colman’s factory, Norwich, <a href="#Page_464">464</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Muston, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“My owd Son,” <a href="#Page_440">440</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">N</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Names ending in ‘by,’ <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nature’s poets, <a href="#Page_303">303-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Navenby, <a href="#Page_161">161-3</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nettleton, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nettleship, R. L., <a href="#Page_297">297</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newsham Abbey, <a href="#Page_238">238</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newton Church Tower, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newton, Isaac, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46-8</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newton-by-Toft, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Noblemen not Saints, <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nocton, <a href="#Page_166">166-9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nonconformists, <a href="#Page_324">324-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Normanby-le-Wold, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Norman buildings, <a href="#Page_255">255</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">North Country humour, <a href="#Page_303">303</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Northorpe, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">North Wytham, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Norton Disney, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170-3</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">O</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Octave of E.E. Churches, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Orgarth Hill, Danish Camp, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ormsby, North, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ormsby, South, <a href="#Page_361">361</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Osbournby, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oswald, St., <a href="#Page_212">212-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oswy, King of Northumbria, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">P</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pagnell, Boothby, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Palmer, effigy of, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parish Clerks, Stories of, <a href="#Page_319">319-20</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Partney, <a href="#Page_358">358-60</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Paulinus, St., <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112-14</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peasant poets, <a href="#Page_303">303-4</a>, <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pelham buckle, the, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pelham pillar, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Penda and Pæda, Kings of Mercia, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Penrose, Rev. Trevenen, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peterborough, cathedral, <a href="#Page_49">49-50</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pickworth, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pilgrimage of Grace, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pinchbeck, <a href="#Page_448">448-50</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">metal called, <a href="#Page_461">461-2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plague, <a href="#Page_290">290-1</a>, <a href="#Page_439">439</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plague-stone, <a href="#Page_290">290-1</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ponton, Great, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ponton, Little, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pope Gregory, <a href="#Page_112">112-13</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Potter Hanworth, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Potteries, Pre-Roman, <a href="#Page_315">315-6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Premonstratensian, meaning of, <a href="#Page_395">395</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pulpit, early, <a href="#Footnote_7">note</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Q</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Quadring, <a href="#Page_455">455</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Queen Margaret (Ed. I.), <a href="#Page_428">428</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Queen Eleanor’s heart buried at Lincoln <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1290, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">R</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Raithby, <a href="#Page_361">361-2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rasen, Market, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Middle, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">West, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ravendale, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rawnsley, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>, <a href="#Page_493">493</a>, <a href="#Page_496">496</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Read’s Island, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rebellion, Lincolnshire, <a href="#Page_240">240-2</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Registers, Early, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_476">476</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Remigius, Bishop, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Revesby Abbey, <a href="#Page_367">367</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Riby Grove, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Richard III. at Grantham, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ridge, the, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rigsby, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rippingale, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Riseholme, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Roads, few going E. and W., <a href="#Page_33">33</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">in the marsh, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">without villages, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_517"></a>[517]</span>Roadway streams, <a href="#Page_246">246-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robert de Brunne, <a href="#Page_25">25-6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rochford, Stoke, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Romanus, Bp., <a href="#Page_113">113-114</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Romans, our benefactors, <a href="#Page_401">401</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Roman_Works">Roman works:</li>
