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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, East Anglia, by J. Ewing Ritchie
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: East Anglia
+ Personal Recollections and Historical Associations
+
+
+Author: J. Ewing Ritchie
+
+
+
+Release Date: December 20, 2009 [eBook #30717]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EAST ANGLIA***
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1893 Jarrold & Sons edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@pglaf.org
+
+
+
+
+_PRESS NOTICES OF THE FIRST EDITION_.
+
+
+ ‘We cordially recommend Mr. Ritchie’s book to all who wish to pass an
+ agreeable hour and to learn something of the outward actions and
+ inner life of their predecessors. It is full of sketches of East
+ Anglian celebrities, happily touched if lightly limned.’—_East
+ Anglian Daily Times_.
+
+ ‘A very entertaining and enjoyable book. Local gossip, a wide range
+ of reading and industrious research, have enabled the author to
+ enliven his pages with a wide diversity of subjects, specially
+ attractive to East Anglians, but also of much general
+ interest.’—_Daily Chronicle_.
+
+ ‘The work is written in a light gossipy style, and by reason both of
+ it and of the variety of persons introduced is interesting. To a
+ Suffolk or Norfolk man it is, of course, especially attractive. The
+ reader will go through these pages without being wearied by
+ application. They form a pleasant and entertaining contribution to
+ county literature, and “East Anglia” will, we should think, find its
+ way to many of the east country bookshelves.’—_Suffolk Chronicle_.
+
+ ‘The book is as readable and attractive a volume of local chronicles
+ as could be desired. Though all of our readers may not see “eye to
+ eye” with Mr. Ritchie, in regard to political and theological
+ questions, they cannot fail to gain much enjoyment from his excellent
+ delineation of old days in East Anglia.’—_Norwich Mercury_.
+
+ ‘“East Anglia” has the merit of not being a compilation, which is
+ more than can be said of the great majority of books produced in
+ these days to satisfy the revived taste for topographical gossip.
+ Mr. Ritchie is a Suffolk man—the son of a Nonconformist minister of
+ Wrentham in that county—and he looks back to the old neighbourhood
+ and the old times with an affection which is likely to communicate
+ itself to its readers. Altogether we can with confidence recommend
+ this book not only to East Anglians, but to all readers who have any
+ affinity for works of its class.’—_Daily News_.
+
+ ‘Mr. Ritchie’s book belongs to a class of which we have none too
+ many, for when well done they illustrate contemporary history in a
+ really charming manner. What with their past grandeur, their present
+ progress, their martyrs, patriots, and authors, there is plenty to
+ tell concerning Eastern counties: and one who writes with native
+ enthusiasm is sure to command an audience.’—_Baptist_.
+
+ ‘Mr. Ritchie, known to the numerous readers of the _Christian World_
+ as “Christopher Crayon,” has the pen of a ready, racy, refreshing
+ writer. He never writes a dull line, and never for a moment allows
+ our interest to flag. In the work before us, which is not his first,
+ he is, I should think, at his best. The volume is the outcome of
+ extensive reading, many rambles over the districts described, and of
+ thoughtful observation. We seem to live and move and have our being
+ in East Anglia. Its folk-lore, its traditions, its worthies, its
+ memorable events, are all vividly and charmingly placed before us,
+ and we close the book sorry that there is no more of it, and
+ wondering why it is that works of a similar kind have not more
+ frequently appeared.’—_Northern Pioneer_.
+
+ ‘It has yielded us more gratification than any work that we have read
+ for a considerable time. The book ought to have a wide circulation
+ in the Eastern counties, and will not fail to yield profit and
+ delight wherever it finds its way.’—_Essex Telegraph_.
+
+ ‘Mr. Ritchie has here written a most attractive chapter of
+ autobiography. He recalls the scenes of his early days, and whatever
+ was quaint or striking in connection with them, and finds in his
+ recollections ready pegs on which to hang historical incident and
+ antiquarian curiosities of many kinds. He passes from point to point
+ in a delightfully cheerful and contagious mood. Mr. Ritchie’s
+ reading has been as extensive and careful as his observation is keen
+ and his temper genial; and his pages, which appeared in _The
+ Christian World Magazine_, well deserve the honour of book-form, with
+ the additions he has been able to make to them.’—_British Quarterly
+ Review_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+ EAST ANGLIA.
+
+
+ _PERSONAL RECOLLECTIONS_
+ AND
+ _HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIONS_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ BY
+ J. EWING RITCHIE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ ‘Behold, there came wise men from the East to Jerusalem.’
+
+ MATTHEW.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _SECOND EDITION_,
+ REVISED, CORRECTED, AND ENLARGED.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LONDON:
+ JARROLD & SONS, PATERNOSTER BUILDINGS, E.C.
+ 1893.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
+
+
+The chapters of which this little work consists originally appeared in
+the _Christian World Magazine_, where they were so fortunate as to
+attract favourable notice, and from which they are now reprinted, with a
+few slight additions, by permission of the Editor. In bringing out a
+second edition, I have incorporated the substance of other articles
+originally written for local journals. It is to be hoped, touching as
+they do a theme not easily exhausted, but always interesting to East
+Anglians, that they may help to sustain that love of one’s county which,
+alas! like the love of country, is a matter reckoned to be of little
+importance in these cosmopolitan days, but which, nevertheless, has had
+not a little share in the formation of that national greatness and glory
+in which at all times Englishmen believe.
+
+One word more. I have retained some strictures on the clergy of East
+Anglia, partly because they were true at the time to which I refer, and
+partly because it gives me pleasure to own that they are not so now. The
+Church of England clergyman of to-day is an immense improvement on that
+of my youth. In ability, in devotion to the duties of his calling, in
+intelligence, in self-denial, in zeal, he is equal to the clergy of any
+other denomination. If he has lost his hold upon Hodge, that, at any
+rate, is not his fault.
+
+CLACTON-ON-SEA,
+ _January_, 1893.
+
+
+ CONTENTS.
+ CHAPTER I.
+
+ A SUFFOLK VILLAGE.
+Distinguished people born there—Its Puritans and 1
+Nonconformists—The country round Covehithe—Southwold—Suffolk
+dialect—The Great Eastern Railway
+ CHAPTER II.
+
+ THE STRICKLANDS.
+Reydon Hall—The clergy—Pakefield—Social life in a village 37
+ CHAPTER III.
+
+ LOWESTOFT.
+Yarmouth bloaters—George Borrow—The town fifty years ago—The 54
+distinguished natives
+ CHAPTER IV.
+
+ POLITICS AND THEOLOGY.
+Homerton academy—W. Johnson Fox, M.P.—Politics in 89
+1830—Anti-Corn Law speeches—Wonderful oratory
+ CHAPTER V.
+
+ BUNGAY AND ITS PEOPLE.
+Bungay Nonconformity—Hannah More—The Childses—The Queen’s 122
+Librarian—Prince Albert
+ CHAPTER VI.
+
+ A CELEBRATED NORFOLK TOWN.
+Great Yarmouth Nonconformists—Intellectual life—Dawson 153
+Turner—Astley Cooper—Hudson Gurney—Mrs. Bendish
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+ THE NORFOLK CAPITAL.
+Brigg’s Lane—The carrier’s cart—Reform demonstration—The old 185
+dragon—Chairing M.P.’s—Hornbutton Jack—Norwich artists and
+literati—Quakers and Nonconformists
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ THE SUFFOLK CAPITAL.
+The Orwell—The Sparrows—Ipswich 226
+notabilities—Gainsborough—Medical men—Nonconformists
+ CHAPTER IX.
+
+ AN OLD-FASHIONED TOWN.
+Woodbridge and the country round—Bernard Barton—Dr. 252
+Lankester—An old Noncon.
+ CHAPTER X.
+
+ MILTON’S SUFFOLK SCHOOLMASTER.
+Stowmarket—The Rev. Thomas Young—Bishop Hall and the 283
+Smectymnian divines—Milton’s mulberry-tree—Suffolk
+relationships
+ CHAPTER XI.
+
+ IN CONSTABLE’S COUNTY.
+East Bergholt—The Valley of the Stour—Painting from 311
+nature—East Anglian girls
+ CHAPTER XII.
+
+ EAST ANGLIAN WORTHIES.
+Suffolk cheese—Danes, Saxons, and Normans—Philosophers and 320
+statesmen—Artists and literati
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+A SUFFOLK VILLAGE.
+
+
+Distinguished people born there—Its Puritans and Nonconformists—The
+country round Covehithe—Southwold—Suffolk dialect—The Great Eastern
+Railway.
+
+In his published Memoirs, the great Metternich observes that if he had
+never been born he never could have loved or hated. Following so
+illustrious a precedent, I may observe that if I had not been born in
+East Anglia I never could have been an East Anglian. Whether I should
+have been wiser or better off had I been born elsewhere, is an
+interesting question, which, however, it is to be hoped the public will
+forgive me if I decline to discuss on the present occasion.
+
+In a paper bearing the date of 1667, a Samuel Baker, of Wattisfield Hall,
+writes: ‘I was born at a village called Wrentham, which place I cannot
+pass by the mention of without saying thus much, that religion has there
+flourished longer, and that in much piety; the Gospel and grace of it
+have been more powerfully and clearly preached, and more generally
+received; the professors of it have been more sound in the matter and
+open and steadfast in the profession of it in an hour of temptation, have
+manifested a greater oneness amongst themselves and have been more
+eminently preserved from enemies without (albeit they dwell where Satan’s
+seat is encompassed with his malice and rage), than I think in any
+village of the like capacity in England; which I speak as my duty to the
+place, but to my particular shame rather than otherwise, that such a dry
+and barren plant should spring out of such a soil.’ I resemble this
+worthy Mr. Baker in two respects. In the first place, I was born at
+Wrentham, though at a considerably later period of time than 1667; and,
+secondly, if he was a barren plant—he of whom we read, in Harmer’s
+Miscellaneous Works, that ‘he was a gentleman of fortune and education,
+very zealous for the Congregational plan of church government and
+discipline, and a sufferer in its bonds for a good conscience’—what am I?
+
+Nor was it only piety that existed in this distant parish. If the reader
+turns to the diary of John Evelyn, under the date of 1679, he will find
+mention made of a child brought up to London, ‘son of one Mr. Wotton,
+formerly amanuensis to Dr. Andrews, Bishop of Winton, who both read and
+perfectly understood Hebrew, Greek, Latin, Arabic and Syriac, and most of
+the modern languages, disputed in divinity, law and all the sciences, was
+skilful in history, both ecclesiastical and profane; in a word, so
+universally and solidly learned at eleven years of age that he was looked
+on as a miracle. Dr. Lloyd, one of the most deep-learned divines of this
+nation in all sorts of literature, with Dr. Burnet, who had severely
+examined him, came away astonished, and told me they did not believe
+there had the like appeared in the world. He had only been instructed by
+his father, who being himself a learned person, confessed that his son
+knew all that he himself knew. But what was more admirable than his vast
+memory was his judgment and invention, he being tried with divers hard
+questions which required maturity of thought and experience. He was also
+dexterous in chronology, antiquities, mathematics. In sum, an
+_intellectus universalis_ beyond all that we reade of Picus Mirandula,
+and other precoce witts, and yet withal a very humble child.’ This
+prodigy was the son of the Rev. Henry Wotton, minister of Wrentham,
+Suffolk. Sir William Skippon, a parishioner, in a letter yet extant,
+describes the wonderful achievements of the little fellow when but five
+years old. He was admitted at Katherine Hall, Cambridge, some months
+before he was ten years old. In after-years he was the friend and
+defender of Bentley and the antagonist of Sir William Temple in the great
+controversy about ancient and modern learning. He died in 1726, and was
+buried at Buxted, in Sussex. It is clear that there was no such
+intellectual phenomenon in all London under the Stuarts as that little
+Wrentham lad.
+
+Of that village, when I came into the world, my father was the honoured,
+laborious and successful minister. The meeting-house, as it was called,
+which stood in the lane leading from the church to the highroad, was a
+square red brick building, vastly superior to any of the ancient
+meeting-houses round. It stood in an enclosure, one side of which was
+devoted to the reception of the farmers’ gigs, which, on a Sunday
+afternoon, when the principal service was held, made quite a respectable
+show when drawn up in a line. By the side of it was a cottage, in which
+lived the woman who kept the place tidy, and her husband, who looked
+after the horses as they were unharnessed and put in the stable close by.
+The backs of the gigs were sheltered from the road by a hedge of lilacs,
+and over the gateway a gigantic elm kept watch and ward. The house in
+which we lived was also part of the chapel estate, and, if it was a
+little way off, it was, at any rate, adapted to the wants of a family of
+quiet habits and simple tastes. On one side of the house was a
+water-butt, and I can well remember my first sad experience of the
+wickedness of the world when, getting up one morning to look after my
+rabbits and other live stock, I found that water-butt had gone, and that
+there were thieves in a village so rural and renowned for piety as ours.
+I say renowned, and not without reason. Years and years back there was a
+pious clergyman of the name of Steffe, who had a son in Dr. Doddridge’s
+Academy, at Daventry, and it is a fact that the great Doctor himself, at
+some time or other, had been a guest in the village.
+
+In 1741 the Doctor thus records his East Anglian recollections, in a
+letter to his wife: ‘You have great reason to confide in that very kind
+Providence which has hitherto watched over us, and has, since the date of
+my last, brought us about sixty miles nearer London. From Yarmouth we
+went on Friday morning to Wrentham, where good Mrs. Steffe lives, and
+from thence to a gentleman’s seat, near Walpole, where I was most
+respectfully entertained. As I had twenty miles to ride yesterday
+morning, he, though I had never seen him before last Tuesday, brought me
+almost half-way in his chaise, to make the journey easier. I reached
+Woodbridge before two, and rode better in the cool of the evening, and
+had the happiness to be entertained in a very elegant and friendly
+family, though perfectly a stranger; and, indeed, I have been escorted
+from one place to another in every mile of my journey by one, and
+sometimes by two or three, of my brethren in a most respectful and
+agreeable manner.’ Dr. Doddridge’s East Anglian recollections seem to
+have been uncommonly agreeable, owing quite as much, I must candidly
+confess, to the presence of the sisters as of the brethren. Writing to
+his wife an account of a little trip on the river, he adds: ‘It was a
+very pleasant day, and I concluded it in the company of one of the finest
+women I ever beheld, who, though she had seven children grown up to
+marriageable years, or very near it, is still herself almost a beauty,
+and a person of sense, good breeding, and piety, which might astonish one
+who had not the happiness of being intimately acquainted with you.’ What
+a sly rogue was Dr. Doddridge! How could any wife be jealous when her
+husband finishes off with such a compliment to herself?
+
+But to return to the good Mrs. Steffe, of whom I am, on my mother’s side,
+a descendant. I must add that as there were great men before Agamemnon,
+so there were good people in the little village of Wrentham before Mrs.
+Steffe appeared upon the scene. The Brewsters, who were an ancient
+family, which seems to have culminated under the glorious usurpation of
+Oliver Cromwell, were eminently good people in Dr. Doddridge’s
+acceptation of the term, and I fancy did much as lords of the manor—and
+as inhabitants of Wrentham Hall, a building which had ceased to exist
+long before my time—to leaven with their goodness the surrounding lump.
+It seems to me that these Brewsters must have been more or less connected
+with Brewster the elder—of Robinson’s Church at Leyden, who, we are told,
+came of a wealthy and distinguished family—who was well trained at
+Cambridge, and, says the historian, ‘thence, being first seasoned with
+the seeds of grace and virtue, he went to the Court, and there served
+that religious and godly Mr. Davison divers years, when he was Secretary
+of State, who found him so discreet and faithful as he trusted him, above
+all others that were about him, and only employed him in matters of great
+trust and secrecy; he esteemed him rather as a son than a servant, and
+for his wisdom and godliness in private, he would converse with him more
+like a familiar than a master.’ When evil times came, this Brewster was
+living in the big Manor House at Scrooby, and how he and his godly
+associates were driven into exile by a foolish King and cruel priests is
+known, or ought to be known, to everyone. Of these Wrentham Brewsters,
+one served his country in Parliament, or I am very much mistaken. It was
+to their credit that they sought out godly men, to whom they might
+entrust the cure of souls. In this respect, when I was a lad, their
+example certainly had not been followed, and Dissent flourished mainly
+because the moral instincts of the villagers and farmers and small
+tradesmen were shocked by hearing men on the Sunday reading the Lessons
+of the Church, leading the devotions of the people, and preaching
+sermons, who on the week-days got drunk and led immoral lives. As to the
+right of the State to interfere in matters of religion, as to the danger
+to religion itself from the establishment of a State Church, as to the
+liberty of unlicensed prophesying, such topics the simple villagers
+ignored. All that they felt was that there came to them more of a
+quickening of the spiritual life, a fuller realization of God and things
+divine, in the meeting-house than in the parish church. They were not
+what pious Churchmen so much dread nowadays—Political Dissenters; how
+could they be such, having no votes, and never seeing a newspaper from
+one year’s end to the other?
+
+It was to the Brewsters that the village was indebted for the ministry of
+the Rev. John Phillip, who married the sister of the pious and learned
+Dr. Ames, Professor of the University of Franeker. Calamy tells us that
+by means of Dr. Ames, Mr. Phillip had no small furtherance in his
+studies, and intimate acquaintance with him increased his inclination to
+the Congregational way. Archbishop Abbot, writing to Winwood, 1611,
+says: ‘I have written to Sir Horace Vere touching the English preacher at
+the Hague. We heard what he was that preceded, and we cannot be less
+cognisant what Mr. Ames is, for by a Latin printed book he hath laden the
+Church and State of England with a great deal of infamous contumely, so
+that if he were amongst us he would be so far from receiving preferment,
+that some exemplary punishment would be his reward. His Majesty had been
+advertised how this man is entertained and embraced at the Hague, and how
+he is a fit person to breed up captains and soldiers there in mutiny and
+faction.’ One of Dr. Ames’s works, which got him into trouble, was
+entitled ‘A Fresh Suit against Ceremonies,’ a work which we may be sure
+would be as distasteful to the Ritualists of our day as it was to the
+Ritualists of his own. One of his works, his ‘Medulla Theologiæ,’ I
+believe, adorned the walls of the paternal study. There is, belonging to
+the Wrentham Congregational Church Library, a volume of tracts,
+sixty-seven in number, of six or eight pages each, printed in 1622,
+forming a series of theses on theological topics, maintained by different
+persons, under the presidency of Dr. Ames; and I believe a son of the
+Doctor is buried in Wrentham Churchyard, as I recollect my father, on one
+occasion, had an old gravestone done up and relettered, which bore
+testimony to the virtues and piety and learning of an Ames. Thus if Mr.
+Phillip was chased out of Old England into New England for his
+Nonconformity, some of the good old Noncons remained to uphold the lamp
+which was one day to cast a sacred light on all quarters of the land.
+That some did emigrate with their pastor is probable, since we learn that
+there is a town called Wrentham across the Atlantic, said to have
+received that name because some of the first settlers came from Wrentham
+in England.
+
+Touching Mr. Phillip, a good deal has been written by the Rev. John
+Browne, the painstaking author of ‘The History of Congregationalism in
+Suffolk and Norfolk.’ It appears that his arrival in America was not
+unexpected, as the Christian people of Dedham had invited him to that
+plantation beforehand. He did not, however, accept their invitation, but
+being much in request, ‘and called divers ways, could not resolve; but,
+at length, upon weighty reasons concerning the public service and
+foundations of the college, he was persuaded to attend to the call of
+Cambridge;’ and, adds an American writer, ‘he might have been the first
+head of that blessed institution.’ On the calling of the Long
+Parliament, he and his wife returned to England, and in 1642 we find him
+ministering to his old flock. So satisfied were the neighbouring
+Independents of his Congregationalism, that when, in 1644, members of Mr.
+Bridge’s church residing in Norwich desired to form themselves into a
+separate community, they not only consulted with their brethren in
+Yarmouth, but with Mr. Phillip also, as the only man then in their
+neighbourhood on whose judgment and experience they could rely. In 1643
+Mr. Phillip was appointed one of the members of the Assembly of Divines,
+and was recognised by Baillie in his Letters as one of the Independent
+men there. The Independents, as we know, sat apart, and were a sad thorn
+in the Presbyterians’ side. Five of them, more zealous than the rest,
+formally dissented from the decisions of the Assembly, and afraid that
+toleration would not be extended to them, appealed to Parliament, ‘as the
+most sacred refuge and asylum for mistaken and misjudged innocence.’ Mr.
+Phillip’s name, however, I do not find in that list; and possibly he was
+too old to be very active in the matter. He lived on till 1660, when he
+died at the good old age of seventy-eight. In the later years of his
+ministry he was assisted by his nephew, W. Ames, who in 1651 preached a
+sermon at St. Paul’s, before the Lord Mayor and Aldermen, ‘On the Saint’s
+Security against Seducing Sports, or the Anointing from the Holy One.’
+It is to be feared, in our more enlightened age, a good Wrentham
+Congregational minister would have little chance of preaching before a
+London Lord Mayor. Talent is supposed to exist only in the crowded town,
+where men have no time to think of anything but of the art of getting on.
+
+Other heroic associations—of men who had suffered for the faith, who
+feared God rather than man, who preferred the peace of an approving
+conscience to the vain honours of the world—also were connected with the
+place. I remember being shown a bush in which the conventicle preacher
+used to hide himself when the enemy, in the shape of the myrmidons of
+Bishop Wren, of Norwich, were at his heels. That furious prelate, as
+many of us know, drove upwards of three thousand persons to seek their
+bread in a foreign land. Indeed, to such an extent did he carry out his
+persecuting system, that the trade and manufactures of the country
+materially suffered in consequence. However, in my boyish days I was not
+troubled much about such things. Dissent in Wrentham was quite
+respectable. If we had lost the Brewster family, whose arms were still
+to be seen on the Communion plate, a neighbouring squire attended at the
+meeting-house, as it was then the fashion to call our chapel, and so did
+the leading grocer and draper of the place, and the village doctor, the
+father of six comely daughters; and the display of gigs on a Sunday was
+really imposing. Alas! as I grew older I saw that imposing array not a
+little shorn of its splendour. The neighbouring baronet, Sir Thomas
+Gooch, M.P., added as he could farm to farm, and that a Dissenter was on
+no account to have one of his farms was pretty well understood. I fancy
+our great landlords have, in many parts of East Anglia, pretty well
+exterminated Dissent, to the real injury of the people all around. I
+write this advisedly. I dare say the preaching in the meeting-house was
+often very miserably poor. The service, I must own, seemed to me often
+peculiarly long and unattractive. There was always that long prayer
+which was, I fear, to all boys a time of utter weariness; but,
+nevertheless, there was a moral and intellectual life in our Dissenting
+circle that did not exist elsewhere. It was true we never attended
+dinners at the village public-house, nor indulged in card-parties, and
+regarded with a horror, which I have come to think unwholesome, the
+frivolity of balls or the attractions of a theatre; but we had all the
+new books voted into our bookclub, and, as a lad, I can well remember how
+I revelled in the back numbers of the _Edinburgh Review_, though even
+then I could not but feel the injustice which it did to what it called
+the Lake school of poets, and more especially to Coleridge and
+Wordsworth. Shakespeare also was almost a sealed book, and perhaps we
+had a little too much of religious reading, such as Doddridge’s ‘Rise and
+Progress,’ or Baxter’s ‘Saint’s Rest,’ or Alleine’s ‘Call to the
+Unconverted,’ or Fleetwood’s ‘Life of Christ’—excellent books in their
+way, undoubtedly, but not remarkably attractive to boys redolent of
+animal life, who had thriven and grown fat in that rustic village, on
+whose vivid senses the world that now is produced far more effect than
+the terrors or splendours of the world to come.
+
+The country round, if flat, was full of interesting associations. At the
+back of us—that is, on the sea—was the village of Covehithe, and when a
+visitor found his way into the place—an event which happened now and
+then—our first excursion with him or her—for plenty of donkeys were to be
+had which ladies could ride—was to Covehithe, known to literary men as
+the birthplace of John Bale, Bishop of Ossory, in Ireland. In connection
+with donkeys, I have this interesting recollection, that one of the old
+men of the village told me. At the time of the Bristol riots, he
+remembered Sir Charles Wetherall, the occasion of them, as a boy at
+Wrentham much given to donkey-riding. In the history of the drama John
+Bale takes distinguished rank. He was one of those by whom the drama was
+gradually evolved, and all to whom it is a study and delight must
+remember him with regard. His play of ‘Kynge John’ is described by Mr.
+Collier as occupying an intermediate place between moralities and
+historical plays—and it is the only known existing specimen of that
+species of composition of so early a date. Bale, who was trained at the
+monastery of White Friars, in Norwich, thence went to Jesus College,
+Cambridge, and was expelled in consequence of the zeal with which he
+exposed the errors of Popery. However, Bale had a friend and protector
+in Cromwell, Henry VIII.’s faithful servant. On the death of that
+nobleman Bale proceeded to Germany, where he appears to have been well
+received and hospitably entertained by Luther and Melancthon, and on the
+accession of Edward VI. he returned to England. In Mary’s reign
+persecution recommenced, and Bale fled to Frankfort. He again returned
+at the commencement of Elizabeth’s reign, and was made prebend of
+Canterbury, at which place he died at the age of sixty-three. Covehithe
+nowadays is not interesting so much as the birthplace of Bale, as on
+account of its ecclesiastical ruins, which are covered with ivy and
+venerable in their decay. The church was evidently almost a cathedral,
+and surely at one time or other there must have been an enormous
+population to worship in such a sanctuary; and yet all you see now is a
+public-house just opposite the church, a few cottages, and a farmhouse.
+A few steps farther bring you to the low cliff, and there is the sea ever
+encroaching on the land in that quarter and swallowing up farmhouse and
+farm. Miss Agnes Strickland, who lived at Reydon Hall—a few miles
+inland—has thus sung the melancholy fate of Covehithe:
+
+ ‘All roofless now the stately pile,
+ And rent the arches tall,
+ Through which with bright departing smile
+ The western sunbeams fall.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ ‘Tradition’s voice forgets to tell
+ Whose ashes sleep below,
+ And Fancy here unchecked may dwell,
+ And bid the story flow.’
+
+Ah! what was that story? How the question puzzled my young head, as I
+walked in the sandy lane that led from my native village! How
+insignificant looked the little church built up inside! What had become
+of the crowds that at one time must have filled that ancient fane? How
+was it that no trace of them remained? They had vanished in the
+historical age, and yet no one could tell how or when. Nature was, then,
+stronger than man. He was gone, but the stars glittered by night and the
+sun shone by day, and the ivy had spread its green mantle over all. Yes!
+what was man, with his pomp and glory, but dust and ashes, after all!
+How I loved to go to Covehithe and climb its ruins, and dream of the
+distant past!
+
+Here in that eastern point of England it seemed to me there was a good
+deal of decay. Sometimes, on a fine summer day, we would take a boat and
+sail from the pretty little town of Southwold, about four miles from
+Wrentham, to Dunwich, another relic of the past. According to an old
+historian, it was a city surrounded with a stone wall having brazen
+gates; it had fifty-two churches, chapels, and religious houses; it also
+boasted hospitals, a huge palace, a bishop’s seat, a mayor’s mansion, and
+a Mint. Beyond it a forest appears to have extended some miles into what
+is now the sea. One of our local Suffolk poets, James Bird (I saw him
+but once, when I walked into his house, about twelve miles from Wrentham,
+having run away from home at the ripe age of ten, and told him I had come
+to see him, as he was a poet; and I well remember how then, much to my
+chagrin, he gave me plum-pudding for dinner, and sent me to play with his
+boys till a cart was found in which the prodigal was compelled to
+return), wrote and published a poetical romance, called ‘Dunwich; or, a
+Tale of the Splendid City;’ and Agnes Strickland also made it the subject
+of her melodious verse, commencing:
+
+ ‘Oft gazing on thy craggy brow,
+ We muse on glories o’er.
+ Fair Dunwich! Thou art lonely now,
+ Renowned and sought no more.’
+
+Never has a splendid city more utterly collapsed. After a long ride over
+sandy lanes and fields, you come to the edge of a cliff, on which stand a
+few houses. There is all that remains of the Dunwich where the first
+Bishop of East Anglia taught the Christian faith, and where was born John
+Daye, the printer of the works of Parker, Latimer, and Fox, who, in the
+reign of Mary, became, as most real men did then, a prisoner and an exile
+for the truth. He has also the reputation of being the first in England
+who printed in the Saxon character. In the records of type-founding the
+name of Daye stands with that of the most illustrious. When the Company
+of Stationers obtained their charter from Philip and Mary, he was the
+first person admitted to their livery. In 1580 he was master of the
+company, to which he bequeathed property at his death. The following is
+the inscription which marks the place of his burial in Little Bradley,
+Suffolk:
+
+ ‘Here lyes the DAYE that darkness could not blynd,
+ When Popish fogges had overcast the sunne;
+ This DAYE the cruel night did leave behind,
+ To view and show what bloudie actes were donne.
+ He set a FOX to write how martyrs runne
+ By death to lyfe, FOX ventured paynes and health.
+ To give them light Daye spent in print his wealth,
+ But GOD with gayne returned his wealth agayne,
+ And gave to him as he gave to the poore.
+ Two wyfes he had partakers of his payne:
+ Each wyfe twelve babes, and each of them one more,
+ Als was the last increaser of his store;
+ Who, mourning long for being left alone,
+ Sett up this tombe, herself turned to a stone.’
+
+Unlike Covehithe, Dunwich has a history. In the reign of Henry II., a
+MS. in the British Museum tells us, the Earl of Leicester came to attack
+it. ‘When he came neare and beheld the strength thereof, it was terror
+and feare unto him to behold it; and so retired both he and his people.’
+Dunwich aided King John in his wars with the barons, and thus gained the
+first charter. In the time of Edward I. it had sixteen fair ships,
+twelve barks, four-and-twenty fishing barks, and at that time there were
+few seaports in England that could say as much. It served the same King
+in his wars with France with eleven ships of war, well furnished with men
+and munition. In most of these ships were seventy-two men-at-arms, who
+served thirteen weeks at their own cost and charge. Dunwich seems to
+have suffered much by the French wars. Four of the eleven ships already
+referred to were captured by the French, and in the wars waged by Edward
+III. Dunwich lost still more shipping, and as many as 500 men. Perhaps
+it might have flourished till this day had if not been for the curse of
+war. But the sea also served the town cruelly. That spared nothing—not
+the King’s Forest, where there were hawking and hunting—not the homes
+where England nursed her hardy sailors—not even the harbour whence the
+brave East Anglians sailed away to the wars. In Edward III.’s time, at
+one fell swoop, the remorseless sea seems to have swallowed up ‘400
+houses which payde rente to the towne towards the fee-farms, besydes
+certain shops and windmills.’ Yet, when I was a lad, this wreck of a
+place returned two members to Parliament, and Birmingham, Manchester and
+Sheffield not one. Between Covehithe and Dunwich stood, and still
+stands, the charming little bathing-place of Southwold. Like them, it
+has seen better days, and has suffered from the encroachments of the
+ever-restless and ever-hungry sea. It was at Southwold that I first saw
+the sea, and I remember naturally asking my father, who showed me the
+guns on the gun-hill—pointing seaward—whether that was where the enemies
+came from.
+
+Southwold appears to have initiated an evangelical alliance, which may
+yet be witnessed if ever a time comes of reasonable toleration on
+religious matters. In many parts of the Continent the same place of
+worship is used by different religious bodies. In Brussels I have seen
+the Episcopalians, the Germans, the French Protestants, all assembling at
+different times in the same building. There was a time when a similar
+custom prevailed in Southwold, and that was when Master Sharpen, who had
+his abode at Sotterley, preached at Southwold once a month. There were
+Independents in the towns in those days, and ‘his indulgence,’ writes a
+local historian, ‘favoured the Separatists with the liberty and free use
+of the church, where they resorted weekly, or oftener, and every fourth
+Sunday both ministers met and celebrated divine service alternately. He
+that entered the church first had the precedency of officiating, the
+other keeping silence until the congregation received the Benediction
+after sermon.’ Most of the people attended all the while. It was before
+the year 1680 that these things were done. After that time there came to
+the church ‘an orthodox man, who suffered many ills, and those not the
+lightest, for his King and for his faith, and he compelled the
+Independents not only to leave the church, but the town also. We read
+they assembled in a malt-house beyond the bridge, where, being disturbed,
+they chose more private places in the town until liberty of conscience
+was granted, when they publicly assembled in a fish-house converted to a
+place of worship.’ At that time many people in the town were Dissenters;
+but it was not till 1748 that they had a church formed. Up to that time
+the Southwold Independents were members of the Church at Wrentham, one of
+the Articles of Association of the new church being to take the Bible as
+their sole guide, and when in difficulties to resort to the neighbouring
+pastor for advice and declaration. Such was Independency when it
+flourished all over East Anglia.
+
+A writer in the _Harleian Miscellany_ says that ‘Southwold, of sea-coast
+town, is the most beneficial unto his Majesty of all the towns in
+England, by reason all their trade is unto Iceland for lings.’ In the
+little harbour of Southwold you see nowadays only a few colliers, and I
+fear that the place is of little advantage to her Majesty, however
+beneficial it may be as a health-resort for some of her Majesty’s
+subjects. It is a place, gentle reader, where you can wander undisturbed
+at your own sweet will, and can get your cheeks fanned by breezes unknown
+in London. The beach, I own, is shingly, and not to be compared with the
+sands of Yarmouth and Lowestoft; but, then, you are away from the Cockney
+crowds that now infest these places at the bathing season, and you are
+quiet—whether you wander on its common, till you come to the Wolsey
+Bridge, getting on towards Halesworth, where, if tradition be
+trustworthy, Wolsey, as a butcher’s boy, was nearly drowned, and where he
+benevolently caused a bridge to be erected for the safety of all future
+butcher-boys and others, when he became a distinguished man; or ramble by
+the seaside to Walberswick, across the harbour, or on to Easton
+Bavent—another decayed village, on the other side. Southwold has its
+historical associations. Most of my readers have seen the well-known
+picture of Solebay Fight at Greenwich Hospital. Southwold overlooks the
+bay on which that fight was won. Here, on the morning of the 28th May,
+1672, De Ruyter, with his Dutchmen, sailed right against those wooden
+walls which have guarded old England in many a time of danger, and found
+to his cost how invincible was British pluck. James, Duke of York—not
+then the drivelling idiot who lost his kingdom for a Mass, but James,
+manly and high-spirited, with a Prince’s pride and a sailor’s heart—won a
+victory that for many a day was a favourite theme with all honest
+Englishmen, and especially with the true and stout men who, alarmed by
+the roar of cannon, as the sound boomed along the blue waters of that
+peaceful bay, stood on the Southwold cliff, wishing that the fog which
+intercepted their view might clear off, and that they might welcome as
+victors their brethren on the sea. I can remember how, when an old
+cannon was dragged up from the depths of the sea, it was supposed to be,
+as it might have been, used in that fight, and now is preserved at one of
+the look-out houses on the cliff as a souvenir of that glorious struggle.
+The details of that fight are matters of history, and I need not dwell on
+them. Our literature, also, owes Southwold one of the happiest effusions
+of one of the wittiest writers of that age; and in a county history I
+remember well a merry song on the Duke’s late glorious success over the
+Dutch, in Southwold Bay, which commences with the writer telling—
+
+ ‘One day as I was sitting still
+ Upon the side of Dunwich Hill,
+ And looking on the ocean,
+ By chance I saw De Ruyter’s fleet
+ With Royal James’s squadron meet;
+ In sooth it was a noble treat
+ To see that brave commotion.’
+
+The writer vividly paints the scene, and ends as follows:
+
+ ‘Here’s to King Charles, and here’s to James,
+ And here’s to all the captains’ names,
+ And here’s to all the Suffolk dames,
+ And here’s to the house of Stuart.’
+
+Well, as to the house of Stuart, the less said the better; but as to the
+Suffolk dames, I agree with the poet, that they are all well worthy of
+the toast, and it was at a very early period of my existence that I
+became aware of that fact. But the course of true love never does run
+smooth, and from none—and they were many—with whom I played on the beach
+as a boy, or read poetry to at riper years, was it my fate to take one as
+wife for better or worse. In the crowded city men have little time to
+fall in love. Besides, they see so many fresh faces that impressions are
+easily erased. It is otherwise in the quiet retirement of a village
+where there is little to disturb the mind—perhaps too little. I can well
+remember a striking illustration of this in the person of an old farmer,
+who lived about three miles off, and at whose house we—that is, the whole
+family—passed what seemed to me a very happy day among the haystacks or
+harvest-fields once or twice a year. The old man was proud of his farm,
+and of everything connected with it. ‘There, Master James,’ he was wont
+to say to me after dinner, ‘you can see three barns all at once!’ and
+sure enough, looking in the direction he pointed, there were three barns
+plainly visible to the naked eye. Alas! the love of the picturesque had
+not been developed in my bucolic friend, and a good barn or two—he was an
+old bachelor, and, I suppose, his heart had never been softened by the
+love of woman—seemed to him about as beautiful an object as you could
+expect or desire. One emotion, that of fear, was, however, I found,
+strongly planted in the village breast. The boys of the village, with
+whom, now and then, I stole away on a birds’-nesting expedition, would
+have it that in a little wood about a mile or two off there were no end
+of flying serpents and dragons to be seen; and I can well remember the
+awe which fell upon the place when there came a rumour of the doings of
+those wretches, Burke and Hare, who were said to have made a living by
+murdering victims—by placing pitch plasters on their mouths—and selling
+them to the doctors to dissect. At this time a little boy had not come
+home at the proper time, and the mother came to our house lamenting. The
+good woman was in tears, and refused to be comforted. There had been a
+stranger in the village that day; he had seen her boy, he had put a pitch
+plaster on his mouth, and no doubt his dead body was then on its way to
+Norwich to be sold to the doctor. Unfortunately, it turned out that the
+boy was alive and well, and lived to give his poor mother a good deal of
+trouble. Another thing, of which I have still a vivid recollection, was
+the mischief wrought by Captain Swing. In Kent there had been an
+alarming outbreak of the peasantry, ostensibly against the use of
+agricultural machinery. They assembled in large bodies, and visited the
+farm buildings of the principal landed proprietors, demolishing the
+threshing machines then being brought into use. In some instances they
+set fire to barns and corn-stacks. These outrages spread throughout the
+county, and fears were entertained that they would be repeated in other
+agricultural districts. A great meeting of magistrates and landed gentry
+was held in Canterbury, the High Sheriff in the chair, when a reward was
+offered of £100 for the discovery of the perpetrators of the senseless
+mischief, and the Lords of the Treasury offered a further reward of the
+same amount for their apprehension; but all was in vain to stop the
+growing evil. The agricultural interest was in a very depressed state,
+and the number of unemployed labourers so large, that apprehensions were
+entertained that the combinations for the destruction of machinery might,
+if not at once checked, take dimensions it would be very difficult for
+the Government to control. When Parliament opened in 1830, the state of
+the agricultural districts had been daily growing more alarming. Rioting
+and incendiarism had spread from Kent to Suffolk, Norfolk, Surrey,
+Hampshire, Wiltshire, Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Huntingdonshire, and
+Cambridgeshire, and a great deal of very valuable property had been
+destroyed. A mystery enveloped these proceedings that indicated
+organization, and it became suspected that they had a political object.
+Threatening letters were sent to individuals signed ‘Swing,’ and beacon
+fires communicated from one part of the country to the other. With the
+object of checking these outrages, night patrols were established,
+dragoons were kept in readiness to put down tumultuous meetings, and
+magistrates and clergymen and landed gentry were all at their wits’ ends.
+Even in our out-of-the-way corner of East Anglia not a little
+consternation was felt. We were on the highroad nightly traversed by the
+London and Yarmouth Royal Mail, and thus, more or less, we had
+communications with the outer world. Just outside of our village was
+Benacre Hall, the seat of Sir Thomas Gooch, one of the county members,
+and I well remember the boyish awe with which I heard that a mob had set
+out from Yarmouth to burn the place down. Whether the mob thought better
+of it, or gave up the walk of eighteen miles as one to which they were
+not equal, I am not in a position to say. All I know is, that Benacre
+Hall, such as it is, remains; but I can never forget the feeling of
+terror with which, on those dark and dull winter nights, I looked out of
+my bedroom window to watch the lurid light flaring up into the black
+clouds around, which told how wicked men were at their mad work, how
+fiendish passion had triumphed, how some honest farmer was reduced to
+ruin, as he saw the efforts of a life of industry consumed by the
+incendiary’s fire. It was long before I ceased to shudder at the name of
+‘Swing.’
+
+The dialect of the village was, I need not add, East Anglian. The people
+said ‘I woll’ for ‘I will’; ‘you warn’t’ for ‘you were not,’ and so on.
+A girl was called a ‘mawther,’ a pitcher a ‘gotch,’ a ‘clap on the
+costard’ was a knock on the head, a lad was a ‘bor.’ Names of places
+especially were made free with. Wangford was ‘Wangfor,’ Covehithe was
+‘Cothhigh,’ Southwold was ‘Soul,’ Lowestoft was ‘Lesteff,’ Halesworth was
+‘Holser,’ London was ‘Lunun.’ People who lived in the midland counties
+were spoken of as living in the shires. The ‘o,’ as in ‘bowls,’ it is
+specially difficult for an East Anglian to pronounce. A learned man was
+held to be a ‘man of larnin’,’ a thing of which there was not too much in
+Suffolk in my young days. A lady in the village sent her son to school,
+and great was the maternal pride as she called in my father to hear how
+well her son could read Latin, the reading being reading alone, without
+the faintest attempt at translation. Sometimes it was hard to get an
+answer to a question, as when a Dissenting minister I knew was sent for
+to visit a sick man. ‘My good man,’ said he, ‘what induced you to send
+for me?’ ‘Hey, what?’ said the invalid. ‘What induced you to send for
+me?’ Alas! the question was repeated in vain. At length the wife
+interfered: ‘He wants to know what the deuce you sent for him for.’ And
+then, and not till then, came an appropriate reply. This story, I
+believe, has more than once found its way into _Punch_; but I heard it as
+a Suffolk boy years and years before _Punch_ had come into existence.
+
+One of the prayers familiar to my youth was as follows:
+
+ ‘Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
+ Bless the bed that I lie on;
+ Four corners to my bed,
+ Four angels at my head;
+ Two to watch and one to pray,
+ And one to carry my soul away.’
+
+An M.P., who shall be nameless, supplies me with an apt illustration of
+East Anglian dialect. It was at the anniversary of a National School,
+with the great M.P. in the chair, surrounded by the benevolent ladies and
+the select clergy of the district. The subject of examination was
+Christ’s entry into Jerusalem on an ass’s colt. ‘Why,’ said the
+M.P.—‘why did they strew rushes before the Saviour? can any of you
+children tell me?’ Profound silence. The M.P. repeated the question. A
+little ragamuffin held up his hand. The M.P. demanded silence as the apt
+scholar proceeded with his answer. ‘Why were the rushes strewed?’ said
+the M.P. in a condescending tone. I don’t know,’ replied the boy,
+‘unless it was to hull the dickey down.’
+
+Roars of laughter greeted the reply, as all the East Anglians present
+knew that ‘hull’ meant ‘throw,’ and ‘dickey’ is Suffolk for ‘donkey,’ but
+some of the Cockney visitors present were for a while quite unable to
+enjoy the joke.
+
+It is to be feared the three R’s were not much patronized in East Anglia,
+if it be true that some forty or fifty years ago, in such a respectable
+town as Sudbury, it was the fashion for some fifty of the leading
+inhabitants to meet in the large bar-parlour of the old White Horse to
+hear the leading paper of the eastern counties read out by a scholar and
+elocutionist known as John. For the discharge of this important duty he
+was paid a pound a year, and provided with as much free liquor as he
+liked, and there were people who considered that the Saturday
+newspaper-reading did them more good than what they heard at church the
+next day.
+
+In some cases our East Anglian dialect is merely a survival of old
+English, as when we say ‘axe’ for ‘ask.’ We find in Chaucer:
+
+ ‘It is but foly and wrong wenging
+ To axe so outrageous thing.’
+
+In his ‘Envious Man,’ Gowing made ‘axeth’ to rhyme with ‘taxeth.’ No
+word is more common in Suffolk than ‘fare’; a pony is a ‘hobby’; a thrush
+is a ‘mavis’; a chest is a ‘kist’; a shovel is a ‘skuppet’; a chaffinch
+is a ‘spink.’ If a man is upset in his mind, he tells us he is ‘wholly
+stammed,’ and the Suffolk ‘yow’ is at least as old as Chaucer, who wrote:
+
+ ‘What do you ye do there, quod she,
+ Come, and if it lyke yow
+ To daucen daunceth with us now.’
+
+An awkward lad is ‘ungain.’ A good deal may be written to show that our
+Suffolk dialect is the nearest of all provincial dialects to that of
+Chaucer and the Bible, and if anyone has the audacity to contradict me,
+why, then, in Suffolk phraseology, I can promise him—‘a good hiding.’
+
+I am old enough to remember how placid was the county, how stay-at-home
+were the people, what a sensation there was created when anyone went to
+London, or any stranger appeared in our midst. From afar we heard of
+railways; then we had a railway opened from London to Brentwood; then the
+railways spread all over the land, and there were farmers who did think
+that they had something to do with the potato disease. The change was
+not a pleasant one: the turnpikes were deserted; the inns were void of
+customers; no longer did the villagers hasten to see the coach change
+horses, and the bugle of the guard was heard no more. For a time the
+Eastern Counties Railway had a somewhat dolorous career. It was thought
+to be something to be thankful for when the traveller by it reached his
+journey’s end in decent time and without an accident. Now the change is
+marvellous. The Great Eastern Railway stands in the foremost rank of the
+lines terminating in London. It now runs roundly 20,000,000 of train
+miles in the course of a year. It carries a larger number of passengers
+than any other line. It carries the London working man twelve miles in
+and twelve miles out for twopence a day. It is the direct means of
+communication with all the North of Europe by its fine steamers from
+Harwich. It has yearly an increased number of season-ticket-holders. On
+a Whit Monday it gives 125,000 excursionists a happy day in the country
+or by the seaside. In 1891 the number of passengers carried was
+81,268,661, exclusive of season-ticket-holders. It is conspicuous now
+for its punctuality and freedom from accidents. It is, in short, a model
+of good management, and it also deserves credit for looking well after
+the interests of its employés, of whom there are some 25,000. It
+contributes to the Accident Fund, to the Provident Society, to the
+Superannuation Fund, and to the Pension Fund, to which the men also
+subscribe, in the most liberal manner, and besides has established a
+savings bank, which returns the men who place their money in it four per
+cent. It is a liberal master. It does its duty to its men, who deserve
+well of the public as of the Great Eastern Railway itself; but its main
+merit, after all, is that it has been the making of East Anglia.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+THE STRICKLANDS.
+
+
+Reydon Hall—The clergy—Pakefield—Social life in a village.
+
+As I write I have lying before me a little book called ‘Hugh Latimer; or,
+The School-boy’s Friendship,’ by Miss Strickland, author of the ‘Little
+Prisoner,’ ‘Charles Grant,’ ‘Prejudice and Principle,’ ‘The Little
+Quaker.’ It bears the imprint—‘London: Printed for A. R. Newman and Co.,
+Leadenhall Street.’ On a blank page inside I find the following: ‘James
+Ewing Ritchie, with his friend Susanna’s affectionate regards.’ Susanna
+was a sister of Miss Agnes Strickland, the authoress, and was as much a
+writer as herself. The Stricklands were a remarkable family, living
+about four or five miles from Wrentham, on the road leading from Wangford
+to Southwold, at an old-fashioned residence called Reydon Hall. They
+had, I fancy, seen better days, and were none the worse for that. The
+Stricklands came over with William the Conqueror. One of them was the
+first to land, and hence the name. A good deal of blue blood flowed in
+their veins. Kate—to my eyes the fairest of the lot—was named Katherine
+Parr, to denote that she was a descendant of one of the wives of the
+too-much-married Henry VIII., and in the old-fashioned drawing-room of
+Reydon Hall I heard not a little—they all talked at once—of what to me
+was strange and rare. Mr. Strickland had deceased some years, and the
+widow and the daughters kept up what little state they could; and I well
+remember the feeling of surprise with which I first entered their
+capacious drawing-room—a room the size of which it had never entered into
+my head to conceive of. It is to the credit of these Misses Strickland
+that they did not vegetate in that old house, but held a fair position in
+the world of letters. Miss Strickland herself chiefly resided in town.
+Agnes, the next, whose ‘Queens of England’ is still a standard book, was
+more frequently at home. The only one of the family who did not write
+was Sarah, who married one of the Radical Childses of Bungay, and who not
+till after the death of her husband became respectable and atoned for her
+sins by marrying a clergyman. Kate, as I have said, the fairest of the
+whole, married an officer in the army of the name of Traill, and went out
+to Canada, and wrote there a book called ‘The Backwoods of Canada,’ which
+was certainly one of the most popular of the four-and-sixpenny volumes
+published under the auspices of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful
+and Entertaining Knowledge. Our friend was Susanna, who wrote a volume
+of poems on Enthusiasm, and who seemed to me, with her dark eyes and
+hair, a very enthusiastic personage indeed. The reason of her friendship
+with our family was her deeply religious nature, which impelled her to
+leave the cold and careless service of the Church—not a little to the
+disgust of her aristocratic sisters, who, as of ancient lineage, not a
+little haughty, and rank Tories, had but little sympathy with Dissent..
+Susanna was much at our house, and when away scarcely a day passed on
+which she did not write some of us a letter or send us a book. Then
+there was a brother Tom, a midshipman—a wonderful being to my
+inexperienced eyes—who once or twice came to our house seated in the
+family donkey-chaise, which seemed to me, somehow or other, not to be an
+ordinary donkey-chaise, but something of a far superior character. I
+have pleasant recollections of them all, and of the annuals in which they
+all wrote, and a good many of which fell to my share. Like her sister,
+Susanna married an officer in the army—a Major Moodie—and emigrated to
+Canada, where the Stricklands have now a high position, where she had
+sons and daughters born to her, and wrote more than one novel which found
+acceptance in the English market. The Stricklands gave me quite a
+literary turn. When I was a small boy it was really an everyday
+occurrence for me to write a book or edit a newspaper, and with about as
+much success as is generally achieved by bookmakers and newspaper
+editors, whose merit is overlooked by an unthinking public. Let me say
+in the Stricklands I found an indulgent audience. On one occasion I
+remember reciting some verses of my own composition, commencing,
+
+‘I sing a song of ancient men,
+ Of warriors great and bold,
+Of Hercules, a famous man,
+ Who lived in times of old.
+He was a man of great renown,
+ A lion large he slew,
+And to his memory games were kept,
+ Which now I tell to you,’
+
+which they got me to repeat in their drawing-room, and which, though I
+say it that should not, evinced for a boy a fair acquaintance with
+‘Mangnall’s Questions’ and Pinnock’s abridgment of Goldsmith’s ‘History
+of Rome.’ Happily, at that time, Niebuhr was unknown, and sceptical
+criticism had not begun its deadly work. We had not to go far for truth
+then. It was quite unnecessary to seek it—at any rate, so it seemed to
+us—at the bottom of a well; there it was right underneath one’s
+nose—before one’s very eyes in the printed pages of the printed book.
+
+Agnes Strickland did all she could to confer reputation on her native
+county. The tall, dark, self-possessed lady from Reydon Hall was a lion
+everywhere. On one occasion she visited the House of Lords, just after
+she had written a violent letter against Lord Campbell, charging him with
+plagiarism. Campbell tells us he had a conversation with her, which
+speedily turned her into a friend. He adds: ‘I thought Brougham would
+have died with envy when I told him the result of my interview, and
+Ellenborough, who was sitting by, lifted his hands in admiration.
+Brougham had thrown me a note across the table, saying: “So you know your
+friend Miss Strickland has come to hear you.”’ Miss Strickland often
+visited Alison, the historian, at Possil House. He says of her that she
+had strong talents of a masculine rather than feminine
+character—indefatigable perseverance, and that ardour in whatever pursuit
+she engaged in without which no one could undergo similar fatigue. On
+one occasion she was descanting on the noble feeling of Queen Mary, ‘That
+may all be very true, Miss Strickland,’ replied the historian; ‘but
+unfortunately she had an awkward habit of burning people—she brought 239
+men, women, and children to the stake in a reign which did not extend
+beyond a few years!’ ‘Oh yes,’ was her reply, ‘it was terrible,
+dreadful, but it was the fault of the age—the temper of the times; Mary
+herself was everything that is noble and heroic.’ Such was her feminine
+tendency to hero-worship. Another tendency of a feminine character was
+her love of talking. ‘She did,’ instances Sir Archibald, ‘not even
+require an answer or a sign of mutual intelligence; it was enough if the
+one she was addressing simply remained passive. One day when I was laid
+up at Possil on my library sofa from a wound in the knee, she was kind
+enough to sit with me for two hours, and was really very entertaining,
+from the number of anecdotes she remembered of queens in the olden time.
+When she left the room she expressed herself kindly to Mrs. Alison as to
+the agreeable time she had spent, and the latter said to me on coming in,
+“What did you get to say to Miss Strickland all this time? She says you
+were so agreeable, and she was two hours here.” “Say!” I replied with
+truth; “I assure you I did not say six words to her the whole time.”’
+Agnes was a terrible one to talk—as, indeed, all the Stricklands were.
+In Suffolk such accomplished conversationalists were rare.
+
+It must have been, now I come to think of it, a dismal old house,
+suggestive of rats and dampness and mould, that Reydon Hall, with its
+scantily furnished rooms and its unused attics and its empty barns and
+stables, with a general air of decay all over the place, inside and out.
+It had a dark, heavy roof and whitewashed walls, and was externally
+anything but a showy place, standing, as it did, a little way from the
+road. It must have been a difficulty with the family to keep up the
+place, and the style of living was altogether plain; yet there I heard a
+good deal of literary life in London, of Thomas Pringle, the poet, and
+the Secretary of the Anti-Slavery Society, whose ‘Residence in South
+Africa’ is still one of the most interesting books on that quarter of the
+world, and of whom Josiah Conder, one of the great men of my smaller
+literary world at that time, wrote an appreciative biographical sketch.
+Mr. Pringle, let me remind my readers, was the original editor of
+_Blackwood’s Magazine_, a magazine which still maintains its reputation
+as being the best of its class. Mr. Pringle, I believe, at some time or
+other, had visited Wrentham; at any rate, the Stricklands, especially
+Susanna, were among his intimate friends, and, from what I heard, I could
+well believe, when, at a later period, I visited his grave in Bunhill
+Fields, what I found recorded there—that ‘In the walks of British
+literature he was known as a man of genius; in the domestic circle he was
+loved as an affectionate relative and faithful friend; in the wide sphere
+of humanity he was revered as the advocate and protector of the
+oppressed,’ who ‘left among the children of the African desert a memorial
+of his philanthropy, and bequeathed to his fellow-countrymen an example
+of enduring virtue.’ At the home of the Pringles the Stricklands made
+many literary acquaintances, such as Alaric Watts, and Mrs. S. C. Hall,
+and others of whom I heard them talk. At that time, however, literature
+was not, as far as women were concerned, the lucrative profession it has
+since become, and I have a dim remembrance of their paintings—for in this
+respect the Stricklands, like my own mother, were very accomplished—being
+sold at the Soho Bazaar, a practice which helped to maintain them in the
+respectability and comfort becoming their position in life. But in
+London they never forgot the old home, and wrote so much about it in
+their stories, that there was not a flower, or shrub, or tree, or hedge,
+or mossy bank redolent in early spring of primroses and violets, to which
+they had not given, to my boyish eyes, a glory and a charm. This
+reference to painting reminds me of a feature of my young days, not
+without interest, in connection with the name of Cunningham—a name at one
+time well known in the religious world.
+
+The reader must be reminded that the reverend gentleman referred to was a
+_rara avis_, and that between him and the neighbouring clergy there was
+little sympathy—unless the common rallying cry of ‘The Church in Danger!’
+was raised as an electioneering dodge. The clergyman at Wrentham at that
+time, who declared himself the appointed vessel of grace for the parish,
+I have been led to believe, since I have become older, was by no means a
+saint, and his brethren were notorious as evil-livers. Some twenty years
+ago one of them had his effects sold off, and his library was viewed with
+no little amusement by his parishioners, to many of whom, if popular fame
+be an authority, he was more than a spiritual father. The library
+contained only one book that could be called theological, and the title
+of that wonderfully unique volume was, ‘Die and be Damned; or, An End of
+the Methodists.’ All the other books were exclusively sporting, while
+the pictures were such as would have been a disgrace to Holywell Street.
+It was of him that the clerk said that ‘next Sunday there would be no
+Divine sarvice, as maaster was going to Newmarket.’ Once upon a time
+after a sermon one of his flock approached him, as he had been preaching
+on miracles, to ask him to explain what a miracle really was. The
+reverend gentleman gave his rustic inquirer a kick, adding, ‘Did you feel
+that?’
+
+‘Oh yes, sir; but what of that?’
+
+‘Why,’ said the reverend gentleman, ‘if you had not felt it, it would
+have been a miracle, that is all.’ Yet that man was as popular as any
+parson in the district, perhaps more so, and it was with some indignation
+in certain quarters that the people learned that a new Bishop had come to
+Norwich, and that the parson had been deprived of his living for immoral
+conduct. Of another it is said that, calling on a poor villager, dying
+and full of gloomy anticipations as to the future, all he could say was,
+‘Don’t be frightened; I dare say you will meet a good many people you
+know.’ I have often heard old men talk of the time when they used to
+take the parson home in a wheelbarrow—but that was before we had a
+Sunday-school, at which I was a regular teacher. The church had a
+Sunday-school, but not till after the one in the chapel had existed many
+years. Of these ornaments of the Church and foes of Dissent, some had
+apparently a sense of shame—one of them, at any rate, committed suicide.
+
+At Pakefield, some seven miles from Wrentham, and just on the borders of
+Lowestoft, then, as now, the most eastern extremity of England, resided
+the Rev. Francis Cunningham. He was a clergyman of piety and
+philanthropy, rare at that time in that benighted district, and in this
+respect he was aided by his wife, a little dark woman whom I well
+remember, a sister of the far-famed John Joseph Gurney, of Earlham. It
+is with pleasure I quote the following from the Journal of Caroline Fox:
+‘A charming story of F. Cunningham coming in to prayers just murmuring
+something about the study being on fire, and proceeding to read a long
+chapter and make equally long comments thereupon. When the reading was
+over, and the fact became public, he observed, “Yes, I saw it was a
+little on fire, but I opened the window on leaving the room.”’ Mr.
+Cunningham had much to do with establishing a branch of the British and
+Foreign Bible Society in Paris in connection with the Buxtons. In this
+way, but on a smaller scale, the Cunninghams were equally distinguished,
+and one of the things they had established at Pakefield was an infant
+school, to which I, in company with my parents—indeed, I may add, the
+whole family—was taken, in order, if possible, that our little village
+should possess a similar institution. But my principal pilgrimages to
+the Pakefield vicarage were in connection with some mission to aid
+Oberlin in his grand work amongst the mountains and valleys of
+Switzerland. It appeared Mr. and Mrs. Cunningham had visited the good
+man, and watched him in his career, and had come back to England to gain
+for him, if possible, sympathy and friends. Mrs. Cunningham had taken
+drawings of the principal objects of interest, which had been
+lithographed, and these lithographs my mother, who in her way was as
+great an enthusiast as Susanna Strickland herself, was very anxious to
+obtain; the financial position of the family, however, forbade any
+thought of purchase. But she had a wonderful gift of painting, and she
+painted while we children were learning the Latin grammar, or preparing
+our lessons in the Delectus, much to my terror, as I had a habit of
+restlessness which, by shaking the table, not only impaired her work, but
+drew down upon me not a little of reproach; and with these paintings I
+was despatched on foot to Pakefield, where, in return for them, I was
+given the famous lithographs, which were to be preserved for many a year
+in the spare room we called the parlour—drawing-rooms at that time in
+East Anglia were, I think, unknown. What a joy it was to us children
+when that parlour had its fire lit, and we found out that company was
+coming—partly, I must add, for sensual reasons. We knew that the best
+tea-things were to be used, that unusual delicacies were to be placed
+upon the table, and I must do my mother the justice to say that she could
+cook as well as she could paint; but for other and higher motives, and
+not as an occasion of feasting or for the disuse of the economical
+pinafore which was always worn to keep our clothes clean, did we rejoice
+when we found there was to be tea in the parlour. If young people were
+coming, we were sure to dissect puzzles, or play some game which combined
+amusement with instruction; and if the party consisted of seniors, as on
+the occasion of the Book Club—almost all Dissenting congregations had
+their Book Clubs then—it was a pleasure to listen to my father’s talk,
+who was a well-read man, and who, being a Scotchman, had inherited his
+full share of Scotch wit, which, however, was enlivened with quotations
+from ‘Hudibras,’ the only poet, alas! in whom he seemed to take any
+particular interest. There, in the parlour, were the fraternal meetings
+attended by all the neighbouring Independent ministers, all clad in sober
+black, and whose wildest exploits in rollicking debauchery were confined
+to a pipe and a glass of home-made wine. Madeira, port and sherry were
+unknown in ministers’ houses, though now and then one got a taste of them
+at the houses of men better to do, and who, perhaps, had been as far as
+London once or twice in their lives. Of these neighbouring ministers,
+one of the most celebrated at that time was the Rev. Edward Walford, then
+of Yarmouth, who afterwards became tutor of Homerton College, and who,
+after the death of a favourite and accomplished daughter—I can still
+remember the gracefulness of her person—sank into a state of profound
+melancholy, which led him to shut himself from his friends, to give up
+all public preaching and tutorial work, and to consider himself as
+hopelessly lost. It is a curious fact that he dated his return to reason
+and happiness and usefulness after a visit paid him by my father, who
+happened to be in town, and who naturally was drawn to see his afflicted
+friend, with whom, in the days of auld lang syne, he had smoked many a
+pipe and held many an argument respecting Edwards on Freedom of the Will,
+and his favourite McKnight. Mrs. Walford, who was aware of my father’s
+intended visit, had thoughtfully prepared pipes and tobacco, and placed
+them on the table of the room where the interview was to take place. My
+father went and smoked his pipe and talked as usual, poor Mr. Walford
+sitting sad and dejected, and refusing to be comforted all the while.
+When my father had left—owing, I suppose, to the force of old
+associations—actually the poor man approached the table, took up a pipe,
+filled it with tobacco, and smoked it. From that hour, strange to say,
+he recovered, wrote a translation of the Psalms, became a trustee of
+Coward’s College, and took charge of a church at Uxbridge. This is ‘a
+fac,’ as Artemus Ward would say, and ‘facs’ are stubborn things. Of this
+Mr. Walford, the well-known publisher of that name in St. Paul’s
+Churchyard was a son, and the firm of Hodder and Stoughton may be said to
+carry on his business, though on a larger scale.
+
+Dressed in rusty black, with hats considerably the worse for wear, with
+shoes not ignorant of the cobbler’s art, unconscious of and careless for
+the fashions of the world, rarely in London, except on the occasion of
+the May Meetings—no one can tell, except those who, like myself, were
+admitted behind the scenes, as it were, how these good men lived to keep
+alive the traditions of freedom, civil and religious, in districts most
+under the sway of the ignorant squire and the equally ignorant parson of
+the parish. If there has been a decency and charm about our country life
+it is due to them, and them alone. Perhaps, more in the country than in
+the crowded city is the pernicious influence felt of sons of Belial,
+flushed with insolence and wine. It is difficult to give the reader an
+idea of the utter animalism, if I may so term it, of rural life some
+fifty years ago. For small wages these Dissenting ministers did a noble
+work, in the way of preserving morals, extending education, promoting
+religion, and elevating the aim and tone of |the little community in
+which they lived, and moved, and had their being. At home the
+difficulties of such of them as had large families were immense. The
+pocket was light, and too often there was but little in the larder. But
+they laboured on through good and bad report, and now they have their
+reward. Perhaps one of their failings was that they kept too much the
+latter end in view, and were too indifferent to present needs and
+requirements. They did not try to make the best of both worlds. I can
+never forget a remark addressed to me by all the good men of the class
+with whom I was familiar in my childhood as to the need of getting on in
+life and earning an honest penny, and becoming independent in a pecuniary
+point of view. I was to be a good boy, to love the Lord, to study the
+Assembly’s Catechism, to read the Bible, as if outside the village there
+was no struggle into which sooner or later I should have to plunge—no
+hard battle with the world to fight, no temporal victory to win.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+LOWESTOFT.
+
+
+Yarmouth bloaters—George Borrow—The town fifty years ago—The
+distinguished natives.
+
+‘I’m a-thinking you’ll be wanting half a pint of beer by this time, won’t
+you?’
+
+Such were the first words I heard as I left the hotel where I was a
+temporary sojourner about nine o’clock. Of course I turned to look at
+the speaker. He wore an oilskin cap, with a great flap hanging over the
+back of the neck; his oilskin middle was encased in a thick blue
+guernsey; his trousers were hidden in heavy jack-boots, which came up
+above his knees; his face was red, and his body was almost as round as
+that of a porpoise. When I add that the party addressed was similarly
+adorned and was of a similar build, the reader will guess at once that I
+was amongst a seafaring community, and let me add that this supposition
+is correct. I was, in fact, at Lowestoft, and Lowestoft just now is,
+with Yarmouth, the headquarters of the herring fishery. The truth is, as
+the poet tells us, ‘Things are not what they seem,’ and that many of the
+Yarmouth bloaters which we are in the habit of indulging in at breakfast
+in reality come from Lowestoft.
+
+It is worth going from London at the season of the year when the finest
+bloaters are being caught, to realize the peril and the enterprise and
+the industry connected with the herring trade, which employs some five
+hundred boats, manned by seven to twelve men, who work the business on
+the cooperative system, which, when the season is a good one, gives a
+handsome remuneration to all concerned, and which drains the country of
+young men for miles around. Each boat is furnished with some score of
+nets, and each net extends more than thirty-two yards. The boat puts off
+according to the tide, and if it gets a good haul, at once returns to the
+harbour with its freight; if the catch is indifferent, the boat stays
+out; the fish are salted as they are caught, and then the boat, generally
+at a distance of about twenty miles from the shore, waits till a
+sufficient number have been caught to complete the cargo. When that is
+the case, the boat at once makes for Lowestoft, and the fish are unloaded
+under a shed in heaps of about half a last (a last is professedly 10,000
+herrings, but really much more). At nine a bell rings and the various
+auctioneers commence operations. A crowd is formed, and in a very few
+minutes a lot is sold off to traders who are well known, and who pay at
+the end of the week. The auctioneer then proceeds to the next group,
+which is disposed of in a similar way. Other auctioneers in various
+parts of the enormous shed erected for their accommodation do the same,
+and then, as more boats arrive, other cargoes are sold, the sailors
+bringing a hundred as a sample from the boat. And thus all day long the
+work of selling goes on, and as soon as a lot are sold they are packed up
+with ice, if fresh, or with more salt, if already salted, and despatched
+by train to various quarters of England, where, it is to be presumed,
+they meet with a speedy and immediate sale. In this way as many as one
+hundred and ninety-eight trucks are sometimes sent off in a single day.
+But in London we are familiar with the kipper, the red herring, and the
+Yarmouth bloater, and to see how they are prepared for consumption I
+leave the market—always wet and fishy and slippery—and make my way to the
+extensive premises on the beach belonging to Mr. Thomas Brown—the only
+Brown whose name is familiar to the fish-dealer in every market in
+England, and the extent of whose business may be best realized by the
+reader when I state that Mr. Brown sends off from his factory as many as
+forty lasts a week.
+
+An intelligent foreman, after I have evaded the attack of a formidable
+dog which keeps watch and ward over the premises, explains to me the
+mystery of the trade. I find myself in the midst of a square. On one
+side are a great stack of oak and many casks of old salt. The latter, I
+gather, is sold to be used as manure. The former is applied to the fire,
+which gently smokes the Yarmouth bloater. On one side, the herrings, as
+they are received, are pickled—that is, first washed in fresh water, and
+then immersed in great tubs in which the water is mixed with salt. The
+next thing is to take them into a room in which several women are engaged
+in spitting them—that is, hanging them on rods—and then they are carried
+to the apartment where they are hung up, while oak logs are burnt
+beneath. In twelve hours they are sufficiently smoked, and then you have
+the real Yarmouth bloater. I am glad I have seen the process, as I have
+a horrible suspicion that the costermonger manufactures many a Yarmouth
+bloater in some filthy Whitechapel slum, the odour of which by no means
+tends to improve the flavour of so delicate a fish.
+
+But we have to discuss the red-herring, not of the artful politician,
+anxious to dodge his hearers, but of the breakfast-table. For this
+purpose I am taken to a large oven filled with oak sawdust, gathered from
+Ipswich, and oak shavings, which are also brought from a distance,
+principally from Bass’s Brewery, and, indeed, from all the great works
+where oak is used; I see heaps of fire made from these ashes, which give
+out much heat, and at the same time much smoke. In a loft above are hung
+the herrings, and there they hang twelve days, till they gradually become
+of the colour of a guinea, when they are packed up and sent away in
+casks, while the bloaters go away in baskets of a hundred, in pots
+holding a smaller number, and in barrels in which as many as three
+hundred are stowed away. As to the kippered herring, he undergoes quite
+a different treatment. Some twenty or thirty women get hold of him, cut
+him open, take out his gut and wash him, and then he is hung over an oak
+fire and smoked for twelve hours, and thus, saturated with smoke inside
+and out, is regarded in many circles as a delicacy to be highly prized.
+But he must be got off the premises. Well, if we climb to a loft, we
+shall see a good many young women hard at work stripping the rods, on
+which he and his fellows have been suspended, and stowing the fish away.
+In the autumn especially the peculiar industries connected with the trade
+are very considerably exercised. All day long carts come in with the
+fish; all day long carts go out with the manufactured articles to the
+railway-station; day and night the men and women are at work; in one
+quarter the women make and mend the nets, which are then boiled in cutch
+and put on board the boats; in another quarter coopers are at work making
+boxes and casks and barrels. As to the baskets, the country is ransacked
+for them, and as soon as they are filled they take the train and away
+they go, to give a flavour to the potato dinner of the poor man, or to
+form a tasty adjunct to the dishes under which the breakfast table of his
+lord and master groans. In London we get the best—the smaller herrings
+go to the North, as the dwellers in those parts will not pay the price
+the Londoner does. Great is the joy and rejoicing, as well can be
+imagined, at Lowestoft when the herring season comes on. It is true, the
+Lowestoft fishers do not have it all to themselves. Yarmouth is a fierce
+rival in the race, and, as it has now superior accommodation, many a boat
+makes for that far-famed port. Then, the Scotch, when they have done
+their fishing, make for the English coast, and manage, as Scotchmen ever
+do, to gather a fair share of the spoil. As to the foreigners, they are
+not such formidable rivals as sometimes we are apt to believe. The
+Frenchman or the Dutchman comes, but that is when he is blown off by a
+gale from his own happy hunting-ground, and then we know, all the world
+over, the cry is, ‘Any port in a storm.’
+
+Oh, these storms! how terrible they are! and how little, as we eat our
+Yarmouth bloater of a morning, or spread the bloater-paste as a covering
+to the thin slice of bread-and-butter, to tempt the languid appetite—how
+little do we who sit at home at ease realize their fury and their power!
+As I now write, twenty-one orphans are bewailing the loss of fathers who
+went out in a craft during the last gale, and of whom no sign has been
+seen, nor ever will. Hour by hour the women, weeping and watching on the
+sandy shore, saw one and another familiar boat come, more or less
+buffeted, into port. On more than one a hand had been washed away, but
+the craft and the rest of the crew were saved somehow. But one boat yet
+remained missing, and in vain the survivors were questioned as to what
+had become of the _Skimmer of the Sea_. Day by day anxious eyes swept
+the distant horizon. Day by day a sadder weight came down on weeping
+child and broken-hearted wife; and now all hope is gone, and all felt
+that in the fury of the gale the _Skimmer of the Sea_ foundered with all
+her hands. Well, as the good old Admiral said, as he and his men were
+about to perish, ‘My lads, the way to heaven is as short by sea as by
+land.’ But the wounded heart in the agony of its grief is slow to
+realize that fact. Sailors ought to be serious men; every halfpenny they
+earn is won at the risk of a life. In Lowestoft, I am glad to find, many
+of them are. ‘The Salvation Army has done ’em a deal of good,’ says a
+decent woman, with whom I happened to scrape an acquaintance at the most
+attractive coffee-house I have ever seen—the Coffee Pot at Mutford
+Bridge. ‘Not that I holds with the Salvation Army myself, sir, but
+they’ve done the men a deal of good, and they don’t spend their wages, as
+they used to do, in drink.’
+
+Lowestoft, when I was there last, had just lost one of its heroes—I mean
+the late Mr. George Borrow—whose ‘Bible in Spain’ was the talk of the
+season in religious and worldly circles alike, and whose writings on
+Gipsies and Wild Wales and the ‘Bible in Spain’ achieved at one time an
+enormous popularity. He lived—I can still remember his tall form—on a
+bank a couple of miles out of Lowestoft, sloping down to a large piece of
+water known in those parts as Oulton Broad. The tourist, if he looks to
+his right just after he has passed Mutford Bridge on the rail from
+Lowestoft to Beccles, across the wide sheet of water, which, as I saw it
+last, lay calm and blue in the fading glory of an autumnal sun, will
+perhaps see a white house at a distance, nestled in among the
+fir-trees—that was where George Borrow lived, and where he died, though
+he was buried in Brompton Cemetery by the side of his wife. You cannot
+make a mistake, for houses are rare in those parts. As his step-daughter
+observed to me, the proper way is by water; to get to the house by
+land—at least as I did—you walk along the rail for a couple of miles,
+then break off across a bit of a swamp, to a little lane that conducts
+you to Oulton Church—a very ancient one, which, however, is in a state of
+good repair and is noted partly on account of the fact that the steeple
+is built in the middle, and partly on account of its containing, so it is
+said, the earliest example of a brass to an ecclesiastic which is to be
+found in England. A narrow path from the church leads you to Oulton
+Hall, which came into the possession of Borrow by marriage, really a very
+plain, red-brick, capacious, comfortable-looking old farmhouse, only of a
+superior class. Keeping the Hall to the right, you reach a gate, which
+opens into a very narrow lane, full of mud in the winter and dust in the
+summer. The lane loses itself in the marshland, on the borders of Lake
+Lothing—a name supposed to have been derived from a certain Danish
+prince, murdered on the spot by a jealous Court retainer; and it is a
+fitting place for a murder, as in that lonely district there was no eye
+to pity, no ear to hear, no hand to save. Even to-day, as you look away
+from the train, there is little sign of life, save the sail of a distant
+wherry as it makes sluggishly for Norwich or Beccles, as it goes either
+into the Waveney or the Yare; or the gray wing of the heron as it flies
+heavily along the marsh; and that is all. Far away, perhaps, rises a
+ridge, with a house on it; or a steeple, with a few trees struggling to
+yield the barren spot a shelter from the suns of summer or the howling
+winds of winter; but all is still life there, and the habitations of men
+are few and far between. In the particular lane to which I have
+introduced the reader—there are but two—there is a little cottage on your
+left, and beyond, under a group of trees, mostly fir, which almost hide
+it from view, a home of a rather superior character, in a very
+dilapidated condition, with everything around it more or less untidy—that
+was where George Borrow lived and worked in his way for many a long day.
+The step-daughter and her husband reside there now—very ancient people,
+who are to be seen driving about Lowestoft in a little wicker car, drawn
+by an amiable and active donkey, an aged dog guarding the cottage during
+their temporary absence. The female, an ancient one, who did for the
+house, lives in the little cottage which the tourist will have already
+observed, and the interior of which presented, when I peeped in, a far
+greater idea of comfort than did Oulton Cottage, the residence of the
+late George Borrow. The picture one gets is rather a melancholy one.
+‘He was a funny-tempered man’—that seems to have been the idea of the few
+people around. Latterly he kept no company, and no one came to see him.
+All who did call on him, however, tell me that he was well dressed, but
+that all the interior of the house was dirty. Well, that was to be
+expected of a man who loved to live with the gipsies, and patter to them
+in Romany of Egyptian lore, for it could not have been want of means.
+Borrow must have made a good deal of money by his books, and I have heard
+his landed property estimated at five hundred per year. The house looked
+like the residence of a miser who would not lay out a penny in keeping up
+appearances or in repairs. It must be remembered, however, that the
+grand old man had long become bowed with age; that for some years before
+his death he was scarcely able to move himself without help; that the
+grasshopper, as it were, had become a burden. In summer time such a
+residence, in good repair and well furnished, would be perfectly
+charming. The house contains a sitting-room on each side of the
+entrance-hall. Behind is the kitchen, and above are four bedrooms and
+two attics—none of them large, I own, but at any rate capable of being
+made very cosy. On your right, in a little niche in the cliff, is a
+small stable. Lower down is a large summer-house, then full of books
+(amongst them, I believe, there were a hundred lexicons), where their
+learned proprietor loved to write. Farther down the lawn you come to the
+lake, where Borrow could enjoy his morning bath without fear of being
+disturbed, and where any amount of fish can be got. Just previous to my
+last visit to the spot a pike of more than twenty pounds’ weight—I am
+afraid to say how many pounds more, lest the reader should think I was
+exaggerating—had been caught. For a real angler or sportsman such a
+house as that in which George Borrow spent the latter years of his long
+life must have been a perfect paradise. The world is utterly away from
+you, and, what is better still, in such a spot the world has no chance of
+finding you out. Approaching by road, you see no sign of the house till
+you are in it, so completely is it hidden in the nook of trees in which
+it stands. Only to the water is it open. It would be really beautiful
+to live there in the summer, and have a gondola to row into Beccles or
+Lowestoft or Bungay when you wanted to be gay.
+
+One good anecdote I heard of George Borrow the last time I was in the
+neighbourhood, which is worth repeating. My informant was an Independent
+minister, at that time supplying the pulpit at Lowestoft, and staying at
+Oulton Hall, then inhabited by a worthy Dissenting tenant. One night a
+meeting of the Bible Society was held at Mutford Bridge, at which the
+party from the Hall attended, and where George Borrow was one of the
+speakers. After the meeting was over, all the speakers went back to
+supper at Oulton Hall, and my friend among them, who, in the course of
+the supper, found himself attacked very violently by the clergyman for
+holding Calvinistic opinions. Naturally my friend replied that the
+clergyman was bound to do the same. ‘How do you make that out?’ ‘Why,
+the Articles of your Church are Calvinistic, and to them you have sworn
+assent.’ ‘Oh yes, but there is a way of explaining them away.’ ‘How
+so?’ said my friend. ‘Oh,’ replied the clergyman, ‘we are not bound to
+take the words in their natural sense.’ My friend, an honest, blunt East
+Anglian, intimated that he did not understand that way of evading the
+difficulty; but he was then a young man, and did not like to continue the
+discussion further. However, George Borrow, who had not said a word
+hitherto, entered into the discussion, opening fire on the clergyman in a
+very unexpected manner, and giving him such a setting down as the
+hearers, at any rate, never forgot. All the sophistry about the
+non-natural meaning of terms was held up by Borrow to ridicule, even
+contempt; and the clergyman was beaten at every point. ‘Never,’ says my
+friend, ‘did I hear one man give another such a dressing as on that
+occasion.’ It was not always, however, that Borrow thus shone. In the
+neighbourhood of Bungay lived a gentleman much given to collect around
+him men of literary taste and culture. A lecture was to be given in the
+neighbourhood, and all the men of light and leading around were invited.
+George Borrow was one of the earliest arrivals, and seated himself before
+the fire with a book in his hand, over which he nodded superciliously, as
+the host brought up all his guests in succession to be introduced to the
+lion of the town. At dinner which followed, which was rather a jovial
+one, and at which the bottle went round freely, so loud and general was
+the conversation that my friend, a clever lawyer, with remarkably good
+ears, was quite unable to catch a sentence from the great author’s lips.
+Perhaps Borrow really did say nothing, or next to nothing. It is quite
+as likely that he did as not, as I have already informed the reader that
+‘he was a funny-tempered man.’
+
+‘Catherine Gurney,’ writes Caroline Fox, ‘gave us a note to George
+Borrow, so on him we called—a tall, ungainly man, with great physical
+strength, quick, penetrating eye, a confident manner, and a disagreeable
+tone and pronunciation.’ We gather from the same lady that it was Joseph
+John Gurney who recommended George Borrow to the Committee of the Bible
+Society. ‘So he stalked up to London, and they gave him a hymn to
+translate into the Manchow language, and the same to one of their people
+to translate also. When compared they proved to be very different. When
+put before their reader, he had the candour to say that Borrow’s was much
+the better of the two. On this they sent him to Petersburg to get it
+printed, and then gave him business in Portugal.’
+
+One thing is clear—that Borrow was a lonely man, and evidently one who
+did not hold the resources of civilization in such esteem as Mr.
+Gladstone does. He loved Nature and her ways, and people like the
+gipsies, who are supposed to be of a similar way of thinking. He
+eschewed the hum of cities and the roar of the ‘madding crowd.’ He was
+big in body and in mind, and wanted elbow-room; and yet what would he
+have been if he had not lived in a city, and come under the stimulative
+influence of such men as Edward Taylor, of Norwich? It is idle to
+complain of cities, however they sully the air, and deface the land, and
+pollute the water, and rear the weak and vicious and the wicked—to remind
+us how low and depraved human nature can become when it is cut off from
+communion with Nature and Nature’s God. Borrow owed much to cities, and
+was best appreciated by the men who dwelt in them. There is often a good
+deal of affectation about the love of rural solitude, nor does it often
+last long when there is a wife to have a voice in the matter. Yet in
+Borrow undoubtedly the feeling was sincere, and of him Wordsworth might
+have written—
+
+ ‘As in the eye of Nature he has lived,
+ So in the eye of Nature let him die.’
+
+Lowestoft was a frequent attraction for a youthful ramble—perhaps almost
+too far, unless one could manage to get a lift in a little yellow-painted
+black-bodied vehicle called a whisky, which was grandfather’s property,
+and into the shafts of which could be put any spare quadruped, whether
+donkey, or mule, or pony, it mattered little, and which afforded a
+considerable relief when a trip as far as Lowestoft was determined on.
+At that time there was no harbour, and the town consisted simply of one
+High Street, gradually rising towards the north, with a fine space for
+boys to play in between the cliff and the sea, called the denes. I can
+well remember being taken to view the works of the harbour before the
+water was let in, and not a little astonished at what then was to me a
+new world of engineering science and skill. In the High Street there was
+a little old-fashioned and by no means flourishing Independent Chapel,
+where at one time the preacher was the Rev. Mr. Maurice, the father of
+the Mr. Maurice to whom many owe a great awakening of spiritual life, and
+whose memory they still regard as that of a beloved and honoured teacher.
+Mr. Maurice was a Unitarian, I believe, and, when he retired, handed over
+the chapel to my father with the remark that it was no use his preaching
+there any longer. The preacher in my time was the Rev. George Steffe
+Crisp, a kindly, timid, tearful man, always in difficulties with his
+people, and who often resorted to Wrentham for advice. Latterly he
+retired from the ministry, and kept a shop and school. In this capacity
+one day my old friend John Childs, of Bungay, the far-famed printer—of
+whom I shall have much to say anon—called on him, when the following
+dialogue took place: ‘Good-morning, Mr. Crisp.’ ‘Good-morning, Mr.
+Childs.’ ‘Well, how are you getting on?’ ‘Oh, very well; but there is
+one thing that troubles me much.’ ‘What is that?’ ‘That I am getting
+deaf, and can’t hear my minister.’ ‘Oh,’ was the cynical reply, ‘you
+ought to be thankful for your privileges.’
+
+Lowestoft is reported to have been a fishing station as early as the time
+of the Romans; but the ancient town is supposed to have been long
+engulfed by the resistless sea, for there was to be seen till the 25th of
+Henry VIII. the remains of an old house upon an inundated spot—left dry
+at low water about four furlongs east of the present beach. The town has
+been the birthplace of many distinguished men—of Sir Thomas Allen, for
+instance, who was steadily attached to the Royal cause, and who after the
+Restoration rose high in command, and won many a victory over the Dutch
+and the Algerines; of Sir Andrew Leake, who fell in the attack on
+Gibraltar; of Rear-Admiral Richard Utbar, also a renowned fighter when
+England and Holland were at war. To the same town also belong Admiral
+Sir John Ashby, who died in 1693, and his nephew Vice-Admiral James
+Mighells. Nor must we fail to do justice to Thomas Nash, a facetious
+writer of considerable reputation in the latter part of the sixteenth
+century. The most witty of his productions is a satirical pamphlet in
+praise of red herrings, intended as a joke upon the great staple of
+Yarmouth, and the pretensions of that place to superiority over
+Lowestoft. It must be confessed that Nash is chiefly famous as a caustic
+pamphleteer and an unscrupulous satirist. For illustration we may point
+to his battle with Gabriel Harvey, the friend of Edmund Spenser, who
+desired that he might be epitaphed the inventor of the not yet
+naturalized English hexameter; and his other battle with Martin Mar
+Prelate, or the writer or writers who passed under that name, and who
+have acquired a reputation to which poor Nash can lay no claim. His one
+conspicuous dramatic effort is ‘Summer’s Last Will and Testament.’ Nash
+wrote for bare existence—to use his own words, ‘contending with the cold,
+and conversing with scarcity.’ Nash lived in an unpropitious age. A
+recent French writer has placed him in the foremost rank of English
+writers. Dr. Jusserand, the author referred to, in his accounts of the
+English novel in the time of Shakespeare, tells us Nash was the most
+successful exponent in England of the picturesque novel. The picturesque
+novel is the forerunner of the realistic novel of modern times. It
+portrays the life and fortunes of the picaro—the adventurer who tries all
+roads to fortune. Spanish in its origin, it developed into a school in
+which Defoe and Thackeray distinguished themselves. ‘Nash,’ writes the
+French author, ‘mingled serious scenes with his comedy, in order that his
+romances might more nearly resemble real life.’ In fact (he writes),
+‘Nash does not only possess the merit of learning how to observe the
+ridiculous side of human nature, and of portraying in a full light
+picturesque figures—now worthy of Teniers and now of Callot—some fat and
+greasy, others lean and lank; he possesses a thing very rare with the
+picturesque school, the faculty of being moved. He seems to have
+foreseen the immense field of study which was to be opened later to the
+novelist. A distant ancestor of Fielding, as Lilly and Sidney appear to
+us to be distant ancestors of Richardson, he understands that a picture
+of active life, reproducing only in the Spanish fashion scenes of comedy,
+is incomplete and departs from reality. The greatest jesters, the most
+arrogant, the most venturesome, have their days of anguish. No hero has
+ever yet remained imprisoned from the cradle to the grave, and no one has
+been able to live an irresponsible spectator, and not feel his heart
+sometimes beat the quicker, nor bow his head unmoved. Nash caught a
+glimpse of this.’ As an illustration, Dr. Jusserand points to his ‘Jack
+Wilton’—‘The best specimen of the picturesque tale in English literature
+anterior to Defoe.’ In Lowestoft they ought to keep his memory green.
+
+The writer well remembers the day when Mr., afterwards Sir, Morton Peto,
+assembled the inhabitants of Lowestoft in the then dilapidated Town Hall,
+and promised that if they would sell their ruined harbour works, and back
+him in making a railway, their mackerel and herrings should be delivered
+almost alive in Manchester, Liverpool, and London. The inhabitants
+believed in the power of the enchanter, and Lowestoft is metamorphosed.
+The old town remains upon its beautiful eminence, and memory clings to
+the cliffs and to the denes, tenanted only, the one by wild rabbits, the
+other by the merry children and the nets of the fishermen. But a new
+town has grown up around the harbour—a grand hotel, excellent
+lodging-houses, a new church; a great population have upset the romance,
+and borne witness to the spirit of enterprise which characterizes this
+generation. The new town has spread to Kirkley, has Londonized even
+quiet Pakefield, and awakened a sleeping neighbourhood to what men call
+life.
+
+At Lowestoft commence what are known to sailors as the Yarmouth Roads—a
+grand stretch of sea protected by the sands, where an armada might anchor
+secure; and it was a sight not to be seen now, when gigantic steamers do
+all the business of the sea, to watch the hundreds of ships that would
+come inside the Roads at certain seasons of the year. There, in the
+winter-time—that is, from Lowestoft to Covehithe—I have seen the beach
+strewed with wrecks, chiefly of rotten colliers, or ships in the corn
+trade; but inside ‘Lowestoft Roads,’ to which they were guided by a
+lighthouse on the cliff, they were supposed to be secure. Lowestoft at
+that time, with its charming sands, was little known to the gay world,
+and depended far more on the fishing than the bathing season. The former
+was a busy time, and kept all the country round in a state of excitement.
+Many were the men, for instance, who, even as far off as Wrentham, went
+herring or mackerel fishing in the big craft, which, drawn up on the
+beach when the season was over, seemed to me ships such as never had been
+seen by the mariners of Tyre and Sidon; but the chief interest to me were
+the vans in which the fish were carried from Lowestoft to London—light
+spring-carts with four wheels and two horses, that, after changing horses
+at our Spread Eagle, raced like lightning along the turnpike-road, at all
+hours, and even on Sundays—a sad grievance to the godly—beating the
+Yarmouth mail.
+
+Now and then, even at that remote period, when railways were not, and
+when Lowestoft was no port, nothing but a fishing-station, distinguished
+people came to Lowestoft, attracted by its bracing air and exceptional
+bathing attractions. I can in this way recollect Sir Edward Parry and M.
+Guizot. But there were other personages equally distinguished. One of
+these was Mrs. Siddons, with whom an old Dissenting minister—the Rev. S.
+Sloper, of Beccles, whom I can well remember—contracted quite an
+intimacy. She had already passed the zenith of her celebrity.
+‘Providence,’ writes my friend, Mr. Wilton Rix, of Beccles, in his ‘East
+Anglian Nonconformity,’ published as far back as 1851, ‘had repeatedly
+and recently called her to tread in domestic life the path of sorrow, and
+her religious advantages, however few, had taught her that
+
+ ‘“That path alone
+ Leads to the land where sorrow is unknown.”
+
+‘“Sweet, sometimes,” said she, “are the uses of adversity. It not only
+strengthens family affection, but it teaches us all to walk humbly with
+God.” It is not surprising that she was disposed to cultivate the
+society of those who could blend piety with cheerfulness, and with whom
+she might be on friendly terms without ceremony. Such acquaintances she
+found in Mr. Sloper’s family. Mrs. Siddons, with unassuming kindness,
+contributed to their amusement by specimens of her powerful reading. She
+joined willingly in the worship of the family, and maintained the same
+invaluable practice at her own lodgings.’ Mr. Rix continues: ‘Just at
+that time Mr. Sloper was requested to preach to his own people on an
+affecting and mournful occasion, the death of a suicide. Though he
+keenly felt the delicacy and difficulty of the task, a sense of duty and
+a possibility of usefulness overcame his scruples. He selected for his
+text the impressive sentiment of the Apostle, “The sorrow of the world
+worketh death.” Mrs. Siddons was one of his auditors. She, who had been
+the honoured guest of Royalty, who had been enthroned as the Tragic Muse,
+and whose voice had charmed applauding multitudes, was seen in the humble
+Dissenting meeting-house at Beccles shedding abundant and unaffected
+tears at the plain and faithful exhibition of religious truth. Mr.
+Sloper’s preaching was as powerfully recommended to her by the delightful
+illustration of Christian principles exhibited in his private character,
+as by the intrinsic importance of those principles, and the simple
+gravity and penetrating earnestness with which they were announced from
+his lips. He afterwards procured for her, at her request, a copy of
+Scott’s admirable “Commentary on the Bible,” which he accompanied with a
+letter, warmly urging upon her attention the great realities her
+profession had so manifest a tendency to exclude from her contemplations.
+Mrs. Siddons,’ again I quote Mr. Rix, ‘more than once expressed her
+gratitude for the interest Mr. Sloper had evinced in her eternal welfare;
+she thanked him in writing for the advice he had given her, adding an
+emphatic wish that God might enable her to follow it—a wish which her
+pious and amiable correspondent echoed with all the fervour of his heart.
+She returned into the glare of popularity, but a hope may easily be
+indulged that the pressure of subsequent relative afflictions and of old
+age were not permitted to come upon her unaccompanied by the impressions
+and consolations of true religion. Her elegant biographer, Mr. Campbell,
+draws a veil over the state of her mind during her last hours, which it
+would be deeply interesting to penetrate. Would she not then, if reason
+were undimmed, reflect upon the faithful counsel she received with
+Scott’s Bible as being of infinitely greater value than the applause of
+myriads or the fame of ages?’
+
+Beccles, where this good Mr. Sloper lived, and where the writer of this
+extract was a respectable solicitor—I believe the firm of Rix and Son
+still exists—was a small market town about eight miles from Wrentham,
+inland. At that time it ranked as the third town in Suffolk. Towards
+the west it is skirted by a cliff, once washed by the estuary which
+separated the eastern portions of Norfolk and Suffolk. There is every
+reason to believe that ages back the mouth of the Yare was an estuary or
+arm of the sea, and extended with considerable magnitude for many miles
+up the country. The herring fishery was thus a principal source of
+emolument to the inhabitants, and in the time of the Conqueror the fee
+farm rent of the manor of Beccles to the King was 60,000 herrings, and in
+the time of the Confessor 20,000. About 956 the manor and advowson of
+Beccles were granted by King Edwy to the monks of Bury, and remained in
+their possession until the dissolution of the religious houses under
+Henry VIII.
+
+As I have said, and as I repeat, in these languid days—when the old
+creeds have lost their power and the old bottles are bursting with new
+wine—the glory of East Anglia was that it was the first to stand up in
+the face of priest or king for the truth—or what it held to be such.
+Amongst the early martyrs under Mary were three burnt at Beccles—Thomas
+Spicer, of Winston, labourer, John Deny, and Edmond Poole. This was in
+the year 1556. Their crime in the indictment, drawn up by Dr. Hopton,
+Bishop of Norwich, and his Chancellor, Dunning, according to Fox, was:
+
+‘1. First was articulate against them that they belieued not the Pope of
+Rome to bee supreame head immediately in Christ on earth of the
+Universall Catholike Church.
+
+‘2. That they belieued not holie bread and holie water, ashes, palmes,
+and all other like ceremonies used in the Church to bee good and laudable
+for stirring up the people to devotion.
+
+‘3. Item that they belieued not afterwards of consecration spoken by the
+priest, the very naturall body of Christ, and no other substance of bread
+and wine to bee in the Sacrament of the altar.
+
+‘4. Item that they belieued it to bee idolatry to worship Christ in the
+Sacrament of the altar.