-<li class="isub1">embankments, etc., <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310-12</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>, <a href="#Page_401">401</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>, <a href="#Page_456">456</a>, <a href="#Page_459">459</a>, <a href="#Page_464">464-5</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub2"><i>see</i> <a href="#Carr_Dyke">Carr Dyke</a>, <a href="#Foss_Dyke">Foss Dyke</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">gateways, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">roads, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91-3</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>,183, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub2"><i>See</i> <a href="#Ermine_Street">Ermine Street</a>, <a href="#Foss_Way">Foss Way</a>, <a href="#Kings_Street">King’s Street</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">stations, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228-9</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315-6</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364-5</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">remains, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125-6</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rood lofts and screens, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Roof covering both nave and aisles, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rooks in towns, <a href="#Page_365">365</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ropsley, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rothwell, long and short work, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rowston, <a href="#Page_150">150</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rulos, Richard de, father of Lincolnshire farmers, <a href="#Page_21">21-22</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">S</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St. Denis, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">St. John, family of, <a href="#Page_49">49-50</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">St. John, Oliver, <a href="#Page_49">49-50</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">St. Poll, family of, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">St. Thomas of Canterbury, Church Dedicated to, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Saleby, <a href="#Page_278">278</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Salinas, Mary de, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Salisbury, Connection of Grantham with, <a href="#Page_62">62-3</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Saltfleetby, All Saints, <a href="#Page_293">293</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">St. Clements, <a href="#Page_294">294</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Samplers, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sandbank, “The Old Warp,” <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sandtoft, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sapperton, Pulpit Hour-glass at, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sausthorpe, <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Saxby, All Saints, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Saxilby, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Saxon Churchyard, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scamblesby, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scartho, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scawby, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Sutton Nelthorpe of, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_494">494</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Schools, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scopwick, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scremby, <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scrivelsby, <a href="#Page_372">372-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scunthorpe, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sea-dyke, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_416">416-7</a>,</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see</i> <a href="#Draining">Draining</a>, <a href="#Roman_Works">Roman Embankment</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Seals, Ancient, <a href="#Page_227">227</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sedgebrook, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sempringham, <a href="#Page_35">35-38</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sempringham Hall, Stamford, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sempringham, Order of, <a href="#Page_25">25-6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sheep in Churchyard, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_454">454</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sibsey, <a href="#Page_361">361</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Silk Willoughby Wayside Cross, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sixhills, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shakespeare Quotations, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_491">491-2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Skating in Fens, <a href="#Page_405">405-7</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">International, <a href="#Page_408">408</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Skegness, <a href="#Page_314">314-5</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman Castrum at, <a href="#Page_316">316</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Skendleby, <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Skidbroke, <a href="#Page_294">294</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Skirbeck, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>, <a href="#Page_427">427</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Skirth” Billinghay, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Slash Lane, <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sleaford, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76-8</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Slope of Church W. to E., <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smith, Capt. John, <a href="#Page_278">278</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Snarford, <a href="#Page_144">144-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Snelland Register, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">St. Poll Tombs, <a href="#Page_145">145-6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Somerby, <a href="#Page_42">42-3</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Somercotes, South, <a href="#Page_294">294</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Somersby, <a href="#Page_340">340-343</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345-353</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Somersby Brook, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Somersby Church Opening, <a href="#Page_352">352</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Somerton Castle, <a href="#Page_160">160-1</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">South Thoresby, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spalding, <a href="#Page_441">441-8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spectacles, Use of, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spelling, a clear gift, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spilsby, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spital-on-the-Street, <a href="#Page_178">178-81</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Springs, Mineral, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Springthorpe, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stainfield, <a href="#Page_395">395</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stainsby, <a href="#Page_379">379</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stainton-le-Vale, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stallingborough, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">The Ayscoughe Tombs, <a href="#Page_223">223-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stamford, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7-17</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">bedehouse, <a href="#Page_13">13-14</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">churches, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12-14</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">college, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">St. Leonard’s Priory, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Stamford Baron,” <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stanley, Dean, on Wesley, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Staple,” the meaning of, <a href="#Page_428">428</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Starlings, flocks of, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Steeping, Little and Great, <a href="#Page_323">323-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stephen King, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stickford and Stickney, <a href="#Page_361">361</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stixwould, <a href="#Page_395">395-6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stocks, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_457">457</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stoke