+
+‘5. Item that they tooke bread and wine in remembrance of Christ’s
+Passion.
+
+‘6. Item that they would not followe the crosse in procession nor bee
+confessed to a priest.
+
+‘7. Item that they affirmed no mortal man to have in himself free will
+to do good or evill.’
+
+It appears that the writ had not come down, nevertheless these brave men
+were burnt at the stake. ‘When they came,’ continues Fox, ‘to the
+reciting of the creed, Sir John Silliard spake to them, “That is well
+said, sirs. I am glad to heare you saie you do belieue the Catholike
+Church; that is the best word I heard of you yet.”
+
+‘To which his sayings Edmond Poole answered, “Though they belieue the
+Catholike Church, yet do they not belieue in their Popish Church, which
+is no part of Christ’s Catholike Church, and, therefore, no part of their
+beliefe.”
+
+‘When they rose from praier they all went joyfullie to the stake, and,
+being bound thereto, and the fire burning about them, they praised God in
+such an audible voice that it was wonderful to all those who stood bye
+and heard them. Then one Robert Bacon, dwelling in the said Beccles, a
+very enemy to God’s truth, and a persecutor of His people, being then
+present, within the hearing thereof willed the tormentors to throwe on
+faggots to stop the knaues breathes, as he termed them; so hot was his
+burning charitie. But these good men, not regarding their malice,
+confessed the truth, and yielded their lives to the death for the
+testimonie of the same very gloriouslie and joyfullie.’
+
+These men were the precursors of that Nonconformity which has made
+England the home of the free, and such men abounded in East Anglia.
+Under Queen Elizabeth they had as bad a time of it almost as under Queen
+Mary. For instance, we find under Dr. Freke, Bishop of Norwich, and in
+the reign of glorious Queen Bess, as her admirers term her, Mathew
+Hammond, a poor ploughwright, of Hethersett, was condemned as a heretic,
+had his ears cut off, and after the lapse of a week was committed, in the
+Castle ditch at Norwich, to the more agonizing torment of the flames.
+The translation of Dr. Whitgift to the See of Canterbury was the signal
+for augmented rigour. He was charged by his imperious mistress to
+restore religious uniformity, which she confessed, notwithstanding all
+her precautions, ran out of square. One of the first victims to this new
+_régime_ was William Fleming, Rector of Beccles. The living of Beccles
+at this period was vested in Lady Anne Gresham, the widow of Sir Thomas
+Gresham, the founder of the Royal Exchange. Previously to her marriage,
+she was the widow of William Rede, merchant, of London and Beccles.
+Under James I. and Bishop Wren, men of integrity and conscience fared
+worse than under Queen Elizabeth, and naturally the people thus
+persecuted formed themselves into a Church. That in Beccles dated from
+1652, and in the covenant drawn up on the occasion we find it was
+resolved:
+
+‘1. That we will for ever acknowledge and admit the Lord to be our God
+in Jesus Christ, giving up ourselves to Him to be His people.
+
+‘2. That we will alwaies endevour, through the grace of God assisting
+us, to walke in all His waies and ordinances, according to His written
+Word, which is the only sufficient rule of good life for every man.
+Neither will we suffer ourselves to be polluted by any sinful waies,
+either publike or private, but endeavour to abstaine from the very
+appearance of evill, giving no offence to the Jew or Gentile, or the
+Churches of Christ.
+
+‘3. That we will humbly and willingly submit ourselves to the government
+of Christ in this Church—in the administration of the Word, the seals,
+and discipline.
+
+‘4. That we will in all love approve our communion as brethren by
+watching over one another, and as such shall be; counsel, administer,
+relieve, assist, and bear with one another, serving one another in love.
+
+‘5. Lastly, we do not covenant or promise these things in our own, but
+in Christ’s strength; neither do we confine ourselves to the words of
+this covenant, but shall at all time account it our duty to embrace any
+further light or covenant which shall be revealed to us out of God’s
+Word.’
+
+This covenant, however, was not to prevent in after time censure being
+cast on others who, endeavouring to preserve its spirit, were led to
+think differently from the majority. For instance, we find in 1656 two
+persons, who had been members of the Independent church at Beccles,
+received adult baptism, and in so doing were considered to have given
+‘offence’ to the church, and were desired to appear and give an account
+of their practices.
+
+At one time there was little of what we know as congregational singing.
+In 1657 it was agreed by the Beccles church ‘that they do put in practice
+the ordinance of singing in the publick upon the forenoon and afternoon
+of the Lord’s daies, and that it be between praier and sermon; and also
+it was agreed that the New England translation of the Psalmes be made use
+of by the church at their times of breaking of bread, and it was agreed
+that the next Lord’s day, seventh night, might be the day to enter upon
+the work of singing in publick.’ It is interesting to note that one of
+the pastors of the Beccles church was a Mr. Nokes, who had been
+trained—where Calamy and many others were trained—at the University of
+Utrecht, and that in the same year in which Dr. Watts accepted the
+pastoral office, he addressed to Mr. Nokes a poem on ‘Friendship,’ which
+is still included in the Doctor’s works. Dissent, when I was a boy, was
+considered low. We were contemptuously termed ‘pograms,’ a term of
+reproach the origin of which I have never learnt. The landed gentry, the
+small squires, the lawyers and the doctors, and the tradespeople who
+pandered to their prejudices and fattened on their patronage, were slow
+to say a word in favour of a Dissenter. The poor who went to chapel were
+excluded from many benefits enjoyed by their fellow-parishioners. It was
+the fashion to treat them with scorn, yet I have heard one of the most
+excellent and finished gentlemen in the district declare that he heard
+better talk in my father’s parlour than he did anywhere else in the
+neighbourhood, and I can well believe it, for the Dissenting minister, as
+a rule, at that time, was a better read man, and a more studious one,
+than the clergyman of the district, in spite of his University education;
+and in matters affecting the welfare of the nation, and that came under
+the denomination of politics, his views were far more rational than those
+of Churchmen in general, and the clergy in particular. We learn from
+Milton’s State Papers that the churches of East Anglia petitioned Oliver
+Cromwell that the three nations might enjoy the blessings of a godly,
+upright magistracy; that they might have Courts of Judicature in their
+own country; and that honest men of known fidelity and uprightness might
+be authorized to determine trivial matters of debt or difference.
+Assuredly the East Anglian saints—the latter term was, and, strange to
+say, is still, used as a term of reproach—were wise and right-thinking
+men where Church government and public policy were concerned. We love to
+read the story of the Pilgrim Fathers. With what rapture Mrs. Hemans
+wrote:
+
+ ‘What sought they thus afar?
+ Bright jewels of the mine?
+ The wealth of seas? the spoils of war?
+ They sought a faith’s pure shrine.
+
+ ‘Ay, call it holy ground,
+ The soil where first they trod;
+ They left unstained what there they found—
+ FREEDOM TO WORSHIP GOD.’
+
+But it seems to me that a greater glory was won by, and a greater honour
+should be paid to, the men who did not cross the Atlantic; who did not
+seek an asylum in a foreign land; who remained at home to suffer—to die,
+if need be, to uphold the rights of conscience, and to fight the good
+fight of faith. It is not even in our tolerant, and, as we deem it, more
+enlightened day, that full justice is done to these men. In what calls
+itself good society you meet men and women whose ancestors were
+Dissenters, and yet who are ashamed of the fact—a fact of which no one
+can be ashamed who feels how in East Anglia, at any rate, the religious
+teaching of Dissent purified the life of the people, enlarged their
+political views, and helped this great land of ours to sweep into a
+better and a younger day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+POLITICS AND THEOLOGY.
+
+
+Homerton academy—W. Johnson Fox, M.P.—Politics in 1830—Anti-Corn Law
+speeches—Wonderful oratory.
+
+About 1830 there was, if not a good deal of actual light let into such
+dark places as our Suffolk village—where it was considered the whole duty
+of man, as regards the poor, to attend church and make a bow to their
+betters (a rustic ceremony generally performed by pulling the lock of
+hair on the forehead with the right hand), and to be grateful for the
+wretched station of life in which they were placed—at any rate, a great
+shaking among the dry bones. One summer morning an awe fell on the
+parish as it ran from one to another that the guard of the Yarmouth and
+London Royal Mail had left word with the ostler at the Spread Eagle that
+George the Fourth was dead; then a certain dull sound as of cannon firing
+afar off had been wafted across the German Ocean, and had given rise to
+mysterious speculations on the subject of Continental wars, in which
+Suffolk lads might have to ‘’list’ as ‘sogers’; and last of all there
+came that grand excitement when—North and South, East and West—the nation
+rose as one man to demand political and Parliamentary Reform. It was a
+delusion, perhaps, that cry, but it was a glorious one, nevertheless;
+that the millennium could be delayed when we had Parliamentary Reform no
+one for a moment doubted. The sad but undeniable fact that mostly men
+are fools with whom beer is omnipotent had not then entered into men’s
+minds, and thus England and Scotland some sixty years ago wore an aspect
+of activity and enthusiasm of which the present generation can have no
+idea, and which, perhaps, can never occur again.
+
+Far away in the distant city which the Suffolk villagers called Lunnon,
+there was a Suffolk lad, whose relations kept a very little shop just by
+us, who was born at Uggeshall—pronounced Ouchell by the common people—on
+a very small farm, and who, as Unitarian preacher and newspaper writer,
+had been and was doing his best in the good cause; but it was not the
+influence of W. Johnson Fox—for it is of him I write—that did much in our
+little village to leaven the mass with the leaven of Reform. While quite
+a lad the Foxes went to Norwich, where the future preacher and teacher
+worked as a weaver boy. In after-years it was often my privilege to meet
+Mr. Fox, who had then attained no small share of London distinction,
+amongst whose hearers were men, often many of the most distinguished
+_literati_ of the day—such as Dickens and Forster—and who was actually to
+sit in Parliament as M.P. for Oldham, where, old as he was—and Mr.
+Gladstone says, ‘People who wish to succeed in Parliament should enter it
+young’—he occupied a most respectable position, all the more creditable
+when you remember that Parliament, even at that recent date, was a far
+more select and aristocratic assembly than any Parliament of our day, or
+of the future, can possibly be. Mr. Fox had been educated at Homerton
+Academy—as such places were then termed (college is the word we use
+now)—under the good and venerable Dr. Pye-Smith, whose ‘Scripture
+Testimony to the Messiah’ was supposed to have given Unitarianism a
+deadly blow, but whom I chiefly remember as a very deaf old man, and one
+of the first to recognise the fact that the Bible and geology were not
+necessarily opposed to each other, and to welcome and proclaim the
+truth—at that time received with fear and trembling, if received at
+all—that the God of Nature and the God of Revelation were the same.
+There was a good deal of free inquiry at Homerton Academy, which,
+however, Mr. Fox assured me, gradually subsided into the right amount of
+orthodoxy as the time came for the student to exchange his sure and safe
+retreat for the fiery ordeal of the deacon and the pew. My father and
+Johnson Fox had been fellow-students, and for some time corresponded
+together. The correspondence in due time, however, naturally ceased, as
+it was chiefly controversial, and nothing can be more irksome than for
+two people who have made up their minds, and whom nothing can change, to
+be arguing continually, and the friendship between them in some sense
+ceased as the one remained firm to, and the other wandered farther and
+farther from, the modified Calvinism of the Wrentham Church and pulpit,
+where, as in all orthodox pulpits at that time, it was taught that men
+were villains by necessity, and fools, as it were, by a Divine thrusting
+on; that for some a Saviour had been crucified, that there might be a way
+of escape from the wrath of an angry and unforgiving God; whilst for the
+vast mass—to whom the name of Christ had never been made known, to whom
+the Bible had never been sent—there was an impending doom, the awful
+horror of which no tongue could tell, no imagination conceive. But to
+the last Mr. Fox—especially if you met him with his old-fashioned hat on
+in the street—looked far more of a Puritan divine than of the literary
+man, or the chief of the advanced thinkers in Church and State, or an
+M.P. At a later time what pleasure it gave me to listen to this
+distinguished East Anglian as he appeared at the crowded Anti-Corn Law
+meetings held in Covent Garden or Drury Lane! Ungainly in figure,
+monotonous in tone, almost without a particle of action, regarded as free
+in his religious opinions by the vast majority of his audience, who were,
+at that time, prone, even in London, to hold that Orthodoxy, like
+Charity, covered a multitude of sins. What an orator he was! How
+smoothly the sentences fell from his lips one after the other; with what
+happy wit did he expose Protectionist fallacies, or enunciate Free Trade
+principles, which up to that time had been held as the special property
+of the philosopher, far too subtle to be understood and appreciated by
+the mob! With what felicity did he illustrate his weighty theme; with
+what clearness did he bring home to the people the wrong and injustice
+done to every one of them by the landlord’s attempt to keep up his rent
+by a tax on corn; and then with what glowing enthusiasm did they wait and
+listen for the climax, which, if studied, and perhaps artificial, seemed
+like the ocean wave to grow grander and larger the nearer it came, till
+it fell with resistless force on all around. It seems to me like a
+dream, all that distant and almost unrecorded past. I see no such
+meetings, I hear no such orators now. As Mr. Disraeli said of Lord
+Salisbury when he was Lord Robert Cecil, there was a want of finish about
+his style, and the remark holds good of the orator of to-day as
+contrasted with the platform speaker of the past. It is impossible to
+fancy anyone in our sober age attempting, to say nothing of succeeding in
+the attempt (my remarks, of course, do not apply to Irish audiences or
+Irish orators), to get an audience to rise _en masse_ and swear never to
+fold their arms, never to relax their efforts, till their end was gained
+and victory won; yet Mr. Fox did so, and long as I live shall I remember
+the night when, in response to his impassioned appeal, the whole
+house—and it was crowded to the ceiling—rose, ladies in the boxes, decent
+City men in the pit, gods in the gallery—to swear never to tire, never to
+rest, never to slacken, till the peasant at the plough, the
+cotton-spinner in the mill, the collier in the mine, the lone widow
+stitching for life far into the early morning in her wretched garret, and
+the pauper in his still more wretched cellar, ate their untaxed loaf. As
+the ‘Publicola’ of the _Weekly Dispatch_, Mr. Fox laboured to the end of
+his life in the good cause of Peace, Retrenchment, and Reform. It is not
+right that his memory should remain unrecorded—his life assuredly was an
+interesting one. Harriet Martineau writes in her autobiography that ‘his
+editorial correspondence with me was unquestionably the reason, and in
+great measure the cause, of the greatest intellectual progress I ever
+made before the age of thirty.’
+
+But it was not from William Johnson Fox that at that time came to our
+small village the grain of light that was to leaven the lump around.
+Lecturing and oratory, and even public tea-meetings, were things almost
+unknown. Now and then a deputation from the London Missionary Society
+came to Wrentham, and in this way I remember William Ellis, then a
+missionary from Madagascar, and Mr. George Bennett, who, in conjunction
+with the Rev. Mr. Tyerman, had been on a tour of inspection to the
+islands of the South Seas, and to whose tales of travel rustic audiences
+listened with delight. Once upon a time—but that was later—the Religious
+Tract Society sent a deputation in the shape of a well-known travelling
+secretary, Mr. Jones. This Mr. Jones was inclined to corpulency, and I
+can well remember how we all laughed when, on one occasion, the daughter
+of a neighbouring minister, having opened the door in reply to his knock,
+ran delightedly into her papa’s study to announce the arrival of the
+Tract Society!
+
+A great impression was also made in all parts of the country by the
+occasional appearances of the Anti-Slavery Society’s lecturers. In 1831,
+as Sir G. Stephen tells us, the younger section of the Anti-Slavery body
+resolved to stir up the country by sending lecturers to the villages and
+towns of the country. The M.P.’s did not much like it. The idea was
+novel to them. ‘Trust to Parliament,’ said they; the outsiders replied,
+‘Trust to the people.’ This scheme of agitation, however, was rejected,
+and would have fallen to the ground had not a benevolent Quaker of the
+name of Cropper come forward. ‘Friend S., what money dost thou want?’
+‘I want £20,000, but I will begin if I can get one.’ ‘Then, I will give
+thee £500.’ Joseph Sturge immediately followed with a promise of £250,
+and Mr. Wilberforce twenty guineas; and £1,000 was raised, and competent
+agents sent out. It proved by no means an easy matter to obtain these
+lecturers, for their duty was not confined to lecturing; they had also to
+revive drooping anti-slavery societies and to establish new ones. Also
+they were to have collections at the end of every lecture. One of them
+who came to Wrentham was Captain Pilkington. ‘Pilkington,’ writes Sir
+George Stephen, ‘was a pleasing lecturer, and won over many by his
+amiable manners; but he wanted power, and resigned in six months.’ We in
+Wrentham, however, did not think so, and I can to this day recall the
+sensation he created in our rustic minds as he described the horrors of
+slavery, and showed us the whip and chains by which those horrors were
+caused. To the Dissenting chapel most of these lecturers were indebted
+for their audience, and if I ever worked hard as a boy, it was to get
+signatures to anti-slavery petitions. Naturally, a Church parson came to
+regard all that was attacked by Reformers as a bulwark of the
+Establishment, and in our part the Meetingers’ were the sole friends of
+the slave.
+
+As was to be expected, the reading of the village was of the most limited
+description. It is true we children jumped for joy as once a month came
+the carrier’s cart from Beccles, with the books for the club—the
+_Evangelical Magazine_, for all the principal families of the
+congregation, and the _Penny Magazine_ and _Chambers’s Journal_—then but
+in their infancy—for ourselves; but, apart from that, there was no
+reading worth mentioning. That which most astonishes the tourist in
+Ireland is the way in which people read the newspapers. In our Suffolk
+village the very reverse was the case, partly because there were few
+newspapers to read, partly because there were few to read them, and
+partly because they were dear to buy. The one paper which we took in was
+the _Suffolk Chronicle_, which made its appearance on Saturday morning,
+the price of which was sixpence, and which was edited by a sturdy Radical
+of the name of King, who to the last held to the belief that to have a
+London letter full of literary or critical talk for the Suffolk farmers
+was, not to put too fine a point on it, to throw pearls before swine.
+And perhaps he was right. I can well remember, when one of my early
+poetical contributions appeared in its columns, how a fear was expressed
+to me by a farmer’s widow in our parish, lest ‘it had cost me a lot o’
+money’ to have that effort of my muse in print. Mr. Childs, of Bungay,
+had many experiences, equally rustic and still more illustrative of the
+simplicity of the class. Once upon a time one of them came in a great
+state of excitement for a copy of the ‘Life of Mr. General Gazetteer.’
+On another occasion a farmer’s wife came in search of a Testament. She
+wanted it directly, and she wanted it of a large type. A specimen was
+selected, which met with the worthy woman’s approval. But the question
+was, could she have it in half an hour, as she would be away for that
+time shopping in the town, and would call for it on her return. She was
+told that she could, and great was her astonishment when, on calling on
+her return for the Testament, there it was, printed in the particular
+type she had selected, ready for her use.
+
+I have a very strong idea that the calm of the country and the peaceful
+occupations of the people had not a very rousing influence upon the
+intellect. I may go further, and say that the cares of the farm, when
+high farming was unknown, did not much lift at that time the master above
+the man. The latter wore a smock-frock, while the former, perhaps,
+sported a blue coat with brass buttons, and had rather a better kind of
+head-dress, and ambled along on a little steady cob, that knew at which
+ale-house to call for the regular allowance, quite as well as his master.
+But as regards talk—which was chiefly of bullocks and pigs—well, there
+really was no very great difference after all. To such religion was the
+mainspring which kept the whole intellect going; and religion was to be
+had at the meeting. And I can well remember how strange it seemed to me
+that these rough, simple, untutored sons of the soil could speak of it
+with enthusiasm, and could pray, at any rate, with astonishing fervour.
+Away from the influence of the meeting-house there existed a Bœotian
+state of mind, only to be excited by appeals to the senses of the most
+palpable character, a state of mind in which faith—the evidence of things
+not seen, according to Paul—was quite out of the question; and I regret
+to say that, notwithstanding the activity of the last fifty years and the
+praiseworthy and laborious efforts of the East Anglian clergy in all
+quarters, suitably to rouse and feed the intellect of the East Anglian
+peasantry, a good deal yet remains to be done. Only a year or two ago,
+riding on an omnibus in a Suffolk village, the driver asked me if people
+could go to America by land. ‘Of course not,’ was my reply. ‘Why do you
+ask such a question?’ Well, it came out that he had ‘heerd tell how
+people got to Americay in ten days; and he did not see how they could do
+that unless they went by land, and had good hosses to get ’em there at
+that time.’ On my explaining the real state of affairs, he admitted, by
+way of apology, that he was not much of a traveller himself. Once he had
+been to Colchester; but that was a long time ago.
+
+But to return to the _Suffolk Chronicle_. It was my duty as a lad, when
+it had been duly studied at home, to take it to the next subscriber, and
+I fancy by the time the paper had gone its round it was not a little the
+worse for wear. But there were other political impulses which tended to
+create and feed the sacred flame of civil and religious liberty. In one
+corner of the village lived a small shopkeeper, who stored away, among
+his pots and pans of treacle and sugar and grocery, a few well-thumbed
+copies, done up in dirty brown paper, of the squibs and caricatures
+published by Hone, whom I can just remember, a red-faced old gentleman in
+black, in the _Patriot_ office, and George Cruikshank, with whom I was to
+spend many a merry hour in after-life. This small shopkeeper was one of
+the chapel people—a kind of superintendent in the Sunday-school, for
+which office he was by no means fitted, but there was no one else to take
+the berth, and as the family also dealt with him in many ways, I had
+often to repair to his shop. It was then our young eyes were opened as
+to the wickedness in high places by the perusal of the ‘Political House
+that Jack built,’ and other publications of a similar revolutionary
+character. Nothing is sacred to the caricaturist, and half a century ago
+bishops and statesmen and lords and kings were very fair subjects for the
+exercise of his art. In our day things have changed for the better,
+partly as the result of the Radical efforts, of which respectability at
+that time stood so much in awe. London newspapers rarely reached so far
+as Wrentham. It was the fashion then to look to Ipswich for light and
+leading. However, as the cry for reform increased in strength, and the
+debates inside the House of Commons and out waxed fiercer, now and then
+even a London newspaper found its way into our house, and I can well
+remember how our hearts glowed within us as some one of us read, while
+father smoked his usual after-dinner pipe, previous to going out to spend
+the afternoon visiting his sick and afflicted; and how such names as Earl
+Grey, and Lord John Russell, and Lord Brougham—the people then called him
+Harry Brougham; it was a pity that he was ever anything else—were
+familiar in our mouths as household words.
+
+In another way also there came to the children in Wrentham the growing
+perception of a larger world than that in which we lived, and moved, and
+had our being. One of the historic sites of East Anglia is Framlingham,
+a small market town, lying a little off the highroad to London, a few
+miles from what always seemed to me the very uninteresting village of
+Needham Market, though at one time Godwin, the author of ‘Caleb
+Williams,’ preached in the chapel there. There is now a public school
+for Suffolk boys at Framlingham, and it may yet make a noise in the
+world. Framlingham in our time has given London Mr. Jeaffreson, a
+successful man of letters, and Sir Henry Thompson, a still more
+successful surgeon. In my young days it was chiefly noted for its
+castle. The mother of that amiable and excellent lady, Mrs. Trimmer,
+also came from Framlingham; and it is to be hoped that the old town may
+have had something to do with the formation of the character of a woman
+whom now we should sneer at, perhaps, as goody-goody, but who, when
+George the Third was King, did much for the education and improvement of
+the young. I read in Mrs. Trimmer’s life ‘that her father was a man of
+an excellent understanding, and of great piety; and so high was his
+reputation for knowledge of divinity, and so exemplary his moral conduct,
+that, as an exception to their general rule, which admitted no laymen, he
+was chosen member of a clerical club in the town (Ipswich) in which he
+resided. From him,’ continues the biographer of the daughter, ‘she
+imbibed the purest sentiments of religion and virtue, and learnt betimes
+the fundamental principles of Christianity.’ Well, it is hoped Mr. Kirby
+did his best for his daughter; but, after all, how much more potent is
+the influence of a mother! And hence I may claim for Framlingham a fair
+share in the formation of even so burning and shining a light as Mrs.
+Trimmer.
+
+The name Framlingham, say the learned, or did say—for what learned men
+say at one time does not always correspond with what they say at
+another—is composed of two Saxon words, signifying the habitation of
+strangers; and to strangers the place is still rich in interest. In its
+church sleeps the unfortunate, but heroic, Earl of Surrey, whose
+harmonious verse still delights the students of English literature. Some
+say he was born at Framlingham. This is matter of doubt; but there is no
+doubt about the fact that he was buried there by his son, the Earl of
+Northampton, who erected a handsome monument to his father’s memory. The
+monument is an elevated tomb, with the Earl’s arms and those of his lady
+in the front in the angles, and with an inscription in the centre. It
+has his effigy in armour, with an ermined mantle, his feet leaning
+against a lion couchant. On his left is his lady in black, with an
+ermined mantle and a coronet. Both have their hands held up as in
+prayer. On a projecting plinth in front is the figure of his second son,
+the Earl of Northampton, in armour, with a mantle of ermine, kneeling in
+prayer. Behind, in a similar plinth, kneeling with a coronet, and in
+robes, is his eldest daughter, Jane, Countess of Westmoreland, on the
+right; and his third daughter Catherine, the wife of Lord Henry Berkeley
+on the left. The monument is kept in order, and painted occasionally, as
+directed by the Earl of Northampton, out of the endowment of his hospital
+at Greenwich. In repairing the monument in October, 1835, the Rev.
+George Attwood, curate of Framlingham, discovered the remains of the Earl
+lying embedded in clay, directly under his figure on his tomb. It is
+difficult now to find what high treason the chivalrous and poetic and
+gallant Earl had been guilty of; but at that time our eighth Henry ruled
+the land, and if he wished anyone out of the way, he had not far to go
+for witnesses or judge or jury ready to do his wicked and wanton will.
+To the shame of England be it said, the Earl of Surrey was beheaded when
+he was only thirty years of age. No particulars are preserved of his
+deportment in prison or on the scaffold, but from the noble spirit he
+evinced at his trial, and from his general character, it cannot be
+doubted that he behaved in the last scene of his existence with fortitude
+and dignity. On the barbarous injustice to which he was sacrificed
+comment is unnecessary; but regret at his early fate is increased by the
+circumstance that Henry was in extremities when he ordered his execution,
+and that his swollen and enfeebled hands were unequal to the task of
+signing his death-warrant. In this respect more fortunate was the father
+of Surrey, the Duke of Norfolk, who is buried near the altar of the
+church at Framlingham. He also was condemned to death, but in the
+meanwhile the King died, and his victim was set free. Not far off is the
+tomb of Henry Fitzroy, a natural son of King Henry. He was a friend of
+Surrey, and was to have married his sister. The other monuments which
+adorn the interior of this magnificent church are a table of black
+marble, supported by angels, to the memory of Sir Robert Hitcham, a mural
+monument by Roubillac, and others to commemorate virtues and graces, as
+embodied in the lives of decent men and women in whom the world has long
+ceased to take any interest.
+
+The venerable castle—here I quote Dr. Dugdale’s ‘British Traveller’—with
+its eventful history, imparts the strongest interest to the town of
+Framlingham. Tradition refers its origin to the sixth century, and
+ascribes it to Redwald, one of the early Saxon monarchs. St. Edmund the
+Martyr fled hither in 870, and was besieged by the Danes, who took
+Framlingham and held it fifty years. The Norman King gave the castle to
+the Bigods. The castle passed through many hands. It was there Queen
+Mary took shelter when, after the death of Edward VI., Lady Jane Grey was
+called to the throne, and thence she came to London, on the capture of
+the former, to take possession of the crown. It was an evil day for
+England when she came to Framlingham Castle and beguiled the hearts of
+the Suffolk men. Old Fox tells us that when Mary had returned to her
+castle at Framlingham there resorted to her ‘the Suffolke men, who, being
+alwayes forward in promoting the proceedings of the Gospel, promised her
+their aid and help, so that she would not attempt the alteration of the
+religion which her brother, King Edward, had before established by laws
+and orders publickly enacted, and received by the consent of the whole
+realm in his behalf. She afterwards agreed with such promise made unto
+them that no innovation should be made of religion, as that no man would
+or could then have misdoubted her. “Victorious by the aid of the
+Suffolke men,” Queen Mary soon forgot her promise. They of course
+remonstrated. It was, methinks,’ adds Fox, ‘an heavie word that she
+answered to the Suffolke men afterwards which did make supplication unto
+her grace to performe her promise. “For so much,” saith she, “as you
+being but members desire to rule your head, you shall one day perceive
+the members must obey their head, and not look to rule over the same.”’
+Well, Queen Mary was as good as her word. As Fox adds, ‘What she
+performed on her part the thing itself and the whole story of the
+persecution doth testifie.’ But the stubborn Suffolk gospellers were not
+to be put down, and a remnant had been left in Framlingham, as well as in
+other parts of the country. At Framlingham we find a Richard Goltie,
+son-in-law of Samuel Ward, of Ipswich, was instituted to the rectory in
+1630. In 1650 he refused the engagement to submit to the then existing
+Government, and was removed, when Henry Sampson, M.A., a fellow of
+Pembroke Hall, Cambridge, was appointed by his college to the vacancy.
+He continued there till the Restoration, when Mr. Goltie returned and
+took possession of the living, which he continued to hold till his death.
+Not being satisfied to conform, Mr. Sampson continued awhile preaching at
+Framlingham to those who were attached to his ministry, in private houses
+and other buildings, and by his labours laid the foundation of the
+Congregational or Independent Church in that town, as appears from a note
+in the Church Book belonging to the Dissenters meeting at Woodbridge, in
+the Quay Lane. Mr. Sampson collected materials for a history of
+Nonconformity, a great part of which is incorporated in Calamy and
+Palmer’s works. It was to him that John Fairfax, of Needham Market,
+wrote, when he and some other ministers were shut up in Bury Gaol for the
+crime of preaching the Gospel. It appears that they had met in the
+parish church, at Walsham-le-Willows, where, after the liturgy was read
+by the clergyman of the parish, a sermon was preached by a non-licensed
+minister. The party were then taken and committed to prison, where they
+remained till the next Quarter Sessions, when they were released upon
+their recognisances to appear at the next Assizes. Then, it seems,
+though not convicted upon any other offence, upon the suggestion of the
+justices, to whom they were strangers, they were committed again to
+prison, on the plea that _they were persons dangerous to the public
+peace_. Thus were Dissenters treated in the good old times. Mr. Sampson
+seems to have fared somewhat better. After his removal, he travelled on
+the Continent, returned to London, entered himself at the College of
+Physicians, and lived and died in good repute. The old congregation
+having become Unitarian, a new one was formed, and of this Church a
+pillar was Mr. Henry Thompson—a gentleman well known and widely honoured
+in his day. This Mr. Thompson had a son, who was sent to Wrentham to be
+educated for awhile with myself. An uncle of his, one of the most
+amiable of men, lived at Southwold, close by, and I presume it was by his
+means that the settlement was effected. Be that as it may, the change
+was a welcome one, as it gave me a pleasant companion for nearly five
+years of boyish life. I confess my two sisters—one of whom has, alas!
+long been in her grave—did all they could in the way of sports and
+pastimes to meet my wants and wishes, and act like boys; but the fact is,
+though it may be doubted in these days of Women’s Rights, girls are not
+boys, nor can they be expected to behave as such.
+
+I confess the advent of this young Thompson from Framlingham was a great
+event in our small family circle. In the first place he came from a
+town, and that at once gave him a marked superiority. Then his father
+kept a horse and gig, for it was thus young Thompson came to Wrentham,
+and all the world over a gig has been a symbol of the respectability dear
+to the British heart; and he had been for that time and as an only son
+carefully and intelligently trained by one of the family who, in the
+person of the late Edward Miall, founder of the _Nonconformist_, and M.P.
+for Bradford, was supposed to be the incarnation of what was termed the
+dissidence of Dissent. Young Thompson was also what would be called a
+genteel youth, and gave me ideas as to wearing straps to my trousers,
+oiling my hair, and generally adorning my person, which had never entered
+into my unsophisticated head. He also had been to London, and as
+Framlingham was some twenty miles nearer the Metropolis—the centre of
+intelligence—than Wrentham, the intelligence of a Framlingham lad was of
+course expected, _à fortiori_, to be of a stronger character than that of
+one born twenty miles farther from the sun of London. There was also a
+good deal of talent in the family on the mother’s side. Mrs. Thompson
+was a Miss Medley, and Mr. Medley was an artist of great merit, the son
+of Mr. Medley, of Liverpool, a leading Baptist minister in his day, and a
+writer of hymns still sung in Baptist churches. Mr. Medley was also
+active as a Liberal, and was credited by us boys with a personal
+acquaintance with no less illustrious an individual than the great
+Brougham himself. Once or twice he came to lodge during the summer at
+Southwold; naturally he was visited there by his grandson, who would
+return well primed with political anecdote to our rustic circle, and was
+deemed by me more of an authority than ever. Once or twice, too, I had
+the honour of being a visitor, and heard Mr. Medley, a fine old
+gentleman, who lived to a very advanced age, talk of art and artists and
+other matters quite out of my usual sphere. It is not surprising, then,
+that the grandson became in time quite an artist himself, though he is
+better known to the world, not so much in that capacity, but as Sir Henry
+Thompson, certainly not the least distinguished surgeon of our day. In
+Lord Beaconsfield’s last novel, ‘Endymion,’ we have a passing reference
+to one Wrentham lad, Sir Charles Wetherell, as ‘the eccentric and too
+uncompromising Wetherell.’ Assuredly the fame of another lad, Sir Henry
+Thompson, connected with Wrentham, will longer live.
+
+This reference to Sir Henry Thompson reminds me of his early attempts at
+rhyme, which I trust he will forgive me for rescuing from oblivion. Once
+upon a time we captured a young cuckoo, and having carefully gorged it
+with bread-and-milk, and left it in a nest in an outhouse, which we
+devoted mainly to rabbits, the next morning the poor bird was found to be
+dead. A prize was offered for the best couplet. Three of us contended.
+My sister wrote:
+
+ ‘This lonely sepulchre contains
+ A little cuckoo’s dead remains.’
+
+I wrote:
+
+ ‘To our grief, cuckoo sweet
+ Is lying underneath our feet.’
+
+Thompson took quite a different and, read by the light of his subsequent
+career, a far more characteristic view of the case. He took care, as a
+medical man, to dwell on the cause which had terminated the career of so
+interesting a bird. According to him,
+
+ ‘It had a breast as soft as silk,
+ And died of eating bread-and-milk.’
+
+Assuredly in this case the child was father to the man.
+
+But the great awakening of the time, that which made the dry bones live,
+and fluttered the dove-cotes of Toryism—we never heard the word
+Conservative then—was the General Election. At that time we were always
+having General Elections. We had one, of course, when George IV. died
+and King William reigned in his stead; we had another when the Duke was
+out and the Whigs came in; and then we had another when the cry ran
+through the land, and reached even the most remote villages of East
+Anglia, of ‘The Bill, the whole Bill, and nothing but the Bill!’ Voters
+were brought down, or up, as the case might be, from all quarters of the
+land. Coaches-full came tearing along, gorgeous with election flags, and
+placarded all over with names of rival candidates. Gentlemen of ancient
+lineage called to request of the meanest elector the favour of his vote
+and influence. It was with pain the Liberals of our little village
+resolved to vote against our Benacre neighbour, Sir Thomas Gooch, who had
+long represented the county, but of whom the Radicals spoke derisively as
+Gaffer Gooch, or the Benacre Bull, and chose in his stead a country
+squire known as Robert Newton Shaw, utterly unknown in our quarter of the
+county.
+
+It was rather a trying time for the Wrentham Liberals and Dissenters to
+do their duty, for Sir Thomas was a neighbour, and always was a pleasant
+gentleman in the parish, and had power to do anyone mischief who went
+against him. Our medical man did not vote at all. Our squire actually,
+I believe, supported Sir Thomas, and altogether respectable people found
+themselves in an extremely awkward position. At Southwold the people
+were a little more independent, for Gaffer Gooch rarely illuminated that
+little town with his presence; and as my father, with the economy which
+is part and parcel of the Scotchman as he leaves his native land, but
+which rarely extends to his children, had, by teaching gentlemen’s sons
+and other ways, been able to save a little, which little had been devoted
+to the purchase of cottage property in Southwold (well do I remember the
+difficulty there was in collecting the rents; never, assuredly, were
+people so much afflicted or so unfortunate when the time of payment
+came), it was for Southwold that he claimed his vote. I, as the son, was
+permitted to share in the glories of that eventful day. The election
+took place at school-time, and my companion was Henry Thompson. We had
+to walk betimes to Frostenden, where Farmer Downing lived, who was that
+_rara avis_ a Liberal tenant farmer; but of course he did not vote tenant
+farmer, but as a freeholder. It was with alarm that Mrs. Downing saw her
+lord and master drive off with us two lads in the gig. There had been
+riots at London, riots as near as Ipswich, and why not at Halesworth? A
+mile or two after we had started we met, per arrangement, the Southwold
+contingent, who joined us with flags flying and a band playing, and all
+the pride and pomp and circumstance of war. We rode in a gig, and our
+animal was a steady-going mare, and behaved as such; but all had not gigs
+or steady-going mares. Some were in carts, some were on horseback, some
+in ancient vehicles furbished up for the occasion; and as the band played
+and the people shouted, some of the animals felt induced to dance, and
+especially was this restlessness on the part of the quadrupeds increased
+as we neared Halesworth, in the market-place of which was the
+polling-booth, and in the streets of which we out-lying voters riding in
+procession made quite a show. Halesworth, or Holser, as it was called,
+was distant about nine miles, lying to the left of Yoxford, a village
+which its admirers were wont to call the Garden of Suffolk. In 1809 the
+Bishop of Norwich wrote from Halesworth: ‘The church in this place is
+uncommonly fine, and the ruins of an old castle (formerly the seat of the
+Howards) are striking and majestic.’ But when we went there the ruins
+were gone—the more is the pity—and the church remained, at that time held
+by no less a Liberal than Richard Whately, afterwards Archbishop of
+Dublin. I used at times to meet with a country gentleman—a brother of a
+noble lord—who after he had spent a fortune merrily, as country gentlemen
+did in the good old times, came to live on a small annuity, and, in spite
+of his enormous daily consumption of London porter at the leading inn of
+the town, managed to reach a good old age. The hon. gentleman and I were
+on friendly terms, and sometimes he would talk of Whately, who had often
+been at his house. But, alas! he remembered nothing of a man who became
+so celebrated in his day except that he would eat after dinner any number
+of oranges, and was so fond of active exercise that he would take a
+pitchfork and fill his tumbrels with manure, or work just like a labourer
+on a farm. Of the Doctor’s aversion to church-bell ringing we have a
+curious illustration in a letter which appeared in the _Suffolk
+Chronicle_ in 1825: ‘A short time since a wedding took place in the
+families of two of the oldest and most respectable inhabitants of the
+town, when it was understood that the Rector had, for the first time
+since his induction to his living, given permission for the bells to
+greet the happy pair. After, however, sounding a merry peal a short hour
+and a half, a message was received at the belfry that the Rector thought
+they had rung long enough. The tardiness with which this mandate was
+obeyed soon brought the rev. gentleman in person to enforce his order,
+which was then reluctantly complied with to the great disappointment of
+the inhabitants, and mortification of the ringers, several of whom had
+come from a considerable distance to assist in the festivities of the
+day.’ The Independent chapel was an old-fashioned meeting-house, full of
+heavy pillars, which, as they intercepted the view of the preacher, were
+favourable to that gentle sleep so peculiarly refreshing on a Sunday
+afternoon—especially in hot weather—in the square and commodious family
+pew. The minister was an old and venerable-looking divine of the name of
+Dennant, who was always writing little poems—I remember the opening lines
+of one,
+
+ ‘A while ago when I was nought,
+ And neither body, soul, nor thought’—
+
+and whose ‘Soul Prosperity,’ a volume of sober prose, reached a second
+edition. His grandson, Mr. J. R. Robinson, now the energetic manager of
+the _Daily News_, may be said to have achieved a position in the world of
+London of which his simple-hearted and deeply-devotional grandfather
+could never have dreamed. As I was the son of a brother minister, Mr.
+Dennant’s house was open to myself and Thompson, though we did not go
+there on the particular day of which I write. The leading tradesman of
+the town was a Liberal, and had at least one pretty daughter, and there
+we went. Most of the day, however, we mixed with the mob which crowded
+round, while the voters—you may be sure, not all of them sober—were
+brought up to vote. The excitement was immense; there was the hourly
+publication of the state of the poll—more or less unreliable, but,
+nevertheless, exciting; and what a tumult there was as one or other of
+the rival candidates drove up to his temporary quarters in a carriage and
+pair, or carriage and four, made a short speech, which was cheered by his
+friends and howled at derisively by his foes, while the horses were being
+changed, and then drove off at a gallop to make the same display and to
+undergo the same ordeal elsewhere! To be sure, there was a little rough
+play; now and then a rush was made by nobody in particular, and for no
+particular reason; or, again, an indiscreet voter—rendered additionally
+so by indulgence in beer—gave occasion for offence; but really, beyond a
+scrimmage, a hat broken, a coat or two torn or bespattered with mud, a
+cockade rudely snatched from the wearer, little harm was done. The
+voters knew each other, and had come to vote, and had stayed to see the
+fun. For the timid, the infirm, the old, the day was a trying one; but
+there was an excitement and a life about the affair one misses now that
+the ballot has come into play, and has made the voter less of a man than
+ever. Of course the shops were shut up. All who could afford to do so
+kept open house, and at every available window were the bright, beaming
+faces of the Suffolk fair—oh, they were jolly, those election days of
+old! Well, in East Anglia, as elsewhere, spite of the parsons, spite of
+the landlords, spite of the slavery of old custom, spite of old
+traditions, the freeholders voted Reform, and Reform was won, and
+everyone believed that the kingdom of heaven was at hand. In ten years,
+I heard people say, there would be no tithes for the farmer to pay, and
+welcome was the announcement; for then, as now, the agricultural interest
+was depressed, and the farmer was a ruined man. Now one takes but a
+languid interest in the word Reform, but then it stirred the hearts of
+the people; and how they celebrated their victory, how they hoisted flags
+and got up processions and made speeches, and feasted and hurrahed,
+’twere tedious to tell. All over the land the people rejoiced with
+exceeding joy. Old things, they believed, had passed away—all things had
+become new.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+BUNGAY AND ITS PEOPLE.
+
+
+Bungay Nonconformity—Hannah More—The Childses—The Queen’s
+Librarian—Prince Albert.
+
+In the beginning of the present century, a disgraceful attack on
+Methodism—by which the writer means Dissent in all its branches—appeared
+in what was then the leading critical journal of the age, the _Edinburgh
+Review_. ‘The sources,’ said the writer, a clergyman (to his shame be it
+recorded) of the Church of England—no less distinguished a divine than
+the far-famed Sydney Smith—‘from which we shall derive our extracts are
+the Evangelical and Methodistical magazines for the year 1807, works
+which are said to be circulated to the amount of 18,000 or 20,000 every
+month, and which contain the sentiments of Arminian and Calvinistic
+Methodists, and of the Evangelical clergymen of the Church of England.
+We shall use the general term of Methodism to designate these three
+classes of fanatics, not troubling ourselves to point out the finer
+shades and nicer discriminations of lunacy, but treating them as all in
+one general conspiracy against common-sense and rational orthodox
+Christianity.’ To East Anglia came the reputed worthy Canon for an
+illustration of what he termed their policy to have a great change of
+ministers. Accordingly, he reprints from the _Evangelical Magazine_ the
+following notice of an East Anglian Nonconformist ordination, which,
+by-the-bye, in no degree affects the charge unjustly laid at the door of
+these ‘fanatics,’ as engaged ‘in one general conspiracy against
+common-sense and rational orthodox Christianity.’ ‘Same day the Rev. W.
+Haward, from Hoxton Academy, was ordained over the Independent Church at
+Rendham, Suffolk; Mr. Pickles, of Walpole, began with prayer and reading;
+Mr. Price, of Woodbridge, delivered the introductory discourse, and asked
+the questions; Mr. Dennant, of Halesworth, offered the ordinary prayer;
+_Mr. Shufflebottom_ [the italics are the Canon’s], of Bungay, gave the
+charge from Acts xx. 28; Mr. Vincent, of Deal, the general prayer; and
+Mr. Walford, of Yarmouth, preached to the people from Phil. ii. 16.’ As
+a lad, I saw a good deal of Bungay, though I never knew the Shufflebottom
+whose name seems to have been such a stumbling-block and cause of offence
+to the Reverend Canon of St. Paul’s. I say Reverend Canon of St. Paul’s,
+because, though the writer had not gained that honour when the review
+appeared, it was as Canon he returned to the charge when he sanctioned
+the republication of it in his collected works. It was at Bungay that I
+had my first painful experience of the utter depravity of the human
+heart—a truth of which, perhaps, for a boy, I learned too much from the
+pulpit. The river Waveney runs through Bungay, and one day, fishing
+there, I lent a redcoat—with whom, like most boys, I was proud to scrape
+an acquaintance—my line, he promising to return it when I came back from
+dinner. When I did so, alas! the red-coat was gone.
+
+Nonconformity in Bungay seems to have originated in the days of the Lord
+Protector, in the person of Zephaniah Smith, who was the author of: (1)
+‘The Dome of Heretiques; or, a discovery of subtle Foxes who were tyed
+tayle to tayle, and crept into the Church to do mischief’; (2) ‘The
+Malignant’s Plot; or, the Conspiracie of the Wicked against the Just,
+laid open in a sermon preached at Eyke, in Suffolk, January 23, 1697.
+Preached and published to set forth the grounds why the Wicked lay such
+crimes to the charge of God’s people as they are cleare off’; (3) ‘The
+Skillful Teacher.’ Beloe says of this Smith that ‘he was a most singular
+character, and among the first founders of the sect of the Antinomians.’
+One of the first leaders of this sect is said by Wood to have been John
+Eaton, who was a minister and preacher at Wickham Market, in which
+situation and capacity Smith succeeded him. This Smith published many
+other tracts and sermons, chiefly fanatical and with fantastical titles.
+One is described by Wood, and is called ‘Directions for Seekers and
+Expectants, or a Guide for Weak Christians in these discontented times.’
+‘I shall not give an extract from these sermons,’ writes Beloe, who is
+clearly, like Wood, by no means a sympathetic or appreciative critic,
+‘though very curious, but they are not characterized by any peculiarity
+of diction, and are chiefly remarkable for the enthusiasm with which the
+doctrine of the sect to which the preacher belonged is asserted and
+vindicated. The hearers also must have been endowed with an
+extraordinary degree of patience, as they are spun out to a great
+length.’ Mr. Smith’s ministry at Bungay led to a contention, which
+resulted in an appeal to the young Protector, Richard Cromwell. Then we
+find Mr. Samuel Malbon silenced by the Act of Uniformity, who is
+described as a man mighty in the Scriptures, who became pastor to the
+church in Amsterdam. In 1695 we hear of a conventicle in Bungay, with a
+preacher with a regularly paid stipend of £40 a year. Till 1700 the
+congregation worshipped in a barn; but in that year the old meeting-house
+was built, and let to the congregation at £10 per annum. In 1729 it was
+made over to the Presbyterians or Independents worshipping there, ‘for
+ever.’ The founders of that conventicle seem to have suffered for their
+faith; yet the glorious Revolution of 1688 had been achieved, and William
+of Orange—who had come from a land which had nobly sheltered the earlier
+Nonconformists—was seated on the throne.
+
+Bungay, till Sydney Smith made it famous, was not much known to the
+general public. It was on the borders of the county and out of the way.
+The only coach that ran through it, I can remember, was a small one that
+ran from Norwich through Beccles and Bungay to Yarmouth; and, if I
+remember aright, on alternate days. There was, at any rate, no direct
+communication between it and London. Bungay is a well-built market town,
+skirted on the east and west by the navigable river Waveney, which
+divides it from Norfolk, and was at one time noted for the manufacture of
+knitted worsted stockings and Suffolk hempen cloth; but those trades are
+now obsolete. The great Roger Bigod—one of the men who really did come
+over with the Conqueror—built its castle, the ruins of which yet remain,
+on a bold eminence on the river Waveney. ‘The castle,’ writes Dugdale,
+‘once the residence and stronghold of the Bigods, and by one of them
+conceived to be impregnable, has become the habitation of helpless
+poverty, many miserable hovels having been reared against its walls for
+the accommodation of the lowest class.’ The form of the castle appears
+to have been octangular. The ruins of two round fortal towers and
+fortresses of the west and south-west angles are still standing, as also
+three sides of the great tower or keep, the walls of which are from 7 to
+11 feet thick and from 15 to 17 feet high. In the midst of the ruins, on
+what is called the Terrace, is a mineral spring, now disused, and near it
+is a vault, or dungeon, of considerable depth. Detached portions of the
+wall and their foundations are spread in all directions in the castle
+grounds, a ridge of which, about 40 yards long, forms the southern
+boundary of a bowling-green which commands delightful prospects. The
+mounds of earth raised for the defence of the castle still retain much of
+their original character, though considerably reduced in height. One of
+them, facing the south, was partly removed in 1840, with the intention of
+forming a cattle market. As a boy I often heard of the proud boast of
+Hugh Bigod, second Earl, one of King Stephen’s most formidable opponents,
+as recorded by Camden:
+
+ ‘Were I in my castle of Bungay,
+ Upon the river Waveney,
+ I would not care for the King of Cockeney.’
+
+In ancient times the Waveney was a much broader stream than it is now,
+and Bungay was called _Le Bon Eye_, or the good island, then being nearly
+surrounded by water. Hence the name, in the vulgar dialect, of Bungay.
+To ‘go to Bungay to get a new bottom’ was a common saying in Suffolk.
+
+In 1777 we find Hannah More writing to Garrick from Bungay, which she
+describes as ‘a much better town than I expected, very clean and
+pleasant.’ ‘You are the favourite bard of Bungay’—at that time the
+tragedians of the city of Norwich were staying there—‘and,’ writes
+Hannah, who at that time had not become serious and renounced the
+gaieties of the great world, ‘the dramatic furore rages terribly among
+the people, the more so, I presume, from being allowed to vent itself so
+seldom. Everybody goes to the play every night,—that is, every other
+night, which is as often as they perform. Visiting, drinking, and even
+card-playing, is for this happy month suspended; nay, I question if, like
+Lent, it does not stop the celebration of weddings, for I do not believe
+there is a damsel in the town who would spare the time to be married
+during this rarely-occurring scene of festivity. It must be confessed,
+however, the good folks have no bad taste.’ It must be recollected that
+Hannah More in reality belongs to East Anglia. She was the daughter of
+Jacob More, who was descended from a respectable family at Harleston. He
+was a High Churchman, but all his family were Nonconformists. His mother
+used to tell young people that they would have known how to value Gospel
+privileges had they lived like her, when at midnight pious worshippers
+went with stealthy steps through the snow to hear the words of
+inspiration delivered by a holy man at her father’s house; while her
+father, with a drawn sword, guarded the entrance from violent or profane
+intrusion, adding that they boarded the minister and kept his horse for
+£10 a year. An unfortunate lawsuit deprived the Mores of their property,
+and thus it was that the celebrated Hannah was born at Gloucestershire,
+and not in Suffolk or Norfolk. The family mansion was at Wenhaston, not
+very far from Wrentham.
+
+In my young days Bungay owed all its fame and most of its wealth to the
+far-famed John Childs, who was one of our first Church Rate martyrs, to
+whom is due mainly the destruction of the Bible-printing monopoly, and to
+whom the late Edward Miall was much indebted for establishing the
+_Nonconformist_ newspaper. For many years it was the habit of Mr. Childs
+to celebrate that event by a dinner, at which the wine was good and the
+talk was better. Old John Childs, of Bungay, had a cellar of port which
+a dean might have envied; and many was the bottle that I cracked with him
+as a young man, after a walk from Wrentham to Bungay, a distance of
+fourteen miles, to talk with him on things in general, and politics in
+particular. He was emphatically a self-made man—a man who would have
+made his way anywhere, and a man who had a large acquaintance with the
+reformers of his day in all parts of the country. On one occasion the
+great Dan O’Connell came to pay him a visit, much to the delight of the
+Suffolk Radicals, and to the horror of the Tories. The first great
+dinner at which I had the honour of being present, and to which I was
+taken by my father, who was a great friend of Mr. Childs, was on the
+occasion of the presentation to the latter of a testimonial by a
+deputation of distinguished Dissenters from Ipswich in connection with
+his incarceration in the county gaol at Ipswich, for having refused to
+pay rates for the support of a Church in which he did not believe, and
+for the performance of a service in which he took no part. At that time
+‘the dear old Church of England,’ while it was compelled to tolerate
+Dissent, insisted on Dissent being taxed to the uttermost farthing; and
+that it does not do so now, and that it is more popular in consequence,
+is due to the firm stand taken by such men as John Childs of Bungay. He
+was a great phrenologist. In his garden he had a summer-house, which he
+facetiously termed his scullery, where he had some three hundred plaster
+casts, many of which he had taken himself of public individuals and
+friends and acquaintances. My father was honoured in this way, as also
+my eldest sister. Sir Henry Thompson and I escaped that honour, but I
+have not forgotten his dark, piercing glance at our heads, when, as boys,
+we first came into his presence, and how I trusted that the verdict was
+satisfactory. Of course the Childses went to Meeting, but when I knew
+Bungay Mr. Shufflebottom had been gathered to his fathers, and the Rev.
+John Blaikie, a Scotchman, and therefore always a welcome guest at
+Wrentham, reigned in his stead. Mr. Childs had a large and promising
+family, few of whom now remain. His daughter was an exceptionally gifted
+and glorious creature, as in that early day it seemed to me. She also
+died early, leaving but one son, Mr. Crisp, a partner in the well-known
+legal firm of Messrs. Ashurst, Morris, and Crisp. It was in the little
+box by the window of the London Coffee House—now, alas! no more—where Mr.
+Childs, on the occasion of his frequent visits to London, always gathered
+around him his friends, that I first made the acquaintance of Mr.
+Ashurst, the head of the firm—a self-made man, like Mr. Childs, of
+wonderful acuteness and great public spirit. In religion Mr. Ashurst was
+far more advanced than the Bungay printer. ‘It is not a thing to reason
+about,’ said the latter; and so to the last he remained orthodox,
+attended the Bungay Meeting-house, invited the divines of that order to
+his house, put in appearance at ordination services, and openings of
+chapels, and was to be seen at May Meetings when in town, where
+occasionally his criticisms were of a freer order than is usually met
+with at such places.
+
+‘The Bungay Press,’ wrote a correspondent of the _Bookseller_, on the
+death of Mr. Charles Childs, who had succeeded his father in the
+business, ‘has been long known for its careful and excellent work.
+Established some short time before the commencement of the present
+century, its founder had, for twenty years, limited its productions to
+serial publications and books of a popular and useful character, and in
+the year 1823, soon after Mr. John Childs had taken control of the
+business, upwards of twenty wooden presses were working, at long hours,
+to supply the rapidly-increasing demand for such works as folio Bibles,
+universal histories, domestic medicine books, and other publications then
+issuing in one and two shilling numbers from the press.’ Originally Mr.
+Childs had been in a grocer’s shop at Norwich. There he was met with by
+a Mr. Brightley, a printer and publisher, who, originally a schoolmaster
+at Beccles, had suggested to young Childs that he had better come and
+help him at Bungay than waste his time behind a counter. Fortunately for
+them both the young man acceded to the proposal, and travelled all over
+England driving tandem, and doing everywhere what we should now call a
+roaring trade. Then he married Mr. Brightley’s daughter, and became a
+partner in the firm, which was known as that of John and R. Childs, and,
+latterly of Childs and Son. ‘Uncle Robert,’ as I used to hear him
+called, was little known out of the Bungay circle. He had a nice house,
+and lived comfortably, marrying, after a long courtship, the only one of
+the Stricklands who was not a writer. Agnes was often a visitor at
+Bungay, and not a little shocked at the atrocious after-dinner talk of
+the Bungay Radicals. ‘Do you not think,’ said she, in her somewhat
+stilted and tragic style of talk, one day, to a literary man who was
+seated next her, author of a French dictionary which the Childses were
+printing at the time—‘Do you not think it was a cruel and wicked act to
+murder the sainted and unfortunate Charles I.?’ ‘Why, ma’am,’ stuttered
+the author, while the dinner-party were silent, ‘I’d have p-p-poisoned
+him.’ The gifted authoress talked no more that day. Naturally, as a
+lad, seeing so much of Bungay, I wished to be a printer, but Mr. Childs
+said there was no use in being a printer without plenty of capital, and
+so that idea was renounced.
+
+But to return to Mr. John Childs. About the year 1826, in association
+with the late Joseph Ogle Robinson, he projected and commenced the
+publication of a series of books known in the trade as the ‘Imperial
+Edition of Standard Authors,’ which for many years maintained an
+extensive sale, and certainly then met an admitted literary want,
+furnishing the student and critical reader, in a cheap and handsome form,
+with dictionaries, histories, commentaries, biographies, and
+miscellaneous literature of acknowledged value and importance, such as
+Burke’s works, Gibbon’s ‘Decline and Fall,’ Howe’s works, the writings of
+Lord Bacon—books which are still in the market, and which, if I may speak
+from a pretty wide acquaintance with students’ libraries fifty years ago,
+were in great demand at that time. The disadvantage of such a series is
+that the books are too big to put in the pocket or to hold in the hand.
+But I do not know that that is a great disadvantage to a real student who
+takes up a book to master its contents, and not merely to pass away his
+time. To study properly a man must be in his study. In that particular
+apartment he is bound to have a table, and if you place a book on a table
+to read, it matters little the size of the page, or the number of columns
+each page contains. Mr. Childs set the fashion of reprinting standard
+authors on a good-sized page, with a couple of columns on each page.
+That fashion was followed by Mr. W. Smith—a Fleet Street publisher, than
+whom a better man never lived—and by Messrs. Chambers; but now it seems
+quite to have passed away. On the failure of Mr. Robinson, Mr. Childs’
+valuable reprints were placed in the hands of Westley and Davis, and
+subsequently with Ball, Arnold, and Co.; and latterly, I think, the late
+Mr. H. G. Bohn reissued them at intervals. As to his part publications,
+when Mr. Childs had given up pushing them, he disposed of them all to Mr.
+Virtue, of Ivy Lane, Paternoster Row, who then secured almost a monopoly
+of the part-number trade, and thus made a large fortune. ‘I love books
+that come out in numbers,’ says Lord Montford in ‘Endymion,’ ‘as there is
+a little suspense, and you cannot deprive yourself of all interest by
+glancing at the last part of the last volume.’ And so I suppose in the
+same way there will always be a part-number trade, though the reapers in
+the field are many, and the harvest is not what it was.
+
+Active and fiery in body and soul, Mr. John Childs, at a somewhat later
+period, with the sympathy and advocacy of Mr. Joseph Hume and other
+members of Parliament, and aided to a large extent by Lord Brougham,
+succeeded in procuring the appointment of a Committee of the House of
+Commons to inquire into the existing King’s Printers’ Patent for printing
+Bibles and Acts of Parliament, the period for the renewal of which was
+near at hand. The principle upon which the patent was originally granted
+appeared to be _correctness secured only by protection_—a fallacy which
+the voluminous evidence of the Committee most completely exposed. The
+late Alderman Besley, a typefounder, and a great friend of John Childs,
+as well as Robert Childs, practical printers, gave conclusive evidence on
+this head, and the result was that, although the patent was renewed for
+thirty years, instead of sixty as before, the Scriptures were sold to the
+public at a greatly reduced price, and the trade in Bibles, though
+nominally protected, has ever since been practically free.
+
+Nor did Mr. Childs’ labours end here. In Scotland the right of printing
+Bibles had been granted exclusively to a company of private persons,
+Blaire and Bruce, neither of whom had any practical knowledge of the art
+of printing, or took any interest in the different editions of the Bible.
+The same men also had the supplying all the public revenue offices of
+Government with stationery, by which means they enjoyed an annual profit
+of more than £6,000 a year. When the Government, in an economical mood,
+ordered them to relinquish the latter contract, not only were they
+compensated for the loss, but were continued in their vested rights as
+regards Bible-printing. In Scotland there was no one to interfere with
+their rights. In England patents had been given not only to the firm of
+Messrs. Strahan, Eyre and Spottiswoode, but to each of the two
+Universities of Cambridge and Oxford. Up to 1821 the Bibles of the
+English monopolists came freely into Scotland, but then a prohibition,
+supported by decisions in the Court of Sessions and the House of Lords,
+was obtained. In 1824 Dr. Adam Thompson, of Coldstream, and three
+ministers were summoned to answer for the high crime and misdemeanour of
+having, as directors of Bible societies, delivered copies of an edition
+of Scriptures which had been printed in England, but which the Scotch
+monopolists would not permit to circulate in Scotland. Bible societies
+in Scotland had received, in return for their subscription to the London
+society, copies of an octavo Bible in large type, to which the Scotch
+patentees had no corresponding edition, and which was much prized by the
+aged. And it was because Dr. Thompson and others helped to circulate it,
+as agents of the London Bible Society, that they were proceeded against.
+The Scotch Bible, in consequence of the monopoly, was as badly printed as
+the English one. In order to show how monopoly had failed to secure good
+work, a gentleman sent to the Archbishop of Canterbury an enormous list
+of errors which he had found in the Oxford Nonpareil Bible. In an old
+Scotch edition the apostle is made to say, ‘Know ye not that the
+righteous shall _not_ inherit the kingdom of God?’ In another edition
+‘The four beasts of the Apocalypse’ are ‘_sour_ beasts.’ Dr. Lee,
+afterwards Principal of Edinburgh University, felt deeply the injustice
+done by the monopoly, and the heavy taxation consequently imposed upon
+the British and Foreign Bible Society; but he was a man of the study
+rather than of the street. Yet in 1837 the monopoly, powerfully defended
+as it was by Sir Robert Inglis, who dreaded cheap editions of the Word of
+God, as necessarily incorrect and leading to wickedness and infidelity of
+all kinds, fell, and it was to John Childs, of Bungay, that in a great
+measure the fall was due, while owing to the repeated labours of Dr. Adam
+Thompson and others, we got cheaper Bibles and Testaments on the other
+side of the Tweed.
+
+If you turn to the life of Dr. Adam Thompson, of Coldstream, the man who
+had the most publicly to do with the fall of the monopoly, there can be
+no doubt on this head. Though specially interested in the English
+patents, Mr. Childs was aware that the one for Scotland fell, to be
+renewed sooner by twenty years, and he kept dunning Joseph Hume on the
+subject, who, Radical Reformer, at that time had his hands pretty full.
+Mr. Childs had got so far as to have his Committee, and to get the
+evidence printed. What was the next step? Dr. Thompson’s biographer
+shall tell us. ‘Mr. Childs had been looking out for a Scottish
+Dissenting minister of proved ability, zeal, and influence, who should
+feel the immense and urgent importance of the question, and after
+mastering the unjust principles and the injurious results of the
+monopoly, should testify to these before the Committee, in a weighty and
+pointed manner, and effectively bring them also before the ministers and
+people of Scotland. He fixed upon Dr. Thompson, and the letter in which
+he wrote to the Doctor to prepare for becoming a witness was the
+beginning of a ten years’ copious correspondence, the first in a series
+of many hundreds of very lengthy letters, in which Mr. Childs, with great
+shrewdness, sagacity, and vigour, and with perfect confidence of always
+being in the right, acted as universal censor, pronouncing oracularly
+upon all ecclesiastical and political men and organs, expressing
+unqualified contempt for the House of Lords, and very small satisfaction
+with the House of Commons, showing no mercy to Churchmen, and little but
+asperity to Dissenters, and denouncing all British journals as base or
+blind except the _Nonconformist_.’ Only two of these letters are
+published in Dr. Thompson’s biography. I give one, partly because it is
+interesting, and partly because it is characteristic. Unfortunately, of
+all John Childs’ letters to myself, written in a fine, bold hand, exactly
+reproduced by his son and grandson, so that I could never tell one from
+the other, I have preserved none. Childs thus wrote to Dr. Thompson,
+July 15th, 1839:
+
+ ‘MY DEAR FRIEND,
+
+ ‘You will be happy to know that I went into Newgate this morning with
+ my friend Ashurst, and heard their pardon read to the Canadians.
+ They were released this afternoon, and Mr. Parker and Mr. Wixon have
+ been dining with me, and are gone to a lodging, taken for them by Mr.
+ A., where they may remain till their departure on Wednesday. I have
+ just sent to Mr. Tidman to inform him they will worship God and
+ return thanks in his place to-morrow, if all be well. How
+ wonderfully God has appeared for these people! My dear friend, when
+ I first saw them in January all things appeared to be against them,
+ but all has been overruled for good.
+
+ ‘At the time you left on Monday evening, Lord John was making known
+ to the House of Commons, in your own words, the plan proposed by
+ yourself, and adopted by him, to my amazement. Most heartily do I
+ congratulate you on the termination of the event, so decidedly
+ honourable to yourself in every way. I do not expect you will
+ approve of all that I have done, but I felt it to be my duty to
+ address a letter to the _Pilot_ on the subject, calling attention to
+ the liberty taken with you, and the manner in which you were
+ humbugged when in concert with the London societies, and the absolute
+ triumph of your cause when conducted with single-handed integrity,
+ intelligence, and energy. If it shall happen that you do not approve
+ of all I have said, I am sure you ought, because without you, and
+ with you, if you had left it to the fellows here, Scotland’s
+ Dissenters would have now appeared the degraded things which, on the
+ Bible subject, the English Dissenters have appeared in my eyes for
+ some years past. It is due to you. I was fairly rejoiced when I saw
+ Lord John’s declaration, because I could see from his answer to Sir
+ James Graham that he meant the thing should be done. Scotland ought
+ to have a day of rejoicing and thanksgiving, and as I said to a
+ friend to whom I wrote in Edinburgh, “You ought to have a
+ monument—the Thompson monument.” “That, sir,” the guide would say,
+ “is erected to honour a man by whose honest energy and zeal Scotland
+ was freed from the most degrading tyranny—that of a monopoly in
+ printing the Word of God.” The tablet should bear that memorable
+ sentence of yours on the first day of your examination, “All
+ monopolies are bad.” Of all monopolies religious monopolies are the
+ worst, and of all religious monopolies a monopoly of the Word of God
+ is the most outrageous.’ Alas! I have heard nothing of the Thompson
+ monument.
+
+Such a man was John Childs. One more busy in body and brain I never
+knew. That he was disposed to be cynical was natural. Most men who see
+much of the world, and who do not wear coloured glasses, are so. Take
+the history of the Bible monopoly. The work of its abolition was
+commenced by John Childs, of Bungay, carried on and completed as far as
+Scotland was concerned by Dr. Adam Thompson, while the British public in
+its usual silliness awarded £3,000 to Dr. Campbell, on the plea—I quote
+the words of the late Dr. Morton Brown, of Cheltenham—that, ‘God gave the
+honour very largely to our friend, Dr. Campbell, to smite this bloated
+enemy of God and man full in the forehead.’ The bloated enemy, as
+regards Scotland, was dead before Dr. Campbell had ever penned a line.
+As regards England, I believe it still exists.
+
+It must have been about 1837 that the name of John Childs, of Bungay, was
+made specially notorious by reason of his refusal to pay Church-rates,
+and when he had the honour of being the first person imprisoned for their
+non-payment. He was proceeded against in the Ecclesiastical Courts, and
+as his refusal to pay was solely on conscientious grounds, he did not
+contest the matter. The result was, he was sent to Ipswich Gaol for the
+non-payment of a rate of 17s. 6d., the animus of the ecclesiastical
+authorities being manifested by the endorsement of the writ, ‘Take no
+bail.’ It was the first death-blow to Church-rates. The local
+excitement it created was intense and unparalleled. In the House of
+Commons Sir William Foulkes presented several petitions from Norfolk, and
+Mr. Joseph Hume several from Suffolk, on the subject. One entire sitting
+of the House of Commons was devoted to the Bungay Martyr, as Sir Robert
+Peel ironically termed him. The Bungay Martyr had however, right on his
+side. It was found that a blot had been hit, and it had to be removed.
+
+The excitement produced by putting Mr. Childs into gaol was intense at
+that time all over the land. ‘I beg to inform you,’ wrote a Halesworth
+Dissenter, Mr. William Lincoln, to the editor of the _Patriot_, at that
+time the organ of Dissent, ‘that my highly-esteemed and talented friend,
+Mr. John Childs, of Bungay, has just passed through this town, in custody
+of a sheriff’s officer, on his way to our county gaol, by virtue of an
+attachment, at the suit of Messrs. Bobbet and Scott, churchwardens of
+Bungay, for non-payment of 17s. 6d. demanded of him as a Church-rate, and
+subsequent refusal to obey a citation for appearance at the Bishop’s
+Court.’ Naturally the writer remarked: ‘It will soon be seen whether
+proceedings so well in harmony with the days of fire and faggot are to be
+tolerated in this advanced period of the nineteenth century.’ When, in
+due time, Mr. Childs obtained his release, the event was celebrated at
+Bungay in fitting style. I find in a private diary the following note:
+‘This day week was a grand day at Bungay. I heard there were not less
+than six or seven thousand people there to welcome his return, and the
+request of the police, that the greatest order might be observed, was
+fully acted up to. Miss C. did not enter Bungay with her father. I
+suppose when she found so great a multitude of horsemen, gigs,
+pedestrians and banners, they thought it better for the young lady and
+the younger children to retire to the close carriages. Mr. C. during his
+imprisonment had letters from all parts of the kingdom.’ I remember the
+leading Dissenters came to Bungay with a piece of plate, to present to
+Mr. Childs, to commemorate his heroism. A dinner was given by Mr. Childs
+in connection with the presentation. At that dinner, lad as I was, I was
+permitted to be present. I had never seen anything so grand or stately
+before; and that was my first interview with John Childs, a dark,
+restless, eagle-eyed man, whom I was to know better and love more for
+many a long day. I took to Radical writing, and nothing could have
+pleased John Childs better. I owed much to his friendship in after-life.
+
+In 1833 the Church-rate question was originally raised in Bungay, and
+many of the Dissenters refused to pay. The local authorities at once
+took high ground, and put twelve of the recusants into the Ecclesiastical
+Court. They caved in, leaving to John Childs the honour of martyrdom.
+At the time of Mr. Childs’ imprisonment he had recently suffered from a
+severe surgical operation, and it was believed by his friends impossible
+that he could survive the infliction of imprisonment. The Rev. John
+Browne writes: ‘A committee very generously formed at Ipswich undertook
+the management of his affairs, and when they learned at the end of eleven
+days’ imprisonment that he had undergone a most severe attack, indicating
+at least the possibility of sudden death, they sent a deputation to the
+Court to pay the sum demanded. The Court, however, required, as well as
+the money, the usual oath of canonical obedience, and this Mr. Childs
+refused to give. He was told by his friends that he would surely die in
+prison, but his reply was, ‘That is not my business.’ But it seems so
+much had been made of the matter by the newspapers that Mr. Childs was
+released without taking the oath. Charles Childs, the son, followed in
+his father’s steps. At Bungay the Churchmen seemed to have determined to
+make Dissenters as uncomfortable as possible. Actually five years after
+they had thrown the father into prison, the churchwardens proceeded
+against the son, having been baffled in repeated attempts to distrain
+upon his goods, and cited him into the Ecclesiastical Court, where it
+took two and a half years to determine whether the sum of three shillings
+and fourpence was due. At the end of that time the judge decided it was
+not, and the churchwardens had to pay Mr. Childs’ costs as well as their
+own, which in the course of time amounted to a very respectable sum.
+Charles Childs, who died suddenly a few years since, and who never seemed
+to me to have aged a day since I first knew him, was truly a chip of the
+old block. He was much in London, as he printed quite as much as his
+father for the leading London publishers. An enlightened patriot, he was
+in very many cases successful in resisting the obstacles raised from time
+to time by party spirit or Church bigotry. On more than one occasion he
+conducted a number of his workmen through an illegally-closed path, and
+opened it by the destruction of the fences, repeated appeals to the
+persistent obstructions having proved unavailing. He was a man of
+scholarly and literary attainments, a clever talker, well able to hold
+his own, and during the Corn Law and Currency agitation he contributed
+one or more articles on these subjects to the _Westminster Review_, then
+edited by his friend, the late General Perronet Thompson, a very foremost
+figure in Radical circles forty years ago, always trying to get into
+Parliament—rarely succeeding in the attempt. ‘How can he expect it,’
+said Mr. Cobden to me one day, ‘when, instead of going to the principal
+people to support him, he finds out some small tradesman—some little
+tailor or shoemaker—to introduce him?’ Once upon a time the _Times_
+furiously attacked Charles Childs. His reply, which was able and
+convincing, was forwarded, but only procured admission in the shape of an
+advertisement, for which Mr. Childs had to pay ten pounds. The corner of
+East Anglia of which I write rarely produced two better men than the
+Childs, father and son. They are gone, but the printing business still
+survives, though no longer carried on under the well-known name. By
+their noble integrity and public spirit they proved themselves worthy of
+a craft to which light and literature and leading owe so much. It is to
+such men that England is under lasting obligations, and one of the
+indirect benefits of a State Church is that it gives them a grievance,
+and a sense of wrong, which compels them to gird up their energies to act
+the part of village Hampdens or guiltless Cromwells. All the manhood in
+them is aroused and strengthened as they contend for what they deem right
+and just, and against force and falsehood. Poets, we are told, by one
+himself a poet,
+
+ ‘Are cradled into poetry by wrong;
+ They learn in suffering what they teach in song.’
+
+Nonconformists have cause especially to rejoice in the bigotry and
+persecution to which they have been exposed, since it has led them by a
+way they knew not, to become the champions of a broader creed and a more
+general right than that of which their fathers dreamed. It is easy to
+swim with the stream; it requires a strong man to swim against it. Two
+hundred years of such swimming had made the Bungay Nonconformists strong,
+and gave to the world two such exceptionally sturdy and strengthful men
+as John and Charles Childs. I was proud to know them as a boy; in
+advancing years I am prouder still to be permitted to bear this humble
+testimony to their honest worth. It is because Nonconformity has raised
+up such men in all parts of the land, that a higher tone has been given
+to our public life, that politics mean something more than a struggle
+between the ins and the outs, and that ‘Onward’ is our battle-cry.
+
+Of the young men more or less coming under the influence of the Childs’s,
+perhaps one of the most successful was the late Bernard Bolingbroke
+Woodward, Librarian to her Majesty. When I first knew him he was in a
+bank at Norwich. Thence he passed to Highbury College, and in due time,
+after he had taken his B.A. degree, settled as the Independent minister
+at Wortwell, near Harleston, in Norfolk. There he became connected with
+John Childs, and, amidst much hard work, edited for the firm a new
+edition of ‘Barclay’s Universal English Dictionary.’ In 1860, on the
+death of Mr. Glover, who had for many years filled the post of Librarian
+to the Queen at Windsor Castle, Mr. Woodward’s name was mentioned to the
+Prince, in reply to inquiries for a competent successor. Acting on the
+advice of a friend at head-quarters, Mr. Woodward forwarded to Prince
+Albert the same printed testimonials which he had sent in when he was a
+candidate for the vacant secretaryship of a large and popular society,
+and to those alone he owed his appointment to the office of Librarian to
+the Queen. An interview took place at Windsor Castle, which was highly
+satisfactory; but before the appointment was finally made, Mr. Woodward
+informed Her Majesty and the Prince that there was one circumstance which
+he had omitted to mention, and which might disqualify him for the post.
+‘Pray, what is that disqualification?’ asked the Prince. ‘It is,’
+replied Mr. Woodward, ‘that I have been educated for, and have actually
+conducted the services of an Independent congregation in the country.’
+‘And why should that be thought to disqualify you?’ asked the Prince.
+‘It does nothing of the sort. If that is all, we are quite satisfied,
+and feel perfectly safe in having you for a librarian.’ Am I not
+justified in saying that at one time Bungay influences reached far and
+near?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+A CELEBRATED NORFOLK TOWN.
+
+
+Great Yarmouth Nonconformists—Intellectual life—Dawson Turner—Astley
+Cooper—Hudson Gurney—Mrs. Bendish.
+
+When David Copperfield, Dickens tells us, first caught sight of Yarmouth,
+it seemed to him to look rather spongy and soppy. As he drew nearer, he
+remarks, ‘and saw the whole adjacent prospect, lying like a straight, low
+line under the sky, I hinted to Peggotty that a mound or so might have
+improved it, and also that if the land had been a little more separated
+from the sea, and the town and the tide had not been quite so much mixed
+up, like toast-and-water, it would have been much nicer.’ He adds: ‘When
+we got into the street, which was strange to me, and smelt the fish, and
+pitch, and oakum, and tallow, and saw the sailors walking about, and the
+carts jingling up and down over the stones, I felt that I had done so
+busy a place injustice.’ In this opinion his readers who know Yarmouth
+will agree. Brighton and Hastings and Eastbourne might envy Yarmouth its
+sandy beach, where you can lead an amphibious life, watching the
+fishing-smacks as they come to shore with cargoes often so heavy as to be
+sold for manure; watching the merchant-ships and yachts that lie securely
+in the Roads, or the long trail of black smoke of Scotch or northern
+steamers far away; watching the gulls ever skimming the surface of the
+waves; or the children, as they build little forts and dwellings in the
+sand to be rudely swept to destruction by the advancing tide. In the
+golden light of summer, how blue is the sky, how green the sea, how
+yellow the sand, how jolly look the men and handsome the women! What
+health and healing are in the air, as it comes laden with ozone from the
+North Sea! You have the sea in front and on each side to look at, to
+walk by, to splash in, to sail on. The danger is, that you grow too fat,
+too ruddy, too hearty, too boisterous. As we all know, Venus was born
+out of the sea, and out there on that eastern peninsula, of which
+Yarmouth is the pride and ornament, there used to flourish bonny lasses,
+as if to show that the connection between the ocean and lovely woman is
+as intimate as of yore. Yarmouth and Lowestoft owe a great deal to the
+Great Eastern Railway, which has made them places of health-resort from
+all parts of England; and truly the pleasure-seeker or the holiday-maker
+may go farther and fare worse.
+
+I was a proud boy when first I set foot in Yarmouth. How I came to go
+there I can scarcely remember, but it is to be presumed I accompanied my
+father on one of those grand occasions—as far as Nonconformist circles
+are concerned—when the brethren met together for godly comfort and
+counsel. It is true Wrentham was in Suffolk, and Yarmouth was in
+Norfolk, but the Congregational Churches of that quarter had always been
+connected by Christian fellowship and sympathy, and hence I was taken to
+Yarmouth—at that time far more like a Dutch than an English town—and
+wonderful to me was the Quay, with its fine houses on one side and its
+long line of ships on the other—something like the far-famed Bompjes of
+Rotterdam—and the narrow rows in which the majority of the labouring
+classes were accustomed to live. ‘A row,’ wrote Charles Dickens, ‘is a
+long, narrow lane or alley, quite straight, or as nearly so as may be,
+with houses on each side, both of which you can sometimes touch with the
+finger-tips of each hand by stretching out your arms to their full
+extent. Many and many a picturesque old bit of domestic architecture is
+to be hunted up among the rows. In some there is little more than a
+blank wall for the double boundary. In others the houses retreat into
+busy square courts, where washing and clear-starching are done, and
+wonderful nasturtiums and scarlet-runners are reared from green boxes
+filled with that scarce commodity, vegetable mould. Most of these rows
+are paved with pebbles from the beach, and to traverse them a peculiar
+form of low cart, drawn by a single horse, is employed.’ This to me was
+a great novelty, as with waggons and carts I was familiar, but not with a
+Yarmouth cart—now, I find, replaced by wheelbarrows. In Amsterdam, at
+the present day, you may see many such quaint old rows. But in Amsterdam
+you have an evil-smelling air, while in Yarmouth it is ever fresh and
+crisp, and redolent, as it were, of the neighbouring sea. The
+market-place and the big church were at the back of this congeries of
+quays and rows, and the sea and the old pier were at quite a respectable
+distance from the town. I fancy the Yarmouth of the London bathers has
+now extended down to the sandy beach, and the rough and rude old pier has
+given place to one better adapted to the wants and requirements of an
+increasingly well-to-do community. Far more Dutch than English was the
+Yarmouth of half a century ago, I again say.
+
+As to the Yarmouth Independent parson, I shall never forget him. He was
+a very big man, with great red cheeks that hung over his collar like
+blown bladders, and was always on stilts. He preached in a big
+meeting-house, now no more, the pillars of which intercepted alike the
+view and the sound. One winter evening he was holding forth, in his
+usual heavy style, to a few good people—with whom, evidently, all
+pleasure was out of the question—who came there, as in duty bound, and
+sat like martyrs all the while, and all were as grave as the preacher,
+when a wicked boy rushed in and, in a hurried manner, called out, ‘Fire!
+fire!’ The effect, I am told, was electrical. For once the good parson
+was in a hurry, and moved as quickly and spoke as rapidly as his fellows;
+but never had there been so much excitement in his chapel since he had
+been its pastor. Once, I remember, he came to town, and dropped in at
+the close of a party rather convivially inclined, in the Old London
+Coffee House. As the reverend gentleman advanced to greet his friends, a
+London lawyer, with all the impudence of his class, muttered, in a
+whisper intended to be heard, and which was heard, by everyone, ‘Yarmouth
+bloater.’ The good man said nothing, but it was evident he thought all
+the more, as the group were more or less tittering over the fitness of
+the comparison. The lawyer who made the remark was also the son of a
+London minister, and, therefore, might have been expected to have known
+better. I fear the Yarmouth minister never forgave him. Well, it only
+served him right, as he had a horrible way of making young people very
+uncomfortable. ‘Well, Master James,’ said he to me on one occasion, when
+all the brethren had come to dine at Wrentham, and when I was admitted,
+in conformity with the golden maxim in all well-regulated family circles,
+that little children were to be seen and not heard (perhaps in our day
+the fault is too much in an opposite direction), ‘can you inform me which
+is the more proper form of expression—a pair of new gloves, or a new pair
+of gloves?’ Of course I gave the wrong answer, as I blushed up to the
+ears at finding myself the smallest personage in the room, publicly
+appealed to by the biggest. He meant well, I dare say. His only object
+was to draw me out; but the question and the questioner gave me a bad
+quarter of an hour, and I never got over the unpleasant sensation of
+which he had unconsciously been the originator in my youthful breast.
+
+At that time Yarmouth people were supposed to be a little superior. They
+were well-to-do, and lived in good style, and, as was to be expected,
+considering the sanitary advantages of the situation, were in good health
+and spirits. They got a good deal of their intellectual character from
+Norwich, which at the time set the fashion in such matters. In 1790 two
+societies were established in that city for the private and amicable
+discussion of miscellaneous questions. One of these, the Tusculan, seems
+to have devoted the attention of its members exclusively to political
+topics; while the Speculative, although it imposed no restrictions on the
+range of inquiry, was of a more philosophical character. William Taylor
+was a member of both, and it is difficult to say whether he distinguished
+himself most by his ingenuity in debate, by the novelty of the
+information which he brought to bear on every point, or by the lively
+sallies of imagination with which he at once amused and excited his
+hearers. The papers read by himself embraced an infinite variety of
+subjects, from the theory of the earth, then unillumined by the
+disclosures of modern geologists, to the most elaborate and refined
+productions of its rational tenants, and he was seldom at a loss to place
+on new ground or in a fresh light the matter of discussion introduced by
+others. Writers of every tongue, studied by him with observant
+curiosity, stored his retentive memory with materials ready to be applied
+on every occasion, moulded by his Promethean talent into the most
+animated and alluring forms. As a speaker and converser he was eminently
+characterized by a constant flow of brilliant ideas, by a rapid
+succession of striking images, and by a never-failing copiousness of
+words, often quaint, but always correct. A similar society was formed at
+Yarmouth, under the auspices of Dr. Aiken, at which William Taylor also
+occasionally attended. The Rev. Thomas Compton has given the following
+description of these visits: ‘We were, moreover, sometimes gratified by
+the presence of our literary friends from Norwich. I have there
+repeatedly listened to the mild and persuasive eloquence of the late Dr.
+Enfield. A gentleman, too, still living, who has lately added to his
+literary fame by a biographical work of high repute (I scarcely need add
+that I allude to Mr. W. Taylor) would sometimes instruct us by his
+various and profound knowledge, or amuse us with his ingenious
+paradoxes.’ When we recollect how at this time the poetical puerilities
+of Bath Easton flourished in the West, we may claim that Norwich and
+Yarmouth, if not as favoured by fashion, had at any rate a claim to
+intellectual reputation at least quite equal to that city of the _ton_.
+Dr. Sayers, whose biography William Taylor had written, and whose
+‘Dramatic Sketches of Northern Mythology’ had created a great sensation
+at the time, was of Yarmouth extraction.
+
+The Rev. Mr. Compton writes: ‘In Yarmouth, where I lived at this time,
+and where Lord Chedworth was accustomed to pay an annual visit, there was
+then a society of gentlemen who met once a fortnight for the purpose of
+amicable discussion. Our members—alas! how few remain—were of all
+parties and persuasions, and some of them of very distinguished
+attainments. A society thus constituted was in those days as pleasant as
+it was instructive. The most eager disputation was never found to
+endanger the most perfect goodwill, nor did any bitter feuds arise from
+this entire freedom of opinion till the prolific period of the French
+Revolution. On this subject our controversies became very impassioned.
+The present Sir Astley Cooper, then a very young man, was accustomed to
+pass his vacations with his most excellent father, Dr. Cooper, a name
+ever to be by me beloved and revered. It was the amusement of our young
+friend to say things of the most irritating nature, I believe—like Lady
+Florence Pemberton in the novel—merely to see who would make the ugliest
+face. Thus circumstanced, it was not in my philosophy to be the coolest
+of the party.’ We can well imagine the consequences. There was a row,
+and the literary society came to grief. As time went on matters became
+worse instead of better, and the town was split up into parties—Liberal
+or the reverse, Church or Dissent, but all of one mind as regards their
+views being correct; and as to the weakness or wickedness of persons who
+thought otherwise. The evil of this spirit knew no bounds, and the
+demoralizing effect it produced was especially apparent at election
+times. When Oldfield wrote his ‘Origin of Parliaments,’ the town, he
+tells us, was under the influence of the Earl of Leicester, and was for
+many years represented by some of his Lordship’s family. The right of
+election was in the burgesses at large, of whom there were at that time
+one thousand. The Reform Bill did little to improve the state of
+affairs; it led to greater bribery and corruption and intimidation than
+ever, and now, as a Parliamentary borough, Yarmouth has ceased to exist.
+‘Sugar,’ it seems, was the slang term used for money, and the honest
+voters were too eager to get it. Alas! in none of our seaport towns is
+the standard of morality very high. Yarmouth, at any rate, is not worse
+than Deal. In old days the excitement of a Yarmouth election much
+affected our village. It lasted some days. The out-voters were brought
+from the uttermost parts of the earth. As there were no railways,
+stage-coaches were hired to bring them down from town; and when they
+changed horses at Wrentham, quite a crowd would assemble to look at the
+flags, and the free and independents on their way to do their duty,
+overflowing with enthusiasm and beer.
+
+Sir Astley Cooper was much connected with Yarmouth in his young days,
+when his father was the incumbent of the parish church. Some of his
+boyish pranks were peculiar. Here is one of them: ‘Having taken two
+pillows from his mother’s bed, he carried them up the spire of Yarmouth
+Church, at a time when the wind was blowing from the north-east; and as
+soon as he had ascended as high as he could, he ripped them open, and,
+shaking out their contents, dispersed them in the air. The feathers were
+carried away by the wind, and fell far and wide over the surface of the
+market-place, to the great astonishment of a large number of persons
+assembled there. The timid looked upon it phenomenon predictive of some
+calamity; the inquisitive formed a thousand conjectures; while some,
+curious in natural history, actually accounted for it by a gale of wind
+in the north blowing wild-fowl feathers from the island of St. Paul’s.’
+On another occasion he got into an old trunk, which the family had agreed
+to get rid of as inconvenient in the house. In this case he had to pay
+the penalty, when he emerged from the chest in the carpenter’s shop. The
+men, who had complained terribly of its weight, were not inclined to
+allow young Astley to get off free. One of Astley’s tricks had, however,
+a good motive, as it was intended to cure an old woman of her besetting
+sin—a tendency to take a drop too much. In order to cure the old woman
+of this weakness, he dressed himself as well as he could to represent the
+sable form of his satanic majesty. Alas! instead of being surprised, the
+old lady was too far-gone for that, and listened with tipsy gravity to
+the distinguished visitor’s discourse. In her case it was true, as Burns
+wrote:
+
+ ‘Wi’ tipenny we fear nae evil;
+ Wi’ usquebae we’ll face the deevil.’
+
+One of his tricks nearly led to unpleasant consequences. Whilst out
+shooting one day, near Yarmouth, he killed an owl—a bird familiarly known
+in Yarmouth by the sobriquet of ‘Brother Billy.’ Having arrived at home,
+he went up into his mother’s room, with the bird concealed behind his
+coat, and, assuming a countenance full of fear and sorrow, exclaimed,
+‘Mother, mother, I’ve shot my brother Billy!’ but the alarm and distress
+instantly depicted on the distracted countenance of his parent induced
+him as quickly as possible to pull the owl from under his coat. This at
+once exposed the truth and allayed the apprehensions of his mother’s
+mind, but the effects of the shock it caused did not so immediately pass
+away. Dr. Cooper determined to punish his son, and he therefore confined
+him, according to his usual mode of correction, in his own house. Astley
+was, however, but little disposed to remain passive in his imprisonment,
+and in the wantonness of his ever-active disposition amused himself by
+climbing up the chimney, and having at length reached the summit,
+endeavoured, by imitating the well-known tone of the chimney-sweeper, and
+calling out as lustily as he could, ‘Sweep, sweep!’ to attract the
+attention of the people below. Even on his father the incorrigible lad
+seems on more than one occasion to have tried his little game. One day,
+while the worthy Doctor was marrying a couple in the church, Master
+Astley concealed himself in a turret close by the altar, and, imitating
+his father’s voice, repeated in a subdued tone the words of the
+marriage-service as the ceremony proceeded, to the consternation of his
+father, who said that he had never observed an echo in that place before.
+Once or twice the lad’s life was in peril, as when his foot slipped on
+the top of the church, and he was unpleasantly suspended for some time
+between the rafters of the ceiling and the floor of the chancel. On
+another occasion he had a narrow escape from drowning. It seems that on
+the Yare are little boats out together very slightly, for the purpose of
+carrying a man, his gun, and dog over the shallows of Braydon, in pursuit
+of the flights of wild-fowl which at certain seasons haunt these shoals.
+When the boat is thus loaded, it only draws two or three inches of water,
+and is quite unfit for sea. Young Astley nearly lost his life in
+attempting to take one of these boats out to open sea. In this way young
+Astley Cooper, from his fearless and enterprising disposition, soon
+became a sort of leader of the Yarmouth boys, and at their head, for a
+time, seems to have devoted himself to every kind of amusement within his
+reach—riding, boating, fishing, and not unfrequently sports of a less
+harmless character, such as breaking lamps and windows, ringing the
+church bells at all hours, disturbing the people by frequent alterations
+of the church clock, so that if any mischief were committed it was sure,
+says his admiring biographer, to be set down to him.
+
+The two men who shed most literary fame on the Yarmouth of my childhood
+were Dawson Turner and Hudson Gurney, who in this respect resembled each
+other, that they were both bankers and both antiquarians more or less
+distinguished. Dawson Turner was a man of middle height and of saturnine
+aspect, who had the reputation of being a hard taskmaster to the ladies
+of his family, who were quite as intelligent and devoted to literature as
+himself. He published a ‘Tour in Normandy’—at that time scarcely anyone
+travelled abroad—and much other matter, and perhaps as an
+autograph-collector was unrivalled. Most of his books, with his notes,
+more or less valuable, are now in the British Museum. Sir Charles Lyell,
+when a young man, visited the Turner family in 1817, and gives us a very
+high idea of them all. ‘Mr. Turner,’ he says, in a letter to his father,
+‘surprises me as much as ever. He wrote twenty-two letters last night
+after he had wished us “Good-night.” It kept him up till two o’clock
+this morning.’ Again Sir Charles writes: ‘What I see going on every hour
+in this family makes me ashamed of the most active day I ever spent at
+Midhurst. Mrs. Turner has been etching with her daughters in the parlour
+every morning at half-past six.’ Of Hudson Gurney in his youth we get a
+flattering portrait in one of the charming ‘Remains of the Late Mrs.
+Trench,’ edited by her son, Archbishop of Dublin. Writing from Yarmouth
+in 1799, she says: ‘I have been detained here since last Friday, waiting
+for a fair wind, and my imprisonment would have been comfortless enough
+had it not have been for the attention of Mr. Hudson Gurney, a young man
+on whom I had no claims except from a letter of Mr. Sanford’s, who,
+without knowing him, or having any connection with him, recommended me to
+his care, feeling wretched that I should be unprotected in the first part
+of my journey. He has already devoted to me one evening and two
+mornings, assisted me in money matters, lent me books, and enlivened my
+confinement to a wretched room by his pleasant conversation. Mr. Sanford
+having described me as a person travelling about _for her health_, he
+says his old assistant in the Bank fancied I was a decrepit elderly lady
+who might safely be consigned to his youthful partner. His description
+of his surprise thus prepared was conceived in a very good strain of
+flattery. He is almost two-and-twenty, understands several languages,
+seems to delight in books, and to be uncommonly well informed.’ Little
+credit, however, is due to Mr. Hudson Gurney for his politeness in this
+case. The lovely and lively widow—she had married Colonel St. George at
+the age of eighteen, and the marriage only lasted two or three years, the
+Colonel dying of consumption—must have possessed personal and mental
+attractions irresistible to a cultivated young man of twenty-two. Had
+she been old and ugly, it is to be feared his business engagements would
+have prevented the youthful banker devoting much time to her ladyship’s
+service.