Rochford, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stones, sculptured, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>, <a href="#Page_368">368</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stonebow, the, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stone Coffin, use for, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stow, <a href="#Page_140">140-2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stow Green, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stragglethorpe, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Strubby, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stubton, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stukeley, Dr. W., <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_500">500</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_518"></a>[518]</span>Sturton, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Suffolk, Duke of, <a href="#Page_398">398-9</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Duchess of, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Surfleet, <a href="#Page_452">452-3</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sutterton, <a href="#Page_459">459</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sutton, Long, <a href="#Page_472">472-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sutton, Thomas, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swallow, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swan, St. Hugh’s, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swan-marks, <a href="#Page_492">492</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swan, ballad of the, <a href="#Page_299">299</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swaton, <a href="#Page_86">86-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swineshead, <a href="#Page_457">457-9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swinstead, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sword called “Fox,” <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Syston Hall, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">T</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tallington, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tathwell, St. Vedast’s, <a href="#Page_276">276-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tattershall, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_370">370-1</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379-80</a>, <a href="#Page_382">382-9</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Mantelpieces, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>, <a href="#Page_388">388</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Taylor, John, poet, <a href="#Page_405">405</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tealby, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_343">343</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Temple_Belwood">Temple Belwood, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-<li class="isub1" id="Temple_Bruer">Bruer, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154-9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tennyson, Alfred Lord, <a href="#Page_131">131-4</a>, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346-357</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tennyson, Dr., <a href="#Page_342">342-344</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tennyson Centenary, <a href="#Page_131">131-2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tennyson, family of, <a href="#Page_343">343-57</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tennyson-Turner, C., <a href="#Page_233">233-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tennyson poems in the Lincolnshire dialect, <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tennyson, Matilda, last of the family, <a href="#Page_353">353</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tetford, <a href="#Page_379">379</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tetney, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Theddlethorpe, West, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Theodore, Archbp. of Canterbury, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thorganby, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thonock Hall, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_495">495</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thornton Abbey, <a href="#Page_219">219-21</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thornton Curtis, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215-16</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thorpe, <a href="#Page_325">325-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thorpe Hall, <a href="#Page_284">284-9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thorpe St. Peter’s, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Threckingham, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thurcytel, first Abbot of Croyland, <a href="#Page_485">485</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thurlby, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tickencote, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Toft-next-Newton, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Top, Cliff and Wold, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Torrington, East and West, <a href="#Page_263">263</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tothby, <a href="#Page_290">290</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tournai fonts, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tournays, or Tourneys, family of, <a href="#Page_269">269-70</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tower-on-the-Moor, <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Toynton, High, <a href="#Page_342">342</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trent, R., <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137-8</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200-2</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tumby, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379-80</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tupholme, Abbey, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_395">395</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Two churches in one churchyard, <a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tydd St. Mary, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>, <a href="#Page_474">474</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">U</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Uffington Hall, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ulceby, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Uppingham, founder of, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Upton, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Usselby, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Utterby, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">V</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vyner, F. G., <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">W</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Waddington, <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wainfleet, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327-9</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wainfleet, St. Mary’s, <a href="#Page_329">329</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wainfleet, William of, Bishop, <a href="#Page_327">327-8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Waith, <a href="#Page_263">263</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wake, de, family of, <a href="#Page_20">20-1</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Walcot, double “squint” at, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Walesby, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Walks, Uppingham to Boston, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Horncastle to Mablethorpe, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wall-painting, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Walmsgate, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Waltham, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wapentake, meaning of, <a href="#Page_73">73-74</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Warping,” process of, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wars, Civil, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53-5</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wars