+
+Yarmouth is intimately connected with literature and the fine arts. It
+was off Yarmouth that Robinson Crusoe was shipwrecked; and the testimony
+he bears to the character of the people shows how kindly disposed were
+the Yarmouth people of his day. ‘We,’ he writes, ‘got all safe on shore,
+and walked afterwards on foot to Yarmouth, where, as unfortunate men, we
+were used with great humanity, not only by the magistrates of the town,
+who assigned us good quarters, but also by particular merchants and
+owners of ships, and had money given us, sufficient to carry us either to
+London or back to Hull, as we thought fit.’ It was from Yarmouth that
+Wordsworth and Coleridge sailed away to Germany, then almost a _terra
+incognita_. Leman Blanchard was born at Yarmouth, as well as Sayers, the
+first, if not the cleverest, of our English caricaturists. One of the
+most brilliant men ever returned to Parliament was Winthrop Mackworth
+Praed, M.P. for Yarmouth, whose politics as a boy I detested as much as
+in after-years I learned to admire his genius. One of the most fortunate
+men of our day, Sir James Paget, the great surgeon, was a Yarmouth lad,
+and the See of Chester was filled by an accomplished divine, also a
+Yarmouth lad. Southey, when at Yarmouth, where his brother was a student
+for some time, was so much struck with the uniqueness of the epitaphs in
+the Yarmouth Church, that he took the trouble to copy many of them. One
+was as follows:
+
+ ‘We put him out to nurse;
+ Alas! his life he paid,
+ But judge not; he was overlaid.’
+
+And hence it may be inferred that in Yarmouth the custom of baby-farming
+has long flourished. Possibly thence it may have extended itself to
+London. Amongst the truly great men who have lived and died in Yarmouth,
+honourable mention must be made of Hales, the Norfolk Giant. In times
+past soldiers and sailors and royal personages were often to be seen at
+Yarmouth. It was at Yarmouth the heroes, returning from many a distant
+battle-field, often landed. Nelson on one occasion—that is, after the
+affair of Copenhagen—when he landed, at once made his way to the hospital
+to see his men. To one of them, who had lost his arm, he said, ‘There,
+Jack, you and I are spoiled for fishermen.’
+
+A good deal of Puritanism seems to have come into England by way of
+Yarmouth. In Queen Elizabeth’s time, 300 Flemings settled there, who had
+fled from Popery and Spain in their native land. In Norwich the Dutch
+Church remains to this day. Some of them seem to have been the friends
+and teachers of the far-famed, and I believe unjustly maligned, Robert
+Browne. In Norfolk the seed fell upon good soil. While sacerdotalism
+was more or less being developed in the State Church, the Norfolk men
+boldly protested against Papal abominations, as they deemed them, and
+swore to maintain the gospel of Geneva and Knox. One of the men
+imprisoned when Bancroft was Archbishop of Canterbury, for attending a
+conventicle, was Thomas Ladd, ‘a merchant of Yarmouth.’ The writ ran:
+‘Because that, on the Sabbath days, after the sermons ended, sojourning
+in the house of Mr. Jachler, in Yarmouth, who was late preacher in
+Yarmouth, joined with him in repeating the substance and heads of the
+sermons that day made in the church, at which Thomas Ladd was usually
+present.’ In 1624 the penal laws for suppressing Separatists were
+strictly enforced in Yarmouth, and one of the teachers of a small society
+of Anabaptists was cast into prison, and the Bishop of Norwich wrote a
+letter of thanks to the bailiffs for their activity in this matter, which
+is preserved to this day. But, nevertheless, people still continued to
+worship God according to the dictates of conscience; we find the Earl of
+Dorset in his reply to the town of Yarmouth, as to the way in which the
+town should be governed, adds: ‘I should want in my care of you if I
+should not let you know that his Majesty is not only informed, but
+incensed against you for conniving at and tolerating a company of
+Brownists among you. I pray you remember there was no seam in the
+Saviour’s garment.’ Bridge was the founder of the Yarmouth
+Congregational Church, somewhere about the time of the commencement of
+the Civil War. The people declared for the Parliament. Colonel Goffe
+was one of its representatives in the House of Commons. All along, the
+town seems to have been puritanically inclined, and to have been in this
+matter more independent than neighbouring towns. At one time they were
+so tolerant that the Independents seem to have worshipped in one end of
+the church while the regular clergyman performed the service in the
+other; but that did not last long, and when the Independents had a place
+of worship of their own, they were not a little troubled by Friends and
+Papists claiming for themselves the liberty the Independents had sought
+and won. In 1655 the peace of the Church was disturbed by Quaker
+doctrines. It appears two females, members of the Church, had joined
+them, and refused to return. We read: ‘The messenger appointed to visit
+May Rouse, brought in an account of her disowning and despising the
+Church; she would not come at all unless she had a message from the
+Spirit moving her.’ She came, however, a week after (December 11), but
+by reason of the cold weather was desired to come in again the next
+Tuesday. She did so, and gave in these two reasons why she forsook the
+Church: 1. Because the doctrine of the Gospel of Faith was not holden
+forth; 2. Because there wanted the right administration of baptism.
+
+In 1659 the Church at Yarmouth, feeling the times to be full of trouble
+and of peril, said:
+
+‘1. We judge a Parliament to be expedient for the preservation of the
+peace of these nations; and withal, we do desire that all due care be
+taken that the Parliament be such as may preserve the interests of Christ
+and His people in these nations.
+
+‘2. As touching the magistrates’ power in matters of faith and worship,
+we have declared our judgments in our late (Free Savoy) confession, and
+though we greatly prize our Christian liberties, yet we profess our utter
+dislike and abhorrence of a universal toleration, as being contrary to
+the mind of God in His Word.
+
+‘3. We judge that the taking away of tithes for the maintenance of
+ministers until as full a maintenance be equally secured and as legally
+settled, tends very much to the destruction of the ministry, and the
+preaching of the Gospel in these nations.
+
+‘4. It is our desire that countenance be not given unto, nor trust
+reposed in, the hand of Quakers, they being persons of such principles as
+are destructive to the Gospel, and inconsistent with the peace of modern
+societies.’
+
+In five years the Yarmouth people had a Roland for their Oliver; the King
+had got his own again, and he and the Parliament of the day looked upon
+the Independents or Presbyterians as mischievous as the Quakers; and as
+to tithes, they were quite as much resolved, the only difference being
+that King and Parliament insisted on their being paid to Episcopalians
+alone. In 1770 Lady Huntingdon writes: ‘Success has crowned our labours
+in that wicked place, Yarmouth.’
+
+Mrs. Bendish, in whom the Protector was said to have lived again, was
+quite a character in Yarmouth society. Bridget Ireton, the granddaughter
+of the Protector, married in 1669 Mr. Thomas Bendish, a descendant of Sir
+Thomas Bendish, baronet, Ambassador from Charles I. to the Sultan. She
+died in 1728, removing, however, in the latter years of her life to
+Yarmouth. Her name stands among the members of the church in London of
+which Caryl had been pastor, and over which Dr. Watts presided. To her
+the latter addressed at any rate one copy of verses to be found in his
+collected works. She recollected her grandfather, and standing, when six
+years old, between his knees at a State Council, she heard secrets which
+neither bribes nor whippings could extract from her. Her grandfather she
+held to be a saint in heaven, and only second to the Twelve Apostles.
+Asked one day whether she had ever been at Court, her reply was, ‘I have
+never been at Court since I was waited upon on the knee.’ Yet she
+managed to dispense with a good deal of waiting, and never would suffer a
+servant to attend her. God, she said, was a sufficient guard, and she
+would have no other. She is described as loquacious and eloquent and
+enthusiastic, frequenting the drawing-rooms and assemblies of Yarmouth,
+dressed in the richest silks, and with a small black hood on her head.
+When she left, which would be at one in the morning, perched on her
+old-fashioned saddle, she would trot home, piercing the night air with
+her loud, jubilant psalms, in which she described herself as one of the
+elect, in a tone more remarkable for strength than sweetness. In the
+daytime she would work with her labourers, taking her turn at the
+pitchfork or the spade. The old Court dresses of her mother and Mrs.
+Cromwell were bequeathed by her to Mrs. Robert Luson, of Yarmouth, and
+were shown as recently as 1834, at an exhibition of Court dresses held at
+the Somerset Gallery in the Strand. As was to be expected, Mrs. Bendish
+was enthusiastic in the cause of the Revolution of 1688, and the printed
+sheets relating to it were dropped by her secretly in the streets of
+Yarmouth, to prepare the people for the good time coming. Her son was a
+friend of Dr. Watts as well as his mother. He died at Yarmouth,
+unmarried, in the year 1753, and with him the line of Bendish seems to
+have come to an end. Another daughter of Ireton was married to Nathaniel
+Carter, who died in 1723, aged 78. His father, John Carter, was
+commander-in-chief of the militia of the town in 1654. He subscribed the
+Solemn League and Covenant, being then one of the elders of the
+Independent congregation. He was also bailiff of the town, and an
+intimate friend of Ireton. He died in 1667. On his tombstone we read:
+
+ ‘His course, his fight, his race,
+ Thus finished, fought, and run,
+ Death brings him to the place
+ From whence is no return.’
+
+He lived at No. 4, South Quay, and it was there, so it is said, that the
+resolve was made that King Charles should die.
+
+He is gone, but his room still remains unaltered—a large wainscoted upper
+chamber, thirty feet long, with three windows looking on to the quay,
+with carved and ornamented chimney-piece and ceiling. A great obscurity,
+as was to be expected, hangs over the transaction, as even now there are
+men who shrink from lifting up a finger against the Lord’s anointed.
+Dinner had been ordered at four, but it was not till eleven, that it was
+served, and that the die had been cast. The members of the Secret
+Council, we are told, ‘after a very short repast, immediately set off by
+post—many for London, and some for the quarters of the army.’ Such is
+the account given in a letter, written in 1773, by Mr. Mewling Luson, a
+well-known resident in Yarmouth, whose father, Mr. William Luson, was
+nearly connected the Cromwell family. Nathaniel Carter, the son-in-law
+of Ireton, was in the habit of showing the room, and relating the
+occurrence connected with it, which happened when he was a boy. Cromwell
+was not at that council. He never was in Yarmouth; but that there was
+such consultation there is more than probable. Yarmouth was full of
+Cromwellites. In the Market Place, now known as the Weavers’ Arms, to
+this day is shown the panelled parlour whence Miles Corbet was used to go
+forth to worship in that part of the church allotted to the Independents.
+Miles Corbet was the son of Sir Thomas Corbet, of Sprouston, who had been
+made Recorder of Yarmouth in the first year of Charles, and who was one
+of the representatives of the town in the Long Parliament. The son was
+an ardent supporter of the policy of Cromwell, and, like him, laboured
+that England might be religious and free and great, as she never could be
+under any king of the Stuart race; and he met with his reward. ‘See,
+young man,’ said an old man to Wilberforce, as he pointed to a figure of
+Christ on the cross, ‘see the fate of a Reformer.’ It was so
+emphatically with Miles Corbet. Under the date of 1662 there is the
+following entry in the church-book:
+
+ ‘1662.—Miles Corbet suffered in London.’
+
+He was a member of the church there, and was one of the judges who sat on
+the trial of King Charles I. His name stands last on the list of those
+who signed the warrant for that monarch’s execution. Corbet fled into
+Holland at the Restoration, with Colonels Okey and Barkstead. George
+Downing—a name ever infamous—had been Colonel Okey’s chaplain. He became
+a Royalist at the Restoration, and was despatched as Envoy Extraordinary
+into Holland, where, under a promise of safety, he trepanned the three
+persons above named into his power, and sent them over to England to
+suffer death for having been members of the Commission for trying King
+Charles I. For this service he was created a baronet. The King sent an
+order to the Sheriffs of London on April 21, 1662, that Okey’s head and
+quarters should have Christian burial, as he had manifested some signs of
+contrition; but Barkstead’s head was directed to be placed on the
+Traitor’s Gate in the Tower, and Corbet’s head on the bridge, and their
+quarters on the City gates.
+
+Foremost amongst the noted women of the Independent Church must be
+mentioned Sarah Martin, of whose life a sketch appeared in the _Edinburgh
+Review_ as far back as 1847. A life of her was also published by the
+Religious Tract Society. Sarah, who joined the Yarmouth church in 1811,
+was born at Caistor. From her nineteenth year she devoted her only day
+of rest, the Sabbath, to the task of teaching in a Sunday-school. She
+likewise visited the inmates of the workhouse, and read the Scriptures to
+the aged and the sick. But the gaol was the scene of her greatest
+labours. In 1819, after some difficulty, she obtained admission to it,
+and soon seems to have acquired an extraordinary influence over the minds
+of the prisoners. She then gave up one day in the week to instruct them
+in reading and writing. At length she attended the prison regularly, and
+kept an exact account of her proceedings and their results in a book,
+which is now preserved in the public library of the town. As there was
+no chaplain, she read and preached to the inmates herself, and devised
+means of obtaining employment for them. She continued this good work
+till the end of her days in 1843, when she died, aged fifty-three. A
+handsome window of stained glass, costing upwards of £100, raised by
+subscription, has been placed to her memory in the west window of the
+north aisle of St. Nicholas Church. But her fame extends beyond local
+limits, and is part of the inheritance of the universal Church. It was
+in Mr. Walford’s time that Sarah Martin commenced her work. Mr. Walford
+tells us, in his Autobiography, that the Church had somewhat degenerated
+in his day, that the line of thought was worldly, and not such as became
+the Gospel. It is clear that in his time it greatly revived, and, even
+as a lad, the intelligence of the congregation seemed to lift me up into
+quite a new sphere, so different were the merchants and ship-owners of
+Yarmouth from the rustic inhabitants of my native village. In this
+respect, if I remember aright, the family of Shelley were particularly
+distinguished. One dear old lady, who lived at the Quay, was
+emphatically the minister’s friend. She had a nice house of her own and
+ample means, and there she welcomed ministers and their wives and
+children. It is to be hoped, for the sake of poor parsons, that such
+people still live. I know it was a great treat to me to enjoy the
+hospitality of the kind-hearted Mrs. Goderham, for whose memory I still
+cherish an affectionate regard. To live in one of the best houses on the
+Quay, and to lie in my bed and to see through the windows the masts of
+the shipping, was indeed to a boy a treat.
+
+A little while ago I chanced to be at Norwich, when the thought naturally
+occurred to me that I would take a run to Yarmouth—a journey quickly made
+by the rail. In my case the journey was safely and expeditiously
+accomplished, and I hastened once more to revisit the scenes and
+associations of my youth. Alas! wherever I went I found changes. A new
+generation had arisen that knew not Joseph. The wind was howling down
+the Quay; the sand was blown into my mouth, my nose, my ears; I could
+scarcely see for the latter, or walk for the former; but, nevertheless, I
+made my way to the pier. Only one person was on it, and his back was
+turned to me. As he stood at the extreme end, with chest expanded, with
+mouth wide open, as if prepared to swallow the raging sea in front and
+the Dutch coast farther off, I thought I knew the figure. It was a
+reporter from Fleet Street and he was the only man to greet me in the
+town I once knew so well. Yes; the Yarmouth of my youth was gone. Then
+a reporter from Fleet Street was an individual never dreamt of. And so
+the world changes, and we get new men, fresh faces, other minds. The
+antiquarian Camden, were he to revisit Yarmouth, would not be a little
+astonished at what he would see. He wrote: ‘As soon as the Yare has
+passed Claxton, it takes a turn to the south, that it may descend more
+gently into the sea, by which means it makes a sort of little tongue or
+slip of land, washt on one side by itself, on the other side by the sea.
+In this slip, upon an open shore, I saw Yarmouth, a very neat harbour and
+town, fortified both by the nature of the place and the contrivance of
+art. For, though it be almost surrounded with water, on the west with a
+river, over which there is a drawbridge, and on either side with the sea,
+except to the north, where it is joined to the continent; yet it is
+fenced with strong, stately walls, which, with the river, figure it into
+an oblong quadrangle. Besides the towers upon these, there is a mole or
+mount, to the east, from whence the great guns command the sea (scarce
+half a mile distant) all round. It has but one church, though very large
+and with a stately high spire, built near the north gate by Herbert,
+Bishop of Norwich.’ In only one respect the Yarmouth of to-day resembles
+that of Camden’s time. Then the north wind played the tyrant and plagued
+the coast, and it does so still.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+THE NORFOLK CAPITAL.
+
+
+Brigg’s Lane—The carrier’s cart—Reform demonstration—The old
+dragon—Chairing M.P.’s—Hornbutton Jack—Norwich artists and
+literati—Quakers and Nonconformists.
+
+Many, many years ago, when wandering in the North of Germany, I came to
+an hotel in the Fremden Buch, of which (Englishmen at that time were far
+more patriotic and less cosmopolitan than in these degenerate days) an
+enthusiastic Englishman had written—and possibly the writing had been
+suggested by the hard fare and dirty ways of the place:
+
+ ‘England, with all thy faults, I love thee still.’
+
+Underneath, a still more enthusiastic Englishman had written: ‘Faults?
+What faults? I know of none, except that Brigg’s Lane, Norwich, wants
+widening.’ For the benefit of the reader who may be a stranger to the
+locality, let me inform him that Brigg’s Lane leads out of the fine
+Market Place, for which the good old city of Norwich is celebrated all
+the world over, and that on a recent visit to Norwich I found that the
+one fault which could be laid at the door of England had been
+removed—that Brigg’s Lane had been widened—that, in fact, it had ceased
+to be a lane, and had been elevated into the dignity of a street.
+
+My first acquaintance with Norwich, when I was a lad of tender years and
+of limited experience, was by Brigg’s Lane. I had reached it by means of
+a carrier’s cart—the only mode of conveyance between Southwold, Wrentham,
+Beccles and Norwich—a carrier’s cart with a hood drawn by three noble
+horses, and able to accommodate almost any number of travellers and any
+amount of luggage. As the driver was well known to everyone, there was
+also a good deal of conversation of a more or less friendly character.
+The cart took one day to reach Norwich—which was, and it may be is, the
+commercial emporium of all that district—and another day to return. The
+beauty of such a conveyance, as compared with the railway travelling of
+to-day, was that there was no occasion to be in a flurry if you wanted to
+travel by it. Goldsmith—for such was the proprietor and driver’s
+name—when he came to a place was in no hurry to leave it. All the
+tradesmen in the village had hampers or boxes to return, and it took some
+time to collect them; or messages and notes to send, and it took some
+time to write them; and at the alehouse there was always a little gossip
+to be done while the horses enjoyed their pail of water or mouthful of
+hay. Even at the worst there was no fear of being left behind, as by
+dint of running and holloaing you might get up with the cart, unless you
+were very much behind indeed. But you may be sure that when the day came
+that I was to visit the great city of Norwich I was ready for the
+carrier’s cart long before the carrier’s cart was ready for me. Why was
+it, you ask, that the Norwich journey was undertaken? The answer is not
+difficult to give. The Reform agitation at that time had quickened the
+entire intellectual and social life of the people. At length had dawned
+the age of reason, and had come the rights of man. The victory had been
+won all along the line, and was to be celebrated in the most emphatic
+manner. We Dissenters rejoiced with exceeding joy; for we looked
+forward, as a natural result, to the restoration of that religious
+equality in the eye of the law of which we had been unrighteously
+deprived, and in consequence of which we had suffered in many ways. We
+joined, as a matter of course, in the celebration of the victory which we
+and the entire body of Reformers throughout the land had gained; and how
+could that be done better than by feeding the entire community on old
+English fare washed down by old English ale? And this was done as far as
+practicable everywhere. For instance, at Bungay there was a public feast
+in the Market Place, and on the town-pump the Messrs. Childs erected a
+printing-press, which they kept hard at work all day printing off papers
+intended to do honour to the great event their fellow-townsmen were
+celebrating in so jovial a manner. In Norwich the demonstration was to
+be of a more imposing character, and as an invitation had come to the
+heads of the family from an old friend, a minister out of work, and
+living more or less comfortably on his property, it seemed good to them
+to accept it, and to take me with them, deeming, possibly, that of two
+evils it was best to choose the least, and that I should be safer under
+their eye at Norwich than with no one to look after me at home. At any
+rate, be that as it may, the change was not a little welcome, and much
+did I see to wonder at in the old Castle, the new Gaol, the size of the
+city, the extent of the Market Place, the smartness of the people, and
+the glare of the shops. It well repaid me for the ride of twenty-six
+miles and the jolting of the carrier’s cart along the dusty roads.
+
+As I look into the mirror of the past, I see, alas! but a faded picture
+of that wonderful banquet in Norwich to celebrate Reform. There was a
+procession with banners and music, which seemed to me endless, as it
+toiled along in the dust under the fierce sun of summer, the spectators
+cheering all the way. There were speeches, I dare say, though no word of
+them remains; but I have a distinct recollection of peeping into the
+tents or tent, where the diners were at work, and of receiving from some
+one or other of them a bit of plum-pudding prepared for that day, which
+seemed to me of unusual excellence. I have a distinct recollection also
+of the fireworks in the evening, the first I had ever seen, on the Castle
+plain, and of the dense crowd that had turned out to see the sight; but I
+can well remember that I enjoyed myself much, and that I was awfully
+tired when it was all over.
+
+Another memory also comes to me in connection with the old Dragon,—not of
+Revelation, but of Norwich—a huge green monster, which was usually kept
+in St. Andrew’s Hall, and dragged out at the time of city festivities.
+Men inside of it carried it along the street, and the sight was terrible
+to see, as it had a ferocious head and a villainous tail, and resembled
+nothing that is in the heaven above or the earth beneath or the waters
+under the earth. I fancy, however, since the schoolmaster has gone
+abroad, that kind of dragon has ceased to roar. I think it was at a
+Norwich election that I saw it for the first and the only time, and it
+followed in the procession formed to chair the Members—the Members being
+seated in gorgeous array on chairs, borne on the heads of people, and
+every now and then, much to the delight of the mob, though I should
+imagine very little to his own, the chair, with the Member in it, was
+tossed up into the air, and by this means it was supposed the general
+public were able to get a view of their M.P. and to see what manner of
+man he was. It was in some such way that I, as a lad, realized, as I
+never else should have done, the red face and the pink-silk stockings of
+the Hon. Mr. Scarlett, the happy candidate who pretended to enjoy the
+fun, as with the best grace possible under the circumstances he smiled on
+the ladies in the windows of the street, as he was borne along and bowed
+to all. From my recollection of the chairing I saw that time, I am more
+inclined to admire the activity of Wilberforce, of whom we read, when
+elected for Hull, ‘When the procession reached his mother’s house, he
+sprang from the chair, and, presenting himself with surprising quickness
+at a projecting window—it was that of the nursery in which his childhood
+had been passed—he addressed the populace with such complete effect that
+he was afterwards able to decide the election of its successor.’ At
+Norwich the Hon. Mr. Scarlett did well in not attempting a similar
+display of agility. Perhaps, however, it is quite as well that we have
+got rid of the chairing and the humour—Heaven help us!—to which it gave
+rise on the part of an English mob.
+
+There was a delightful flavour of antiquity about the Norwich of that
+day—its old fusty chapels and churches, its old bridges and narrow
+streets. All the people with whom I came into contact on that festival
+seemed to me well stricken in years. It was not so very long since, old
+Hornbutton Jack had been seen threading his way along its ancient
+streets. With a countenance much resembling the portraits of Erasmus,
+with gray hair hanging about his shoulders, with his hat drawn over his
+eyes and his hands behind him, as if in deep meditation; John Fransham,
+the Norwich metaphysician and mathematician, might well excite the
+curiosity of the casual observer, especially when I add that he was
+bandy-legged, that he was short of stature, that he wore a green jacket,
+a broad hat, large shoes, and short worsted stockings. A Norwich weaver
+had helped to make Fransham a philosopher. Wright said Fransham could
+discourse well on the nature and fitness of things. He possessed a
+purely philosophical spirit and a soul well purified from vulgar errors.
+Fransham made himself famous in his day. There is every reason to
+believe that he had been for some time tutor to Mr. Windham. He is once
+recorded to have spent a day with Dr. Parr. Many of his pupils became
+professional men; with one of them, Dr. Leeds, the reader of Foote’s
+comedies, if such a one exists, may be acquainted. The tutor and his
+pupil, as Johnny Macpherson and Dr. Last, were actually exhibited on the
+stage. But to return to Norwich antiquities. I have a dim memory of
+some old place where the Dutch and Huguenot refugees were permitted to
+meet for worship, and even now I can recognise there the possibility of
+another Sir Thomas Browne—unless the Norwich of my boyhood has undergone
+the destructive process we love to call improvement—not even disturbed in
+his quiet study by the storm of civil war, inditing his thoughts as
+follows: ‘That crystal is nothing else but ice strongly congealed; that a
+diamond is softened or broken by the blood of a goat; that bays preserve
+from the mischief of lightning and thunder; that the horse hath no gall;
+that a kingfisher hanged by the bill showeth where the wind lay; that the
+flesh of peacocks corrupteth not;’ and so on—questions, it may be, as
+pertinent as those learnedly discussed in half-crown magazines at the
+present day.
+
+As a boy, I was chiefly familiar with Norwich crapes and bombazines and
+Norwich shawls, which at that time were making quite a sensation in the
+fashionable world. It was at a later time that I came to hear of Old
+Crome and the Norwich school. Of him writes Mr. Wedmore, that ‘he died
+in a substantial square-built house, in what was a good street then, in
+the parish of St. George, Colegate, having begun as a workman, and ended
+as a bourgeois. He was a simple man, of genial company. To the end of
+his life he used to go of an evening to the public-house as to an
+informal club. In the privileged bar-parlour, behind the taps and
+glasses, he sat with his friends and the shopkeepers, talking of local
+things. But it is not to be supposed that because his life was from end
+to end a humble one, though prosperous even outwardly after its kind,
+Crome was deprived of the companionship most fitted to his genius, the
+stimulus that he most needed. The very existence of the Norwich Society
+of Artists settles that question. The local men hung on his words; he
+knew that he was not only making pictures, but a school. And in the
+quietness of a provincial city a coterie had been formed of men bent on
+the pursuit of an honest and homely art, and of these he was the chief.’
+Dying, his last words were, ‘Hobbema, oh, Hobbema, how I loved thee!’ In
+my young days Mr. John Sell Cotman chiefly represented Norwich, although
+in later times he became connected with King’s College, London. A lady
+writes to me: ‘I think it was in the summer of 1842 Mr. Cotman came down
+to Norwich to visit his son John, who at that time was occupying a house
+on St. Bennet’s Road. He visited us at Thorpe several times, and was
+unusually well and in good spirits, with sketchbook or folio always in
+hand. His father and sisters, too, were then living in a small house at
+Thorpe, and from the balcony of their house, which looked over the valley
+of the Wensum, he made one of his last interesting sketches, twelve of
+which, after his death, the following year, were selected by his sons for
+publication.’
+
+Evelyn gives us a pleasant picture of Norwich when he went there ‘to see
+that famous scholar and physitian, Dr. T. Browne, author of the “Religio
+Medici” and “Vulgar Errors,” etc., now lately knighted.’ Evelyn
+continues: ‘Next morning I went to see Sir Thomas Browne, with whom I had
+corresponded by letter, though I had never seen him before, his whole
+house and garden being a Paradise and cabinet of rarities, and that of
+the best collection, especially medals, books, plants and natural things.
+Amongst other curiosities, Sir Thomas has a collection of all the eggs of
+all the foule and birds he could procure; that country, especially the
+promonotary of Norfolck, being frequented, as he said, by severall kinds,
+which seldom or never go further into the land, as cranes, storkes,
+eagles, and a variety of water-foule. He led me to see all the
+remarkable places of this ancient citty, being one of the largest and
+certainly, after London, one of the noblest of England, for its venerable
+cathedrall, number of stately churches, cleannesse of the streetes and
+building of flints so exquisitely headed and squared, as I was much
+astonished at; but he told me they had lost the art of squaring the
+flints, in which at one time they so much excelled, and of which the
+churches, best houses, and walls are built.’ Further, Evelyn tells us:
+‘The suburbs are large, the prospect sweete with other amenities, not
+omitting the flower-gardens, in which all the inhabitants excel. The
+fabric of stuffs brings a vast trade to this populous towne.’
+
+Long has Norwich rejoiced in clever people. In the life of William
+Taylor, one of her most distinguished sons, we have a formidable array of
+illustrious Norwich personages, in whom, alas! at the present time the
+world takes no interest. Sir James Edward Smith, founder and first
+President of the Linnæan Society, ought not to be forgotten. Of Taylor
+himself Mackintosh wrote: ‘I can still trace William Taylor by his
+Armenian dress, gliding through the crowd in Annual Reviews, Monthly
+Magazines, Athenæums, etc., rousing the stupid public by paradox, or
+correcting it by useful and seasonable truth. It is true that he does
+not speak the Armenian or any other tongue but the Taylorian, but I am so
+fond of his vigour and originality, that for his sake I have studied and
+learned the language. As the Hebrew is studied by one book, so is the
+Taylorian by me for another. He never deigns to write to me, but in
+print I doubt whether he has many readers who so much understand, relish,
+and tolerate him, for which he ought to reward me by some of his
+manuscript esoteries.’ More may be said of William Taylor. It was he
+who made Walter Scott a poet. Taylor’s spirited translation of Burger’s
+‘Leonore’ with the two well-known lines—
+
+ ‘Tramp, tramp along the land they rode,
+ Splash, splash along the sea,’
+
+opened up to Scott a field in which for a time he won fame and wealth.
+
+Of Mrs. Taylor, wife of the grandson of the eminent Hebraist, Mackintosh
+declared that she was the Madame Roland of Norwich. We owe to her Mrs.
+Austen and Lady Duff Gordon. Mr. Reeve, the translator of De
+Tocqueville’s ‘Democracy,’ has preserved the memory of his father, Dr.
+Henry Reeve, by the republication of his ‘Journal of a Tour on the
+Continent.’ Let me also mention that Dr. Caius, the founder of Caius
+College, Cambridge, was a Norwich man.
+
+To Noncons Norwich offers peculiar attractions. We have in Dr.
+Williams’s library ‘The Order of the Prophesie in Norwich’; and Robinson,
+the leader of the Pilgrim Fathers, had a Norwich charge. Even in a later
+day some of the Norwich divines had a godly zeal for freedom, worthy of
+Milton himself, and on which the Pilgrim Fathers would have smiled
+approval. It is told of Mark Wilks, the brother of Matthew, and the
+grandfather of our London Mark Wilks, that when a deputation went from
+Norwich during the Thelwall and Horne Tooke trials, when, if the
+Castlereagh gang had had their will, there would have been found a short
+and easy way with the Dissenters, and came back on the Sunday morning,
+entering the place after the service had commenced, that he called out,
+‘What’s the news?’ as he saw them enter. ‘Acquitted,’ was the reply.
+‘Thank God!’ said the parson, as they all joined in singing
+
+ ‘Praise God from whom all blessings flow.’
+
+It is a fact that Wilks’s first sermon in the Countess of Huntingdon’s
+Chapel at Norwich was from the text, ‘There is a lad here with five
+barley loaves and a few small fishes.’ Let me tell another story, this
+time in connection with that Old Meeting which has so much to attract the
+visitor at Norwich. It had a grand old man, William Youngman, amongst
+its supporters; I see him now, with his choleric face, his full fat
+figure, his black knee-breeches and silk stockings, his gold-headed cane.
+He was an author, a learned man, as well as a Norwich merchant, the very
+Aristarchus of Dissent—a kind-hearted, hospitable man withal, if my
+boyish experience may be relied on. One Sunday there came to preach in
+the Old Meeting a young man named Halley from London, who lived to be
+honoured as few of our Dissenting D.D.’s have been. He was young, and he
+felt nervous as he looked from the pulpit on the austere critic in his
+great square pew just beneath. Well, thought the young preacher, a
+sermon on keeping the Sabbath will be safe, and he selected that for his
+morning discourse. The service over, up comes the grand old man. ‘The
+next time, young man, you preach, preach on something you understand;’
+and, having said so, he bought a pennyworth of apples of a woman in the
+street, leaving the young man to digest his remarks as best he could.
+Again the service was to be carried on. The young man was in the pulpit,
+the grand old man below. There was singing and prayer, but no sermon,
+the young man having bolted after opening the service. I like better the
+picture of Norwich I get in Sir James Mackintosh’s Life, where Basil
+Montague tells us how he and Mackintosh, when travelling the Norfolk
+circuit, always hastened to Norwich to spend their evenings in the circle
+of which Mrs. Taylor was the attraction and the centre. The wife of a
+Norwich tradesman, we see her sitting sewing and talking in the midst of
+her family, the companion of philosophers, who compared her to Lucy
+Hutchinson, and a model wife. Far away in India Sir James writes to her:
+‘I know the value of your letters. They rouse my mind on subjects which
+interest us in common—friends, children, literature, and life. Their
+moral tone cheers and braces me. I ought to be made permanently happy by
+contemplating a mind like yours; which seems more exclusively to derive
+its gratifications from its duties than almost any other.’ It was in the
+Norwich Octagon that these Taylors worshipped. Their Unitarianism seemed
+to have affected them more favourably than it did Harriet Martineau,
+whose family also attended there. I remember Edward Taylor, who was the
+Gresham Professor of Music. But theologically, I presume, the palm of
+excellence in connection with the Octagon is to be awarded to Dr. Taylor,
+the great Hebrew scholar. He wrote to old Newton: ‘I have been looking
+through my Bible, and can’t find your doctrine of the Atonement.’ ‘Last
+night I could not see to get into bed,’ replied old Newton, ‘because I
+found I had my extinguisher on the candle. Take off the extinguisher,
+and then you will see.’
+
+Leaving theology, let us get up on the gray old castle, which is to be
+turned into a museum, and look round on the city lying at our feet.
+Would you have a finer view? Cross the Yare and walk up the new road
+(made by the unemployed one hard winter) to Mousehold Heath, and after
+you have done thinking of Kitt’s rebellion—an agrarian one, by-the-bye,
+and worth thinking about just at this time—and of the Lollards, who were
+burnt just under you, look across to the city in the valley, with its
+heights all round, more resembling the Holy City, so travellers say, than
+any other city in the world. In the foreground is the cathedral, right
+beyond rises the castle on the hill; church spires, warehouses, public
+buildings, private dwellings, manufactories, chimneys’ smoke, complete
+the landscape fringed by the green of the distant hills. There are a
+hundred thousand people there—to be preached to and saved.
+
+Windham was rather hard on the Norwich of his day. In his diary, in
+1798, he records a visit to Norwich, of which city he was the
+representative. On October 9 he dined at the Swan—‘dinner, like the
+sessions dinner, but ball in the evening distinguished by the presence of
+Mrs. Siddons.’ On the 10th he dined at the Bishop’s—‘A party, of, I
+suppose, fifty, chiefly clergy. I felt the same enjoyment that I
+frequently do at large dinners—they afford, in general, what never fails
+to be pleasant—solitude in a crowd.’ On the 11th he writes: ‘Dined with
+sheriffs at King’s Head. Robinson, the late sheriff, was there, and much
+as he may be below his own opinion of himself, he is more to talk to than
+the generality of those who are found on those occasions. I could not
+help reflecting on the very low state of talents or understanding in
+those who compose the whole, nearly, of the society of Norwich. The
+French are surely a more enlightened and polished people.’ Perhaps
+Windham would have fared better had he dined with some of the leading
+Dissenters. Few of the clergy of East Anglia at that time would have
+been fitting company for the friend of Johnson and Burke. In Norwich,
+Mr. Windham often managed to make himself unpopular. For instance,
+towards the end of the session of 1788, Mr. Windham called the attention
+of Government to a requisition from France, which was then suffering the
+greatest distress from a scarcity of grain. The object of this
+requisition was to be supplied with 20,000 sacks of flour from this
+country. So small a boon ought, he thought, to be granted from motives
+of humanity; but a Committee of the House of Commons having decided
+against it, the Ministers, though they professed themselves disposed to
+afford the relief sought for, could not, after such a decision, undertake
+to grant it upon their own responsibility. The leading part which Mr.
+Windham took in favour of this requisition occasioned, amongst some of
+his constituents at Norwich, considerable clamour. He allayed the storm
+by a private letter addressed to those citizens of Norwich who were most
+likely to be affected by a rise in the price of provisions; but the fact
+that Norwich should thus have backed up the inhuman policy of refusing
+food to France showed how strong at that time was the force of passion,
+and how hard it is to break down hereditary animosity. As a further
+illustration of manners and habits of the East Anglian clergy, let me
+mention that when, in 1778, Windham made the speech which pointed him out
+to be a man of marked ability in connection with the call made on the
+country for carrying on the American War, one of the Canons of the
+cathedral, and a great supporter of the war, exclaimed: ‘D—n him! I
+could cut his tongue out!’
+
+In my young days, in serious circles, there was no name dearer than that
+of Joseph Gurney—a fine-looking man with a musical voice, always ready to
+aid with money, or in other ways, all that was right and good, or what
+seemed to him such. In the ‘Memorials of a Quaker Lady’ he is described
+thus: ‘He sat on the end seat of the first cross-form, and both preached
+and supplicated. I was very much struck with him. His fine person, his
+beautiful dark, glossy hair, his intelligent, benign, and truly amiable
+countenance, made a deep impression upon me. And as he noticed me most
+kindly, as I was introduced to him by Elizabeth Fry, as the little girl
+his sister Priscilla wanted to bring to England, I felt myself greatly
+honoured.’ The Gurneys have an ancient lineage, and had their home in
+Gourney, in Upper Normandy. One of them, of course, fought in the ranks
+of the winners at the battle of Hastings. Another was a crusader.
+Another had done good service at Acre, as a follower of Richard of the
+Lion Heart. When the main line came to an end, one branch settled in
+Norfolk. Gurney’s Bank at Norwich was one of the institutions of the
+city, and was as famous in my day as at a later time was the great house
+of Overend and Gurney, which, when it fell, created a panic in financial
+circles all the world over.
+
+At Earlham, the home of the Gurneys, we learn how much may be done by a
+family, and how widespread its influence for good or evil may become.
+Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton certainly stands foremost, not alone amongst the
+East Anglians, but the philanthropists of later years. At the age of
+sixteen young Buxton went to Earlham as a guest. His biographer writes:
+‘They received him as one of themselves, early appreciating his masterly,
+though still uncultivated mind; while, on his side, their cordial and
+encouraging welcome seemed to draw out all his latent powers. He at once
+joined with them in reading and study, and from this visit may be dated a
+remarkable change in the whole tone of his character; he received a
+stimulus not merely in the acquisition of knowledge, but in the formation
+of studious habits and intellectual tastes. Nor could the same influence
+fail of extending to the refinement of his disposition and manners.’ At
+that time Norwich—the Buxtons being witnesses—was distinguished for good
+society, and Earlham was celebrated for its hospitality. Mr. Gurney, the
+father, belonged to the Society of Friends, but his family was not
+brought up with any strict regard to its peculiarities. He put little
+restraint on their domestic amusements, and music and dancing were among
+their favourite recreations. The third daughter, Mrs. Fry, had, indeed,
+united herself more closely with the Society of Friends; but her example
+had not then been followed by any of her brothers and sisters. ‘I know,’
+wrote Sir Thomas, in later years, ‘no blessing of a temporal nature—and
+it is not only temporal—for which I ought to render so many thanks as my
+connection with the Earlham family. It has given a colour to my life.
+Its influence was most positive, and pregnant with good at that critical
+period between school and manhood. They were eager to improve; I caught
+the infection. I was resolved to please them, and in the college at
+Dublin, at a distance from all my friends and all control, their
+influence and the desire to please them kept me hard at my books, and
+sweetened the task they gave. The distinctions I gained at college
+(little valuable as distinctions, but valuable because habits of
+industry, perseverance and resolution were necessary to attain
+them)—these boyish distinctions were exclusively the result of the
+animating passion in my mind to carry back to them the prizes which they
+prompted and enabled me to win.’
+
+Wilberforce, when he was staying at Lowestoft in 1816, wrote: ‘I am still
+full of Earlham and its excellent inhabitants. One of our great
+astronomers stated it as probable there may be stars whose light has been
+travelling to us from the Creation, and has not yet reached our little
+planet. In the Earlham family a new constellation has broken in upon us,
+for which you must invent a name, as you are fond of star-gazing, and if
+it indicates a little monstrosity (as they are apt to give the collection
+of stars the names of strange creatures—dragons, bears, etc.), the
+various stars of which the Earlham assemblage is made,’ continues
+Wilberforce, ‘will include also much to be respected and loved.’ At that
+time Mrs. Opie was one of the Norwich stars. Caroline Fox, who went to
+dine with her described her as in great force and really jolly. ‘She is
+enthusiastic about Father Mathew, reads Dickens voraciously, takes to
+Carlyle, but thinks his appearance rather against him—talks much and with
+great spirit of people, but never ill-naturedly.’
+
+‘Norwich,’ as described by Camden, ‘on account of its wealth,
+populousness, neatness of buildings, beautiful churches, with the number
+of them—for it has a matter of fifty parishes—as also the industry of its
+citizens, loyalty to their Prince, is to be reckoned among the most
+considerable cities in Britain. It was fortified with walls that have a
+great many turrets and eleven gates.’ Camden, quoting one writer after
+another, adds the eulogy of Andrew Johnston, a Scotchman, as follows:
+
+ ‘A town whose stately piles and happy seat
+ Her citizens and strangers both delight;
+ Whose tedious siege and plunder made her bear
+ In Norman battles an unhappy share,
+ And feel the sad effects of dreadful war.
+ These storms o’erblown, now blest with constant peace,
+ She saw her riches and her trade increase.
+ State here by wealth, by beauty yet undone,
+ How blest if vain excess be yet unknown!
+ So fully is she from herself supplied
+ That England while she stands can never want a head.’
+
+From Norwich went Robinson to help to build up in Amsterdam that Church
+of the Pilgrim Fathers which was to be in its turn the mother of a great
+Republic such as the world had never seen. He has been styled the Father
+of Modern Congregationalism; be that as it may, when he bade farewell in
+that quaint old harbour, Delfhaven—which looks as if not a brick or a
+building had been touched since—he was doing a work from which neither
+himself nor those who stood with him could ever have expected such
+wonderful results. That emigration to Holland in Wren’s time was a great
+loss of money and men to England, and was an indication of Nonconformist
+strength which wise Churchmen would have conciliated rather than driven
+to extremities. ‘In sooth it was,’ wrote Heylin, ‘that the people in
+many great trading towns which were near the sea, having long been
+discharged of the bond of ceremonies, no sooner came to hear the least
+noise of a conformity, but they began to spurn against it; and when they
+found that all their striving was in vain, that they had lost the comfort
+of their lecturers and that their ministers began to shrink at the very
+name of a visitation, it was no hard matter for those ministers and
+lecturers to persuade them to remove their dwellings and transport their
+trades.’ ‘The sun of heaven,’ say they, ‘doth shine as comfortably in
+other places; the Sun of Righteousness much brighter.’ ‘Better to go and
+dwell in Goshen, find it where we can, than tarry in the midst of such an
+Egyptian darkness as is now falling on the land.’ One of the preachers
+who gave that advice and acted in accordance with it was William Bridge,
+M.A. Against him Wren was so furious that he fled to Holland and settled
+down as one of the pastors of the church at Rotterdam. In 1643 we find
+him pastor of the church at Norwich and Yarmouth, and one of the Assembly
+of Divines. In 1644 the church was separated—a part meeting at Yarmouth
+and a part at Norwich. This was done on the advice of Mr. John Phillip,
+of Wrentham—a godly minister of great influence in his denomination in
+his day.
+
+As was to be expected, I was taken to the Old Meeting House at Norwich,
+where many learned men had preached, and where many men almost as learned
+listened. The gigantic pews, in which a small family might have lived,
+filled me with amazement. And equally appalling to me was the
+respectability of the people, of a very different class from that of our
+Wrentham chapel. Close by was the Octagon Chapel, where the Unitarians
+worshipped, equally impressive in its respectability. But what struck me
+most was the new and fashionable Baptist chapel of St. Mary’s, where the
+venerable and learned Kinghorn preached—a great Hebrew scholar and the
+champion of strict communion—against Robert Hall, and other degenerate
+Baptists, who were ready to admit to the Lord’s Table any Christians,
+whether properly baptized—that is, by immersion when adults—or merely
+sprinkled as infants. Up to this day I confound the worthy man with John
+the Baptist, probably because he looked so lank and long and lean. He
+was a man of singularly precise habits, so much so that I heard of an old
+lady who always regulated her cooking by his daily walk, putting the
+dumplings into the pot to boil when he went, and taking them out when he
+returned. I could write much about him, but _cui bono_? who cares about
+a dead Baptist lion? Not even the Baptists themselves. On going into
+their library in Castle Street the other day, to look at Kinghorn’s life,
+I found no one had taken the trouble to cut the pages. In the front
+gallery of St. Mary’s, Mr. Brewer, the Norwich schoolmaster, had sittings
+for the boys of his school, including his own sons, who, at King’s
+College and elsewhere, have done much to illustrate our national history
+and literature. If I remember aright, one of the congregation was a
+jolly-looking old gentleman who, as Uncle Jerry, laid the foundation of a
+mustard manufactory, which has placed one of the present M.P.’s for
+Norwich at the head of a business of unrivalled extent. When Mr.
+Kinghorn died, his place was taken by Mr. Brock, better known as Dr.
+Brock, of Bloomsbury Chapel, London. Under Mr. Brock’s preaching the
+reputation of St. Mary’s Chapel was increased rather than diminished. As
+a young man himself at that time, he was peculiarly attractive to the
+young, and the singing was very different from the rustic psalmody of my
+native village, in spite of the fact that we had a bass-viol at all
+times, and on highly-favoured occasions such an array of flutes and
+clarionets as really astonished the natives and delighted me.
+
+But to return to the Old Meeting. Calamy writes of one of the Norwich
+ministers, of the name of Cromwell, that ‘he enjoyed but one peaceable
+day after his settlement, being on the second forced out of his
+meeting-house, the licenses being called in, and then for nine years
+together he was never without trouble. Sometimes he was pursued with
+indictments at sessions, at assizes, and then with citations of the
+ecclesiastical courts; and at other times feigned letters, rhymes or
+libels were dropped in the streets or church and fathered upon him, so
+that he was forced to make his house his prison. At length that was
+broken open, and he absconded into the houses of his friends, till he
+contracted his old disease’ a second time. It is said that he was
+invited on one occasion to dine with Bishop Reynolds, when several young
+clergy were present. When Mr. Cromwell retired, the Bishop rose and
+attended him, and then a general laugh ensued. On his return his
+lordship rebuked his guests for their unmannerly conduct, and told them
+that Mr. Cromwell had more solid divinity in his little finger than all
+of them had in their bodies. It must be remembered that, like most of
+the early Independent ministers, Mr. Cromwell had a University training;
+and even in my young days the respect shown to a learned ministry kept up
+not a little of the high standard which had been laid down by the fathers
+and founders of Dissent. In these more degenerate days it is to be
+questioned whether as much can be said. The Old Meeting House at Norwich
+was finished as far back as 1643. The only pastor of the church who was
+not an author was the Rev. Dr. Scott, who died in 1767. In the Octagon
+Chapel the preachers had been still more distinguished. One of them was
+the Rev. Dr. Taylor, author of the famous Hebrew Concordance, which was
+published in two volumes folio, and was the labour of fourteen years. He
+left Norwich to become tutor at the newly-erected Academy at Warrington;
+but his son, Mr. Edward Taylor, the Gresham Professor of Music, was often
+a visitor at Wrentham, where he had a little property, which he valued,
+as it gave him a vote. Another of the preachers at the Octagon was the
+Rev. R. Alderson, who afterwards became Recorder of Norwich. The Mr.
+Edward Taylor of whom I have just written was baptized by him. One day,
+being under examination as a witness in court, Alderson questioned him as
+to his age. ‘Why,’ said Taylor, a little nettled, ‘you ought to know,
+for you baptized me.’ ‘I baptized you!’ exclaimed Alderson. ‘What do
+you mean?’ The Recorder never liked to be reminded of his having been a
+preacher. The Marchioness of Salisbury is of this family. Perhaps, of
+these Unitarian preachers, one of the most distinguished was Dr. William
+Enfield, whose ‘Speaker’ was one of the books placed in the hands of
+ingenuous youth, and whose ‘History of Philosophy’ was one of the works
+to be studied in their riper years. Norwich, indeed, was full of learned
+men. Its aged Bishop, Bathurst, was the one voter for Reform, much to
+the delight of William IV., who said that he was a fine fellow, and
+deserved to be the helmsman of the Church in the rough sea she would soon
+have to steer through. His one offence in the eyes of George III. was
+that he voted against the King—that is, in favour of justice to the
+Catholics. With such a Bishop a Reformer, no wonder that all Norwich
+went wild with joy when the battle of Reform was fought and won. Bishop
+Stanley, who succeeded, was also in his way a great Liberal, and invited
+Jenny Lind to stay with him at the palace. I often used to see him at
+Exeter Hall, where his activity as a speaker afforded a remarkable
+contrast to the quieter style of his more celebrated son.
+
+Accidentally looking into the life of Bishop Bathurst, I find printed in
+the Appendix some interesting conversations at Earlham, where Joseph John
+Gurney lived. On one occasion, when Dr. Chalmers was staying there,
+Joseph John Gurney writes: ‘W. Y. breakfasted with us, and with his usual
+strong sense and talent called forth the energies of Chalmers’ mind.
+They conversed on the subject of special Providence, and of the unseen
+yet unceasing superintendence of the Creator of all the events which
+occur in this lower world. Said W. Y.: “Mr. Barbauld, the husband of the
+authoress, was once a resident in my house. He was a man of low opinions
+in religion, and denied the agency of an unseen spirit on the mind of
+man.” I remarked that when the mind was determined to a certain right
+action by a combination of circumstances productive of the adequate
+motives, and meeting from various quarters precisely at the right point
+for the purpose in view, this was in itself a sufficient evidence of an
+especial Providence, and might be regarded as the instrumentality through
+which the Holy Spirit acts. Mr. Barbauld admitted the justice of this
+argument.’ Again I read: ‘W. Y. supported the doctrine that nature is
+governed through the means of general laws—laws which broadly and
+obviously mark the wisdom and benevolence of God.’ One extract more: ‘W.
+Y. expressed his admiration of the masterly manner in which Dr. Chalmers,
+in his “Bridgewater Treatise,” has fixed on the atheist a moral
+obligation to inquire into the truth of religion; but, said he, might not
+the disciples of Irving, by the same rule, oblige us to an inquiry into
+the supposed evidences of their favourite doctrine that Christ is about
+to appear and to reign personally on earth? Might not even the Mahometan
+suppose in the Christian a similar necessity as it relates to the
+pretensions of the false prophet?’ If Joseph Gurney sent for W. Y. to
+converse with Dr. Chalmers as a genial spirit, surely the name of one so
+honourable and of one so friendly both to my father and myself should not
+be omitted. W. Y. loved a joke. He was very stout, and wore tight black
+knee breeches with shoes and silk stockings. I remember how he made me
+laugh one day as he described what happened to his knee-breeches as he
+stooped to tie up his shoes ere attending a place of worship. To cut a
+long story short, I may add W. Youngman did not go to church that day.
+Originally I think he was a dyer.
+
+Harriet Martineau, as all the world knows, was born at Norwich. In her
+somewhat ill-natured autobiography she writes: ‘Norwich, which has now no
+social claims to superiority at all, was in my childhood a rival of
+Lichfield itself, in the time of the Sewards, for literary pretensions
+and the vulgarity of pedantry. William Taylor was then at his best, when
+there was something like fulfilment of his early promise, when his
+exemplary filial duty was a fine spectacle to the whole city, and before
+the vice which destroyed him had coarsened his morale and destroyed his
+intellect. During the war it was a great distinction to know anything of
+German literature, and in Mr. Taylor’s case it proved a ruinous
+distinction. He was completely spoiled by the flatteries of shallow men,
+pedantic women, and conceited lads.’ Yet this man was the friend of
+Southey and opened up a new world to the English intellect, and perhaps
+in days to come will have a more enduring reputation than Harriet
+Martineau herself. The lady does not err on the side of good nature in
+her criticism. All she can say of Dr. Sayers is: ‘I always heard of him
+as a genuine scholar, and I have no doubt he was superior to his
+neighbours in modesty and manners. Dr. Enfield, a feeble and superficial
+man of letters, was gone also from the literary supper-table before my
+time. There was Sir James Smith, the botanist, made much of and really
+not pedantic and vulgar like the rest, but weak and irritable. There was
+Dr. Alderson, Mrs. Opie’s father, solemn and sententious and eccentric in
+manner, but not an able man in any way;’ and thus the leading lights of
+Norwich are contemptuously dismissed. ‘The great days of the Gurneys
+were not come yet. The remarkable family from which issued Mrs. Fry and
+Priscilla and Joseph John Gurney were then a set of dashing young people,
+dressed in gay riding habits and scarlet boots, as Mrs. Fry told us
+afterwards, and riding about the country to balls and gaieties of all
+sorts. Accomplished and charming young ladies they were; and we children
+used to overhear some whispered gossip about the effects of their charms
+on heart-stricken young men; but their final characteristics were not yet
+apparent.’
+
+It is to a Norwich man that we owe the publication of Hansard’s
+Parliamentary Debates. Luke Hansard, to whom they owe their name, was
+born in Norwich, 1725, was trained as a printer, went to London with but
+a guinea in his pocket, was employed by Hughes, the printer of the House
+of Commons, succeeded to the business and became widely known for his
+despatch and accuracy in printing Parliamentary papers and debates. He
+died in 1828, but the business was continued by his family, and to refer
+to Hansard became the invariable custom when an M.P. was to be condemned
+out of his own mouth—as Hansard was supposed never to err. Recently
+Hansard has been carried on by a company, but the old name still remains.
+
+Dr. Stoughton has in vain, in a number of the _Congregationalist_,
+attempted to record the memory of a man well known and much honoured in
+his day—the Rev. John Alexander, of Norwich. The portrait is a failure.
+It gives us no idea of the man with his rosy face, his curly black hair,
+his merry, twinkling eye, his joyous laugh, when mirth befitted the
+occasion, or his tender sympathy where pain and sorrow and distress had
+to be endured. Mr. Alexander’s jubilee was celebrated in St. Andrew’s
+Hall in 1867, when the Mayor and a crowd of citizens did him honour, and
+a sum of money for the purchase of an annuity was presented, thus
+obviating the necessity of doing to him as on one occasion he in his
+humorous way suggested should be done with old ministers when past
+work—that they should be shot. In 1817 Mr. Alexander had come to Norwich
+to preach in the old Whitfield Tabernacle in place of Mr. Hooper, one of
+the tutors at Hoxton Academy. When I went to Norwich he had built a fine
+chapel in Prince’s Street, and amongst the hearers was Mr. Tillet, then
+in a lawyer’s office, a young man famous for his speeches at the
+Mechanics’ Institute and in connection with a literary venture, the
+_Norwich Magazine_, not destined to set the Thames on fire; latterly an
+M.P. for Norwich and proprietor and editor, I believe, of one of the most
+popular of East Anglian journals, the _Norfolk News_. It was in Prince’s
+Street Chapel I first learned to realize how influential was the
+Nonconformist public, of which I frankly admit in our little village,
+with Churchmen all round, I had but a limited idea. It seemed to me that
+we were rather a puny folk, but at Norwich, with its chapels and pastors
+and people, I saw another sight. There was the Rev. John Alexander, with
+an overflowing audience on the Sunday and an active vitality all the
+week, now dining at the palace with the Bishop or breakfasting at Earlham
+with the Gurneys, now meeting on terms of equality the literati of the
+place (at that time Mrs. Opie was still living near the castle, and Mr.
+Wilkins was writing his life of the far-famed Norwich doctor, the learned
+and ingenious author of the ‘Religio Medici’), now visiting the afflicted
+and the destitute, now carrying consolation to the home of the mourner.
+John Alexander was a man to whom East Anglian Nonconformity owes much.
+In the old city there was a good deal of young intelligence, and a good
+deal of it amongst the Noncons. Dr. Sexton was one of the Old Meeting
+House congregation, as was Lucy Brightwell, a lady not unknown to the
+present generation of readers. To a certain extent a Noncon. is bound to
+be more or less intelligent. He finds a great State Establishment of
+religion wherever he goes. It enjoys the favour of the Court. It is
+patronized by the aristocracy. It enlists among its supporters all who
+wish to rise in the world or to make a figure in society. By means of
+the endowed schools of the land, it offers to the young, even of the
+humblest birth, a chance of winning a prize. Conform, it says, and you
+may be rich and respectable. It was said of a late Bishop of Winchester
+that he would forgive a man anything so long as he were but a good
+Churchman, and even now one meets in society with people who regard a
+Dissenter as little better than a heathen or a publican. A man who can
+thus voluntarily place himself at a disadvantage, to a certain extent,
+must have exercised his intellect and be ready to give a reason for the
+faith that is in him. Naturally, men are of the religion of the country
+in which they are born—Roman Catholics in Italy, Mahometans in Turkey,
+Buddhists in the East. It requires more power and strength of mind and
+decision of character to dissent from the Church of the State than to
+support it. ‘How was it,’ asked Dr. Storrar, Chairman of the Convocation
+of the University of London, the other day, ‘that the lads educated at
+Mill Hill Grammar School had done so well at Cambridge and Oxford?’ The
+reply, said the Doctor, was—I don’t give his words, merely the idea—to be
+found in the fact that a couple of centuries ago there were men of strong
+intellect and tender consciences who refused to renounce their opinions
+at the command of a despotic power. They had been succeeded by their
+sons with the same quickness of intellect and conscience. Generations
+one after another had come and gone, and the children of these old
+Nonconformists thus came to the school with an hereditary intelligence,
+destined to win in the gladiatorship of the school, the college, or the
+world.
+
+Let me now give an anecdote of Dr. Bathurst, the Lord Bishop of Norwich,
+too good to be lost. It is told by Sir Charles Leman, who described him
+in 1839 as gradually converting his enemies into friends by his uniform
+straightforwardness and enlarged Christian principle. One of his clergy,
+who had been writing most abusively in newspapers, had on one occasion
+some favour to solicit, which he did with natural hesitation. The Bishop
+promised all in his power and in the kindest manner, and when the
+clergyman was about to leave the room he suddenly turned with, ‘My lord,
+I must say, however, I much regret the part I have taken against you; I
+see I was quite in the wrong, and I beg your forgiveness.’ This was
+readily accorded. ‘But how was it,’ the clergyman continued, ‘you did
+not turn your back on me? I quite expected it.’ ‘Why, you forget that I
+profess myself a Christian,’ was the reply.
+
+Of a later Bishop—Stanley—whom I can well remember, a dark, energetic
+little man, making a speech at Exeter Hall, we hear a little in Caroline
+Fox’s memories of old friends. In 1848 she writes: ‘Dined very
+pleasantly at the palace; the Bishop was all animation and good humour,
+but too unsettled to leave any memorable impression. I like Mrs. Stanley
+much—a shrewd, sensible, observing woman. She told me much about her
+Bishop, how very trying his position was on first settling at Norwich;
+for his predecessor was an amiable, indolent old man, who let things take
+their course, and a very bad course too, all which the present man has to
+correct as way opens, and continually sacrifice popularity to a sense of
+right.’
+
+The following anecdote of Miss Fox and her friends calling at a cottage
+in the neighbourhood of Norwich is too good to be lost. ‘A young woman,’
+she writes, ‘told us that her father was nearly converted, and that a
+little more teaching would complete the business,’ adding, ‘He quite
+believes that he is lost, which is, of course, a great consolation to the
+old man.’ That story is racy of the soil. It is in that way the East
+Anglian peasantry who have any religion at all talk; they have no hope of
+a man who does not feel that he is lost. Well, there are many ways to
+heaven, and that must comfort some of us who still believe that man was
+made in the image of his Maker, a little lower than the angels, crowned
+with glory and honour, and not destined to an eternity of misery for the
+sins of a day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+THE SUFFOLK CAPITAL.
+
+
+The Orwell—The Sparrows—Ipswich notabilities—Gainsborough—Medical
+men—Nonconformists.
+
+Those who imagine Suffolk to be a flat and uninteresting county, with no
+charms for the eye and no associations worth speaking of, are much
+mistaken. There are few lovelier rivers in England than the Orwell, on
+which Ipswich stands, up which river the fiery Danes used to sail to
+plunder all the country round, and on the banks of which Gainsborough
+learned to love Nature and draw her in all her charms. The town itself
+stands in a valley, but it has gradually crept up the hills on each side,
+so that almost everywhere you have a pleasing prospect and breathe a
+bracing air. A few miles, or, rather, a short walk, brings you to
+Henley, which has the reputation of being the highest land in Suffolk,
+and on the other side there is a railway that connects Ipswich with
+Felixstowe, just as the Crystal Palace is connected with the City.
+Ipswich may claim to be the most prosperous and enterprising of all the
+Suffolk towns. It goes with the times. Its citizens are active and
+pushing men of business, and have enlightened ideas as well. They are
+also Liberal in politics and practical in religion, and are never behind
+in coming forward when there is a chance of benefiting themselves or
+their fellow-creatures. And yet Ipswich has a history as long as the
+dullest cathedral town. It was a place of note during the existence of
+the Saxon Heptarchy. Twice it had the honour of publicly entertaining
+King John; and there is a tradition that in the curious and
+beautifully-ornamented house in the Butter Market—formerly the residence
+of Mr. Sparrow, the Ipswich coroner, whose old family portraits,
+including one of the Jameses, presented to an ancestor of the family,
+filled me not a little with youthful wonder—Charles II. was secreted by
+one of the Sparrows of that day, when he came to hide in Ipswich after
+the battle of Worcester. ‘The house is now a shop,’ but, observes Mr.
+Glyde, a far-famed local historian, ‘a concealed room in the upper story
+of the house, which was discovered during some alterations in 1801, is
+well adapted for such a purpose.’ And, at any rate, the gay and
+graceless monarch, in search of a hiding-place, might have gone farther
+and fared worse. Be that as it may, Ipswich can rejoice in the fact that
+it was the birthplace of Cardinal Wolsey; and that he was one of the
+first educational reformers of the day must be admitted, at any rate, in
+Ipswich, of which, possibly, he would have made a second Cambridge.
+Alas! of his efforts in that direction, the only outward and visible sign
+is the old gateway in what is called College Street, which remains to
+this day. Ipswich fared well in the Elizabethan days, when her Gracious
+Majesty condescended to visit the place. Sir Christopher Hatton, the
+dancing Lord Chancellor, who led the brawls, when
+
+ ‘The seals and maces danced before him,’
+
+lived in a house near the Church of St. Mary-le-Tower. Sir Edward Coke
+resided in a village not far off, and in 1597 the M.P. for Ipswich was no
+other than the great Lord Bacon, who by birth and breeding was
+emphatically a Suffolk man. From Windham’s diary, it appears that at
+Ipswich that distinguished statesman experienced a new sensation. In
+1789 he writes: ‘Left Ipswich not till near twelve. Saw Humphries there,
+and was for the first time entertained with some sparring; felt much
+amused with the whole of the business.’
+
+In the early part of the present century Miss Berry, on returning from
+one of her Continental trips, paid Ipswich a visit, having landed at
+Southwold. ‘Appearance of Ipswich very pretty in descending towards it,’
+is the entry in her diary. About the same time Bishop Bathurst made his
+visitation tour, and he writes to one of his lady correspondents: ‘You
+will be glad that, during the three weeks I passed in Suffolk, I did not
+meet a single unpleasant man, nor experience a single unpleasant
+accident.’ With the name of the Suffolk hero Captain Broke, of the
+_Shannon_. (I can well remember the Shannon coach—which ran from Yoxford
+to London—the only day-coach we had at that time), Ipswich is inseparably
+connected. He was born at Broke Hall, just by, and there spent the later
+years of his life. Another of our naval heroes, Admiral Vernon, the
+victor of Porto Bello, resided in the same vicinity. At one time there
+seems to have been an attempt to connect Ipswich with the Iron Duke. In
+the memoir of Admiral Broke we have more than one reference to the Duke’s
+shooting in that neighbourhood, and actually it appears that, unknown to
+himself, he was nominated as a candidate to the office of High Steward.
+Ipswich, however, preferred a neighbour, in the shape of Sir Robert
+Harland. At a later day the office was filled by Mr. Charles Austin, the
+distinguished writer on Jurisprudence.
+
+One of the celebrated noblemen who lived in Ipswich was Lord Chedworth.
+He wore top-boots, and wore them till they were not fit to be seen. When
+new boots were sent home he was accustomed to set them on one side, and
+get his manservant to wear them a short time to prepare them for his own
+feet. Sometimes the man would tell his lordship that he thought the
+boots were ready, but his lordship would generally reply, ‘Never mind,
+William; wear them another week.’ While at Ipswich his lordship was
+frequently consulted, owing to his legal attainments and well-known
+generous disposition, by tradesmen and people in indigent circumstances.
+The applicants were ushered into the library, where, surrounded by books,
+they found his lordship. The chairs and furniture of the room, like his
+lordship’s clothes, had not merely seen their best days, but were
+comparatively worthless, and the old red cloak which invariably enveloped
+his shoulders made him look more like a gipsy boy than a peer of the
+realm. His lordship’s legacies to Ipswich ladies and others, especially
+of the theatrical profession, were of the most liberal character.
+
+Ipswich in its old days had its share of witches. One of the most
+notorious of them was Mother Hatheland, who in due course was tried,
+condemned and executed. From her confession in 1645 it appears ‘the said
+Mother Hatheland hath been a professor of religion, a constant hearer of
+the Word for these many years, yet a witch, as she confessed, for the
+space of nearly twenty years. The devil came to her first between
+sleeping and waking, and spake to her in a hollow voice, telling her that
+if she would serve him she would want nothing. After often solicitations
+she consented to him. Then he stroke his claw (as she confessed) into
+her hands, and with her blood wrote the covenant.’ Now, as the writer
+gravely remarks, the subtlety of Satan is to be observed in that he did
+not press her to deny God and Christ, as he did others, because she was a
+professor, and he might have lost all his hold by pressing her too far.
+Satan appears to have provided her with three imps, in the shape of two
+little dogs and a mole.
+
+As the home of Gainsborough Ipswich has enduring claims on the English
+nation and on lovers of art and artists everywhere. That must have been
+a Suffolk man who passed the following criticism on Gainsborough’s
+celebrated picture of ‘Girl and Pigs,’ of which Sir Joshua Reynolds
+became the purchaser at one hundred guineas, though the artist asked but
+sixty: ‘They be deadly like pigs; but who ever saw pigs feeding together,
+but one on ’em had a foot in the trough?’ Gainsborough had an
+enthusiastic attachment to music. It was the favourite amusement of his
+leisure hours, and his love for it induced him to give one or two
+concerts to his most intimate acquaintances whilst living in Ipswich. He
+was a member of a musical club, and painted some of the portraits of his
+brother members in his picture of a choir. Once upon a time,
+Gainsborough was examined as a witness on a trial respecting the
+originality of a picture. The barrister on the other side said: ‘I
+observe you lay great stress on a painter’s eye; what do you mean by that
+expression?’ ‘A painter’s eye,’ replied Gainsborough, ‘is to him what
+the lawyer’s eye is to you.’ As a boy at the Grammar School of his
+native town, it is to be feared he loved to play truant. One day he went
+out to his usual sketching haunts to enjoy the nature which he loved
+heartily, previously presenting to his uncle, who was master of the
+school, the usual slip of paper, ‘Give Tom a holiday,’ in which his
+father’s handwriting was so exactly imitated that not the slightest
+suspicion of the forgery ever entered the mind of the master. Alas!
+however, the crime was detected, and his terrified parent exclaimed in
+despair, ‘Tom will one day be hanged.’ When, however, he was informed
+how the truant schoolboy had employed his truant hours, and the boy’s
+sketches were laid before him, forgetful of the consequences of forgeries
+in a commercial society, he declared, with all the pride of a father,
+‘Tom will be a genius,’ and he was right.
+
+Worthy Mr. Pickwick seems to have known Ipswich about the same time as
+myself. ‘In the main street of Ipswich,’ wrote the biographer of that
+distinguished individual, ‘on the left-hand side of the way, a short
+distance after you have passed through the open space fronting the Town
+Hall, stands an inn known far and wide by the appellation of the Great
+White Horse, rendered the more conspicuous by a stone statue of some
+rapacious animal, with flowing mane and tail, distantly resembling an
+insane carthorse, which is elevated above the principal door. The Great
+White Horse is famous in the neighbourhood in the same degree as a prize
+ox, a county paper chronicled turnip, or unwieldy pig, for its enormous
+size. Never were such labyrinths of uncarpeted passages, such clusters
+of mouldy, ill-lighted rooms, such huge numbers of small dens for eating
+or sleeping in, beneath any one roof as are collected together between
+the four walls of the Great White Horse of Ipswich.’ This was the great
+hotel of the Ipswich of my youth. As regards hotels, Ipswich has not
+improved, but in every other way it has much advanced. One of the old
+inns has been turned into a fine public hall, admirably adapted for
+concerts and public meetings. The new Town Hall, Corn Exchange, and
+Post-office are a credit to the town. The same may be said of the new
+Museum and the Grammar School and the Working Men’s College and that
+health resort, the Arboretum; while by means of the new dock ships of
+fifteen hundred tons burden can load and unload. Nowadays everybody says
+Ipswich is a rising town, and what everyone says must be right. The
+Ipswich people, at any rate, have firmly got that idea into their heads.
+Its fathers and founders built the streets narrow, evidently little
+anticipating for Ipswich the future it has since achieved. The Ipswich
+of to-day is laid out on quite a different scale. It has a tram road
+service evidently much in excess of the present population, and as you
+wander in the suburbs you come to a sign-post bearing the name of a
+street in which not even the enterprise of the speculative builder has
+been able at present to plant a single dwelling. When Ipswich has
+climbed up its surrounding hills, and taken up all the building sites at
+present in the market, it will be a goodly and gallant town, almost
+fitted to invite the temporary residence of holiday-making Londoners who
+are fond of the water. At all times it is a pretty sail to Harwich and
+thence to Felixstowe, that quiet watering-place, a seaside residence that
+has still a pleasant flavour of rusticity about it, with a fine crisp
+sea-sand floor for a promenade.
+
+When I was a boy Ipswich was resorted to by Londoners in the summer-time.
+As an illustration, I give the case of Mr. Ewen, one of the deacons of
+the Weigh House Chapel, when the Rev. John Clayton was the pastor. In
+his memories of the Clayton family, the Rev. Dr. Aveling writes of Mr.
+Ewen, that ‘he was so sensitively conscientious in the discharge of his
+official duties at the Weigh House, that he was never absent from town on
+the days when the Lord’s Supper was administered, and when he was
+expected to assist in the administration of the elements. His London
+residence was in Lincoln’s Inn Fields, but having a house and property in
+the town of Ipswich, he passed his summer months there. Yet so intent
+was he upon duly filling his place in the sanctuary of God, that he
+regularly travelled by post-chaise once in every month, and returned in
+the same manner, that he might be present, together with his pastor and
+the brethren, at the table of the Lord. The length and the expense of
+the journey (and travelling was not then what it is now) did not deter
+him from what he at least deemed to be a matter of Christian obligation.’
+Dr. Aveling is quite right when he tells us travelling is not what it
+was. It took almost a day to go from Ipswich to London when I was a boy,
+and now the journey is done by means of the Great Eastern Railway in
+about an hour and a half. It seems marvellous to one who, like myself,
+remembers well the past, to leave Liverpool Street at 5.0 p.m. precisely,
+and to find one’s self landed safe and well in Ipswich soon after
+half-past six. The present generation can have no conception of
+travelling in England in the olden time.
+
+There were some wonderful old Radicals in Ipswich, though it was, and is,
+the county town of the most landlord-ridden district in England. Some of
+them got the great Dan O’Connell to pay the town a visit, and some of
+them nobly stood by old John Childs when he became famous all the world
+over as the Church-rate martyr. The lawyers and the doctors were mostly
+Tories, but the tradesmen and the merchants were not a little leavened
+with the leaven of Dissent. Mr. Hammond was, however, a Liberal surgeon,
+and as such flourished. His Whig principles, writes Mr. Glyde, brought
+him many patients, and his skill and sound qualities retained them. Dr.
+Garrord, the well-known London practitioner, was an apprentice of Mr.
+Hammond’s; and this reminds me that among the Ipswich men who have risen
+is Mr. Sprigg, the Premier of Cape Colony when Sir Bartle Frere was at
+the head of affairs there. The father of Mr. Sprigg was the respected
+pastor of a Baptist chapel in the town. The only Ipswich minister whom I
+can remember was the Rev. Mr. Notcutt, who preached in the leading
+Independent chapel, now pulled down to make way for a much more
+attractive building. All I can recollect about him is, that once, when a
+lad, I fainted away when he was preaching. No sermon ever affected me so
+since; and that effect was due, it must be confessed, not to the
+preacher, who seemed to me rather aged and asthmatic, but to the heat of
+the place, in consequence of the crowd attracted to the meeting-house on
+some special occasion.
+
+But to return to the doctors. Of one of them, who was famed for his love
+of bleeding his patients, not metaphorically, but in the old-fashioned
+way, with the lancet, it is recorded that on the occasion of his taking a
+holiday two of his patients died. Lamenting the fact to a friend, the
+following epigram was the result:
+
+ ‘B--- kills two patients while from home away—
+ A clever fellow this same B---, I wot;
+ If absent thus his patients he can slay,
+ How he must kill them when he’s on the spot!’
+
+Perhaps one of the noted physicians of my boyhood was Mr. Stebbing. ‘He
+was once,’ writes Mr. Glyde, ‘called in to see one of the Ipswich
+Dissenting ministers, who had taken life very easily, and had grown
+corpulent. After examining the patient and hearing his statement as to
+bodily state, he replied: “You’ve no particular ailment; mind and keep
+your eyes longer open, and your mouth longer shut, and you will do very
+well in a short time.”’ On another occasion a raw and very poor-looking
+young fellow called upon him for advice. The doctor told him to go home
+and eat more pudding, adding, ‘That’s all you want; physic is a very good
+thing for one to live by, but a precious bad thing for you to take.’ One
+of the Ipswich characters of my boyhood, of whom Mr. Glyde has preserved
+an anecdote, was old Tuxford, the veterinary surgeon. He used to declare
+that he never took more than one meal a day—a breakfast; but when asked
+of what that consisted, he said, ‘A pound of beefsteak, seven eggs, three
+cups of tea, and a quartern of rum.’ It may also be mentioned that
+before Mrs. Garrett Anderson was born, Ipswich had a lady physician in
+the person of Miss Stebbing, daughter of the doctor to whom I have
+already referred. ‘She was,’ says one who knew her well, ‘a woman of
+general education, with more than ordinary tact and discernment, combined
+with the true womanly power of analyzing and observing. She had good
+physical powers, and, like her worthy father, was somewhat pungent in her
+remarks and eccentric in her habits. She entered the ranks as a medical
+practitioner during her father’s life. The benefit of his advice so
+aided her perceptive powers as to make her quite an expert in various
+ways, and she continued to practise long after his decease, occasionally
+attending males as well as females. Her knowledge of midwifery caused a
+large number of ladies to engage her services.
+
+Of the Radicals of Ipswich, the only one with whom I came into contact
+was Mr. John King, the proprietor and editor of what was then, at any
+rate, a far-famed journal—the _Suffolk Chronicle_. Astronomy was his
+hobby, and he had ideas on the subject which, unfortunately, I failed to
+catch. He had built himself an observatory, if I remember aright, at his
+residence on Rose Hill, where he would sweep the heavens nightly, to see
+what could be seen. He was a Radical of the old type, a tall, dark,
+bilious-looking man, a little hard and dry, perhaps, who seemed to think
+that it was no use to throw pearls before swine, and to serve up for the
+chaw-bacons a too rich intellectual treat, and his policy was a
+successful one. Priest-ridden as Suffolk was, the _Suffolk Chronicle_
+was the leading paper of the county, and had a large circulation, and,
+let me add, did good service in its day. Now I find Ipswich rejoices in
+a well-conducted daily journal, the _East Anglian Times_, which I hear,
+and am glad to hear, is a fine property, and I see all the leading towns
+in Suffolk have a paper to themselves, even if they can’t get up a decent
+paragraph of local news—and some of them I know, from my experiences of
+Suffolk life, are quite unequal to that—once a week. The plan is to have
+some sheets already printed in London, at some great establishment,
+whence perhaps a hundred little towns are supplied, and then the local
+news and advertisements are added on, and Little Pedlington has its
+_Observer_, and Eatanswill its _Gazette_. When I was a boy, such a thing
+was out of the question, as to each paper a fourpenny-halfpenny stamp was
+attached. As the stamps had to be paid for in advance, and as, besides,
+there was an eighteen-penny duty on every advertisement, it was not quite
+such an easy matter to run a paper then as it has since become. I fancy
+the old-established journals suffered much by the change, which
+completely revolutionized the newspaper trade; at any rate, so far as the
+country was concerned. In this connection, let me add that it was to an
+Ipswich journalist we owe the establishment of penny readings on anything
+like a large and successful scale. They were originated by Mr. Sully, at
+that time the proprietor and editor of the _Ipswich __Express_, a paper
+intended to steer between the ferocious Toryism of the _Ipswich Journal_,
+and the equally ferocious Radicalism of the _Suffolk Chronicle_. As was
+to be expected, the attempt did not succeed. As in love and in war, so
+in politics and theology, moderation is a thing hateful to gods and men.
+The electioneering annals of Ipswich can testify to that fact. I have a
+dim recollection of an election petition which ended in Sir Fitzroy
+Kelly’s admitting that he had stated what was not true, but he did it as
+a lawyer, not as a gentleman, and in sending one of the finest old
+gentlemen I ever knew to gaol, because he would not tell what he knew of
+the matter. There was not much half-and-half work in the Ipswich
+politics of my young days.
+
+When people fight fiercely in politics, it is natural to expect an equal
+earnestness in religious matters. It was so emphatically with respect to
+the Ipswich of the past. ‘The Reformed religion, after those fiery days
+of persecution,’ writes John Quick, ‘was now revived, and flourished
+again in the country, under the auspicious name of our English Deborah,
+Queen Elizabeth; and Ipswich, the capital town of Suffolk, was not more
+famous for its spacious sheds, large and beautiful buildings, rich and
+great trade, and honourable merchants, both at home and abroad, than it
+was for its learned and godly ministers and its religious intolerants.’
+Of the godly ministers, one of the most famous was Samuel Ward, who was
+buried in St. Mary-le-Tower Church. In 1666 he preached a sermon at St.
+Paul’s Cross. But he meddled with politics. For instance, in 1621 he
+published a caricature picture, entitled ‘Spayne and Rome Defeated.’ It
+is thus described: The Pope and his Council are represented in the centre
+of the piece, and beneath, on one side the Armada, and on the other the
+Gunpowder Treason. Gondomar, the Spanish Ambassador, complained of it as
+insulting to his master. Ward was placed in custody. Being
+Puritanically inclined, he was, in addition, prosecuted in the Consistory
+Court of Norwich by Bishop Harsnet for Nonconformity. Ten years later,
+when 600 persons were contemplating a removal from Ipswich to New
+England—as a place where they could worship God without fear of priest or
+king—the blame was cast by Laud on Ward. Rushworth informs us that the
+charges laid against him were that he preached against the common bowing
+at the name of Jesus and against the King’s ‘Book of Sports,’ and further
+said that the Church of England was ready to ring changes in England, and
+that the Gospel stood on tiptoe as ready to be gone; and for this he was
+removed from his lectureship and sent to gaol. John Ward, his brother,
+Rector of St. Clement’s, was a member of the Assembly of Divines, and was
+called to preach two sermons before the House of Commons, for which he
+received the thanks of the House. At that time we find a reference to
+Ipswich as a place which ‘the Lord hath long made famous and happy as a
+valley of Gospel vision.’ Such places, alas! seem to have been commoner
+formerly than they are now.
+
+One of the Congregational churches of Ipswich, at any rate, has very
+interesting historical associations. ‘Salem Chapel,’ writes the Rev.
+John Browne, in his ‘History of Congregationalism in Suffolk and
+Norfolk,’ ‘stands in St. George’s Lane, opposite the place where St.
+George’s Chapel formerly stood, where Bilney was apprehended when
+preaching in favour of the Reformation, and where he so enraged the monks
+that they twice plucked him out of the pulpit.’ The last time I was at
+Ipswich I saw bricklayers at work at the old Presbyterian church in St.
+Nicholas Street, which it would be a pity to see modernized, being such a
+fine illustration of the old-fashioned Dissenting Meeting-house, before
+it became the fashion to have a taste and to build Gothic chapels in
+which it is difficult to see or hear, and the only advantage of which is
+that they are an exact copy of the steeple-houses against which at one
+time Nonconformist England waged remorseless war. One of the pastors of
+this congregation removed to Mill Hill Chapel, Leeds, where he succeeded
+Dr. Priestley; another was the author of a ‘History and Description of
+Derbyshire’; while one of the supplies was the Rev. Robert Alderson,
+afterwards of the Octagon Chapel, Norwich, who ultimately became a lawyer
+and Recorder of Norwich. Perhaps one of the most singular scenes
+connected with Dissenting chapels in Ipswich was that which took place in
+the old chapel in Tackard, now Tacket, Street. In 1766 the minister
+there was the Rev. Mr. Edwards, who, it appears, was sent for to the gaol
+to see two men who had been found guilty of house-breaking, and who,
+according to the law as it then stood, were to be hung. Mr. Edwards did
+so, and stayed with them two hours. As the result of this visit they
+were brought to a penitent state of mind. They had heard that Mr.
+Edwards had prepared a sermon for them and desired them to attend. This
+was a mistake, but notwithstanding they obtained permission to go to the
+chapel, where Mr. Edwards was conducting a church meeting. A report of
+the purpose got abroad, and many persons came to the meeting, upon which
+it was thought most proper that the church business should be laid aside,
+and that Mr. Edwards should go into the pulpit. This he did, and after
+singing and prayer the prisoners came in with their shackles and fetters
+on. Mr. Edwards, in describing the scene, says:
+
+‘Many were moved at the sight. As for myself, I was obliged for some
+time to stop to give vent to tears. When I recovered I gave out part of
+a hymn suitable to the occasion, then prayed. The subject of discourse
+was, “This is a faithful saying,” and the poor prisoners shed abundance
+of tears while I was explaining the several parts of the text, and
+especially when I turned and addressed myself immediately to them. The
+house was thronged, and I suppose not a dry eye in the whole
+place—nothing but weeping and sorrow; and the floods of tears which
+gushed from the eyes of the two prisoners were very melting.’
+
+The good man continues: ‘When we had concluded I went and spoke some
+encouraging words by way of supporting them under their sorrow. They
+then desired I should see them in the evening, which I did, and called
+upon Mr. Blindle on the way; the old gentleman went along with me to the
+prison, and was one who prayed with them with much fervour and
+enlargement of heart. We spent nearly two hours with them, and a crowd
+of people were present.’ On another occasion we find an American Indian
+preaching in the pulpit—a novelty in 1767. He came over with a Dr.
+Whitaker, of Norwich, in America, to collect money for the education and
+conversion of Indians, and at Tackard Street the people raised the very
+respectable sum of £80 for the purpose. In 1561 Queen Elizabeth paid
+Ipswich a visit. At that time the place was a little too Protestant for
+her. Strype writes: ‘Here Her Majesty took a great dislike to the
+impudent behaviour of most of the ministers and readers, there being many
+weak ones among them, and little or no order observed in the public
+service, and few or none wearing the surplice, and the Bishop of Norwich
+was thought remiss, and that he winked at schismatics. But more
+particularly she was offended with the clergy’s marriage, and that in
+cathedrals and colleges there were so many wives and children and widows
+seen, which, she said, was contrary to the intent of the founders, and so
+much tending to the interruption of the studies of those who were placed
+there. Therefore she issued an order to all dignitaries, dated August 9,
+at Ipswich, to forbid all women to the lodgings of cathedrals or
+colleges, and that upon pain of losing their ecclesiastical promotion.’
+From this it is clear that when Elizabeth was Queen there was little
+chance of the Women’s Rights Question finding a favourable hearing. The
+Queen was succeeded by monarchs after her own heart. In 1636 Prynne
+published his ‘Newes from Ipswich,’ ‘discovering certain late detestable
+practices of some domineering Lordly Prelates to undermine the
+established doctrine and discipline of our Church, extirpate all orthodox
+sincere preachers and preaching of God’s Word, usher in popery, idolatry
+and superstition.’ For this publication Prynne was sentenced to be fined
+£5,000 to the King, to lose the remainder of his ears, to be branded on
+both cheeks, and to be perpetually imprisoned in Carnarvon Castle. At
+that time the Ipswich people were far too Liberal for the powers
+existing. Ipswich news nowadays is little calculated to displease
+anyone, and governments and kings are less prone to take offence at the
+exercise of free thought and free speech.
+
+Ipswich people make their way. Miss Reeve—who wrote the ‘Old English
+Baron,’ a popular tale years ago—was the daughter of the Rev. William
+Reeve of St. Nicholas Church. Another Ipswich lady, Mrs. Keeley, who
+lives on in her grand old age, was certainly one of the most popular
+performers of her day.
+
+Two hundred years ago, no city man was better known than Thomas Firmin,
+who was born at Ipswich, described in his biography as ‘a very large and
+populous town in the county of Suffolk,’ in 1632. He was of Puritan
+parentage, and bound apprentice in the city of London, and then began
+business as a linen-draper on the modest capital of £100. In a little
+while he married and was enabled to dispense a generous hospitality,
+seeking all opportunities of becoming acquainted with persons of worth,
+whether foreigners or his fellow-countrymen. Amongst his special friends
+were Wilkins, Bishop of Chester, and Archbishop Tillotson, at that time
+the afternoon lecturer at St. Lawrence’s. During the time of the plague
+he managed to secure work for the London poor, and after the fire he
+erected a warehouse on the banks of the Thames, where coal and corn were
+sold at cost price. In 1676 he built a great factory in Little Britain,
+for the employment of the needy and industrious in the linen manufacture;
+he also relieved poor debtors in prison. The great work of his later
+years was in connection with the Blue Coat School. He was also one of
+the Governors of St. Thomas’s Hospital, which he did much to rescue from
+the wretched condition in which he found it. When the French refugees,
+in consequence of the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, were driven over
+to this country, Firmin exerted himself powerfully on their behalf, and
+sent some of them to Ipswich to engage in manufacturing there. He also
+had a good deal to do with Ireland, when, as now, the country was torn by
+contending factions. At a large expense he also educated many boys and
+set them up in trade. He was also one of the first of the avowed and
+ardent friends and advocates of a free thought, of which there were few
+supporters in England at that day—even among the countrymen of Milton and
+John Locke. Unitarians were rare in the days when Firmin proclaimed
+himself one. Altogether he was one of the best men of his age, and well
+deserved to be buried in Christchurch, Newgate, among the Bluecoat School
+boys, to whom he had ever been such a friend, and to have the memorial
+pillar erected in his honour by Lady Clayton in Marden Park, Surrey. It
+is to be hoped that the memorial remains, though, alas! the noble mansion
+at one time inhabited by Wilberforce, and where the great
+philanthropist’s celebrated son, the Bishop of Oxford was born, and where
+I have spent more than one pleasant day when Sir John Puleston lived
+there, has been since burnt down.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+AN OLD-FASHIONED TOWN.
+
+
+Woodbridge and the country round—Bernard Barton—Dr. Lankester—An old
+Noncon.
+
+The traveller as he leaves the English coast for Antwerp or Rotterdam or
+the northern ports of Germany, may remember that the last glimpse of his
+native land is the light from Orford Ness, which is a guiding star to the
+mariner as he ploughs his weary way along the deep. Of that part of
+Suffolk little is known to the community at large. When I was a boy it
+was looked upon as an _ultima Thule_, where the people were in a
+primitive state of civilization; where shops and towns and newspapers and
+good roads were unknown; where traditions of smuggling yet remained. Few
+ever went into that region, and those who did, when they returned, did
+not bring back with them encouraging reports. Barren sandy moors, along
+which the bitter east wind perpetually blew, fatal alike to vegetation
+and human life, were the chief characteristics of a district the natives
+of which were not rich, at any rate as regards this world’s goods.
+Orford, like Dunwich, was once a place of some importance. ‘A large and
+populous town with a castle of reddish stone,’ writes Camden, but in his
+time a victim of the sea’s ingratitude; ‘which withdraws itself little by
+little, and begins to envy it the advantages of a harbour.’ In the time
+of Henry I., writes Ralph de Coggeshall, when Bartholomew de Glanville
+was Governor of its castle, some fishermen there caught a wild man in
+their nets. ‘All the parts of his body resembled those of a man. He had
+hair on his head, a long-peaked beard, and about the breast was exceeding
+hairy and rough. But at length he made his escape into the sea, and was
+never seen more,’ which was a pity, as undoubtedly he was the ‘missing
+link.’ Besides, as Camden remarks, the fact was a confirmation of what
+the common people of his time remarked. ‘Whatever is produced in any
+part of nature is in the sea,’ and shows ‘that not all is fabulous what
+Pliny has written about the Triton on the coasts of Portugal, and the sea
+man in the Straits of Gibraltar.’ Nor is that the only wonder connected
+with the district. Close by is Aldborough, where the poet Crabbe learned
+to become, as Byron calls him,
+
+ ‘Nature’s sternest painter, but the best;’
+
+and as Camden writes, ‘Hard by, when in the year 1555 all the corn
+throughout England was choakt in the ear by unseasonable weather, the
+inhabitants tell you that in the beginning of autumn there grew peas
+miraculously among the rocks, and that they relieved the dearth in those
+parts. But the more thinking people affirm that pulse cast upon the
+shore by shipwreck used to grow there now and then, and so quite exclude
+the miracle.’ At the present the crag-beds are the most interesting
+feature to the visitor, especially if he be of a geological turn. These
+are so rich in fossil shells that you may find some of the latter in
+almost every house in Ipswich. The Coralline Crag is the oldest bed; but
+this formation does not occur in an undisturbed state, except in
+Sudbourne Park and about Orford. A drive thither from Ipswich, through
+Woodbridge, conveys the traveller through some of the loveliest scenery
+in Suffolk, and the numerous exposures of Coralline Crag in Sudbourne
+Park, which is about two miles from Orford, will amply repay the
+traveller, on account of the number of fossils which he can there obtain,
+and the ease with which he can extract them. In this neighbourhood live
+the far-famed Garrett family, one of whom, as Mrs. Dr. Anderson, is well
+known in London society, as is also her sister, Mrs. Fawcett, the wife of
+the late popular M.P. for Hackney. Close by is Leiston Abbey, originally
+one of Black Canons, consisting of several subterranean chapels, various
+offices and a church, which appears to have been a handsome structure,
+faced with flint and freestone. The interior was plain and undecorated,
+yet massive. A large extent of the neighbouring fields was enclosed with
+walls, which have been demolished, as was to be expected, for the sake of
+the materials. We hear much of the dead cities of the Zuyder Zee. On
+her eastern coast England has her dead cities. Dunwich, of which I have
+already spoken, is one. Orford, now known solely by its lighthouse, is
+another; Blythburgh, in the church of which is the tomb of Anna, King of
+the East Angles, who was slain in 654, is a third. Like Tyre and Sidon,
+these places had their merchant princes, who lived delicately, and whose
+ships traded far and near. It is said incorrectly of Love, that it
+
+ ‘At sight of human ties
+ Spreads its soft wings and in a moment flies.’
+
+The remark is truer of commerce, which is a law to itself, and which
+defies Acts of Parliament and royal patronage. Hence it is the east
+coast of Suffolk is so rich in melancholy remains of ancient cities, now
+given over to decay. In my young days the chief town of this district
+was Woodbridge. Manufactories were then unknown. The steam-engine had
+not then been utilized for the everyday use of man, and farmers,
+peasants, coal and corn merchants, solely inhabited the district, and in
+Woodbridge especially the latter rose and flourished for a time.
+
+How it was, I know not, but nevertheless such was the fact, that the
+Ipswich of my youthful days seemed to have little, if any, literary
+associations connected with it. The celebrated Mr. Fulcher published his
+‘Ladies’ Pocket-book’ at Sudbury, which had a great reputation in its
+day, and for which very distinguished people used to write. It was, in
+fact, more of an annual than a pocket-book, and was patronized
+accordingly. Then there was James Bird, living at Yoxford, ‘the garden
+of Suffolk,’ as it was called. Woodbridge had a still higher reputation.
+James Bird kept a shop, and was supposed to be a Unitarian; but Bernard
+Barton was in a bank, and, besides, he was a Quaker, and Quakers all the
+world over are, or were, famous for their goodness and their wealth. The
+fame of the Quaker-poet conferred quite a literary reputation on the
+district, and the more so as no one at that time associated Quakerism
+with literary faculty in any way. Now and then, it is true, the
+Stricklands talked of a charming young Quaker, who indeed once or twice
+called at our house to see Susanna when she was staying there; but Allan
+Ransome—for it is to him I refer—did not pursue literature or poetry to
+any great extent, and instead preferred to develop the manufacture of
+agricultural implements—a manufacture which, carried on under the same
+name, is now one of the chief industries of the busy and thriving town of
+Ipswich, and employs quite a thousand men. Woodbridge then bore away the
+palm from the county capital, as the home of literature and poetry and
+romance. As a town, it is more prettily situated than are most East
+Anglian villages and towns. The principal thoroughfare, as you rode
+through it by one of the Yarmouth coaches, that connected it at that time
+with the Metropolis, was long and narrow. If you turned off to the right
+you came to the Market-place, where were the leading shops. On your left
+you reached the Quay and the river, where a few coasters were employed,
+chiefly in the coal and corn trade. In our time Woodbridge has done its
+duty to the State. Dr. Edwin Lankester the well-known coroner for
+Middlesex, came from Melton, close by, the High Street of which gradually
+terminates in the Woodbridge thoroughfare; and the lately deceased Lord
+Hatherley, one of England’s most celebrated lawyers, was educated in that
+district, and took his wife from the same happy land. The body of the
+late Lord Hatherley, the great Whig Lord Chancellor, we were told the
+other day, was interred in the family vault of Great Bearings, Suffolk.
+His mother was a Woodbridge lady, a Miss Page. Lord Hatherley’s father
+was the far-famed Liberal Alderman, Sir Matthew Wood, for many years M.P.
+for the City of London, and Queen Caroline’s trusted friend and
+counsellor. Lord Hatherley married, in 1830, Charlotte, the only
+daughter of the late Major Edward Moore, of Great Bealings, Suffolk, but
+was left a widower in 1878. He devoted much time to religious work, so
+long as he had the strength to undertake it. He was the author of a work
+entitled ‘The Continuity of Scripture, as declared by the Testimony of
+Our Lord and the Evangelists and the Apostles’, which has passed through
+three or four editions. He was created an Hon. D.C.L. of Oxford in 1851,
+was an Hon. Student of Christ Church, Oxford, a Governor of the
+Charterhouse, and a member of the Fishmongers’ Company, of which his
+father had at one time been Prime Warden. Major Moore himself was a
+great authority on Suffolk literature and antiquities, and published more
+than one book—now very scarce—on the interesting theme.
+
+As to Dr. Lankester, all Woodbridge was scandalized when it was announced
+that he was articled to a medical man. ‘What, make a doctor of him!’
+said the local gossips at the time. ‘They had much better make a butcher
+of him.’ And not a little were the good people astonished when he came
+to town, and was signally successful as a medical lecturer, and as an
+advocate of the sanitary principles which in our day have come to be
+recognised as essential to the welfare of the State. Dr. Lankester was
+in great request as a writer on medical subjects in a popular manner, and
+did undoubtedly much good in his day. A good many genteel people lived
+in the neighbourhood of Woodbridge, and it had a society to which it can
+lay no claim at the present time. Edward Fitzgerald, the friend of
+Thackeray and Carlyle, himself an author of no mean repute, lived close
+by.
+
+That genteel people should have pitched their tents in or around
+Woodbridge is not much to be wondered at, as the neighbourhood was
+certainly attractive and convenient at the same time. The scenery around
+is as interesting as any that could be found, at any rate, in that part
+of England. The drive from Tuddenham to Woodbridge, says Mr. Taylor, in
+his ‘Ipswich Handbook,’ is perhaps unequalled in Suffolk. On the road
+you pass through the villages of Little and Great Bealings, and if you
+are on the look-out for spots which an artist would love to study, you
+may make a very short detour to Playford. The churches, both of Little
+and of Great Bealings, are very ancient, and well deserve a visit; but
+the Woodbridge Road itself passes through some very pretty scenery.
+Rushmere Heath, in the early summer time, when the gorse is in bloom, is
+one mass of yellow, in the cleared spaces of which may usually be seen a
+gipsy encampment. The gibbet once stood on this heath, and in former
+times it seems to have been the place where executions usually took
+place. It was here that in 1783 a woman, named Bedingfield, was burnt
+for murdering her husband. In the early part of this century, when there
+were many alarms as to a French invasion, and it was the firm belief of
+the old ladies that one fine morning Bony would land upon our shores, and
+carry them all away captive, many were the reviews of soldiers held there
+by the Duke of Cambridge—whose house has been pointed out to me at
+Woodbridge—and the Duke of Kent. At that time it was the fashion to
+exercise the volunteers on a Sunday, a practice which would not be
+sanctioned in our more religious age. It is a beautiful ride through
+Kesgrave. Dense plantations abound on both sides, and in May the chorus
+of nightingales is described as something wonderful. In the word
+‘Kesgrave’ we have an allusion to the barrows or tumuli to be seen on
+Kesgrave Heath. There are several of these erections remaining to this
+day, and perhaps tradition is warranted in speaking of the spot as the
+site whereon the Danes and Saxons met in deadly fight. It is certain
+that the former frequently came up the Deben and the Orwell. At
+Martlesham you see a creek, richly wooded on both sides, which flows up
+from the River Deben. It is a striking object at high water, but by no
+means so striking as the sign of the village public-house—the head of a
+huge wooden lion painted with the brightest of reds. It was originally
+the figure-head of a Dutch man-of-war, one of the fleet defeated at the
+famous battle of Sole Bay. Be that as it may, no sign is better known
+than that of Martlesham Red Lion. ‘As red as Martlesham Lion’ is still a
+common figure of speech throughout East Suffolk, and I am glad to see
+that in the beautiful East Anglian etchings of Mr. Edwards, a Suffolk
+lawyer, who turned artist, Martlesham Red Lion has justice done to it at
+last.
+
+Woodbridge, which the guide-book in 1844 described as a thriving town and
+port—I question whether it is thriving now—is situated on the western
+bank of the Deben, about nine miles above the mouth of the river, and
+about eight miles to the north of Ipswich. In Domesday Book the place is
+called Udebridge, of which its present name is no doubt a corruption.
+Mr. William White, whom I have already quoted, says: ‘Fifty years ago
+only one daily coach and a weekly waggon passed through the town to and
+from London; but more than twelve conveyances (coaches, omnibuses and
+carriers’ waggons) now pass daily between the hours of six in the morning
+and twelve at noon, and persons may travel from Woodbridge to London in a
+few hours for ten shillings, instead of paying three times that amount,
+and being thirteen hours on the road, as was formerly the case.’ The
+railway has now rendered it possible for people to travel at a quicker
+speed and at a cheaper rate. In London we have a Woodbridge Street, in
+the neighbourhood of Clerkenwell Green, which points to a connection
+between the poorer part of the City and the picturesque Suffolk town on
+the banks of the Deben, and this gives me occasion to speak of Thomas
+Seckford, Esq., one of the masters of the Court of Requests, and Surveyor
+of the Court of Wards and Liveries in the reign of Queen Elizabeth. He
+was not less distinguished in the profession of the law than in the other
+polite accomplishments of the age in which he lived, and to his patronage
+of his servant, Christopher Saxton, the public were indebted for the
+first set of county maps, which were engraved by his encouragement and at
+his request. He represented Ipswich in three Parliaments, and died
+without issue in 1588, aged seventy-two. In Woodbridge his name is
+perpetuated by a handsome pile of buildings known as the Seckford
+Almshouses and Schools, to which the property in Clerkenwell is devoted.
+At the time of his decease that property produced about £112 a year; in
+1768 it was said to be of the yearly value of £563. In 1826 an Act of
+Parliament was obtained to enable the governors of the almshouses to
+grant building and other leases, to take down many of the old buildings,
+to erect new premises, and repair and alter old ones, and to lay out new
+streets on the charity estate in Clerkenwell, and, in consequence, we
+find in 1830 the estate producing a rental of more than £3,000 a year.
+In 1844 the yearly rental had risen to £4,000. Since then it has much
+increased, and all this is devoted to the benefit of the Woodbridge poor.
+
+In 1806 Bernard Barton, the Quaker poet, came to live at Woodbridge.
+When fourteen years old he was apprenticed to Mr. Samuel Jessup, a
+shopkeeper in Halstead, Essex. ‘There I stood,’ he writes, ‘for eight
+years behind the counter of the corner shop at the top of Halstead Hill,
+kept to this day (November 9, 1828) by my old master and still worthy
+uncle, S. Jessup.’ In Woodbridge he married a niece of his old master,
+and went into partnership with her brother as corn and coal merchant.
+But she died in giving birth to the Lucy Barton whose name still, unless
+I am mistaken, adorns our literature. Bernard gave up business and
+retired into the bank of the Messrs. Alexander, where he continued for
+forty years, working within two days of his death. He had always been
+fond of books, and was one of the most active members of a Woodbridge
+Book Club, and had been in the habit of writing and sending to his
+friends occasional copies of verse. In 1812 he published his first
+volume, called ‘Metrical Effusions,’ and began a correspondence with
+Southey. A complimentary copy of verses which he had addressed to the
+author of the ‘Queen’s Wake,’ just then come into notice, brought him
+long and vehement letters from the Ettrick—letters full of thanks to
+Barton and praises of himself, and a tragedy ‘that will astonish the
+world ten times more than the “Queen’s Wake,”’ to which justice could not
+be done in Edinburgh, and which Bernard Barton was to try to get
+represented in London. In 1825 one of Bernard’s volumes of poems had run
+into a fifth edition, and of another George IV. had accepted the
+dedication. Thus prompted to exertion, he worked too hard; banking all
+day and writing poetry all night were too much for him. Lamb, however,
+cheered up the dyspeptic poet. ‘You are too much apprehensive about your
+complaint,’ he wrote. ‘I know many that are always writing of it and
+live on to a good old age. I knew a merry fellow—you partly know him,
+too—who, when his medical adviser told him he had drunk all _that part_,
+congratulated himself, now his liver was gone, that he should be the
+longest liver of the two.’ Southey wrote in a soberer vein. ‘My friend,
+go to bed early; and if you eat suppers, read afterwards, but never
+compose, that you may lie down with a quiet intellect. There is an
+intellectual as well as a religious peace of mind, and without the former
+be assured there can be no health for a poet.’
+
+At times Bernard Barton seems to have been troubled about money matters.
+On one occasion he appears to have made up his mind to have done with
+banking and devote himself to literature. ‘Keep to your bank,’ wrote
+Lamb, ‘and the bank will keep you. Trust not to the public: you may
+hang, starve, drown yourself, for anything that worthy personage cares.
+I bless every star that Providence, not seeing good to make me
+independent, has seen it next good to settle me on the stable foundation
+of Leadenhall. Sit down, good B. B., in the banking office. What! is
+there not from six to eleven p.m. six days in the week? and is there not
+all Sunday?’ Fortunately for B. B., friends came to his rescue. A few
+members of his Society, including some of the wealthier of his own
+family, raised among them £1,200 for his benefit. The scheme originated
+with Joseph John Gurney, of Norwich, and in 1824 when the money was
+collected, it was felt that £1,200 was a great deal for a poet to
+receive. Bernard Barton’s daughter married a Suffolk gentleman,
+well-to-do in the world, but the lady and gentleman had not congenial
+minds, and parted almost as soon as the honeymoon was over.
+
+B. B. was a great correspondent. As a banker’s clerk, necessarily his
+journeys were few and far between. Once or twice he visited Charles
+Lamb. He once also met Southey at Thomas Clarkson’s, at Playford Hall,
+perhaps the most picturesque old house in East Anglia, where the latter
+resided, and of which I have a distinct recollection, as, on the terrace
+before the moat with which it was surrounded, I once saw the venerable
+philanthropist and his grandchildren. Now and then B. B. also visited
+the Rev. Mr. Mitford at Benhall, a village between Woodbridge and
+Saxmundham, who was then engaged in editing the Aldine edition of the
+English Poets. But B. B.’s correspondents were numerous. Poor,
+unfortunate L. E. L. sent him girlish letters. Mrs. Hemans was also a
+correspondent, as were the Howitts and Mrs. Opie and Dr. Drake, of
+Hadley, whose literary disquisitions are now, alas! forgotten; and poor
+Charles Lloyd, whose father wrote of his son’s many books ‘that it is
+easier to write them than to gain numerous readers.’ Dr. Bowring and
+Josiah Conder were also on writing terms with the Quaker poet. His
+excursions, his daughter tells us, rarely extended beyond a few miles
+round Woodbridge, to the vale of Dedham, Constable’s birthplace and
+painting-room; or to the neighbouring seacoast, including Aldborough,
+doubly dear to him from its association with the memory and poetry of
+Crabbe. Once upon a time he dined with Sir Robert Peel, when he had the
+pleasure of meeting Airy, the late Astronomer Royal, whom he had known as
+a lad at Playford. The dinner with Sir Robert Peel ended satisfactorily,
+as it resulted in the bestowal by the Queen on the poet of a pension of
+£100 a year. He was now beyond the fear of being tempted to commit
+forgery, and being hung in consequence—a possibility, which was the
+occasion of one of Lamb’s wittiest letters. The gentle Elia made merry
+over the chance of a Quaker poet being hung.
+
+Amiable and liberal as was Bernard Barton, he could and did strike hard
+when occasion required. In East Anglia, when I was a lad, there was a
+great deal of intolerance—almost as much as exists in society circles at
+the present day—and that is saying a great deal. Churchmen, in their
+ignorance, were ready to put down Dissent in every way, and occasionally,
+by their absurdity, they roused the righteous ire of the Quaker poet.
+One of them, for instance, had said at a public meeting: ‘This was the
+opinion he had formed of Dissenters, that they were wolves in sheep’s
+clothing.’ Whereupon B. B. wrote:
+
+ ‘Wolves in sheep’s clothing! bitter words and big;
+ But who applies them? first the speaker scan;
+ A suckling Tory! an apostate Whig!
+ Indeed a very silly, weak young man!
+
+ ‘What such an one may either think or say,
+ With sober people matters not one pin;
+ In _their_ opinion his own senseless bray
+ Proves _him_ the ASS WRAPT IN A LION’S SKIN!’
+
+Better is the following address to a certain Dr. E.:
+
+ ‘A bullying, brawling, champion of the Church,
+ Vain as a parrot screaming on her perch;
+ And like that parrot screaming out by rote,
+ The same stale, flat, unprofitable note;
+ Still interrupting all debate
+ With one eternal cry of “Church and State!”
+ With all the High Tory’s ignorance increased,
+ By all the arrogance that makes the priest;
+ One who declares upon his solemn word
+ The Voluntary system is absurd;
+ He well may say so, for ’twere hard to tell
+ Who would support him did not law compel.’
+
+A prophet, it is said, is not honoured in his own country. Bernard
+Barton was happily the rare exception that proves the rule. I remember
+being at the launching of a vessel, bought and owned by a Woodbridge man,
+called the _Bernard Barton_; it was the first time I had ever seen a ship
+launched, and I was interested accordingly. The ultimate fate of the
+craft is unknown to history. On one occasion she was reported in the
+shipping list amongst the arrivals at some far-off port as the _Barney
+Burton_. Such is fame!
+
+Of his local reputation Bernard was not a little proud. His little town
+was vain of him. It was something to go into the bank and get a cheque
+cashed by the poet. The other evening I went to the house of a
+Woodbridge man who has done well in London, and lives in one of the few
+grand old houses which yet adorn Stoke Newington Green—just a stone’s
+throw from where Samuel Rogers dwelt—and there in the drawing-room were
+Bernard Barton’s own chair and cabinet preserved with as much pious care
+as if he had been a Shakespeare or a Milton. Bernard Barton made no
+secret of his vocation, and when the time had come that he had delivered
+himself of a new poem, it was his habit to call on one or other of his
+friends and discuss the matter over a bottle of port—port befitting the
+occasion; no modern liquor of that name—
+
+ ‘Not such as that
+ You set before chance comers,
+ But such whose father grape grew fat
+ On Lusitanian summers.’
+
+And then there was a good deal of talk, as was to be expected, on things
+in general, for B. B. loved his joke and was full of anecdote—anecdote,
+perhaps, not always of the most refined character. But what could you
+expect at such happy times from a man brimful of human nature, who had to
+pose all life under the double weight of decorum imposed on him, in the
+first place as a Quaker, and in the second place as a banker’s clerk?
+
+Bernard Barton, as I recollect him, was somewhat of a dear old man—short
+in person, red in face, with dark brown hair. He was, as I have said, a
+clerk in a bank, but his poetry had elevated him, somehow, to the rank of
+a provincial lion, and at certain houses, where the dinner was good and
+the wine was ditto, he ever was a welcome guest. I dined with him at the
+house of a friend in Woodbridge, and it seemed to me that he cared more
+for good feeding and a glass of wine and a pinch of snuff than the sacred
+Nine. Of course at that time I had not been educated up to the fitting
+state of mind with which the philosopher of our day proceeds to the
+performance of the mysteries of dinner. Dining had at that time not been
+elevated to the rank of a science, to the study of which the most acute
+intellects devote their highest energies; nor had flowers then been
+invoked to lend an additional grace to the dining-table. Besides,
+dinners such as Mr. Black gives at Brighton, scientific dinners, such as
+those feasts with which Sir Henry Thompson regales his friends, were
+unknown. Nevertheless, now and then we managed to dine comfortably off
+roast beef or lamb, a slice of boiled or roast fowl, a bit of
+plum-pudding or fruit tart, a crust of bread and cheese, with—tell it not
+in Gath, publish it not in the streets of Askalon—sherry and Madeira at
+dinner, and a few glasses of fine old fruity port after. Some
+Shakespearian quotations—unknown to me then, for Shakespeare was little
+quoted in purely evangelical circles, either in Church or Dissent—a
+reference to Sir Walter Scott’s earlier German translations, formed about
+the sum and substance of the conversation which took place between the
+poet and my host; all the rest was principally social gossip and an
+exchange of pleasantries between the poet and his friend, whom he
+addressed familiarly as ‘mine ancient.’ It was a great treat to me, of
+course, to dine with Bernard Barton, the Quaker poet. Once upon a time a
+Quaker minister had come to Woodbridge on a preaching tour, and all the
+Quakers, male and female, small and great, rich and poor, were ranged
+before him. When Bernard Barton was announced, the good old man said,
+‘Barton—Barton—that’s a name I don’t recollect.’ The bearer of the name
+replied it would be strange if he did, seeing that they had never met
+before. Suddenly looking up, the minister exclaimed, ‘Art thou the
+versifying man?’ Unlike the venerable stranger, I had no need to ask the
+question, as in my mother’s album there was more than one letter from the
+genial B. B.
+
+I can well recall the room in which I dined with the poet. My host had
+come into a handsome fortune by marrying a wealthy widow—one of the
+possibilities of a Dissenting minister’s situation—and he had retired
+from the ministry to cultivate literature and literary men. As I think
+of that room and that dinner, I am reminded of the wonderful contrast
+effected within the last age. At that time the dinner-table presented a
+far less picturesque appearance than it does now. We had always pudding
+before meat; the latter was solid, and in the shape of a joint. Nor was
+it handed round by servants, but carved by the host or his lady. Silver
+forks were unknown, and electro-plate had not then been invented.
+Vegetables, also, were deficient as regards quantity and quality compared
+with the supply at a respectable dinner nowadays. In manners the change
+is equally remarkable. It was said of a nobleman, a personal friend of
+George III., and a model gentleman of his day, that he had made the tour
+of Europe without ever touching the back of his travelling carriage.
+That includes an idea of self-denial utterly unknown to all the young
+people of to-day. The study now is how to make our houses more
+comfortable, and to furnish them most luxuriously. Then, perhaps, there
+was but one sofa in the house, and that was repellent rather than
+attractive. Easy-chairs were few and far between. Lounging of any kind
+was out of the question. In the drawing-room, the furniture was of the
+same uncomfortable description, and there were none of the modern
+appliances which exist to make ladies and gentlemen happy. Couches,
+antimacassars, photographs, were unknown. One picture invariably to be
+seen was a painting of a favourite steed, with the owner looking at it in
+a state of intense admiration; and a few family portraits might be
+ostentatiously displayed. As to pianos, there never was but one in the
+house; and a billiard-table would have been considered as the last refuge
+of human depravity. In sitting-rooms and bedrooms and passages there was
+a great deficiency of carpets and of oilcloth. But furniture was
+furniture then, and could stand a good deal of wear and tear; while as to
+the spare bed in the best room, with its enormous four posts and its
+gigantic funereal canopy and its heavy curtains, through which no breath
+of fresh air could penetrate, all I can say is that people slept in it
+and survived the operation—so wonderfully does nature adapt itself to
+circumstances the most adverse.
+
+This reference to Bernard Barton reminds me of a portrait he has left in
+one of his pleasant letters of a Suffolk yeoman, a class of whose virtues
+I can testify from personal experience. ‘He was a hearty old yeoman of
+eighty-six, and had occupied the farm in which he lived and died about
+fifty-five years. Social, hospitable, friendly, a liberal master to his
+labourers, a kind neighbour, and a right merry companion within the
+limits of becoming mirth. In politics a stanch Whig, in his theological
+creed as sturdy a Dissenter; yet with no more party spirit in him than a
+child. He and I belonged to the same book-club for about forty years.
+. . . Not that he greatly cared about books or was deeply read in them, but
+he loved to meet his neighbours and get them round him on any occasion or
+no occasion at all. As a fine specimen of the true English yeoman, I
+have met with few to equal, if any to surpass him, and he looked the
+character as well as he acted it, till within a few years, when the
+strong man was bowed by bodily infirmity. About twenty-six years ago, in
+his dress costume of a blue coat and yellow buckskins, a finer sample of
+John Bullism you would rarely see. It was the whole study of his long
+life to make the few who revolved round him in his little orbit as happy
+as he seemed to be himself. Yet I was gravely queried when I happened to
+say that his children had asked me to write a few lines to his memory,
+whether I could do this in keeping with the general tone of my poetry—the
+speaker doubted if he was a decidedly pious character! He had at times
+in his altitude been known to vociferate a song, of which the chorus was
+certainly not teetotalism:
+
+ ‘“Sing old Rose, and burn the bellows,
+ Drink and drive dull care away.”’
+
+Bernard Barton goes on to describe the deceased yeoman as a diligent
+attendant at the meeting-house, a frequent and serious reader of the
+Bible, and the head of an orderly and well-regulated house. He is
+described as knowing Dr. Watts’ hymns almost by heart, and as singing
+them on Sunday at meeting with equal fervour and unction. Bernard Barton
+feared in 1847—the date of his epistle—the breed of such men was dying
+out. It is to be feared in East Anglia the race is quite extinct. In
+our meeting-house at Wrentham, when I was a lad, there were several such.
+I am afraid there is not one there now. The sons and daughters have left
+the old rustic houses, and gone out into the world. They have become
+respectable, and go to church, and have lost a good deal of the vigour
+and independence of their forefathers. In all the East Anglian
+meeting-houses fifty years ago such men abounded. Of a Sunday, with
+their blue coats and kerseymere knee-breeches, and jolly red laces, they
+looked more like country squires than common farmers. They drove up to
+the meeting-house yard with very superior gigs and cattle. In their
+houses creature comforts of all known kinds were to be found. Tea—a
+hearty meal, not of mere bread-and-butter, but of ham and cake as
+well—was served up in the parlour, with a glass or two of real
+home-brewed ale, amber-coloured, of a quality now unknown, and which was
+wonderfully refreshing after a long walk or drive. Then, if it were
+summer, there was a stroll in the big garden, well planted with
+fruit-trees and strawberry-beds, and adorned with flowers—old-fashioned,
+perhaps, but rich, nevertheless, in colour and perfume. In one corner
+there was sure to be an arbour, all covered with honeysuckle, such as
+Izaak Walton himself would have approved; and there, while the seniors
+over their long pipes discussed politics and theology, and corn and
+cattle, the younger ones would make their first feeble efforts, all
+unconsciously, perhaps, to conjugate the verb ‘to love.’ Outside the
+church organizations these old yeomen lived and died. There was a
+flavour of the world about them. They would dine at market ordinaries,
+and perhaps would stop an hour in the long room of the public-house,
+where they put up their horses, to smoke a pipe and take a drop of
+brandy-and-water for the good of the landlord. Now and then—sometimes to
+the sorrow of their wives, who were often church-members—they would join,
+as I have indicated, in a song of an objectionable character when
+severely criticised. Perhaps their parson would be much exercised on
+their behalf; but surely the noble spirit of humanity in these old
+yeomen, at any rate, was as worthy of admiration as the Puritanic faith
+of the past—or as the honest doubt of the present age. If I mistake not,
+the fine old yeoman to whom Bernard Barton referred lived not far from
+Seckford Hall.
+
+Woodbridge has some claim to consideration from the Nonconformist point
+of view. In 1648 a schoolmistress, Elizabeth Warren, published a
+pamphlet, ‘The Old and Good Way Vindicated, in a Treatise, wherein Divers
+Errours, both in Judgment and Practice incident to these Declining Days,
+are Unmasked for the Caution of humble Christians.’ From the same town
+also there issued ‘The Preacher Sent: a Vindication of the Liberty of
+Public Preaching by Some Men not Ordained.’ The author of this book, or
+one of the authors of it, was the Rev. Frederick Woodall, the first
+pastor of the Free Church—‘a man of learning, ability, and piety, a
+strict Independent, zealous for the fifth monarchy, and a considerable
+sufferer after his ejectment.’ He had, we are told, to contend with a
+tedious embarrassment, through the persecuting spirit that for many years
+prevailed, and considerably cramped the success of his ministry.
+Woodbridge is one of the churches which Mr. Harmer refers to in his
+‘Miscellaneous Works,’ as being rigidly Congregationalist, and which
+conducted its affairs rather according to the heads of Savoy Confession
+than the heads of Agreement. When I was a boy the pastor was a Mr.
+Pinchback, who seems to have been a worthy successor of godly men,
+equally attractive and successful. He had previously settled at Ware.
+It is recorded of the good divine that on one occasion he had to leave
+his wife at the point of death, as it seemed, to go to chapel. In the
+course of the service he mentioned the fact of her illness, and announced
+in consequence that he would preach her funeral sermon on the following
+Sunday. But when the following Sunday came the lady was better, and
+lived for many years to assist her husband in his godly work. In the
+rural districts the Baptists flourished immensely.
+
+At Grundisburgh there preached for many years to a large congregation a
+worthy man of the name of Collins, who was one of the leading lights of
+the body which rejoiced in a John Foreman and a Brother Wells. People
+who live in London cannot have forgotten Jemmy Wells, of the Surrey
+Tabernacle, and his grotesque and telling anecdotes. One can scarcely
+imagine how people could ever believe the things Wells used to say as to
+the Lord’s dealings with him; but they did, and his funeral—in South
+London, at any rate—was almost as numerously attended as that of Arthur,
+Duke of Wellington. I expect high-and-dry Baptists have been not a
+little troublesome in their day, and in East Anglia they were more
+numerous than in London. It may be that they have helped to weaken
+Dissent in that part of the world. Men of independent intellect must
+have been not a little shocked by that unctuous familiarity with God and
+the devil which is the characteristic of that class. On a Sunday morning
+Jemmy Wells, as his admirers called him, would describe in the most
+graphic manner what the devil had said to him in the course of the week;
+and on one memorable occasion, at any rate, described with much force the
+shame he felt at having to tell the gentleman in black that his people’s
+memories, unfortunately, were somewhat remiss in the matter of pew-rents.
+Brother Collins avoided such flights, but he was an attractive preacher
+to all the country round, nevertheless. Truly such a one was needed in
+that district. At Rendham, a village near Saxmundham, lived a godly
+minister of the Church of England. In 1844, speaking to a friend of the
+writer, he said that when he came into the county, between thirty and
+forty years before, there was only one other clergyman and himself
+between Ipswich and Great Yarmouth who preached the Gospel, and that
+sometimes the squire of the parish would hold up his watch to him to bid
+him close his sermon. In some places where he went to preach he had to
+have a body-guard to prevent his being mobbed and pelted with rotten eggs
+on account of his evangelical principles.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+MILTON’S SUFFOLK SCHOOLMASTER.
+
+
+Stowmarket—The Rev. Thomas Young—Bishop Hall and the Smectymnian
+divines—Milton’s mulberry-tree—Suffolk relationships.
+
+‘My father destined me,’ writes John Milton, in his ‘Defensio Secunda,’
+‘while yet a little boy, for the study of humane letters, which I served
+with such eagerness that, from the twelfth year of my age, I scarcely
+ever went from my lessons to bed before midnight, which, indeed, was the
+first cause of injury to my eyes, to whose natural weakness there were
+also added frequent headaches; all which not retarding my natural
+impetuosity in learning, he caused me to be instructed both at the
+Grammar School and under other masters at home.’ Of the latter, the best
+known was the Rev. Thomas Young, the Puritan minister, of Stowmarket,
+Suffolk.
+
+It is generally claimed for Young that he was an East Anglian. Professor
+Masson has, however, settled the question that he was a Scotchman, of the
+University of Aberdeen. Be that as it may, like most Scotchmen, he made
+his way to England, and was employed by Mr. Milton, the scrivener of
+Bread Street, to teach his gifted son. As he seems to have been married
+at the time, it is not probable that he resided with his pupil, but only
+visited him daily. Never had master a better pupil, or one who rewarded
+him more richly by the splendour of his subsequent career. The poet,
+writing to him a few years after he ceased to be his pupil, speaks of
+‘the incredible and singular gratitude he owed him on account of the
+services he had done him,’ and calls God to witness that he reverenced
+him as his father. In a Latin elegy, after implying that Young was
+dearer to him than Socrates to Alcibiades, or than the great Stagyrite to
+his generous pupil, Alexander, he goes on to say: ‘First, under his
+guidance, I explored the recesses of the Muses, and beheld the sacred
+green spots of the cleft summit of Parnassus and quaffed the Pierian
+cups, and, Clio favouring me, thrice sprinkled my joyful mouth with
+Castalian wine;’ from which it is clear that Young had done his duty to
+his pupil, and that the latter ever regarded him with an affection as
+beautiful as rare. Never did a Rugby lad write of Arnold as Milton of
+Thomas Young. How long the latter’s preceptorship lasted cannot be
+determined with precision. ‘It certainly closed,’ writes Professor
+Masson, in that truly awful biography of his, ‘when Young left England at
+the age of thirty-five, and became pastor of the congregation of British
+merchants settled at Hamburg.’
+
+As one of the leaders of the Presbyterian party, Dr. Thomas Young became
+Vicar of Stowmarket in due time. He was one of the Smectymnian divines.
+As it is not every schoolboy who knows what the term means, let me
+explain who they were. Two or three hundred years ago people were much
+more controversial than they are now, and very fierce was the battle on
+the subject of the relative claims, from a Scriptural point of view, of
+Prelacy or Presbytery. One of the most distinguished champions of the
+former was Dr. Hall, Bishop of Norwich—a simple, godly, learned man, who
+deserves to be held in remembrance, if only for the way in which he got
+married. ‘Being now settled,’ he writes, ‘in that sweet and civil county
+of Suffolk, the uncouth solitariness of my life, and the extreme
+incommodity of that single housekeeping, drew my thoughts, after two
+years, to condescend to the necessity of a married state, which God no
+less strangely provided for me; for walking from the church on Monday, in
+the Whitsun week, with a grave and reverend minister, I saw a comely and
+modest gentlewoman standing at the door of that house where we were
+invited to a wedding-dinner, and inquiring of that worthy friend whether
+he knew her, “Yes,” quoth he, “I know her well, and have bespoken her for
+your wife.” When I further demanded an account of that answer, he told
+me she was the daughter of a gentleman whom he much respected—Mr. George
+Whinniff, of Brettenham; that out of an opinion he had of the fitness of
+that match for me he had already treated with her father about it, whom
+he found very apt to entertain it. Advising me not to neglect the
+opportunity, and not concealing the just praises of the modesty, piety,
+good disposition, and other virtues that were lodged in that seemly
+presence, I listened to the motion as sent from God, and at last, upon
+due prosecution, happily prevailed, enjoying the comfortable society of
+that meet-help for the space of forty-nine years.’ A young clergyman so
+good and amiable ought to have fared better as regards the days in which
+his lot was passed. Hall should have lived in some theological Arcadia.
+As it was, he had to fight much and suffer much. In those distracted
+times he was all for peace. When the storm was brewing in Church and
+State, which for a time swept away Bishop and King, he published—but,
+alas! in vain—his ‘Via Media.’ ‘I see,’ he wrote, ‘every man to rank
+himself unto a side, and to draw in the quarrel he affecteth. I see no
+man either holding or joining their hands for peace.’ Bishop Hall was
+the most celebrated writer of his time in defence of the Church of
+England. Archbishop Laud got him to write on ‘The Divine Right of
+Episcopacy,’ nor could he have well placed the subject in abler hands.
+This was followed, after Laud had fallen, with ‘An Humble Remonstrance to
+the High Court of Parliament,’ in which treatise he vindicated the
+antiquity of liturgies and Episcopacy with admirable skill, meekness, and
+simplicity, yet with such strength of argument that five Presbyterian
+divines clubbed their wits together to frame an answer. These
+Presbyterian ministers were—Stephen Marshal, then lecturer at St.
+Margaret’s, whom Baillie terms the best of the preachers in England;
+Edmund Calamy, who had long been a celebrated East Anglian preacher,
+first at Swaffham, then at Bury St. Edmunds, who, as we all know, refused
+a bishopric when offered him, and whom, therefore, at any rate, his
+adversaries must allow to have been sincere; Thomas Young, Matthew
+Newcomen, and William Spurstow. To this reply was given the name of
+Smectymnuus—a startling word, as Calamy calls it, made up of the initial
+letters of these names. This work, which was published in 1641, gave,
+says Dr. M’Crie, the first serious blow to Prelacy. It was composed in a
+style superior to that of the Puritans in general, and was, by the
+confession of the learned Bishop Wilkins, a capital work against
+Episcopacy. Dr. Kippis says, ‘This piece is certainly written with great
+fierceness and asperity of language,’ and quotes, as evidence, some
+strong things said against the practice of the prelates. But Neal, who
+has given a long account of the work, states that, if the rest of the
+clergy had been of the same temper and spirit with Bishop Hall, the
+controversy between him and the Smectymnian divines might have been
+compromised.
+
+Stowmarket, as I have said, had the honour of being placed under the
+pastoral care of one of these Smectymnian divines. He came there in
+March, 1628, on the presentation of Mr. John Howe, a gentleman then
+residing in the town, and a man of wealth, whose ancestors had been great
+cloth-manufacturers in that place and neighbourhood. Since the time of
+Edward III. the cloth manufacture had been very active in Suffolk, and it
+is little to the credit of its merchants that we find them, in 1522,
+petitioning for the repeal of a royal law which inflicted a penalty
+against those who sold cloth which, when wetted, shrunk up, on the plea
+that, as such goods were made for a foreign market, the home-consumer was
+not injured. Stowmarket, when I was a lad, had reached its climax in a
+pecuniary sense. In the early part of the present century it was spoken
+of as a rising town. Situated as it was in the centre of the county, it
+was a convenient mart for barley, and great quantities of malt were made.
+Its other manufactures were sacking, ropes, and twine. Its tanneries
+were of a more recent date, as also its manufactory of gun-cotton,
+connected with which at one time there was an explosion of a most fatal
+and disastrous character. In 1763 it was connected with Ipswich by means
+of a canal, which was a great source of prosperity to the town. Up to
+the time of the great Reform Bill, it was the great place for county
+meetings, and for the nomination of the county representatives. In our
+day it has a population of 4,052. When I was a lad it was one of the
+first towns to welcome the Plymouth Brethren into Suffolk, and they are
+there still. The Independent Chapel for awhile suffered much from them.
+The pastor was a very worthy but somewhat dry preacher. His favourite
+quotation in the pulpit, when he would describe the attacks of the enemy
+of God and man, was
+
+ ‘He worries whom he can’t devour
+ With a malicious joy.’
+
+Suffolk had its great lawyers as well as Norfolk. The first to head the
+list is Ranulph de Glanville, a man of great parts, deep learning, for
+the times, eminent alike for his legal abilities and energetic mind. He
+was said, by one account, to have been born at Stowmarket. It is certain
+he founded Leiston Abbey, near Aldborough, and Bentley Priory. As Chief
+Justice under Henry II. he naturally was no favourite with Richard I.,
+who deprived him of his office and made use of his wealth. He lived,
+however, to accompany Richard to the Holy Land, and died at the siege of
+Acre. His treatise on our laws is one of the earliest on record. It
+must be remembered also that Godwin, the author of ‘Political Justice,’
+and ‘Caleb Williams,’ a novel still read—the husband of one gifted woman,
+and the father of another—was at one time an Independent minister at
+Stowmarket.
+
+But to return to Dr. Young. He, like Mr. Newcomen, had become an East
+Anglian, and Smectymnuus may therefore more or less be said to have an
+East Anglian original. As the living of Stowmarket was at that time
+worth £300 a year, and as £300 a year then was quite equal to £600 a year
+now, Dr. Young must have been in comfortable circumstances while at
+Stowmarket. A likeness of him is hung up, or was preserved, in
+Stowmarket Vicarage. ‘It,’ wrote an old observer, ‘possesses the solemn,
+faded yellowness of a man much given to austere meditation, yet there is
+sufficient energy in the eye and mouth to show, as he is preaching in
+Geneva gown and bands, that he is a man who could write and think, and
+speak with great vigour.’ One of Milton’s biographers terms him,
+contemptuously, a Puritan who cut his hair short. The Rev. Mr.
+Hollingsworth writes that it is an error to suppose that Young remained
+long as chaplain to merchants abroad. ‘He must have remained generally
+in constant residence, because we possess his signature to the vestry
+accounts, in a curious quarto book, which contains the annual accounts of
+Stow upland Parish for eighty-four years. At the parish meetings, and at
+the audit of each year’s accounts Vicar Young presided, with some
+exceptions, from the year 1629 to 1655, and his autograph is attached to
+each page.’ As an author, Dr. Young had distinguished himself before he
+appeared as one of the Smectymnians. In 1639, while the Stuarts and the
+Bishops were doing all they could to break down the sanctity of the
+Sabbath, and to make it a day of vulgar revelry and rustic sport, Dr.
+Young published a thin quarto in Latin, entitled ‘Dies Dominica,’
+containing a history of the institution of the Sabbath, and its
+vindication from all common and profane uses. There is no place of
+publication named, the signature is feigned, ‘Theophilus Philo Kunaces
+Loncardiensis,’ and in the copy reserved at Stowmarket is added, in
+characters by no means unlike that of the handwriting of the Vicar
+himself, ‘Dr. Thos. Young, of Jesus.’ The tractate is described as a
+very elaborate and learned compilation from the Fathers upon the sanctity
+of the Sabbath. A spirit of laborious and determined energy pervades it,
+nor is it unworthy the abilities and erudition of the author. The work
+was written at Stowmarket, and may have been published in Ipswich. Its
+paper and type are coarse; the name of the author was concealed, because
+at that time a man who reverenced the Sabbath had a good chance of being
+brought before the Star Chamber, and of being roughly treated by
+Archbishop Laud, as an enemy to Church and State. About ten years
+before, Dr. Young had heard how, for writing his plea against Prelacy,
+Dr. Alexander Leighton had been cast into Newgate, dragged before the
+Star Chamber, where he was sentenced to have his ears cut off, to have
+his nose slit, to be branded in the face, to stand in the pillory, to be
+whipped at the post, to pay a fine of £10,000, and to suffer perpetual
+imprisonment. Dr. Young might well shrink from exposing himself to
+similar torture. But Dr. Young had other warnings, and much nearer home.
+
+Dr. Young, like most of the men of that time, persecuted witches. These
+latter were supposed to have existed in great numbers, and a roving
+commission for their discovery was given to one Matthew Hopkins, of
+Manningtree, in Essex, to find them out in the eastern counties and
+execute the law upon them. It was a brutal business, and Hopkins
+followed it for three or four years. He proceeded from town to town and
+opened his courts. Stowmarket was one of the places he visited. The
+Puritans are said to have hung sixty witches in Suffolk, but the Puritans
+were not alone responsible. It is a fact that, up to fifty years ago two
+supposed witches lived in Stowmarket.
+
+Dr. Young escaped the Star Chamber, but, like most good men who would be
+free at that time he had to fly his native land for awhile. Milton
+refers to this exile in his Latin elegy:
+
+ ‘Meantime alone
+ Thou dwellest, and helpless on a soil unknown,
+ Poor, and receiving from a foreign hand
+ The aid denied thee in thy native land.’
+
+It seems from this that the living at Stowmarket was under sequestration.
+A little while after Young is back in Stowmarket, and Milton thus
+describes his daily life—a personal experience of the poet’s, not a
+flight of fancy:
+
+ ‘Now, entering, thou shalt haply seated see
+ Besides his spouse, his infants on his knee;
+ Or, turning page by page with studious look
+ Some bulky paper or God’s holy Book.’
+
+Good times came to Dr. Young. The seed he had sown bore fruit. For
+awhile England had woke up to attack the Stuart doctrine of royal
+prerogative in Church and State. The men of Suffolk had been the
+foremost in the fight, and in 1643 we find the Doctor in Duke’s Place,
+London. A sermon was preached by him before the House of Commons, and
+printed by order of the House. A Stowmarket Rector speaks of it
+naturally as a very prolix, learned, somewhat dull and heavy effort to
+encourage them to persevere in their civil war against the King; but he
+has the grace to add: ‘There is much less of faction in it than many
+others, and it is rather the production of a contemplative than of an
+active partisan.’ ‘One of his examples,’ writes Mr. Hollingsworth, ‘is
+from 2 Sam. xiii. 28, where the command of Absalom was to kill Amnon:
+“Could the command of a _mortal man_ infuse that courage and valour into
+the hearts _of his servants_ as to make them adventure upon a _desperate_
+design? And shall not the command of the _Almighty God_ raise up the
+hearts of His people employed by Him in any work to which _He_ calls
+them, raise up their hearts in following at His command!”’ The Doctor
+had not cleared himself of all the errors of his times. He urged on his
+hearers, by the example of the Emperors, the necessity of maintaining the
+doctrine of the Trinity uncorrupt, by the aid of the civil power. He
+urged, however, on them personal holiness, in order that the reformation
+of the Church might be more easily accomplished. The two legislative
+enactments he wished them to pass were to confer a power upon the
+Presbyterian clergy to exclude men from the Sacrament, and enforce a
+better observance of the Sabbath-day. The sermon is scarce, but is bound
+up with others in the Library at Cambridge, preached at the monthly fasts
+before the House of Commons.
+
+In the library of the Memorial Hall, Farringdon Street, where assuredly
+the portrait of the Stowmarket Rector should find a place, there is a
+copy of this sermon, which was preached at the last solemn fast.
+February 28, 1643, with the notice that ‘It is this day ordered by the
+Commoners’ House of Parliament that Sir John Trevor and Mr. Rous do from
+this House give thanks to Mr. Young for the great paines hee tooke in the
+sermon hee preached that day at the intreaty of the said House of Commons
+at St. Margaret’s, Westminster, it being the day of publike humiliation,
+and to desire him to print this sermon;’ which accordingly was done,
+under the title of ‘Hope’s Encouragement.’ The motto on the outside was:
+‘Which hope we have as an anchor of the soul both sure and steadfast, and
+entereth into that which is within the veil.’ The sermon was printed in
+London for Ralph Smith, at the sign of the Bible, in Cornhill, near the
+Royal Exchange. In his sermon the preacher took for his text: ‘Be of
+good courage, and He shall strengthen your heart, all ye that wait upon
+the Lord.’ The three propositions established are: First, that God’s
+people are taught by the Lord in all their troubles to wait patiently on
+Him. The second is that such as wait patiently upon the Lord must rouse
+themselves with strength and courage to further wait upon Him; and that,
+thirdly, when God’s people wait upon Him, He will increase their courage.
+The preacher quotes the Hebrew and Augustine, and reasons in a most
+undeniable manner in support of his propositions; but above all things he
+is practical. ‘The work you are now called on to do,’ he says to the
+M.P.’s, ‘is a work of great concernment. It is the purging of the Lord’s
+floor. As it hath reference both to the Church and the Commonwealth, a
+work sure enough to be encountered with great opposition. Yet I must say
+it is a work with the managing whereof God hath not so honoured others
+which have gone before you in your places, but hath reserved it to make
+you the instruments of His glory in advancing it, and that doth much add
+unto your honour. Was it an honour to the Tyrians that they were counted
+amongst the builders of the Temple when Hiram sent to Solomon things
+necessary for that work? How, then, hath God honoured you, reserving to
+you the care of re-edifying His Church (the throne of the living God) and
+the repairing of the shattered Commonwealth, so far borne down before He
+raised you to support it, that succeeding ages may with honour to your
+names, say, “This was the Reforming Parliament,” a work which God, by His
+blessing on your unwearied pains, hath much furthered already, whilst He,
+by you, hath removed the rubbish that might hinder the raising up of that
+godly structure appointed and prescribed by the Lord in His Word.’ They
+were to stick to the truth, contended the preacher, quoting the edict of
+the Emperor Justinian in the Arian controversy, and the reply of Basil
+the Great to the Emperor’s deputy: ‘That none trained up in Holy
+Scriptures would suffer one syllable of Divine truth to be betrayed; but
+were ready, if it be required, to suffer any death in the defence
+thereof.’ People, he maintained, are ever carried on by the example of
+their governors. ‘How,’ he asks, ‘was the Eastern Empire polluted with
+execrable Arianism, whilst yet the Western continued in the truth? The
+historians give the reason of it. Constantine, an Arian, ruled in the
+East when at the same time Constans and Constantius, sons to Constantine
+the Great, treading in the steps of their pious father, adhered to the
+truth professed by him, and so did as far ennoble the Western Empire with
+the truth as the other did defile the Eastern with his countenancing of
+error and heresy.’ The preacher here asks his hearers to make no laws
+against religion and piety, and ‘recall such as have been made in time of
+ignorance against the same, and study to uphold and maintain such
+profitable and wholesome laws as have been formerly enacted for God and
+His people. Improve what was well begun by others before you, and not
+perfected by them.’ Under this latter head he dwelt on the possible
+abuse of the Holy Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper, and the irreligious
+profanation of the Lord’s Day.
+
+In 1643 the Earl of Manchester ejected many of the Royalist clergymen
+from their livings who were scandalous ministers. Dr. Sterne having been
+deprived of the mastership of Jesus College, Cambridge, the Stowmarket
+Vicar was placed there in his stead. He held the situation till 1654,
+when, on his refusal of the engagement, Government deprived him of his
+office. At the time the sermon was preached Dr. Young was one of the
+far-famed Assembly of Divines which met in Henry VII.’s chapel in
+accordance with the Solemn League and Covenant, which proposed three
+grand objects: ‘To endeavour the extirpation of Popery, Prelacy
+superstition, heresy, and profaneness; to endeavour the preservation of
+the reformed religion in Scotland and the reformation of religion in the
+kingdoms of England and Ireland in doctrine, worship, discipline, and
+government according to the Word of God and the example of the best
+Reformed Church; and to endeavour to bring the Churches of God in the
+three kingdoms to the nearest conjunction and uniformity in
+religion—confession of faith, form of Church government, directory for
+worship and catechizing; that we and our posterity after us may as
+brethren live in faith and love, and that the Lord may delight to dwell
+in the midst of us.’ A clause was inserted to the effect that it was
+English prelacy which they contemned; and thus modified, after all due
+solemnities, and with their right hands lifted to heaven, was the Solemn
+League and Covenant sworn to by the English Parliament and by the
+Assembly of Divines in St. Margaret’s Church, September 25, 1643. It
+was, writes a Presbyterian divine, too much the creature of the Long
+Parliament who convoked the meeting, selected the members of Assembly,
+nominated its president, prescribed its bye-laws, and kept a firm hold
+and a vigilant eye on all their proceedings. Still, with all these
+drawbacks, it must be admitted that Parliament could hardly have made a
+selection of more pious, learned, and conscientious men. The Assembly
+consisted of men nominated by the members for each county sending in
+suitable names. The two divines appointed for Suffolk were Mr. Thomas
+Young, of Stowmarket, and Mr. John Phillips, of Rentall. The Vicar, it
+is said, sometimes acted as chairman, but this, as Mr. Hollingsworth
+remarks, is doubtful.
+
+Mr. Young’s claim to fame rests on something greater than his sermon, or
+his position in the Assembly of Divines at Westminster, or his mastership
+of Jesus College. He was, as we have said, Milton’s schoolmaster. The
+poet tells us:
+
+ ‘’Tis education forms the common mind;
+ Just as a twig is bent the tree’s inclined.’
+
+If so, much of Milton’s piety and lofty principle and massive learning
+must have come to him from the Stowmarket Vicar. In our day there is
+little chance of a young scholar becoming imbued with Miltonian ideas on
+the subject of civil and religious liberty. That sublime genius which
+was to sing in immortal verse of
+
+ ‘Man’s first disobedience, and the fruit
+ Of that forbidden tree, whose mortal taste
+ Brought death into the world, and all our woe,’
+
+must have owed much to Dr. Young—a debt which the poet acknowledged, as
+we have already seen, in no niggardly way. Amongst Milton’s Latin
+letters is the following, which has been translated by Professor Masson
+thus: ‘Although I had resolved with myself, most excellent preceptor, to
+send you a certain small epistle composed in metrical numbers, yet I did
+not consider that I had done enough unless I also wrote something in
+prose: for, truly, the singular and boundless gratitude of my mind which
+your deserts justly claim from me was not to be expressed in that cramped
+mode of speech, straitened by fixed feet and syllables, but in a free
+oration—nay, rather, if it were possible, in an Asiatic exuberance of
+words. To express sufficiently how much I owe you, were a work far
+greater than my strength, even if I should call into play all those
+commonplaces of argument which Aristotle or that dialectician of Paris
+(Ramus) has collected, or even if I should exhaust all the fountains of
+oratory. You complain as justly that my letters have been to you very
+few and very short; but I, on the other hand, do not so much grieve that
+I have been remiss in a duty so pleasant and so enviable, as I rejoice,
+and all but exult, at having such a place in your friendship, as that you
+should care to ask for frequent letters from me. That I should never
+have written to you for over more than three years, I pray you will not
+misconceive, but, in accordance with your wonderful indulgence and
+candour, put the more charitable construction on it; for I call God to
+witness how much, as a father, I regard you, with what singular devotion
+I have always followed you in thought, and how I feared to trouble you
+with my writings. In sooth, I make it my first care, that since there is
+nothing else to commend my letters, that their rarity may commend them.
+Next, as out of that most vehement desire after you which I feel, I
+always fancy you with me, and speak to you, and beheld you as if you were
+present, and so, as always happens in love, soothe my grief by a certain
+vain imagination of your presence, it is, in truth, my fear, as soon as I
+meditate sending you a letter, that it should suddenly come into my mind
+by what an interval of earth you are distant from me, and so the grief of
+your absence, already nearly lulled, should grow fresh and break up my
+sweet dream. The Hebrew Bible, your truly most acceptable gift, I have
+already received. These lines I have written in London, in the midst of
+town distractions, not, as usual, surrounded by books; if, therefore,
+anything in this epistle should please you less than might be, and
+disappoint your expectations, it will be made up for by another more
+elaborate one as soon as I have returned to the haunts of the Muses.’
+
+When the above letter was written, Milton had become a Cambridge student,
+where he was to experience a new kind of tutor. Milton could not get on
+with Chappell as he did with Young. The tie between the Stowmarket Vicar
+and the poet was of a much more cordial character.
+
+Again the poet appears to have forwarded the following letter to the
+Stowmarket Vicarage. It is to be feared that few such precious epistles
+find their way there now. Milton writes to the Doctor: ‘On looking at
+your letter, most excellent preceptor, this alone struck me as
+superfluous, that you excused your slowness in writing; for though
+nothing could come to me more desirable than your letters, how could I or
+ought I to hope that you should have so much leisure from serious and
+more sacred affairs, especially as that is a matter entirely of kindness,
+and not at all of duty? That, however, I should suspect that you had
+forgotten me, your so many recent kindnesses to me would by no means
+allow. I do not see how you could dismiss out of your memory one laden
+with so great benefits by you. Having been invited by you to your part
+of the country, as soon as spring has a little advanced I will gladly
+come to enjoy the delights of the year, and not less of your
+conversation, and will then withdraw myself from the din of town to your
+Stoa of the Iceni, as to that most celebrated porch of Zeno or the
+Tusculan Villa of Cicero, where you with moderate means, but regal
+spirit, like some Serranus or Curius, placidly reign in your little farm,
+and contemning fortune, hold as it were a triumph over riches, ambition,
+pomp, luxury, and whatever the herd of man admire and are amazed by. But
+as you have deprecated the blame of slowness, you will also, I hope,
+pardon me the fault of haste; for having put off this letter, I preferred
+writing little, and that rather in a slovenly manner, to not writing at
+all. Farewell, much-to-be respected Sir.’
+
+The question is, Did Milton carry out this intention, and pay Stowmarket
+a visit? Professor Masson thinks he may have been there in the memorable
+summer and autumn of 1630. The Rev. Mr. Hollingsworth, the Stowmarket
+historian argues that it is not unlikely that several, if not many,
+visits, extending over a period of thirty years, while the tutor held the
+living, were made by the poet to the place. Tradition has constantly
+associated his name with the mulberry-trees of the Vicarage, which he
+planted, but of these only one remains. ‘This venerable relic of the
+past,’ continues the Vicar, ‘is much decayed, and is still in vigorous
+bearing. Its girth, before it breaks into branches, is ten feet, and I
+have had in one season as much as ten gallons from the pure juices of its
+fruits, which yields a highly flavoured and brilliant-coloured wine.’ It
+stands a few yards distant from the oldest part of the house, and
+opposite the windows of an upstair double room, which was formerly the
+sitting-parlour of the Vicar, and where, it is to be believed, the poet
+and his friend had many a talk of the way to advance religion and liberty
+in the land, to remove hirelings out of the Church, and to abolish the
+Bishops. There too, perhaps, might have come to the guest visions of
+‘Paradise Lost.’ In his first work Milton throws out something like a
+hint of the great poem which he was in time to write. ‘Then, amidst,’ to
+quote his own sonorous language, ‘the hymns and hallelujahs of saints,
+_someone_ may, perhaps, be heard offering in high strains, in new and
+lofty measures, to sing and celebrate Thy Divine mercies and marvellous
+judgments in this land throughout all ages.’ We can easily believe how,
+in the Stowmarket Vicarage, the plan of the poet may have been talked
+over, and the heart of the poet encouraged to the work. Regarding Young
+as Milton did, we may be sure that he would have been only too glad to
+listen to his suggestions and adopt his advice. There must have been a
+good deal of plain living and high thinking at the Stowmarket Vicarage
+when Milton came there as an occasional guest. This is the more probable
+as Milton’s earliest publications were in support of the views of
+Smectymnian divines. His friendship for Young probably led him into the
+field of controversy, for he owns that he was not disposed to this manner
+of writing ‘wherein, knowing myself inferior to myself, led by the genial
+power of nature to another task, I have the use, as I may account, but of
+my left hand.’ It is a fact that Milton was thus drawn into the
+controversy, and what more natural than that he should have been induced
+to do so by the Stowmarket Vicar in the Stowmarket Vicarage? The poet’s
+family were familiar with that part of Suffolk, and his brother, Sir
+Christopher, who was a stanch Royalist and barrister, lived at Ipswich,
+but twelve miles off. He went to see Milton, and Milton might have
+visited Ipswich and Stowmarket at the same time. Be that as it may,
+tradition and probability alike justify the belief that Milton came to
+Stowmarket, and that he went away all the wiser and better, all the
+stronger to do good work for man and God, for his age and all succeeding
+ages. Young, as it may be inferred, was held in high honour by his
+friends. He was spoken of by two neighbouring ejected Rectors as the
+reverend, learned, orthodox, prudent, and holy Dr. Young. When he died,
+an epitaph was inscribed with some care by a friendly hand, and an
+unwilling admission is made of the opposition he had encountered. It is
+now illegible, and some of its lines appear to have been carefully
+erased—by some High Church chisel, probably. But the following copy was
+made when the epitaph was fresh and legible:
+
+ ‘Here is committed to earth’s trust
+ Wise, pious, spotlesse, learned dust,
+ Who living more adorned the place
+ Than the place him. Such was God’s grace.’
+
+Is the verse of this epitaph from Milton’s pen or not? Mr. Hollingsworth
+writes: ‘The probability is quite in favour that the pupil should write
+the last memorial of one whom he so highly honoured and loved as his old
+master. Nor is the verse itself, with the exception of the last line,
+unlike the character of Milton’s poetry, and this last may have been
+mutilated and rendered inharmonious by the action of the stone-cutter,
+who also confused the death of the father and son.’ It is pleasant to
+think, not only that Milton now and then came to the Stowmarket Vicarage,
+but that in the church itself there is a slight record of his poetical
+fame. Let me add, as a further illustration of the connection of the
+great poet with the county of Suffolk, that I am informed one of the
+family of the Meadowses, of Witnesham, was for a time one of his
+secretaries.
+
+Young died, aged sixty-eight, in the year 1655, when Milton was fully
+embarked in public life, when he could spare but little time; but we may
+be sure that he would be the last at that time of life to forget all that
+he owed to his tutor Young. Wife and son had predeceased the Vicar. It
+seems as if there was no one left but the poet to record on the marble in
+the middle aisle, in front of the present reading-desk, the virtues of a
+character which had long exercised so beneficial an influence on his own,
+and which he had loved so well. Milton’s regret for the loss of such a
+guide, philosopher, and friend must have been lasting and sincere.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+IN CONSTABLE’S COUNTY.
+
+
+East Bergholt—The Valley of the Stour—Painting from nature—East Anglian
+girls.
+
+Charles Kingsley was wont to glorify the teaching of the hills, and to
+maintain that the man of the mountain is more imaginative and poetical
+than the man of the plain. There are many Scotch people, mostly those
+born in the Highlands, who tell us much the same. If the theory be
+true—and I am not aware that it is—the exceptions are striking and many.
+Lincolnshire is rather a flat country, but it gave us (I can never bring
+myself to call him Lord) Alfred Tennyson. Many of our greatest poets and
+artists were cockneys; and Constable, that sweet painter of cornfields
+and shady lanes and quiet rivers, used to say that the scenes of his
+boyhood made him a painter. I was one autumn in Constable’s county, and
+I do not wonder at it. It is a wonderful district. I trod all the
+while, it seemed to me, on enchanted ground: in the gilded mist of
+autumn, with its river and its marsh lands, where the cows lazily fed—or
+got under the pollards to be out of the way of the flies—where laughing
+children swarmed along the hedges in pursuit of the ripe blackberry,
+where every cottage front was a thing of beauty, with its ivy creeping up
+the roof or over the wall; while the little garden was a mass of flowers.
+We expected to see the old gods and goddesses again to participate in the
+joyousness of an ancient mirth.
+
+Nor was it altogether a flat land, sacred to fat cattle and wheat and
+turnips. All round me were the elements of romance. At one end of the
+Vale of Dedham is a hill whence you may look all along the valley
+(Constable has made it the subject of one of his pictures) as far as
+Harwich; and as I lingered by the Stour—the river which divides Essex and
+Suffolk—East Bergholt, clothed with woods and crowned with a church, in
+which there is a stained-glass window put up in honour of Constable, and
+a baptismal font, the gift of Constable’s brother, unfolded to my
+wondering eye all her rural charms. There are people who love to climb
+hills; I hate to do so. It is all vanity and vexation of spirit; when
+you get to the top of one hill the chances are all you see is another
+hill, to the top of which you will have to climb. Give me a country
+lane, with its luxuriant hedges, its shady trees, its flowers, its
+richness of greensward, its pigs and poultry and farmyard; there is
+poetry in such nooks and corners of the earth, as Burns and Bloomfield
+and Gerald Massey found. No wonder the place made Constable an artist,
+and an artist whose name will not speedily pass away. My dear sir or
+madam, the next time you are on your way from London to Ipswich, don’t
+rush along at express speed; get out at Ardleigh, make your way to the
+Vale of Dedham, then walk along the Stour, and cross it by a couple of
+rustic bridges, and you are at East Bergholt, in Suffolk, where Constable
+was born, and if you do so you will bless me evermore. Then, if you
+like, rejoin the train at Manningtree, and resume your journey. Few East
+Anglians even are aware of the wealth of beauty in that quiet corner.
+‘The beauty of the surrounding scenery,’ writes Constable’s biographer,
+‘its gentle declivities, its luxuriant meadows, flats sprinkled with
+flocks and herds, its well-cultivated Uplands, its woods and rivers, with
+mansions scattered, and churches, farms, and picturesque cottages—all
+impart to this spot an amenity and elegance hardly anywhere else to be
+found.’
+
+The Constables have been long in the district. The grandfather was a
+farmer at a village close by. The father, who was well-to-do, purchased
+a water-mill at Dedham and two windmills at East Bergholt, where he
+lived. The great artist, his son John, was born in the last century, and
+was educated at Lavenham and the Dedham Grammar School, and when the lad
+had reached sixteen or seventeen became addicted to painting, his studio
+being in the house of a Mr. John Dunthorne, a painter and glazier, with
+whom he remained on terms of the greatest intimacy for many years. The
+father would fain have made the son a farmer. He preferred to be a
+miller, and in his young days was known in the district as the handsome
+miller. His windmills, when he took to painting, were wonderful, and
+well deserved the criticism of his brother, who used to say, ‘When I look
+at a windmill painted by John, I see that it will go round, which is not
+always the case with those of other artists,’ for the simple reason that
+John knew what he was about, which the others did not. Again, his
+industrial career helped him in another way. A miller learns to study
+the clouds, and Constable’s clouds were exceptionally life-like and real.
+The handsome young miller soon acquired artistic friends, one of them
+being Sir George Beaumont, the guide, philosopher, and friend of most of
+the geniuses of that time. Said another to him, ‘Do not trouble yourself
+about inventing figures for a landscape; you cannot remain an hour in a
+spot without the appearance of some living thing, that will in all
+probability better accord with the scene and the time of day than any
+invention of your own.’ After a visit to his artist friends in London,
+he resumed his mill life, and in 1779 he finally commenced his artistic
+career, and painted all the country round. His studies were chiefly
+Dedham, East Bergholt, the Valley of the Stour, and the neighbouring
+village of Stratford. At Stoke Nayland he painted an altar-piece for the
+church. There is also another altar-piece in a neighbouring church, but
+his altar-pieces are not known or treasured like his other works.
+
+Cooper tells a good story of Constable. One day Stodart, the sculptor,
+met Fuseli starting forth with an old umbrella. ‘Why do you carry the
+umbrella?’ asked the sculptor. ‘I am going to see Constable,’ was the
+reply, ‘and he is always painting rain.’ One can only remark that, if
+Constable was always painting rain, he always did it well.
+
+Another good story was told Redgrave by Lee. ‘I hear you sell all your
+pictures,’ said Constable to the younger landscape-painter. ‘Why, yes,’
+said Lee; ‘I’m pretty fortunate. Don’t you sell yours?’ ‘No,’ said
+Constable, ‘I don’t sell any of my pictures, and I’ll tell you why: when
+I paint a _bad_ picture I don’t like to part with it, and when I paint a
+_good_ one I like to keep it.’ It is well known that one year when
+Constable was on the Council of the Royal Academy, one of his own
+pictures was passed by mistake before the judges. ‘Cross it,’ said one.
+‘It won’t do,’ said another. ‘Pass on,’ said a third. And the carpenter
+was just about to chalk it with a cross, when he read the name of ‘John
+Constable.’ Of course there were lame apologies, and the picture was
+taken from the condemned heap and placed with the works of his brother
+Academicians. But after work was over Constable took the picture under
+his arm, and, despite the remonstrance of his brother colleagues, marched
+off with it, saving: ‘I can’t think of its being hung after it has been
+fairly turned out. The work so condemned was the ‘Stream bordered in
+with Willows,’ now in the South Kensington Museum. Leslie once remarked
+to Redgrave that he would give any work he had painted for it, so warmly
+did he admire it.
+
+‘Constable is the best landscape-painter we have,’ wrote Frith to his
+mother in 1835. ‘He is a very merry fellow, and very rich. He told us
+an anecdote of a man who came to look at his pictures; he was a gardener.
+One day he called him into his painting-room to look at his pictures,
+when the man made the usual vulgar remarks, such as, “Did you do all
+this, sir?” “Yes.” “What, all this?” “Yes.” “What, frame and all?”
+At last he came to an empty frame that was hung against the wall without
+any picture in it, when he said to Constable, “But you don’t call this
+picture quite finished, do you, sir?” Constable said that quite sickened
+him, and he never let any ignoramuses ever see his pictures again, or
+frames either.’
+
+Constable’s great merits, writes Mr. Frith, were first recognised in
+France, with the result upon French landscape art that is felt at the
+present time. His advice to Frith was: ‘Never do anything without nature
+before you if it be possible to have it. See those weeds and the dock
+leaves? They are to come into the foreground of this picture. I know
+dock leaves pretty well, but I should not attempt to introduce them into
+a picture without having them before me.’
+
+Constable died very suddenly in 1837. His fame, now that he is dead, is
+greater than when he was alive. His work abides in all its strength.
+
+There is little in East Bergholt to remind one of Constable, where his
+reputation remains as that of a genial and kindly-hearted man; but the
+landscape in all its essential features remains the same. The house in
+which he was born was pulled down in 1841, which is a great pity, as it
+is described as a large and handsome mansion. But I never saw a small
+village with so many attractive residences, though why anybody should
+live in any of them I could not, for the life of me, understand. Yet
+there they were, quite a street of them, all in beautiful order, as if
+they were the residences of wealthy citizens in the suburbs of a busy
+town. They ought to have been filled with handsome girls, as Charles
+Kingsley tells us East Anglia is famed for the beauty of its women; all I
+can say, however, is that I saw none of them, or any sign of life
+anywhere, beyond the inevitable tradesmen’s carts. Independently of
+Constable, East Bergholt claims to be worth a pilgrimage for its rustic
+beauty, which, however, becomes tame and common as you get away from it.
+The church is old, and has a history—of little consequence, however, to
+anyone now. One of its rectors was burned at Ipswich in Queen Mary’s
+reign. His name, Samuel, ought to be preserved by a Church which, till
+lately, had few martyrs of its own. East Bergholt has also a
+Congregational and Primitive Methodist chapel, and a colony of
+Benedictine nuns, driven away from France by the great Revolution. We
+are a hospitable people, and we are proud to be so, but have we not just
+at this time too many refugee nuns and monks in our midst?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+EAST ANGLIAN WORTHIES.
+
+
+Suffolk cheese—Danes, Saxons, and Normans—Philosophers and
+statesmen—Artists and literati.
+
+Abbo Floriacencis, who flourished in the year A.D. 910, describes East
+Anglia as ‘very noble, and particularly because of its being watered on
+all sides. On the south and east it is encompassed by the ocean, on the
+north by the moisture of large and wet fens which, arising almost in the
+heart of the island, because of the evenness of the ground for a hundred
+miles and more, descend in great rivers into the sea. On the west the
+province is joyned to the rest of the island, and, therefore, may be
+entered (by land); but lest it should be harassed by the frequent
+incursions of the enemy it is fortifyed with an earthen rampire like a
+high wall, and with a ditch. The inner parts of it is a pretty rich
+soil, made exceeding pleasant by gardens and groves, rendered agreeable
+by its convenience for hunting, famous for pasturage, and abounding with
+sheep and all sorts of cattle. I do not insist upon its rivers full of
+fish, considering that a tongue as it were of the sea itself licks it on
+one side, and on the other side the large fens make a prodigious number
+of lakes two or three miles over. These fens accommodate great numbers
+of monks with their desired retirement and solitude, with which, being
+enclosed, they have no occasion for the privacy of a wilderness.’ Before
+the monks came the place was held by the Iceni—a stout and valiant
+people, as Tacitus describes them. In the time of the Heptarchy, King
+Uffa was their lord and master. In later times Suffolk, when explored by
+Camden, was celebrated for its cheeses, which, to the great advantage of
+the inhabitants, were bought up through all England, nay, in Germany
+also, with France and Spain, as Pantaleon Medicus has told us, who
+scruples not to set them against those of Placentia both in colour and
+taste. To the Norfolk people, it must be admitted, Camden gives the
+palm. The goodness of the soil of that country, he argues, ‘may be
+gathered from hence, that the inhabitants are of a bright, clear
+complexion, not to mention their sharpness of wit and admirable quickness
+in the study of our common law. So that it is at present, and always has
+been, reputed the common nursery of lawyers, and even amongst the common
+people you shall meet with a great many who (as one expresses it), if
+they have no just quarrel, are able to raise it out of the very quirks
+and niceties of the law.’ In our time it is rather the fashion to run
+down the East Anglians, yet that they have done their duty to their
+country no one can deny. ‘They say we are Norfolk fules,’ said a waiter
+at a Norfolk hotel, to me, a little while ago; ‘but I ain’t ashamed of my
+county, for all that.’ Why should he be, the reader naturally asks?
+
+The Saxons of East Anglia gave the name of England to this land of ours;
+but before this time East Anglia had attained, by means of its sons and
+daughters, to fame far and near. If we may believe Gildas, a Christian
+church was planted in England in the time of Nero. Claudia, to whom Paul
+refers in Philippians and Timothy, was a British lady of great wit and
+greater beauty, celebrated by the poet Martial. She may have been
+converted by Paul, argued the Rev. Mr. Hollingsworth, a local historian,
+Rural Dean and Rector of Stowmarket; nor is it at all improbable, he
+adds, ‘that Claudia, the British beauty, may have been an Iceni, or East
+Anglian lady, as her brilliant complexion, for which so many in these
+counties are celebrated, had caused a vivid feeling of sensation and
+curiosity and envy even among the haughty dames of the imperial city of
+Rome.’ The Romans were glad to make terms with the Iceni till the
+unfortunate Boadicea perished in the revolt which she had so rashly
+raised. The Saxons came after the Romans, and took possession of the
+land. Saxon proprietors compelled the people, whose lives they spared,
+to till the very lands on which their fathers had lived under the Roman
+Government or their own chiefs. Pagan worship was reintroduced; but when
+Sigberht, the son of Redwald, King of East Anglia, reigned, he sent to
+France for Christian ministers, and one of them, Felix, a Burgundian,
+landed at Felixstowe, and there commenced his Christian labours. Felix
+was held in high repute by the Bishops in other parts of the kingdom.
+His opinions were quoted and revered. The diocese was large, and the
+fourth Bishop divided it into two parts, the second Bishop being planted
+at North Elmham, in Norfolk. In 955 the see was again united, when
+Erfastus, the twenty-second Bishop, removed to Thetford. A little while
+after the Bishop’s residence was removed to Norwich, and there it has
+ever since remained; but the land was not long permitted to remain in
+peace. In 870 a large party of Danes marched from Lincolnshire into
+Suffolk, defeated King Edmund, near Hoxne, and, as he would not become an
+idolater, shot him to death with arrows. Bury St. Edmunds still
+preserves the name and fame of one of the most illustrious of our
+Anglo-Saxon martyrs. King Alfred, with a policy worthy of his sagacity,
+made Guthrum, the Danish governor of Suffolk, a Christian, and continued
+him in his rule. The Danes in East Anglia were then an immense army, and
+thus at once they were turned from foes into friends. Guthrum was
+baptized, and it is to be hoped was all the better for it. At any rate,
+he returned to Suffolk and divided many of the estates which had been
+held by Saxon proprietors killed in war. He died in peace, and had a
+fitting funeral at Hadleigh. The children of those Danish soldiers were
+dangerous friends, and too frequently betrayed the Saxons. Blood is
+thicker than water, and as each succeeding band of Danish adventurers
+landed on our eastern coast, they were welcomed by such followers of
+Guthrum as had settled in Suffolk as friends and allies. Nevertheless,
+the Danes found the conquest of the island impossible. Divine
+Providence, Mr. Hollingsworth tells us, did not suffer the Saxon race to
+be vanquished by those who were connected with them by blood.
+Nevertheless, the struggle was long and severe. The two races were
+equally matched in courage, but the Saxon surpassed his foe in that
+stern, unyielding endurance which enabled him to resist every defeat and
+prepare again for the contest. The whole surface of the country became
+studded with entrenchments, moats, and mounds, within whose line the
+harassed Saxon defended his property and all he valued in his home.
+History begins, as far as England is practically concerned, with the
+Norman Conquest. It was then the Norsemen, blue-eyed, fair-haired, the
+finest blood in Europe, planted themselves in Norfolk and Suffolk, and
+brought with them feudalism and civilization. It was in 787 that,
+according to the Saxon Chronicle, they first reached England; but it was
+not till William the Conqueror made the land his own that they settled as
+English lords, and divided between them the land in which their rapacious
+forefathers had won many a precious treasure.
+
+ ‘The red gold and the white silver
+ He covets as a leech does blood,’
+
+wrote an old poet of the Norseman.
+
+Let us take, as an illustration of the county, a Norfolk family. In
+Westminster Abbey there is monument to Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton, who was
+buried in the ruined chancel of the little church at Overstrand, near
+Northrepps, ‘a droll, irregular, unconventional-looking place,’ as
+Caroline Fox calls it, where he loved at all times to live, and where he
+retired to die. The family from which Sir Thomas descended resided,
+about the middle of the sixteenth century, at Sudbury, in Suffolk. It
+was while at Earlham that he made his début as a public speaker at one of
+the earlier meetings of the Norfolk Bible Society. In the winter of 1817
+he went over to France with some of the Gurneys and the Rev. Francis
+Cunningham, who was anxious to establish a Bible Society in Paris. He
+was also anxious to inquire into the way in which the gaols at Antwerp
+and Ghent were conducted. On his return he examined minutely into the
+state of the London gaols, and, to use his own expression, his inquiries
+developed a system of folly and wickedness which surpassed belief. In
+the following year he published a work entitled ‘An Inquiry whether Crime
+be Produced or Prevented by our Present System of Penal Discipline,’
+which ran through six editions, and tended powerfully to create a proper
+public feeling on the subject. In 1819 we find him in Parliament
+seconding Sir James Mackintosh in his efforts to promote a reform of our
+criminal law—then the most sanguinary in Europe. One of his earliest
+efforts was to get the House to abolish the burning of widows in India;
+and in 1821 he received from Wilberforce the command to relieve him of a
+responsibility too heavy for his advancing years and infirmities—the care
+of the slave: a holy enterprise for which Mr. Buxton had been qualifying
+himself by careful thought and study, and which he was spared to carry to
+a successful end. At first he resided at Cromer Hall, an old seat of the
+Windham family, which no longer exists, having been pulled down and
+replaced by a modern residence. It was situated about a quarter of a
+mile from the sea, but sheltered from the north winds by closely
+surrounding hills and woods, and with its old buttresses, gables, and
+porches clothed with roses and jessamine, and its famed lawn, where the
+pheasants came down to feed, had a peculiar character of picturesque
+simplicity. The interior corresponded with its external appearance, and
+had little of the regularity of modern building. One attic chamber was
+walled up, with no entrance save through the window: and at different
+times large pits were discovered under the floor or in the thick
+walls—used, it was supposed, in old times by the smugglers of the coast.
+There is much picturesque scenery around Cromer, and large parties were
+often made up for excursions to Sherringham—one of the most beautiful
+spots in all the eastern counties, to the wooded dells of Felbrigg and
+Runton, or to the rough heath ground by the beach beacon. One who was a
+frequent guest at Cromer Hall wrote: ‘I wish I could describe the
+impression made upon me by the extraordinary power of interesting and
+stimulating others which was possessed by Sir Fowell Buxton some thirty
+years ago. In my own case it was like having powers of thinking, powers
+of feeling, and, above all, the love of true poetry suddenly aroused
+within me, which, though I had possessed them before, had been till then
+unused. From Locke “On the Human Understanding,” to “William of
+Deloraine, good at need,” _he_ woke up in me the sleeping principle of
+taste, and, in giving me such objects of pursuit, has added immeasurably
+to the happiness of my life.’ On a Sunday afternoon, we are told, his
+large dining-hall was filled with a miscellaneous audience of fishermen
+and neighbours, as well as of his own household, to whom he would read
+the Bible, commenting on it at the same time. Very simple and beautiful
+seems to us that far-away Norfolk life; except that his hospitalities
+were more bounded by want of room, his life at Northrepps was much the
+same as it had been at Cromer Hall. It is one of the pleasures of my
+life that I have heard Sir Thomas speak. In modern England the influence
+of the Buxton family and name is yet a power.
+
+Having already alluded to the Windhams and Felbrigg, it remains to say
+that the last of that illustrious line died in 1810. Felbrigg was
+purchased by the Windhams as far back as 1461. The public life of
+Windham, the statesman, may be considered as having commenced in 1783,
+when he undertook the office of Principal Secretary to Lord Northington,
+who was appointed Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. The great Marquis of
+Lansdowne, when he was last at Felbrigg, in 1861, said Mr. Windham had
+the best Parliamentary address of any man he had ever seen, which was
+enhanced by the grace of his person and the dignity of his manners.
+Still more glowing was the testimony borne to Mr. Windham by Earl Grey
+when he heard of his death. A mere glance at his diary is sufficient to
+convince us that Windham, when in London, mixed with the first men and
+women of his time. The late Lord Chief Justice Scarlett, on being asked
+by his son-in-law to name the very best speech he had heard during his
+life, and that which he thought most worthy of study, answered, without
+hesitation, ‘Windham’s speech on the Law of Evidence.’ In a conversation
+with Lord Palmerston, Pitt observed of Windham: ‘Nothing can be so
+well-meaning or eloquent as he is. His speeches are the finest
+productions possible of warm imagination and fancy.’ In 1800 we read in
+the Malmesbury Diaries that old George III. had meant Windham to be his
+First Minister. As a friend of Burke and Johnson, Windham’s name will
+not easily fade away. It is to him we owe the most pathetic account of
+the closing hours of the Monarch of Bolt Court.
+
+Sir Cloudesley Shovel may well claim to be one of Norfolk’s heroes. Born
+in an obscure village, an apprentice to a shoemaker, he obtained rank and
+fame as one of Queen Anne’s most honoured Admirals. It is denied that he
+was in very humble circumstances, and it is a fact that his original
+letters were so well worded as to indicate that he had received a fair
+education. At any rate, he went to sea at ten years old with his friend
+Sir John Hadough; and although not a cabin-boy in the modern acceptation
+of that term, he undertook his captain’s errands, swimming on one
+occasion through the enemy’s fire with some despatches for a distant
+ship, carrying the papers in his mouth, displaying a courage worthy of
+admiration. He distinguished himself in the Battle of Bantry Bay. As an
+enemy of France and Spain, he triumphed in many a fierce fight.
+Returning home flushed with victory, his ship and all on board were lost
+on the Scilly Isles in an October gale. Some uncertainty hangs over his
+last moments. It is asserted that he swam to shore alive, and that he
+was put to death for the sake of his ring of emeralds and diamonds. An
+ancient woman is stated to have confessed as much. For the honour of
+human nature, we would fain believe the story to be untrue. A still
+greater Norfolk hero was Lord Nelson, who is buried in St. Paul’s
+Cathedral. ‘My principle,’ said Nelson, on one occasion, ‘is to assist
+in driving the French to the devil, and in restoring peace and happiness
+to mankind.’ Whether he succeeded as regards the former we are not in a
+position to state; but peace and happiness, alas! are still far from
+being the common property of mankind. The rectory house at Burnham
+Thorpe, where Nelson was born, exists no longer. Sir Cloudesley Shovel
+lived in a castellated stone house in the small agricultural village of
+Cockthorpe, originally fortified as a defence against the incursions of
+smugglers. A room in this house, entered by a doorway arched over with
+stone, is shown, which is still called by the villagers Sir Cloudesley’s
+drawing-room.
+
+A chapter might be written about the Norfolk Cokes. Sir Edward Coke, the
+great lawyer, was buried at Tittleshale, in Norfolk. The well-known
+Coke, the distinguished agriculturist, inhabited that splendid Holkham,
+the fame of which exists in our day. It was begun by Lord Leicester in
+1734, and finished by his Countess in 1764. Blomefield, the well-known
+Norfolk historian, speaks of it as a noble, stately, and sumptuous
+palace. Lord Coke and Lord Burlington were men of similar tastes and
+pursuits, and were diligent students of classical and Italian art. The
+Holkham Library still contains treasures rich and rare. Many of the
+latter formed part of the library of Sir Edward Coke; the title-page of
+the first edition of the ‘Novum Organum,’ published in 1620, bears the
+design of a ship passing through the Pillars of Hercules into an
+undulating sea. The Holkham copy is adorned by the inscription, ‘Ex dono
+auctoris.’
+
+Above the ship, in the handwriting of Coke, is the couplet:
+
+ ‘It deserveth not to be read in schools,
+ But to be freighted in the ship of fools.’
+
+Thomas Shadwell, the Poet Laureate and historiographer of William III.,
+was a Norfolk man. He is buried in Westminster Abbey. It is said by
+Noble that he was an honest man. Of course he was. Chalmers accuses him
+of indecent conversation, or Lord Rochester would not have said that he
+had more wit and humour than any other poet. I am afraid he confers
+little honour on his native county. ‘Others,’ wrote Dryden in one of his
+satires,
+
+ ‘To some faint meaning make pretence,
+ But Shadwell never deviates into sense.’
+
+Sir Robert Walpole, who saved England from wooden shoes and slavery, was
+of a Norfolk family, yet flourishing; as are the Townshends, to whom we
+owe the introduction of the turnip. Norfolk also can boast of Sir Thomas
+Gresham and Sir Francis Walsingham. In Norfolk was born that ‘great
+oracle of law, patron of the Church, and glory of England,’ as Camden
+calls him, Sir Henry Spelman. At Bickling, in the same county, was born
+that ill-starred Anne Boleyn, of whom it is written that
+
+ ‘Love could teach a monarch to be wise,
+ And Gospel light first beamed from Boleyn’s eyes.’
+
+In the same neighbourhood, also, was born John Baconthorpe, the resolute
+doctor, of whom Pantias Pansa has written: ‘This one resolute doctor has
+furnished the Christian religion with armour against the Jews stronger
+than that of Vulcan.’ Pansa was a Norfolk man, and so was the great
+botanist Sir W. Hooker.
+
+Who has not heard of Lynn, in Norfolk, where, when Eugene Aram was the
+usher,
+
+ ‘Four-and-twenty happy boys
+ Came bounding out of school’?
+
+It was in that old town Fanny Burney, the friend of Mrs. Thrale and Dr.
+Johnson, the author of novels like ‘Evelina,’ which people even read
+nowadays, was born on the 13th of June, 1752. She grew up low of
+stature, of a brown complexion. One of her friends called her the dove,
+which she thought was from the colour of her eyes—a greenish-gray; her
+last editor thinks it must have been from their kind expression. She was
+very short-sighted, like her father. In her portrait, taken at the age
+of thirty, merriment seems latent behind a demure look. At any rate, her
+countenance was what might be called a speaking one. ‘Poor Fanny!’ said
+her father, ‘her face tells what she thinks, whether she will or no. I
+long to see her honest face once more.’ ‘Poor Fanny’ lived to a good old
+age, and her gossiping diary is a mine of wealth as regards the Royal
+Family, and Johnson, and Mrs. Thrale, and the cleverest men and women of
+her time.
+
+Thomas Bilney, one of our Protestant martyrs, was a Norfolk man. It was
+a Norfolk knight, Sir Thomas Erpingham, who gave signal for the archers
+at Agincourt. Shakespeare refers to him in his ‘King Henry V.’ as
+follows:
+
+ ‘KING.—Good-morrow, old Sir Thomas Erpingham;
+ A good soft pillow for that good white head
+ Were better than a churlish turf of France.
+
+ ‘ERP.—Not so, my liege; this lodging likes me better,
+ Since I may say, now lie I like a king.’
+
+Many East Anglians helped to win the battle of Agincourt. The Earl of
+Kimberley still bears Agincourt on his shield.
+
+Let us now pass over into Suffolk. It is worth asking how Suffolk came
+to earn the nickname of Silly Suffolk. ‘Silly,’ say the learned, is
+derived from the German _selig_, meaning ‘holy or blessed,’ and is said
+to have been applied to Suffolk on account of the number of beautiful
+churches it contains; Suffolk, at any rate, is silly no longer. In the
+present day it shows to advantage, if we may judge by the enterprise and
+public spirit of such a town as Ipswich, for instance. Not long since,
+as I landed on the docks at Hamburg, I had the pleasure of seeing some
+dozen or more steam ploughs and agricultural implements waiting to be
+transported into the interior. The ploughs and implements bore
+well-known Suffolk names, such as Garrett and Sons or Ransomes, Sims and
+Jefferies, and were open manifestations of Suffolk skill and energy, and
+ability to hold its own against all comers. Amongst the women of the
+present generation, where are to be met the superiors of Mrs. Garrett
+Anderson or of Mrs. Fawcett, widow of the distinguished statesman, and
+mother of a sweet girl-graduate who has beaten all the men at her
+University? I was the other day at Haverhill, where Mr. D. Gurteen still
+lives to enjoy, at the ripe old age of eighty-three, the fruits of an
+energy on his part which has raised Haverhill from a village of paupers
+into a flourishing community, whose manufactures are to be met with all
+over the land. One day, as I was walking along Gray’s Inn Road, a fine,
+well-built man stopped me to ask me if I remembered him. When he
+mentioned his name I did directly. He was of the poorest of the poor in
+his home at Wrentham. He had done well in London. ‘You know, sir,’ he
+said, ‘how poor our family was. Well, I had enough of poverty, and I
+made up my mind to come to London and be either a man or a mouse.’
+
+In the London of to-day the heads of some of our greatest establishments
+are Suffolk men. We all know the stately pile in Holborn, once
+Meekings’, now Wallis’s, where all the world and his wife go to buy. Mr.
+Wallis hails from Stowmarket, and the man who fits up London shops in the
+most tasty style, Mr. Sage, of Gray’s Inn Road, was a Suffolk carpenter,
+who, when out of work, with his last guinea got some cards printed, one
+of which got him a job, which ultimately led on to fame and fortune.
+
+No, Suffolk has long ceased to be silly. It must have deserved the title
+in the days which I can remember when a Conservative M.P., amidst
+enthusiastic cheering, at Ipswich, intimated that it was quite as well
+the sun and moon were placed high up in the heavens, else
+
+ ‘Some reforming ass
+ Would soon propose to pluck them down
+ And light the world with gas.’
+
+One of the oddest, most attractive, and most original women of the last
+century was Elizabeth Simpson, a Suffolk girl, who ran away from her
+home, where she was never taught anything, at the age of sixteen, to make
+her fortune, and to win fame. In both cases she succeeded, though not so
+soon as she could have wished. Failing to touch the hard heart of the
+manager of the Norwich Theatre, a Welshman of the name of Griffiths, she
+packed up her things in a bandbox, and, good-looking and audacious,
+landed herself on the Holborn pavement. ‘By the time you receive this,’
+she wrote to her mother, ‘I shall leave Standingfield perhaps for ever.
+You are surprised, but be not uneasy; believe the step I have undertaken
+is indiscreet, but by no means criminal, unless I sin by not acquainting
+you with it. I now endure every pang, am not lost to every feeling, on
+thus quitting the tenderest and best of parents, I would say most
+beloved, too, but cannot prove my affection, yet time may. To that I
+must submit my hope of retaining your regard. The censures of the world
+I despise, as the most worthy incur the reproaches of that. Should I
+ever think you will wish to hear from me I will write.’ A pretty,
+unprotected, unknown girl of sixteen, in London, had, we can well
+believe, no easy time of it. Strangers followed her in the street,
+people insulted her in the theatre, suspicious landladies looked her up.
+Happily, a brother-in-law met her in a penniless state and took her home.
+Unhappily, at his house she met Inchbald, an indifferent and badly-paid
+actor. They were immediately married, and the girl rejoiced to think
+that she was an actress, and about to realize the ambition of her youth.
+It was no small part which the Suffolk girl felt herself qualified to
+fill. On the 4th of September, 1772, she made her début as Cordelia to
+her husband’s Lear. In 1821 Mrs. Inchbald, famed for her ‘simple story,’
+which took the town by storm, was buried in Kensington Churchyard. But
+before she got there she had to endure much. At that time theatrical
+performers were much worse paid than they are now, when, as Mr. Irving
+tells us, any decent-looking young man, with a good suit of clothes, can
+command his five or six pounds a week. Mrs. Inchbald and her husband had
+to drink of the cup of poverty, and its consequent degradation, to the
+dregs. On one occasion they took it into their heads to go to France,
+believing that they could make money—he by painting, she by writing. The
+scheme, as was to be expected, did not answer, and they were landed on
+their return somewhere near Brighton, in the September of 1776, literally
+without a crust of bread. On one occasion it was stated that they dined
+off raw turnips, stolen from a field as they wandered past. Next year,
+however, the world began to mend so far as they were concerned.
+
+At Manchester they met the Siddonses and J. P. Kemble, and one result of
+that meeting was peace and prosperity. At this time also the lady’s
+husband died, and that was no great loss, as the lady was far too
+independent for a wife. Yet, if the great Kemble had proposed to her, as
+she used to tell Fanny Kemble, she would have jumped at him. To the last
+her habits of life were most penurious. She spent nothing on dress, she
+was indifferent in the matter of eating and drinking, and when she was
+making as much as from £500 to £900 by a new play, in order to save a
+trifle she would sit in the depth of winter without a fire. Only fancy
+any of our later lady-novelists thus ascetic and self-denying. The idea
+is absurd. She was to the last what Godwin described her, a mixture of
+lady and milkmaid. And yet the lady had ambition. She had an idea that
+she might be Lady Bunbury. However, she marred her chance, at the same
+time missing a rich Mr. Glover, who offered a marriage settlement of £500
+a year. Mrs. Inchbald, however, well knew how to take care of herself.
+No one better. She had learned the art in rather a hard school, and,
+besides, she knew how to take care of her poor relations. None of her
+sisters seem to have done well, and she had to aid them all.
+
+Sudbury was the birthplace of that William Enfield, whose ‘Speaker’ was
+the terror and delight of more than one generation of England’s ingenuous
+youth. Lord Chancellor Thurlow, of the rugged eyebrows and the savage
+look, and fellow-clerk with the poet Cowper, was born at Ashfield, an
+obscure village not far off. Robert Bloomfield, who wrote the ‘Farmer’s
+Boy,’ came from Honington, where his mother kept a village school, and
+where he became a shoemaker. Capel Loft, an amiable gentleman of
+literary sympathies and pursuits, and Bloomfield’s warmest friend,
+resided at Troston Hall, in the immediate neighbourhood of Honington. At
+one time there was no writer better known than John Lydgate, called the
+Monk of Bury, born at the village of Lydgate, in 1380. ‘His language,’
+writes a learned critic, ‘is much less obsolete than Chaucer’s, and a
+great deal more harmonious.’ Stephen Gardener, Bishop of Winchester, and
+an enemy to the Reformation, was born at Bury. At Trinity St. Martin
+lived Thomas Cavendish, the second Englishman who sailed round the globe.
+Admiral Broke, memorable for his capture of the _Chesapeake_, when we
+were at war with America, was born at Nacton. The great non-juring
+Archbishop Sancroft was born at Fressingfield, where he retired to die,
+and where he is buried under a handsome monument. The great scholar,
+Robert Grossetête, Bishop of Lincoln, was born at Stradbrook. Of him
+Roger Bacon wrote that he was the only man living who was in possession
+of all the sciences. Wycliff, on innumerable occasions, refers to him
+with respect. Arthur Young, the celebrated agriculturist, some of whose
+sentences are preserved as golden ones—especially that which says, ‘Give
+a man the secure possession of a rock, and he will make a garden of
+it’—and whose valuable works, I am glad to see, are republished, was born
+and lived near Bury St. Edmunds. Echard, the historian, was born at
+Barsham, in 1671. Porson was a Norfolk lad.
+
+Sir Thomas Hanmer was one of the most independent men that ever sat for
+the county of Suffolk. Mr. Glyde, of Ipswich, terms him the Gladstone of
+his age. Pope appears to stigmatize him as a Trimmer,
+
+ ‘Courtiers and patrols in two ranks divide;
+ Through both he passed, and bowed from side to side.’
+
+His garden at Mildenhall was celebrated for the quality of its grapes,
+and Sir Thomas used to send every year hampers filled with these grapes,
+and carried on men’s shoulders, to London for the Queen. That stubborn
+Radical and Freethinker, Tom Paine, was born at Thetford. Sir John
+Suckling, a Suffolk poet, has written, at any rate, one verse never
+excelled:
+
+ ‘Her feet beneath her petticoat,
+ Like little mice, stole in and out,
+ As if they feared the light.
+ But oh, she dances such a way,
+ No sun upon an Easter day
+ Is half so fine a sight.’
+
+England has in all parts of the world sons and daughters who have
+deserved well of the State, and not a few of them are East Anglians by
+birth and breeding. May their fame be cherished and their examples
+followed by their successors in that calm, quiet, Eastern land—far from
+the madding crowd—where the roar and rush of our modern life are almost
+unknown—where farmers weep and wail but look jolly nevertheless!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE END.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ BILLING AND SONS, PRINTERS, GUILDFORD.