of the Roses, <a href="#Page_10">10-11</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Watts, G. F., and Tennyson, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Wedercoke” at Louth, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Weir dyke, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Welbourn, John de, treasurer, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Well, <a href="#Page_247">247-251</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Welland, R., <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wellbourn, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wellingore, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wellington and Dr. Keate, <a href="#Page_345">345</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wells, blow-, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Welton-le-Wold, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wernington, William de, Master Mason, <a href="#Page_487">487</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wesley, Samuel and John, <a href="#Page_210">210-12</a>, <a href="#Page_499">499</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Westmoreland Stories, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_338">338-9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Weston, <a href="#Page_463">463</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Whitgift, John, Archbp. of Canterbury, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wickenby, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilfrid, Bishop, <a href="#Page_8">8-10</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilksby, <a href="#Page_368">368</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Willingham, North, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">South, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Cherry, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">by Stow, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilsthorpe, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Whaplode, <a href="#Page_466">466-8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Willoughby, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_519"></a>[519]</span>Willoughby d’Eresby, family of, <a href="#Page_30">30-1</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248-9</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Willoughton, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Winceby, <a href="#Page_364">364-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wine-cellars in Boston, <a href="#Page_430">430-1</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Winteringham, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Winterton, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195-6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Winthorpe, <a href="#Page_312">312-14</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Witham-on-hill, inscription on Bells, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Witham, R., <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>, <a href="#Page_425">425-6</a>, <a href="#Page_432">432-3</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Withern, <a href="#Page_278">278</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Woad, cultivation of, <a href="#Page_464">464</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wolds, the, <a href="#Page_2">2-5</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wood, Enderby, <a href="#Page_369">369</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Woodhall Spa, <a href="#Page_397">397-8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Woodcarving by Wallis, of Louth, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wood-work, church, <a href="#Page_255">255-6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wool, staple, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_428">428-9</a>, <a href="#Page_432">432</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Woolsthorpe, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47-8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wordsworth, Bishop, Christopher, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wordsworth, W., Sonnet <i>Persuasion</i>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wragby, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wrangle, <a href="#Page_413">413-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wrawby, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wray, Sir Christopher, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wright family, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>, <a href="#Page_413">413</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wulfhere, King of Mercia, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wyberton, <a href="#Page_476">476</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wyclif, John, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wykeham Chapel, <a href="#Page_448">448</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Y</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Yarborough, Earls of, <a href="#Page_236">236-7</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Church, <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Z</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Zucchero, <a href="#Page_289">289</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<p class="titlepage">R. CLAY AND SONS, LTD., BRUNSWICK ST., STAMFORD ST., S.E.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="map">
-<p class="caption">HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS IN LINCOLNSHIRE</p>
-<p class="caption tn">Transcriber’s note: map is clickable for a larger version.</p>
-<a href="images/map-full.jpg"><img src="images/map.jpg" width="500" height="650" alt="Map" /></a>
-<p class="caption"><i>Stanford’s Geogˡ. Estabᵗ. London.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">London: Macmillan &amp; Co. Lᵗᵈ.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="smaller">THE</span><br />
-HIGHWAYS &amp; BYWAYS<br />
-SERIES.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">Extra crown 8vo, gilt tops, <b>7s. 6d.</b> net each.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>London.</b> By Mrs. E. T. Cook. With Illustrations
-by <span class="smcap">Hugh Thomson</span> and <span class="smcap">Frederick L. Griggs</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>GRAPHIC.</i>—“Mrs. Cook is an admirable guide; she knows her
-London in and out; she is equally at home in writing of Mayfair and of
-City courts, and she has a wealth of knowledge relating to literary and
-historical associations. This, taken together with the fact that she is a
-writer who could not be dull if she tried, makes her book very delightful
-reading.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Middlesex.</b> By <span class="smcap">Walter Jerrold</span>. With
-Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Hugh Thomson</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>EVENING STANDARD.</i>—“Every Londoner who wishes to multiply
-fourfold the interest of his roamings and excursions should beg,
-borrow, or buy it without a day’s delay.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Hertfordshire.</b> By <span class="smcap">Herbert W. Tompkins</span>,
-F.R.Hist.S. With Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Frederick L. Griggs</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>WESTMINSTER GAZETTE.</i>—“A very charming book....
-Will delight equally the artistic and the poetic, the historical and the antiquarian,
-the picturesque and the sentimental kinds of tourist.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Buckinghamshire.</b> By <span class="smcap">Clement Shorter</span>.
-With Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Frederick L. Griggs</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>WORLD.</i>—“A thoroughly delightful little volume. Mr. Frederick
-L. Griggs contributes a copious series of delicately graceful illustrations.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Surrey.</b> By <span class="smcap">Eric Parker</span>. With Illustrations
-by <span class="smcap">Hugh Thomson</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>SPECTATOR.</i>—“A very charming book, both to dip into and to read....
-Every page is sown with something rare and curious.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Kent.</b> By <span class="smcap">Walter Jerrold</span>. With Illustrations
-by <span class="smcap">Hugh Thomson</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>PALL MALL GAZETTE.</i>—“A book over which it is a pleasure to
-pore, and which every man of Kent or Kentish man, or ‘foreigner,’ should
-promptly steal, purchase, or borrow.... The illustrations alone are
-worth twice the money charged for the book.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Sussex.</b> By <span class="smcap">E. V. Lucas</span>. With Illustrations
-by <span class="smcap">Frederick L. Griggs</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>WESTMINSTER GAZETTE.</i>—“A delightful addition to an
-excellent series.... Mr. Lucas’s knowledge of Sussex is shown in so
-many fields, with so abundant and yet so natural a flow, that one is kept
-entertained and charmed through every passage of his devious progress.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Berkshire.</b> By <span class="smcap">James Edmund Vincent</span>.
-With Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Frederick L. Griggs</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>DAILY CHRONICLE.</i>—“We consider this book one of the best in an
-admirable series, and one which should appeal to all who love this kind of
-literature.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Oxford and the Cotswolds.</b> By <span class="smcap">H. A.
-Evans</span>. With Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Frederick L. Griggs</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>DAILY TELEGRAPH.</i>—“The author is everywhere entertaining
-and fresh, never allowing his own interest to flag, and thereby retaining
-the close attention of the reader.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Shakespeare’s Country.</b> By The Ven.
-<span class="smcap">W. H. Hutton</span>. With Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Edmund H.
-New</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>PALL MALL GAZETTE.</i>—“Mr. Edmund H. New has made a
-fine book a thing of beauty and a joy for ever by a series of lovely
-drawings.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Hampshire.</b> By <span class="smcap">D. H. Moutray Read</span>. With
-Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Arthur B. Connor</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>STANDARD.</i>—“In our judgment, as excellent and as lively a book
-as has yet appeared in the Highways and Byways Series.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Dorset.</b> By Sir <span class="smcap">Frederick Treves</span>. With
-Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Joseph Pennell</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>STANDARD.</i>—“A breezy, delightful book, full of sidelights on men
-and manners, and quick in the interpretation of all the half-inarticulate
-lore of the countryside.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Wiltshire.</b> By <span class="smcap">Edward Hutton</span>. With
-Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Nelly Erichsen</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>DAILY GRAPHIC.</i>—“Replete with enjoyable and informing
-reading.... Illustrated by exquisite sketches.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Somerset.</b> By <span class="smcap">Edward Hutton</span>. With
-Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Nelly Erichsen</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>DAILY TELEGRAPH.</i>—“A book which will set the heart of every
-West-country-man beating with enthusiasm, and with pride for the goodly
-heritage into which he has been born as a son of Somerset.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Devon and Cornwall.</b> By <span class="smcap">Arthur H.