+
+
+
+
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+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>East Anglia, by J. Ewing Ritchie</title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, East Anglia, by J. Ewing Ritchie
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: East Anglia
+ Personal Recollections and Historical Associations
+
+
+Author: J. Ewing Ritchie
+
+
+
+Release Date: December 20, 2009 [eBook #30717]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EAST ANGLIA***
+</pre>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1893 Jarrold &amp; Sons edition by David
+Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org</p>
+<h2><i>PRESS NOTICES OF THE FIRST EDITION</i>.</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;We cordially recommend Mr. Ritchie&rsquo;s
+book to all who wish to pass an agreeable hour and to learn
+something of the outward actions and inner life of their
+predecessors.&nbsp; It is full of sketches of East Anglian
+celebrities, happily touched if lightly
+limned.&rsquo;&mdash;<i>East Anglian Daily Times</i>.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;A very entertaining and enjoyable book.&nbsp; Local
+gossip, a wide range of reading and industrious research, have
+enabled the author to enliven his pages with a wide diversity of
+subjects, specially attractive to East Anglians, but also of much
+general interest.&rsquo;&mdash;<i>Daily Chronicle</i>.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;The work is written in a light gossipy style, and by
+reason both of it and of the variety of persons introduced is
+interesting.&nbsp; To a Suffolk or Norfolk man it is, of course,
+especially attractive.&nbsp; The reader will go through these
+pages without being wearied by application.&nbsp; They form a
+pleasant and entertaining contribution to county literature, and
+&ldquo;East Anglia&rdquo; will, we should think, find its way to
+many of the east country bookshelves.&rsquo;&mdash;<i>Suffolk
+Chronicle</i>.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;The book is as readable and attractive a volume of
+local chronicles as could be desired.&nbsp; Though all of our
+readers may not see &ldquo;eye to eye&rdquo; with Mr. Ritchie, in
+regard to political and theological questions, they cannot fail
+to gain much enjoyment from his excellent delineation of old days
+in East Anglia.&rsquo;&mdash;<i>Norwich Mercury</i>.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;&ldquo;East Anglia&rdquo; has the merit of not being a
+compilation, which is more than can be said of the great majority
+of books produced in these days to satisfy the revived taste for
+topographical gossip.&nbsp; Mr. Ritchie is a Suffolk
+man&mdash;the son of a Nonconformist minister of Wrentham in that
+county&mdash;and he looks back to the old neighbourhood and the
+old times with an affection which is likely to communicate itself
+to its readers.&nbsp; Altogether we can with confidence recommend
+this book not only to East Anglians, but to all readers who have
+any affinity for works of its class.&rsquo;&mdash;<i>Daily
+News</i>.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Mr. Ritchie&rsquo;s book belongs to a class of which we
+have none too many, for when well done they illustrate
+contemporary history in a really charming manner.&nbsp; What with
+their past grandeur, their present progress, their martyrs,
+patriots, and authors, there is plenty to tell concerning Eastern
+counties: and one who writes with native enthusiasm is sure to
+command an audience.&rsquo;&mdash;<i>Baptist</i>.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Mr. Ritchie, known to the numerous readers of the
+<i>Christian World</i> as &ldquo;Christopher Crayon,&rdquo; has
+the pen of a ready, racy, refreshing writer.&nbsp; He never
+writes a dull line, and never for a moment allows our interest to
+flag.&nbsp; In the work before us, which is not his first, he is,
+I should think, at his best.&nbsp; The volume is the outcome of
+extensive reading, many rambles over the districts described, and
+of thoughtful observation.&nbsp; We seem to live and move and
+have our being in East Anglia.&nbsp; Its folk-lore, its
+traditions, its worthies, its memorable events, are all vividly
+and charmingly placed before us, and we close the book sorry that
+there is no more of it, and wondering why it is that works of a
+similar kind have not more frequently
+appeared.&rsquo;&mdash;<i>Northern Pioneer</i>.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;It has yielded us more gratification than any work that
+we have read for a considerable time.&nbsp; The book ought to
+have a wide circulation in the Eastern counties, and will not
+fail to yield profit and delight wherever it finds its
+way.&rsquo;&mdash;<i>Essex Telegraph</i>.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Mr. Ritchie has here written a most attractive chapter
+of autobiography.&nbsp; He recalls the scenes of his early days,
+and whatever was quaint or striking in connection with them, and
+finds in his recollections ready pegs on which to hang historical
+incident and antiquarian curiosities of many kinds.&nbsp; He
+passes from point to point in a delightfully cheerful and
+contagious mood.&nbsp; Mr. Ritchie&rsquo;s reading has been as
+extensive and careful as his observation is keen and his temper
+genial; and his pages, which appeared in <i>The Christian World
+Magazine</i>, well deserve the honour of book-form, with the
+additions he has been able to make to
+them.&rsquo;&mdash;<i>British Quarterly Review</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<h1>EAST ANGLIA.</h1>
+<p style="text-align: center"><i>PERSONAL RECOLLECTIONS</i><br />
+<span class="smcap">and</span><br />
+<i>HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIONS</i>.</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">by</span><br />
+J. EWING RITCHIE.</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Behold, there came wise men from the East
+to Jerusalem.&rsquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="smcap">Matthew</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><i>SECOND EDITION</i>,<br />
+<span class="smcap">revised</span>, <span
+class="smcap">corrected</span>, <span class="smcap">and
+enlarged</span>.</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center">LONDON:<br />
+JARROLD &amp; SONS, PATERNOSTER BUILDINGS, E.C.<br />
+1893.</p>
+<h2><!-- page v--><a name="pagev"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+v</span>PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.</h2>
+<p>The chapters of which this little work consists originally
+appeared in the <i>Christian World Magazine</i>, where they were
+so fortunate as to attract favourable notice, and from which they
+are now reprinted, with a few slight additions, by permission of
+the Editor.&nbsp; In bringing out a second edition, I have
+incorporated the substance of other articles originally written
+for local journals.&nbsp; It is to be hoped, touching as they do
+a theme not easily exhausted, but always interesting to East
+Anglians, that they may help to sustain that love of one&rsquo;s
+county which, alas! like the love of country, is a matter
+reckoned to be of little importance in these cosmopolitan days,
+but which, nevertheless, has had not a little share in the
+formation of that national greatness and glory in which at all
+times Englishmen believe.</p>
+<p><!-- page vi--><a name="pagevi"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+vi</span>One word more.&nbsp; I have retained some strictures on
+the clergy of East Anglia, partly because they were true at the
+time to which I refer, and partly because it gives me pleasure to
+own that they are not so now.&nbsp; The Church of England
+clergyman of to-day is an immense improvement on that of my
+youth.&nbsp; In ability, in devotion to the duties of his
+calling, in intelligence, in self-denial, in zeal, he is equal to
+the clergy of any other denomination.&nbsp; If he has lost his
+hold upon Hodge, that, at any rate, is not his fault.</p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Clacton-on-Sea</span>,<br />
+
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<i>January</i>, 1893.</p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center"><!-- page vii--><a
+name="pagevii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+vii</span>CONTENTS.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER I.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">a suffolk
+village</span>.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Distinguished people born there&mdash;Its Puritans and
+Nonconformists&mdash;The country round
+Covehithe&mdash;Southwold&mdash;Suffolk dialect&mdash;The Great
+Eastern Railway</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page1">1</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER II.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">the
+stricklands</span>.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Reydon Hall&mdash;The clergy&mdash;Pakefield&mdash;Social
+life in a village</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page37">37</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER III.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span
+class="smcap">lowestoft</span>.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Yarmouth bloaters&mdash;George Borrow&mdash;The town fifty
+years ago&mdash;The distinguished natives</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page54">54</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER IV.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">politics and
+theology</span>.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Homerton academy&mdash;W. Johnson Fox, M.P.&mdash;Politics
+in 1830&mdash;Anti-Corn Law speeches&mdash;Wonderful oratory</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page89">89</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER V.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">bungay and its
+people</span>.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Bungay Nonconformity&mdash;Hannah More&mdash;The
+Childses&mdash;The Queen&rsquo;s Librarian&mdash;Prince
+Albert</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page122">122</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center"><!-- page viii--><a
+name="pageviii"></a><span class="pagenum">p. viii</span>CHAPTER
+VI.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">a celebrated
+norfolk town</span>.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Great Yarmouth Nonconformists&mdash;Intellectual
+life&mdash;Dawson Turner&mdash;Astley Cooper&mdash;Hudson
+Gurney&mdash;Mrs. Bendish</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page153">153</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER VII.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">the norfolk
+capital</span>.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Brigg&rsquo;s Lane&mdash;The carrier&rsquo;s
+cart&mdash;Reform demonstration&mdash;The old
+dragon&mdash;Chairing M.P.&rsquo;s&mdash;Hornbutton
+Jack&mdash;Norwich artists and literati&mdash;Quakers and
+Nonconformists</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page185">185</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER VIII.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">the suffolk
+capital</span>.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>The Orwell&mdash;The Sparrows&mdash;Ipswich
+notabilities&mdash;Gainsborough&mdash;Medical
+men&mdash;Nonconformists</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page226">226</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER IX.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">an
+old-fashioned town</span>.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Woodbridge and the country round&mdash;Bernard
+Barton&mdash;Dr. Lankester&mdash;An old Noncon.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page252">252</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER X.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">milton&rsquo;s
+suffolk schoolmaster</span>.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Stowmarket&mdash;The Rev. Thomas Young&mdash;Bishop Hall
+and the Smectymnian divines&mdash;Milton&rsquo;s
+mulberry-tree&mdash;Suffolk relationships</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page283">283</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XI.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">in
+constable&rsquo;s county</span>.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>East Bergholt&mdash;The Valley of the Stour&mdash;Painting
+from nature&mdash;East Anglian girls</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page311">311</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XII.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">east anglian
+worthies</span>.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Suffolk cheese&mdash;Danes, Saxons, and
+Normans&mdash;Philosophers and statesmen&mdash;Artists and
+literati</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page320">320</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<h2><!-- page 1--><a name="page1"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+1</span>CHAPTER I.<br />
+<span class="smcap">a suffolk village</span>.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Distinguished people born there&mdash;Its
+Puritans and Nonconformists&mdash;The country round
+Covehithe&mdash;Southwold&mdash;Suffolk dialect&mdash;The Great
+Eastern Railway.</p>
+<p>In his published Memoirs, the great Metternich observes that
+if he had never been born he never could have loved or
+hated.&nbsp; Following so illustrious a precedent, I may observe
+that if I had not been born in East Anglia I never could have
+been an East Anglian.&nbsp; Whether I should have been wiser or
+better off had I been born elsewhere, is an interesting question,
+which, however, it is to be hoped the public will forgive me if I
+decline to discuss on the present occasion.</p>
+<p>In a paper bearing the date of 1667, a Samuel Baker, of
+Wattisfield Hall, writes: &lsquo;I was born at <!-- page 2--><a
+name="page2"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 2</span>a village
+called Wrentham, which place I cannot pass by the mention of
+without saying thus much, that religion has there flourished
+longer, and that in much piety; the Gospel and grace of it have
+been more powerfully and clearly preached, and more generally
+received; the professors of it have been more sound in the matter
+and open and steadfast in the profession of it in an hour of
+temptation, have manifested a greater oneness amongst themselves
+and have been more eminently preserved from enemies without
+(albeit they dwell where Satan&rsquo;s seat is encompassed with
+his malice and rage), than I think in any village of the like
+capacity in England; which I speak as my duty to the place, but
+to my particular shame rather than otherwise, that such a dry and
+barren plant should spring out of such a soil.&rsquo;&nbsp; I
+resemble this worthy Mr. Baker in two respects.&nbsp; In the
+first place, I was born at Wrentham, though at a considerably
+later period of time than 1667; and, secondly, if he was a barren
+plant&mdash;he of whom we read, in Harmer&rsquo;s Miscellaneous
+Works, that &lsquo;he was a gentleman of fortune and education,
+very zealous for the Congregational plan of church government and
+discipline, and a sufferer in its bonds for a good
+conscience&rsquo;&mdash;what am I?</p>
+<p><!-- page 3--><a name="page3"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+3</span>Nor was it only piety that existed in this distant
+parish.&nbsp; If the reader turns to the diary of John Evelyn,
+under the date of 1679, he will find mention made of a child
+brought up to London, &lsquo;son of one Mr. Wotton, formerly
+amanuensis to Dr. Andrews, Bishop of Winton, who both read and
+perfectly understood Hebrew, Greek, Latin, Arabic and Syriac, and
+most of the modern languages, disputed in divinity, law and all
+the sciences, was skilful in history, both ecclesiastical and
+profane; in a word, so universally and solidly learned at eleven
+years of age that he was looked on as a miracle.&nbsp; Dr. Lloyd,
+one of the most deep-learned divines of this nation in all sorts
+of literature, with Dr. Burnet, who had severely examined him,
+came away astonished, and told me they did not believe there had
+the like appeared in the world.&nbsp; He had only been instructed
+by his father, who being himself a learned person, confessed that
+his son knew all that he himself knew.&nbsp; But what was more
+admirable than his vast memory was his judgment and invention, he
+being tried with divers hard questions which required maturity of
+thought and experience.&nbsp; He was also dexterous in
+chronology, antiquities, mathematics.&nbsp; In sum, an
+<i>intellectus universalis</i> beyond all that we <!-- page
+4--><a name="page4"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 4</span>reade of
+Picus Mirandula, and other precoce witts, and yet withal a very
+humble child.&rsquo;&nbsp; This prodigy was the son of the Rev.
+Henry Wotton, minister of Wrentham, Suffolk.&nbsp; Sir William
+Skippon, a parishioner, in a letter yet extant, describes the
+wonderful achievements of the little fellow when but five years
+old.&nbsp; He was admitted at Katherine Hall, Cambridge, some
+months before he was ten years old.&nbsp; In after-years he was
+the friend and defender of Bentley and the antagonist of Sir
+William Temple in the great controversy about ancient and modern
+learning.&nbsp; He died in 1726, and was buried at Buxted, in
+Sussex.&nbsp; It is clear that there was no such intellectual
+phenomenon in all London under the Stuarts as that little
+Wrentham lad.</p>
+<p>Of that village, when I came into the world, my father was the
+honoured, laborious and successful minister.&nbsp; The
+meeting-house, as it was called, which stood in the lane leading
+from the church to the highroad, was a square red brick building,
+vastly superior to any of the ancient meeting-houses round.&nbsp;
+It stood in an enclosure, one side of which was devoted to the
+reception of the farmers&rsquo; gigs, which, on a Sunday
+afternoon, when the principal service was held, made quite a
+respectable show when drawn up in a line.&nbsp; By <!-- page
+5--><a name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 5</span>the side
+of it was a cottage, in which lived the woman who kept the place
+tidy, and her husband, who looked after the horses as they were
+unharnessed and put in the stable close by.&nbsp; The backs of
+the gigs were sheltered from the road by a hedge of lilacs, and
+over the gateway a gigantic elm kept watch and ward.&nbsp; The
+house in which we lived was also part of the chapel estate, and,
+if it was a little way off, it was, at any rate, adapted to the
+wants of a family of quiet habits and simple tastes.&nbsp; On one
+side of the house was a water-butt, and I can well remember my
+first sad experience of the wickedness of the world when, getting
+up one morning to look after my rabbits and other live stock, I
+found that water-butt had gone, and that there were thieves in a
+village so rural and renowned for piety as ours.&nbsp; I say
+renowned, and not without reason.&nbsp; Years and years back
+there was a pious clergyman of the name of Steffe, who had a son
+in Dr. Doddridge&rsquo;s Academy, at Daventry, and it is a fact
+that the great Doctor himself, at some time or other, had been a
+guest in the village.</p>
+<p>In 1741 the Doctor thus records his East Anglian
+recollections, in a letter to his wife: &lsquo;You have great
+reason to confide in that very kind Providence which has hitherto
+watched over <!-- page 6--><a name="page6"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 6</span>us, and has, since the date of my
+last, brought us about sixty miles nearer London.&nbsp; From
+Yarmouth we went on Friday morning to Wrentham, where good Mrs.
+Steffe lives, and from thence to a gentleman&rsquo;s seat, near
+Walpole, where I was most respectfully entertained.&nbsp; As I
+had twenty miles to ride yesterday morning, he, though I had
+never seen him before last Tuesday, brought me almost half-way in
+his chaise, to make the journey easier.&nbsp; I reached
+Woodbridge before two, and rode better in the cool of the
+evening, and had the happiness to be entertained in a very
+elegant and friendly family, though perfectly a stranger; and,
+indeed, I have been escorted from one place to another in every
+mile of my journey by one, and sometimes by two or three, of my
+brethren in a most respectful and agreeable manner.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Dr. Doddridge&rsquo;s East Anglian recollections seem to have
+been uncommonly agreeable, owing quite as much, I must candidly
+confess, to the presence of the sisters as of the brethren.&nbsp;
+Writing to his wife an account of a little trip on the river, he
+adds: &lsquo;It was a very pleasant day, and I concluded it in
+the company of one of the finest women I ever beheld, who, though
+she had seven children grown up to marriageable years, or very
+near it, is <!-- page 7--><a name="page7"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 7</span>still herself almost a beauty, and a
+person of sense, good breeding, and piety, which might astonish
+one who had not the happiness of being intimately acquainted with
+you.&rsquo;&nbsp; What a sly rogue was Dr. Doddridge!&nbsp; How
+could any wife be jealous when her husband finishes off with such
+a compliment to herself?</p>
+<p>But to return to the good Mrs. Steffe, of whom I am, on my
+mother&rsquo;s side, a descendant.&nbsp; I must add that as there
+were great men before Agamemnon, so there were good people in the
+little village of Wrentham before Mrs. Steffe appeared upon the
+scene.&nbsp; The Brewsters, who were an ancient family, which
+seems to have culminated under the glorious usurpation of Oliver
+Cromwell, were eminently good people in Dr. Doddridge&rsquo;s
+acceptation of the term, and I fancy did much as lords of the
+manor&mdash;and as inhabitants of Wrentham Hall, a building which
+had ceased to exist long before my time&mdash;to leaven with
+their goodness the surrounding lump.&nbsp; It seems to me that
+these Brewsters must have been more or less connected with
+Brewster the elder&mdash;of Robinson&rsquo;s Church at Leyden,
+who, we are told, came of a wealthy and distinguished
+family&mdash;who was well trained at Cambridge, and, says the
+historian, &lsquo;thence, being first seasoned with <!-- page
+8--><a name="page8"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 8</span>the
+seeds of grace and virtue, he went to the Court, and there served
+that religious and godly Mr. Davison divers years, when he was
+Secretary of State, who found him so discreet and faithful as he
+trusted him, above all others that were about him, and only
+employed him in matters of great trust and secrecy; he esteemed
+him rather as a son than a servant, and for his wisdom and
+godliness in private, he would converse with him more like a
+familiar than a master.&rsquo;&nbsp; When evil times came, this
+Brewster was living in the big Manor House at Scrooby, and how he
+and his godly associates were driven into exile by a foolish King
+and cruel priests is known, or ought to be known, to
+everyone.&nbsp; Of these Wrentham Brewsters, one served his
+country in Parliament, or I am very much mistaken.&nbsp; It was
+to their credit that they sought out godly men, to whom they
+might entrust the cure of souls.&nbsp; In this respect, when I
+was a lad, their example certainly had not been followed, and
+Dissent flourished mainly because the moral instincts of the
+villagers and farmers and small tradesmen were shocked by hearing
+men on the Sunday reading the Lessons of the Church, leading the
+devotions of the people, and preaching sermons, who on the
+week-days got drunk and led immoral <!-- page 9--><a
+name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 9</span>lives.&nbsp; As
+to the right of the State to interfere in matters of religion, as
+to the danger to religion itself from the establishment of a
+State Church, as to the liberty of unlicensed prophesying, such
+topics the simple villagers ignored.&nbsp; All that they felt was
+that there came to them more of a quickening of the spiritual
+life, a fuller realization of God and things divine, in the
+meeting-house than in the parish church.&nbsp; They were not what
+pious Churchmen so much dread nowadays&mdash;Political
+Dissenters; how could they be such, having no votes, and never
+seeing a newspaper from one year&rsquo;s end to the other?</p>
+<p>It was to the Brewsters that the village was indebted for the
+ministry of the Rev. John Phillip, who married the sister of the
+pious and learned Dr. Ames, Professor of the University of
+Franeker.&nbsp; Calamy tells us that by means of Dr. Ames, Mr.
+Phillip had no small furtherance in his studies, and intimate
+acquaintance with him increased his inclination to the
+Congregational way.&nbsp; Archbishop Abbot, writing to Winwood,
+1611, says: &lsquo;I have written to Sir Horace Vere touching the
+English preacher at the Hague.&nbsp; We heard what he was that
+preceded, and we cannot be less cognisant what Mr. Ames is, for
+by a Latin printed book he hath laden the Church and State of
+England with <!-- page 10--><a name="page10"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 10</span>a great deal of infamous contumely,
+so that if he were amongst us he would be so far from receiving
+preferment, that some exemplary punishment would be his
+reward.&nbsp; His Majesty had been advertised how this man is
+entertained and embraced at the Hague, and how he is a fit person
+to breed up captains and soldiers there in mutiny and
+faction.&rsquo;&nbsp; One of Dr. Ames&rsquo;s works, which got
+him into trouble, was entitled &lsquo;A Fresh Suit against
+Ceremonies,&rsquo; a work which we may be sure would be as
+distasteful to the Ritualists of our day as it was to the
+Ritualists of his own.&nbsp; One of his works, his &lsquo;Medulla
+Theologi&aelig;,&rsquo; I believe, adorned the walls of the
+paternal study.&nbsp; There is, belonging to the Wrentham
+Congregational Church Library, a volume of tracts, sixty-seven in
+number, of six or eight pages each, printed in 1622, forming a
+series of theses on theological topics, maintained by different
+persons, under the presidency of Dr. Ames; and I believe a son of
+the Doctor is buried in Wrentham Churchyard, as I recollect my
+father, on one occasion, had an old gravestone done up and
+relettered, which bore testimony to the virtues and piety and
+learning of an Ames.&nbsp; Thus if Mr. Phillip was chased out of
+Old England into New England for his Nonconformity, some of the
+good <!-- page 11--><a name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+11</span>old Noncons remained to uphold the lamp which was one
+day to cast a sacred light on all quarters of the land.&nbsp;
+That some did emigrate with their pastor is probable, since we
+learn that there is a town called Wrentham across the Atlantic,
+said to have received that name because some of the first
+settlers came from Wrentham in England.</p>
+<p>Touching Mr. Phillip, a good deal has been written by the Rev.
+John Browne, the painstaking author of &lsquo;The History of
+Congregationalism in Suffolk and Norfolk.&rsquo;&nbsp; It appears
+that his arrival in America was not unexpected, as the Christian
+people of Dedham had invited him to that plantation
+beforehand.&nbsp; He did not, however, accept their invitation,
+but being much in request, &lsquo;and called divers ways, could
+not resolve; but, at length, upon weighty reasons concerning the
+public service and foundations of the college, he was persuaded
+to attend to the call of Cambridge;&rsquo; and, adds an American
+writer, &lsquo;he might have been the first head of that blessed
+institution.&rsquo;&nbsp; On the calling of the Long Parliament,
+he and his wife returned to England, and in 1642 we find him
+ministering to his old flock.&nbsp; So satisfied were the
+neighbouring Independents of his Congregationalism, that when, in
+1644, members of Mr. <!-- page 12--><a name="page12"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 12</span>Bridge&rsquo;s church residing in
+Norwich desired to form themselves into a separate community,
+they not only consulted with their brethren in Yarmouth, but with
+Mr. Phillip also, as the only man then in their neighbourhood on
+whose judgment and experience they could rely.&nbsp; In 1643 Mr.
+Phillip was appointed one of the members of the Assembly of
+Divines, and was recognised by Baillie in his Letters as one of
+the Independent men there.&nbsp; The Independents, as we know,
+sat apart, and were a sad thorn in the Presbyterians&rsquo;
+side.&nbsp; Five of them, more zealous than the rest, formally
+dissented from the decisions of the Assembly, and afraid that
+toleration would not be extended to them, appealed to Parliament,
+&lsquo;as the most sacred refuge and asylum for mistaken and
+misjudged innocence.&rsquo;&nbsp; Mr. Phillip&rsquo;s name,
+however, I do not find in that list; and possibly he was too old
+to be very active in the matter.&nbsp; He lived on till 1660,
+when he died at the good old age of seventy-eight.&nbsp; In the
+later years of his ministry he was assisted by his nephew, W.
+Ames, who in 1651 preached a sermon at St. Paul&rsquo;s, before
+the Lord Mayor and Aldermen, &lsquo;On the Saint&rsquo;s Security
+against Seducing Sports, or the Anointing from the Holy
+One.&rsquo;&nbsp; It is to be feared, in our <!-- page 13--><a
+name="page13"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 13</span>more
+enlightened age, a good Wrentham Congregational minister would
+have little chance of preaching before a London Lord Mayor.&nbsp;
+Talent is supposed to exist only in the crowded town, where men
+have no time to think of anything but of the art of getting
+on.</p>
+<p>Other heroic associations&mdash;of men who had suffered for
+the faith, who feared God rather than man, who preferred the
+peace of an approving conscience to the vain honours of the
+world&mdash;also were connected with the place.&nbsp; I remember
+being shown a bush in which the conventicle preacher used to hide
+himself when the enemy, in the shape of the myrmidons of Bishop
+Wren, of Norwich, were at his heels.&nbsp; That furious prelate,
+as many of us know, drove upwards of three thousand persons to
+seek their bread in a foreign land.&nbsp; Indeed, to such an
+extent did he carry out his persecuting system, that the trade
+and manufactures of the country materially suffered in
+consequence.&nbsp; However, in my boyish days I was not troubled
+much about such things.&nbsp; Dissent in Wrentham was quite
+respectable.&nbsp; If we had lost the Brewster family, whose arms
+were still to be seen on the Communion plate, a neighbouring
+squire attended at the meeting-house, as it was <!-- page 14--><a
+name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 14</span>then the
+fashion to call our chapel, and so did the leading grocer and
+draper of the place, and the village doctor, the father of six
+comely daughters; and the display of gigs on a Sunday was really
+imposing.&nbsp; Alas! as I grew older I saw that imposing array
+not a little shorn of its splendour.&nbsp; The neighbouring
+baronet, Sir Thomas Gooch, M.P., added as he could farm to farm,
+and that a Dissenter was on no account to have one of his farms
+was pretty well understood.&nbsp; I fancy our great landlords
+have, in many parts of East Anglia, pretty well exterminated
+Dissent, to the real injury of the people all around.&nbsp; I
+write this advisedly.&nbsp; I dare say the preaching in the
+meeting-house was often very miserably poor.&nbsp; The service, I
+must own, seemed to me often peculiarly long and
+unattractive.&nbsp; There was always that long prayer which was,
+I fear, to all boys a time of utter weariness; but, nevertheless,
+there was a moral and intellectual life in our Dissenting circle
+that did not exist elsewhere.&nbsp; It was true we never attended
+dinners at the village public-house, nor indulged in
+card-parties, and regarded with a horror, which I have come to
+think unwholesome, the frivolity of balls or the attractions of a
+theatre; but we had all the new books voted into our bookclub,
+<!-- page 15--><a name="page15"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+15</span>and, as a lad, I can well remember how I revelled in the
+back numbers of the <i>Edinburgh Review</i>, though even then I
+could not but feel the injustice which it did to what it called
+the Lake school of poets, and more especially to Coleridge and
+Wordsworth.&nbsp; Shakespeare also was almost a sealed book, and
+perhaps we had a little too much of religious reading, such as
+Doddridge&rsquo;s &lsquo;Rise and Progress,&rsquo; or
+Baxter&rsquo;s &lsquo;Saint&rsquo;s Rest,&rsquo; or
+Alleine&rsquo;s &lsquo;Call to the Unconverted,&rsquo; or
+Fleetwood&rsquo;s &lsquo;Life of Christ&rsquo;&mdash;excellent
+books in their way, undoubtedly, but not remarkably attractive to
+boys redolent of animal life, who had thriven and grown fat in
+that rustic village, on whose vivid senses the world that now is
+produced far more effect than the terrors or splendours of the
+world to come.</p>
+<p>The country round, if flat, was full of interesting
+associations.&nbsp; At the back of us&mdash;that is, on the
+sea&mdash;was the village of Covehithe, and when a visitor found
+his way into the place&mdash;an event which happened now and
+then&mdash;our first excursion with him or her&mdash;for plenty
+of donkeys were to be had which ladies could ride&mdash;was to
+Covehithe, known to literary men as the birthplace of John Bale,
+Bishop of Ossory, in Ireland.&nbsp; In connection with donkeys, I
+have this interesting recollection, <!-- page 16--><a
+name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 16</span>that one of
+the old men of the village told me.&nbsp; At the time of the
+Bristol riots, he remembered Sir Charles Wetherall, the occasion
+of them, as a boy at Wrentham much given to donkey-riding.&nbsp;
+In the history of the drama John Bale takes distinguished
+rank.&nbsp; He was one of those by whom the drama was gradually
+evolved, and all to whom it is a study and delight must remember
+him with regard.&nbsp; His play of &lsquo;Kynge John&rsquo; is
+described by Mr. Collier as occupying an intermediate place
+between moralities and historical plays&mdash;and it is the only
+known existing specimen of that species of composition of so
+early a date.&nbsp; Bale, who was trained at the monastery of
+White Friars, in Norwich, thence went to Jesus College,
+Cambridge, and was expelled in consequence of the zeal with which
+he exposed the errors of Popery.&nbsp; However, Bale had a friend
+and protector in Cromwell, Henry VIII.&rsquo;s faithful
+servant.&nbsp; On the death of that nobleman Bale proceeded to
+Germany, where he appears to have been well received and
+hospitably entertained by Luther and Melancthon, and on the
+accession of Edward VI. he returned to England.&nbsp; In
+Mary&rsquo;s reign persecution recommenced, and Bale fled to
+Frankfort.&nbsp; He again returned at the commencement of
+Elizabeth&rsquo;s reign, and <!-- page 17--><a
+name="page17"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 17</span>was made
+prebend of Canterbury, at which place he died at the age of
+sixty-three.&nbsp; Covehithe nowadays is not interesting so much
+as the birthplace of Bale, as on account of its ecclesiastical
+ruins, which are covered with ivy and venerable in their
+decay.&nbsp; The church was evidently almost a cathedral, and
+surely at one time or other there must have been an enormous
+population to worship in such a sanctuary; and yet all you see
+now is a public-house just opposite the church, a few cottages,
+and a farmhouse.&nbsp; A few steps farther bring you to the low
+cliff, and there is the sea ever encroaching on the land in that
+quarter and swallowing up farmhouse and farm.&nbsp; Miss Agnes
+Strickland, who lived at Reydon Hall&mdash;a few miles
+inland&mdash;has thus sung the melancholy fate of Covehithe:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;All roofless now the stately pile,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And rent the arches tall,<br />
+Through which with bright departing smile<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The western sunbeams fall.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Tradition&rsquo;s voice forgets to tell<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Whose ashes sleep below,<br />
+And Fancy here unchecked may dwell,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And bid the story flow.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Ah! what was that story?&nbsp; How the question puzzled my
+young head, as I walked in the sandy <!-- page 18--><a
+name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 18</span>lane that led
+from my native village!&nbsp; How insignificant looked the little
+church built up inside!&nbsp; What had become of the crowds that
+at one time must have filled that ancient fane?&nbsp; How was it
+that no trace of them remained?&nbsp; They had vanished in the
+historical age, and yet no one could tell how or when.&nbsp;
+Nature was, then, stronger than man.&nbsp; He was gone, but the
+stars glittered by night and the sun shone by day, and the ivy
+had spread its green mantle over all.&nbsp; Yes! what was man,
+with his pomp and glory, but dust and ashes, after all!&nbsp; How
+I loved to go to Covehithe and climb its ruins, and dream of the
+distant past!</p>
+<p>Here in that eastern point of England it seemed to me there
+was a good deal of decay.&nbsp; Sometimes, on a fine summer day,
+we would take a boat and sail from the pretty little town of
+Southwold, about four miles from Wrentham, to Dunwich, another
+relic of the past.&nbsp; According to an old historian, it was a
+city surrounded with a stone wall having brazen gates; it had
+fifty-two churches, chapels, and religious houses; it also
+boasted hospitals, a huge palace, a bishop&rsquo;s seat, a
+mayor&rsquo;s mansion, and a Mint.&nbsp; Beyond it a forest
+appears to have extended some miles into what is now the
+sea.&nbsp; <!-- page 19--><a name="page19"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 19</span>One of our local Suffolk poets, James
+Bird (I saw him but once, when I walked into his house, about
+twelve miles from Wrentham, having run away from home at the ripe
+age of ten, and told him I had come to see him, as he was a poet;
+and I well remember how then, much to my chagrin, he gave me
+plum-pudding for dinner, and sent me to play with his boys till a
+cart was found in which the prodigal was compelled to return),
+wrote and published a poetical romance, called &lsquo;Dunwich;
+or, a Tale of the Splendid City;&rsquo; and Agnes Strickland also
+made it the subject of her melodious verse, commencing:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Oft gazing on thy craggy brow,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; We muse on glories o&rsquo;er.<br />
+Fair Dunwich!&nbsp; Thou art lonely now,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Renowned and sought no more.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Never has a splendid city more utterly collapsed.&nbsp; After
+a long ride over sandy lanes and fields, you come to the edge of
+a cliff, on which stand a few houses.&nbsp; There is all that
+remains of the Dunwich where the first Bishop of East Anglia
+taught the Christian faith, and where was born John Daye, the
+printer of the works of Parker, Latimer, and Fox, who, in the
+reign of Mary, became, as most real men did then, a prisoner and
+an exile for the <!-- page 20--><a name="page20"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 20</span>truth.&nbsp; He has also the
+reputation of being the first in England who printed in the Saxon
+character.&nbsp; In the records of type-founding the name of Daye
+stands with that of the most illustrious.&nbsp; When the Company
+of Stationers obtained their charter from Philip and Mary, he was
+the first person admitted to their livery.&nbsp; In 1580 he was
+master of the company, to which he bequeathed property at his
+death.&nbsp; The following is the inscription which marks the
+place of his burial in Little Bradley, Suffolk:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Here lyes the <span
+class="smcap">Daye</span> that darkness could not blynd,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When Popish fogges had overcast the sunne;<br />
+This <span class="smcap">Daye</span> the cruel night did leave
+behind,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To view and show what bloudie actes were donne.<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He set a <span class="smcap">Fox</span> to write how
+martyrs runne<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By death to lyfe, <span class="smcap">Fox</span>
+ventured paynes and health.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To give them light Daye spent in print his
+wealth,<br />
+But <span class="smcap">God</span> with gayne returned his wealth
+agayne,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And gave to him as he gave to the poore.<br />
+Two wyfes he had partakers of his payne:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Each wyfe twelve babes, and each of them one
+more,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Als was the last increaser of his store;<br />
+Who, mourning long for being left alone,<br />
+Sett up this tombe, herself turned to a stone.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Unlike Covehithe, Dunwich has a history.&nbsp; In the reign of
+Henry II., a MS. in the British Museum tells us, the Earl of
+Leicester came to attack it.&nbsp; &lsquo;When he came neare and
+beheld the <!-- page 21--><a name="page21"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 21</span>strength thereof, it was terror and
+feare unto him to behold it; and so retired both he and his
+people.&rsquo;&nbsp; Dunwich aided King John in his wars with the
+barons, and thus gained the first charter.&nbsp; In the time of
+Edward I. it had sixteen fair ships, twelve barks,
+four-and-twenty fishing barks, and at that time there were few
+seaports in England that could say as much.&nbsp; It served the
+same King in his wars with France with eleven ships of war, well
+furnished with men and munition.&nbsp; In most of these ships
+were seventy-two men-at-arms, who served thirteen weeks at their
+own cost and charge.&nbsp; Dunwich seems to have suffered much by
+the French wars.&nbsp; Four of the eleven ships already referred
+to were captured by the French, and in the wars waged by Edward
+III. Dunwich lost still more shipping, and as many as 500
+men.&nbsp; Perhaps it might have flourished till this day had if
+not been for the curse of war.&nbsp; But the sea also served the
+town cruelly.&nbsp; That spared nothing&mdash;not the
+King&rsquo;s Forest, where there were hawking and
+hunting&mdash;not the homes where England nursed her hardy
+sailors&mdash;not even the harbour whence the brave East Anglians
+sailed away to the wars.&nbsp; In Edward III.&rsquo;s time, at
+one fell swoop, the remorseless sea seems to have swallowed up
+&lsquo;400 houses <!-- page 22--><a name="page22"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 22</span>which payde rente to the towne
+towards the fee-farms, besydes certain shops and
+windmills.&rsquo;&nbsp; Yet, when I was a lad, this wreck of a
+place returned two members to Parliament, and Birmingham,
+Manchester and Sheffield not one.&nbsp; Between Covehithe and
+Dunwich stood, and still stands, the charming little
+bathing-place of Southwold.&nbsp; Like them, it has seen better
+days, and has suffered from the encroachments of the
+ever-restless and ever-hungry sea.&nbsp; It was at Southwold that
+I first saw the sea, and I remember naturally asking my father,
+who showed me the guns on the gun-hill&mdash;pointing
+seaward&mdash;whether that was where the enemies came from.</p>
+<p>Southwold appears to have initiated an evangelical alliance,
+which may yet be witnessed if ever a time comes of reasonable
+toleration on religious matters.&nbsp; In many parts of the
+Continent the same place of worship is used by different
+religious bodies.&nbsp; In Brussels I have seen the
+Episcopalians, the Germans, the French Protestants, all
+assembling at different times in the same building.&nbsp; There
+was a time when a similar custom prevailed in Southwold, and that
+was when Master Sharpen, who had his abode at Sotterley, preached
+at Southwold once a month.&nbsp; There were Independents in the
+towns in <!-- page 23--><a name="page23"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 23</span>those days, and &lsquo;his
+indulgence,&rsquo; writes a local historian, &lsquo;favoured the
+Separatists with the liberty and free use of the church, where
+they resorted weekly, or oftener, and every fourth Sunday both
+ministers met and celebrated divine service alternately.&nbsp; He
+that entered the church first had the precedency of officiating,
+the other keeping silence until the congregation received the
+Benediction after sermon.&rsquo;&nbsp; Most of the people
+attended all the while.&nbsp; It was before the year 1680 that
+these things were done.&nbsp; After that time there came to the
+church &lsquo;an orthodox man, who suffered many ills, and those
+not the lightest, for his King and for his faith, and he
+compelled the Independents not only to leave the church, but the
+town also.&nbsp; We read they assembled in a malt-house beyond
+the bridge, where, being disturbed, they chose more private
+places in the town until liberty of conscience was granted, when
+they publicly assembled in a fish-house converted to a place of
+worship.&rsquo;&nbsp; At that time many people in the town were
+Dissenters; but it was not till 1748 that they had a church
+formed.&nbsp; Up to that time the Southwold Independents were
+members of the Church at Wrentham, one of the Articles of
+Association of the new church being to take the Bible as their
+sole <!-- page 24--><a name="page24"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+24</span>guide, and when in difficulties to resort to the
+neighbouring pastor for advice and declaration.&nbsp; Such was
+Independency when it flourished all over East Anglia.</p>
+<p>A writer in the <i>Harleian Miscellany</i> says that
+&lsquo;Southwold, of sea-coast town, is the most beneficial unto
+his Majesty of all the towns in England, by reason all their
+trade is unto Iceland for lings.&rsquo;&nbsp; In the little
+harbour of Southwold you see nowadays only a few colliers, and I
+fear that the place is of little advantage to her Majesty,
+however beneficial it may be as a health-resort for some of her
+Majesty&rsquo;s subjects.&nbsp; It is a place, gentle reader,
+where you can wander undisturbed at your own sweet will, and can
+get your cheeks fanned by breezes unknown in London.&nbsp; The
+beach, I own, is shingly, and not to be compared with the sands
+of Yarmouth and Lowestoft; but, then, you are away from the
+Cockney crowds that now infest these places at the bathing
+season, and you are quiet&mdash;whether you wander on its common,
+till you come to the Wolsey Bridge, getting on towards
+Halesworth, where, if tradition be trustworthy, Wolsey, as a
+butcher&rsquo;s boy, was nearly drowned, and where he
+benevolently caused a bridge to be erected for the safety of all
+future butcher-boys and others, <!-- page 25--><a
+name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 25</span>when he
+became a distinguished man; or ramble by the seaside to
+Walberswick, across the harbour, or on to Easton
+Bavent&mdash;another decayed village, on the other side.&nbsp;
+Southwold has its historical associations.&nbsp; Most of my
+readers have seen the well-known picture of Solebay Fight at
+Greenwich Hospital.&nbsp; Southwold overlooks the bay on which
+that fight was won.&nbsp; Here, on the morning of the 28th May,
+1672, De Ruyter, with his Dutchmen, sailed right against those
+wooden walls which have guarded old England in many a time of
+danger, and found to his cost how invincible was British
+pluck.&nbsp; James, Duke of York&mdash;not then the drivelling
+idiot who lost his kingdom for a Mass, but James, manly and
+high-spirited, with a Prince&rsquo;s pride and a sailor&rsquo;s
+heart&mdash;won a victory that for many a day was a favourite
+theme with all honest Englishmen, and especially with the true
+and stout men who, alarmed by the roar of cannon, as the sound
+boomed along the blue waters of that peaceful bay, stood on the
+Southwold cliff, wishing that the fog which intercepted their
+view might clear off, and that they might welcome as victors
+their brethren on the sea.&nbsp; I can remember how, when an old
+cannon was dragged up from the depths of the sea, it was supposed
+to be, as <!-- page 26--><a name="page26"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 26</span>it might have been, used in that
+fight, and now is preserved at one of the look-out houses on the
+cliff as a souvenir of that glorious struggle.&nbsp; The details
+of that fight are matters of history, and I need not dwell on
+them.&nbsp; Our literature, also, owes Southwold one of the
+happiest effusions of one of the wittiest writers of that age;
+and in a county history I remember well a merry song on the
+Duke&rsquo;s late glorious success over the Dutch, in Southwold
+Bay, which commences with the writer telling&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;One day as I was sitting still<br />
+Upon the side of Dunwich Hill,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And looking on the ocean,<br />
+By chance I saw De Ruyter&rsquo;s fleet<br />
+With Royal James&rsquo;s squadron meet;<br />
+In sooth it was a noble treat<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To see that brave commotion.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The writer vividly paints the scene, and ends as follows:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Here&rsquo;s to King Charles, and
+here&rsquo;s to James,<br />
+And here&rsquo;s to all the captains&rsquo; names,<br />
+And here&rsquo;s to all the Suffolk dames,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And here&rsquo;s to the house of Stuart.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Well, as to the house of Stuart, the less said the better; but
+as to the Suffolk dames, I agree with the poet, that they are all
+well worthy of the toast, and it was at a very early period of my
+existence <!-- page 27--><a name="page27"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 27</span>that I became aware of that
+fact.&nbsp; But the course of true love never does run smooth,
+and from none&mdash;and they were many&mdash;with whom I played
+on the beach as a boy, or read poetry to at riper years, was it
+my fate to take one as wife for better or worse.&nbsp; In the
+crowded city men have little time to fall in love.&nbsp; Besides,
+they see so many fresh faces that impressions are easily
+erased.&nbsp; It is otherwise in the quiet retirement of a
+village where there is little to disturb the mind&mdash;perhaps
+too little.&nbsp; I can well remember a striking illustration of
+this in the person of an old farmer, who lived about three miles
+off, and at whose house we&mdash;that is, the whole
+family&mdash;passed what seemed to me a very happy day among the
+haystacks or harvest-fields once or twice a year.&nbsp; The old
+man was proud of his farm, and of everything connected with
+it.&nbsp; &lsquo;There, Master James,&rsquo; he was wont to say
+to me after dinner, &lsquo;you can see three barns all at
+once!&rsquo; and sure enough, looking in the direction he
+pointed, there were three barns plainly visible to the naked
+eye.&nbsp; Alas! the love of the picturesque had not been
+developed in my bucolic friend, and a good barn or two&mdash;he
+was an old bachelor, and, I suppose, his heart had never been
+softened by the love of woman&mdash;seemed to him <!-- page
+28--><a name="page28"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 28</span>about
+as beautiful an object as you could expect or desire.&nbsp; One
+emotion, that of fear, was, however, I found, strongly planted in
+the village breast.&nbsp; The boys of the village, with whom, now
+and then, I stole away on a birds&rsquo;-nesting expedition,
+would have it that in a little wood about a mile or two off there
+were no end of flying serpents and dragons to be seen; and I can
+well remember the awe which fell upon the place when there came a
+rumour of the doings of those wretches, Burke and Hare, who were
+said to have made a living by murdering victims&mdash;by placing
+pitch plasters on their mouths&mdash;and selling them to the
+doctors to dissect.&nbsp; At this time a little boy had not come
+home at the proper time, and the mother came to our house
+lamenting.&nbsp; The good woman was in tears, and refused to be
+comforted.&nbsp; There had been a stranger in the village that
+day; he had seen her boy, he had put a pitch plaster on his
+mouth, and no doubt his dead body was then on its way to Norwich
+to be sold to the doctor.&nbsp; Unfortunately, it turned out that
+the boy was alive and well, and lived to give his poor mother a
+good deal of trouble.&nbsp; Another thing, of which I have still
+a vivid recollection, was the mischief wrought by Captain
+Swing.&nbsp; In Kent there had been an <!-- page 29--><a
+name="page29"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 29</span>alarming
+outbreak of the peasantry, ostensibly against the use of
+agricultural machinery.&nbsp; They assembled in large bodies, and
+visited the farm buildings of the principal landed proprietors,
+demolishing the threshing machines then being brought into
+use.&nbsp; In some instances they set fire to barns and
+corn-stacks.&nbsp; These outrages spread throughout the county,
+and fears were entertained that they would be repeated in other
+agricultural districts.&nbsp; A great meeting of magistrates and
+landed gentry was held in Canterbury, the High Sheriff in the
+chair, when a reward was offered of &pound;100 for the discovery
+of the perpetrators of the senseless mischief, and the Lords of
+the Treasury offered a further reward of the same amount for
+their apprehension; but all was in vain to stop the growing
+evil.&nbsp; The agricultural interest was in a very depressed
+state, and the number of unemployed labourers so large, that
+apprehensions were entertained that the combinations for the
+destruction of machinery might, if not at once checked, take
+dimensions it would be very difficult for the Government to
+control.&nbsp; When Parliament opened in 1830, the state of the
+agricultural districts had been daily growing more
+alarming.&nbsp; Rioting and incendiarism had spread from Kent to
+Suffolk, <!-- page 30--><a name="page30"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 30</span>Norfolk, Surrey, Hampshire,
+Wiltshire, Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Huntingdonshire, and
+Cambridgeshire, and a great deal of very valuable property had
+been destroyed.&nbsp; A mystery enveloped these proceedings that
+indicated organization, and it became suspected that they had a
+political object.&nbsp; Threatening letters were sent to
+individuals signed &lsquo;Swing,&rsquo; and beacon fires
+communicated from one part of the country to the other.&nbsp;
+With the object of checking these outrages, night patrols were
+established, dragoons were kept in readiness to put down
+tumultuous meetings, and magistrates and clergymen and landed
+gentry were all at their wits&rsquo; ends.&nbsp; Even in our
+out-of-the-way corner of East Anglia not a little consternation
+was felt.&nbsp; We were on the highroad nightly traversed by the
+London and Yarmouth Royal Mail, and thus, more or less, we had
+communications with the outer world.&nbsp; Just outside of our
+village was Benacre Hall, the seat of Sir Thomas Gooch, one of
+the county members, and I well remember the boyish awe with which
+I heard that a mob had set out from Yarmouth to burn the place
+down.&nbsp; Whether the mob thought better of it, or gave up the
+walk of eighteen miles as one to which they were not equal, I am
+not in a position to say.&nbsp; All <!-- page 31--><a
+name="page31"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 31</span>I know is,
+that Benacre Hall, such as it is, remains; but I can never forget
+the feeling of terror with which, on those dark and dull winter
+nights, I looked out of my bedroom window to watch the lurid
+light flaring up into the black clouds around, which told how
+wicked men were at their mad work, how fiendish passion had
+triumphed, how some honest farmer was reduced to ruin, as he saw
+the efforts of a life of industry consumed by the
+incendiary&rsquo;s fire.&nbsp; It was long before I ceased to
+shudder at the name of &lsquo;Swing.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The dialect of the village was, I need not add, East
+Anglian.&nbsp; The people said &lsquo;I woll&rsquo; for &lsquo;I
+will&rsquo;; &lsquo;you warn&rsquo;t&rsquo; for &lsquo;you were
+not,&rsquo; and so on.&nbsp; A girl was called a
+&lsquo;mawther,&rsquo; a pitcher a &lsquo;gotch,&rsquo; a
+&lsquo;clap on the costard&rsquo; was a knock on the head, a lad
+was a &lsquo;bor.&rsquo;&nbsp; Names of places especially were
+made free with.&nbsp; Wangford was &lsquo;Wangfor,&rsquo;
+Covehithe was &lsquo;Cothhigh,&rsquo; Southwold was
+&lsquo;Soul,&rsquo; Lowestoft was &lsquo;Lesteff,&rsquo;
+Halesworth was &lsquo;Holser,&rsquo; London was
+&lsquo;Lunun.&rsquo;&nbsp; People who lived in the midland
+counties were spoken of as living in the shires.&nbsp; The
+&lsquo;o,&rsquo; as in &lsquo;bowls,&rsquo; it is specially
+difficult for an East Anglian to pronounce.&nbsp; A learned man
+was held to be a &lsquo;man of larnin&rsquo;,&rsquo; a thing of
+which there was not too much in Suffolk in my <!-- page 32--><a
+name="page32"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 32</span>young
+days.&nbsp; A lady in the village sent her son to school, and
+great was the maternal pride as she called in my father to hear
+how well her son could read Latin, the reading being reading
+alone, without the faintest attempt at translation.&nbsp;
+Sometimes it was hard to get an answer to a question, as when a
+Dissenting minister I knew was sent for to visit a sick
+man.&nbsp; &lsquo;My good man,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;what
+induced you to send for me?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Hey, what?&rsquo;
+said the invalid.&nbsp; &lsquo;What induced you to send for
+me?&rsquo;&nbsp; Alas! the question was repeated in vain.&nbsp;
+At length the wife interfered: &lsquo;He wants to know what the
+deuce you sent for him for.&rsquo;&nbsp; And then, and not till
+then, came an appropriate reply.&nbsp; This story, I believe, has
+more than once found its way into <i>Punch</i>; but I heard it as
+a Suffolk boy years and years before <i>Punch</i> had come into
+existence.</p>
+<p>One of the prayers familiar to my youth was as follows:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,<br />
+Bless the bed that I lie on;<br />
+Four corners to my bed,<br />
+Four angels at my head;<br />
+Two to watch and one to pray,<br />
+And one to carry my soul away.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>An M.P., who shall be nameless, supplies me with an apt
+illustration of East Anglian dialect.&nbsp; It <!-- page 33--><a
+name="page33"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 33</span>was at the
+anniversary of a National School, with the great M.P. in the
+chair, surrounded by the benevolent ladies and the select clergy
+of the district.&nbsp; The subject of examination was
+Christ&rsquo;s entry into Jerusalem on an ass&rsquo;s colt.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Why,&rsquo; said the M.P.&mdash;&lsquo;why did they strew
+rushes before the Saviour? can any of you children tell
+me?&rsquo;&nbsp; Profound silence.&nbsp; The M.P. repeated the
+question.&nbsp; A little ragamuffin held up his hand.&nbsp; The
+M.P. demanded silence as the apt scholar proceeded with his
+answer.&nbsp; &lsquo;Why were the rushes strewed?&rsquo; said the
+M.P. in a condescending tone.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t know,&rsquo;
+replied the boy, &lsquo;unless it was to hull the dickey
+down.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Roars of laughter greeted the reply, as all the East Anglians
+present knew that &lsquo;hull&rsquo; meant &lsquo;throw,&rsquo;
+and &lsquo;dickey&rsquo; is Suffolk for &lsquo;donkey,&rsquo; but
+some of the Cockney visitors present were for a while quite
+unable to enjoy the joke.</p>
+<p>It is to be feared the three R&rsquo;s were not much
+patronized in East Anglia, if it be true that some forty or fifty
+years ago, in such a respectable town as Sudbury, it was the
+fashion for some fifty of the leading inhabitants to meet in the
+large bar-parlour of the old White Horse to hear the leading
+paper of the eastern counties read out by a scholar and <!-- page
+34--><a name="page34"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+34</span>elocutionist known as John.&nbsp; For the discharge of
+this important duty he was paid a pound a year, and provided with
+as much free liquor as he liked, and there were people who
+considered that the Saturday newspaper-reading did them more good
+than what they heard at church the next day.</p>
+<p>In some cases our East Anglian dialect is merely a survival of
+old English, as when we say &lsquo;axe&rsquo; for
+&lsquo;ask.&rsquo;&nbsp; We find in Chaucer:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;It is but foly and wrong wenging<br />
+To axe so outrageous thing.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In his &lsquo;Envious Man,&rsquo; Gowing made
+&lsquo;axeth&rsquo; to rhyme with &lsquo;taxeth.&rsquo;&nbsp; No
+word is more common in Suffolk than &lsquo;fare&rsquo;; a pony is
+a &lsquo;hobby&rsquo;; a thrush is a &lsquo;mavis&rsquo;; a chest
+is a &lsquo;kist&rsquo;; a shovel is a &lsquo;skuppet&rsquo;; a
+chaffinch is a &lsquo;spink.&rsquo;&nbsp; If a man is upset in
+his mind, he tells us he is &lsquo;wholly stammed,&rsquo; and the
+Suffolk &lsquo;yow&rsquo; is at least as old as Chaucer, who
+wrote:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;What do you ye do there, quod she,<br />
+Come, and if it lyke yow<br />
+To daucen daunceth with us now.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>An awkward lad is &lsquo;ungain.&rsquo;&nbsp; A good deal may
+be written to show that our Suffolk dialect is the nearest of all
+provincial dialects to that of Chaucer and the Bible, and if
+anyone has the audacity to <!-- page 35--><a
+name="page35"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 35</span>contradict
+me, why, then, in Suffolk phraseology, I can promise
+him&mdash;&lsquo;a good hiding.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>I am old enough to remember how placid was the county, how
+stay-at-home were the people, what a sensation there was created
+when anyone went to London, or any stranger appeared in our
+midst.&nbsp; From afar we heard of railways; then we had a
+railway opened from London to Brentwood; then the railways spread
+all over the land, and there were farmers who did think that they
+had something to do with the potato disease.&nbsp; The change was
+not a pleasant one: the turnpikes were deserted; the inns were
+void of customers; no longer did the villagers hasten to see the
+coach change horses, and the bugle of the guard was heard no
+more.&nbsp; For a time the Eastern Counties Railway had a
+somewhat dolorous career.&nbsp; It was thought to be something to
+be thankful for when the traveller by it reached his
+journey&rsquo;s end in decent time and without an accident.&nbsp;
+Now the change is marvellous.&nbsp; The Great Eastern Railway
+stands in the foremost rank of the lines terminating in
+London.&nbsp; It now runs roundly 20,000,000 of train miles in
+the course of a year.&nbsp; It carries a larger number of
+passengers than any other line.&nbsp; It carries the London
+working man <!-- page 36--><a name="page36"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 36</span>twelve miles in and twelve miles out
+for twopence a day.&nbsp; It is the direct means of communication
+with all the North of Europe by its fine steamers from
+Harwich.&nbsp; It has yearly an increased number of
+season-ticket-holders.&nbsp; On a Whit Monday it gives 125,000
+excursionists a happy day in the country or by the seaside.&nbsp;
+In 1891 the number of passengers carried was 81,268,661,
+exclusive of season-ticket-holders.&nbsp; It is conspicuous now
+for its punctuality and freedom from accidents.&nbsp; It is, in
+short, a model of good management, and it also deserves credit
+for looking well after the interests of its employ&eacute;s, of
+whom there are some 25,000.&nbsp; It contributes to the Accident
+Fund, to the Provident Society, to the Superannuation Fund, and
+to the Pension Fund, to which the men also subscribe, in the most
+liberal manner, and besides has established a savings bank, which
+returns the men who place their money in it four per cent.&nbsp;
+It is a liberal master.&nbsp; It does its duty to its men, who
+deserve well of the public as of the Great Eastern Railway
+itself; but its main merit, after all, is that it has been the
+making of East Anglia.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 37--><a name="page37"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+37</span>CHAPTER II.<br />
+<span class="smcap">the stricklands</span>.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Reydon Hall&mdash;The
+clergy&mdash;Pakefield&mdash;Social life in a village.</p>
+<p>As I write I have lying before me a little book called
+&lsquo;Hugh Latimer; or, The School-boy&rsquo;s
+Friendship,&rsquo; by Miss Strickland, author of the
+&lsquo;Little Prisoner,&rsquo; &lsquo;Charles Grant,&rsquo;
+&lsquo;Prejudice and Principle,&rsquo; &lsquo;The Little
+Quaker.&rsquo;&nbsp; It bears the imprint&mdash;&lsquo;London:
+Printed for A. R. Newman and Co., Leadenhall Street.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+On a blank page inside I find the following: &lsquo;James Ewing
+Ritchie, with his friend Susanna&rsquo;s affectionate
+regards.&rsquo;&nbsp; Susanna was a sister of Miss Agnes
+Strickland, the authoress, and was as much a writer as
+herself.&nbsp; The Stricklands were a remarkable family, living
+about four or five miles from Wrentham, on the road leading from
+Wangford to Southwold, at an old-fashioned residence called
+Reydon Hall.&nbsp; They had, I fancy, seen better days, and were
+none the worse for that.&nbsp; The Stricklands came over <!--
+page 38--><a name="page38"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+38</span>with William the Conqueror.&nbsp; One of them was the
+first to land, and hence the name.&nbsp; A good deal of blue
+blood flowed in their veins.&nbsp; Kate&mdash;to my eyes the
+fairest of the lot&mdash;was named Katherine Parr, to denote that
+she was a descendant of one of the wives of the too-much-married
+Henry VIII., and in the old-fashioned drawing-room of Reydon Hall
+I heard not a little&mdash;they all talked at once&mdash;of what
+to me was strange and rare.&nbsp; Mr. Strickland had deceased
+some years, and the widow and the daughters kept up what little
+state they could; and I well remember the feeling of surprise
+with which I first entered their capacious drawing-room&mdash;a
+room the size of which it had never entered into my head to
+conceive of.&nbsp; It is to the credit of these Misses Strickland
+that they did not vegetate in that old house, but held a fair
+position in the world of letters.&nbsp; Miss Strickland herself
+chiefly resided in town.&nbsp; Agnes, the next, whose
+&lsquo;Queens of England&rsquo; is still a standard book, was
+more frequently at home.&nbsp; The only one of the family who did
+not write was Sarah, who married one of the Radical Childses of
+Bungay, and who not till after the death of her husband became
+respectable and atoned for her sins by marrying a
+clergyman.&nbsp; <!-- page 39--><a name="page39"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 39</span>Kate, as I have said, the fairest of
+the whole, married an officer in the army of the name of Traill,
+and went out to Canada, and wrote there a book called &lsquo;The
+Backwoods of Canada,&rsquo; which was certainly one of the most
+popular of the four-and-sixpenny volumes published under the
+auspices of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful and
+Entertaining Knowledge.&nbsp; Our friend was Susanna, who wrote a
+volume of poems on Enthusiasm, and who seemed to me, with her
+dark eyes and hair, a very enthusiastic personage indeed.&nbsp;
+The reason of her friendship with our family was her deeply
+religious nature, which impelled her to leave the cold and
+careless service of the Church&mdash;not a little to the disgust
+of her aristocratic sisters, who, as of ancient lineage, not a
+little haughty, and rank Tories, had but little sympathy with
+Dissent..&nbsp; Susanna was much at our house, and when away
+scarcely a day passed on which she did not write some of us a
+letter or send us a book.&nbsp; Then there was a brother Tom, a
+midshipman&mdash;a wonderful being to my inexperienced
+eyes&mdash;who once or twice came to our house seated in the
+family donkey-chaise, which seemed to me, somehow or other, not
+to be an ordinary donkey-chaise, but something of a far superior
+character.&nbsp; I have <!-- page 40--><a name="page40"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 40</span>pleasant recollections of them all,
+and of the annuals in which they all wrote, and a good many of
+which fell to my share.&nbsp; Like her sister, Susanna married an
+officer in the army&mdash;a Major Moodie&mdash;and emigrated to
+Canada, where the Stricklands have now a high position, where she
+had sons and daughters born to her, and wrote more than one novel
+which found acceptance in the English market.&nbsp; The
+Stricklands gave me quite a literary turn.&nbsp; When I was a
+small boy it was really an everyday occurrence for me to write a
+book or edit a newspaper, and with about as much success as is
+generally achieved by bookmakers and newspaper editors, whose
+merit is overlooked by an unthinking public.&nbsp; Let me say in
+the Stricklands I found an indulgent audience.&nbsp; On one
+occasion I remember reciting some verses of my own composition,
+commencing,</p>
+<p class="gutsumm">&lsquo;I sing a song of ancient men,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of warriors great and bold,<br />
+Of Hercules, a famous man,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Who lived in times of old.<br />
+He was a man of great renown,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A lion large he slew,<br />
+And to his memory games were kept,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Which now I tell to you,&rsquo;</p>
+<p>which they got me to repeat in their drawing-room, <!-- page
+41--><a name="page41"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 41</span>and
+which, though I say it that should not, evinced for a boy a fair
+acquaintance with &lsquo;Mangnall&rsquo;s Questions&rsquo; and
+Pinnock&rsquo;s abridgment of Goldsmith&rsquo;s &lsquo;History of
+Rome.&rsquo;&nbsp; Happily, at that time, Niebuhr was unknown,
+and sceptical criticism had not begun its deadly work.&nbsp; We
+had not to go far for truth then.&nbsp; It was quite unnecessary
+to seek it&mdash;at any rate, so it seemed to us&mdash;at the
+bottom of a well; there it was right underneath one&rsquo;s
+nose&mdash;before one&rsquo;s very eyes in the printed pages of
+the printed book.</p>
+<p>Agnes Strickland did all she could to confer reputation on her
+native county.&nbsp; The tall, dark, self-possessed lady from
+Reydon Hall was a lion everywhere.&nbsp; On one occasion she
+visited the House of Lords, just after she had written a violent
+letter against Lord Campbell, charging him with plagiarism.&nbsp;
+Campbell tells us he had a conversation with her, which speedily
+turned her into a friend.&nbsp; He adds: &lsquo;I thought
+Brougham would have died with envy when I told him the result of
+my interview, and Ellenborough, who was sitting by, lifted his
+hands in admiration.&nbsp; Brougham had thrown me a note across
+the table, saying: &ldquo;So you know your friend Miss Strickland
+has come to hear you.&rdquo;&rsquo;&nbsp; Miss Strickland often
+<!-- page 42--><a name="page42"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+42</span>visited Alison, the historian, at Possil House.&nbsp; He
+says of her that she had strong talents of a masculine rather
+than feminine character&mdash;indefatigable perseverance, and
+that ardour in whatever pursuit she engaged in without which no
+one could undergo similar fatigue.&nbsp; On one occasion she was
+descanting on the noble feeling of Queen Mary, &lsquo;That may
+all be very true, Miss Strickland,&rsquo; replied the historian;
+&lsquo;but unfortunately she had an awkward habit of burning
+people&mdash;she brought 239 men, women, and children to the
+stake in a reign which did not extend beyond a few
+years!&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Oh yes,&rsquo; was her reply,
+&lsquo;it was terrible, dreadful, but it was the fault of the
+age&mdash;the temper of the times; Mary herself was everything
+that is noble and heroic.&rsquo;&nbsp; Such was her feminine
+tendency to hero-worship.&nbsp; Another tendency of a feminine
+character was her love of talking.&nbsp; &lsquo;She did,&rsquo;
+instances Sir Archibald, &lsquo;not even require an answer or a
+sign of mutual intelligence; it was enough if the one she was
+addressing simply remained passive.&nbsp; One day when I was laid
+up at Possil on my library sofa from a wound in the knee, she was
+kind enough to sit with me for two hours, and was really very
+entertaining, from the number of anecdotes she remembered of
+queens in <!-- page 43--><a name="page43"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 43</span>the olden time.&nbsp; When she left
+the room she expressed herself kindly to Mrs. Alison as to the
+agreeable time she had spent, and the latter said to me on coming
+in, &ldquo;What did you get to say to Miss Strickland all this
+time?&nbsp; She says you were so agreeable, and she was two hours
+here.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Say!&rdquo; I replied with truth;
+&ldquo;I assure you I did not say six words to her the whole
+time.&rdquo;&rsquo;&nbsp; Agnes was a terrible one to
+talk&mdash;as, indeed, all the Stricklands were.&nbsp; In Suffolk
+such accomplished conversationalists were rare.</p>
+<p>It must have been, now I come to think of it, a dismal old
+house, suggestive of rats and dampness and mould, that Reydon
+Hall, with its scantily furnished rooms and its unused attics and
+its empty barns and stables, with a general air of decay all over
+the place, inside and out.&nbsp; It had a dark, heavy roof and
+whitewashed walls, and was externally anything but a showy place,
+standing, as it did, a little way from the road.&nbsp; It must
+have been a difficulty with the family to keep up the place, and
+the style of living was altogether plain; yet there I heard a
+good deal of literary life in London, of Thomas Pringle, the
+poet, and the Secretary of the Anti-Slavery Society, whose
+&lsquo;Residence in South Africa&rsquo; is still one of the <!--
+page 44--><a name="page44"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+44</span>most interesting books on that quarter of the world, and
+of whom Josiah Conder, one of the great men of my smaller
+literary world at that time, wrote an appreciative biographical
+sketch.&nbsp; Mr. Pringle, let me remind my readers, was the
+original editor of <i>Blackwood&rsquo;s Magazine</i>, a magazine
+which still maintains its reputation as being the best of its
+class.&nbsp; Mr. Pringle, I believe, at some time or other, had
+visited Wrentham; at any rate, the Stricklands, especially
+Susanna, were among his intimate friends, and, from what I heard,
+I could well believe, when, at a later period, I visited his
+grave in Bunhill Fields, what I found recorded there&mdash;that
+&lsquo;In the walks of British literature he was known as a man
+of genius; in the domestic circle he was loved as an affectionate
+relative and faithful friend; in the wide sphere of humanity he
+was revered as the advocate and protector of the
+oppressed,&rsquo; who &lsquo;left among the children of the
+African desert a memorial of his philanthropy, and bequeathed to
+his fellow-countrymen an example of enduring virtue.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+At the home of the Pringles the Stricklands made many literary
+acquaintances, such as Alaric Watts, and Mrs. S. C. Hall, and
+others of whom I heard them talk.&nbsp; At that time, however,
+literature was not, as far as women were <!-- page 45--><a
+name="page45"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 45</span>concerned,
+the lucrative profession it has since become, and I have a dim
+remembrance of their paintings&mdash;for in this respect the
+Stricklands, like my own mother, were very
+accomplished&mdash;being sold at the Soho Bazaar, a practice
+which helped to maintain them in the respectability and comfort
+becoming their position in life.&nbsp; But in London they never
+forgot the old home, and wrote so much about it in their stories,
+that there was not a flower, or shrub, or tree, or hedge, or
+mossy bank redolent in early spring of primroses and violets, to
+which they had not given, to my boyish eyes, a glory and a
+charm.&nbsp; This reference to painting reminds me of a feature
+of my young days, not without interest, in connection with the
+name of Cunningham&mdash;a name at one time well known in the
+religious world.</p>
+<p>The reader must be reminded that the reverend gentleman
+referred to was a <i>rara avis</i>, and that between him and the
+neighbouring clergy there was little sympathy&mdash;unless the
+common rallying cry of &lsquo;The Church in Danger!&rsquo; was
+raised as an electioneering dodge.&nbsp; The clergyman at
+Wrentham at that time, who declared himself the appointed vessel
+of grace for the parish, I have been led to believe, since I have
+become older, was by no <!-- page 46--><a name="page46"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 46</span>means a saint, and his brethren were
+notorious as evil-livers.&nbsp; Some twenty years ago one of them
+had his effects sold off, and his library was viewed with no
+little amusement by his parishioners, to many of whom, if popular
+fame be an authority, he was more than a spiritual father.&nbsp;
+The library contained only one book that could be called
+theological, and the title of that wonderfully unique volume was,
+&lsquo;Die and be Damned; or, An End of the
+Methodists.&rsquo;&nbsp; All the other books were exclusively
+sporting, while the pictures were such as would have been a
+disgrace to Holywell Street.&nbsp; It was of him that the clerk
+said that &lsquo;next Sunday there would be no Divine sarvice, as
+maaster was going to Newmarket.&rsquo;&nbsp; Once upon a time
+after a sermon one of his flock approached him, as he had been
+preaching on miracles, to ask him to explain what a miracle
+really was.&nbsp; The reverend gentleman gave his rustic inquirer
+a kick, adding, &lsquo;Did you feel that?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh yes, sir; but what of that?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Why,&rsquo; said the reverend gentleman, &lsquo;if you
+had not felt it, it would have been a miracle, that is
+all.&rsquo;&nbsp; Yet that man was as popular as any parson in
+the district, perhaps more so, and it was with some indignation
+in certain quarters that the people <!-- page 47--><a
+name="page47"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 47</span>learned that
+a new Bishop had come to Norwich, and that the parson had been
+deprived of his living for immoral conduct.&nbsp; Of another it
+is said that, calling on a poor villager, dying and full of
+gloomy anticipations as to the future, all he could say was,
+&lsquo;Don&rsquo;t be frightened; I dare say you will meet a good
+many people you know.&rsquo;&nbsp; I have often heard old men
+talk of the time when they used to take the parson home in a
+wheelbarrow&mdash;but that was before we had a Sunday-school, at
+which I was a regular teacher.&nbsp; The church had a
+Sunday-school, but not till after the one in the chapel had
+existed many years.&nbsp; Of these ornaments of the Church and
+foes of Dissent, some had apparently a sense of shame&mdash;one
+of them, at any rate, committed suicide.</p>
+<p>At Pakefield, some seven miles from Wrentham, and just on the
+borders of Lowestoft, then, as now, the most eastern extremity of
+England, resided the Rev. Francis Cunningham.&nbsp; He was a
+clergyman of piety and philanthropy, rare at that time in that
+benighted district, and in this respect he was aided by his wife,
+a little dark woman whom I well remember, a sister of the
+far-famed John Joseph Gurney, of Earlham.&nbsp; It is with
+pleasure I quote the following from the Journal of Caroline <!--
+page 48--><a name="page48"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+48</span>Fox: &lsquo;A charming story of F. Cunningham coming in
+to prayers just murmuring something about the study being on
+fire, and proceeding to read a long chapter and make equally long
+comments thereupon.&nbsp; When the reading was over, and the fact
+became public, he observed, &ldquo;Yes, I saw it was a little on
+fire, but I opened the window on leaving the
+room.&rdquo;&rsquo;&nbsp; Mr. Cunningham had much to do with
+establishing a branch of the British and Foreign Bible Society in
+Paris in connection with the Buxtons.&nbsp; In this way, but on a
+smaller scale, the Cunninghams were equally distinguished, and
+one of the things they had established at Pakefield was an infant
+school, to which I, in company with my parents&mdash;indeed, I
+may add, the whole family&mdash;was taken, in order, if possible,
+that our little village should possess a similar
+institution.&nbsp; But my principal pilgrimages to the Pakefield
+vicarage were in connection with some mission to aid Oberlin in
+his grand work amongst the mountains and valleys of
+Switzerland.&nbsp; It appeared Mr. and Mrs. Cunningham had
+visited the good man, and watched him in his career, and had come
+back to England to gain for him, if possible, sympathy and
+friends.&nbsp; Mrs. Cunningham had taken drawings of the
+principal objects of <!-- page 49--><a name="page49"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 49</span>interest, which had been
+lithographed, and these lithographs my mother, who in her way was
+as great an enthusiast as Susanna Strickland herself, was very
+anxious to obtain; the financial position of the family, however,
+forbade any thought of purchase.&nbsp; But she had a wonderful
+gift of painting, and she painted while we children were learning
+the Latin grammar, or preparing our lessons in the Delectus, much
+to my terror, as I had a habit of restlessness which, by shaking
+the table, not only impaired her work, but drew down upon me not
+a little of reproach; and with these paintings I was despatched
+on foot to Pakefield, where, in return for them, I was given the
+famous lithographs, which were to be preserved for many a year in
+the spare room we called the parlour&mdash;drawing-rooms at that
+time in East Anglia were, I think, unknown.&nbsp; What a joy it
+was to us children when that parlour had its fire lit, and we
+found out that company was coming&mdash;partly, I must add, for
+sensual reasons.&nbsp; We knew that the best tea-things were to
+be used, that unusual delicacies were to be placed upon the
+table, and I must do my mother the justice to say that she could
+cook as well as she could paint; but for other and higher
+motives, and not as an occasion <!-- page 50--><a
+name="page50"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 50</span>of feasting
+or for the disuse of the economical pinafore which was always
+worn to keep our clothes clean, did we rejoice when we found
+there was to be tea in the parlour.&nbsp; If young people were
+coming, we were sure to dissect puzzles, or play some game which
+combined amusement with instruction; and if the party consisted
+of seniors, as on the occasion of the Book Club&mdash;almost all
+Dissenting congregations had their Book Clubs then&mdash;it was a
+pleasure to listen to my father&rsquo;s talk, who was a well-read
+man, and who, being a Scotchman, had inherited his full share of
+Scotch wit, which, however, was enlivened with quotations from
+&lsquo;Hudibras,&rsquo; the only poet, alas! in whom he seemed to
+take any particular interest.&nbsp; There, in the parlour, were
+the fraternal meetings attended by all the neighbouring
+Independent ministers, all clad in sober black, and whose wildest
+exploits in rollicking debauchery were confined to a pipe and a
+glass of home-made wine.&nbsp; Madeira, port and sherry were
+unknown in ministers&rsquo; houses, though now and then one got a
+taste of them at the houses of men better to do, and who,
+perhaps, had been as far as London once or twice in their
+lives.&nbsp; Of these neighbouring ministers, one of the most
+celebrated at that time was the Rev. Edward <!-- page 51--><a
+name="page51"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 51</span>Walford, then
+of Yarmouth, who afterwards became tutor of Homerton College, and
+who, after the death of a favourite and accomplished
+daughter&mdash;I can still remember the gracefulness of her
+person&mdash;sank into a state of profound melancholy, which led
+him to shut himself from his friends, to give up all public
+preaching and tutorial work, and to consider himself as
+hopelessly lost.&nbsp; It is a curious fact that he dated his
+return to reason and happiness and usefulness after a visit paid
+him by my father, who happened to be in town, and who naturally
+was drawn to see his afflicted friend, with whom, in the days of
+auld lang syne, he had smoked many a pipe and held many an
+argument respecting Edwards on Freedom of the Will, and his
+favourite McKnight.&nbsp; Mrs. Walford, who was aware of my
+father&rsquo;s intended visit, had thoughtfully prepared pipes
+and tobacco, and placed them on the table of the room where the
+interview was to take place.&nbsp; My father went and smoked his
+pipe and talked as usual, poor Mr. Walford sitting sad and
+dejected, and refusing to be comforted all the while.&nbsp; When
+my father had left&mdash;owing, I suppose, to the force of old
+associations&mdash;actually the poor man approached the table,
+took up a pipe, filled it with tobacco, and smoked <!-- page
+52--><a name="page52"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+52</span>it.&nbsp; From that hour, strange to say, he recovered,
+wrote a translation of the Psalms, became a trustee of
+Coward&rsquo;s College, and took charge of a church at
+Uxbridge.&nbsp; This is &lsquo;a fac,&rsquo; as Artemus Ward
+would say, and &lsquo;facs&rsquo; are stubborn things.&nbsp; Of
+this Mr. Walford, the well-known publisher of that name in St.
+Paul&rsquo;s Churchyard was a son, and the firm of Hodder and
+Stoughton may be said to carry on his business, though on a
+larger scale.</p>
+<p>Dressed in rusty black, with hats considerably the worse for
+wear, with shoes not ignorant of the cobbler&rsquo;s art,
+unconscious of and careless for the fashions of the world, rarely
+in London, except on the occasion of the May Meetings&mdash;no
+one can tell, except those who, like myself, were admitted behind
+the scenes, as it were, how these good men lived to keep alive
+the traditions of freedom, civil and religious, in districts most
+under the sway of the ignorant squire and the equally ignorant
+parson of the parish.&nbsp; If there has been a decency and charm
+about our country life it is due to them, and them alone.&nbsp;
+Perhaps, more in the country than in the crowded city is the
+pernicious influence felt of sons of Belial, flushed with
+insolence and wine.&nbsp; It is difficult to give the reader an
+idea of the utter animalism, if I may so term it, of <!-- page
+53--><a name="page53"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 53</span>rural
+life some fifty years ago.&nbsp; For small wages these Dissenting
+ministers did a noble work, in the way of preserving morals,
+extending education, promoting religion, and elevating the aim
+and tone of |the little community in which they lived, and moved,
+and had their being.&nbsp; At home the difficulties of such of
+them as had large families were immense.&nbsp; The pocket was
+light, and too often there was but little in the larder.&nbsp;
+But they laboured on through good and bad report, and now they
+have their reward.&nbsp; Perhaps one of their failings was that
+they kept too much the latter end in view, and were too
+indifferent to present needs and requirements.&nbsp; They did not
+try to make the best of both worlds.&nbsp; I can never forget a
+remark addressed to me by all the good men of the class with whom
+I was familiar in my childhood as to the need of getting on in
+life and earning an honest penny, and becoming independent in a
+pecuniary point of view.&nbsp; I was to be a good boy, to love
+the Lord, to study the Assembly&rsquo;s Catechism, to read the
+Bible, as if outside the village there was no struggle into which
+sooner or later I should have to plunge&mdash;no hard battle with
+the world to fight, no temporal victory to win.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 54--><a name="page54"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+54</span>CHAPTER III<br />
+<span class="smcap">lowestoft</span>.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Yarmouth bloaters&mdash;George
+Borrow&mdash;The town fifty years ago&mdash;The distinguished
+natives.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I&rsquo;m a-thinking you&rsquo;ll be wanting half a
+pint of beer by this time, won&rsquo;t you?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Such were the first words I heard as I left the hotel where I
+was a temporary sojourner about nine o&rsquo;clock.&nbsp; Of
+course I turned to look at the speaker.&nbsp; He wore an oilskin
+cap, with a great flap hanging over the back of the neck; his
+oilskin middle was encased in a thick blue guernsey; his trousers
+were hidden in heavy jack-boots, which came up above his knees;
+his face was red, and his body was almost as round as that of a
+porpoise.&nbsp; When I add that the party addressed was similarly
+adorned and was of a similar build, the reader will guess at once
+that I was amongst a seafaring community, and let me add that
+this supposition is correct.&nbsp; I was, in fact, at Lowestoft,
+and Lowestoft just now <!-- page 55--><a name="page55"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 55</span>is, with Yarmouth, the headquarters
+of the herring fishery.&nbsp; The truth is, as the poet tells us,
+&lsquo;Things are not what they seem,&rsquo; and that many of the
+Yarmouth bloaters which we are in the habit of indulging in at
+breakfast in reality come from Lowestoft.</p>
+<p>It is worth going from London at the season of the year when
+the finest bloaters are being caught, to realize the peril and
+the enterprise and the industry connected with the herring trade,
+which employs some five hundred boats, manned by seven to twelve
+men, who work the business on the cooperative system, which, when
+the season is a good one, gives a handsome remuneration to all
+concerned, and which drains the country of young men for miles
+around.&nbsp; Each boat is furnished with some score of nets, and
+each net extends more than thirty-two yards.&nbsp; The boat puts
+off according to the tide, and if it gets a good haul, at once
+returns to the harbour with its freight; if the catch is
+indifferent, the boat stays out; the fish are salted as they are
+caught, and then the boat, generally at a distance of about
+twenty miles from the shore, waits till a sufficient number have
+been caught to complete the cargo.&nbsp; When that is the case,
+the boat at once makes for Lowestoft, and the fish are unloaded
+<!-- page 56--><a name="page56"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+56</span>under a shed in heaps of about half a last (a last is
+professedly 10,000 herrings, but really much more).&nbsp; At nine
+a bell rings and the various auctioneers commence
+operations.&nbsp; A crowd is formed, and in a very few minutes a
+lot is sold off to traders who are well known, and who pay at the
+end of the week.&nbsp; The auctioneer then proceeds to the next
+group, which is disposed of in a similar way.&nbsp; Other
+auctioneers in various parts of the enormous shed erected for
+their accommodation do the same, and then, as more boats arrive,
+other cargoes are sold, the sailors bringing a hundred as a
+sample from the boat.&nbsp; And thus all day long the work of
+selling goes on, and as soon as a lot are sold they are packed up
+with ice, if fresh, or with more salt, if already salted, and
+despatched by train to various quarters of England, where, it is
+to be presumed, they meet with a speedy and immediate sale.&nbsp;
+In this way as many as one hundred and ninety-eight trucks are
+sometimes sent off in a single day.&nbsp; But in London we are
+familiar with the kipper, the red herring, and the Yarmouth
+bloater, and to see how they are prepared for consumption I leave
+the market&mdash;always wet and fishy and slippery&mdash;and make
+my way to the extensive premises on the <!-- page 57--><a
+name="page57"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 57</span>beach
+belonging to Mr. Thomas Brown&mdash;the only Brown whose name is
+familiar to the fish-dealer in every market in England, and the
+extent of whose business may be best realized by the reader when
+I state that Mr. Brown sends off from his factory as many as
+forty lasts a week.</p>
+<p>An intelligent foreman, after I have evaded the attack of a
+formidable dog which keeps watch and ward over the premises,
+explains to me the mystery of the trade.&nbsp; I find myself in
+the midst of a square.&nbsp; On one side are a great stack of oak
+and many casks of old salt.&nbsp; The latter, I gather, is sold
+to be used as manure.&nbsp; The former is applied to the fire,
+which gently smokes the Yarmouth bloater.&nbsp; On one side, the
+herrings, as they are received, are pickled&mdash;that is, first
+washed in fresh water, and then immersed in great tubs in which
+the water is mixed with salt.&nbsp; The next thing is to take
+them into a room in which several women are engaged in spitting
+them&mdash;that is, hanging them on rods&mdash;and then they are
+carried to the apartment where they are hung up, while oak logs
+are burnt beneath.&nbsp; In twelve hours they are sufficiently
+smoked, and then you have the real Yarmouth bloater.&nbsp; I am
+glad I have seen the process, as I have a horrible suspicion that
+the <!-- page 58--><a name="page58"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+58</span>costermonger manufactures many a Yarmouth bloater in
+some filthy Whitechapel slum, the odour of which by no means
+tends to improve the flavour of so delicate a fish.</p>
+<p>But we have to discuss the red-herring, not of the artful
+politician, anxious to dodge his hearers, but of the
+breakfast-table.&nbsp; For this purpose I am taken to a large
+oven filled with oak sawdust, gathered from Ipswich, and oak
+shavings, which are also brought from a distance, principally
+from Bass&rsquo;s Brewery, and, indeed, from all the great works
+where oak is used; I see heaps of fire made from these ashes,
+which give out much heat, and at the same time much smoke.&nbsp;
+In a loft above are hung the herrings, and there they hang twelve
+days, till they gradually become of the colour of a guinea, when
+they are packed up and sent away in casks, while the bloaters go
+away in baskets of a hundred, in pots holding a smaller number,
+and in barrels in which as many as three hundred are stowed
+away.&nbsp; As to the kippered herring, he undergoes quite a
+different treatment.&nbsp; Some twenty or thirty women get hold
+of him, cut him open, take out his gut and wash him, and then he
+is hung over an oak fire and smoked for twelve hours, and thus,
+saturated with smoke inside and out, is regarded in <!-- page
+59--><a name="page59"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 59</span>many
+circles as a delicacy to be highly prized.&nbsp; But he must be
+got off the premises.&nbsp; Well, if we climb to a loft, we shall
+see a good many young women hard at work stripping the rods, on
+which he and his fellows have been suspended, and stowing the
+fish away.&nbsp; In the autumn especially the peculiar industries
+connected with the trade are very considerably exercised.&nbsp;
+All day long carts come in with the fish; all day long carts go
+out with the manufactured articles to the railway-station; day
+and night the men and women are at work; in one quarter the women
+make and mend the nets, which are then boiled in cutch and put on
+board the boats; in another quarter coopers are at work making
+boxes and casks and barrels.&nbsp; As to the baskets, the country
+is ransacked for them, and as soon as they are filled they take
+the train and away they go, to give a flavour to the potato
+dinner of the poor man, or to form a tasty adjunct to the dishes
+under which the breakfast table of his lord and master
+groans.&nbsp; In London we get the best&mdash;the smaller
+herrings go to the North, as the dwellers in those parts will not
+pay the price the Londoner does.&nbsp; Great is the joy and
+rejoicing, as well can be imagined, at Lowestoft when the herring
+season comes on.&nbsp; It is true, the Lowestoft <!-- page
+60--><a name="page60"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+60</span>fishers do not have it all to themselves.&nbsp; Yarmouth
+is a fierce rival in the race, and, as it has now superior
+accommodation, many a boat makes for that far-famed port.&nbsp;
+Then, the Scotch, when they have done their fishing, make for the
+English coast, and manage, as Scotchmen ever do, to gather a fair
+share of the spoil.&nbsp; As to the foreigners, they are not such
+formidable rivals as sometimes we are apt to believe.&nbsp; The
+Frenchman or the Dutchman comes, but that is when he is blown off
+by a gale from his own happy hunting-ground, and then we know,
+all the world over, the cry is, &lsquo;Any port in a
+storm.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Oh, these storms! how terrible they are! and how little, as we
+eat our Yarmouth bloater of a morning, or spread the
+bloater-paste as a covering to the thin slice of
+bread-and-butter, to tempt the languid appetite&mdash;how little
+do we who sit at home at ease realize their fury and their
+power!&nbsp; As I now write, twenty-one orphans are bewailing the
+loss of fathers who went out in a craft during the last gale, and
+of whom no sign has been seen, nor ever will.&nbsp; Hour by hour
+the women, weeping and watching on the sandy shore, saw one and
+another familiar boat come, more or less buffeted, into
+port.&nbsp; On more than one a hand had been washed away, <!--
+page 61--><a name="page61"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+61</span>but the craft and the rest of the crew were saved
+somehow.&nbsp; But one boat yet remained missing, and in vain the
+survivors were questioned as to what had become of the <i>Skimmer
+of the Sea</i>.&nbsp; Day by day anxious eyes swept the distant
+horizon.&nbsp; Day by day a sadder weight came down on weeping
+child and broken-hearted wife; and now all hope is gone, and all
+felt that in the fury of the gale the <i>Skimmer of the Sea</i>
+foundered with all her hands.&nbsp; Well, as the good old Admiral
+said, as he and his men were about to perish, &lsquo;My lads, the
+way to heaven is as short by sea as by land.&rsquo;&nbsp; But the
+wounded heart in the agony of its grief is slow to realize that
+fact.&nbsp; Sailors ought to be serious men; every halfpenny they
+earn is won at the risk of a life.&nbsp; In Lowestoft, I am glad
+to find, many of them are.&nbsp; &lsquo;The Salvation Army has
+done &rsquo;em a deal of good,&rsquo; says a decent woman, with
+whom I happened to scrape an acquaintance at the most attractive
+coffee-house I have ever seen&mdash;the Coffee Pot at Mutford
+Bridge.&nbsp; &lsquo;Not that I holds with the Salvation Army
+myself, sir, but they&rsquo;ve done the men a deal of good, and
+they don&rsquo;t spend their wages, as they used to do, in
+drink.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Lowestoft, when I was there last, had just lost <!-- page
+62--><a name="page62"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 62</span>one
+of its heroes&mdash;I mean the late Mr. George Borrow&mdash;whose
+&lsquo;Bible in Spain&rsquo; was the talk of the season in
+religious and worldly circles alike, and whose writings on
+Gipsies and Wild Wales and the &lsquo;Bible in Spain&rsquo;
+achieved at one time an enormous popularity.&nbsp; He
+lived&mdash;I can still remember his tall form&mdash;on a bank a
+couple of miles out of Lowestoft, sloping down to a large piece
+of water known in those parts as Oulton Broad.&nbsp; The tourist,
+if he looks to his right just after he has passed Mutford Bridge
+on the rail from Lowestoft to Beccles, across the wide sheet of
+water, which, as I saw it last, lay calm and blue in the fading
+glory of an autumnal sun, will perhaps see a white house at a
+distance, nestled in among the fir-trees&mdash;that was where
+George Borrow lived, and where he died, though he was buried in
+Brompton Cemetery by the side of his wife.&nbsp; You cannot make
+a mistake, for houses are rare in those parts.&nbsp; As his
+step-daughter observed to me, the proper way is by water; to get
+to the house by land&mdash;at least as I did&mdash;you walk along
+the rail for a couple of miles, then break off across a bit of a
+swamp, to a little lane that conducts you to Oulton
+Church&mdash;a very ancient one, which, however, is in a state of
+good repair and is noted partly on account of the <!-- page
+63--><a name="page63"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 63</span>fact
+that the steeple is built in the middle, and partly on account of
+its containing, so it is said, the earliest example of a brass to
+an ecclesiastic which is to be found in England.&nbsp; A narrow
+path from the church leads you to Oulton Hall, which came into
+the possession of Borrow by marriage, really a very plain,
+red-brick, capacious, comfortable-looking old farmhouse, only of
+a superior class.&nbsp; Keeping the Hall to the right, you reach
+a gate, which opens into a very narrow lane, full of mud in the
+winter and dust in the summer.&nbsp; The lane loses itself in the
+marshland, on the borders of Lake Lothing&mdash;a name supposed
+to have been derived from a certain Danish prince, murdered on
+the spot by a jealous Court retainer; and it is a fitting place
+for a murder, as in that lonely district there was no eye to
+pity, no ear to hear, no hand to save.&nbsp; Even to-day, as you
+look away from the train, there is little sign of life, save the
+sail of a distant wherry as it makes sluggishly for Norwich or
+Beccles, as it goes either into the Waveney or the Yare; or the
+gray wing of the heron as it flies heavily along the marsh; and
+that is all.&nbsp; Far away, perhaps, rises a ridge, with a house
+on it; or a steeple, with a few trees struggling to yield the
+barren spot a shelter from the suns of summer <!-- page 64--><a
+name="page64"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 64</span>or the
+howling winds of winter; but all is still life there, and the
+habitations of men are few and far between.&nbsp; In the
+particular lane to which I have introduced the reader&mdash;there
+are but two&mdash;there is a little cottage on your left, and
+beyond, under a group of trees, mostly fir, which almost hide it
+from view, a home of a rather superior character, in a very
+dilapidated condition, with everything around it more or less
+untidy&mdash;that was where George Borrow lived and worked in his
+way for many a long day.&nbsp; The step-daughter and her husband
+reside there now&mdash;very ancient people, who are to be seen
+driving about Lowestoft in a little wicker car, drawn by an
+amiable and active donkey, an aged dog guarding the cottage
+during their temporary absence.&nbsp; The female, an ancient one,
+who did for the house, lives in the little cottage which the
+tourist will have already observed, and the interior of which
+presented, when I peeped in, a far greater idea of comfort than
+did Oulton Cottage, the residence of the late George
+Borrow.&nbsp; The picture one gets is rather a melancholy
+one.&nbsp; &lsquo;He was a funny-tempered man&rsquo;&mdash;that
+seems to have been the idea of the few people around.&nbsp;
+Latterly he kept no company, and no one came to see him.&nbsp;
+All who did call on him, however, tell <!-- page 65--><a
+name="page65"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 65</span>me that he
+was well dressed, but that all the interior of the house was
+dirty.&nbsp; Well, that was to be expected of a man who loved to
+live with the gipsies, and patter to them in Romany of Egyptian
+lore, for it could not have been want of means.&nbsp; Borrow must
+have made a good deal of money by his books, and I have heard his
+landed property estimated at five hundred per year.&nbsp; The
+house looked like the residence of a miser who would not lay out
+a penny in keeping up appearances or in repairs.&nbsp; It must be
+remembered, however, that the grand old man had long become bowed
+with age; that for some years before his death he was scarcely
+able to move himself without help; that the grasshopper, as it
+were, had become a burden.&nbsp; In summer time such a residence,
+in good repair and well furnished, would be perfectly
+charming.&nbsp; The house contains a sitting-room on each side of
+the entrance-hall.&nbsp; Behind is the kitchen, and above are
+four bedrooms and two attics&mdash;none of them large, I own, but
+at any rate capable of being made very cosy.&nbsp; On your right,
+in a little niche in the cliff, is a small stable.&nbsp; Lower
+down is a large summer-house, then full of books (amongst them, I
+believe, there were a hundred lexicons), where their learned
+proprietor loved to write.&nbsp; <!-- page 66--><a
+name="page66"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 66</span>Farther down
+the lawn you come to the lake, where Borrow could enjoy his
+morning bath without fear of being disturbed, and where any
+amount of fish can be got.&nbsp; Just previous to my last visit
+to the spot a pike of more than twenty pounds&rsquo;
+weight&mdash;I am afraid to say how many pounds more, lest the
+reader should think I was exaggerating&mdash;had been
+caught.&nbsp; For a real angler or sportsman such a house as that
+in which George Borrow spent the latter years of his long life
+must have been a perfect paradise.&nbsp; The world is utterly
+away from you, and, what is better still, in such a spot the
+world has no chance of finding you out.&nbsp; Approaching by
+road, you see no sign of the house till you are in it, so
+completely is it hidden in the nook of trees in which it
+stands.&nbsp; Only to the water is it open.&nbsp; It would be
+really beautiful to live there in the summer, and have a gondola
+to row into Beccles or Lowestoft or Bungay when you wanted to be
+gay.</p>
+<p>One good anecdote I heard of George Borrow the last time I was
+in the neighbourhood, which is worth repeating.&nbsp; My
+informant was an Independent minister, at that time supplying the
+pulpit at Lowestoft, and staying at Oulton Hall, then inhabited
+by a worthy Dissenting tenant.&nbsp; One <!-- page 67--><a
+name="page67"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 67</span>night a
+meeting of the Bible Society was held at Mutford Bridge, at which
+the party from the Hall attended, and where George Borrow was one
+of the speakers.&nbsp; After the meeting was over, all the
+speakers went back to supper at Oulton Hall, and my friend among
+them, who, in the course of the supper, found himself attacked
+very violently by the clergyman for holding Calvinistic
+opinions.&nbsp; Naturally my friend replied that the clergyman
+was bound to do the same.&nbsp; &lsquo;How do you make that
+out?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Why, the Articles of your Church are
+Calvinistic, and to them you have sworn assent.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Oh yes, but there is a way of explaining them
+away.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;How so?&rsquo; said my friend.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Oh,&rsquo; replied the clergyman, &lsquo;we are not bound
+to take the words in their natural sense.&rsquo;&nbsp; My friend,
+an honest, blunt East Anglian, intimated that he did not
+understand that way of evading the difficulty; but he was then a
+young man, and did not like to continue the discussion
+further.&nbsp; However, George Borrow, who had not said a word
+hitherto, entered into the discussion, opening fire on the
+clergyman in a very unexpected manner, and giving him such a
+setting down as the hearers, at any rate, never forgot.&nbsp; All
+the sophistry about the non-natural meaning of terms was held up
+by <!-- page 68--><a name="page68"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+68</span>Borrow to ridicule, even contempt; and the clergyman was
+beaten at every point.&nbsp; &lsquo;Never,&rsquo; says my friend,
+&lsquo;did I hear one man give another such a dressing as on that
+occasion.&rsquo;&nbsp; It was not always, however, that Borrow
+thus shone.&nbsp; In the neighbourhood of Bungay lived a
+gentleman much given to collect around him men of literary taste
+and culture.&nbsp; A lecture was to be given in the
+neighbourhood, and all the men of light and leading around were
+invited.&nbsp; George Borrow was one of the earliest arrivals,
+and seated himself before the fire with a book in his hand, over
+which he nodded superciliously, as the host brought up all his
+guests in succession to be introduced to the lion of the
+town.&nbsp; At dinner which followed, which was rather a jovial
+one, and at which the bottle went round freely, so loud and
+general was the conversation that my friend, a clever lawyer,
+with remarkably good ears, was quite unable to catch a sentence
+from the great author&rsquo;s lips.&nbsp; Perhaps Borrow really
+did say nothing, or next to nothing.&nbsp; It is quite as likely
+that he did as not, as I have already informed the reader that
+&lsquo;he was a funny-tempered man.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Catherine Gurney,&rsquo; writes Caroline Fox,
+&lsquo;gave us a note to George Borrow, so on him we
+called&mdash;<!-- page 69--><a name="page69"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 69</span>a tall, ungainly man, with great
+physical strength, quick, penetrating eye, a confident manner,
+and a disagreeable tone and pronunciation.&rsquo;&nbsp; We gather
+from the same lady that it was Joseph John Gurney who recommended
+George Borrow to the Committee of the Bible Society.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;So he stalked up to London, and they gave him a hymn to
+translate into the Manchow language, and the same to one of their
+people to translate also.&nbsp; When compared they proved to be
+very different.&nbsp; When put before their reader, he had the
+candour to say that Borrow&rsquo;s was much the better of the
+two.&nbsp; On this they sent him to Petersburg to get it printed,
+and then gave him business in Portugal.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>One thing is clear&mdash;that Borrow was a lonely man, and
+evidently one who did not hold the resources of civilization in
+such esteem as Mr. Gladstone does.&nbsp; He loved Nature and her
+ways, and people like the gipsies, who are supposed to be of a
+similar way of thinking.&nbsp; He eschewed the hum of cities and
+the roar of the &lsquo;madding crowd.&rsquo;&nbsp; He was big in
+body and in mind, and wanted elbow-room; and yet what would he
+have been if he had not lived in a city, and come under the
+stimulative influence of such men as Edward Taylor, of <!-- page
+70--><a name="page70"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+70</span>Norwich?&nbsp; It is idle to complain of cities, however
+they sully the air, and deface the land, and pollute the water,
+and rear the weak and vicious and the wicked&mdash;to remind us
+how low and depraved human nature can become when it is cut off
+from communion with Nature and Nature&rsquo;s God.&nbsp; Borrow
+owed much to cities, and was best appreciated by the men who
+dwelt in them.&nbsp; There is often a good deal of affectation
+about the love of rural solitude, nor does it often last long
+when there is a wife to have a voice in the matter.&nbsp; Yet in
+Borrow undoubtedly the feeling was sincere, and of him Wordsworth
+might have written&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;As in the eye of Nature he has lived,<br />
+So in the eye of Nature let him die.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Lowestoft was a frequent attraction for a youthful
+ramble&mdash;perhaps almost too far, unless one could manage to
+get a lift in a little yellow-painted black-bodied vehicle called
+a whisky, which was grandfather&rsquo;s property, and into the
+shafts of which could be put any spare quadruped, whether donkey,
+or mule, or pony, it mattered little, and which afforded a
+considerable relief when a trip as far as Lowestoft was
+determined on.&nbsp; At that time there was no harbour, and the
+town consisted simply of one High Street, gradually rising
+towards the north, <!-- page 71--><a name="page71"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 71</span>with a fine space for boys to play in
+between the cliff and the sea, called the denes.&nbsp; I can well
+remember being taken to view the works of the harbour before the
+water was let in, and not a little astonished at what then was to
+me a new world of engineering science and skill.&nbsp; In the
+High Street there was a little old-fashioned and by no means
+flourishing Independent Chapel, where at one time the preacher
+was the Rev. Mr. Maurice, the father of the Mr. Maurice to whom
+many owe a great awakening of spiritual life, and whose memory
+they still regard as that of a beloved and honoured
+teacher.&nbsp; Mr. Maurice was a Unitarian, I believe, and, when
+he retired, handed over the chapel to my father with the remark
+that it was no use his preaching there any longer.&nbsp; The
+preacher in my time was the Rev. George Steffe Crisp, a kindly,
+timid, tearful man, always in difficulties with his people, and
+who often resorted to Wrentham for advice.&nbsp; Latterly he
+retired from the ministry, and kept a shop and school.&nbsp; In
+this capacity one day my old friend John Childs, of Bungay, the
+far-famed printer&mdash;of whom I shall have much to say
+anon&mdash;called on him, when the following dialogue took place:
+&lsquo;Good-morning, Mr. Crisp.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Good-morning,
+Mr. Childs.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Well, how <!-- page 72--><a
+name="page72"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 72</span>are you
+getting on?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Oh, very well; but there is one
+thing that troubles me much.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;What is
+that?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;That I am getting deaf, and can&rsquo;t
+hear my minister.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Oh,&rsquo; was the cynical
+reply, &lsquo;you ought to be thankful for your
+privileges.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Lowestoft is reported to have been a fishing station as early
+as the time of the Romans; but the ancient town is supposed to
+have been long engulfed by the resistless sea, for there was to
+be seen till the 25th of Henry VIII. the remains of an old house
+upon an inundated spot&mdash;left dry at low water about four
+furlongs east of the present beach.&nbsp; The town has been the
+birthplace of many distinguished men&mdash;of Sir Thomas Allen,
+for instance, who was steadily attached to the Royal cause, and
+who after the Restoration rose high in command, and won many a
+victory over the Dutch and the Algerines; of Sir Andrew Leake,
+who fell in the attack on Gibraltar; of Rear-Admiral Richard
+Utbar, also a renowned fighter when England and Holland were at
+war.&nbsp; To the same town also belong Admiral Sir John Ashby,
+who died in 1693, and his nephew Vice-Admiral James
+Mighells.&nbsp; Nor must we fail to do justice to Thomas Nash, a
+facetious writer of considerable reputation in the latter part of
+the sixteenth <!-- page 73--><a name="page73"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 73</span>century.&nbsp; The most witty of his
+productions is a satirical pamphlet in praise of red herrings,
+intended as a joke upon the great staple of Yarmouth, and the
+pretensions of that place to superiority over Lowestoft.&nbsp; It
+must be confessed that Nash is chiefly famous as a caustic
+pamphleteer and an unscrupulous satirist.&nbsp; For illustration
+we may point to his battle with Gabriel Harvey, the friend of
+Edmund Spenser, who desired that he might be epitaphed the
+inventor of the not yet naturalized English hexameter; and his
+other battle with Martin Mar Prelate, or the writer or writers
+who passed under that name, and who have acquired a reputation to
+which poor Nash can lay no claim.&nbsp; His one conspicuous
+dramatic effort is &lsquo;Summer&rsquo;s Last Will and
+Testament.&rsquo;&nbsp; Nash wrote for bare existence&mdash;to
+use his own words, &lsquo;contending with the cold, and
+conversing with scarcity.&rsquo;&nbsp; Nash lived in an
+unpropitious age.&nbsp; A recent French writer has placed him in
+the foremost rank of English writers.&nbsp; Dr. Jusserand, the
+author referred to, in his accounts of the English novel in the
+time of Shakespeare, tells us Nash was the most successful
+exponent in England of the picturesque novel.&nbsp; The
+picturesque novel is the forerunner of the realistic novel of
+modern <!-- page 74--><a name="page74"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 74</span>times.&nbsp; It portrays the life and
+fortunes of the picaro&mdash;the adventurer who tries all roads
+to fortune.&nbsp; Spanish in its origin, it developed into a
+school in which Defoe and Thackeray distinguished
+themselves.&nbsp; &lsquo;Nash,&rsquo; writes the French author,
+&lsquo;mingled serious scenes with his comedy, in order that his
+romances might more nearly resemble real life.&rsquo;&nbsp; In
+fact (he writes), &lsquo;Nash does not only possess the merit of
+learning how to observe the ridiculous side of human nature, and
+of portraying in a full light picturesque figures&mdash;now
+worthy of Teniers and now of Callot&mdash;some fat and greasy,
+others lean and lank; he possesses a thing very rare with the
+picturesque school, the faculty of being moved.&nbsp; He seems to
+have foreseen the immense field of study which was to be opened
+later to the novelist.&nbsp; A distant ancestor of Fielding, as
+Lilly and Sidney appear to us to be distant ancestors of
+Richardson, he understands that a picture of active life,
+reproducing only in the Spanish fashion scenes of comedy, is
+incomplete and departs from reality.&nbsp; The greatest jesters,
+the most arrogant, the most venturesome, have their days of
+anguish.&nbsp; No hero has ever yet remained imprisoned from the
+cradle to the grave, and no one has been able to live an
+irresponsible spectator, <!-- page 75--><a
+name="page75"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 75</span>and not feel
+his heart sometimes beat the quicker, nor bow his head
+unmoved.&nbsp; Nash caught a glimpse of this.&rsquo;&nbsp; As an
+illustration, Dr. Jusserand points to his &lsquo;Jack
+Wilton&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;The best specimen of the picturesque
+tale in English literature anterior to Defoe.&rsquo;&nbsp; In
+Lowestoft they ought to keep his memory green.</p>
+<p>The writer well remembers the day when Mr., afterwards Sir,
+Morton Peto, assembled the inhabitants of Lowestoft in the then
+dilapidated Town Hall, and promised that if they would sell their
+ruined harbour works, and back him in making a railway, their
+mackerel and herrings should be delivered almost alive in
+Manchester, Liverpool, and London.&nbsp; The inhabitants believed
+in the power of the enchanter, and Lowestoft is
+metamorphosed.&nbsp; The old town remains upon its beautiful
+eminence, and memory clings to the cliffs and to the denes,
+tenanted only, the one by wild rabbits, the other by the merry
+children and the nets of the fishermen.&nbsp; But a new town has
+grown up around the harbour&mdash;a grand hotel, excellent
+lodging-houses, a new church; a great population have upset the
+romance, and borne witness to the spirit of enterprise which
+characterizes this generation.&nbsp; The new town has spread to
+Kirkley, has Londonized even <!-- page 76--><a
+name="page76"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 76</span>quiet
+Pakefield, and awakened a sleeping neighbourhood to what men call
+life.</p>
+<p>At Lowestoft commence what are known to sailors as the
+Yarmouth Roads&mdash;a grand stretch of sea protected by the
+sands, where an armada might anchor secure; and it was a sight
+not to be seen now, when gigantic steamers do all the business of
+the sea, to watch the hundreds of ships that would come inside
+the Roads at certain seasons of the year.&nbsp; There, in the
+winter-time&mdash;that is, from Lowestoft to Covehithe&mdash;I
+have seen the beach strewed with wrecks, chiefly of rotten
+colliers, or ships in the corn trade; but inside &lsquo;Lowestoft
+Roads,&rsquo; to which they were guided by a lighthouse on the
+cliff, they were supposed to be secure.&nbsp; Lowestoft at that
+time, with its charming sands, was little known to the gay world,
+and depended far more on the fishing than the bathing
+season.&nbsp; The former was a busy time, and kept all the
+country round in a state of excitement.&nbsp; Many were the men,
+for instance, who, even as far off as Wrentham, went herring or
+mackerel fishing in the big craft, which, drawn up on the beach
+when the season was over, seemed to me ships such as never had
+been seen by the mariners of Tyre and Sidon; but the chief
+interest to me were the vans <!-- page 77--><a
+name="page77"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 77</span>in which the
+fish were carried from Lowestoft to London&mdash;light
+spring-carts with four wheels and two horses, that, after
+changing horses at our Spread Eagle, raced like lightning along
+the turnpike-road, at all hours, and even on Sundays&mdash;a sad
+grievance to the godly&mdash;beating the Yarmouth mail.</p>
+<p>Now and then, even at that remote period, when railways were
+not, and when Lowestoft was no port, nothing but a
+fishing-station, distinguished people came to Lowestoft,
+attracted by its bracing air and exceptional bathing
+attractions.&nbsp; I can in this way recollect Sir Edward Parry
+and M. Guizot.&nbsp; But there were other personages equally
+distinguished.&nbsp; One of these was Mrs. Siddons, with whom an
+old Dissenting minister&mdash;the Rev. S. Sloper, of Beccles,
+whom I can well remember&mdash;contracted quite an
+intimacy.&nbsp; She had already passed the zenith of her
+celebrity.&nbsp; &lsquo;Providence,&rsquo; writes my friend, Mr.