-Norway</span>. With Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Joseph Pennell</span> and
-<span class="smcap">Hugh Thomson</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>DAILY CHRONICLE.</i>—“So delightful that we would gladly fill
-columns with extracts were space as elastic as imagination.... The text
-is excellent; the illustrations of it are even better.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>South Wales.</b> By <span class="smcap">A. G. Bradley</span>. With
-Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Frederick L. Griggs</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>SPECTATOR.</i>—“Mr. Bradley has certainly exalted the writing of a
-combined archæological and descriptive guide-book into a species of
-literary art. The result is fascinating.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>North Wales.</b> By <span class="smcap">A. G. Bradley</span>. With
-Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Hugh Thomson</span> and <span class="smcap">Joseph Pennell</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>PALL MALL GAZETTE.</i>—“To read this fine book makes us eager
-to visit every hill and every valley that Mr. Bradley describes with such
-tantalising enthusiasm. It is a work of inspiration, vivid, sparkling, and
-eloquent—a deep well of pleasure to every lover of Wales.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Cambridge and Ely.</b> By Rev. <span class="smcap">Edward
-Conybeare</span>. With Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Frederick L. Griggs</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>ATHENÆUM.</i>—“A volume which, light and easily read as it is,
-deserves to rank with the best literature about the county.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>East Anglia.</b> By <span class="smcap">William A. Dutt</span>. With
-Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Joseph Pennell</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>WORLD.</i>—“Of all the fascinating volumes in the ‘Highways and Byways’
-series, none is more pleasant to read.... Mr. Dutt, himself an
-East Anglian, writes most sympathetically and in picturesque style of the
-district.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Lincolnshire.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. F. Rawnsley</span>. With
-Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Frederick L. Griggs</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>PALL MALL GAZETTE.</i>—“A splendid record of a storied shire.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Nottinghamshire.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. B. Firth</span>. With
-Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Frederick L. Griggs</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>DAILY TELEGRAPH.</i>—“A book that will rank high in the series
-which it augments; a book that no student of our Midland topography
-and of Midland associations should miss.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Northamptonshire and Rutland.</b> By
-<span class="smcap">Herbert A. Evans</span>. With Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Frederick
-L. Griggs</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>TIMES.</i>—“A pleasant, gossiping record.... Mr. Evans is a guide
-who makes us want to see for ourselves the places he has seen.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Derbyshire.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. B. Firth</span>. With Illustrations
-by <span class="smcap">Nelly Erichsen</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>DAILY TELEGRAPH.</i>—“The result is altogether delightful, for
-‘Derbyshire’ is as attractive to the reader in his arm-chair as to the
-tourist wandering amid the scenes Mr. Firth describes so well.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Yorkshire.</b> By <span class="smcap">Arthur H. Norway</span>. With
-Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Joseph Pennell</span> and <span class="smcap">Hugh Thomson</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>PALL MALL GAZETTE.</i>—“The wonderful story of Yorkshire’s
-past provides Mr. Norway with a wealth of interesting material, which
-he has used judiciously and well; each grey ruin of castle and abbey he
-has re-erected and re-peopled in the most delightful way. A better guide
-and story-teller it would be hard to find.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Lake District.</b> By <span class="smcap">A. G. Bradley</span>. With
-Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Joseph Pennell</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>ST. JAMES’S GAZETTE.</i>—“A notable edition—an engaging
-volume, packed with the best of all possible guidance for tourists. For
-the most part the artist’s work is as exquisite as anything of the kind he
-has done.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Northumbria.</b> By <span class="smcap">Anderson Graham</span>. With
-Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Hugh Thomson</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>The Border.</b> By <span class="smcap">Andrew Lang</span> and <span class="smcap">John
-Lang</span>. With Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Hugh Thomson</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>STANDARD.</i>—“The reader on his travels, real or imaginary, could
-not have pleasanter or more profitable companionship. There are charming
-sketches by Mr. Hugh Thomson to illustrate the letterpress.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Galloway and Carrick.</b> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">C. H.
-Dick</span>. With Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Hugh Thomson</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>SATURDAY REVIEW.</i>—“The very book to take with one into
-that romantic angle of Scotland, which lies well aside of the beaten tourist
-track.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Donegal and Antrim.</b> By <span class="smcap">Stephen Gwynn</span>.
-With Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Hugh Thomson</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>DAILY TELEGRAPH.</i>—“A perfect book of its kind, on which
-author, artist, and publisher have lavished of their best.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="hanging"><b>Normandy.</b> By <span class="smcap">Percy Dearmer</span>, M.A. With
-Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Joseph Pennell</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p><i>ST. JAMES’S GAZETTE.</i>—“A charming book.... Mr. Dearmer
-is as arrestive in his way as Mr. Pennell. He has the true topographic eye.
-He handles legend and history in entertaining fashion.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">MACMILLAN AND CO., Ltd.</span>, LONDON.</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS IN LINCOLNSHIRE ***</div>
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