+Wilton Rix, of Beccles, in his &lsquo;East Anglian
+Nonconformity,&rsquo; published as far back as 1851, &lsquo;had
+repeatedly and recently called her to tread in domestic life the
+path of sorrow, and her religious advantages, however few, had
+taught her that</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&lsquo;&ldquo;That
+path alone<br />
+Leads to the land where sorrow is unknown.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><!-- page 78--><a name="page78"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+78</span>&lsquo;&ldquo;Sweet, sometimes,&rdquo; said she,
+&ldquo;are the uses of adversity.&nbsp; It not only strengthens
+family affection, but it teaches us all to walk humbly with
+God.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is not surprising that she was disposed to
+cultivate the society of those who could blend piety with
+cheerfulness, and with whom she might be on friendly terms
+without ceremony.&nbsp; Such acquaintances she found in Mr.
+Sloper&rsquo;s family.&nbsp; Mrs. Siddons, with unassuming
+kindness, contributed to their amusement by specimens of her
+powerful reading.&nbsp; She joined willingly in the worship of
+the family, and maintained the same invaluable practice at her
+own lodgings.&rsquo;&nbsp; Mr. Rix continues: &lsquo;Just at that
+time Mr. Sloper was requested to preach to his own people on an
+affecting and mournful occasion, the death of a suicide.&nbsp;
+Though he keenly felt the delicacy and difficulty of the task, a
+sense of duty and a possibility of usefulness overcame his
+scruples.&nbsp; He selected for his text the impressive sentiment
+of the Apostle, &ldquo;The sorrow of the world worketh
+death.&rdquo;&nbsp; Mrs. Siddons was one of his auditors.&nbsp;
+She, who had been the honoured guest of Royalty, who had been
+enthroned as the Tragic Muse, and whose voice had charmed
+applauding multitudes, was seen in the humble Dissenting
+meeting-house at Beccles shedding abundant and unaffected tears
+at <!-- page 79--><a name="page79"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+79</span>the plain and faithful exhibition of religious
+truth.&nbsp; Mr. Sloper&rsquo;s preaching was as powerfully
+recommended to her by the delightful illustration of Christian
+principles exhibited in his private character, as by the
+intrinsic importance of those principles, and the simple gravity
+and penetrating earnestness with which they were announced from
+his lips.&nbsp; He afterwards procured for her, at her request, a
+copy of Scott&rsquo;s admirable &ldquo;Commentary on the
+Bible,&rdquo; which he accompanied with a letter, warmly urging
+upon her attention the great realities her profession had so
+manifest a tendency to exclude from her contemplations.&nbsp;
+Mrs. Siddons,&rsquo; again I quote Mr. Rix, &lsquo;more than once
+expressed her gratitude for the interest Mr. Sloper had evinced
+in her eternal welfare; she thanked him in writing for the advice
+he had given her, adding an emphatic wish that God might enable
+her to follow it&mdash;a wish which her pious and amiable
+correspondent echoed with all the fervour of his heart.&nbsp; She
+returned into the glare of popularity, but a hope may easily be
+indulged that the pressure of subsequent relative afflictions and
+of old age were not permitted to come upon her unaccompanied by
+the impressions and consolations of true religion.&nbsp; Her
+elegant biographer, Mr. Campbell, draws a veil <!-- page 80--><a
+name="page80"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 80</span>over the
+state of her mind during her last hours, which it would be deeply
+interesting to penetrate.&nbsp; Would she not then, if reason
+were undimmed, reflect upon the faithful counsel she received
+with Scott&rsquo;s Bible as being of infinitely greater value
+than the applause of myriads or the fame of ages?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Beccles, where this good Mr. Sloper lived, and where the
+writer of this extract was a respectable solicitor&mdash;I
+believe the firm of Rix and Son still exists&mdash;was a small
+market town about eight miles from Wrentham, inland.&nbsp; At
+that time it ranked as the third town in Suffolk.&nbsp; Towards
+the west it is skirted by a cliff, once washed by the estuary
+which separated the eastern portions of Norfolk and
+Suffolk.&nbsp; There is every reason to believe that ages back
+the mouth of the Yare was an estuary or arm of the sea, and
+extended with considerable magnitude for many miles up the
+country.&nbsp; The herring fishery was thus a principal source of
+emolument to the inhabitants, and in the time of the Conqueror
+the fee farm rent of the manor of Beccles to the King was 60,000
+herrings, and in the time of the Confessor 20,000.&nbsp; About
+956 the manor and advowson of Beccles were granted by King Edwy
+to the monks of Bury, and remained in <!-- page 81--><a
+name="page81"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 81</span>their
+possession until the dissolution of the religious houses under
+Henry VIII.</p>
+<p>As I have said, and as I repeat, in these languid
+days&mdash;when the old creeds have lost their power and the old
+bottles are bursting with new wine&mdash;the glory of East Anglia
+was that it was the first to stand up in the face of priest or
+king for the truth&mdash;or what it held to be such.&nbsp;
+Amongst the early martyrs under Mary were three burnt at
+Beccles&mdash;Thomas Spicer, of Winston, labourer, John Deny, and
+Edmond Poole.&nbsp; This was in the year 1556.&nbsp; Their crime
+in the indictment, drawn up by Dr. Hopton, Bishop of Norwich, and
+his Chancellor, Dunning, according to Fox, was:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;1.&nbsp; First was articulate against them that they
+belieued not the Pope of Rome to bee supreame head immediately in
+Christ on earth of the Universall Catholike Church.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;2.&nbsp; That they belieued not holie bread and holie
+water, ashes, palmes, and all other like ceremonies used in the
+Church to bee good and laudable for stirring up the people to
+devotion.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;3.&nbsp; Item that they belieued not afterwards of
+consecration spoken by the priest, the very naturall body of
+Christ, and no other substance of bread and wine to bee in the
+Sacrament of the altar.</p>
+<p><!-- page 82--><a name="page82"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+82</span>&lsquo;4.&nbsp; Item that they belieued it to bee
+idolatry to worship Christ in the Sacrament of the altar.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;5.&nbsp; Item that they tooke bread and wine in
+remembrance of Christ&rsquo;s Passion.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;6.&nbsp; Item that they would not followe the crosse in
+procession nor bee confessed to a priest.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;7.&nbsp; Item that they affirmed no mortal man to have
+in himself free will to do good or evill.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>It appears that the writ had not come down, nevertheless these
+brave men were burnt at the stake.&nbsp; &lsquo;When they
+came,&rsquo; continues Fox, &lsquo;to the reciting of the creed,
+Sir John Silliard spake to them, &ldquo;That is well said,
+sirs.&nbsp; I am glad to heare you saie you do belieue the
+Catholike Church; that is the best word I heard of you
+yet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;To which his sayings Edmond Poole answered,
+&ldquo;Though they belieue the Catholike Church, yet do they not
+belieue in their Popish Church, which is no part of
+Christ&rsquo;s Catholike Church, and, therefore, no part of their
+beliefe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;When they rose from praier they all went joyfullie to
+the stake, and, being bound thereto, and the fire burning about
+them, they praised God in such an audible voice that it was
+wonderful to all those who stood bye and heard them.&nbsp; Then
+one Robert Bacon, dwelling in the said Beccles, a <!-- page
+83--><a name="page83"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 83</span>very
+enemy to God&rsquo;s truth, and a persecutor of His people, being
+then present, within the hearing thereof willed the tormentors to
+throwe on faggots to stop the knaues breathes, as he termed them;
+so hot was his burning charitie.&nbsp; But these good men, not
+regarding their malice, confessed the truth, and yielded their
+lives to the death for the testimonie of the same very
+gloriouslie and joyfullie.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>These men were the precursors of that Nonconformity which has
+made England the home of the free, and such men abounded in East
+Anglia.&nbsp; Under Queen Elizabeth they had as bad a time of it
+almost as under Queen Mary.&nbsp; For instance, we find under Dr.
+Freke, Bishop of Norwich, and in the reign of glorious Queen
+Bess, as her admirers term her, Mathew Hammond, a poor
+ploughwright, of Hethersett, was condemned as a heretic, had his
+ears cut off, and after the lapse of a week was committed, in the
+Castle ditch at Norwich, to the more agonizing torment of the
+flames.&nbsp; The translation of Dr. Whitgift to the See of
+Canterbury was the signal for augmented rigour.&nbsp; He was
+charged by his imperious mistress to restore religious
+uniformity, which she confessed, notwithstanding all her
+precautions, ran out of square.&nbsp; One of the <!-- page
+84--><a name="page84"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 84</span>first
+victims to this new <i>r&eacute;gime</i> was William Fleming,
+Rector of Beccles.&nbsp; The living of Beccles at this period was
+vested in Lady Anne Gresham, the widow of Sir Thomas Gresham, the
+founder of the Royal Exchange.&nbsp; Previously to her marriage,
+she was the widow of William Rede, merchant, of London and
+Beccles.&nbsp; Under James I. and Bishop Wren, men of integrity
+and conscience fared worse than under Queen Elizabeth, and
+naturally the people thus persecuted formed themselves into a
+Church.&nbsp; That in Beccles dated from 1652, and in the
+covenant drawn up on the occasion we find it was resolved:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;1.&nbsp; That we will for ever acknowledge and admit
+the Lord to be our God in Jesus Christ, giving up ourselves to
+Him to be His people.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;2.&nbsp; That we will alwaies endevour, through the
+grace of God assisting us, to walke in all His waies and
+ordinances, according to His written Word, which is the only
+sufficient rule of good life for every man.&nbsp; Neither will we
+suffer ourselves to be polluted by any sinful waies, either
+publike or private, but endeavour to abstaine from the very
+appearance of evill, giving no offence to the Jew or Gentile, or
+the Churches of Christ.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;3.&nbsp; That we will humbly and willingly submit <!--
+page 85--><a name="page85"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+85</span>ourselves to the government of Christ in this
+Church&mdash;in the administration of the Word, the seals, and
+discipline.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;4.&nbsp; That we will in all love approve our communion
+as brethren by watching over one another, and as such shall be;
+counsel, administer, relieve, assist, and bear with one another,
+serving one another in love.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;5.&nbsp; Lastly, we do not covenant or promise these
+things in our own, but in Christ&rsquo;s strength; neither do we
+confine ourselves to the words of this covenant, but shall at all
+time account it our duty to embrace any further light or covenant
+which shall be revealed to us out of God&rsquo;s Word.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This covenant, however, was not to prevent in after time
+censure being cast on others who, endeavouring to preserve its
+spirit, were led to think differently from the majority.&nbsp;
+For instance, we find in 1656 two persons, who had been members
+of the Independent church at Beccles, received adult baptism, and
+in so doing were considered to have given &lsquo;offence&rsquo;
+to the church, and were desired to appear and give an account of
+their practices.</p>
+<p>At one time there was little of what we know as congregational
+singing.&nbsp; In 1657 it was agreed by the Beccles church
+&lsquo;that they do put in <!-- page 86--><a
+name="page86"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 86</span>practice the
+ordinance of singing in the publick upon the forenoon and
+afternoon of the Lord&rsquo;s daies, and that it be between
+praier and sermon; and also it was agreed that the New England
+translation of the Psalmes be made use of by the church at their
+times of breaking of bread, and it was agreed that the next
+Lord&rsquo;s day, seventh night, might be the day to enter upon
+the work of singing in publick.&rsquo;&nbsp; It is interesting to
+note that one of the pastors of the Beccles church was a Mr.
+Nokes, who had been trained&mdash;where Calamy and many others
+were trained&mdash;at the University of Utrecht, and that in the
+same year in which Dr. Watts accepted the pastoral office, he
+addressed to Mr. Nokes a poem on &lsquo;Friendship,&rsquo; which
+is still included in the Doctor&rsquo;s works.&nbsp; Dissent,
+when I was a boy, was considered low.&nbsp; We were
+contemptuously termed &lsquo;pograms,&rsquo; a term of reproach
+the origin of which I have never learnt.&nbsp; The landed gentry,
+the small squires, the lawyers and the doctors, and the
+tradespeople who pandered to their prejudices and fattened on
+their patronage, were slow to say a word in favour of a
+Dissenter.&nbsp; The poor who went to chapel were excluded from
+many benefits enjoyed by their fellow-parishioners.&nbsp; It was
+the fashion to treat them with scorn, yet I <!-- page 87--><a
+name="page87"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 87</span>have heard
+one of the most excellent and finished gentlemen in the district
+declare that he heard better talk in my father&rsquo;s parlour
+than he did anywhere else in the neighbourhood, and I can well
+believe it, for the Dissenting minister, as a rule, at that time,
+was a better read man, and a more studious one, than the
+clergyman of the district, in spite of his University education;
+and in matters affecting the welfare of the nation, and that came
+under the denomination of politics, his views were far more
+rational than those of Churchmen in general, and the clergy in
+particular.&nbsp; We learn from Milton&rsquo;s State Papers that
+the churches of East Anglia petitioned Oliver Cromwell that the
+three nations might enjoy the blessings of a godly, upright
+magistracy; that they might have Courts of Judicature in their
+own country; and that honest men of known fidelity and
+uprightness might be authorized to determine trivial matters of
+debt or difference.&nbsp; Assuredly the East Anglian
+saints&mdash;the latter term was, and, strange to say, is still,
+used as a term of reproach&mdash;were wise and right-thinking men
+where Church government and public policy were concerned.&nbsp;
+We love to read the story of the Pilgrim Fathers.&nbsp; With what
+rapture Mrs. Hemans wrote:</p>
+<blockquote><p><!-- page 88--><a name="page88"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 88</span>&lsquo;What sought they thus afar?<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Bright jewels of the mine?<br />
+The wealth of seas? the spoils of war?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; They sought a faith&rsquo;s pure shrine.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Ay, call it holy ground,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The soil where first they trod;<br />
+They left unstained what there they found&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Freedom to worship
+God</span>.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>But it seems to me that a greater glory was won by, and a
+greater honour should be paid to, the men who did not cross the
+Atlantic; who did not seek an asylum in a foreign land; who
+remained at home to suffer&mdash;to die, if need be, to uphold
+the rights of conscience, and to fight the good fight of
+faith.&nbsp; It is not even in our tolerant, and, as we deem it,
+more enlightened day, that full justice is done to these
+men.&nbsp; In what calls itself good society you meet men and
+women whose ancestors were Dissenters, and yet who are ashamed of
+the fact&mdash;a fact of which no one can be ashamed who feels
+how in East Anglia, at any rate, the religious teaching of
+Dissent purified the life of the people, enlarged their political
+views, and helped this great land of ours to sweep into a better
+and a younger day.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 89--><a name="page89"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+89</span>CHAPTER IV.<br />
+<span class="smcap">politics and theology</span>.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Homerton academy&mdash;W. Johnson Fox,
+M.P.&mdash;Politics in 1830&mdash;Anti-Corn Law
+speeches&mdash;Wonderful oratory.</p>
+<p>About 1830 there was, if not a good deal of actual light let
+into such dark places as our Suffolk village&mdash;where it was
+considered the whole duty of man, as regards the poor, to attend
+church and make a bow to their betters (a rustic ceremony
+generally performed by pulling the lock of hair on the forehead
+with the right hand), and to be grateful for the wretched station
+of life in which they were placed&mdash;at any rate, a great
+shaking among the dry bones.&nbsp; One summer morning an awe fell
+on the parish as it ran from one to another that the guard of the
+Yarmouth and London Royal Mail had left word with the ostler at
+the Spread Eagle that George the Fourth was dead; then a certain
+dull sound as of cannon firing afar off had been wafted across
+the German Ocean, and had <!-- page 90--><a
+name="page90"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 90</span>given rise to
+mysterious speculations on the subject of Continental wars, in
+which Suffolk lads might have to &lsquo;&rsquo;list&rsquo; as
+&lsquo;sogers&rsquo;; and last of all there came that grand
+excitement when&mdash;North and South, East and West&mdash;the
+nation rose as one man to demand political and Parliamentary
+Reform.&nbsp; It was a delusion, perhaps, that cry, but it was a
+glorious one, nevertheless; that the millennium could be delayed
+when we had Parliamentary Reform no one for a moment
+doubted.&nbsp; The sad but undeniable fact that mostly men are
+fools with whom beer is omnipotent had not then entered into
+men&rsquo;s minds, and thus England and Scotland some sixty years
+ago wore an aspect of activity and enthusiasm of which the
+present generation can have no idea, and which, perhaps, can
+never occur again.</p>
+<p>Far away in the distant city which the Suffolk villagers
+called Lunnon, there was a Suffolk lad, whose relations kept a
+very little shop just by us, who was born at
+Uggeshall&mdash;pronounced Ouchell by the common people&mdash;on
+a very small farm, and who, as Unitarian preacher and newspaper
+writer, had been and was doing his best in the good cause; but it
+was not the influence of W. Johnson Fox&mdash;for it is of him I
+write&mdash;that did much in our little <!-- page 91--><a
+name="page91"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 91</span>village to
+leaven the mass with the leaven of Reform.&nbsp; While quite a
+lad the Foxes went to Norwich, where the future preacher and
+teacher worked as a weaver boy.&nbsp; In after-years it was often
+my privilege to meet Mr. Fox, who had then attained no small
+share of London distinction, amongst whose hearers were men,
+often many of the most distinguished <i>literati</i> of the
+day&mdash;such as Dickens and Forster&mdash;and who was actually
+to sit in Parliament as M.P. for Oldham, where, old as he
+was&mdash;and Mr. Gladstone says, &lsquo;People who wish to
+succeed in Parliament should enter it young&rsquo;&mdash;he
+occupied a most respectable position, all the more creditable
+when you remember that Parliament, even at that recent date, was
+a far more select and aristocratic assembly than any Parliament
+of our day, or of the future, can possibly be.&nbsp; Mr. Fox had
+been educated at Homerton Academy&mdash;as such places were then
+termed (college is the word we use now)&mdash;under the good and
+venerable Dr. Pye-Smith, whose &lsquo;Scripture Testimony to the
+Messiah&rsquo; was supposed to have given Unitarianism a deadly
+blow, but whom I chiefly remember as a very deaf old man, and one
+of the first to recognise the fact that the Bible and geology
+were not necessarily opposed to each other, <!-- page 92--><a
+name="page92"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 92</span>and to
+welcome and proclaim the truth&mdash;at that time received with
+fear and trembling, if received at all&mdash;that the God of
+Nature and the God of Revelation were the same.&nbsp; There was a
+good deal of free inquiry at Homerton Academy, which, however,
+Mr. Fox assured me, gradually subsided into the right amount of
+orthodoxy as the time came for the student to exchange his sure
+and safe retreat for the fiery ordeal of the deacon and the
+pew.&nbsp; My father and Johnson Fox had been fellow-students,
+and for some time corresponded together.&nbsp; The correspondence
+in due time, however, naturally ceased, as it was chiefly
+controversial, and nothing can be more irksome than for two
+people who have made up their minds, and whom nothing can change,
+to be arguing continually, and the friendship between them in
+some sense ceased as the one remained firm to, and the other
+wandered farther and farther from, the modified Calvinism of the
+Wrentham Church and pulpit, where, as in all orthodox pulpits at
+that time, it was taught that men were villains by necessity, and
+fools, as it were, by a Divine thrusting on; that for some a
+Saviour had been crucified, that there might be a way of escape
+from the wrath of an angry and unforgiving God; whilst for the
+<!-- page 93--><a name="page93"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+93</span>vast mass&mdash;to whom the name of Christ had never
+been made known, to whom the Bible had never been
+sent&mdash;there was an impending doom, the awful horror of which
+no tongue could tell, no imagination conceive.&nbsp; But to the
+last Mr. Fox&mdash;especially if you met him with his
+old-fashioned hat on in the street&mdash;looked far more of a
+Puritan divine than of the literary man, or the chief of the
+advanced thinkers in Church and State, or an M.P.&nbsp; At a
+later time what pleasure it gave me to listen to this
+distinguished East Anglian as he appeared at the crowded
+Anti-Corn Law meetings held in Covent Garden or Drury Lane!&nbsp;
+Ungainly in figure, monotonous in tone, almost without a particle
+of action, regarded as free in his religious opinions by the vast
+majority of his audience, who were, at that time, prone, even in
+London, to hold that Orthodoxy, like Charity, covered a multitude
+of sins.&nbsp; What an orator he was!&nbsp; How smoothly the
+sentences fell from his lips one after the other; with what happy
+wit did he expose Protectionist fallacies, or enunciate Free
+Trade principles, which up to that time had been held as the
+special property of the philosopher, far too subtle to be
+understood and appreciated by the mob!&nbsp; With what felicity
+did he illustrate his weighty theme; with <!-- page 94--><a
+name="page94"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 94</span>what
+clearness did he bring home to the people the wrong and injustice
+done to every one of them by the landlord&rsquo;s attempt to keep
+up his rent by a tax on corn; and then with what glowing
+enthusiasm did they wait and listen for the climax, which, if
+studied, and perhaps artificial, seemed like the ocean wave to
+grow grander and larger the nearer it came, till it fell with
+resistless force on all around.&nbsp; It seems to me like a
+dream, all that distant and almost unrecorded past.&nbsp; I see
+no such meetings, I hear no such orators now.&nbsp; As Mr.
+Disraeli said of Lord Salisbury when he was Lord Robert Cecil,
+there was a want of finish about his style, and the remark holds
+good of the orator of to-day as contrasted with the platform
+speaker of the past.&nbsp; It is impossible to fancy anyone in
+our sober age attempting, to say nothing of succeeding in the
+attempt (my remarks, of course, do not apply to Irish audiences
+or Irish orators), to get an audience to rise <i>en masse</i> and
+swear never to fold their arms, never to relax their efforts,
+till their end was gained and victory won; yet Mr. Fox did so,
+and long as I live shall I remember the night when, in response
+to his impassioned appeal, the whole house&mdash;and it was
+crowded to the ceiling&mdash;rose, ladies in the boxes, decent
+City men in the pit, gods in <!-- page 95--><a
+name="page95"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 95</span>the
+gallery&mdash;to swear never to tire, never to rest, never to
+slacken, till the peasant at the plough, the cotton-spinner in
+the mill, the collier in the mine, the lone widow stitching for
+life far into the early morning in her wretched garret, and the
+pauper in his still more wretched cellar, ate their untaxed
+loaf.&nbsp; As the &lsquo;Publicola&rsquo; of the <i>Weekly
+Dispatch</i>, Mr. Fox laboured to the end of his life in the good
+cause of Peace, Retrenchment, and Reform.&nbsp; It is not right
+that his memory should remain unrecorded&mdash;his life assuredly
+was an interesting one.&nbsp; Harriet Martineau writes in her
+autobiography that &lsquo;his editorial correspondence with me
+was unquestionably the reason, and in great measure the cause, of
+the greatest intellectual progress I ever made before the age of
+thirty.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>But it was not from William Johnson Fox that at that time came
+to our small village the grain of light that was to leaven the
+lump around.&nbsp; Lecturing and oratory, and even public
+tea-meetings, were things almost unknown.&nbsp; Now and then a
+deputation from the London Missionary Society came to Wrentham,
+and in this way I remember William Ellis, then a missionary from
+Madagascar, and Mr. George Bennett, who, in conjunction with the
+Rev. Mr. Tyerman, had been on a tour of <!-- page 96--><a
+name="page96"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 96</span>inspection to
+the islands of the South Seas, and to whose tales of travel
+rustic audiences listened with delight.&nbsp; Once upon a
+time&mdash;but that was later&mdash;the Religious Tract Society
+sent a deputation in the shape of a well-known travelling
+secretary, Mr. Jones.&nbsp; This Mr. Jones was inclined to
+corpulency, and I can well remember how we all laughed when, on
+one occasion, the daughter of a neighbouring minister, having
+opened the door in reply to his knock, ran delightedly into her
+papa&rsquo;s study to announce the arrival of the Tract
+Society!</p>
+<p>A great impression was also made in all parts of the country
+by the occasional appearances of the Anti-Slavery Society&rsquo;s
+lecturers.&nbsp; In 1831, as Sir G. Stephen tells us, the younger
+section of the Anti-Slavery body resolved to stir up the country
+by sending lecturers to the villages and towns of the
+country.&nbsp; The M.P.&rsquo;s did not much like it.&nbsp; The
+idea was novel to them.&nbsp; &lsquo;Trust to Parliament,&rsquo;
+said they; the outsiders replied, &lsquo;Trust to the
+people.&rsquo;&nbsp; This scheme of agitation, however, was
+rejected, and would have fallen to the ground had not a
+benevolent Quaker of the name of Cropper come forward.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Friend S., what money dost thou want?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;I want &pound;20,000, but I will <!-- page 97--><a
+name="page97"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 97</span>begin if I
+can get one.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Then, I will give thee
+&pound;500.&rsquo;&nbsp; Joseph Sturge immediately followed with
+a promise of &pound;250, and Mr. Wilberforce twenty guineas; and
+&pound;1,000 was raised, and competent agents sent out.&nbsp; It
+proved by no means an easy matter to obtain these lecturers, for
+their duty was not confined to lecturing; they had also to revive
+drooping anti-slavery societies and to establish new ones.&nbsp;
+Also they were to have collections at the end of every
+lecture.&nbsp; One of them who came to Wrentham was Captain
+Pilkington.&nbsp; &lsquo;Pilkington,&rsquo; writes Sir George
+Stephen, &lsquo;was a pleasing lecturer, and won over many by his
+amiable manners; but he wanted power, and resigned in six
+months.&rsquo;&nbsp; We in Wrentham, however, did not think so,
+and I can to this day recall the sensation he created in our
+rustic minds as he described the horrors of slavery, and showed
+us the whip and chains by which those horrors were caused.&nbsp;
+To the Dissenting chapel most of these lecturers were indebted
+for their audience, and if I ever worked hard as a boy, it was to
+get signatures to anti-slavery petitions.&nbsp; Naturally, a
+Church parson came to regard all that was attacked by Reformers
+as a bulwark of the Establishment, and in our part the
+Meetingers&rsquo; were the sole friends of the slave.</p>
+<p><!-- page 98--><a name="page98"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+98</span>As was to be expected, the reading of the village was of
+the most limited description.&nbsp; It is true we children jumped
+for joy as once a month came the carrier&rsquo;s cart from
+Beccles, with the books for the club&mdash;the <i>Evangelical
+Magazine</i>, for all the principal families of the congregation,
+and the <i>Penny Magazine</i> and <i>Chambers&rsquo;s
+Journal</i>&mdash;then but in their infancy&mdash;for ourselves;
+but, apart from that, there was no reading worth
+mentioning.&nbsp; That which most astonishes the tourist in
+Ireland is the way in which people read the newspapers.&nbsp; In
+our Suffolk village the very reverse was the case, partly because
+there were few newspapers to read, partly because there were few
+to read them, and partly because they were dear to buy.&nbsp; The
+one paper which we took in was the <i>Suffolk Chronicle</i>,
+which made its appearance on Saturday morning, the price of which
+was sixpence, and which was edited by a sturdy Radical of the
+name of King, who to the last held to the belief that to have a
+London letter full of literary or critical talk for the Suffolk
+farmers was, not to put too fine a point on it, to throw pearls
+before swine.&nbsp; And perhaps he was right.&nbsp; I can well
+remember, when one of my early poetical contributions appeared in
+its columns, how a fear was expressed to me by a farmer&rsquo;s
+widow in <!-- page 99--><a name="page99"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 99</span>our parish, lest &lsquo;it had cost
+me a lot o&rsquo; money&rsquo; to have that effort of my muse in
+print.&nbsp; Mr. Childs, of Bungay, had many experiences, equally
+rustic and still more illustrative of the simplicity of the
+class.&nbsp; Once upon a time one of them came in a great state
+of excitement for a copy of the &lsquo;Life of Mr. General
+Gazetteer.&rsquo;&nbsp; On another occasion a farmer&rsquo;s wife
+came in search of a Testament.&nbsp; She wanted it directly, and
+she wanted it of a large type.&nbsp; A specimen was selected,
+which met with the worthy woman&rsquo;s approval.&nbsp; But the
+question was, could she have it in half an hour, as she would be
+away for that time shopping in the town, and would call for it on
+her return.&nbsp; She was told that she could, and great was her
+astonishment when, on calling on her return for the Testament,
+there it was, printed in the particular type she had selected,
+ready for her use.</p>
+<p>I have a very strong idea that the calm of the country and the
+peaceful occupations of the people had not a very rousing
+influence upon the intellect.&nbsp; I may go further, and say
+that the cares of the farm, when high farming was unknown, did
+not much lift at that time the master above the man.&nbsp; The
+latter wore a smock-frock, while the former, perhaps, sported a
+blue coat with brass buttons, and had rather a better kind of
+head-dress, and <!-- page 100--><a name="page100"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 100</span>ambled along on a little steady cob,
+that knew at which ale-house to call for the regular allowance,
+quite as well as his master.&nbsp; But as regards
+talk&mdash;which was chiefly of bullocks and pigs&mdash;well,
+there really was no very great difference after all.&nbsp; To
+such religion was the mainspring which kept the whole intellect
+going; and religion was to be had at the meeting.&nbsp; And I can
+well remember how strange it seemed to me that these rough,
+simple, untutored sons of the soil could speak of it with
+enthusiasm, and could pray, at any rate, with astonishing
+fervour.&nbsp; Away from the influence of the meeting-house there
+existed a B&oelig;otian state of mind, only to be excited by
+appeals to the senses of the most palpable character, a state of
+mind in which faith&mdash;the evidence of things not seen,
+according to Paul&mdash;was quite out of the question; and I
+regret to say that, notwithstanding the activity of the last
+fifty years and the praiseworthy and laborious efforts of the
+East Anglian clergy in all quarters, suitably to rouse and feed
+the intellect of the East Anglian peasantry, a good deal yet
+remains to be done.&nbsp; Only a year or two ago, riding on an
+omnibus in a Suffolk village, the driver asked me if people could
+go to America by land.&nbsp; &lsquo;Of course not,&rsquo; was my
+reply.&nbsp; &lsquo;Why do you ask such a <!-- page 101--><a
+name="page101"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+101</span>question?&rsquo;&nbsp; Well, it came out that he had
+&lsquo;heerd tell how people got to Americay in ten days; and he
+did not see how they could do that unless they went by land, and
+had good hosses to get &rsquo;em there at that time.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+On my explaining the real state of affairs, he admitted, by way
+of apology, that he was not much of a traveller himself.&nbsp;
+Once he had been to Colchester; but that was a long time ago.</p>
+<p>But to return to the <i>Suffolk Chronicle</i>.&nbsp; It was my
+duty as a lad, when it had been duly studied at home, to take it
+to the next subscriber, and I fancy by the time the paper had
+gone its round it was not a little the worse for wear.&nbsp; But
+there were other political impulses which tended to create and
+feed the sacred flame of civil and religious liberty.&nbsp; In
+one corner of the village lived a small shopkeeper, who stored
+away, among his pots and pans of treacle and sugar and grocery, a
+few well-thumbed copies, done up in dirty brown paper, of the
+squibs and caricatures published by Hone, whom I can just
+remember, a red-faced old gentleman in black, in the
+<i>Patriot</i> office, and George Cruikshank, with whom I was to
+spend many a merry hour in after-life.&nbsp; This small
+shopkeeper was one of the chapel people&mdash;a kind of
+superintendent in the Sunday-school, for which office he <!--
+page 102--><a name="page102"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+102</span>was by no means fitted, but there was no one else to
+take the berth, and as the family also dealt with him in many
+ways, I had often to repair to his shop.&nbsp; It was then our
+young eyes were opened as to the wickedness in high places by the
+perusal of the &lsquo;Political House that Jack built,&rsquo; and
+other publications of a similar revolutionary character.&nbsp;
+Nothing is sacred to the caricaturist, and half a century ago
+bishops and statesmen and lords and kings were very fair subjects
+for the exercise of his art.&nbsp; In our day things have changed
+for the better, partly as the result of the Radical efforts, of
+which respectability at that time stood so much in awe.&nbsp;
+London newspapers rarely reached so far as Wrentham.&nbsp; It was
+the fashion then to look to Ipswich for light and leading.&nbsp;
+However, as the cry for reform increased in strength, and the
+debates inside the House of Commons and out waxed fiercer, now
+and then even a London newspaper found its way into our house,
+and I can well remember how our hearts glowed within us as some
+one of us read, while father smoked his usual after-dinner pipe,
+previous to going out to spend the afternoon visiting his sick
+and afflicted; and how such names as Earl Grey, and Lord John
+Russell, and Lord Brougham&mdash;the people then called him <!--
+page 103--><a name="page103"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+103</span>Harry Brougham; it was a pity that he was ever anything
+else&mdash;were familiar in our mouths as household words.</p>
+<p>In another way also there came to the children in Wrentham the
+growing perception of a larger world than that in which we lived,
+and moved, and had our being.&nbsp; One of the historic sites of
+East Anglia is Framlingham, a small market town, lying a little
+off the highroad to London, a few miles from what always seemed
+to me the very uninteresting village of Needham Market, though at
+one time Godwin, the author of &lsquo;Caleb Williams,&rsquo;
+preached in the chapel there.&nbsp; There is now a public school
+for Suffolk boys at Framlingham, and it may yet make a noise in
+the world.&nbsp; Framlingham in our time has given London Mr.
+Jeaffreson, a successful man of letters, and Sir Henry Thompson,
+a still more successful surgeon.&nbsp; In my young days it was
+chiefly noted for its castle.&nbsp; The mother of that amiable
+and excellent lady, Mrs. Trimmer, also came from Framlingham; and
+it is to be hoped that the old town may have had something to do
+with the formation of the character of a woman whom now we should
+sneer at, perhaps, as goody-goody, but who, when George the Third
+was King, did much for the education and improvement <!-- page
+104--><a name="page104"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 104</span>of
+the young.&nbsp; I read in Mrs. Trimmer&rsquo;s life &lsquo;that
+her father was a man of an excellent understanding, and of great
+piety; and so high was his reputation for knowledge of divinity,
+and so exemplary his moral conduct, that, as an exception to
+their general rule, which admitted no laymen, he was chosen
+member of a clerical club in the town (Ipswich) in which he
+resided.&nbsp; From him,&rsquo; continues the biographer of the
+daughter, &lsquo;she imbibed the purest sentiments of religion
+and virtue, and learnt betimes the fundamental principles of
+Christianity.&rsquo;&nbsp; Well, it is hoped Mr. Kirby did his
+best for his daughter; but, after all, how much more potent is
+the influence of a mother!&nbsp; And hence I may claim for
+Framlingham a fair share in the formation of even so burning and
+shining a light as Mrs. Trimmer.</p>
+<p>The name Framlingham, say the learned, or did say&mdash;for
+what learned men say at one time does not always correspond with
+what they say at another&mdash;is composed of two Saxon words,
+signifying the habitation of strangers; and to strangers the
+place is still rich in interest.&nbsp; In its church sleeps the
+unfortunate, but heroic, Earl of Surrey, whose harmonious verse
+still delights the students of English literature.&nbsp; Some say
+he was born at <!-- page 105--><a name="page105"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 105</span>Framlingham.&nbsp; This is matter of
+doubt; but there is no doubt about the fact that he was buried
+there by his son, the Earl of Northampton, who erected a handsome
+monument to his father&rsquo;s memory.&nbsp; The monument is an
+elevated tomb, with the Earl&rsquo;s arms and those of his lady
+in the front in the angles, and with an inscription in the
+centre.&nbsp; It has his effigy in armour, with an ermined
+mantle, his feet leaning against a lion couchant.&nbsp; On his
+left is his lady in black, with an ermined mantle and a
+coronet.&nbsp; Both have their hands held up as in prayer.&nbsp;
+On a projecting plinth in front is the figure of his second son,
+the Earl of Northampton, in armour, with a mantle of ermine,
+kneeling in prayer.&nbsp; Behind, in a similar plinth, kneeling
+with a coronet, and in robes, is his eldest daughter, Jane,
+Countess of Westmoreland, on the right; and his third daughter
+Catherine, the wife of Lord Henry Berkeley on the left.&nbsp; The
+monument is kept in order, and painted occasionally, as directed
+by the Earl of Northampton, out of the endowment of his hospital
+at Greenwich.&nbsp; In repairing the monument in October, 1835,
+the Rev. George Attwood, curate of Framlingham, discovered the
+remains of the Earl lying embedded in clay, directly under his
+figure on his tomb.&nbsp; It is <!-- page 106--><a
+name="page106"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 106</span>difficult
+now to find what high treason the chivalrous and poetic and
+gallant Earl had been guilty of; but at that time our eighth
+Henry ruled the land, and if he wished anyone out of the way, he
+had not far to go for witnesses or judge or jury ready to do his
+wicked and wanton will.&nbsp; To the shame of England be it said,
+the Earl of Surrey was beheaded when he was only thirty years of
+age.&nbsp; No particulars are preserved of his deportment in
+prison or on the scaffold, but from the noble spirit he evinced
+at his trial, and from his general character, it cannot be
+doubted that he behaved in the last scene of his existence with
+fortitude and dignity.&nbsp; On the barbarous injustice to which
+he was sacrificed comment is unnecessary; but regret at his early
+fate is increased by the circumstance that Henry was in
+extremities when he ordered his execution, and that his swollen
+and enfeebled hands were unequal to the task of signing his
+death-warrant.&nbsp; In this respect more fortunate was the
+father of Surrey, the Duke of Norfolk, who is buried near the
+altar of the church at Framlingham.&nbsp; He also was condemned
+to death, but in the meanwhile the King died, and his victim was
+set free.&nbsp; Not far off is the tomb of Henry Fitzroy, a
+natural son of King Henry.&nbsp; He <!-- page 107--><a
+name="page107"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 107</span>was a
+friend of Surrey, and was to have married his sister.&nbsp; The
+other monuments which adorn the interior of this magnificent
+church are a table of black marble, supported by angels, to the
+memory of Sir Robert Hitcham, a mural monument by Roubillac, and
+others to commemorate virtues and graces, as embodied in the
+lives of decent men and women in whom the world has long ceased
+to take any interest.</p>
+<p>The venerable castle&mdash;here I quote Dr. Dugdale&rsquo;s
+&lsquo;British Traveller&rsquo;&mdash;with its eventful history,
+imparts the strongest interest to the town of Framlingham.&nbsp;
+Tradition refers its origin to the sixth century, and ascribes it
+to Redwald, one of the early Saxon monarchs.&nbsp; St. Edmund the
+Martyr fled hither in 870, and was besieged by the Danes, who
+took Framlingham and held it fifty years.&nbsp; The Norman King
+gave the castle to the Bigods.&nbsp; The castle passed through
+many hands.&nbsp; It was there Queen Mary took shelter when,
+after the death of Edward VI., Lady Jane Grey was called to the
+throne, and thence she came to London, on the capture of the
+former, to take possession of the crown.&nbsp; It was an evil day
+for England when she came to Framlingham Castle and beguiled the
+hearts of the Suffolk men.&nbsp; Old <!-- page 108--><a
+name="page108"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 108</span>Fox tells
+us that when Mary had returned to her castle at Framlingham there
+resorted to her &lsquo;the Suffolke men, who, being alwayes
+forward in promoting the proceedings of the Gospel, promised her
+their aid and help, so that she would not attempt the alteration
+of the religion which her brother, King Edward, had before
+established by laws and orders publickly enacted, and received by
+the consent of the whole realm in his behalf.&nbsp; She
+afterwards agreed with such promise made unto them that no
+innovation should be made of religion, as that no man would or
+could then have misdoubted her.&nbsp; &ldquo;Victorious by the
+aid of the Suffolke men,&rdquo; Queen Mary soon forgot her
+promise.&nbsp; They of course remonstrated.&nbsp; It was,
+methinks,&rsquo; adds Fox, &lsquo;an heavie word that she
+answered to the Suffolke men afterwards which did make
+supplication unto her grace to performe her promise.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;For so much,&rdquo; saith she, &ldquo;as you being but
+members desire to rule your head, you shall one day perceive the
+members must obey their head, and not look to rule over the
+same.&rdquo;&rsquo;&nbsp; Well, Queen Mary was as good as her
+word.&nbsp; As Fox adds, &lsquo;What she performed on her part
+the thing itself and the whole story of the persecution doth
+testifie.&rsquo;&nbsp; But the stubborn Suffolk gospellers were
+<!-- page 109--><a name="page109"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+109</span>not to be put down, and a remnant had been left in
+Framlingham, as well as in other parts of the country.&nbsp; At
+Framlingham we find a Richard Goltie, son-in-law of Samuel Ward,
+of Ipswich, was instituted to the rectory in 1630.&nbsp; In 1650
+he refused the engagement to submit to the then existing
+Government, and was removed, when Henry Sampson, M.A., a fellow
+of Pembroke Hall, Cambridge, was appointed by his college to the
+vacancy.&nbsp; He continued there till the Restoration, when Mr.
+Goltie returned and took possession of the living, which he
+continued to hold till his death.&nbsp; Not being satisfied to
+conform, Mr. Sampson continued awhile preaching at Framlingham to
+those who were attached to his ministry, in private houses and
+other buildings, and by his labours laid the foundation of the
+Congregational or Independent Church in that town, as appears
+from a note in the Church Book belonging to the Dissenters
+meeting at Woodbridge, in the Quay Lane.&nbsp; Mr. Sampson
+collected materials for a history of Nonconformity, a great part
+of which is incorporated in Calamy and Palmer&rsquo;s
+works.&nbsp; It was to him that John Fairfax, of Needham Market,
+wrote, when he and some other ministers were shut up in Bury Gaol
+for the crime of preaching the Gospel.&nbsp; <!-- page 110--><a
+name="page110"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 110</span>It appears
+that they had met in the parish church, at Walsham-le-Willows,
+where, after the liturgy was read by the clergyman of the parish,
+a sermon was preached by a non-licensed minister.&nbsp; The party
+were then taken and committed to prison, where they remained till
+the next Quarter Sessions, when they were released upon their
+recognisances to appear at the next Assizes.&nbsp; Then, it
+seems, though not convicted upon any other offence, upon the
+suggestion of the justices, to whom they were strangers, they
+were committed again to prison, on the plea that <i>they were
+persons dangerous to the public peace</i>.&nbsp; Thus were
+Dissenters treated in the good old times.&nbsp; Mr. Sampson seems
+to have fared somewhat better.&nbsp; After his removal, he
+travelled on the Continent, returned to London, entered himself
+at the College of Physicians, and lived and died in good
+repute.&nbsp; The old congregation having become Unitarian, a new
+one was formed, and of this Church a pillar was Mr. Henry
+Thompson&mdash;a gentleman well known and widely honoured in his
+day.&nbsp; This Mr. Thompson had a son, who was sent to Wrentham
+to be educated for awhile with myself.&nbsp; An uncle of his, one
+of the most amiable of men, lived at Southwold, close by, and I
+presume it was by his means that the settlement was <!-- page
+111--><a name="page111"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+111</span>effected.&nbsp; Be that as it may, the change was a
+welcome one, as it gave me a pleasant companion for nearly five
+years of boyish life.&nbsp; I confess my two sisters&mdash;one of
+whom has, alas! long been in her grave&mdash;did all they could
+in the way of sports and pastimes to meet my wants and wishes,
+and act like boys; but the fact is, though it may be doubted in
+these days of Women&rsquo;s Rights, girls are not boys, nor can
+they be expected to behave as such.</p>
+<p>I confess the advent of this young Thompson from Framlingham
+was a great event in our small family circle.&nbsp; In the first
+place he came from a town, and that at once gave him a marked
+superiority.&nbsp; Then his father kept a horse and gig, for it
+was thus young Thompson came to Wrentham, and all the world over
+a gig has been a symbol of the respectability dear to the British
+heart; and he had been for that time and as an only son carefully
+and intelligently trained by one of the family who, in the person
+of the late Edward Miall, founder of the <i>Nonconformist</i>,
+and M.P. for Bradford, was supposed to be the incarnation of what
+was termed the dissidence of Dissent.&nbsp; Young Thompson was
+also what would be called a genteel youth, and gave me ideas as
+to wearing straps to my trousers, oiling my hair, and generally
+adorning <!-- page 112--><a name="page112"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 112</span>my person, which had never entered
+into my unsophisticated head.&nbsp; He also had been to London,
+and as Framlingham was some twenty miles nearer the
+Metropolis&mdash;the centre of intelligence&mdash;than Wrentham,
+the intelligence of a Framlingham lad was of course expected,
+<i>&agrave; fortiori</i>, to be of a stronger character than that
+of one born twenty miles farther from the sun of London.&nbsp;
+There was also a good deal of talent in the family on the
+mother&rsquo;s side.&nbsp; Mrs. Thompson was a Miss Medley, and
+Mr. Medley was an artist of great merit, the son of Mr. Medley,
+of Liverpool, a leading Baptist minister in his day, and a writer
+of hymns still sung in Baptist churches.&nbsp; Mr. Medley was
+also active as a Liberal, and was credited by us boys with a
+personal acquaintance with no less illustrious an individual than
+the great Brougham himself.&nbsp; Once or twice he came to lodge
+during the summer at Southwold; naturally he was visited there by
+his grandson, who would return well primed with political
+anecdote to our rustic circle, and was deemed by me more of an
+authority than ever.&nbsp; Once or twice, too, I had the honour
+of being a visitor, and heard Mr. Medley, a fine old gentleman,
+who lived to a very advanced age, talk of art and artists and
+other matters quite out of <!-- page 113--><a
+name="page113"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 113</span>my usual
+sphere.&nbsp; It is not surprising, then, that the grandson
+became in time quite an artist himself, though he is better known
+to the world, not so much in that capacity, but as Sir Henry
+Thompson, certainly not the least distinguished surgeon of our
+day.&nbsp; In Lord Beaconsfield&rsquo;s last novel,
+&lsquo;Endymion,&rsquo; we have a passing reference to one
+Wrentham lad, Sir Charles Wetherell, as &lsquo;the eccentric and
+too uncompromising Wetherell.&rsquo;&nbsp; Assuredly the fame of
+another lad, Sir Henry Thompson, connected with Wrentham, will
+longer live.</p>
+<p>This reference to Sir Henry Thompson reminds me of his early
+attempts at rhyme, which I trust he will forgive me for rescuing
+from oblivion.&nbsp; Once upon a time we captured a young cuckoo,
+and having carefully gorged it with bread-and-milk, and left it
+in a nest in an outhouse, which we devoted mainly to rabbits, the
+next morning the poor bird was found to be dead.&nbsp; A prize
+was offered for the best couplet.&nbsp; Three of us
+contended.&nbsp; My sister wrote:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;This lonely sepulchre contains<br />
+A little cuckoo&rsquo;s dead remains.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I wrote:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;To our grief, cuckoo sweet<br />
+Is lying underneath our feet.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><!-- page 114--><a name="page114"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+114</span>Thompson took quite a different and, read by the light
+of his subsequent career, a far more characteristic view of the
+case.&nbsp; He took care, as a medical man, to dwell on the cause
+which had terminated the career of so interesting a bird.&nbsp;
+According to him,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;It had a breast as soft as silk,<br />
+And died of eating bread-and-milk.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Assuredly in this case the child was father to the man.</p>
+<p>But the great awakening of the time, that which made the dry
+bones live, and fluttered the dove-cotes of Toryism&mdash;we
+never heard the word Conservative then&mdash;was the General
+Election.&nbsp; At that time we were always having General
+Elections.&nbsp; We had one, of course, when George IV. died and
+King William reigned in his stead; we had another when the Duke
+was out and the Whigs came in; and then we had another when the
+cry ran through the land, and reached even the most remote
+villages of East Anglia, of &lsquo;The Bill, the whole Bill, and
+nothing but the Bill!&rsquo;&nbsp; Voters were brought down, or
+up, as the case might be, from all quarters of the land.&nbsp;
+Coaches-full came tearing along, gorgeous with election flags,
+and placarded all over with names of rival candidates.&nbsp; <!--
+page 115--><a name="page115"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+115</span>Gentlemen of ancient lineage called to request of the
+meanest elector the favour of his vote and influence.&nbsp; It
+was with pain the Liberals of our little village resolved to vote
+against our Benacre neighbour, Sir Thomas Gooch, who had long
+represented the county, but of whom the Radicals spoke derisively
+as Gaffer Gooch, or the Benacre Bull, and chose in his stead a
+country squire known as Robert Newton Shaw, utterly unknown in
+our quarter of the county.</p>
+<p>It was rather a trying time for the Wrentham Liberals and
+Dissenters to do their duty, for Sir Thomas was a neighbour, and
+always was a pleasant gentleman in the parish, and had power to
+do anyone mischief who went against him.&nbsp; Our medical man
+did not vote at all.&nbsp; Our squire actually, I believe,
+supported Sir Thomas, and altogether respectable people found
+themselves in an extremely awkward position.&nbsp; At Southwold
+the people were a little more independent, for Gaffer Gooch
+rarely illuminated that little town with his presence; and as my
+father, with the economy which is part and parcel of the
+Scotchman as he leaves his native land, but which rarely extends
+to his children, had, by teaching gentlemen&rsquo;s sons and
+other ways, been able to save a <!-- page 116--><a
+name="page116"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 116</span>little,
+which little had been devoted to the purchase of cottage property
+in Southwold (well do I remember the difficulty there was in
+collecting the rents; never, assuredly, were people so much
+afflicted or so unfortunate when the time of payment came), it
+was for Southwold that he claimed his vote.&nbsp; I, as the son,
+was permitted to share in the glories of that eventful day.&nbsp;
+The election took place at school-time, and my companion was
+Henry Thompson.&nbsp; We had to walk betimes to Frostenden, where
+Farmer Downing lived, who was that <i>rara avis</i> a Liberal
+tenant farmer; but of course he did not vote tenant farmer, but
+as a freeholder.&nbsp; It was with alarm that Mrs. Downing saw
+her lord and master drive off with us two lads in the gig.&nbsp;
+There had been riots at London, riots as near as Ipswich, and why
+not at Halesworth?&nbsp; A mile or two after we had started we
+met, per arrangement, the Southwold contingent, who joined us
+with flags flying and a band playing, and all the pride and pomp
+and circumstance of war.&nbsp; We rode in a gig, and our animal
+was a steady-going mare, and behaved as such; but all had not
+gigs or steady-going mares.&nbsp; Some were in carts, some were
+on horseback, some in ancient vehicles furbished up for the
+occasion; <!-- page 117--><a name="page117"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 117</span>and as the band played and the
+people shouted, some of the animals felt induced to dance, and
+especially was this restlessness on the part of the quadrupeds
+increased as we neared Halesworth, in the market-place of which
+was the polling-booth, and in the streets of which we out-lying
+voters riding in procession made quite a show.&nbsp; Halesworth,
+or Holser, as it was called, was distant about nine miles, lying
+to the left of Yoxford, a village which its admirers were wont to
+call the Garden of Suffolk.&nbsp; In 1809 the Bishop of Norwich
+wrote from Halesworth: &lsquo;The church in this place is
+uncommonly fine, and the ruins of an old castle (formerly the
+seat of the Howards) are striking and majestic.&rsquo;&nbsp; But
+when we went there the ruins were gone&mdash;the more is the
+pity&mdash;and the church remained, at that time held by no less
+a Liberal than Richard Whately, afterwards Archbishop of
+Dublin.&nbsp; I used at times to meet with a country
+gentleman&mdash;a brother of a noble lord&mdash;who after he had
+spent a fortune merrily, as country gentlemen did in the good old
+times, came to live on a small annuity, and, in spite of his
+enormous daily consumption of London porter at the leading inn of
+the town, managed to reach a good old age.&nbsp; The hon.
+gentleman and I were on <!-- page 118--><a
+name="page118"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 118</span>friendly
+terms, and sometimes he would talk of Whately, who had often been
+at his house.&nbsp; But, alas! he remembered nothing of a man who
+became so celebrated in his day except that he would eat after
+dinner any number of oranges, and was so fond of active exercise
+that he would take a pitchfork and fill his tumbrels with manure,
+or work just like a labourer on a farm.&nbsp; Of the
+Doctor&rsquo;s aversion to church-bell ringing we have a curious
+illustration in a letter which appeared in the <i>Suffolk
+Chronicle</i> in 1825: &lsquo;A short time since a wedding took
+place in the families of two of the oldest and most respectable
+inhabitants of the town, when it was understood that the Rector
+had, for the first time since his induction to his living, given
+permission for the bells to greet the happy pair.&nbsp; After,
+however, sounding a merry peal a short hour and a half, a message
+was received at the belfry that the Rector thought they had rung
+long enough.&nbsp; The tardiness with which this mandate was
+obeyed soon brought the rev. gentleman in person to enforce his
+order, which was then reluctantly complied with to the great
+disappointment of the inhabitants, and mortification of the
+ringers, several of whom had come from a considerable distance to
+assist in the festivities of the day.&rsquo;&nbsp; <!-- page
+119--><a name="page119"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+119</span>The Independent chapel was an old-fashioned
+meeting-house, full of heavy pillars, which, as they intercepted
+the view of the preacher, were favourable to that gentle sleep so
+peculiarly refreshing on a Sunday afternoon&mdash;especially in
+hot weather&mdash;in the square and commodious family pew.&nbsp;
+The minister was an old and venerable-looking divine of the name
+of Dennant, who was always writing little poems&mdash;I remember
+the opening lines of one,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;A while ago when I was nought,<br />
+And neither body, soul, nor thought&rsquo;&mdash;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>and whose &lsquo;Soul Prosperity,&rsquo; a volume of sober
+prose, reached a second edition.&nbsp; His grandson, Mr. J. R.
+Robinson, now the energetic manager of the <i>Daily News</i>, may
+be said to have achieved a position in the world of London of
+which his simple-hearted and deeply-devotional grandfather could
+never have dreamed.&nbsp; As I was the son of a brother minister,
+Mr. Dennant&rsquo;s house was open to myself and Thompson, though
+we did not go there on the particular day of which I write.&nbsp;
+The leading tradesman of the town was a Liberal, and had at least
+one pretty daughter, and there we went.&nbsp; Most of the day,
+however, we mixed with the mob which crowded round, while the
+voters&mdash;<!-- page 120--><a name="page120"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 120</span>you may be sure, not all of them
+sober&mdash;were brought up to vote.&nbsp; The excitement was
+immense; there was the hourly publication of the state of the
+poll&mdash;more or less unreliable, but, nevertheless, exciting;
+and what a tumult there was as one or other of the rival
+candidates drove up to his temporary quarters in a carriage and
+pair, or carriage and four, made a short speech, which was
+cheered by his friends and howled at derisively by his foes,
+while the horses were being changed, and then drove off at a
+gallop to make the same display and to undergo the same ordeal
+elsewhere!&nbsp; To be sure, there was a little rough play; now
+and then a rush was made by nobody in particular, and for no
+particular reason; or, again, an indiscreet voter&mdash;rendered
+additionally so by indulgence in beer&mdash;gave occasion for
+offence; but really, beyond a scrimmage, a hat broken, a coat or
+two torn or bespattered with mud, a cockade rudely snatched from
+the wearer, little harm was done.&nbsp; The voters knew each
+other, and had come to vote, and had stayed to see the fun.&nbsp;
+For the timid, the infirm, the old, the day was a trying one; but
+there was an excitement and a life about the affair one misses
+now that the ballot has come into play, and has made the voter
+less of a man than ever.&nbsp; Of course <!-- page 121--><a
+name="page121"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 121</span>the shops
+were shut up.&nbsp; All who could afford to do so kept open
+house, and at every available window were the bright, beaming
+faces of the Suffolk fair&mdash;oh, they were jolly, those
+election days of old!&nbsp; Well, in East Anglia, as elsewhere,
+spite of the parsons, spite of the landlords, spite of the
+slavery of old custom, spite of old traditions, the freeholders
+voted Reform, and Reform was won, and everyone believed that the
+kingdom of heaven was at hand.&nbsp; In ten years, I heard people
+say, there would be no tithes for the farmer to pay, and welcome
+was the announcement; for then, as now, the agricultural interest
+was depressed, and the farmer was a ruined man.&nbsp; Now one
+takes but a languid interest in the word Reform, but then it
+stirred the hearts of the people; and how they celebrated their
+victory, how they hoisted flags and got up processions and made
+speeches, and feasted and hurrahed, &rsquo;twere tedious to
+tell.&nbsp; All over the land the people rejoiced with exceeding
+joy.&nbsp; Old things, they believed, had passed away&mdash;all
+things had become new.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 122--><a name="page122"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 122</span>CHAPTER V.<br />
+<span class="smcap">bungay and its people</span>.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Bungay Nonconformity&mdash;Hannah
+More&mdash;The Childses&mdash;The Queen&rsquo;s
+Librarian&mdash;Prince Albert.</p>
+<p>In the beginning of the present century, a disgraceful attack
+on Methodism&mdash;by which the writer means Dissent in all its
+branches&mdash;appeared in what was then the leading critical
+journal of the age, the <i>Edinburgh Review</i>.&nbsp; &lsquo;The
+sources,&rsquo; said the writer, a clergyman (to his shame be it
+recorded) of the Church of England&mdash;no less distinguished a
+divine than the far-famed Sydney Smith&mdash;&lsquo;from which we
+shall derive our extracts are the Evangelical and Methodistical
+magazines for the year 1807, works which are said to be
+circulated to the amount of 18,000 or 20,000 every month, and
+which contain the sentiments of Arminian and Calvinistic
+Methodists, and of the Evangelical clergymen of the Church of
+England.&nbsp; We shall use the general term of Methodism to
+designate these three <!-- page 123--><a name="page123"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 123</span>classes of fanatics, not troubling
+ourselves to point out the finer shades and nicer discriminations
+of lunacy, but treating them as all in one general conspiracy
+against common-sense and rational orthodox
+Christianity.&rsquo;&nbsp; To East Anglia came the reputed worthy
+Canon for an illustration of what he termed their policy to have
+a great change of ministers.&nbsp; Accordingly, he reprints from
+the <i>Evangelical Magazine</i> the following notice of an East
+Anglian Nonconformist ordination, which, by-the-bye, in no degree
+affects the charge unjustly laid at the door of these
+&lsquo;fanatics,&rsquo; as engaged &lsquo;in one general
+conspiracy against common-sense and rational orthodox
+Christianity.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Same day the Rev. W. Haward,
+from Hoxton Academy, was ordained over the Independent Church at
+Rendham, Suffolk; Mr. Pickles, of Walpole, began with prayer and
+reading; Mr. Price, of Woodbridge, delivered the introductory
+discourse, and asked the questions; Mr. Dennant, of Halesworth,
+offered the ordinary prayer; <i>Mr. Shufflebottom</i> [the
+italics are the Canon&rsquo;s], of Bungay, gave the charge from
+Acts xx. 28; Mr. Vincent, of Deal, the general prayer; and Mr.
+Walford, of Yarmouth, preached to the people from Phil. ii.
+16.&rsquo;&nbsp; As a lad, I saw a good deal of Bungay, though I
+never knew the Shufflebottom <!-- page 124--><a
+name="page124"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 124</span>whose name
+seems to have been such a stumbling-block and cause of offence to
+the Reverend Canon of St. Paul&rsquo;s.&nbsp; I say Reverend
+Canon of St. Paul&rsquo;s, because, though the writer had not
+gained that honour when the review appeared, it was as Canon he
+returned to the charge when he sanctioned the republication of it
+in his collected works.&nbsp; It was at Bungay that I had my
+first painful experience of the utter depravity of the human
+heart&mdash;a truth of which, perhaps, for a boy, I learned too
+much from the pulpit.&nbsp; The river Waveney runs through
+Bungay, and one day, fishing there, I lent a redcoat&mdash;with
+whom, like most boys, I was proud to scrape an
+acquaintance&mdash;my line, he promising to return it when I came
+back from dinner.&nbsp; When I did so, alas! the red-coat was
+gone.</p>
+<p>Nonconformity in Bungay seems to have originated in the days
+of the Lord Protector, in the person of Zephaniah Smith, who was
+the author of: (1) &lsquo;The Dome of Heretiques; or, a discovery
+of subtle Foxes who were tyed tayle to tayle, and crept into the
+Church to do mischief&rsquo;; (2) &lsquo;The Malignant&rsquo;s
+Plot; or, the Conspiracie of the Wicked against the Just, laid
+open in a sermon preached at Eyke, in Suffolk, January 23,
+1697.&nbsp; Preached and published to set forth the grounds <!--
+page 125--><a name="page125"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+125</span>why the Wicked lay such crimes to the charge of
+God&rsquo;s people as they are cleare off&rsquo;; (3) &lsquo;The
+Skillful Teacher.&rsquo;&nbsp; Beloe says of this Smith that
+&lsquo;he was a most singular character, and among the first
+founders of the sect of the Antinomians.&rsquo;&nbsp; One of the
+first leaders of this sect is said by Wood to have been John
+Eaton, who was a minister and preacher at Wickham Market, in
+which situation and capacity Smith succeeded him.&nbsp; This
+Smith published many other tracts and sermons, chiefly fanatical
+and with fantastical titles.&nbsp; One is described by Wood, and
+is called &lsquo;Directions for Seekers and Expectants, or a
+Guide for Weak Christians in these discontented
+times.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;I shall not give an extract from these
+sermons,&rsquo; writes Beloe, who is clearly, like Wood, by no
+means a sympathetic or appreciative critic, &lsquo;though very
+curious, but they are not characterized by any peculiarity of
+diction, and are chiefly remarkable for the enthusiasm with which
+the doctrine of the sect to which the preacher belonged is
+asserted and vindicated.&nbsp; The hearers also must have been
+endowed with an extraordinary degree of patience, as they are
+spun out to a great length.&rsquo;&nbsp; Mr. Smith&rsquo;s
+ministry at Bungay led to a contention, which resulted in an
+appeal to the young Protector, Richard Cromwell.&nbsp; <!-- page
+126--><a name="page126"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+126</span>Then we find Mr. Samuel Malbon silenced by the Act of
+Uniformity, who is described as a man mighty in the Scriptures,
+who became pastor to the church in Amsterdam.&nbsp; In 1695 we
+hear of a conventicle in Bungay, with a preacher with a regularly
+paid stipend of &pound;40 a year.&nbsp; Till 1700 the
+congregation worshipped in a barn; but in that year the old
+meeting-house was built, and let to the congregation at &pound;10
+per annum.&nbsp; In 1729 it was made over to the Presbyterians or
+Independents worshipping there, &lsquo;for ever.&rsquo;&nbsp; The
+founders of that conventicle seem to have suffered for their
+faith; yet the glorious Revolution of 1688 had been achieved, and
+William of Orange&mdash;who had come from a land which had nobly
+sheltered the earlier Nonconformists&mdash;was seated on the
+throne.</p>
+<p>Bungay, till Sydney Smith made it famous, was not much known
+to the general public.&nbsp; It was on the borders of the county
+and out of the way.&nbsp; The only coach that ran through it, I
+can remember, was a small one that ran from Norwich through
+Beccles and Bungay to Yarmouth; and, if I remember aright, on
+alternate days.&nbsp; There was, at any rate, no direct
+communication between it and London.&nbsp; Bungay is a well-built
+market town, skirted on the east and west by the navigable river
+Waveney, <!-- page 127--><a name="page127"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 127</span>which divides it from Norfolk, and
+was at one time noted for the manufacture of knitted worsted
+stockings and Suffolk hempen cloth; but those trades are now
+obsolete.&nbsp; The great Roger Bigod&mdash;one of the men who
+really did come over with the Conqueror&mdash;built its castle,
+the ruins of which yet remain, on a bold eminence on the river
+Waveney.&nbsp; &lsquo;The castle,&rsquo; writes Dugdale,
+&lsquo;once the residence and stronghold of the Bigods, and by
+one of them conceived to be impregnable, has become the
+habitation of helpless poverty, many miserable hovels having been
+reared against its walls for the accommodation of the lowest
+class.&rsquo;&nbsp; The form of the castle appears to have been
+octangular.&nbsp; The ruins of two round fortal towers and
+fortresses of the west and south-west angles are still standing,
+as also three sides of the great tower or keep, the walls of
+which are from 7 to 11 feet thick and from 15 to 17 feet
+high.&nbsp; In the midst of the ruins, on what is called the
+Terrace, is a mineral spring, now disused, and near it is a
+vault, or dungeon, of considerable depth.&nbsp; Detached portions
+of the wall and their foundations are spread in all directions in
+the castle grounds, a ridge of which, about 40 yards long, forms
+the southern boundary of a bowling-green which commands
+delightful prospects.&nbsp; <!-- page 128--><a
+name="page128"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 128</span>The mounds
+of earth raised for the defence of the castle still retain much
+of their original character, though considerably reduced in
+height.&nbsp; One of them, facing the south, was partly removed
+in 1840, with the intention of forming a cattle market.&nbsp; As
+a boy I often heard of the proud boast of Hugh Bigod, second
+Earl, one of King Stephen&rsquo;s most formidable opponents, as
+recorded by Camden:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Were I in my castle of Bungay,<br />
+Upon the river Waveney,<br />
+I would not care for the King of Cockeney.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In ancient times the Waveney was a much broader stream than it
+is now, and Bungay was called <i>Le Bon Eye</i>, or the good
+island, then being nearly surrounded by water.&nbsp; Hence the
+name, in the vulgar dialect, of Bungay.&nbsp; To &lsquo;go to
+Bungay to get a new bottom&rsquo; was a common saying in
+Suffolk.</p>
+<p>In 1777 we find Hannah More writing to Garrick from Bungay,
+which she describes as &lsquo;a much better town than I expected,
+very clean and pleasant.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;You are the
+favourite bard of Bungay&rsquo;&mdash;at that time the tragedians
+of the city of Norwich were staying
+there&mdash;&lsquo;and,&rsquo; writes Hannah, who at that time
+had not become serious and renounced the gaieties of the great
+world, &lsquo;the <!-- page 129--><a name="page129"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 129</span>dramatic furore rages terribly among
+the people, the more so, I presume, from being allowed to vent
+itself so seldom.&nbsp; Everybody goes to the play every
+night,&mdash;that is, every other night, which is as often as
+they perform.&nbsp; Visiting, drinking, and even card-playing, is
+for this happy month suspended; nay, I question if, like Lent, it
+does not stop the celebration of weddings, for I do not believe
+there is a damsel in the town who would spare the time to be
+married during this rarely-occurring scene of festivity.&nbsp; It
+must be confessed, however, the good folks have no bad
+taste.&rsquo;&nbsp; It must be recollected that Hannah More in
+reality belongs to East Anglia.&nbsp; She was the daughter of
+Jacob More, who was descended from a respectable family at
+Harleston.&nbsp; He was a High Churchman, but all his family were
+Nonconformists.&nbsp; His mother used to tell young people that
+they would have known how to value Gospel privileges had they
+lived like her, when at midnight pious worshippers went with
+stealthy steps through the snow to hear the words of inspiration
+delivered by a holy man at her father&rsquo;s house; while her
+father, with a drawn sword, guarded the entrance from violent or
+profane intrusion, adding that they boarded the minister and kept
+his horse for &pound;10 a year.&nbsp; An unfortunate <!-- page
+130--><a name="page130"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+130</span>lawsuit deprived the Mores of their property, and thus
+it was that the celebrated Hannah was born at Gloucestershire,
+and not in Suffolk or Norfolk.&nbsp; The family mansion was at
+Wenhaston, not very far from Wrentham.</p>
+<p>In my young days Bungay owed all its fame and most of its
+wealth to the far-famed John Childs, who was one of our first
+Church Rate martyrs, to whom is due mainly the destruction of the
+Bible-printing monopoly, and to whom the late Edward Miall was
+much indebted for establishing the <i>Nonconformist</i>
+newspaper.&nbsp; For many years it was the habit of Mr. Childs to
+celebrate that event by a dinner, at which the wine was good and
+the talk was better.&nbsp; Old John Childs, of Bungay, had a
+cellar of port which a dean might have envied; and many was the
+bottle that I cracked with him as a young man, after a walk from
+Wrentham to Bungay, a distance of fourteen miles, to talk with
+him on things in general, and politics in particular.&nbsp; He
+was emphatically a self-made man&mdash;a man who would have made
+his way anywhere, and a man who had a large acquaintance with the
+reformers of his day in all parts of the country.&nbsp; On one
+occasion the great Dan O&rsquo;Connell came to pay him a visit,
+much to the delight of the Suffolk Radicals, <!-- page 131--><a
+name="page131"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 131</span>and to the
+horror of the Tories.&nbsp; The first great dinner at which I had
+the honour of being present, and to which I was taken by my
+father, who was a great friend of Mr. Childs, was on the occasion
+of the presentation to the latter of a testimonial by a
+deputation of distinguished Dissenters from Ipswich in connection
+with his incarceration in the county gaol at Ipswich, for having
+refused to pay rates for the support of a Church in which he did
+not believe, and for the performance of a service in which he
+took no part.&nbsp; At that time &lsquo;the dear old Church of
+England,&rsquo; while it was compelled to tolerate Dissent,
+insisted on Dissent being taxed to the uttermost farthing; and
+that it does not do so now, and that it is more popular in
+consequence, is due to the firm stand taken by such men as John
+Childs of Bungay.&nbsp; He was a great phrenologist.&nbsp; In his
+garden he had a summer-house, which he facetiously termed his
+scullery, where he had some three hundred plaster casts, many of
+which he had taken himself of public individuals and friends and
+acquaintances.&nbsp; My father was honoured in this way, as also
+my eldest sister.&nbsp; Sir Henry Thompson and I escaped that
+honour, but I have not forgotten his dark, piercing glance at our
+heads, when, as boys, we first came into his presence, and how I
+<!-- page 132--><a name="page132"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+132</span>trusted that the verdict was satisfactory.&nbsp; Of
+course the Childses went to Meeting, but when I knew Bungay Mr.
+Shufflebottom had been gathered to his fathers, and the Rev. John
+Blaikie, a Scotchman, and therefore always a welcome guest at
+Wrentham, reigned in his stead.&nbsp; Mr. Childs had a large and
+promising family, few of whom now remain.&nbsp; His daughter was
+an exceptionally gifted and glorious creature, as in that early
+day it seemed to me.&nbsp; She also died early, leaving but one
+son, Mr. Crisp, a partner in the well-known legal firm of Messrs.
+Ashurst, Morris, and Crisp.&nbsp; It was in the little box by the
+window of the London Coffee House&mdash;now, alas! no
+more&mdash;where Mr. Childs, on the occasion of his frequent
+visits to London, always gathered around him his friends, that I
+first made the acquaintance of Mr. Ashurst, the head of the
+firm&mdash;a self-made man, like Mr. Childs, of wonderful
+acuteness and great public spirit.&nbsp; In religion Mr. Ashurst
+was far more advanced than the Bungay printer.&nbsp; &lsquo;It is
+not a thing to reason about,&rsquo; said the latter; and so to
+the last he remained orthodox, attended the Bungay Meeting-house,
+invited the divines of that order to his house, put in appearance
+at ordination services, and openings of chapels, and was to be
+seen at May <!-- page 133--><a name="page133"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 133</span>Meetings when in town, where
+occasionally his criticisms were of a freer order than is usually
+met with at such places.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;The Bungay Press,&rsquo; wrote a correspondent of the
+<i>Bookseller</i>, on the death of Mr. Charles Childs, who had
+succeeded his father in the business, &lsquo;has been long known
+for its careful and excellent work.&nbsp; Established some short
+time before the commencement of the present century, its founder
+had, for twenty years, limited its productions to serial
+publications and books of a popular and useful character, and in
+the year 1823, soon after Mr. John Childs had taken control of
+the business, upwards of twenty wooden presses were working, at
+long hours, to supply the rapidly-increasing demand for such
+works as folio Bibles, universal histories, domestic medicine
+books, and other publications then issuing in one and two
+shilling numbers from the press.&rsquo;&nbsp; Originally Mr.
+Childs had been in a grocer&rsquo;s shop at Norwich.&nbsp; There
+he was met with by a Mr. Brightley, a printer and publisher, who,
+originally a schoolmaster at Beccles, had suggested to young
+Childs that he had better come and help him at Bungay than waste
+his time behind a counter.&nbsp; Fortunately for them both the
+young man acceded to the proposal, and travelled all over <!--
+page 134--><a name="page134"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+134</span>England driving tandem, and doing everywhere what we
+should now call a roaring trade.&nbsp; Then he married Mr.
+Brightley&rsquo;s daughter, and became a partner in the firm,
+which was known as that of John and R. Childs, and, latterly of
+Childs and Son.&nbsp; &lsquo;Uncle Robert,&rsquo; as I used to
+hear him called, was little known out of the Bungay circle.&nbsp;
+He had a nice house, and lived comfortably, marrying, after a
+long courtship, the only one of the Stricklands who was not a
+writer.&nbsp; Agnes was often a visitor at Bungay, and not a
+little shocked at the atrocious after-dinner talk of the Bungay
+Radicals.&nbsp; &lsquo;Do you not think,&rsquo; said she, in her
+somewhat stilted and tragic style of talk, one day, to a literary
+man who was seated next her, author of a French dictionary which
+the Childses were printing at the time&mdash;&lsquo;Do you not
+think it was a cruel and wicked act to murder the sainted and
+unfortunate Charles I.?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Why,
+ma&rsquo;am,&rsquo; stuttered the author, while the dinner-party
+were silent, &lsquo;I&rsquo;d have p-p-poisoned him.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+The gifted authoress talked no more that day.&nbsp; Naturally, as
+a lad, seeing so much of Bungay, I wished to be a printer, but
+Mr. Childs said there was no use in being a printer without
+plenty of capital, and so that idea was renounced.</p>
+<p><!-- page 135--><a name="page135"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+135</span>But to return to Mr. John Childs.&nbsp; About the year
+1826, in association with the late Joseph Ogle Robinson, he
+projected and commenced the publication of a series of books
+known in the trade as the &lsquo;Imperial Edition of Standard
+Authors,&rsquo; which for many years maintained an extensive
+sale, and certainly then met an admitted literary want,
+furnishing the student and critical reader, in a cheap and
+handsome form, with dictionaries, histories, commentaries,
+biographies, and miscellaneous literature of acknowledged value
+and importance, such as Burke&rsquo;s works, Gibbon&rsquo;s
+&lsquo;Decline and Fall,&rsquo; Howe&rsquo;s works, the writings
+of Lord Bacon&mdash;books which are still in the market, and
+which, if I may speak from a pretty wide acquaintance with
+students&rsquo; libraries fifty years ago, were in great demand
+at that time.&nbsp; The disadvantage of such a series is that the
+books are too big to put in the pocket or to hold in the
+hand.&nbsp; But I do not know that that is a great disadvantage
+to a real student who takes up a book to master its contents, and
+not merely to pass away his time.&nbsp; To study properly a man
+must be in his study.&nbsp; In that particular apartment he is
+bound to have a table, and if you place a book on a table to
+read, it matters little the size of the page, or the number <!--
+page 136--><a name="page136"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+136</span>of columns each page contains.&nbsp; Mr. Childs set the
+fashion of reprinting standard authors on a good-sized page, with
+a couple of columns on each page.&nbsp; That fashion was followed
+by Mr. W. Smith&mdash;a Fleet Street publisher, than whom a
+better man never lived&mdash;and by Messrs. Chambers; but now it
+seems quite to have passed away.&nbsp; On the failure of Mr.
+Robinson, Mr. Childs&rsquo; valuable reprints were placed in the
+hands of Westley and Davis, and subsequently with Ball, Arnold,
+and Co.; and latterly, I think, the late Mr. H. G. Bohn reissued
+them at intervals.&nbsp; As to his part publications, when Mr.
+Childs had given up pushing them, he disposed of them all to Mr.
+Virtue, of Ivy Lane, Paternoster Row, who then secured almost a
+monopoly of the part-number trade, and thus made a large
+fortune.&nbsp; &lsquo;I love books that come out in
+numbers,&rsquo; says Lord Montford in &lsquo;Endymion,&rsquo;
+&lsquo;as there is a little suspense, and you cannot deprive
+yourself of all interest by glancing at the last part of the last
+volume.&rsquo;&nbsp; And so I suppose in the same way there will
+always be a part-number trade, though the reapers in the field
+are many, and the harvest is not what it was.</p>
+<p>Active and fiery in body and soul, Mr. John Childs, at a
+somewhat later period, with the <!-- page 137--><a
+name="page137"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 137</span>sympathy
+and advocacy of Mr. Joseph Hume and other members of Parliament,
+and aided to a large extent by Lord Brougham, succeeded in
+procuring the appointment of a Committee of the House of Commons
+to inquire into the existing King&rsquo;s Printers&rsquo; Patent
+for printing Bibles and Acts of Parliament, the period for the
+renewal of which was near at hand.&nbsp; The principle upon which
+the patent was originally granted appeared to be <i>correctness
+secured only by protection</i>&mdash;a fallacy which the
+voluminous evidence of the Committee most completely
+exposed.&nbsp; The late Alderman Besley, a typefounder, and a
+great friend of John Childs, as well as Robert Childs, practical
+printers, gave conclusive evidence on this head, and the result
+was that, although the patent was renewed for thirty years,
+instead of sixty as before, the Scriptures were sold to the
+public at a greatly reduced price, and the trade in Bibles,
+though nominally protected, has ever since been practically
+free.</p>
+<p>Nor did Mr. Childs&rsquo; labours end here.&nbsp; In Scotland
+the right of printing Bibles had been granted exclusively to a
+company of private persons, Blaire and Bruce, neither of whom had
+any practical knowledge of the art of printing, or took any <!--
+page 138--><a name="page138"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+138</span>interest in the different editions of the Bible.&nbsp;
+The same men also had the supplying all the public revenue
+offices of Government with stationery, by which means they
+enjoyed an annual profit of more than &pound;6,000 a year.&nbsp;
+When the Government, in an economical mood, ordered them to
+relinquish the latter contract, not only were they compensated
+for the loss, but were continued in their vested rights as
+regards Bible-printing.&nbsp; In Scotland there was no one to
+interfere with their rights.&nbsp; In England patents had been
+given not only to the firm of Messrs. Strahan, Eyre and
+Spottiswoode, but to each of the two Universities of Cambridge
+and Oxford.&nbsp; Up to 1821 the Bibles of the English
+monopolists came freely into Scotland, but then a prohibition,
+supported by decisions in the Court of Sessions and the House of
+Lords, was obtained.&nbsp; In 1824 Dr. Adam Thompson, of
+Coldstream, and three ministers were summoned to answer for the
+high crime and misdemeanour of having, as directors of Bible
+societies, delivered copies of an edition of Scriptures which had
+been printed in England, but which the Scotch monopolists would
+not permit to circulate in Scotland.&nbsp; Bible societies in
+Scotland had received, in return for their subscription to the
+London society, copies <!-- page 139--><a
+name="page139"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 139</span>of an
+octavo Bible in large type, to which the Scotch patentees had no
+corresponding edition, and which was much prized by the
+aged.&nbsp; And it was because Dr. Thompson and others helped to
+circulate it, as agents of the London Bible Society, that they
+were proceeded against.&nbsp; The Scotch Bible, in consequence of
+the monopoly, was as badly printed as the English one.&nbsp; In
+order to show how monopoly had failed to secure good work, a
+gentleman sent to the Archbishop of Canterbury an enormous list
+of errors which he had found in the Oxford Nonpareil Bible.&nbsp;
+In an old Scotch edition the apostle is made to say, &lsquo;Know
+ye not that the righteous shall <i>not</i> inherit the kingdom of
+God?&rsquo;&nbsp; In another edition &lsquo;The four beasts of
+the Apocalypse&rsquo; are &lsquo;<i>sour</i> beasts.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Dr. Lee, afterwards Principal of Edinburgh University, felt
+deeply the injustice done by the monopoly, and the heavy taxation
+consequently imposed upon the British and Foreign Bible Society;
+but he was a man of the study rather than of the street.&nbsp;
+Yet in 1837 the monopoly, powerfully defended as it was by Sir
+Robert Inglis, who dreaded cheap editions of the Word of God, as
+necessarily incorrect and leading to wickedness and infidelity of
+all kinds, fell, and it was to John Childs, of <!-- page 140--><a
+name="page140"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 140</span>Bungay,
+that in a great measure the fall was due, while owing to the
+repeated labours of Dr. Adam Thompson and others, we got cheaper
+Bibles and Testaments on the other side of the Tweed.</p>
+<p>If you turn to the life of Dr. Adam Thompson, of Coldstream,
+the man who had the most publicly to do with the fall of the
+monopoly, there can be no doubt on this head.&nbsp; Though
+specially interested in the English patents, Mr. Childs was aware
+that the one for Scotland fell, to be renewed sooner by twenty
+years, and he kept dunning Joseph Hume on the subject, who,
+Radical Reformer, at that time had his hands pretty full.&nbsp;
+Mr. Childs had got so far as to have his Committee, and to get
+the evidence printed.&nbsp; What was the next step?&nbsp; Dr.
+Thompson&rsquo;s biographer shall tell us.&nbsp; &lsquo;Mr.
+Childs had been looking out for a Scottish Dissenting minister of
+proved ability, zeal, and influence, who should feel the immense
+and urgent importance of the question, and after mastering the
+unjust principles and the injurious results of the monopoly,
+should testify to these before the Committee, in a weighty and
+pointed manner, and effectively bring them also before the
+ministers and people of Scotland.&nbsp; He fixed upon Dr.
+Thompson, and the letter in which he wrote to the Doctor to
+prepare <!-- page 141--><a name="page141"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 141</span>for becoming a witness was the
+beginning of a ten years&rsquo; copious correspondence, the first
+in a series of many hundreds of very lengthy letters, in which
+Mr. Childs, with great shrewdness, sagacity, and vigour, and with
+perfect confidence of always being in the right, acted as
+universal censor, pronouncing oracularly upon all ecclesiastical
+and political men and organs, expressing unqualified contempt for
+the House of Lords, and very small satisfaction with the House of
+Commons, showing no mercy to Churchmen, and little but asperity
+to Dissenters, and denouncing all British journals as base or
+blind except the <i>Nonconformist</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; Only two of
+these letters are published in Dr. Thompson&rsquo;s
+biography.&nbsp; I give one, partly because it is interesting,
+and partly because it is characteristic.&nbsp; Unfortunately, of
+all John Childs&rsquo; letters to myself, written in a fine, bold
+hand, exactly reproduced by his son and grandson, so that I could
+never tell one from the other, I have preserved none.&nbsp;
+Childs thus wrote to Dr. Thompson, July 15th, 1839:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;<span class="smcap">My dear
+Friend</span>,</p>
+<p>&lsquo;You will be happy to know that I went into Newgate this
+morning with my friend Ashurst, and heard their pardon read to
+the Canadians.&nbsp; <!-- page 142--><a name="page142"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 142</span>They were released this afternoon,
+and Mr. Parker and Mr. Wixon have been dining with me, and are
+gone to a lodging, taken for them by Mr. A., where they may
+remain till their departure on Wednesday.&nbsp; I have just sent
+to Mr. Tidman to inform him they will worship God and return
+thanks in his place to-morrow, if all be well.&nbsp; How
+wonderfully God has appeared for these people!&nbsp; My dear
+friend, when I first saw them in January all things appeared to
+be against them, but all has been overruled for good.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;At the time you left on Monday evening, Lord John was
+making known to the House of Commons, in your own words, the plan
+proposed by yourself, and adopted by him, to my amazement.&nbsp;
+Most heartily do I congratulate you on the termination of the
+event, so decidedly honourable to yourself in every way.&nbsp; I
+do not expect you will approve of all that I have done, but I
+felt it to be my duty to address a letter to the <i>Pilot</i> on
+the subject, calling attention to the liberty taken with you, and
+the manner in which you were humbugged when in concert with the
+London societies, and the absolute triumph of your cause when
+conducted with single-handed integrity, intelligence, and
+energy.&nbsp; If it shall happen that you do not approve of all I
+have <!-- page 143--><a name="page143"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 143</span>said, I am sure you ought, because
+without you, and with you, if you had left it to the fellows
+here, Scotland&rsquo;s Dissenters would have now appeared the
+degraded things which, on the Bible subject, the English
+Dissenters have appeared in my eyes for some years past.&nbsp; It
+is due to you.&nbsp; I was fairly rejoiced when I saw Lord
+John&rsquo;s declaration, because I could see from his answer to
+Sir James Graham that he meant the thing should be done.&nbsp;
+Scotland ought to have a day of rejoicing and thanksgiving, and
+as I said to a friend to whom I wrote in Edinburgh, &ldquo;You
+ought to have a monument&mdash;the Thompson
+monument.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;That, sir,&rdquo; the guide would
+say, &ldquo;is erected to honour a man by whose honest energy and
+zeal Scotland was freed from the most degrading
+tyranny&mdash;that of a monopoly in printing the Word of
+God.&rdquo;&nbsp; The tablet should bear that memorable sentence
+of yours on the first day of your examination, &ldquo;All
+monopolies are bad.&rdquo;&nbsp; Of all monopolies religious
+monopolies are the worst, and of all religious monopolies a
+monopoly of the Word of God is the most outrageous.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Alas!&nbsp; I have heard nothing of the Thompson monument.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Such a man was John Childs.&nbsp; One more busy <!-- page
+144--><a name="page144"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 144</span>in
+body and brain I never knew.&nbsp; That he was disposed to be
+cynical was natural.&nbsp; Most men who see much of the world,
+and who do not wear coloured glasses, are so.&nbsp; Take the
+history of the Bible monopoly.&nbsp; The work of its abolition
+was commenced by John Childs, of Bungay, carried on and completed
+as far as Scotland was concerned by Dr. Adam Thompson, while the
+British public in its usual silliness awarded &pound;3,000 to Dr.
+Campbell, on the plea&mdash;I quote the words of the late Dr.
+Morton Brown, of Cheltenham&mdash;that, &lsquo;God gave the
+honour very largely to our friend, Dr. Campbell, to smite this
+bloated enemy of God and man full in the forehead.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+The bloated enemy, as regards Scotland, was dead before Dr.
+Campbell had ever penned a line.&nbsp; As regards England, I
+believe it still exists.</p>
+<p>It must have been about 1837 that the name of John Childs, of
+Bungay, was made specially notorious by reason of his refusal to
+pay Church-rates, and when he had the honour of being the first
+person imprisoned for their non-payment.&nbsp; He was proceeded
+against in the Ecclesiastical Courts, and as his refusal to pay
+was solely on conscientious grounds, he did not contest the
+matter.&nbsp; The result was, he was sent to Ipswich Gaol for the
+non-payment <!-- page 145--><a name="page145"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 145</span>of a rate of 17s. 6d., the animus of
+the ecclesiastical authorities being manifested by the
+endorsement of the writ, &lsquo;Take no bail.&rsquo;&nbsp; It was
+the first death-blow to Church-rates.&nbsp; The local excitement
+it created was intense and unparalleled.&nbsp; In the House of
+Commons Sir William Foulkes presented several petitions from
+Norfolk, and Mr. Joseph Hume several from Suffolk, on the
+subject.&nbsp; One entire sitting of the House of Commons was
+devoted to the Bungay Martyr, as Sir Robert Peel ironically
+termed him.&nbsp; The Bungay Martyr had however, right on his
+side.&nbsp; It was found that a blot had been hit, and it had to
+be removed.</p>
+<p>The excitement produced by putting Mr. Childs into gaol was
+intense at that time all over the land.&nbsp; &lsquo;I beg to
+inform you,&rsquo; wrote a Halesworth Dissenter, Mr. William
+Lincoln, to the editor of the <i>Patriot</i>, at that time the
+organ of Dissent, &lsquo;that my highly-esteemed and talented
+friend, Mr. John Childs, of Bungay, has just passed through this
+town, in custody of a sheriff&rsquo;s officer, on his way to our
+county gaol, by virtue of an attachment, at the suit of Messrs.
+Bobbet and Scott, churchwardens of Bungay, for non-payment of
+17s. 6d. demanded of him as a Church-rate, and subsequent refusal
+to obey a citation for appearance <!-- page 146--><a
+name="page146"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 146</span>at the
+Bishop&rsquo;s Court.&rsquo;&nbsp; Naturally the writer remarked:
+&lsquo;It will soon be seen whether proceedings so well in
+harmony with the days of fire and faggot are to be tolerated in
+this advanced period of the nineteenth century.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+When, in due time, Mr. Childs obtained his release, the event was
+celebrated at Bungay in fitting style.&nbsp; I find in a private
+diary the following note: &lsquo;This day week was a grand day at
+Bungay.&nbsp; I heard there were not less than six or seven
+thousand people there to welcome his return, and the request of
+the police, that the greatest order might be observed, was fully
+acted up to.&nbsp; Miss C. did not enter Bungay with her
+father.&nbsp; I suppose when she found so great a multitude of
+horsemen, gigs, pedestrians and banners, they thought it better
+for the young lady and the younger children to retire to the
+close carriages.&nbsp; Mr. C. during his imprisonment had letters
+from all parts of the kingdom.&rsquo;&nbsp; I remember the
+leading Dissenters came to Bungay with a piece of plate, to
+present to Mr. Childs, to commemorate his heroism.&nbsp; A dinner
+was given by Mr. Childs in connection with the
+presentation.&nbsp; At that dinner, lad as I was, I was permitted
+to be present.&nbsp; I had never seen anything so grand or
+stately before; and that <!-- page 147--><a
+name="page147"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 147</span>was my
+first interview with John Childs, a dark, restless, eagle-eyed
+man, whom I was to know better and love more for many a long
+day.&nbsp; I took to Radical writing, and nothing could have
+pleased John Childs better.&nbsp; I owed much to his friendship
+in after-life.</p>
+<p>In 1833 the Church-rate question was originally raised in
+Bungay, and many of the Dissenters refused to pay.&nbsp; The
+local authorities at once took high ground, and put twelve of the
+recusants into the Ecclesiastical Court.&nbsp; They caved in,
+leaving to John Childs the honour of martyrdom.&nbsp; At the time
+of Mr. Childs&rsquo; imprisonment he had recently suffered from a
+severe surgical operation, and it was believed by his friends
+impossible that he could survive the infliction of
+imprisonment.&nbsp; The Rev. John Browne writes: &lsquo;A
+committee very generously formed at Ipswich undertook the
+management of his affairs, and when they learned at the end of
+eleven days&rsquo; imprisonment that he had undergone a most
+severe attack, indicating at least the possibility of sudden
+death, they sent a deputation to the Court to pay the sum
+demanded.&nbsp; The Court, however, required, as well as the
+money, the usual oath of canonical obedience, and this Mr. Childs
+refused to give.&nbsp; He was told by <!-- page 148--><a
+name="page148"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 148</span>his friends
+that he would surely die in prison, but his reply was,
+&lsquo;That is not my business.&rsquo;&nbsp; But it seems so much
+had been made of the matter by the newspapers that Mr. Childs was
+released without taking the oath.&nbsp; Charles Childs, the son,
+followed in his father&rsquo;s steps.&nbsp; At Bungay the
+Churchmen seemed to have determined to make Dissenters as
+uncomfortable as possible.&nbsp; Actually five years after they
+had thrown the father into prison, the churchwardens proceeded
+against the son, having been baffled in repeated attempts to
+distrain upon his goods, and cited him into the Ecclesiastical
+Court, where it took two and a half years to determine whether
+the sum of three shillings and fourpence was due.&nbsp; At the
+end of that time the judge decided it was not, and the
+churchwardens had to pay Mr. Childs&rsquo; costs as well as their
+own, which in the course of time amounted to a very respectable
+sum.&nbsp; Charles Childs, who died suddenly a few years since,
+and who never seemed to me to have aged a day since I first knew
+him, was truly a chip of the old block.&nbsp; He was much in
+London, as he printed quite as much as his father for the leading
+London publishers.&nbsp; An enlightened patriot, he was in very
+many cases successful in resisting the obstacles <!-- page
+149--><a name="page149"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+149</span>raised from time to time by party spirit or Church
+bigotry.&nbsp; On more than one occasion he conducted a number of
+his workmen through an illegally-closed path, and opened it by
+the destruction of the fences, repeated appeals to the persistent
+obstructions having proved unavailing.&nbsp; He was a man of
+scholarly and literary attainments, a clever talker, well able to
+hold his own, and during the Corn Law and Currency agitation he
+contributed one or more articles on these subjects to the
+<i>Westminster Review</i>, then edited by his friend, the late
+General Perronet Thompson, a very foremost figure in Radical
+circles forty years ago, always trying to get into
+Parliament&mdash;rarely succeeding in the attempt.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;How can he expect it,&rsquo; said Mr. Cobden to me one
+day, &lsquo;when, instead of going to the principal people to
+support him, he finds out some small tradesman&mdash;some little
+tailor or shoemaker&mdash;to introduce him?&rsquo;&nbsp; Once
+upon a time the <i>Times</i> furiously attacked Charles
+Childs.&nbsp; His reply, which was able and convincing, was
+forwarded, but only procured admission in the shape of an
+advertisement, for which Mr. Childs had to pay ten pounds.&nbsp;
+The corner of East Anglia of which I write rarely produced two
+better men than the Childs, father and son.&nbsp; They are gone,
+<!-- page 150--><a name="page150"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+150</span>but the printing business still survives, though no
+longer carried on under the well-known name.&nbsp; By their noble
+integrity and public spirit they proved themselves worthy of a
+craft to which light and literature and leading owe so
+much.&nbsp; It is to such men that England is under lasting
+obligations, and one of the indirect benefits of a State Church
+is that it gives them a grievance, and a sense of wrong, which
+compels them to gird up their energies to act the part of village
+Hampdens or guiltless Cromwells.&nbsp; All the manhood in them is
+aroused and strengthened as they contend for what they deem right
+and just, and against force and falsehood.&nbsp; Poets, we are
+told, by one himself a poet,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Are cradled into poetry by wrong;<br />
+They learn in suffering what they teach in song.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Nonconformists have cause especially to rejoice in the bigotry
+and persecution to which they have been exposed, since it has led
+them by a way they knew not, to become the champions of a broader
+creed and a more general right than that of which their fathers
+dreamed.&nbsp; It is easy to swim with the stream; it requires a
+strong man to swim against it.&nbsp; Two hundred years of such
+swimming had made the Bungay Nonconformists strong, and <!-- page
+151--><a name="page151"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+151</span>gave to the world two such exceptionally sturdy and
+strengthful men as John and Charles Childs.&nbsp; I was proud to
+know them as a boy; in advancing years I am prouder still to be
+permitted to bear this humble testimony to their honest
+worth.&nbsp; It is because Nonconformity has raised up such men
+in all parts of the land, that a higher tone has been given to
+our public life, that politics mean something more than a
+struggle between the ins and the outs, and that
+&lsquo;Onward&rsquo; is our battle-cry.</p>
+<p>Of the young men more or less coming under the influence of
+the Childs&rsquo;s, perhaps one of the most successful was the
+late Bernard Bolingbroke Woodward, Librarian to her
+Majesty.&nbsp; When I first knew him he was in a bank at
+Norwich.&nbsp; Thence he passed to Highbury College, and in due
+time, after he had taken his B.A. degree, settled as the
+Independent minister at Wortwell, near Harleston, in
+Norfolk.&nbsp; There he became connected with John Childs, and,
+amidst much hard work, edited for the firm a new edition of
+&lsquo;Barclay&rsquo;s Universal English Dictionary.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+In 1860, on the death of Mr. Glover, who had for many years
+filled the post of Librarian to the Queen at Windsor Castle, Mr.
+Woodward&rsquo;s name <!-- page 152--><a name="page152"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 152</span>was mentioned to the Prince, in
+reply to inquiries for a competent successor.&nbsp; Acting on the
+advice of a friend at head-quarters, Mr. Woodward forwarded to
+Prince Albert the same printed testimonials which he had sent in
+when he was a candidate for the vacant secretaryship of a large
+and popular society, and to those alone he owed his appointment
+to the office of Librarian to the Queen.&nbsp; An interview took
+place at Windsor Castle, which was highly satisfactory; but
+before the appointment was finally made, Mr. Woodward informed
+Her Majesty and the Prince that there was one circumstance which
+he had omitted to mention, and which might disqualify him for the
+post.&nbsp; &lsquo;Pray, what is that disqualification?&rsquo;
+asked the Prince.&nbsp; &lsquo;It is,&rsquo; replied Mr.
+Woodward, &lsquo;that I have been educated for, and have actually
+conducted the services of an Independent congregation in the
+country.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;And why should that be thought to
+disqualify you?&rsquo; asked the Prince.&nbsp; &lsquo;It does
+nothing of the sort.&nbsp; If that is all, we are quite
+satisfied, and feel perfectly safe in having you for a
+librarian.&rsquo;&nbsp; Am I not justified in saying that at one
+time Bungay influences reached far and near?</p>
+<h2><!-- page 153--><a name="page153"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 153</span>CHAPTER VI.<br />
+<span class="smcap">a celebrated norfolk town</span>.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Great Yarmouth
+Nonconformists&mdash;Intellectual life&mdash;Dawson
+Turner&mdash;Astley Cooper&mdash;Hudson Gurney&mdash;Mrs.
+Bendish.</p>
+<p>When David Copperfield, Dickens tells us, first caught sight
+of Yarmouth, it seemed to him to look rather spongy and
+soppy.&nbsp; As he drew nearer, he remarks, &lsquo;and saw the
+whole adjacent prospect, lying like a straight, low line under
+the sky, I hinted to Peggotty that a mound or so might have
+improved it, and also that if the land had been a little more
+separated from the sea, and the town and the tide had not been
+quite so much mixed up, like toast-and-water, it would have been
+much nicer.&rsquo;&nbsp; He adds: &lsquo;When we got into the
+street, which was strange to me, and smelt the fish, and pitch,
+and oakum, and tallow, and saw the sailors walking about, and the
+carts jingling up and down over the stones, I felt that I had
+done so busy a place injustice.&rsquo;&nbsp; In this opinion his
+readers who know <!-- page 154--><a name="page154"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 154</span>Yarmouth will agree.&nbsp; Brighton
+and Hastings and Eastbourne might envy Yarmouth its sandy beach,
+where you can lead an amphibious life, watching the
+fishing-smacks as they come to shore with cargoes often so heavy
+as to be sold for manure; watching the merchant-ships and yachts
+that lie securely in the Roads, or the long trail of black smoke
+of Scotch or northern steamers far away; watching the gulls ever
+skimming the surface of the waves; or the children, as they build
+little forts and dwellings in the sand to be rudely swept to
+destruction by the advancing tide.&nbsp; In the golden light of
+summer, how blue is the sky, how green the sea, how yellow the
+sand, how jolly look the men and handsome the women!&nbsp; What
+health and healing are in the air, as it comes laden with ozone
+from the North Sea!&nbsp; You have the sea in front and on each
+side to look at, to walk by, to splash in, to sail on.&nbsp; The
+danger is, that you grow too fat, too ruddy, too hearty, too
+boisterous.&nbsp; As we all know, Venus was born out of the sea,
+and out there on that eastern peninsula, of which Yarmouth is the
+pride and ornament, there used to flourish bonny lasses, as if to
+show that the connection between the ocean and lovely woman is as
+intimate as of yore.&nbsp; Yarmouth and Lowestoft owe a great
+<!-- page 155--><a name="page155"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+155</span>deal to the Great Eastern Railway, which has made them
+places of health-resort from all parts of England; and truly the
+pleasure-seeker or the holiday-maker may go farther and fare
+worse.</p>
+<p>I was a proud boy when first I set foot in Yarmouth.&nbsp; How
+I came to go there I can scarcely remember, but it is to be
+presumed I accompanied my father on one of those grand
+occasions&mdash;as far as Nonconformist circles are
+concerned&mdash;when the brethren met together for godly comfort
+and counsel.&nbsp; It is true Wrentham was in Suffolk, and
+Yarmouth was in Norfolk, but the Congregational Churches of that
+quarter had always been connected by Christian fellowship and
+sympathy, and hence I was taken to Yarmouth&mdash;at that time
+far more like a Dutch than an English town&mdash;and wonderful to
+me was the Quay, with its fine houses on one side and its long
+line of ships on the other&mdash;something like the far-famed
+Bompjes of Rotterdam&mdash;and the narrow rows in which the
+majority of the labouring classes were accustomed to live.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;A row,&rsquo; wrote Charles Dickens, &lsquo;is a long,
+narrow lane or alley, quite straight, or as nearly so as may be,
+with houses on each side, both of which you can sometimes touch
+with the finger-tips of each hand by stretching out your arms to
+their full extent.&nbsp; <!-- page 156--><a
+name="page156"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 156</span>Many and
+many a picturesque old bit of domestic architecture is to be
+hunted up among the rows.&nbsp; In some there is little more than
+a blank wall for the double boundary.&nbsp; In others the houses
+retreat into busy square courts, where washing and
+clear-starching are done, and wonderful nasturtiums and
+scarlet-runners are reared from green boxes filled with that
+scarce commodity, vegetable mould.&nbsp; Most of these rows are
+paved with pebbles from the beach, and to traverse them a
+peculiar form of low cart, drawn by a single horse, is
+employed.&rsquo;&nbsp; This to me was a great novelty, as with
+waggons and carts I was familiar, but not with a Yarmouth
+cart&mdash;now, I find, replaced by wheelbarrows.&nbsp; In
+Amsterdam, at the present day, you may see many such quaint old
+rows.&nbsp; But in Amsterdam you have an evil-smelling air, while
+in Yarmouth it is ever fresh and crisp, and redolent, as it were,
+of the neighbouring sea.&nbsp; The market-place and the big
+church were at the back of this congeries of quays and rows, and
+the sea and the old pier were at quite a respectable distance
+from the town.&nbsp; I fancy the Yarmouth of the London bathers
+has now extended down to the sandy beach, and the rough and rude
+old pier has given place to one better adapted to the wants and
+requirements of an <!-- page 157--><a name="page157"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 157</span>increasingly well-to-do
+community.&nbsp; Far more Dutch than English was the Yarmouth of
+half a century ago, I again say.</p>
+<p>As to the Yarmouth Independent parson, I shall never forget
+him.&nbsp; He was a very big man, with great red cheeks that hung
+over his collar like blown bladders, and was always on
+stilts.&nbsp; He preached in a big meeting-house, now no more,
+the pillars of which intercepted alike the view and the
+sound.&nbsp; One winter evening he was holding forth, in his
+usual heavy style, to a few good people&mdash;with whom,
+evidently, all pleasure was out of the question&mdash;who came
+there, as in duty bound, and sat like martyrs all the while, and
+all were as grave as the preacher, when a wicked boy rushed in
+and, in a hurried manner, called out, &lsquo;Fire!
+fire!&rsquo;&nbsp; The effect, I am told, was electrical.&nbsp;
+For once the good parson was in a hurry, and moved as quickly and
+spoke as rapidly as his fellows; but never had there been so much
+excitement in his chapel since he had been its pastor.&nbsp;
+Once, I remember, he came to town, and dropped in at the close of
+a party rather convivially inclined, in the Old London Coffee
+House.&nbsp; As the reverend gentleman advanced to greet his
+friends, a London lawyer, with all the impudence of his class,
+muttered, <!-- page 158--><a name="page158"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 158</span>in a whisper intended to be heard,
+and which was heard, by everyone, &lsquo;Yarmouth
+bloater.&rsquo;&nbsp; The good man said nothing, but it was
+evident he thought all the more, as the group were more or less
+tittering over the fitness of the comparison.&nbsp; The lawyer
+who made the remark was also the son of a London minister, and,
+therefore, might have been expected to have known better.&nbsp; I
+fear the Yarmouth minister never forgave him.&nbsp; Well, it only
+served him right, as he had a horrible way of making young people
+very uncomfortable.&nbsp; &lsquo;Well, Master James,&rsquo; said
+he to me on one occasion, when all the brethren had come to dine
+at Wrentham, and when I was admitted, in conformity with the
+golden maxim in all well-regulated family circles, that little
+children were to be seen and not heard (perhaps in our day the
+fault is too much in an opposite direction), &lsquo;can you
+inform me which is the more proper form of expression&mdash;a
+pair of new gloves, or a new pair of gloves?&rsquo;&nbsp; Of
+course I gave the wrong answer, as I blushed up to the ears at
+finding myself the smallest personage in the room, publicly
+appealed to by the biggest.&nbsp; He meant well, I dare
+say.&nbsp; His only object was to draw me out; but the question
+and the questioner gave me a bad quarter of an hour, and I never
+got <!-- page 159--><a name="page159"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 159</span>over the unpleasant sensation of
+which he had unconsciously been the originator in my youthful
+breast.</p>
+<p>At that time Yarmouth people were supposed to be a little
+superior.&nbsp; They were well-to-do, and lived in good style,
+and, as was to be expected, considering the sanitary advantages
+of the situation, were in good health and spirits.&nbsp; They got
+a good deal of their intellectual character from Norwich, which
+at the time set the fashion in such matters.&nbsp; In 1790 two
+societies were established in that city for the private and
+amicable discussion of miscellaneous questions.&nbsp; One of
+these, the Tusculan, seems to have devoted the attention of its
+members exclusively to political topics; while the Speculative,
+although it imposed no restrictions on the range of inquiry, was
+of a more philosophical character.&nbsp; William Taylor was a
+member of both, and it is difficult to say whether he
+distinguished himself most by his ingenuity in debate, by the
+novelty of the information which he brought to bear on every
+point, or by the lively sallies of imagination with which he at
+once amused and excited his hearers.&nbsp; The papers read by
+himself embraced an infinite variety of subjects, from the theory
+of the earth, then unillumined by <!-- page 160--><a
+name="page160"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 160</span>the
+disclosures of modern geologists, to the most elaborate and
+refined productions of its rational tenants, and he was seldom at
+a loss to place on new ground or in a fresh light the matter of
+discussion introduced by others.&nbsp; Writers of every tongue,
+studied by him with observant curiosity, stored his retentive
+memory with materials ready to be applied on every occasion,
+moulded by his Promethean talent into the most animated and
+alluring forms.&nbsp; As a speaker and converser he was eminently
+characterized by a constant flow of brilliant ideas, by a rapid
+succession of striking images, and by a never-failing copiousness
+of words, often quaint, but always correct.&nbsp; A similar
+society was formed at Yarmouth, under the auspices of Dr. Aiken,
+at which William Taylor also occasionally attended.&nbsp; The
+Rev. Thomas Compton has given the following description of these
+visits: &lsquo;We were, moreover, sometimes gratified by the
+presence of our literary friends from Norwich.&nbsp; I have there
+repeatedly listened to the mild and persuasive eloquence of the
+late Dr. Enfield.&nbsp; A gentleman, too, still living, who has
+lately added to his literary fame by a biographical work of high
+repute (I scarcely need add that I allude to Mr. W. Taylor) would
+sometimes instruct us by his <!-- page 161--><a
+name="page161"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 161</span>various and
+profound knowledge, or amuse us with his ingenious
+paradoxes.&rsquo;&nbsp; When we recollect how at this time the
+poetical puerilities of Bath Easton flourished in the West, we
+may claim that Norwich and Yarmouth, if not as favoured by
+fashion, had at any rate a claim to intellectual reputation at
+least quite equal to that city of the <i>ton</i>.&nbsp; Dr.
+Sayers, whose biography William Taylor had written, and whose
+&lsquo;Dramatic Sketches of Northern Mythology&rsquo; had created
+a great sensation at the time, was of Yarmouth extraction.</p>
+<p>The Rev. Mr. Compton writes: &lsquo;In Yarmouth, where I lived
+at this time, and where Lord Chedworth was accustomed to pay an
+annual visit, there was then a society of gentlemen who met once
+a fortnight for the purpose of amicable discussion.&nbsp; Our
+members&mdash;alas! how few remain&mdash;were of all parties and
+persuasions, and some of them of very distinguished
+attainments.&nbsp; A society thus constituted was in those days
+as pleasant as it was instructive.&nbsp; The most eager
+disputation was never found to endanger the most perfect
+goodwill, nor did any bitter feuds arise from this entire freedom
+of opinion till the prolific period of the French
+Revolution.&nbsp; On this subject our controversies became very
+impassioned.&nbsp; The present Sir Astley <!-- page 162--><a
+name="page162"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 162</span>Cooper,
+then a very young man, was accustomed to pass his vacations with
+his most excellent father, Dr. Cooper, a name ever to be by me
+beloved and revered.&nbsp; It was the amusement of our young
+friend to say things of the most irritating nature, I
+believe&mdash;like Lady Florence Pemberton in the
+novel&mdash;merely to see who would make the ugliest face.&nbsp;
+Thus circumstanced, it was not in my philosophy to be the coolest
+of the party.&rsquo;&nbsp; We can well imagine the
+consequences.&nbsp; There was a row, and the literary society
+came to grief.&nbsp; As time went on matters became worse instead
+of better, and the town was split up into parties&mdash;Liberal
+or the reverse, Church or Dissent, but all of one mind as regards
+their views being correct; and as to the weakness or wickedness
+of persons who thought otherwise.&nbsp; The evil of this spirit
+knew no bounds, and the demoralizing effect it produced was
+especially apparent at election times.&nbsp; When Oldfield wrote
+his &lsquo;Origin of Parliaments,&rsquo; the town, he tells us,
+was under the influence of the Earl of Leicester, and was for
+many years represented by some of his Lordship&rsquo;s
+family.&nbsp; The right of election was in the burgesses at
+large, of whom there were at that time one thousand.&nbsp; The
+Reform Bill did little to improve the state of <!-- page 163--><a
+name="page163"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 163</span>affairs; it
+led to greater bribery and corruption and intimidation than ever,
+and now, as a Parliamentary borough, Yarmouth has ceased to
+exist.&nbsp; &lsquo;Sugar,&rsquo; it seems, was the slang term
+used for money, and the honest voters were too eager to get
+it.&nbsp; Alas! in none of our seaport towns is the standard of
+morality very high.&nbsp; Yarmouth, at any rate, is not worse
+than Deal.&nbsp; In old days the excitement of a Yarmouth
+election much affected our village.&nbsp; It lasted some
+days.&nbsp; The out-voters were brought from the uttermost parts
+of the earth.&nbsp; As there were no railways, stage-coaches were
+hired to bring them down from town; and when they changed horses
+at Wrentham, quite a crowd would assemble to look at the flags,
+and the free and independents on their way to do their duty,
+overflowing with enthusiasm and beer.</p>
+<p>Sir Astley Cooper was much connected with Yarmouth in his
+young days, when his father was the incumbent of the parish
+church.&nbsp; Some of his boyish pranks were peculiar.&nbsp; Here
+is one of them: &lsquo;Having taken two pillows from his
+mother&rsquo;s bed, he carried them up the spire of Yarmouth
+Church, at a time when the wind was blowing from the north-east;
+and as soon as he <!-- page 164--><a name="page164"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 164</span>had ascended as high as he could, he
+ripped them open, and, shaking out their contents, dispersed them
+in the air.&nbsp; The feathers were carried away by the wind, and
+fell far and wide over the surface of the market-place, to the
+great astonishment of a large number of persons assembled
+there.&nbsp; The timid looked upon it phenomenon predictive of
+some calamity; the inquisitive formed a thousand conjectures;
+while some, curious in natural history, actually accounted for it
+by a gale of wind in the north blowing wild-fowl feathers from
+the island of St. Paul&rsquo;s.&rsquo;&nbsp; On another occasion
+he got into an old trunk, which the family had agreed to get rid
+of as inconvenient in the house.&nbsp; In this case he had to pay
+the penalty, when he emerged from the chest in the
+carpenter&rsquo;s shop.&nbsp; The men, who had complained
+terribly of its weight, were not inclined to allow young Astley
+to get off free.&nbsp; One of Astley&rsquo;s tricks had, however,
+a good motive, as it was intended to cure an old woman of her
+besetting sin&mdash;a tendency to take a drop too much.&nbsp; In
+order to cure the old woman of this weakness, he dressed himself
+as well as he could to represent the sable form of his satanic
+majesty.&nbsp; Alas! instead of being surprised, the old lady was
+too far-gone for that, and listened with tipsy gravity to the
+<!-- page 165--><a name="page165"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+165</span>distinguished visitor&rsquo;s discourse.&nbsp; In her
+case it was true, as Burns wrote:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Wi&rsquo; tipenny we fear nae evil;<br />
+Wi&rsquo; usquebae we&rsquo;ll face the deevil.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>One of his tricks nearly led to unpleasant consequences.&nbsp;
+Whilst out shooting one day, near Yarmouth, he killed an
+owl&mdash;a bird familiarly known in Yarmouth by the sobriquet of
+&lsquo;Brother Billy.&rsquo;&nbsp; Having arrived at home, he
+went up into his mother&rsquo;s room, with the bird concealed
+behind his coat, and, assuming a countenance full of fear and
+sorrow, exclaimed, &lsquo;Mother, mother, I&rsquo;ve shot my
+brother Billy!&rsquo; but the alarm and distress instantly
+depicted on the distracted countenance of his parent induced him
+as quickly as possible to pull the owl from under his coat.&nbsp;
+This at once exposed the truth and allayed the apprehensions of
+his mother&rsquo;s mind, but the effects of the shock it caused
+did not so immediately pass away.&nbsp; Dr. Cooper determined to
+punish his son, and he therefore confined him, according to his
+usual mode of correction, in his own house.&nbsp; Astley was,
+however, but little disposed to remain passive in his
+imprisonment, and in the wantonness of his ever-active
+disposition amused himself by climbing up the chimney, and having
+at length reached the <!-- page 166--><a name="page166"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 166</span>summit, endeavoured, by imitating
+the well-known tone of the chimney-sweeper, and calling out as
+lustily as he could, &lsquo;Sweep, sweep!&rsquo; to attract the
+attention of the people below.&nbsp; Even on his father the
+incorrigible lad seems on more than one occasion to have tried
+his little game.&nbsp; One day, while the worthy Doctor was
+marrying a couple in the church, Master Astley concealed himself
+in a turret close by the altar, and, imitating his father&rsquo;s
+voice, repeated in a subdued tone the words of the
+marriage-service as the ceremony proceeded, to the consternation
+of his father, who said that he had never observed an echo in
+that place before.&nbsp; Once or twice the lad&rsquo;s life was
+in peril, as when his foot slipped on the top of the church, and
+he was unpleasantly suspended for some time between the rafters
+of the ceiling and the floor of the chancel.&nbsp; On another
+occasion he had a narrow escape from drowning.&nbsp; It seems
+that on the Yare are little boats out together very slightly, for
+the purpose of carrying a man, his gun, and dog over the shallows
+of Braydon, in pursuit of the flights of wild-fowl which at
+certain seasons haunt these shoals.&nbsp; When the boat is thus
+loaded, it only draws two or three inches of water, and is quite
+unfit for sea.&nbsp; Young Astley nearly lost his life <!-- page
+167--><a name="page167"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 167</span>in
+attempting to take one of these boats out to open sea.&nbsp; In
+this way young Astley Cooper, from his fearless and enterprising
+disposition, soon became a sort of leader of the Yarmouth boys,
+and at their head, for a time, seems to have devoted himself to
+every kind of amusement within his reach&mdash;riding, boating,
+fishing, and not unfrequently sports of a less harmless
+character, such as breaking lamps and windows, ringing the church
+bells at all hours, disturbing the people by frequent alterations
+of the church clock, so that if any mischief were committed it
+was sure, says his admiring biographer, to be set down to
+him.</p>
+<p>The two men who shed most literary fame on the Yarmouth of my
+childhood were Dawson Turner and Hudson Gurney, who in this
+respect resembled each other, that they were both bankers and
+both antiquarians more or less distinguished.&nbsp; Dawson Turner
+was a man of middle height and of saturnine aspect, who had the
+reputation of being a hard taskmaster to the ladies of his
+family, who were quite as intelligent and devoted to literature
+as himself.&nbsp; He published a &lsquo;Tour in
+Normandy&rsquo;&mdash;at that time scarcely anyone travelled
+abroad&mdash;and much other matter, and perhaps as an
+autograph-collector was unrivalled.&nbsp; Most of <!-- page
+168--><a name="page168"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+168</span>his books, with his notes, more or less valuable, are
+now in the British Museum.&nbsp; Sir Charles Lyell, when a young
+man, visited the Turner family in 1817, and gives us a very high
+idea of them all.&nbsp; &lsquo;Mr. Turner,&rsquo; he says, in a
+letter to his father, &lsquo;surprises me as much as ever.&nbsp;
+He wrote twenty-two letters last night after he had wished us
+&ldquo;Good-night.&rdquo;&nbsp; It kept him up till two
+o&rsquo;clock this morning.&rsquo;&nbsp; Again Sir Charles
+writes: &lsquo;What I see going on every hour in this family
+makes me ashamed of the most active day I ever spent at
+Midhurst.&nbsp; Mrs. Turner has been etching with her daughters
+in the parlour every morning at half-past six.&rsquo;&nbsp; Of
+Hudson Gurney in his youth we get a flattering portrait in one of
+the charming &lsquo;Remains of the Late Mrs. Trench,&rsquo;
+edited by her son, Archbishop of Dublin.&nbsp; Writing from
+Yarmouth in 1799, she says: &lsquo;I have been detained here
+since last Friday, waiting for a fair wind, and my imprisonment
+would have been comfortless enough had it not have been for the
+attention of Mr. Hudson Gurney, a young man on whom I had no
+claims except from a letter of Mr. Sanford&rsquo;s, who, without
+knowing him, or having any connection with him, recommended me to
+his care, feeling wretched that I should be unprotected in the
+first <!-- page 169--><a name="page169"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 169</span>part of my journey.&nbsp; He has
+already devoted to me one evening and two mornings, assisted me
+in money matters, lent me books, and enlivened my confinement to
+a wretched room by his pleasant conversation.&nbsp; Mr. Sanford
+having described me as a person travelling about <i>for her
+health</i>, he says his old assistant in the Bank fancied I was a
+decrepit elderly lady who might safely be consigned to his
+youthful partner.&nbsp; His description of his surprise thus
+prepared was conceived in a very good strain of flattery.&nbsp;
+He is almost two-and-twenty, understands several languages, seems
+to delight in books, and to be uncommonly well
+informed.&rsquo;&nbsp; Little credit, however, is due to Mr.
+Hudson Gurney for his politeness in this case.&nbsp; The lovely
+and lively widow&mdash;she had married Colonel St. George at the
+age of eighteen, and the marriage only lasted two or three years,
+the Colonel dying of consumption&mdash;must have possessed
+personal and mental attractions irresistible to a cultivated
+young man of twenty-two.&nbsp; Had she been old and ugly, it is
+to be feared his business engagements would have prevented the
+youthful banker devoting much time to her ladyship&rsquo;s
+service.</p>
+<p>Yarmouth is intimately connected with literature and the fine
+arts.&nbsp; It was off Yarmouth that <!-- page 170--><a
+name="page170"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 170</span>Robinson
+Crusoe was shipwrecked; and the testimony he bears to the
+character of the people shows how kindly disposed were the
+Yarmouth people of his day.&nbsp; &lsquo;We,&rsquo; he writes,
+&lsquo;got all safe on shore, and walked afterwards on foot to
+Yarmouth, where, as unfortunate men, we were used with great
+humanity, not only by the magistrates of the town, who assigned
+us good quarters, but also by particular merchants and owners of
+ships, and had money given us, sufficient to carry us either to
+London or back to Hull, as we thought fit.&rsquo;&nbsp; It was
+from Yarmouth that Wordsworth and Coleridge sailed away to
+Germany, then almost a <i>terra incognita</i>.&nbsp; Leman
+Blanchard was born at Yarmouth, as well as Sayers, the first, if
+not the cleverest, of our English caricaturists.&nbsp; One of the
+most brilliant men ever returned to Parliament was Winthrop
+Mackworth Praed, M.P. for Yarmouth, whose politics as a boy I
+detested as much as in after-years I learned to admire his
+genius.&nbsp; One of the most fortunate men of our day, Sir James
+Paget, the great surgeon, was a Yarmouth lad, and the See of
+Chester was filled by an accomplished divine, also a Yarmouth
+lad.&nbsp; Southey, when at Yarmouth, where his brother was a
+student for some time, was so much struck with <!-- page 171--><a
+name="page171"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 171</span>the
+uniqueness of the epitaphs in the Yarmouth Church, that he took
+the trouble to copy many of them.&nbsp; One was as follows:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;We put him out to nurse;<br />
+Alas! his life he paid,<br />
+But judge not; he was overlaid.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And hence it may be inferred that in Yarmouth the custom of
+baby-farming has long flourished.&nbsp; Possibly thence it may
+have extended itself to London.&nbsp; Amongst the truly great men
+who have lived and died in Yarmouth, honourable mention must be
+made of Hales, the Norfolk Giant.&nbsp; In times past soldiers
+and sailors and royal personages were often to be seen at
+Yarmouth.&nbsp; It was at Yarmouth the heroes, returning from
+many a distant battle-field, often landed.&nbsp; Nelson on one
+occasion&mdash;that is, after the affair of Copenhagen&mdash;when
+he landed, at once made his way to the hospital to see his
+men.&nbsp; To one of them, who had lost his arm, he said,
+&lsquo;There, Jack, you and I are spoiled for
+fishermen.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>A good deal of Puritanism seems to have come into England by
+way of Yarmouth.&nbsp; In Queen Elizabeth&rsquo;s time, 300
+Flemings settled there, who had fled from Popery and Spain in
+their native land.&nbsp; In Norwich the Dutch Church <!-- page
+172--><a name="page172"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+172</span>remains to this day.&nbsp; Some of them seem to have
+been the friends and teachers of the far-famed, and I believe
+unjustly maligned, Robert Browne.&nbsp; In Norfolk the seed fell
+upon good soil.&nbsp; While sacerdotalism was more or less being
+developed in the State Church, the Norfolk men boldly protested
+against Papal abominations, as they deemed them, and swore to
+maintain the gospel of Geneva and Knox.&nbsp; One of the men
+imprisoned when Bancroft was Archbishop of Canterbury, for
+attending a conventicle, was Thomas Ladd, &lsquo;a merchant of
+Yarmouth.&rsquo;&nbsp; The writ ran: &lsquo;Because that, on the
+Sabbath days, after the sermons ended, sojourning in the house of
+Mr. Jachler, in Yarmouth, who was late preacher in Yarmouth,
+joined with him in repeating the substance and heads of the
+sermons that day made in the church, at which Thomas Ladd was
+usually present.&rsquo;&nbsp; In 1624 the penal laws for
+suppressing Separatists were strictly enforced in Yarmouth, and
+one of the teachers of a small society of Anabaptists was cast
+into prison, and the Bishop of Norwich wrote a letter of thanks
+to the bailiffs for their activity in this matter, which is
+preserved to this day.&nbsp; But, nevertheless, people still
+continued to worship God according to the <!-- page 173--><a
+name="page173"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 173</span>dictates of
+conscience; we find the Earl of Dorset in his reply to the town
+of Yarmouth, as to the way in which the town should be governed,
+adds: &lsquo;I should want in my care of you if I should not let
+you know that his Majesty is not only informed, but incensed
+against you for conniving at and tolerating a company of
+Brownists among you.&nbsp; I pray you remember there was no seam
+in the Saviour&rsquo;s garment.&rsquo;&nbsp; Bridge was the
+founder of the Yarmouth Congregational Church, somewhere about
+the time of the commencement of the Civil War.&nbsp; The people
+declared for the Parliament.&nbsp; Colonel Goffe was one of its
+representatives in the House of Commons.&nbsp; All along, the
+town seems to have been puritanically inclined, and to have been
+in this matter more independent than neighbouring towns.&nbsp; At
+one time they were so tolerant that the Independents seem to have
+worshipped in one end of the church while the regular clergyman
+performed the service in the other; but that did not last long,
+and when the Independents had a place of worship of their own,
+they were not a little troubled by Friends and Papists claiming
+for themselves the liberty the Independents had sought and
+won.&nbsp; In 1655 the peace of the Church was disturbed by
+Quaker doctrines.&nbsp; It appears two females, members <!-- page
+174--><a name="page174"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 174</span>of
+the Church, had joined them, and refused to return.&nbsp; We
+read: &lsquo;The messenger appointed to visit May Rouse, brought
+in an account of her disowning and despising the Church; she
+would not come at all unless she had a message from the Spirit
+moving her.&rsquo;&nbsp; She came, however, a week after
+(December 11), but by reason of the cold weather was desired to
+come in again the next Tuesday.&nbsp; She did so, and gave in
+these two reasons why she forsook the Church: 1.&nbsp; Because
+the doctrine of the Gospel of Faith was not holden forth;
+2.&nbsp; Because there wanted the right administration of
+baptism.</p>
+<p>In 1659 the Church at Yarmouth, feeling the times to be full
+of trouble and of peril, said:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;1.&nbsp; We judge a Parliament to be expedient for the
+preservation of the peace of these nations; and withal, we do
+desire that all due care be taken that the Parliament be such as
+may preserve the interests of Christ and His people in these
+nations.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;2.&nbsp; As touching the magistrates&rsquo; power in
+matters of faith and worship, we have declared our judgments in
+our late (Free Savoy) confession, and though we greatly prize our
+Christian liberties, yet we profess our utter dislike and
+abhorrence of <!-- page 175--><a name="page175"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 175</span>a universal toleration, as being
+contrary to the mind of God in His Word.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;3.&nbsp; We judge that the taking away of tithes for
+the maintenance of ministers until as full a maintenance be
+equally secured and as legally settled, tends very much to the
+destruction of the ministry, and the preaching of the Gospel in
+these nations.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;4.&nbsp; It is our desire that countenance be not given
+unto, nor trust reposed in, the hand of Quakers, they being
+persons of such principles as are destructive to the Gospel, and
+inconsistent with the peace of modern societies.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>In five years the Yarmouth people had a Roland for their
+Oliver; the King had got his own again, and he and the Parliament
+of the day looked upon the Independents or Presbyterians as
+mischievous as the Quakers; and as to tithes, they were quite as
+much resolved, the only difference being that King and Parliament
+insisted on their being paid to Episcopalians alone.&nbsp; In
+1770 Lady Huntingdon writes: &lsquo;Success has crowned our
+labours in that wicked place, Yarmouth.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Bendish, in whom the Protector was said to have lived
+again, was quite a character in Yarmouth society.&nbsp; Bridget
+Ireton, the granddaughter <!-- page 176--><a
+name="page176"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 176</span>of the
+Protector, married in 1669 Mr. Thomas Bendish, a descendant of
+Sir Thomas Bendish, baronet, Ambassador from Charles I. to the
+Sultan.&nbsp; She died in 1728, removing, however, in the latter
+years of her life to Yarmouth.&nbsp; Her name stands among the
+members of the church in London of which Caryl had been pastor,
+and over which Dr. Watts presided.&nbsp; To her the latter
+addressed at any rate one copy of verses to be found in his
+collected works.&nbsp; She recollected her grandfather, and
+standing, when six years old, between his knees at a State
+Council, she heard secrets which neither bribes nor whippings
+could extract from her.&nbsp; Her grandfather she held to be a
+saint in heaven, and only second to the Twelve Apostles.&nbsp;
+Asked one day whether she had ever been at Court, her reply was,
+&lsquo;I have never been at Court since I was waited upon on the
+knee.&rsquo;&nbsp; Yet she managed to dispense with a good deal
+of waiting, and never would suffer a servant to attend her.&nbsp;
+God, she said, was a sufficient guard, and she would have no
+other.&nbsp; She is described as loquacious and eloquent and
+enthusiastic, frequenting the drawing-rooms and assemblies of
+Yarmouth, dressed in the richest silks, and with a small black
+hood on her head.&nbsp; When she left, which would be at one in
+the <!-- page 177--><a name="page177"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 177</span>morning, perched on her
+old-fashioned saddle, she would trot home, piercing the night air
+with her loud, jubilant psalms, in which she described herself as
+one of the elect, in a tone more remarkable for strength than
+sweetness.&nbsp; In the daytime she would work with her
+labourers, taking her turn at the pitchfork or the spade.&nbsp;
+The old Court dresses of her mother and Mrs. Cromwell were
+bequeathed by her to Mrs. Robert Luson, of Yarmouth, and were
+shown as recently as 1834, at an exhibition of Court dresses held
+at the Somerset Gallery in the Strand.&nbsp; As was to be
+expected, Mrs. Bendish was enthusiastic in the cause of the
+Revolution of 1688, and the printed sheets relating to it were
+dropped by her secretly in the streets of Yarmouth, to prepare
+the people for the good time coming.&nbsp; Her son was a friend
+of Dr. Watts as well as his mother.&nbsp; He died at Yarmouth,
+unmarried, in the year 1753, and with him the line of Bendish
+seems to have come to an end.&nbsp; Another daughter of Ireton
+was married to Nathaniel Carter, who died in 1723, aged 78.&nbsp;
+His father, John Carter, was commander-in-chief of the militia of
+the town in 1654.&nbsp; He subscribed the Solemn League and
+Covenant, being then one of the elders of the Independent
+congregation.&nbsp; He was also bailiff of <!-- page 178--><a
+name="page178"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 178</span>the town,
+and an intimate friend of Ireton.&nbsp; He died in 1667.&nbsp; On
+his tombstone we read:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;His course, his fight, his race,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thus finished, fought, and run,<br />
+Death brings him to the place<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From whence is no return.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>He lived at No. 4, South Quay, and it was there, so it is
+said, that the resolve was made that King Charles should die.</p>
+<p>He is gone, but his room still remains unaltered&mdash;a large
+wainscoted upper chamber, thirty feet long, with three windows
+looking on to the quay, with carved and ornamented chimney-piece
+and ceiling.&nbsp; A great obscurity, as was to be expected,
+hangs over the transaction, as even now there are men who shrink
+from lifting up a finger against the Lord&rsquo;s anointed.&nbsp;
+Dinner had been ordered at four, but it was not till eleven, that
+it was served, and that the die had been cast.&nbsp; The members
+of the Secret Council, we are told, &lsquo;after a very short
+repast, immediately set off by post&mdash;many for London, and
+some for the quarters of the army.&rsquo;&nbsp; Such is the
+account given in a letter, written in 1773, by Mr. Mewling Luson,
+a well-known resident in Yarmouth, whose father, Mr. William
+Luson, was nearly connected the <!-- page 179--><a
+name="page179"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 179</span>Cromwell
+family.&nbsp; Nathaniel Carter, the son-in-law of Ireton, was in
+the habit of showing the room, and relating the occurrence
+connected with it, which happened when he was a boy.&nbsp;
+Cromwell was not at that council.&nbsp; He never was in Yarmouth;
+but that there was such consultation there is more than
+probable.&nbsp; Yarmouth was full of Cromwellites.&nbsp; In the
+Market Place, now known as the Weavers&rsquo; Arms, to this day
+is shown the panelled parlour whence Miles Corbet was used to go
+forth to worship in that part of the church allotted to the
+Independents.&nbsp; Miles Corbet was the son of Sir Thomas
+Corbet, of Sprouston, who had been made Recorder of Yarmouth in
+the first year of Charles, and who was one of the representatives
+of the town in the Long Parliament.&nbsp; The son was an ardent
+supporter of the policy of Cromwell, and, like him, laboured that
+England might be religious and free and great, as she never could
+be under any king of the Stuart race; and he met with his
+reward.&nbsp; &lsquo;See, young man,&rsquo; said an old man to
+Wilberforce, as he pointed to a figure of Christ on the cross,
+&lsquo;see the fate of a Reformer.&rsquo;&nbsp; It was so
+emphatically with Miles Corbet.&nbsp; Under the date of 1662
+there is the following entry in the church-book:</p>
+<blockquote><p><!-- page 180--><a name="page180"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 180</span>&lsquo;1662.&mdash;Miles Corbet
+suffered in London.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>He was a member of the church there, and was one of the judges
+who sat on the trial of King Charles I.&nbsp; His name stands
+last on the list of those who signed the warrant for that
+monarch&rsquo;s execution.&nbsp; Corbet fled into Holland at the
+Restoration, with Colonels Okey and Barkstead.&nbsp; George
+Downing&mdash;a name ever infamous&mdash;had been Colonel
+Okey&rsquo;s chaplain.&nbsp; He became a Royalist at the
+Restoration, and was despatched as Envoy Extraordinary into
+Holland, where, under a promise of safety, he trepanned the three
+persons above named into his power, and sent them over to England
+to suffer death for having been members of the Commission for
+trying King Charles I.&nbsp; For this service he was created a
+baronet.&nbsp; The King sent an order to the Sheriffs of London
+on April 21, 1662, that Okey&rsquo;s head and quarters should
+have Christian burial, as he had manifested some signs of
+contrition; but Barkstead&rsquo;s head was directed to be placed
+on the Traitor&rsquo;s Gate in the Tower, and Corbet&rsquo;s head
+on the bridge, and their quarters on the City gates.</p>
+<p>Foremost amongst the noted women of the Independent Church
+must be mentioned Sarah Martin, of whose life a sketch appeared
+in the <!-- page 181--><a name="page181"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 181</span><i>Edinburgh Review</i> as far back
+as 1847.&nbsp; A life of her was also published by the Religious
+Tract Society.&nbsp; Sarah, who joined the Yarmouth church in
+1811, was born at Caistor.&nbsp; From her nineteenth year she
+devoted her only day of rest, the Sabbath, to the task of
+teaching in a Sunday-school.&nbsp; She likewise visited the
+inmates of the workhouse, and read the Scriptures to the aged and
+the sick.&nbsp; But the gaol was the scene of her greatest
+labours.&nbsp; In 1819, after some difficulty, she obtained
+admission to it, and soon seems to have acquired an extraordinary
+influence over the minds of the prisoners.&nbsp; She then gave up
+one day in the week to instruct them in reading and
+writing.&nbsp; At length she attended the prison regularly, and
+kept an exact account of her proceedings and their results in a
+book, which is now preserved in the public library of the
+town.&nbsp; As there was no chaplain, she read and preached to
+the inmates herself, and devised means of obtaining employment
+for them.&nbsp; She continued this good work till the end of her
+days in 1843, when she died, aged fifty-three.&nbsp; A handsome
+window of stained glass, costing upwards of &pound;100, raised by
+subscription, has been placed to her memory in the west window of
+the north aisle of St. Nicholas Church.&nbsp; But <!-- page
+182--><a name="page182"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+182</span>her fame extends beyond local limits, and is part of
+the inheritance of the universal Church.&nbsp; It was in Mr.
+Walford&rsquo;s time that Sarah Martin commenced her work.&nbsp;
+Mr. Walford tells us, in his Autobiography, that the Church had
+somewhat degenerated in his day, that the line of thought was
+worldly, and not such as became the Gospel.&nbsp; It is clear
+that in his time it greatly revived, and, even as a lad, the
+intelligence of the congregation seemed to lift me up into quite
+a new sphere, so different were the merchants and ship-owners of
+Yarmouth from the rustic inhabitants of my native village.&nbsp;
+In this respect, if I remember aright, the family of Shelley were
+particularly distinguished.&nbsp; One dear old lady, who lived at
+the Quay, was emphatically the minister&rsquo;s friend.&nbsp; She
+had a nice house of her own and ample means, and there she
+welcomed ministers and their wives and children.&nbsp; It is to
+be hoped, for the sake of poor parsons, that such people still
+live.&nbsp; I know it was a great treat to me to enjoy the
+hospitality of the kind-hearted Mrs. Goderham, for whose memory I
+still cherish an affectionate regard.&nbsp; To live in one of the
+best houses on the Quay, and to lie in my bed and to see through
+the windows the masts of the shipping, was indeed to a boy a
+treat.</p>
+<p><!-- page 183--><a name="page183"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+183</span>A little while ago I chanced to be at Norwich, when the
+thought naturally occurred to me that I would take a run to
+Yarmouth&mdash;a journey quickly made by the rail.&nbsp; In my
+case the journey was safely and expeditiously accomplished, and I
+hastened once more to revisit the scenes and associations of my
+youth.&nbsp; Alas! wherever I went I found changes.&nbsp; A new
+generation had arisen that knew not Joseph.&nbsp; The wind was
+howling down the Quay; the sand was blown into my mouth, my nose,
+my ears; I could scarcely see for the latter, or walk for the
+former; but, nevertheless, I made my way to the pier.&nbsp; Only
+one person was on it, and his back was turned to me.&nbsp; As he
+stood at the extreme end, with chest expanded, with mouth wide
+open, as if prepared to swallow the raging sea in front and the
+Dutch coast farther off, I thought I knew the figure.&nbsp; It
+was a reporter from Fleet Street and he was the only man to greet
+me in the town I once knew so well.&nbsp; Yes; the Yarmouth of my
+youth was gone.&nbsp; Then a reporter from Fleet Street was an
+individual never dreamt of.&nbsp; And so the world changes, and
+we get new men, fresh faces, other minds.&nbsp; The antiquarian
+Camden, were he to revisit Yarmouth, would not be a little
+astonished at what he would see.&nbsp; He wrote: &lsquo;As <!--
+page 184--><a name="page184"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+184</span>soon as the Yare has passed Claxton, it takes a turn to
+the south, that it may descend more gently into the sea, by which
+means it makes a sort of little tongue or slip of land, washt on
+one side by itself, on the other side by the sea.&nbsp; In this
+slip, upon an open shore, I saw Yarmouth, a very neat harbour and
+town, fortified both by the nature of the place and the
+contrivance of art.&nbsp; For, though it be almost surrounded
+with water, on the west with a river, over which there is a
+drawbridge, and on either side with the sea, except to the north,
+where it is joined to the continent; yet it is fenced with
+strong, stately walls, which, with the river, figure it into an
+oblong quadrangle.&nbsp; Besides the towers upon these, there is
+a mole or mount, to the east, from whence the great guns command
+the sea (scarce half a mile distant) all round.&nbsp; It has but
+one church, though very large and with a stately high spire,
+built near the north gate by Herbert, Bishop of
+Norwich.&rsquo;&nbsp; In only one respect the Yarmouth of to-day
+resembles that of Camden&rsquo;s time.&nbsp; Then the north wind
+played the tyrant and plagued the coast, and it does so
+still.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 185--><a name="page185"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 185</span>CHAPTER VII.<br />
+<span class="smcap">the norfolk capital</span>.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Brigg&rsquo;s Lane&mdash;The carrier&rsquo;s
+cart&mdash;Reform demonstration&mdash;The old
+dragon&mdash;Chairing M.P.&rsquo;s&mdash;Hornbutton
+Jack&mdash;Norwich artists and literati&mdash;Quakers and
+Nonconformists.</p>
+<p>Many, many years ago, when wandering in the North of Germany,
+I came to an hotel in the Fremden Buch, of which (Englishmen at
+that time were far more patriotic and less cosmopolitan than in
+these degenerate days) an enthusiastic Englishman had
+written&mdash;and possibly the writing had been suggested by the
+hard fare and dirty ways of the place:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;England, with all thy faults, I love thee
+still.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Underneath, a still more enthusiastic Englishman had written:
+&lsquo;Faults?&nbsp; What faults?&nbsp; I know of none, except
+that Brigg&rsquo;s Lane, Norwich, wants widening.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+For the benefit of the reader who may be a stranger to the
+locality, let me inform him that <!-- page 186--><a
+name="page186"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+186</span>Brigg&rsquo;s Lane leads out of the fine Market Place,
+for which the good old city of Norwich is celebrated all the
+world over, and that on a recent visit to Norwich I found that
+the one fault which could be laid at the door of England had been
+removed&mdash;that Brigg&rsquo;s Lane had been
+widened&mdash;that, in fact, it had ceased to be a lane, and had
+been elevated into the dignity of a street.</p>
+<p>My first acquaintance with Norwich, when I was a lad of tender
+years and of limited experience, was by Brigg&rsquo;s Lane.&nbsp;
+I had reached it by means of a carrier&rsquo;s cart&mdash;the
+only mode of conveyance between Southwold, Wrentham, Beccles and
+Norwich&mdash;a carrier&rsquo;s cart with a hood drawn by three
+noble horses, and able to accommodate almost any number of
+travellers and any amount of luggage.&nbsp; As the driver was
+well known to everyone, there was also a good deal of
+conversation of a more or less friendly character.&nbsp; The cart
+took one day to reach Norwich&mdash;which was, and it may be is,
+the commercial emporium of all that district&mdash;and another
+day to return.&nbsp; The beauty of such a conveyance, as compared
+with the railway travelling of to-day, was that there was no
+occasion to be in a flurry if you wanted to travel by it.&nbsp;
+Goldsmith&mdash;for such was the proprietor and driver&rsquo;s
+name&mdash;when he came to <!-- page 187--><a
+name="page187"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 187</span>a place was
+in no hurry to leave it.&nbsp; All the tradesmen in the village
+had hampers or boxes to return, and it took some time to collect
+them; or messages and notes to send, and it took some time to
+write them; and at the alehouse there was always a little gossip
+to be done while the horses enjoyed their pail of water or
+mouthful of hay.&nbsp; Even at the worst there was no fear of
+being left behind, as by dint of running and holloaing you might
+get up with the cart, unless you were very much behind
+indeed.&nbsp; But you may be sure that when the day came that I
+was to visit the great city of Norwich I was ready for the
+carrier&rsquo;s cart long before the carrier&rsquo;s cart was
+ready for me.&nbsp; Why was it, you ask, that the Norwich journey
+was undertaken?&nbsp; The answer is not difficult to give.&nbsp;
+The Reform agitation at that time had quickened the entire
+intellectual and social life of the people.&nbsp; At length had
+dawned the age of reason, and had come the rights of man.&nbsp;
+The victory had been won all along the line, and was to be
+celebrated in the most emphatic manner.&nbsp; We Dissenters
+rejoiced with exceeding joy; for we looked forward, as a natural
+result, to the restoration of that religious equality in the eye
+of the law of which we had been unrighteously deprived, <!-- page
+188--><a name="page188"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+188</span>and in consequence of which we had suffered in many
+ways.&nbsp; We joined, as a matter of course, in the celebration
+of the victory which we and the entire body of Reformers
+throughout the land had gained; and how could that be done better
+than by feeding the entire community on old English fare washed
+down by old English ale?&nbsp; And this was done as far as
+practicable everywhere.&nbsp; For instance, at Bungay there was a
+public feast in the Market Place, and on the town-pump the
+Messrs. Childs erected a printing-press, which they kept hard at
+work all day printing off papers intended to do honour to the
+great event their fellow-townsmen were celebrating in so jovial a
+manner.&nbsp; In Norwich the demonstration was to be of a more
+imposing character, and as an invitation had come to the heads of
+the family from an old friend, a minister out of work, and living
+more or less comfortably on his property, it seemed good to them
+to accept it, and to take me with them, deeming, possibly, that
+of two evils it was best to choose the least, and that I should
+be safer under their eye at Norwich than with no one to look
+after me at home.&nbsp; At any rate, be that as it may, the
+change was not a little welcome, and much did I see to wonder at
+in the old Castle, the new Gaol, the size <!-- page 189--><a
+name="page189"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 189</span>of the
+city, the extent of the Market Place, the smartness of the
+people, and the glare of the shops.&nbsp; It well repaid me for
+the ride of twenty-six miles and the jolting of the
+carrier&rsquo;s cart along the dusty roads.</p>
+<p>As I look into the mirror of the past, I see, alas! but a
+faded picture of that wonderful banquet in Norwich to celebrate
+Reform.&nbsp; There was a procession with banners and music,
+which seemed to me endless, as it toiled along in the dust under
+the fierce sun of summer, the spectators cheering all the
+way.&nbsp; There were speeches, I dare say, though no word of
+them remains; but I have a distinct recollection of peeping into
+the tents or tent, where the diners were at work, and of
+receiving from some one or other of them a bit of plum-pudding
+prepared for that day, which seemed to me of unusual
+excellence.&nbsp; I have a distinct recollection also of the
+fireworks in the evening, the first I had ever seen, on the
+Castle plain, and of the dense crowd that had turned out to see
+the sight; but I can well remember that I enjoyed myself much,
+and that I was awfully tired when it was all over.</p>
+<p>Another memory also comes to me in connection with the old
+Dragon,&mdash;not of Revelation, but of Norwich&mdash;a huge
+green monster, which was usually <!-- page 190--><a
+name="page190"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 190</span>kept in St.
+Andrew&rsquo;s Hall, and dragged out at the time of city
+festivities.&nbsp; Men inside of it carried it along the street,
+and the sight was terrible to see, as it had a ferocious head and
+a villainous tail, and resembled nothing that is in the heaven
+above or the earth beneath or the waters under the earth.&nbsp; I
+fancy, however, since the schoolmaster has gone abroad, that kind
+of dragon has ceased to roar.&nbsp; I think it was at a Norwich
+election that I saw it for the first and the only time, and it
+followed in the procession formed to chair the Members&mdash;the
+Members being seated in gorgeous array on chairs, borne on the
+heads of people, and every now and then, much to the delight of
+the mob, though I should imagine very little to his own, the
+chair, with the Member in it, was tossed up into the air, and by
+this means it was supposed the general public were able to get a
+view of their M.P. and to see what manner of man he was.&nbsp; It
+was in some such way that I, as a lad, realized, as I never else
+should have done, the red face and the pink-silk stockings of the
+Hon. Mr. Scarlett, the happy candidate who pretended to enjoy the
+fun, as with the best grace possible under the circumstances he
+smiled on the ladies in the windows of the street, as he was
+borne along and bowed to all.&nbsp; From <!-- page 191--><a
+name="page191"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 191</span>my
+recollection of the chairing I saw that time, I am more inclined
+to admire the activity of Wilberforce, of whom we read, when
+elected for Hull, &lsquo;When the procession reached his
+mother&rsquo;s house, he sprang from the chair, and, presenting
+himself with surprising quickness at a projecting window&mdash;it
+was that of the nursery in which his childhood had been
+passed&mdash;he addressed the populace with such complete effect
+that he was afterwards able to decide the election of its
+successor.&rsquo;&nbsp; At Norwich the Hon. Mr. Scarlett did well
+in not attempting a similar display of agility.&nbsp; Perhaps,
+however, it is quite as well that we have got rid of the chairing
+and the humour&mdash;Heaven help us!&mdash;to which it gave rise
+on the part of an English mob.</p>
+<p>There was a delightful flavour of antiquity about the Norwich
+of that day&mdash;its old fusty chapels and churches, its old
+bridges and narrow streets.&nbsp; All the people with whom I came
+into contact on that festival seemed to me well stricken in
+years.&nbsp; It was not so very long since, old Hornbutton Jack
+had been seen threading his way along its ancient streets.&nbsp;
+With a countenance much resembling the portraits of Erasmus, with
+gray hair hanging about his shoulders, with his hat drawn over
+his eyes and his hands behind him, as if in deep meditation; <!--
+page 192--><a name="page192"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+192</span>John Fransham, the Norwich metaphysician and
+mathematician, might well excite the curiosity of the casual
+observer, especially when I add that he was bandy-legged, that he
+was short of stature, that he wore a green jacket, a broad hat,
+large shoes, and short worsted stockings.&nbsp; A Norwich weaver
+had helped to make Fransham a philosopher.&nbsp; Wright said
+Fransham could discourse well on the nature and fitness of
+things.&nbsp; He possessed a purely philosophical spirit and a
+soul well purified from vulgar errors.&nbsp; Fransham made
+himself famous in his day.&nbsp; There is every reason to believe
+that he had been for some time tutor to Mr. Windham.&nbsp; He is
+once recorded to have spent a day with Dr. Parr.&nbsp; Many of
+his pupils became professional men; with one of them, Dr. Leeds,
+the reader of Foote&rsquo;s comedies, if such a one exists, may
+be acquainted.&nbsp; The tutor and his pupil, as Johnny
+Macpherson and Dr. Last, were actually exhibited on the
+stage.&nbsp; But to return to Norwich antiquities.&nbsp; I have a
+dim memory of some old place where the Dutch and Huguenot
+refugees were permitted to meet for worship, and even now I can
+recognise there the possibility of another Sir Thomas
+Browne&mdash;unless the Norwich of my boyhood has undergone the
+destructive process we <!-- page 193--><a
+name="page193"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 193</span>love to
+call improvement&mdash;not even disturbed in his quiet study by
+the storm of civil war, inditing his thoughts as follows:
+&lsquo;That crystal is nothing else but ice strongly congealed;
+that a diamond is softened or broken by the blood of a goat; that
+bays preserve from the mischief of lightning and thunder; that
+the horse hath no gall; that a kingfisher hanged by the bill
+showeth where the wind lay; that the flesh of peacocks corrupteth
+not;&rsquo; and so on&mdash;questions, it may be, as pertinent as
+those learnedly discussed in half-crown magazines at the present
+day.</p>
+<p>As a boy, I was chiefly familiar with Norwich crapes and
+bombazines and Norwich shawls, which at that time were making
+quite a sensation in the fashionable world.&nbsp; It was at a
+later time that I came to hear of Old Crome and the Norwich
+school.&nbsp; Of him writes Mr. Wedmore, that &lsquo;he died in a
+substantial square-built house, in what was a good street then,
+in the parish of St. George, Colegate, having begun as a workman,
+and ended as a bourgeois.&nbsp; He was a simple man, of genial
+company.&nbsp; To the end of his life he used to go of an evening
+to the public-house as to an informal club.&nbsp; In the
+privileged bar-parlour, behind the taps and glasses, he sat with
+his friends and the shopkeepers, <!-- page 194--><a
+name="page194"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 194</span>talking of
+local things.&nbsp; But it is not to be supposed that because his
+life was from end to end a humble one, though prosperous even
+outwardly after its kind, Crome was deprived of the companionship
+most fitted to his genius, the stimulus that he most
+needed.&nbsp; The very existence of the Norwich Society of
+Artists settles that question.&nbsp; The local men hung on his
+words; he knew that he was not only making pictures, but a
+school.&nbsp; And in the quietness of a provincial city a coterie
+had been formed of men bent on the pursuit of an honest and
+homely art, and of these he was the chief.&rsquo;&nbsp; Dying,
+his last words were, &lsquo;Hobbema, oh, Hobbema, how I loved
+thee!&rsquo;&nbsp; In my young days Mr. John Sell Cotman chiefly
+represented Norwich, although in later times he became connected
+with King&rsquo;s College, London.&nbsp; A lady writes to me:
+&lsquo;I think it was in the summer of 1842 Mr. Cotman came down
+to Norwich to visit his son John, who at that time was occupying
+a house on St. Bennet&rsquo;s Road.&nbsp; He visited us at Thorpe
+several times, and was unusually well and in good spirits, with
+sketchbook or folio always in hand.&nbsp; His father and sisters,
+too, were then living in a small house at Thorpe, and from the
+balcony of their house, which looked over the valley of the
+Wensum, he made <!-- page 195--><a name="page195"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 195</span>one of his last interesting
+sketches, twelve of which, after his death, the following year,
+were selected by his sons for publication.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Evelyn gives us a pleasant picture of Norwich when he went
+there &lsquo;to see that famous scholar and physitian, Dr. T.
+Browne, author of the &ldquo;Religio Medici&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;Vulgar Errors,&rdquo; etc., now lately
+knighted.&rsquo;&nbsp; Evelyn continues: &lsquo;Next morning I
+went to see Sir Thomas Browne, with whom I had corresponded by
+letter, though I had never seen him before, his whole house and
+garden being a Paradise and cabinet of rarities, and that of the
+best collection, especially medals, books, plants and natural
+things.&nbsp; Amongst other curiosities, Sir Thomas has a
+collection of all the eggs of all the foule and birds he could
+procure; that country, especially the promonotary of Norfolck,
+being frequented, as he said, by severall kinds, which seldom or
+never go further into the land, as cranes, storkes, eagles, and a
+variety of water-foule.&nbsp; He led me to see all the remarkable
+places of this ancient citty, being one of the largest and
+certainly, after London, one of the noblest of England, for its
+venerable cathedrall, number of stately churches, cleannesse of
+the streetes and building of flints so exquisitely headed and
+squared, as I was much <!-- page 196--><a
+name="page196"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 196</span>astonished
+at; but he told me they had lost the art of squaring the flints,
+in which at one time they so much excelled, and of which the
+churches, best houses, and walls are built.&rsquo;&nbsp; Further,
+Evelyn tells us: &lsquo;The suburbs are large, the prospect
+sweete with other amenities, not omitting the flower-gardens, in
+which all the inhabitants excel.&nbsp; The fabric of stuffs
+brings a vast trade to this populous towne.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Long has Norwich rejoiced in clever people.&nbsp; In the life
+of William Taylor, one of her most distinguished sons, we have a
+formidable array of illustrious Norwich personages, in whom,
+alas! at the present time the world takes no interest.&nbsp; Sir
+James Edward Smith, founder and first President of the
+Linn&aelig;an Society, ought not to be forgotten.&nbsp; Of Taylor
+himself Mackintosh wrote: &lsquo;I can still trace William Taylor
+by his Armenian dress, gliding through the crowd in Annual
+Reviews, Monthly Magazines, Athen&aelig;ums, etc., rousing the
+stupid public by paradox, or correcting it by useful and
+seasonable truth.&nbsp; It is true that he does not speak the
+Armenian or any other tongue but the Taylorian, but I am so fond
+of his vigour and originality, that for his sake I have studied
+and learned the language.&nbsp; As the Hebrew is studied by one
+book, so is the Taylorian by me for another.&nbsp; <!-- page
+197--><a name="page197"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 197</span>He
+never deigns to write to me, but in print I doubt whether he has
+many readers who so much understand, relish, and tolerate him,
+for which he ought to reward me by some of his manuscript
+esoteries.&rsquo;&nbsp; More may be said of William Taylor.&nbsp;
+It was he who made Walter Scott a poet.&nbsp; Taylor&rsquo;s
+spirited translation of Burger&rsquo;s &lsquo;Leonore&rsquo; with
+the two well-known lines&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Tramp, tramp along the land they rode,<br
+/>
+Splash, splash along the sea,&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>opened up to Scott a field in which for a time he won fame and
+wealth.</p>
+<p>Of Mrs. Taylor, wife of the grandson of the eminent Hebraist,
+Mackintosh declared that she was the Madame Roland of
+Norwich.&nbsp; We owe to her Mrs. Austen and Lady Duff
+Gordon.&nbsp; Mr. Reeve, the translator of De Tocqueville&rsquo;s
+&lsquo;Democracy,&rsquo; has preserved the memory of his father,
+Dr. Henry Reeve, by the republication of his &lsquo;Journal of a
+Tour on the Continent.&rsquo;&nbsp; Let me also mention that Dr.
+Caius, the founder of Caius College, Cambridge, was a Norwich
+man.</p>
+<p>To Noncons Norwich offers peculiar attractions.&nbsp; We have
+in Dr. Williams&rsquo;s library &lsquo;The Order of the Prophesie
+in Norwich&rsquo;; and Robinson, the leader of the Pilgrim
+Fathers, had a Norwich <!-- page 198--><a
+name="page198"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+198</span>charge.&nbsp; Even in a later day some of the Norwich
+divines had a godly zeal for freedom, worthy of Milton himself,
+and on which the Pilgrim Fathers would have smiled
+approval.&nbsp; It is told of Mark Wilks, the brother of Matthew,
+and the grandfather of our London Mark Wilks, that when a
+deputation went from Norwich during the Thelwall and Horne Tooke
+trials, when, if the Castlereagh gang had had their will, there
+would have been found a short and easy way with the Dissenters,
+and came back on the Sunday morning, entering the place after the
+service had commenced, that he called out, &lsquo;What&rsquo;s
+the news?&rsquo; as he saw them enter.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Acquitted,&rsquo; was the reply.&nbsp; &lsquo;Thank
+God!&rsquo; said the parson, as they all joined in singing</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Praise God from whom all blessings
+flow.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It is a fact that Wilks&rsquo;s first sermon in the Countess
+of Huntingdon&rsquo;s Chapel at Norwich was from the text,
+&lsquo;There is a lad here with five barley loaves and a few
+small fishes.&rsquo;&nbsp; Let me tell another story, this time
+in connection with that Old Meeting which has so much to attract
+the visitor at Norwich.&nbsp; It had a grand old man, William
+Youngman, amongst its supporters; I see him now, with his
+choleric face, his full fat figure, his black knee-breeches and
+silk <!-- page 199--><a name="page199"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 199</span>stockings, his gold-headed
+cane.&nbsp; He was an author, a learned man, as well as a Norwich
+merchant, the very Aristarchus of Dissent&mdash;a kind-hearted,
+hospitable man withal, if my boyish experience may be relied
+on.&nbsp; One Sunday there came to preach in the Old Meeting a
+young man named Halley from London, who lived to be honoured as
+few of our Dissenting D.D.&rsquo;s have been.&nbsp; He was young,
+and he felt nervous as he looked from the pulpit on the austere
+critic in his great square pew just beneath.&nbsp; Well, thought
+the young preacher, a sermon on keeping the Sabbath will be safe,
+and he selected that for his morning discourse.&nbsp; The service
+over, up comes the grand old man.&nbsp; &lsquo;The next time,
+young man, you preach, preach on something you understand;&rsquo;
+and, having said so, he bought a pennyworth of apples of a woman
+in the street, leaving the young man to digest his remarks as
+best he could.&nbsp; Again the service was to be carried
+on.&nbsp; The young man was in the pulpit, the grand old man
+below.&nbsp; There was singing and prayer, but no sermon, the
+young man having bolted after opening the service.&nbsp; I like
+better the picture of Norwich I get in Sir James
+Mackintosh&rsquo;s Life, where Basil Montague tells us how he and
+Mackintosh, when travelling the <!-- page 200--><a
+name="page200"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 200</span>Norfolk
+circuit, always hastened to Norwich to spend their evenings in
+the circle of which Mrs. Taylor was the attraction and the
+centre.&nbsp; The wife of a Norwich tradesman, we see her sitting
+sewing and talking in the midst of her family, the companion of
+philosophers, who compared her to Lucy Hutchinson, and a model
+wife.&nbsp; Far away in India Sir James writes to her: &lsquo;I
+know the value of your letters.&nbsp; They rouse my mind on
+subjects which interest us in common&mdash;friends, children,
+literature, and life.&nbsp; Their moral tone cheers and braces
+me.&nbsp; I ought to be made permanently happy by contemplating a
+mind like yours; which seems more exclusively to derive its
+gratifications from its duties than almost any
+other.&rsquo;&nbsp; It was in the Norwich Octagon that these
+Taylors worshipped.&nbsp; Their Unitarianism seemed to have
+affected them more favourably than it did Harriet Martineau,
+whose family also attended there.&nbsp; I remember Edward Taylor,
+who was the Gresham Professor of Music.&nbsp; But theologically,
+I presume, the palm of excellence in connection with the Octagon
+is to be awarded to Dr. Taylor, the great Hebrew scholar.&nbsp;
+He wrote to old Newton: &lsquo;I have been looking through my
+Bible, and can&rsquo;t find your doctrine of the
+Atonement.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Last night I <!-- page 201--><a
+name="page201"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 201</span>could not
+see to get into bed,&rsquo; replied old Newton, &lsquo;because I
+found I had my extinguisher on the candle.&nbsp; Take off the
+extinguisher, and then you will see.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Leaving theology, let us get up on the gray old castle, which
+is to be turned into a museum, and look round on the city lying
+at our feet.&nbsp; Would you have a finer view?&nbsp; Cross the
+Yare and walk up the new road (made by the unemployed one hard
+winter) to Mousehold Heath, and after you have done thinking of
+Kitt&rsquo;s rebellion&mdash;an agrarian one, by-the-bye, and
+worth thinking about just at this time&mdash;and of the Lollards,
+who were burnt just under you, look across to the city in the
+valley, with its heights all round, more resembling the Holy
+City, so travellers say, than any other city in the world.&nbsp;
+In the foreground is the cathedral, right beyond rises the castle
+on the hill; church spires, warehouses, public buildings, private
+dwellings, manufactories, chimneys&rsquo; smoke, complete the
+landscape fringed by the green of the distant hills.&nbsp; There
+are a hundred thousand people there&mdash;to be preached to and
+saved.</p>
+<p>Windham was rather hard on the Norwich of his day.&nbsp; In
+his diary, in 1798, he records a visit to Norwich, of which city
+he was the representative.&nbsp; <!-- page 202--><a
+name="page202"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 202</span>On October
+9 he dined at the Swan&mdash;&lsquo;dinner, like the sessions
+dinner, but ball in the evening distinguished by the presence of
+Mrs. Siddons.&rsquo;&nbsp; On the 10th he dined at the
+Bishop&rsquo;s&mdash;&lsquo;A party, of, I suppose, fifty,
+chiefly clergy.&nbsp; I felt the same enjoyment that I frequently
+do at large dinners&mdash;they afford, in general, what never
+fails to be pleasant&mdash;solitude in a crowd.&rsquo;&nbsp; On
+the 11th he writes: &lsquo;Dined with sheriffs at King&rsquo;s
+Head.&nbsp; Robinson, the late sheriff, was there, and much as he
+may be below his own opinion of himself, he is more to talk to
+than the generality of those who are found on those
+occasions.&nbsp; I could not help reflecting on the very low
+state of talents or understanding in those who compose the whole,
+nearly, of the society of Norwich.&nbsp; The French are surely a
+more enlightened and polished people.&rsquo;&nbsp; Perhaps
+Windham would have fared better had he dined with some of the
+leading Dissenters.&nbsp; Few of the clergy of East Anglia at
+that time would have been fitting company for the friend of
+Johnson and Burke.&nbsp; In Norwich, Mr. Windham often managed to
+make himself unpopular.&nbsp; For instance, towards the end of
+the session of 1788, Mr. Windham called the attention of
+Government to a requisition from France, which was then suffering
+the greatest distress <!-- page 203--><a name="page203"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 203</span>from a scarcity of grain.&nbsp; The
+object of this requisition was to be supplied with 20,000 sacks
+of flour from this country.&nbsp; So small a boon ought, he
+thought, to be granted from motives of humanity; but a Committee
+of the House of Commons having decided against it, the Ministers,
+though they professed themselves disposed to afford the relief
+sought for, could not, after such a decision, undertake to grant
+it upon their own responsibility.&nbsp; The leading part which
+Mr. Windham took in favour of this requisition occasioned,
+amongst some of his constituents at Norwich, considerable
+clamour.&nbsp; He allayed the storm by a private letter addressed
+to those citizens of Norwich who were most likely to be affected
+by a rise in the price of provisions; but the fact that Norwich
+should thus have backed up the inhuman policy of refusing food to
+France showed how strong at that time was the force of passion,
+and how hard it is to break down hereditary animosity.&nbsp; As a
+further illustration of manners and habits of the East Anglian
+clergy, let me mention that when, in 1778, Windham made the
+speech which pointed him out to be a man of marked ability in
+connection with the call made on the country for carrying on the
+American War, one of the Canons of the cathedral, and a great
+supporter <!-- page 204--><a name="page204"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 204</span>of the war, exclaimed:
+&lsquo;D&mdash;n him!&nbsp; I could cut his tongue
+out!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>In my young days, in serious circles, there was no name dearer
+than that of Joseph Gurney&mdash;a fine-looking man with a
+musical voice, always ready to aid with money, or in other ways,
+all that was right and good, or what seemed to him such.&nbsp; In
+the &lsquo;Memorials of a Quaker Lady&rsquo; he is described
+thus: &lsquo;He sat on the end seat of the first cross-form, and
+both preached and supplicated.&nbsp; I was very much struck with
+him.&nbsp; His fine person, his beautiful dark, glossy hair, his
+intelligent, benign, and truly amiable countenance, made a deep
+impression upon me.&nbsp; And as he noticed me most kindly, as I
+was introduced to him by Elizabeth Fry, as the little girl his
+sister Priscilla wanted to bring to England, I felt myself
+greatly honoured.&rsquo;&nbsp; The Gurneys have an ancient
+lineage, and had their home in Gourney, in Upper Normandy.&nbsp;
+One of them, of course, fought in the ranks of the winners at the
+battle of Hastings.&nbsp; Another was a crusader.&nbsp; Another
+had done good service at Acre, as a follower of Richard of the
+Lion Heart.&nbsp; When the main line came to an end, one branch
+settled in Norfolk.&nbsp; Gurney&rsquo;s Bank at Norwich was one
+of the institutions of the city, and was as famous in <!-- page
+205--><a name="page205"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 205</span>my
+day as at a later time was the great house of Overend and Gurney,
+which, when it fell, created a panic in financial circles all the
+world over.</p>
+<p>At Earlham, the home of the Gurneys, we learn how much may be
+done by a family, and how widespread its influence for good or
+evil may become.&nbsp; Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton certainly stands
+foremost, not alone amongst the East Anglians, but the
+philanthropists of later years.&nbsp; At the age of sixteen young
+Buxton went to Earlham as a guest.&nbsp; His biographer writes:
+&lsquo;They received him as one of themselves, early appreciating
+his masterly, though still uncultivated mind; while, on his side,
+their cordial and encouraging welcome seemed to draw out all his
+latent powers.&nbsp; He at once joined with them in reading and
+study, and from this visit may be dated a remarkable change in
+the whole tone of his character; he received a stimulus not
+merely in the acquisition of knowledge, but in the formation of
+studious habits and intellectual tastes.&nbsp; Nor could the same
+influence fail of extending to the refinement of his disposition
+and manners.&rsquo;&nbsp; At that time Norwich&mdash;the Buxtons
+being witnesses&mdash;was distinguished for good society, and
+Earlham was celebrated for its hospitality.&nbsp; <!-- page
+206--><a name="page206"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+206</span>Mr. Gurney, the father, belonged to the Society of
+Friends, but his family was not brought up with any strict regard
+to its peculiarities.&nbsp; He put little restraint on their
+domestic amusements, and music and dancing were among their
+favourite recreations.&nbsp; The third daughter, Mrs. Fry, had,
+indeed, united herself more closely with the Society of Friends;
+but her example had not then been followed by any of her brothers
+and sisters.&nbsp; &lsquo;I know,&rsquo; wrote Sir Thomas, in
+later years, &lsquo;no blessing of a temporal nature&mdash;and it
+is not only temporal&mdash;for which I ought to render so many
+thanks as my connection with the Earlham family.&nbsp; It has
+given a colour to my life.&nbsp; Its influence was most positive,
+and pregnant with good at that critical period between school and
+manhood.&nbsp; They were eager to improve; I caught the
+infection.&nbsp; I was resolved to please them, and in the
+college at Dublin, at a distance from all my friends and all
+control, their influence and the desire to please them kept me
+hard at my books, and sweetened the task they gave.&nbsp; The
+distinctions I gained at college (little valuable as
+distinctions, but valuable because habits of industry,
+perseverance and resolution were necessary to attain
+them)&mdash;these boyish distinctions were exclusively the result
+of the animating <!-- page 207--><a name="page207"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 207</span>passion in my mind to carry back to
+them the prizes which they prompted and enabled me to
+win.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Wilberforce, when he was staying at Lowestoft in 1816, wrote:
+&lsquo;I am still full of Earlham and its excellent
+inhabitants.&nbsp; One of our great astronomers stated it as
+probable there may be stars whose light has been travelling to us
+from the Creation, and has not yet reached our little
+planet.&nbsp; In the Earlham family a new constellation has
+broken in upon us, for which you must invent a name, as you are
+fond of star-gazing, and if it indicates a little monstrosity (as
+they are apt to give the collection of stars the names of strange
+creatures&mdash;dragons, bears, etc.), the various stars of which
+the Earlham assemblage is made,&rsquo; continues Wilberforce,
+&lsquo;will include also much to be respected and
+loved.&rsquo;&nbsp; At that time Mrs. Opie was one of the Norwich
+stars.&nbsp; Caroline Fox, who went to dine with her described
+her as in great force and really jolly.&nbsp; &lsquo;She is
+enthusiastic about Father Mathew, reads Dickens voraciously,
+takes to Carlyle, but thinks his appearance rather against
+him&mdash;talks much and with great spirit of people, but never
+ill-naturedly.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Norwich,&rsquo; as described by Camden, &lsquo;on
+account of its wealth, populousness, neatness of buildings, <!--
+page 208--><a name="page208"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+208</span>beautiful churches, with the number of them&mdash;for
+it has a matter of fifty parishes&mdash;as also the industry of
+its citizens, loyalty to their Prince, is to be reckoned among
+the most considerable cities in Britain.&nbsp; It was fortified
+with walls that have a great many turrets and eleven
+gates.&rsquo;&nbsp; Camden, quoting one writer after another,
+adds the eulogy of Andrew Johnston, a Scotchman, as follows:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;A town whose stately piles and happy
+seat<br />
+Her citizens and strangers both delight;<br />
+Whose tedious siege and plunder made her bear<br />
+In Norman battles an unhappy share,<br />
+And feel the sad effects of dreadful war.<br />
+These storms o&rsquo;erblown, now blest with constant peace,<br
+/>
+She saw her riches and her trade increase.<br />
+State here by wealth, by beauty yet undone,<br />
+How blest if vain excess be yet unknown!<br />
+So fully is she from herself supplied<br />
+That England while she stands can never want a head.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>From Norwich went Robinson to help to build up in Amsterdam
+that Church of the Pilgrim Fathers which was to be in its turn
+the mother of a great Republic such as the world had never
+seen.&nbsp; He has been styled the Father of Modern
+Congregationalism; be that as it may, when he bade farewell in
+that quaint old harbour, Delfhaven&mdash;which looks as if not a
+brick or a building had been touched since&mdash;he was doing a
+work from which <!-- page 209--><a name="page209"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 209</span>neither himself nor those who stood
+with him could ever have expected such wonderful results.&nbsp;
+That emigration to Holland in Wren&rsquo;s time was a great loss
+of money and men to England, and was an indication of
+Nonconformist strength which wise Churchmen would have
+conciliated rather than driven to extremities.&nbsp; &lsquo;In
+sooth it was,&rsquo; wrote Heylin, &lsquo;that the people in many
+great trading towns which were near the sea, having long been
+discharged of the bond of ceremonies, no sooner came to hear the
+least noise of a conformity, but they began to spurn against it;
+and when they found that all their striving was in vain, that
+they had lost the comfort of their lecturers and that their
+ministers began to shrink at the very name of a visitation, it
+was no hard matter for those ministers and lecturers to persuade
+them to remove their dwellings and transport their
+trades.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;The sun of heaven,&rsquo; say they,
+&lsquo;doth shine as comfortably in other places; the Sun of
+Righteousness much brighter.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Better to go and
+dwell in Goshen, find it where we can, than tarry in the midst of
+such an Egyptian darkness as is now falling on the
+land.&rsquo;&nbsp; One of the preachers who gave that advice and
+acted in accordance with it was William Bridge, M.A.&nbsp;
+Against him Wren <!-- page 210--><a name="page210"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 210</span>was so furious that he fled to
+Holland and settled down as one of the pastors of the church at
+Rotterdam.&nbsp; In 1643 we find him pastor of the church at
+Norwich and Yarmouth, and one of the Assembly of Divines.&nbsp;
+In 1644 the church was separated&mdash;a part meeting at Yarmouth
+and a part at Norwich.&nbsp; This was done on the advice of Mr.
+John Phillip, of Wrentham&mdash;a godly minister of great
+influence in his denomination in his day.</p>
+<p>As was to be expected, I was taken to the Old Meeting House at
+Norwich, where many learned men had preached, and where many men
+almost as learned listened.&nbsp; The gigantic pews, in which a
+small family might have lived, filled me with amazement.&nbsp;
+And equally appalling to me was the respectability of the people,
+of a very different class from that of our Wrentham chapel.&nbsp;
+Close by was the Octagon Chapel, where the Unitarians worshipped,
+equally impressive in its respectability.&nbsp; But what struck
+me most was the new and fashionable Baptist chapel of St.
+Mary&rsquo;s, where the venerable and learned Kinghorn
+preached&mdash;a great Hebrew scholar and the champion of strict
+communion&mdash;against Robert Hall, and other degenerate
+Baptists, who were ready to admit to the Lord&rsquo;s Table any
+Christians, whether properly <!-- page 211--><a
+name="page211"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+211</span>baptized&mdash;that is, by immersion when
+adults&mdash;or merely sprinkled as infants.&nbsp; Up to this day
+I confound the worthy man with John the Baptist, probably because
+he looked so lank and long and lean.&nbsp; He was a man of
+singularly precise habits, so much so that I heard of an old lady
+who always regulated her cooking by his daily walk, putting the
+dumplings into the pot to boil when he went, and taking them out
+when he returned.&nbsp; I could write much about him, but <i>cui
+bono</i>? who cares about a dead Baptist lion?&nbsp; Not even the
+Baptists themselves.&nbsp; On going into their library in Castle
+Street the other day, to look at Kinghorn&rsquo;s life, I found
+no one had taken the trouble to cut the pages.&nbsp; In the front
+gallery of St. Mary&rsquo;s, Mr. Brewer, the Norwich
+schoolmaster, had sittings for the boys of his school, including
+his own sons, who, at King&rsquo;s College and elsewhere, have
+done much to illustrate our national history and
+literature.&nbsp; If I remember aright, one of the congregation
+was a jolly-looking old gentleman who, as Uncle Jerry, laid the
+foundation of a mustard manufactory, which has placed one of the
+present M.P.&rsquo;s for Norwich at the head of a business of
+unrivalled extent.&nbsp; When Mr. Kinghorn died, his place was
+taken by Mr. Brock, better known as Dr. Brock, <!-- page 212--><a
+name="page212"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 212</span>of
+Bloomsbury Chapel, London.&nbsp; Under Mr. Brock&rsquo;s
+preaching the reputation of St. Mary&rsquo;s Chapel was increased
+rather than diminished.&nbsp; As a young man himself at that
+time, he was peculiarly attractive to the young, and the singing
+was very different from the rustic psalmody of my native village,
+in spite of the fact that we had a bass-viol at all times, and on
+highly-favoured occasions such an array of flutes and clarionets
+as really astonished the natives and delighted me.</p>
+<p>But to return to the Old Meeting.&nbsp; Calamy writes of one
+of the Norwich ministers, of the name of Cromwell, that &lsquo;he
+enjoyed but one peaceable day after his settlement, being on the
+second forced out of his meeting-house, the licenses being called
+in, and then for nine years together he was never without
+trouble.&nbsp; Sometimes he was pursued with indictments at
+sessions, at assizes, and then with citations of the
+ecclesiastical courts; and at other times feigned letters, rhymes
+or libels were dropped in the streets or church and fathered upon
+him, so that he was forced to make his house his prison.&nbsp; At
+length that was broken open, and he absconded into the houses of
+his friends, till he contracted his old disease&rsquo; a second
+time.&nbsp; It is said that he was invited on one occasion to
+dine with Bishop Reynolds, <!-- page 213--><a
+name="page213"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 213</span>when
+several young clergy were present.&nbsp; When Mr. Cromwell
+retired, the Bishop rose and attended him, and then a general
+laugh ensued.&nbsp; On his return his lordship rebuked his guests
+for their unmannerly conduct, and told them that Mr. Cromwell had
+more solid divinity in his little finger than all of them had in
+their bodies.&nbsp; It must be remembered that, like most of the
+early Independent ministers, Mr. Cromwell had a University
+training; and even in my young days the respect shown to a
+learned ministry kept up not a little of the high standard which
+had been laid down by the fathers and founders of Dissent.&nbsp;
+In these more degenerate days it is to be questioned whether as
+much can be said.&nbsp; The Old Meeting House at Norwich was
+finished as far back as 1643.&nbsp; The only pastor of the church
+who was not an author was the Rev. Dr. Scott, who died in
+1767.&nbsp; In the Octagon Chapel the preachers had been still
+more distinguished.&nbsp; One of them was the Rev. Dr. Taylor,
+author of the famous Hebrew Concordance, which was published in
+two volumes folio, and was the labour of fourteen years.&nbsp; He
+left Norwich to become tutor at the newly-erected Academy at
+Warrington; but his son, Mr. Edward Taylor, the Gresham Professor
+of Music, was often <!-- page 214--><a name="page214"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 214</span>a visitor at Wrentham, where he had
+a little property, which he valued, as it gave him a vote.&nbsp;
+Another of the preachers at the Octagon was the Rev. R. Alderson,
+who afterwards became Recorder of Norwich.&nbsp; The Mr. Edward
+Taylor of whom I have just written was baptized by him.&nbsp; One
+day, being under examination as a witness in court, Alderson
+questioned him as to his age.&nbsp; &lsquo;Why,&rsquo; said
+Taylor, a little nettled, &lsquo;you ought to know, for you
+baptized me.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;I baptized you!&rsquo; exclaimed
+Alderson.&nbsp; &lsquo;What do you mean?&rsquo;&nbsp; The
+Recorder never liked to be reminded of his having been a
+preacher.&nbsp; The Marchioness of Salisbury is of this
+family.&nbsp; Perhaps, of these Unitarian preachers, one of the
+most distinguished was Dr. William Enfield, whose
+&lsquo;Speaker&rsquo; was one of the books placed in the hands of
+ingenuous youth, and whose &lsquo;History of Philosophy&rsquo;
+was one of the works to be studied in their riper years.&nbsp;
+Norwich, indeed, was full of learned men.&nbsp; Its aged Bishop,
+Bathurst, was the one voter for Reform, much to the delight of
+William IV., who said that he was a fine fellow, and deserved to
+be the helmsman of the Church in the rough sea she would soon
+have to steer through.&nbsp; His one offence in the eyes of
+George III. was that he voted against the King&mdash;that is, in
+favour <!-- page 215--><a name="page215"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 215</span>of justice to the Catholics.&nbsp;
+With such a Bishop a Reformer, no wonder that all Norwich went
+wild with joy when the battle of Reform was fought and won.&nbsp;
+Bishop Stanley, who succeeded, was also in his way a great
+Liberal, and invited Jenny Lind to stay with him at the
+palace.&nbsp; I often used to see him at Exeter Hall, where his
+activity as a speaker afforded a remarkable contrast to the
+quieter style of his more celebrated son.</p>
+<p>Accidentally looking into the life of Bishop Bathurst, I find
+printed in the Appendix some interesting conversations at
+Earlham, where Joseph John Gurney lived.&nbsp; On one occasion,
+when Dr. Chalmers was staying there, Joseph John Gurney writes:
+&lsquo;W. Y. breakfasted with us, and with his usual strong sense
+and talent called forth the energies of Chalmers&rsquo;
+mind.&nbsp; They conversed on the subject of special Providence,
+and of the unseen yet unceasing superintendence of the Creator of
+all the events which occur in this lower world.&nbsp; Said W. Y.:
+&ldquo;Mr. Barbauld, the husband of the authoress, was once a
+resident in my house.&nbsp; He was a man of low opinions in
+religion, and denied the agency of an unseen spirit on the mind
+of man.&rdquo;&nbsp; I remarked that when the mind was determined
+to a certain right action by a combination of circumstances <!--
+page 216--><a name="page216"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+216</span>productive of the adequate motives, and meeting from
+various quarters precisely at the right point for the purpose in
+view, this was in itself a sufficient evidence of an especial
+Providence, and might be regarded as the instrumentality through
+which the Holy Spirit acts.&nbsp; Mr. Barbauld admitted the
+justice of this argument.&rsquo;&nbsp; Again I read: &lsquo;W. Y.
+supported the doctrine that nature is governed through the means
+of general laws&mdash;laws which broadly and obviously mark the
+wisdom and benevolence of God.&rsquo;&nbsp; One extract more:
+&lsquo;W. Y. expressed his admiration of the masterly manner in
+which Dr. Chalmers, in his &ldquo;Bridgewater Treatise,&rdquo;
+has fixed on the atheist a moral obligation to inquire into the
+truth of religion; but, said he, might not the disciples of
+Irving, by the same rule, oblige us to an inquiry into the
+supposed evidences of their favourite doctrine that Christ is
+about to appear and to reign personally on earth?&nbsp; Might not
+even the Mahometan suppose in the Christian a similar necessity
+as it relates to the pretensions of the false
+prophet?&rsquo;&nbsp; If Joseph Gurney sent for W. Y. to converse
+with Dr. Chalmers as a genial spirit, surely the name of one so
+honourable and of one so friendly both to my father and myself
+should not be omitted.&nbsp; W. Y. loved a joke.&nbsp; He was
+<!-- page 217--><a name="page217"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+217</span>very stout, and wore tight black knee breeches with
+shoes and silk stockings.&nbsp; I remember how he made me laugh
+one day as he described what happened to his knee-breeches as he
+stooped to tie up his shoes ere attending a place of
+worship.&nbsp; To cut a long story short, I may add W. Youngman
+did not go to church that day.&nbsp; Originally I think he was a
+dyer.</p>
+<p>Harriet Martineau, as all the world knows, was born at
+Norwich.&nbsp; In her somewhat ill-natured autobiography she
+writes: &lsquo;Norwich, which has now no social claims to
+superiority at all, was in my childhood a rival of Lichfield
+itself, in the time of the Sewards, for literary pretensions and
+the vulgarity of pedantry.&nbsp; William Taylor was then at his
+best, when there was something like fulfilment of his early
+promise, when his exemplary filial duty was a fine spectacle to
+the whole city, and before the vice which destroyed him had
+coarsened his morale and destroyed his intellect.&nbsp; During
+the war it was a great distinction to know anything of German
+literature, and in Mr. Taylor&rsquo;s case it proved a ruinous
+distinction.&nbsp; He was completely spoiled by the flatteries of
+shallow men, pedantic women, and conceited lads.&rsquo;&nbsp; Yet
+this man was the friend of Southey and opened up a <!-- page
+218--><a name="page218"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+218</span>new world to the English intellect, and perhaps in days
+to come will have a more enduring reputation than Harriet
+Martineau herself.&nbsp; The lady does not err on the side of
+good nature in her criticism.&nbsp; All she can say of Dr. Sayers
+is: &lsquo;I always heard of him as a genuine scholar, and I have
+no doubt he was superior to his neighbours in modesty and
+manners.&nbsp; Dr. Enfield, a feeble and superficial man of
+letters, was gone also from the literary supper-table before my
+time.&nbsp; There was Sir James Smith, the botanist, made much of
+and really not pedantic and vulgar like the rest, but weak and
+irritable.&nbsp; There was Dr. Alderson, Mrs. Opie&rsquo;s
+father, solemn and sententious and eccentric in manner, but not
+an able man in any way;&rsquo; and thus the leading lights of
+Norwich are contemptuously dismissed.&nbsp; &lsquo;The great days
+of the Gurneys were not come yet.&nbsp; The remarkable family
+from which issued Mrs. Fry and Priscilla and Joseph John Gurney
+were then a set of dashing young people, dressed in gay riding
+habits and scarlet boots, as Mrs. Fry told us afterwards, and
+riding about the country to balls and gaieties of all
+sorts.&nbsp; Accomplished and charming young ladies they were;
+and we children used to overhear some whispered gossip about the
+effects of their charms <!-- page 219--><a
+name="page219"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 219</span>on
+heart-stricken young men; but their final characteristics were
+not yet apparent.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>It is to a Norwich man that we owe the publication of
+Hansard&rsquo;s Parliamentary Debates.&nbsp; Luke Hansard, to
+whom they owe their name, was born in Norwich, 1725, was trained
+as a printer, went to London with but a guinea in his pocket, was
+employed by Hughes, the printer of the House of Commons,
+succeeded to the business and became widely known for his
+despatch and accuracy in printing Parliamentary papers and
+debates.&nbsp; He died in 1828, but the business was continued by
+his family, and to refer to Hansard became the invariable custom
+when an M.P. was to be condemned out of his own mouth&mdash;as
+Hansard was supposed never to err.&nbsp; Recently Hansard has
+been carried on by a company, but the old name still remains.</p>
+<p>Dr. Stoughton has in vain, in a number of the
+<i>Congregationalist</i>, attempted to record the memory of a man
+well known and much honoured in his day&mdash;the Rev. John
+Alexander, of Norwich.&nbsp; The portrait is a failure.&nbsp; It
+gives us no idea of the man with his rosy face, his curly black
+hair, his merry, twinkling eye, his joyous laugh, when mirth
+befitted the occasion, or his tender sympathy <!-- page 220--><a
+name="page220"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 220</span>where pain
+and sorrow and distress had to be endured.&nbsp; Mr.
+Alexander&rsquo;s jubilee was celebrated in St. Andrew&rsquo;s
+Hall in 1867, when the Mayor and a crowd of citizens did him
+honour, and a sum of money for the purchase of an annuity was
+presented, thus obviating the necessity of doing to him as on one
+occasion he in his humorous way suggested should be done with old
+ministers when past work&mdash;that they should be shot.&nbsp; In
+1817 Mr. Alexander had come to Norwich to preach in the old
+Whitfield Tabernacle in place of Mr. Hooper, one of the tutors at
+Hoxton Academy.&nbsp; When I went to Norwich he had built a fine
+chapel in Prince&rsquo;s Street, and amongst the hearers was Mr.
+Tillet, then in a lawyer&rsquo;s office, a young man famous for
+his speeches at the Mechanics&rsquo; Institute and in connection
+with a literary venture, the <i>Norwich Magazine</i>, not
+destined to set the Thames on fire; latterly an M.P. for Norwich
+and proprietor and editor, I believe, of one of the most popular
+of East Anglian journals, the <i>Norfolk News</i>.&nbsp; It was
+in Prince&rsquo;s Street Chapel I first learned to realize how
+influential was the Nonconformist public, of which I frankly
+admit in our little village, with Churchmen all round, I had but
+a limited idea.&nbsp; It seemed to me that we were rather a puny
+folk, <!-- page 221--><a name="page221"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 221</span>but at Norwich, with its chapels and
+pastors and people, I saw another sight.&nbsp; There was the Rev.
+John Alexander, with an overflowing audience on the Sunday and an
+active vitality all the week, now dining at the palace with the
+Bishop or breakfasting at Earlham with the Gurneys, now meeting
+on terms of equality the literati of the place (at that time Mrs.
+Opie was still living near the castle, and Mr. Wilkins was
+writing his life of the far-famed Norwich doctor, the learned and
+ingenious author of the &lsquo;Religio Medici&rsquo;), now
+visiting the afflicted and the destitute, now carrying
+consolation to the home of the mourner.&nbsp; John Alexander was
+a man to whom East Anglian Nonconformity owes much.&nbsp; In the
+old city there was a good deal of young intelligence, and a good
+deal of it amongst the Noncons.&nbsp; Dr. Sexton was one of the
+Old Meeting House congregation, as was Lucy Brightwell, a lady
+not unknown to the present generation of readers.&nbsp; To a
+certain extent a Noncon. is bound to be more or less
+intelligent.&nbsp; He finds a great State Establishment of
+religion wherever he goes.&nbsp; It enjoys the favour of the
+Court.&nbsp; It is patronized by the aristocracy.&nbsp; It
+enlists among its supporters all who wish to rise in the world or
+to make a figure in society.&nbsp; By means of the endowed <!--
+page 222--><a name="page222"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+222</span>schools of the land, it offers to the young, even of
+the humblest birth, a chance of winning a prize.&nbsp; Conform,
+it says, and you may be rich and respectable.&nbsp; It was said
+of a late Bishop of Winchester that he would forgive a man
+anything so long as he were but a good Churchman, and even now
+one meets in society with people who regard a Dissenter as little
+better than a heathen or a publican.&nbsp; A man who can thus
+voluntarily place himself at a disadvantage, to a certain extent,
+must have exercised his intellect and be ready to give a reason
+for the faith that is in him.&nbsp; Naturally, men are of the
+religion of the country in which they are born&mdash;Roman
+Catholics in Italy, Mahometans in Turkey, Buddhists in the
+East.&nbsp; It requires more power and strength of mind and
+decision of character to dissent from the Church of the State
+than to support it.&nbsp; &lsquo;How was it,&rsquo; asked Dr.
+Storrar, Chairman of the Convocation of the University of London,
+the other day, &lsquo;that the lads educated at Mill Hill Grammar
+School had done so well at Cambridge and Oxford?&rsquo;&nbsp; The
+reply, said the Doctor, was&mdash;I don&rsquo;t give his words,
+merely the idea&mdash;to be found in the fact that a couple of
+centuries ago there were men of strong intellect and tender
+consciences who refused <!-- page 223--><a
+name="page223"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 223</span>to renounce
+their opinions at the command of a despotic power.&nbsp; They had
+been succeeded by their sons with the same quickness of intellect
+and conscience.&nbsp; Generations one after another had come and
+gone, and the children of these old Nonconformists thus came to
+the school with an hereditary intelligence, destined to win in
+the gladiatorship of the school, the college, or the world.</p>
+<p>Let me now give an anecdote of Dr. Bathurst, the Lord Bishop
+of Norwich, too good to be lost.&nbsp; It is told by Sir Charles
+Leman, who described him in 1839 as gradually converting his
+enemies into friends by his uniform straightforwardness and
+enlarged Christian principle.&nbsp; One of his clergy, who had
+been writing most abusively in newspapers, had on one occasion
+some favour to solicit, which he did with natural
+hesitation.&nbsp; The Bishop promised all in his power and in the
+kindest manner, and when the clergyman was about to leave the
+room he suddenly turned with, &lsquo;My lord, I must say,
+however, I much regret the part I have taken against you; I see I
+was quite in the wrong, and I beg your forgiveness.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+This was readily accorded.&nbsp; &lsquo;But how was it,&rsquo;
+the clergyman continued, &lsquo;you did not turn your back on
+<!-- page 224--><a name="page224"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+224</span>me?&nbsp; I quite expected it.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Why,
+you forget that I profess myself a Christian,&rsquo; was the
+reply.</p>
+<p>Of a later Bishop&mdash;Stanley&mdash;whom I can well
+remember, a dark, energetic little man, making a speech at Exeter
+Hall, we hear a little in Caroline Fox&rsquo;s memories of old
+friends.&nbsp; In 1848 she writes: &lsquo;Dined very pleasantly
+at the palace; the Bishop was all animation and good humour, but
+too unsettled to leave any memorable impression.&nbsp; I like
+Mrs. Stanley much&mdash;a shrewd, sensible, observing
+woman.&nbsp; She told me much about her Bishop, how very trying
+his position was on first settling at Norwich; for his
+predecessor was an amiable, indolent old man, who let things take
+their course, and a very bad course too, all which the present
+man has to correct as way opens, and continually sacrifice
+popularity to a sense of right.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The following anecdote of Miss Fox and her friends calling at
+a cottage in the neighbourhood of Norwich is too good to be
+lost.&nbsp; &lsquo;A young woman,&rsquo; she writes, &lsquo;told
+us that her father was nearly converted, and that a little more
+teaching would complete the business,&rsquo; adding, &lsquo;He
+quite believes that he is lost, which is, of course, a great
+consolation to the old man.&rsquo;&nbsp; That story is racy of
+the soil.&nbsp; It is in that way the East Anglian peasantry <!--
+page 225--><a name="page225"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+225</span>who have any religion at all talk; they have no hope of
+a man who does not feel that he is lost.&nbsp; Well, there are
+many ways to heaven, and that must comfort some of us who still
+believe that man was made in the image of his Maker, a little
+lower than the angels, crowned with glory and honour, and not
+destined to an eternity of misery for the sins of a day.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 226--><a name="page226"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 226</span>CHAPTER VIII.<br />
+<span class="smcap">the suffolk capital</span>.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">The Orwell&mdash;The Sparrows&mdash;Ipswich
+notabilities&mdash;Gainsborough&mdash;Medical
+men&mdash;Nonconformists.</p>
+<p>Those who imagine Suffolk to be a flat and uninteresting
+county, with no charms for the eye and no associations worth
+speaking of, are much mistaken.&nbsp; There are few lovelier
+rivers in England than the Orwell, on which Ipswich stands, up
+which river the fiery Danes used to sail to plunder all the
+country round, and on the banks of which Gainsborough learned to
+love Nature and draw her in all her charms.&nbsp; The town itself
+stands in a valley, but it has gradually crept up the hills on
+each side, so that almost everywhere you have a pleasing prospect
+and breathe a bracing air.&nbsp; A few miles, or, rather, a short
+walk, brings you to Henley, which has the reputation of being the
+highest land in Suffolk, and on the other side there is a railway
+that connects Ipswich with Felixstowe, <!-- page 227--><a
+name="page227"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 227</span>just as the
+Crystal Palace is connected with the City.&nbsp; Ipswich may
+claim to be the most prosperous and enterprising of all the
+Suffolk towns.&nbsp; It goes with the times.&nbsp; Its citizens
+are active and pushing men of business, and have enlightened
+ideas as well.&nbsp; They are also Liberal in politics and
+practical in religion, and are never behind in coming forward
+when there is a chance of benefiting themselves or their
+fellow-creatures.&nbsp; And yet Ipswich has a history as long as
+the dullest cathedral town.&nbsp; It was a place of note during
+the existence of the Saxon Heptarchy.&nbsp; Twice it had the
+honour of publicly entertaining King John; and there is a
+tradition that in the curious and beautifully-ornamented house in
+the Butter Market&mdash;formerly the residence of Mr. Sparrow,
+the Ipswich coroner, whose old family portraits, including one of
+the Jameses, presented to an ancestor of the family, filled me
+not a little with youthful wonder&mdash;Charles II. was secreted
+by one of the Sparrows of that day, when he came to hide in
+Ipswich after the battle of Worcester.&nbsp; &lsquo;The house is
+now a shop,&rsquo; but, observes Mr. Glyde, a far-famed local
+historian, &lsquo;a concealed room in the upper story of the
+house, which was discovered during some alterations in 1801, is
+well adapted for such a <!-- page 228--><a
+name="page228"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+228</span>purpose.&rsquo;&nbsp; And, at any rate, the gay and
+graceless monarch, in search of a hiding-place, might have gone
+farther and fared worse.&nbsp; Be that as it may, Ipswich can
+rejoice in the fact that it was the birthplace of Cardinal
+Wolsey; and that he was one of the first educational reformers of
+the day must be admitted, at any rate, in Ipswich, of which,
+possibly, he would have made a second Cambridge.&nbsp; Alas! of
+his efforts in that direction, the only outward and visible sign
+is the old gateway in what is called College Street, which
+remains to this day.&nbsp; Ipswich fared well in the Elizabethan
+days, when her Gracious Majesty condescended to visit the
+place.&nbsp; Sir Christopher Hatton, the dancing Lord Chancellor,
+who led the brawls, when</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;The seals and maces danced before
+him,&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>lived in a house near the Church of St. Mary-le-Tower.&nbsp;
+Sir Edward Coke resided in a village not far off, and in 1597 the
+M.P. for Ipswich was no other than the great Lord Bacon, who by
+birth and breeding was emphatically a Suffolk man.&nbsp; From
+Windham&rsquo;s diary, it appears that at Ipswich that
+distinguished statesman experienced a new sensation.&nbsp; In
+1789 he writes: &lsquo;Left Ipswich not till near twelve.&nbsp;
+Saw Humphries there, and <!-- page 229--><a
+name="page229"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 229</span>was for the
+first time entertained with some sparring; felt much amused with
+the whole of the business.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>In the early part of the present century Miss Berry, on
+returning from one of her Continental trips, paid Ipswich a
+visit, having landed at Southwold.&nbsp; &lsquo;Appearance of
+Ipswich very pretty in descending towards it,&rsquo; is the entry
+in her diary.&nbsp; About the same time Bishop Bathurst made his
+visitation tour, and he writes to one of his lady correspondents:
+&lsquo;You will be glad that, during the three weeks I passed in
+Suffolk, I did not meet a single unpleasant man, nor experience a
+single unpleasant accident.&rsquo;&nbsp; With the name of the
+Suffolk hero Captain Broke, of the <i>Shannon</i>.&nbsp; (I can
+well remember the Shannon coach&mdash;which ran from Yoxford to
+London&mdash;the only day-coach we had at that time), Ipswich is
+inseparably connected.&nbsp; He was born at Broke Hall, just by,
+and there spent the later years of his life.&nbsp; Another of our
+naval heroes, Admiral Vernon, the victor of Porto Bello, resided
+in the same vicinity.&nbsp; At one time there seems to have been
+an attempt to connect Ipswich with the Iron Duke.&nbsp; In the
+memoir of Admiral Broke we have more than one reference to the
+Duke&rsquo;s shooting in that neighbourhood, <!-- page 230--><a
+name="page230"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 230</span>and
+actually it appears that, unknown to himself, he was nominated as
+a candidate to the office of High Steward.&nbsp; Ipswich,
+however, preferred a neighbour, in the shape of Sir Robert
+Harland.&nbsp; At a later day the office was filled by Mr.
+Charles Austin, the distinguished writer on Jurisprudence.</p>
+<p>One of the celebrated noblemen who lived in Ipswich was Lord
+Chedworth.&nbsp; He wore top-boots, and wore them till they were
+not fit to be seen.&nbsp; When new boots were sent home he was
+accustomed to set them on one side, and get his manservant to
+wear them a short time to prepare them for his own feet.&nbsp;
+Sometimes the man would tell his lordship that he thought the
+boots were ready, but his lordship would generally reply,
+&lsquo;Never mind, William; wear them another week.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+While at Ipswich his lordship was frequently consulted, owing to
+his legal attainments and well-known generous disposition, by
+tradesmen and people in indigent circumstances.&nbsp; The
+applicants were ushered into the library, where, surrounded by
+books, they found his lordship.&nbsp; The chairs and furniture of
+the room, like his lordship&rsquo;s clothes, had not merely seen
+their best days, but were comparatively worthless, and the old
+red cloak which invariably enveloped his shoulders made him look
+<!-- page 231--><a name="page231"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+231</span>more like a gipsy boy than a peer of the realm.&nbsp;
+His lordship&rsquo;s legacies to Ipswich ladies and others,
+especially of the theatrical profession, were of the most liberal
+character.</p>
+<p>Ipswich in its old days had its share of witches.&nbsp; One of
+the most notorious of them was Mother Hatheland, who in due
+course was tried, condemned and executed.&nbsp; From her
+confession in 1645 it appears &lsquo;the said Mother Hatheland
+hath been a professor of religion, a constant hearer of the Word
+for these many years, yet a witch, as she confessed, for the
+space of nearly twenty years.&nbsp; The devil came to her first
+between sleeping and waking, and spake to her in a hollow voice,
+telling her that if she would serve him she would want
+nothing.&nbsp; After often solicitations she consented to
+him.&nbsp; Then he stroke his claw (as she confessed) into her
+hands, and with her blood wrote the covenant.&rsquo;&nbsp; Now,
+as the writer gravely remarks, the subtlety of Satan is to be
+observed in that he did not press her to deny God and Christ, as
+he did others, because she was a professor, and he might have
+lost all his hold by pressing her too far.&nbsp; Satan appears to
+have provided her with three imps, in the shape of two little
+dogs and a mole.</p>
+<p><!-- page 232--><a name="page232"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+232</span>As the home of Gainsborough Ipswich has enduring claims
+on the English nation and on lovers of art and artists
+everywhere.&nbsp; That must have been a Suffolk man who passed
+the following criticism on Gainsborough&rsquo;s celebrated
+picture of &lsquo;Girl and Pigs,&rsquo; of which Sir Joshua
+Reynolds became the purchaser at one hundred guineas, though the
+artist asked but sixty: &lsquo;They be deadly like pigs; but who
+ever saw pigs feeding together, but one on &rsquo;em had a foot
+in the trough?&rsquo;&nbsp; Gainsborough had an enthusiastic
+attachment to music.&nbsp; It was the favourite amusement of his
+leisure hours, and his love for it induced him to give one or two
+concerts to his most intimate acquaintances whilst living in
+Ipswich.&nbsp; He was a member of a musical club, and painted
+some of the portraits of his brother members in his picture of a
+choir.&nbsp; Once upon a time, Gainsborough was examined as a
+witness on a trial respecting the originality of a picture.&nbsp;
+The barrister on the other side said: &lsquo;I observe you lay
+great stress on a painter&rsquo;s eye; what do you mean by that
+expression?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;A painter&rsquo;s eye,&rsquo;
+replied Gainsborough, &lsquo;is to him what the lawyer&rsquo;s
+eye is to you.&rsquo;&nbsp; As a boy at the Grammar School of his
+native town, it is to be feared he loved to play truant.&nbsp;
+One day he went out to his <!-- page 233--><a
+name="page233"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 233</span>usual
+sketching haunts to enjoy the nature which he loved heartily,
+previously presenting to his uncle, who was master of the school,
+the usual slip of paper, &lsquo;Give Tom a holiday,&rsquo; in
+which his father&rsquo;s handwriting was so exactly imitated that
+not the slightest suspicion of the forgery ever entered the mind
+of the master.&nbsp; Alas! however, the crime was detected, and
+his terrified parent exclaimed in despair, &lsquo;Tom will one
+day be hanged.&rsquo;&nbsp; When, however, he was informed how
+the truant schoolboy had employed his truant hours, and the
+boy&rsquo;s sketches were laid before him, forgetful of the
+consequences of forgeries in a commercial society, he declared,
+with all the pride of a father, &lsquo;Tom will be a
+genius,&rsquo; and he was right.</p>
+<p>Worthy Mr. Pickwick seems to have known Ipswich about the same
+time as myself.&nbsp; &lsquo;In the main street of
+Ipswich,&rsquo; wrote the biographer of that distinguished
+individual, &lsquo;on the left-hand side of the way, a short
+distance after you have passed through the open space fronting
+the Town Hall, stands an inn known far and wide by the
+appellation of the Great White Horse, rendered the more
+conspicuous by a stone statue of some rapacious animal, with
+flowing mane and tail, distantly <!-- page 234--><a
+name="page234"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 234</span>resembling
+an insane carthorse, which is elevated above the principal
+door.&nbsp; The Great White Horse is famous in the neighbourhood
+in the same degree as a prize ox, a county paper chronicled
+turnip, or unwieldy pig, for its enormous size.&nbsp; Never were
+such labyrinths of uncarpeted passages, such clusters of mouldy,
+ill-lighted rooms, such huge numbers of small dens for eating or
+sleeping in, beneath any one roof as are collected together
+between the four walls of the Great White Horse of
+Ipswich.&rsquo;&nbsp; This was the great hotel of the Ipswich of
+my youth.&nbsp; As regards hotels, Ipswich has not improved, but
+in every other way it has much advanced.&nbsp; One of the old
+inns has been turned into a fine public hall, admirably adapted
+for concerts and public meetings.&nbsp; The new Town Hall, Corn
+Exchange, and Post-office are a credit to the town.&nbsp; The
+same may be said of the new Museum and the Grammar School and the
+Working Men&rsquo;s College and that health resort, the
+Arboretum; while by means of the new dock ships of fifteen
+hundred tons burden can load and unload.&nbsp; Nowadays everybody
+says Ipswich is a rising town, and what everyone says must be
+right.&nbsp; The Ipswich people, at any rate, have firmly got
+that idea into their heads.&nbsp; Its fathers and founders <!--
+page 235--><a name="page235"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+235</span>built the streets narrow, evidently little anticipating
+for Ipswich the future it has since achieved.&nbsp; The Ipswich
+of to-day is laid out on quite a different scale.&nbsp; It has a
+tram road service evidently much in excess of the present
+population, and as you wander in the suburbs you come to a
+sign-post bearing the name of a street in which not even the
+enterprise of the speculative builder has been able at present to
+plant a single dwelling.&nbsp; When Ipswich has climbed up its
+surrounding hills, and taken up all the building sites at present
+in the market, it will be a goodly and gallant town, almost
+fitted to invite the temporary residence of holiday-making
+Londoners who are fond of the water.&nbsp; At all times it is a
+pretty sail to Harwich and thence to Felixstowe, that quiet
+watering-place, a seaside residence that has still a pleasant
+flavour of rusticity about it, with a fine crisp sea-sand floor
+for a promenade.</p>
+<p>When I was a boy Ipswich was resorted to by Londoners in the
+summer-time.&nbsp; As an illustration, I give the case of Mr.
+Ewen, one of the deacons of the Weigh House Chapel, when the Rev.
+John Clayton was the pastor.&nbsp; In his memories of the Clayton
+family, the Rev. Dr. Aveling writes of Mr. Ewen, that &lsquo;he
+was so sensitively conscientious <!-- page 236--><a
+name="page236"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 236</span>in the
+discharge of his official duties at the Weigh House, that he was
+never absent from town on the days when the Lord&rsquo;s Supper
+was administered, and when he was expected to assist in the
+administration of the elements.&nbsp; His London residence was in
+Lincoln&rsquo;s Inn Fields, but having a house and property in
+the town of Ipswich, he passed his summer months there.&nbsp; Yet
+so intent was he upon duly filling his place in the sanctuary of
+God, that he regularly travelled by post-chaise once in every
+month, and returned in the same manner, that he might be present,
+together with his pastor and the brethren, at the table of the
+Lord.&nbsp; The length and the expense of the journey (and
+travelling was not then what it is now) did not deter him from
+what he at least deemed to be a matter of Christian
+obligation.&rsquo;&nbsp; Dr. Aveling is quite right when he tells
+us travelling is not what it was.&nbsp; It took almost a day to
+go from Ipswich to London when I was a boy, and now the journey
+is done by means of the Great Eastern Railway in about an hour
+and a half.&nbsp; It seems marvellous to one who, like myself,
+remembers well the past, to leave Liverpool Street at 5.0 p.m.
+precisely, and to find one&rsquo;s self landed safe and well in
+Ipswich soon after half-past six.&nbsp; The present generation
+can <!-- page 237--><a name="page237"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 237</span>have no conception of travelling in
+England in the olden time.</p>
+<p>There were some wonderful old Radicals in Ipswich, though it
+was, and is, the county town of the most landlord-ridden district
+in England.&nbsp; Some of them got the great Dan O&rsquo;Connell
+to pay the town a visit, and some of them nobly stood by old John
+Childs when he became famous all the world over as the
+Church-rate martyr.&nbsp; The lawyers and the doctors were mostly
+Tories, but the tradesmen and the merchants were not a little
+leavened with the leaven of Dissent.&nbsp; Mr. Hammond was,
+however, a Liberal surgeon, and as such flourished.&nbsp; His
+Whig principles, writes Mr. Glyde, brought him many patients, and
+his skill and sound qualities retained them.&nbsp; Dr. Garrord,
+the well-known London practitioner, was an apprentice of Mr.
+Hammond&rsquo;s; and this reminds me that among the Ipswich men
+who have risen is Mr. Sprigg, the Premier of Cape Colony when Sir
+Bartle Frere was at the head of affairs there.&nbsp; The father
+of Mr. Sprigg was the respected pastor of a Baptist chapel in the
+town.&nbsp; The only Ipswich minister whom I can remember was the
+Rev. Mr. Notcutt, who preached in the leading Independent chapel,
+now pulled down to make way for a much more <!-- page 238--><a
+name="page238"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 238</span>attractive
+building.&nbsp; All I can recollect about him is, that once, when
+a lad, I fainted away when he was preaching.&nbsp; No sermon ever
+affected me so since; and that effect was due, it must be
+confessed, not to the preacher, who seemed to me rather aged and
+asthmatic, but to the heat of the place, in consequence of the
+crowd attracted to the meeting-house on some special
+occasion.</p>
+<p>But to return to the doctors.&nbsp; Of one of them, who was
+famed for his love of bleeding his patients, not metaphorically,
+but in the old-fashioned way, with the lancet, it is recorded
+that on the occasion of his taking a holiday two of his patients
+died.&nbsp; Lamenting the fact to a friend, the following epigram
+was the result:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;B--- kills two patients while from home
+away&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A clever fellow this same B---, I wot;<br />
+If absent thus his patients he can slay,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; How he must kill them when he&rsquo;s on the
+spot!&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Perhaps one of the noted physicians of my boyhood was Mr.
+Stebbing.&nbsp; &lsquo;He was once,&rsquo; writes Mr. Glyde,
+&lsquo;called in to see one of the Ipswich Dissenting ministers,
+who had taken life very easily, and had grown corpulent.&nbsp;
+After examining the patient and hearing his statement as to
+bodily state, he replied: &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve no particular
+ailment; <!-- page 239--><a name="page239"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 239</span>mind and keep your eyes longer open,
+and your mouth longer shut, and you will do very well in a short
+time.&rdquo;&rsquo;&nbsp; On another occasion a raw and very
+poor-looking young fellow called upon him for advice.&nbsp; The
+doctor told him to go home and eat more pudding, adding,
+&lsquo;That&rsquo;s all you want; physic is a very good thing for
+one to live by, but a precious bad thing for you to
+take.&rsquo;&nbsp; One of the Ipswich characters of my boyhood,
+of whom Mr. Glyde has preserved an anecdote, was old Tuxford, the
+veterinary surgeon.&nbsp; He used to declare that he never took
+more than one meal a day&mdash;a breakfast; but when asked of
+what that consisted, he said, &lsquo;A pound of beefsteak, seven
+eggs, three cups of tea, and a quartern of rum.&rsquo;&nbsp; It
+may also be mentioned that before Mrs. Garrett Anderson was born,
+Ipswich had a lady physician in the person of Miss Stebbing,
+daughter of the doctor to whom I have already referred.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;She was,&rsquo; says one who knew her well, &lsquo;a woman
+of general education, with more than ordinary tact and
+discernment, combined with the true womanly power of analyzing
+and observing.&nbsp; She had good physical powers, and, like her
+worthy father, was somewhat pungent in her remarks and eccentric
+in her habits.&nbsp; She entered the ranks as a medical
+practitioner during her father&rsquo;s life.&nbsp; The <!-- page
+240--><a name="page240"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+240</span>benefit of his advice so aided her perceptive powers as
+to make her quite an expert in various ways, and she continued to
+practise long after his decease, occasionally attending males as
+well as females.&nbsp; Her knowledge of midwifery caused a large
+number of ladies to engage her services.</p>
+<p>Of the Radicals of Ipswich, the only one with whom I came into
+contact was Mr. John King, the proprietor and editor of what was
+then, at any rate, a far-famed journal&mdash;the <i>Suffolk
+Chronicle</i>.&nbsp; Astronomy was his hobby, and he had ideas on
+the subject which, unfortunately, I failed to catch.&nbsp; He had
+built himself an observatory, if I remember aright, at his
+residence on Rose Hill, where he would sweep the heavens nightly,
+to see what could be seen.&nbsp; He was a Radical of the old
+type, a tall, dark, bilious-looking man, a little hard and dry,
+perhaps, who seemed to think that it was no use to throw pearls
+before swine, and to serve up for the chaw-bacons a too rich
+intellectual treat, and his policy was a successful one.&nbsp;
+Priest-ridden as Suffolk was, the <i>Suffolk Chronicle</i> was
+the leading paper of the county, and had a large circulation,
+and, let me add, did good service in its day.&nbsp; Now I find
+Ipswich rejoices in a well-conducted daily journal, the <i>East
+Anglian Times</i>, which I hear, and <!-- page 241--><a
+name="page241"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 241</span>am glad to
+hear, is a fine property, and I see all the leading towns in
+Suffolk have a paper to themselves, even if they can&rsquo;t get
+up a decent paragraph of local news&mdash;and some of them I
+know, from my experiences of Suffolk life, are quite unequal to
+that&mdash;once a week.&nbsp; The plan is to have some sheets
+already printed in London, at some great establishment, whence
+perhaps a hundred little towns are supplied, and then the local
+news and advertisements are added on, and Little Pedlington has
+its <i>Observer</i>, and Eatanswill its <i>Gazette</i>.&nbsp;
+When I was a boy, such a thing was out of the question, as to
+each paper a fourpenny-halfpenny stamp was attached.&nbsp; As the
+stamps had to be paid for in advance, and as, besides, there was
+an eighteen-penny duty on every advertisement, it was not quite
+such an easy matter to run a paper then as it has since
+become.&nbsp; I fancy the old-established journals suffered much
+by the change, which completely revolutionized the newspaper
+trade; at any rate, so far as the country was concerned.&nbsp; In
+this connection, let me add that it was to an Ipswich journalist
+we owe the establishment of penny readings on anything like a
+large and successful scale.&nbsp; They were originated by Mr.
+Sully, at that time the proprietor and editor of the <i>Ipswich
+</i><!-- page 242--><a name="page242"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 242</span><i>Express</i>, a paper intended to
+steer between the ferocious Toryism of the <i>Ipswich
+Journal</i>, and the equally ferocious Radicalism of the
+<i>Suffolk Chronicle</i>.&nbsp; As was to be expected, the
+attempt did not succeed.&nbsp; As in love and in war, so in
+politics and theology, moderation is a thing hateful to gods and
+men.&nbsp; The electioneering annals of Ipswich can testify to
+that fact.&nbsp; I have a dim recollection of an election
+petition which ended in Sir Fitzroy Kelly&rsquo;s admitting that
+he had stated what was not true, but he did it as a lawyer, not
+as a gentleman, and in sending one of the finest old gentlemen I
+ever knew to gaol, because he would not tell what he knew of the
+matter.&nbsp; There was not much half-and-half work in the
+Ipswich politics of my young days.</p>
+<p>When people fight fiercely in politics, it is natural to
+expect an equal earnestness in religious matters.&nbsp; It was so
+emphatically with respect to the Ipswich of the past.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;The Reformed religion, after those fiery days of
+persecution,&rsquo; writes John Quick, &lsquo;was now revived,
+and flourished again in the country, under the auspicious name of
+our English Deborah, Queen Elizabeth; and Ipswich, the capital
+town of Suffolk, was not more famous for its spacious sheds,
+large and beautiful buildings, rich and great trade, <!-- page
+243--><a name="page243"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+243</span>and honourable merchants, both at home and abroad, than
+it was for its learned and godly ministers and its religious
+intolerants.&rsquo;&nbsp; Of the godly ministers, one of the most
+famous was Samuel Ward, who was buried in St. Mary-le-Tower
+Church.&nbsp; In 1666 he preached a sermon at St. Paul&rsquo;s
+Cross.&nbsp; But he meddled with politics.&nbsp; For instance, in
+1621 he published a caricature picture, entitled &lsquo;Spayne
+and Rome Defeated.&rsquo;&nbsp; It is thus described: The Pope
+and his Council are represented in the centre of the piece, and
+beneath, on one side the Armada, and on the other the Gunpowder
+Treason.&nbsp; Gondomar, the Spanish Ambassador, complained of it
+as insulting to his master.&nbsp; Ward was placed in
+custody.&nbsp; Being Puritanically inclined, he was, in addition,
+prosecuted in the Consistory Court of Norwich by Bishop Harsnet
+for Nonconformity.&nbsp; Ten years later, when 600 persons were
+contemplating a removal from Ipswich to New England&mdash;as a
+place where they could worship God without fear of priest or
+king&mdash;the blame was cast by Laud on Ward.&nbsp; Rushworth
+informs us that the charges laid against him were that he
+preached against the common bowing at the name of Jesus and
+against the King&rsquo;s &lsquo;Book of Sports,&rsquo; and
+further said that <!-- page 244--><a name="page244"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 244</span>the Church of England was ready to
+ring changes in England, and that the Gospel stood on tiptoe as
+ready to be gone; and for this he was removed from his
+lectureship and sent to gaol.&nbsp; John Ward, his brother,
+Rector of St. Clement&rsquo;s, was a member of the Assembly of
+Divines, and was called to preach two sermons before the House of
+Commons, for which he received the thanks of the House.&nbsp; At
+that time we find a reference to Ipswich as a place which
+&lsquo;the Lord hath long made famous and happy as a valley of
+Gospel vision.&rsquo;&nbsp; Such places, alas! seem to have been
+commoner formerly than they are now.</p>
+<p>One of the Congregational churches of Ipswich, at any rate,
+has very interesting historical associations.&nbsp; &lsquo;Salem
+Chapel,&rsquo; writes the Rev. John Browne, in his &lsquo;History
+of Congregationalism in Suffolk and Norfolk,&rsquo; &lsquo;stands
+in St. George&rsquo;s Lane, opposite the place where St.
+George&rsquo;s Chapel formerly stood, where Bilney was
+apprehended when preaching in favour of the Reformation, and
+where he so enraged the monks that they twice plucked him out of
+the pulpit.&rsquo;&nbsp; The last time I was at Ipswich I saw
+bricklayers at work at the old Presbyterian church in St.
+Nicholas Street, which it would be a pity to see modernized,
+being <!-- page 245--><a name="page245"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 245</span>such a fine illustration of the
+old-fashioned Dissenting Meeting-house, before it became the
+fashion to have a taste and to build Gothic chapels in which it
+is difficult to see or hear, and the only advantage of which is
+that they are an exact copy of the steeple-houses against which
+at one time Nonconformist England waged remorseless war.&nbsp;
+One of the pastors of this congregation removed to Mill Hill
+Chapel, Leeds, where he succeeded Dr. Priestley; another was the
+author of a &lsquo;History and Description of Derbyshire&rsquo;;
+while one of the supplies was the Rev. Robert Alderson,
+afterwards of the Octagon Chapel, Norwich, who ultimately became
+a lawyer and Recorder of Norwich.&nbsp; Perhaps one of the most
+singular scenes connected with Dissenting chapels in Ipswich was
+that which took place in the old chapel in Tackard, now Tacket,
+Street.&nbsp; In 1766 the minister there was the Rev. Mr.
+Edwards, who, it appears, was sent for to the gaol to see two men
+who had been found guilty of house-breaking, and who, according
+to the law as it then stood, were to be hung.&nbsp; Mr. Edwards
+did so, and stayed with them two hours.&nbsp; As the result of
+this visit they were brought to a penitent state of mind.&nbsp;
+They had heard that Mr. Edwards had prepared a sermon for them
+and <!-- page 246--><a name="page246"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 246</span>desired them to attend.&nbsp; This
+was a mistake, but notwithstanding they obtained permission to go
+to the chapel, where Mr. Edwards was conducting a church
+meeting.&nbsp; A report of the purpose got abroad, and many
+persons came to the meeting, upon which it was thought most
+proper that the church business should be laid aside, and that
+Mr. Edwards should go into the pulpit.&nbsp; This he did, and
+after singing and prayer the prisoners came in with their
+shackles and fetters on.&nbsp; Mr. Edwards, in describing the
+scene, says:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Many were moved at the sight.&nbsp; As for myself, I
+was obliged for some time to stop to give vent to tears.&nbsp;
+When I recovered I gave out part of a hymn suitable to the
+occasion, then prayed.&nbsp; The subject of discourse was,
+&ldquo;This is a faithful saying,&rdquo; and the poor prisoners
+shed abundance of tears while I was explaining the several parts
+of the text, and especially when I turned and addressed myself
+immediately to them.&nbsp; The house was thronged, and I suppose
+not a dry eye in the whole place&mdash;nothing but weeping and
+sorrow; and the floods of tears which gushed from the eyes of the
+two prisoners were very melting.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The good man continues: &lsquo;When we had concluded I went
+and spoke some encouraging words <!-- page 247--><a
+name="page247"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 247</span>by way of
+supporting them under their sorrow.&nbsp; They then desired I
+should see them in the evening, which I did, and called upon Mr.
+Blindle on the way; the old gentleman went along with me to the
+prison, and was one who prayed with them with much fervour and
+enlargement of heart.&nbsp; We spent nearly two hours with them,
+and a crowd of people were present.&rsquo;&nbsp; On another
+occasion we find an American Indian preaching in the
+pulpit&mdash;a novelty in 1767.&nbsp; He came over with a Dr.
+Whitaker, of Norwich, in America, to collect money for the
+education and conversion of Indians, and at Tackard Street the
+people raised the very respectable sum of &pound;80 for the
+purpose.&nbsp; In 1561 Queen Elizabeth paid Ipswich a
+visit.&nbsp; At that time the place was a little too Protestant
+for her.&nbsp; Strype writes: &lsquo;Here Her Majesty took a
+great dislike to the impudent behaviour of most of the ministers
+and readers, there being many weak ones among them, and little or
+no order observed in the public service, and few or none wearing
+the surplice, and the Bishop of Norwich was thought remiss, and
+that he winked at schismatics.&nbsp; But more particularly she
+was offended with the clergy&rsquo;s marriage, and that in
+cathedrals and colleges there were so many wives and children and
+widows seen, <!-- page 248--><a name="page248"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 248</span>which, she said, was contrary to the
+intent of the founders, and so much tending to the interruption
+of the studies of those who were placed there.&nbsp; Therefore
+she issued an order to all dignitaries, dated August 9, at
+Ipswich, to forbid all women to the lodgings of cathedrals or
+colleges, and that upon pain of losing their ecclesiastical
+promotion.&rsquo;&nbsp; From this it is clear that when Elizabeth
+was Queen there was little chance of the Women&rsquo;s Rights
+Question finding a favourable hearing.&nbsp; The Queen was
+succeeded by monarchs after her own heart.&nbsp; In 1636 Prynne
+published his &lsquo;Newes from Ipswich,&rsquo;
+&lsquo;discovering certain late detestable practices of some
+domineering Lordly Prelates to undermine the established doctrine
+and discipline of our Church, extirpate all orthodox sincere
+preachers and preaching of God&rsquo;s Word, usher in popery,
+idolatry and superstition.&rsquo;&nbsp; For this publication
+Prynne was sentenced to be fined &pound;5,000 to the King, to
+lose the remainder of his ears, to be branded on both cheeks, and
+to be perpetually imprisoned in Carnarvon Castle.&nbsp; At that
+time the Ipswich people were far too Liberal for the powers
+existing.&nbsp; Ipswich news nowadays is little calculated to
+displease anyone, and governments and kings are less prone to
+take <!-- page 249--><a name="page249"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 249</span>offence at the exercise of free
+thought and free speech.</p>
+<p>Ipswich people make their way.&nbsp; Miss Reeve&mdash;who
+wrote the &lsquo;Old English Baron,&rsquo; a popular tale years
+ago&mdash;was the daughter of the Rev. William Reeve of St.
+Nicholas Church.&nbsp; Another Ipswich lady, Mrs. Keeley, who
+lives on in her grand old age, was certainly one of the most
+popular performers of her day.</p>
+<p>Two hundred years ago, no city man was better known than
+Thomas Firmin, who was born at Ipswich, described in his
+biography as &lsquo;a very large and populous town in the county
+of Suffolk,&rsquo; in 1632.&nbsp; He was of Puritan parentage,
+and bound apprentice in the city of London, and then began
+business as a linen-draper on the modest capital of
+&pound;100.&nbsp; In a little while he married and was enabled to
+dispense a generous hospitality, seeking all opportunities of
+becoming acquainted with persons of worth, whether foreigners or
+his fellow-countrymen.&nbsp; Amongst his special friends were
+Wilkins, Bishop of Chester, and Archbishop Tillotson, at that
+time the afternoon lecturer at St. Lawrence&rsquo;s.&nbsp; During
+the time of the plague he managed to secure work for the London
+poor, and after the fire he erected a warehouse on the banks of
+the <!-- page 250--><a name="page250"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 250</span>Thames, where coal and corn were
+sold at cost price.&nbsp; In 1676 he built a great factory in
+Little Britain, for the employment of the needy and industrious
+in the linen manufacture; he also relieved poor debtors in
+prison.&nbsp; The great work of his later years was in connection
+with the Blue Coat School.&nbsp; He was also one of the Governors
+of St. Thomas&rsquo;s Hospital, which he did much to rescue from
+the wretched condition in which he found it.&nbsp; When the
+French refugees, in consequence of the revocation of the Edict of
+Nantes, were driven over to this country, Firmin exerted himself
+powerfully on their behalf, and sent some of them to Ipswich to
+engage in manufacturing there.&nbsp; He also had a good deal to
+do with Ireland, when, as now, the country was torn by contending
+factions.&nbsp; At a large expense he also educated many boys and
+set them up in trade.&nbsp; He was also one of the first of the
+avowed and ardent friends and advocates of a free thought, of
+which there were few supporters in England at that day&mdash;even
+among the countrymen of Milton and John Locke.&nbsp; Unitarians
+were rare in the days when Firmin proclaimed himself one.&nbsp;
+Altogether he was one of the best men of his age, and well
+deserved to be buried in Christchurch, Newgate, among the
+Bluecoat <!-- page 251--><a name="page251"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 251</span>School boys, to whom he had ever
+been such a friend, and to have the memorial pillar erected in
+his honour by Lady Clayton in Marden Park, Surrey.&nbsp; It is to
+be hoped that the memorial remains, though, alas! the noble
+mansion at one time inhabited by Wilberforce, and where the great
+philanthropist&rsquo;s celebrated son, the Bishop of Oxford was
+born, and where I have spent more than one pleasant day when Sir
+John Puleston lived there, has been since burnt down.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 252--><a name="page252"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 252</span>CHAPTER IX.<br />
+<span class="smcap">an old-fashioned town</span>.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Woodbridge and the country round&mdash;Bernard
+Barton&mdash;Dr. Lankester&mdash;An old Noncon.</p>
+<p>The traveller as he leaves the English coast for Antwerp or
+Rotterdam or the northern ports of Germany, may remember that the
+last glimpse of his native land is the light from Orford Ness,
+which is a guiding star to the mariner as he ploughs his weary
+way along the deep.&nbsp; Of that part of Suffolk little is known
+to the community at large.&nbsp; When I was a boy it was looked
+upon as an <i>ultima Thule</i>, where the people were in a
+primitive state of civilization; where shops and towns and
+newspapers and good roads were unknown; where traditions of
+smuggling yet remained.&nbsp; Few ever went into that region, and
+those who did, when they returned, did not bring back with them
+encouraging reports.&nbsp; Barren sandy moors, along which the
+bitter east wind perpetually blew, fatal <!-- page 253--><a
+name="page253"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 253</span>alike to
+vegetation and human life, were the chief characteristics of a
+district the natives of which were not rich, at any rate as
+regards this world&rsquo;s goods.&nbsp; Orford, like Dunwich, was
+once a place of some importance.&nbsp; &lsquo;A large and
+populous town with a castle of reddish stone,&rsquo; writes
+Camden, but in his time a victim of the sea&rsquo;s ingratitude;
+&lsquo;which withdraws itself little by little, and begins to
+envy it the advantages of a harbour.&rsquo;&nbsp; In the time of
+Henry I., writes Ralph de Coggeshall, when Bartholomew de
+Glanville was Governor of its castle, some fishermen there caught
+a wild man in their nets.&nbsp; &lsquo;All the parts of his body
+resembled those of a man.&nbsp; He had hair on his head, a
+long-peaked beard, and about the breast was exceeding hairy and
+rough.&nbsp; But at length he made his escape into the sea, and
+was never seen more,&rsquo; which was a pity, as undoubtedly he
+was the &lsquo;missing link.&rsquo;&nbsp; Besides, as Camden
+remarks, the fact was a confirmation of what the common people of
+his time remarked.&nbsp; &lsquo;Whatever is produced in any part
+of nature is in the sea,&rsquo; and shows &lsquo;that not all is
+fabulous what Pliny has written about the Triton on the coasts of
+Portugal, and the sea man in the Straits of
+Gibraltar.&rsquo;&nbsp; Nor is that the only wonder connected
+with the district.&nbsp; Close by is <!-- page 254--><a
+name="page254"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 254</span>Aldborough,
+where the poet Crabbe learned to become, as Byron calls him,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Nature&rsquo;s sternest painter, but the
+best;&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>and as Camden writes, &lsquo;Hard by, when in the year 1555
+all the corn throughout England was choakt in the ear by
+unseasonable weather, the inhabitants tell you that in the
+beginning of autumn there grew peas miraculously among the rocks,
+and that they relieved the dearth in those parts.&nbsp; But the
+more thinking people affirm that pulse cast upon the shore by
+shipwreck used to grow there now and then, and so quite exclude
+the miracle.&rsquo;&nbsp; At the present the crag-beds are the
+most interesting feature to the visitor, especially if he be of a
+geological turn.&nbsp; These are so rich in fossil shells that
+you may find some of the latter in almost every house in
+Ipswich.&nbsp; The Coralline Crag is the oldest bed; but this
+formation does not occur in an undisturbed state, except in
+Sudbourne Park and about Orford.&nbsp; A drive thither from
+Ipswich, through Woodbridge, conveys the traveller through some
+of the loveliest scenery in Suffolk, and the numerous exposures
+of Coralline Crag in Sudbourne Park, which is about two miles
+from Orford, will amply repay the traveller, on account of the
+number of fossils which he can there obtain, and the ease <!--
+page 255--><a name="page255"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+255</span>with which he can extract them.&nbsp; In this
+neighbourhood live the far-famed Garrett family, one of whom, as
+Mrs. Dr. Anderson, is well known in London society, as is also
+her sister, Mrs. Fawcett, the wife of the late popular M.P. for
+Hackney.&nbsp; Close by is Leiston Abbey, originally one of Black
+Canons, consisting of several subterranean chapels, various
+offices and a church, which appears to have been a handsome
+structure, faced with flint and freestone.&nbsp; The interior was
+plain and undecorated, yet massive.&nbsp; A large extent of the
+neighbouring fields was enclosed with walls, which have been
+demolished, as was to be expected, for the sake of the
+materials.&nbsp; We hear much of the dead cities of the Zuyder
+Zee.&nbsp; On her eastern coast England has her dead
+cities.&nbsp; Dunwich, of which I have already spoken, is
+one.&nbsp; Orford, now known solely by its lighthouse, is
+another; Blythburgh, in the church of which is the tomb of Anna,
+King of the East Angles, who was slain in 654, is a third.&nbsp;
+Like Tyre and Sidon, these places had their merchant princes, who
+lived delicately, and whose ships traded far and near.&nbsp; It
+is said incorrectly of Love, that it</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&lsquo;At
+sight of human ties<br />
+Spreads its soft wings and in a moment flies.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The remark is truer of commerce, which is a law to <!-- page
+256--><a name="page256"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+256</span>itself, and which defies Acts of Parliament and royal
+patronage.&nbsp; Hence it is the east coast of Suffolk is so rich
+in melancholy remains of ancient cities, now given over to
+decay.&nbsp; In my young days the chief town of this district was
+Woodbridge.&nbsp; Manufactories were then unknown.&nbsp; The
+steam-engine had not then been utilized for the everyday use of
+man, and farmers, peasants, coal and corn merchants, solely
+inhabited the district, and in Woodbridge especially the latter
+rose and flourished for a time.</p>
+<p>How it was, I know not, but nevertheless such was the fact,
+that the Ipswich of my youthful days seemed to have little, if
+any, literary associations connected with it.&nbsp; The
+celebrated Mr. Fulcher published his &lsquo;Ladies&rsquo;
+Pocket-book&rsquo; at Sudbury, which had a great reputation in
+its day, and for which very distinguished people used to
+write.&nbsp; It was, in fact, more of an annual than a
+pocket-book, and was patronized accordingly.&nbsp; Then there was
+James Bird, living at Yoxford, &lsquo;the garden of
+Suffolk,&rsquo; as it was called.&nbsp; Woodbridge had a still
+higher reputation.&nbsp; James Bird kept a shop, and was supposed
+to be a Unitarian; but Bernard Barton was in a bank, and,
+besides, he was a Quaker, and Quakers all the world over are,
+<!-- page 257--><a name="page257"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+257</span>or were, famous for their goodness and their
+wealth.&nbsp; The fame of the Quaker-poet conferred quite a
+literary reputation on the district, and the more so as no one at
+that time associated Quakerism with literary faculty in any
+way.&nbsp; Now and then, it is true, the Stricklands talked of a
+charming young Quaker, who indeed once or twice called at our
+house to see Susanna when she was staying there; but Allan
+Ransome&mdash;for it is to him I refer&mdash;did not pursue
+literature or poetry to any great extent, and instead preferred
+to develop the manufacture of agricultural implements&mdash;a
+manufacture which, carried on under the same name, is now one of
+the chief industries of the busy and thriving town of Ipswich,
+and employs quite a thousand men.&nbsp; Woodbridge then bore away
+the palm from the county capital, as the home of literature and
+poetry and romance.&nbsp; As a town, it is more prettily situated
+than are most East Anglian villages and towns.&nbsp; The
+principal thoroughfare, as you rode through it by one of the
+Yarmouth coaches, that connected it at that time with the
+Metropolis, was long and narrow.&nbsp; If you turned off to the
+right you came to the Market-place, where were the leading
+shops.&nbsp; On your left you reached the Quay and the river,
+where a few coasters were employed, chiefly in the <!-- page
+258--><a name="page258"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+258</span>coal and corn trade.&nbsp; In our time Woodbridge has
+done its duty to the State.&nbsp; Dr. Edwin Lankester the
+well-known coroner for Middlesex, came from Melton, close by, the
+High Street of which gradually terminates in the Woodbridge
+thoroughfare; and the lately deceased Lord Hatherley, one of
+England&rsquo;s most celebrated lawyers, was educated in that
+district, and took his wife from the same happy land.&nbsp; The
+body of the late Lord Hatherley, the great Whig Lord Chancellor,
+we were told the other day, was interred in the family vault of
+Great Bearings, Suffolk.&nbsp; His mother was a Woodbridge lady,
+a Miss Page.&nbsp; Lord Hatherley&rsquo;s father was the
+far-famed Liberal Alderman, Sir Matthew Wood, for many years M.P.
+for the City of London, and Queen Caroline&rsquo;s trusted friend
+and counsellor.&nbsp; Lord Hatherley married, in 1830, Charlotte,
+the only daughter of the late Major Edward Moore, of Great
+Bealings, Suffolk, but was left a widower in 1878.&nbsp; He
+devoted much time to religious work, so long as he had the
+strength to undertake it.&nbsp; He was the author of a work
+entitled &lsquo;The Continuity of Scripture, as declared by the
+Testimony of Our Lord and the Evangelists and the
+Apostles&rsquo;, which has passed through three or four
+editions.&nbsp; He was created an Hon. D.C.L. of Oxford in 1851,
+<!-- page 259--><a name="page259"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+259</span>was an Hon. Student of Christ Church, Oxford, a
+Governor of the Charterhouse, and a member of the
+Fishmongers&rsquo; Company, of which his father had at one time
+been Prime Warden.&nbsp; Major Moore himself was a great
+authority on Suffolk literature and antiquities, and published
+more than one book&mdash;now very scarce&mdash;on the interesting
+theme.</p>
+<p>As to Dr. Lankester, all Woodbridge was scandalized when it
+was announced that he was articled to a medical man.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;What, make a doctor of him!&rsquo; said the local gossips
+at the time.&nbsp; &lsquo;They had much better make a butcher of
+him.&rsquo;&nbsp; And not a little were the good people
+astonished when he came to town, and was signally successful as a
+medical lecturer, and as an advocate of the sanitary principles
+which in our day have come to be recognised as essential to the
+welfare of the State.&nbsp; Dr. Lankester was in great request as
+a writer on medical subjects in a popular manner, and did
+undoubtedly much good in his day.&nbsp; A good many genteel
+people lived in the neighbourhood of Woodbridge, and it had a
+society to which it can lay no claim at the present time.&nbsp;
+Edward Fitzgerald, the friend of Thackeray and Carlyle, himself
+an author of no mean repute, lived close by.</p>
+<p>That genteel people should have pitched their <!-- page
+260--><a name="page260"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+260</span>tents in or around Woodbridge is not much to be
+wondered at, as the neighbourhood was certainly attractive and
+convenient at the same time.&nbsp; The scenery around is as
+interesting as any that could be found, at any rate, in that part
+of England.&nbsp; The drive from Tuddenham to Woodbridge, says
+Mr. Taylor, in his &lsquo;Ipswich Handbook,&rsquo; is perhaps
+unequalled in Suffolk.&nbsp; On the road you pass through the
+villages of Little and Great Bealings, and if you are on the
+look-out for spots which an artist would love to study, you may
+make a very short detour to Playford.&nbsp; The churches, both of
+Little and of Great Bealings, are very ancient, and well deserve
+a visit; but the Woodbridge Road itself passes through some very
+pretty scenery.&nbsp; Rushmere Heath, in the early summer time,
+when the gorse is in bloom, is one mass of yellow, in the cleared
+spaces of which may usually be seen a gipsy encampment.&nbsp; The
+gibbet once stood on this heath, and in former times it seems to
+have been the place where executions usually took place.&nbsp; It
+was here that in 1783 a woman, named Bedingfield, was burnt for
+murdering her husband.&nbsp; In the early part of this century,
+when there were many alarms as to a French invasion, and it was
+the firm belief of the old ladies that one fine morning <!-- page
+261--><a name="page261"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+261</span>Bony would land upon our shores, and carry them all
+away captive, many were the reviews of soldiers held there by the
+Duke of Cambridge&mdash;whose house has been pointed out to me at
+Woodbridge&mdash;and the Duke of Kent.&nbsp; At that time it was
+the fashion to exercise the volunteers on a Sunday, a practice
+which would not be sanctioned in our more religious age.&nbsp; It
+is a beautiful ride through Kesgrave.&nbsp; Dense plantations
+abound on both sides, and in May the chorus of nightingales is
+described as something wonderful.&nbsp; In the word
+&lsquo;Kesgrave&rsquo; we have an allusion to the barrows or
+tumuli to be seen on Kesgrave Heath.&nbsp; There are several of
+these erections remaining to this day, and perhaps tradition is
+warranted in speaking of the spot as the site whereon the Danes
+and Saxons met in deadly fight.&nbsp; It is certain that the
+former frequently came up the Deben and the Orwell.&nbsp; At
+Martlesham you see a creek, richly wooded on both sides, which
+flows up from the River Deben.&nbsp; It is a striking object at
+high water, but by no means so striking as the sign of the
+village public-house&mdash;the head of a huge wooden lion painted
+with the brightest of reds.&nbsp; It was originally the
+figure-head of a Dutch man-of-war, one of the fleet defeated at
+the famous battle of Sole Bay.&nbsp; Be <!-- page 262--><a
+name="page262"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 262</span>that as it
+may, no sign is better known than that of Martlesham Red
+Lion.&nbsp; &lsquo;As red as Martlesham Lion&rsquo; is still a
+common figure of speech throughout East Suffolk, and I am glad to
+see that in the beautiful East Anglian etchings of Mr. Edwards, a
+Suffolk lawyer, who turned artist, Martlesham Red Lion has
+justice done to it at last.</p>
+<p>Woodbridge, which the guide-book in 1844 described as a
+thriving town and port&mdash;I question whether it is thriving
+now&mdash;is situated on the western bank of the Deben, about
+nine miles above the mouth of the river, and about eight miles to
+the north of Ipswich.&nbsp; In Domesday Book the place is called
+Udebridge, of which its present name is no doubt a
+corruption.&nbsp; Mr. William White, whom I have already quoted,
+says: &lsquo;Fifty years ago only one daily coach and a weekly
+waggon passed through the town to and from London; but more than
+twelve conveyances (coaches, omnibuses and carriers&rsquo;
+waggons) now pass daily between the hours of six in the morning
+and twelve at noon, and persons may travel from Woodbridge to
+London in a few hours for ten shillings, instead of paying three
+times that amount, and being thirteen hours on the road, as was
+formerly the case.&rsquo;&nbsp; The railway has now rendered <!--
+page 263--><a name="page263"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+263</span>it possible for people to travel at a quicker speed and
+at a cheaper rate.&nbsp; In London we have a Woodbridge Street,
+in the neighbourhood of Clerkenwell Green, which points to a
+connection between the poorer part of the City and the
+picturesque Suffolk town on the banks of the Deben, and this
+gives me occasion to speak of Thomas Seckford, Esq., one of the
+masters of the Court of Requests, and Surveyor of the Court of
+Wards and Liveries in the reign of Queen Elizabeth.&nbsp; He was
+not less distinguished in the profession of the law than in the
+other polite accomplishments of the age in which he lived, and to
+his patronage of his servant, Christopher Saxton, the public were
+indebted for the first set of county maps, which were engraved by
+his encouragement and at his request.&nbsp; He represented
+Ipswich in three Parliaments, and died without issue in 1588,
+aged seventy-two.&nbsp; In Woodbridge his name is perpetuated by
+a handsome pile of buildings known as the Seckford Almshouses and
+Schools, to which the property in Clerkenwell is devoted.&nbsp;
+At the time of his decease that property produced about
+&pound;112 a year; in 1768 it was said to be of the yearly value
+of &pound;563.&nbsp; In 1826 an Act of Parliament was obtained to
+enable the governors of the almshouses to grant building and <!--
+page 264--><a name="page264"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+264</span>other leases, to take down many of the old buildings,
+to erect new premises, and repair and alter old ones, and to lay
+out new streets on the charity estate in Clerkenwell, and, in
+consequence, we find in 1830 the estate producing a rental of
+more than &pound;3,000 a year.&nbsp; In 1844 the yearly rental
+had risen to &pound;4,000.&nbsp; Since then it has much
+increased, and all this is devoted to the benefit of the
+Woodbridge poor.</p>
+<p>In 1806 Bernard Barton, the Quaker poet, came to live at
+Woodbridge.&nbsp; When fourteen years old he was apprenticed to
+Mr. Samuel Jessup, a shopkeeper in Halstead, Essex.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;There I stood,&rsquo; he writes, &lsquo;for eight years
+behind the counter of the corner shop at the top of Halstead
+Hill, kept to this day (November 9, 1828) by my old master and
+still worthy uncle, S. Jessup.&rsquo;&nbsp; In Woodbridge he
+married a niece of his old master, and went into partnership with
+her brother as corn and coal merchant.&nbsp; But she died in
+giving birth to the Lucy Barton whose name still, unless I am
+mistaken, adorns our literature.&nbsp; Bernard gave up business
+and retired into the bank of the Messrs. Alexander, where he
+continued for forty years, working within two days of his
+death.&nbsp; He had always been fond of books, and was one of the
+<!-- page 265--><a name="page265"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+265</span>most active members of a Woodbridge Book Club, and had
+been in the habit of writing and sending to his friends
+occasional copies of verse.&nbsp; In 1812 he published his first
+volume, called &lsquo;Metrical Effusions,&rsquo; and began a
+correspondence with Southey.&nbsp; A complimentary copy of verses
+which he had addressed to the author of the &lsquo;Queen&rsquo;s
+Wake,&rsquo; just then come into notice, brought him long and
+vehement letters from the Ettrick&mdash;letters full of thanks to
+Barton and praises of himself, and a tragedy &lsquo;that will
+astonish the world ten times more than the &ldquo;Queen&rsquo;s
+Wake,&rdquo;&rsquo; to which justice could not be done in
+Edinburgh, and which Bernard Barton was to try to get represented
+in London.&nbsp; In 1825 one of Bernard&rsquo;s volumes of poems
+had run into a fifth edition, and of another George IV. had
+accepted the dedication.&nbsp; Thus prompted to exertion, he
+worked too hard; banking all day and writing poetry all night
+were too much for him.&nbsp; Lamb, however, cheered up the
+dyspeptic poet.&nbsp; &lsquo;You are too much apprehensive about
+your complaint,&rsquo; he wrote.&nbsp; &lsquo;I know many that
+are always writing of it and live on to a good old age.&nbsp; I
+knew a merry fellow&mdash;you partly know him, too&mdash;who,
+when his medical adviser told him he had drunk all <i>that
+part</i>, congratulated <!-- page 266--><a
+name="page266"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 266</span>himself,
+now his liver was gone, that he should be the longest liver of
+the two.&rsquo;&nbsp; Southey wrote in a soberer vein.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;My friend, go to bed early; and if you eat suppers, read
+afterwards, but never compose, that you may lie down with a quiet
+intellect.&nbsp; There is an intellectual as well as a religious
+peace of mind, and without the former be assured there can be no
+health for a poet.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>At times Bernard Barton seems to have been troubled about
+money matters.&nbsp; On one occasion he appears to have made up
+his mind to have done with banking and devote himself to
+literature.&nbsp; &lsquo;Keep to your bank,&rsquo; wrote Lamb,
+&lsquo;and the bank will keep you.&nbsp; Trust not to the public:
+you may hang, starve, drown yourself, for anything that worthy
+personage cares.&nbsp; I bless every star that Providence, not
+seeing good to make me independent, has seen it next good to
+settle me on the stable foundation of Leadenhall.&nbsp; Sit down,
+good B. B., in the banking office.&nbsp; What! is there not from
+six to eleven p.m. six days in the week? and is there not all
+Sunday?&rsquo;&nbsp; Fortunately for B. B., friends came to his
+rescue.&nbsp; A few members of his Society, including some of the
+wealthier of his own family, raised among them &pound;1,200 for
+his benefit.&nbsp; The scheme originated with Joseph John Gurney,
+<!-- page 267--><a name="page267"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+267</span>of Norwich, and in 1824 when the money was collected,
+it was felt that &pound;1,200 was a great deal for a poet to
+receive.&nbsp; Bernard Barton&rsquo;s daughter married a Suffolk
+gentleman, well-to-do in the world, but the lady and gentleman
+had not congenial minds, and parted almost as soon as the
+honeymoon was over.</p>
+<p>B. B. was a great correspondent.&nbsp; As a banker&rsquo;s
+clerk, necessarily his journeys were few and far between.&nbsp;
+Once or twice he visited Charles Lamb.&nbsp; He once also met
+Southey at Thomas Clarkson&rsquo;s, at Playford Hall, perhaps the
+most picturesque old house in East Anglia, where the latter
+resided, and of which I have a distinct recollection, as, on the
+terrace before the moat with which it was surrounded, I once saw
+the venerable philanthropist and his grandchildren.&nbsp; Now and
+then B. B. also visited the Rev. Mr. Mitford at Benhall, a
+village between Woodbridge and Saxmundham, who was then engaged
+in editing the Aldine edition of the English Poets.&nbsp; But B.
+B.&rsquo;s correspondents were numerous.&nbsp; Poor, unfortunate
+L. E. L. sent him girlish letters.&nbsp; Mrs. Hemans was also a
+correspondent, as were the Howitts and Mrs. Opie and Dr. Drake,
+of Hadley, whose literary disquisitions are now, alas! forgotten;
+and poor Charles Lloyd, <!-- page 268--><a
+name="page268"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 268</span>whose
+father wrote of his son&rsquo;s many books &lsquo;that it is
+easier to write them than to gain numerous readers.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Dr. Bowring and Josiah Conder were also on writing terms with the
+Quaker poet.&nbsp; His excursions, his daughter tells us, rarely
+extended beyond a few miles round Woodbridge, to the vale of
+Dedham, Constable&rsquo;s birthplace and painting-room; or to the
+neighbouring seacoast, including Aldborough, doubly dear to him
+from its association with the memory and poetry of Crabbe.&nbsp;
+Once upon a time he dined with Sir Robert Peel, when he had the
+pleasure of meeting Airy, the late Astronomer Royal, whom he had
+known as a lad at Playford.&nbsp; The dinner with Sir Robert Peel
+ended satisfactorily, as it resulted in the bestowal by the Queen
+on the poet of a pension of &pound;100 a year.&nbsp; He was now
+beyond the fear of being tempted to commit forgery, and being
+hung in consequence&mdash;a possibility, which was the occasion
+of one of Lamb&rsquo;s wittiest letters.&nbsp; The gentle Elia
+made merry over the chance of a Quaker poet being hung.</p>
+<p>Amiable and liberal as was Bernard Barton, he could and did
+strike hard when occasion required.&nbsp; In East Anglia, when I
+was a lad, there was a great deal of intolerance&mdash;almost as
+much as exists in society circles at the present day&mdash;and
+<!-- page 269--><a name="page269"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+269</span>that is saying a great deal.&nbsp; Churchmen, in their
+ignorance, were ready to put down Dissent in every way, and
+occasionally, by their absurdity, they roused the righteous ire
+of the Quaker poet.&nbsp; One of them, for instance, had said at
+a public meeting: &lsquo;This was the opinion he had formed of
+Dissenters, that they were wolves in sheep&rsquo;s
+clothing.&rsquo;&nbsp; Whereupon B. B. wrote:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Wolves in sheep&rsquo;s clothing! bitter
+words and big;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But who applies them? first the speaker scan;<br />
+A suckling Tory! an apostate Whig!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Indeed a very silly, weak young man!</p>
+<p>&lsquo;What such an one may either think or say,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With sober people matters not one pin;<br />
+In <i>their</i> opinion his own senseless bray<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Proves <i>him</i> the <span class="smcap">ass wrapt
+in a lion&rsquo;s skin</span>!&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Better is the following address to a certain Dr. E.:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;A bullying, brawling, champion of the
+Church,<br />
+Vain as a parrot screaming on her perch;<br />
+And like that parrot screaming out by rote,<br />
+The same stale, flat, unprofitable note;<br />
+Still interrupting all debate<br />
+With one eternal cry of &ldquo;Church and State!&rdquo;<br />
+With all the High Tory&rsquo;s ignorance increased,<br />
+By all the arrogance that makes the priest;<br />
+One who declares upon his solemn word<br />
+The Voluntary system is absurd;<br />
+He well may say so, for &rsquo;twere hard to tell<br />
+Who would support him did not law compel.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><!-- page 270--><a name="page270"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+270</span>A prophet, it is said, is not honoured in his own
+country.&nbsp; Bernard Barton was happily the rare exception that
+proves the rule.&nbsp; I remember being at the launching of a
+vessel, bought and owned by a Woodbridge man, called the
+<i>Bernard Barton</i>; it was the first time I had ever seen a
+ship launched, and I was interested accordingly.&nbsp; The
+ultimate fate of the craft is unknown to history.&nbsp; On one
+occasion she was reported in the shipping list amongst the
+arrivals at some far-off port as the <i>Barney Burton</i>.&nbsp;
+Such is fame!</p>
+<p>Of his local reputation Bernard was not a little proud.&nbsp;
+His little town was vain of him.&nbsp; It was something to go
+into the bank and get a cheque cashed by the poet.&nbsp; The
+other evening I went to the house of a Woodbridge man who has
+done well in London, and lives in one of the few grand old houses
+which yet adorn Stoke Newington Green&mdash;just a stone&rsquo;s
+throw from where Samuel Rogers dwelt&mdash;and there in the
+drawing-room were Bernard Barton&rsquo;s own chair and cabinet
+preserved with as much pious care as if he had been a Shakespeare
+or a Milton.&nbsp; Bernard Barton made no secret of his vocation,
+and when the time had come that he had delivered himself of a new
+poem, it was his habit to call on one or other of his friends and
+<!-- page 271--><a name="page271"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+271</span>discuss the matter over a bottle of port&mdash;port
+befitting the occasion; no modern liquor of that name&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&lsquo;Not
+such as that<br />
+You set before chance comers,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But such whose father grape grew fat<br />
+On Lusitanian summers.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And then there was a good deal of talk, as was to be expected,
+on things in general, for B. B. loved his joke and was full of
+anecdote&mdash;anecdote, perhaps, not always of the most refined
+character.&nbsp; But what could you expect at such happy times
+from a man brimful of human nature, who had to pose all life
+under the double weight of decorum imposed on him, in the first
+place as a Quaker, and in the second place as a banker&rsquo;s
+clerk?</p>
+<p>Bernard Barton, as I recollect him, was somewhat of a dear old
+man&mdash;short in person, red in face, with dark brown
+hair.&nbsp; He was, as I have said, a clerk in a bank, but his
+poetry had elevated him, somehow, to the rank of a provincial
+lion, and at certain houses, where the dinner was good and the
+wine was ditto, he ever was a welcome guest.&nbsp; I dined with
+him at the house of a friend in Woodbridge, and it seemed to me
+that he cared more for good feeding and a glass of wine and a
+<!-- page 272--><a name="page272"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+272</span>pinch of snuff than the sacred Nine.&nbsp; Of course at
+that time I had not been educated up to the fitting state of mind
+with which the philosopher of our day proceeds to the performance
+of the mysteries of dinner.&nbsp; Dining had at that time not
+been elevated to the rank of a science, to the study of which the
+most acute intellects devote their highest energies; nor had
+flowers then been invoked to lend an additional grace to the
+dining-table.&nbsp; Besides, dinners such as Mr. Black gives at
+Brighton, scientific dinners, such as those feasts with which Sir
+Henry Thompson regales his friends, were unknown.&nbsp;
+Nevertheless, now and then we managed to dine comfortably off
+roast beef or lamb, a slice of boiled or roast fowl, a bit of
+plum-pudding or fruit tart, a crust of bread and cheese,
+with&mdash;tell it not in Gath, publish it not in the streets of
+Askalon&mdash;sherry and Madeira at dinner, and a few glasses of
+fine old fruity port after.&nbsp; Some Shakespearian
+quotations&mdash;unknown to me then, for Shakespeare was little
+quoted in purely evangelical circles, either in Church or
+Dissent&mdash;a reference to Sir Walter Scott&rsquo;s earlier
+German translations, formed about the sum and substance of the
+conversation which took place between the poet and my host; all
+the rest was <!-- page 273--><a name="page273"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 273</span>principally social gossip and an
+exchange of pleasantries between the poet and his friend, whom he
+addressed familiarly as &lsquo;mine ancient.&rsquo;&nbsp; It was
+a great treat to me, of course, to dine with Bernard Barton, the
+Quaker poet.&nbsp; Once upon a time a Quaker minister had come to
+Woodbridge on a preaching tour, and all the Quakers, male and
+female, small and great, rich and poor, were ranged before
+him.&nbsp; When Bernard Barton was announced, the good old man
+said, &lsquo;Barton&mdash;Barton&mdash;that&rsquo;s a name I
+don&rsquo;t recollect.&rsquo;&nbsp; The bearer of the name
+replied it would be strange if he did, seeing that they had never
+met before.&nbsp; Suddenly looking up, the minister exclaimed,
+&lsquo;Art thou the versifying man?&rsquo;&nbsp; Unlike the
+venerable stranger, I had no need to ask the question, as in my
+mother&rsquo;s album there was more than one letter from the
+genial B. B.</p>
+<p>I can well recall the room in which I dined with the
+poet.&nbsp; My host had come into a handsome fortune by marrying
+a wealthy widow&mdash;one of the possibilities of a Dissenting
+minister&rsquo;s situation&mdash;and he had retired from the
+ministry to cultivate literature and literary men.&nbsp; As I
+think of that room and that dinner, I am reminded of the
+wonderful contrast effected within the last age.&nbsp; <!-- page
+274--><a name="page274"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 274</span>At
+that time the dinner-table presented a far less picturesque
+appearance than it does now.&nbsp; We had always pudding before
+meat; the latter was solid, and in the shape of a joint.&nbsp;
+Nor was it handed round by servants, but carved by the host or
+his lady.&nbsp; Silver forks were unknown, and electro-plate had
+not then been invented.&nbsp; Vegetables, also, were deficient as
+regards quantity and quality compared with the supply at a
+respectable dinner nowadays.&nbsp; In manners the change is
+equally remarkable.&nbsp; It was said of a nobleman, a personal
+friend of George III., and a model gentleman of his day, that he
+had made the tour of Europe without ever touching the back of his
+travelling carriage.&nbsp; That includes an idea of self-denial
+utterly unknown to all the young people of to-day.&nbsp; The
+study now is how to make our houses more comfortable, and to
+furnish them most luxuriously.&nbsp; Then, perhaps, there was but
+one sofa in the house, and that was repellent rather than
+attractive.&nbsp; Easy-chairs were few and far between.&nbsp;
+Lounging of any kind was out of the question.&nbsp; In the
+drawing-room, the furniture was of the same uncomfortable
+description, and there were none of the modern appliances which
+exist to make ladies and gentlemen happy.&nbsp; Couches, <!--
+page 275--><a name="page275"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+275</span>antimacassars, photographs, were unknown.&nbsp; One
+picture invariably to be seen was a painting of a favourite
+steed, with the owner looking at it in a state of intense
+admiration; and a few family portraits might be ostentatiously
+displayed.&nbsp; As to pianos, there never was but one in the
+house; and a billiard-table would have been considered as the
+last refuge of human depravity.&nbsp; In sitting-rooms and
+bedrooms and passages there was a great deficiency of carpets and
+of oilcloth.&nbsp; But furniture was furniture then, and could
+stand a good deal of wear and tear; while as to the spare bed in
+the best room, with its enormous four posts and its gigantic
+funereal canopy and its heavy curtains, through which no breath
+of fresh air could penetrate, all I can say is that people slept
+in it and survived the operation&mdash;so wonderfully does nature
+adapt itself to circumstances the most adverse.</p>
+<p>This reference to Bernard Barton reminds me of a portrait he
+has left in one of his pleasant letters of a Suffolk yeoman, a
+class of whose virtues I can testify from personal
+experience.&nbsp; &lsquo;He was a hearty old yeoman of
+eighty-six, and had occupied the farm in which he lived and died
+about fifty-five years.&nbsp; Social, hospitable, friendly, a
+liberal master to his labourers, a kind neighbour, and a right
+merry <!-- page 276--><a name="page276"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 276</span>companion within the limits of
+becoming mirth.&nbsp; In politics a stanch Whig, in his
+theological creed as sturdy a Dissenter; yet with no more party
+spirit in him than a child.&nbsp; He and I belonged to the same
+book-club for about forty years. . . . Not that he greatly cared
+about books or was deeply read in them, but he loved to meet his
+neighbours and get them round him on any occasion or no occasion
+at all.&nbsp; As a fine specimen of the true English yeoman, I
+have met with few to equal, if any to surpass him, and he looked
+the character as well as he acted it, till within a few years,
+when the strong man was bowed by bodily infirmity.&nbsp; About
+twenty-six years ago, in his dress costume of a blue coat and
+yellow buckskins, a finer sample of John Bullism you would rarely
+see.&nbsp; It was the whole study of his long life to make the
+few who revolved round him in his little orbit as happy as he
+seemed to be himself.&nbsp; Yet I was gravely queried when I
+happened to say that his children had asked me to write a few
+lines to his memory, whether I could do this in keeping with the
+general tone of my poetry&mdash;the speaker doubted if he was a
+decidedly pious character!&nbsp; He had at times in his altitude
+been known to vociferate a song, of which the chorus was
+certainly not teetotalism:</p>
+<blockquote><p><!-- page 277--><a name="page277"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 277</span>&lsquo;&ldquo;Sing old Rose, and
+burn the bellows,<br />
+Drink and drive dull care away.&rdquo;&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Bernard Barton goes on to describe the deceased yeoman as a
+diligent attendant at the meeting-house, a frequent and serious
+reader of the Bible, and the head of an orderly and
+well-regulated house.&nbsp; He is described as knowing Dr.
+Watts&rsquo; hymns almost by heart, and as singing them on Sunday
+at meeting with equal fervour and unction.&nbsp; Bernard Barton
+feared in 1847&mdash;the date of his epistle&mdash;the breed of
+such men was dying out.&nbsp; It is to be feared in East Anglia
+the race is quite extinct.&nbsp; In our meeting-house at
+Wrentham, when I was a lad, there were several such.&nbsp; I am
+afraid there is not one there now.&nbsp; The sons and daughters
+have left the old rustic houses, and gone out into the
+world.&nbsp; They have become respectable, and go to church, and
+have lost a good deal of the vigour and independence of their
+forefathers.&nbsp; In all the East Anglian meeting-houses fifty
+years ago such men abounded.&nbsp; Of a Sunday, with their blue
+coats and kerseymere knee-breeches, and jolly red laces, they
+looked more like country squires than common farmers.&nbsp; They
+drove up to the meeting-house yard with very superior gigs and
+cattle.&nbsp; In their houses creature comforts of all known
+kinds <!-- page 278--><a name="page278"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 278</span>were to be found.&nbsp; Tea&mdash;a
+hearty meal, not of mere bread-and-butter, but of ham and cake as
+well&mdash;was served up in the parlour, with a glass or two of
+real home-brewed ale, amber-coloured, of a quality now unknown,
+and which was wonderfully refreshing after a long walk or
+drive.&nbsp; Then, if it were summer, there was a stroll in the
+big garden, well planted with fruit-trees and strawberry-beds,
+and adorned with flowers&mdash;old-fashioned, perhaps, but rich,
+nevertheless, in colour and perfume.&nbsp; In one corner there
+was sure to be an arbour, all covered with honeysuckle, such as
+Izaak Walton himself would have approved; and there, while the
+seniors over their long pipes discussed politics and theology,
+and corn and cattle, the younger ones would make their first
+feeble efforts, all unconsciously, perhaps, to conjugate the verb
+&lsquo;to love.&rsquo;&nbsp; Outside the church organizations
+these old yeomen lived and died.&nbsp; There was a flavour of the
+world about them.&nbsp; They would dine at market ordinaries, and
+perhaps would stop an hour in the long room of the public-house,
+where they put up their horses, to smoke a pipe and take a drop
+of brandy-and-water for the good of the landlord.&nbsp; Now and
+then&mdash;sometimes to the sorrow of their wives, who were often
+church-members&mdash;they would join, as I have indicated, in
+<!-- page 279--><a name="page279"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+279</span>a song of an objectionable character when severely
+criticised.&nbsp; Perhaps their parson would be much exercised on
+their behalf; but surely the noble spirit of humanity in these
+old yeomen, at any rate, was as worthy of admiration as the
+Puritanic faith of the past&mdash;or as the honest doubt of the
+present age.&nbsp; If I mistake not, the fine old yeoman to whom
+Bernard Barton referred lived not far from Seckford Hall.</p>
+<p>Woodbridge has some claim to consideration from the
+Nonconformist point of view.&nbsp; In 1648 a schoolmistress,
+Elizabeth Warren, published a pamphlet, &lsquo;The Old and Good
+Way Vindicated, in a Treatise, wherein Divers Errours, both in
+Judgment and Practice incident to these Declining Days, are
+Unmasked for the Caution of humble Christians.&rsquo;&nbsp; From
+the same town also there issued &lsquo;The Preacher Sent: a
+Vindication of the Liberty of Public Preaching by Some Men not
+Ordained.&rsquo;&nbsp; The author of this book, or one of the
+authors of it, was the Rev. Frederick Woodall, the first pastor
+of the Free Church&mdash;&lsquo;a man of learning, ability, and
+piety, a strict Independent, zealous for the fifth monarchy, and
+a considerable sufferer after his ejectment.&rsquo;&nbsp; He had,
+we are told, to contend with a tedious embarrassment, through the
+persecuting <!-- page 280--><a name="page280"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 280</span>spirit that for many years
+prevailed, and considerably cramped the success of his
+ministry.&nbsp; Woodbridge is one of the churches which Mr.
+Harmer refers to in his &lsquo;Miscellaneous Works,&rsquo; as
+being rigidly Congregationalist, and which conducted its affairs
+rather according to the heads of Savoy Confession than the heads
+of Agreement.&nbsp; When I was a boy the pastor was a Mr.
+Pinchback, who seems to have been a worthy successor of godly
+men, equally attractive and successful.&nbsp; He had previously
+settled at Ware.&nbsp; It is recorded of the good divine that on
+one occasion he had to leave his wife at the point of death, as
+it seemed, to go to chapel.&nbsp; In the course of the service he
+mentioned the fact of her illness, and announced in consequence
+that he would preach her funeral sermon on the following
+Sunday.&nbsp; But when the following Sunday came the lady was
+better, and lived for many years to assist her husband in his
+godly work.&nbsp; In the rural districts the Baptists flourished
+immensely.</p>
+<p>At Grundisburgh there preached for many years to a large
+congregation a worthy man of the name of Collins, who was one of
+the leading lights of the body which rejoiced in a John Foreman
+and a Brother Wells.&nbsp; People who live in London cannot <!--
+page 281--><a name="page281"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+281</span>have forgotten Jemmy Wells, of the Surrey Tabernacle,
+and his grotesque and telling anecdotes.&nbsp; One can scarcely
+imagine how people could ever believe the things Wells used to
+say as to the Lord&rsquo;s dealings with him; but they did, and
+his funeral&mdash;in South London, at any rate&mdash;was almost
+as numerously attended as that of Arthur, Duke of
+Wellington.&nbsp; I expect high-and-dry Baptists have been not a
+little troublesome in their day, and in East Anglia they were
+more numerous than in London.&nbsp; It may be that they have
+helped to weaken Dissent in that part of the world.&nbsp; Men of
+independent intellect must have been not a little shocked by that
+unctuous familiarity with God and the devil which is the
+characteristic of that class.&nbsp; On a Sunday morning Jemmy
+Wells, as his admirers called him, would describe in the most
+graphic manner what the devil had said to him in the course of
+the week; and on one memorable occasion, at any rate, described
+with much force the shame he felt at having to tell the gentleman
+in black that his people&rsquo;s memories, unfortunately, were
+somewhat remiss in the matter of pew-rents.&nbsp; Brother Collins
+avoided such flights, but he was an attractive preacher to all
+the country round, nevertheless.&nbsp; Truly such a one was
+needed in that <!-- page 282--><a name="page282"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 282</span>district.&nbsp; At Rendham, a
+village near Saxmundham, lived a godly minister of the Church of
+England.&nbsp; In 1844, speaking to a friend of the writer, he
+said that when he came into the county, between thirty and forty
+years before, there was only one other clergyman and himself
+between Ipswich and Great Yarmouth who preached the Gospel, and
+that sometimes the squire of the parish would hold up his watch
+to him to bid him close his sermon.&nbsp; In some places where he
+went to preach he had to have a body-guard to prevent his being
+mobbed and pelted with rotten eggs on account of his evangelical
+principles.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 283--><a name="page283"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 283</span>CHAPTER X.<br />
+<span class="smcap">milton&rsquo;s suffolk
+schoolmaster</span>.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Stowmarket&mdash;The Rev. Thomas
+Young&mdash;Bishop Hall and the Smectymnian
+divines&mdash;Milton&rsquo;s mulberry-tree&mdash;Suffolk
+relationships.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;My father destined me,&rsquo; writes John Milton, in
+his &lsquo;Defensio Secunda,&rsquo; &lsquo;while yet a little
+boy, for the study of humane letters, which I served with such
+eagerness that, from the twelfth year of my age, I scarcely ever
+went from my lessons to bed before midnight, which, indeed, was
+the first cause of injury to my eyes, to whose natural weakness
+there were also added frequent headaches; all which not retarding
+my natural impetuosity in learning, he caused me to be instructed
+both at the Grammar School and under other masters at
+home.&rsquo;&nbsp; Of the latter, the best known was the Rev.
+Thomas Young, the Puritan minister, of Stowmarket, Suffolk.</p>
+<p>It is generally claimed for Young that he was <!-- page
+284--><a name="page284"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 284</span>an
+East Anglian.&nbsp; Professor Masson has, however, settled the
+question that he was a Scotchman, of the University of
+Aberdeen.&nbsp; Be that as it may, like most Scotchmen, he made
+his way to England, and was employed by Mr. Milton, the scrivener
+of Bread Street, to teach his gifted son.&nbsp; As he seems to
+have been married at the time, it is not probable that he resided
+with his pupil, but only visited him daily.&nbsp; Never had
+master a better pupil, or one who rewarded him more richly by the
+splendour of his subsequent career.&nbsp; The poet, writing to
+him a few years after he ceased to be his pupil, speaks of
+&lsquo;the incredible and singular gratitude he owed him on
+account of the services he had done him,&rsquo; and calls God to
+witness that he reverenced him as his father.&nbsp; In a Latin
+elegy, after implying that Young was dearer to him than Socrates
+to Alcibiades, or than the great Stagyrite to his generous pupil,
+Alexander, he goes on to say: &lsquo;First, under his guidance, I
+explored the recesses of the Muses, and beheld the sacred green
+spots of the cleft summit of Parnassus and quaffed the Pierian
+cups, and, Clio favouring me, thrice sprinkled my joyful mouth
+with Castalian wine;&rsquo; from which it is clear that Young had
+done his duty to his pupil, and that the latter ever regarded
+<!-- page 285--><a name="page285"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+285</span>him with an affection as beautiful as rare.&nbsp; Never
+did a Rugby lad write of Arnold as Milton of Thomas Young.&nbsp;
+How long the latter&rsquo;s preceptorship lasted cannot be
+determined with precision.&nbsp; &lsquo;It certainly
+closed,&rsquo; writes Professor Masson, in that truly awful
+biography of his, &lsquo;when Young left England at the age of
+thirty-five, and became pastor of the congregation of British
+merchants settled at Hamburg.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>As one of the leaders of the Presbyterian party, Dr. Thomas
+Young became Vicar of Stowmarket in due time.&nbsp; He was one of
+the Smectymnian divines.&nbsp; As it is not every schoolboy who
+knows what the term means, let me explain who they were.&nbsp;
+Two or three hundred years ago people were much more
+controversial than they are now, and very fierce was the battle
+on the subject of the relative claims, from a Scriptural point of
+view, of Prelacy or Presbytery.&nbsp; One of the most
+distinguished champions of the former was Dr. Hall, Bishop of
+Norwich&mdash;a simple, godly, learned man, who deserves to be
+held in remembrance, if only for the way in which he got
+married.&nbsp; &lsquo;Being now settled,&rsquo; he writes,
+&lsquo;in that sweet and civil county of Suffolk, the uncouth
+solitariness of my life, and the extreme incommodity of that
+single housekeeping, drew my <!-- page 286--><a
+name="page286"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 286</span>thoughts,
+after two years, to condescend to the necessity of a married
+state, which God no less strangely provided for me; for walking
+from the church on Monday, in the Whitsun week, with a grave and
+reverend minister, I saw a comely and modest gentlewoman standing
+at the door of that house where we were invited to a
+wedding-dinner, and inquiring of that worthy friend whether he
+knew her, &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;I know her well,
+and have bespoken her for your wife.&rdquo;&nbsp; When I further
+demanded an account of that answer, he told me she was the
+daughter of a gentleman whom he much respected&mdash;Mr. George
+Whinniff, of Brettenham; that out of an opinion he had of the
+fitness of that match for me he had already treated with her
+father about it, whom he found very apt to entertain it.&nbsp;
+Advising me not to neglect the opportunity, and not concealing
+the just praises of the modesty, piety, good disposition, and
+other virtues that were lodged in that seemly presence, I
+listened to the motion as sent from God, and at last, upon due
+prosecution, happily prevailed, enjoying the comfortable society
+of that meet-help for the space of forty-nine years.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+A young clergyman so good and amiable ought to have fared better
+as regards the days in which his lot was passed.&nbsp; Hall <!--
+page 287--><a name="page287"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+287</span>should have lived in some theological Arcadia.&nbsp; As
+it was, he had to fight much and suffer much.&nbsp; In those
+distracted times he was all for peace.&nbsp; When the storm was
+brewing in Church and State, which for a time swept away Bishop
+and King, he published&mdash;but, alas! in vain&mdash;his
+&lsquo;Via Media.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;I see,&rsquo; he wrote,
+&lsquo;every man to rank himself unto a side, and to draw in the
+quarrel he affecteth.&nbsp; I see no man either holding or
+joining their hands for peace.&rsquo;&nbsp; Bishop Hall was the
+most celebrated writer of his time in defence of the Church of
+England.&nbsp; Archbishop Laud got him to write on &lsquo;The
+Divine Right of Episcopacy,&rsquo; nor could he have well placed
+the subject in abler hands.&nbsp; This was followed, after Laud
+had fallen, with &lsquo;An Humble Remonstrance to the High Court
+of Parliament,&rsquo; in which treatise he vindicated the
+antiquity of liturgies and Episcopacy with admirable skill,
+meekness, and simplicity, yet with such strength of argument that
+five Presbyterian divines clubbed their wits together to frame an
+answer.&nbsp; These Presbyterian ministers were&mdash;Stephen
+Marshal, then lecturer at St. Margaret&rsquo;s, whom Baillie
+terms the best of the preachers in England; Edmund Calamy, who
+had long been a celebrated East Anglian preacher, first at
+Swaffham, then at Bury <!-- page 288--><a
+name="page288"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 288</span>St.
+Edmunds, who, as we all know, refused a bishopric when offered
+him, and whom, therefore, at any rate, his adversaries must allow
+to have been sincere; Thomas Young, Matthew Newcomen, and William
+Spurstow.&nbsp; To this reply was given the name of
+Smectymnuus&mdash;a startling word, as Calamy calls it, made up
+of the initial letters of these names.&nbsp; This work, which was
+published in 1641, gave, says Dr. M&rsquo;Crie, the first serious
+blow to Prelacy.&nbsp; It was composed in a style superior to
+that of the Puritans in general, and was, by the confession of
+the learned Bishop Wilkins, a capital work against
+Episcopacy.&nbsp; Dr. Kippis says, &lsquo;This piece is certainly
+written with great fierceness and asperity of language,&rsquo;
+and quotes, as evidence, some strong things said against the
+practice of the prelates.&nbsp; But Neal, who has given a long
+account of the work, states that, if the rest of the clergy had
+been of the same temper and spirit with Bishop Hall, the
+controversy between him and the Smectymnian divines might have
+been compromised.</p>
+<p>Stowmarket, as I have said, had the honour of being placed
+under the pastoral care of one of these Smectymnian
+divines.&nbsp; He came there in March, 1628, on the presentation
+of Mr. John <!-- page 289--><a name="page289"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 289</span>Howe, a gentleman then residing in
+the town, and a man of wealth, whose ancestors had been great
+cloth-manufacturers in that place and neighbourhood.&nbsp; Since
+the time of Edward III. the cloth manufacture had been very
+active in Suffolk, and it is little to the credit of its
+merchants that we find them, in 1522, petitioning for the repeal
+of a royal law which inflicted a penalty against those who sold
+cloth which, when wetted, shrunk up, on the plea that, as such
+goods were made for a foreign market, the home-consumer was not
+injured.&nbsp; Stowmarket, when I was a lad, had reached its
+climax in a pecuniary sense.&nbsp; In the early part of the
+present century it was spoken of as a rising town.&nbsp; Situated
+as it was in the centre of the county, it was a convenient mart
+for barley, and great quantities of malt were made.&nbsp; Its
+other manufactures were sacking, ropes, and twine.&nbsp; Its
+tanneries were of a more recent date, as also its manufactory of
+gun-cotton, connected with which at one time there was an
+explosion of a most fatal and disastrous character.&nbsp; In 1763
+it was connected with Ipswich by means of a canal, which was a
+great source of prosperity to the town.&nbsp; Up to the time of
+the great Reform Bill, it was the great place for county
+meetings, and for the nomination of the county
+representatives.&nbsp; In our <!-- page 290--><a
+name="page290"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 290</span>day it has
+a population of 4,052.&nbsp; When I was a lad it was one of the
+first towns to welcome the Plymouth Brethren into Suffolk, and
+they are there still.&nbsp; The Independent Chapel for awhile
+suffered much from them.&nbsp; The pastor was a very worthy but
+somewhat dry preacher.&nbsp; His favourite quotation in the
+pulpit, when he would describe the attacks of the enemy of God
+and man, was</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;He worries whom he can&rsquo;t devour<br />
+With a malicious joy.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Suffolk had its great lawyers as well as Norfolk.&nbsp; The
+first to head the list is Ranulph de Glanville, a man of great
+parts, deep learning, for the times, eminent alike for his legal
+abilities and energetic mind.&nbsp; He was said, by one account,
+to have been born at Stowmarket.&nbsp; It is certain he founded
+Leiston Abbey, near Aldborough, and Bentley Priory.&nbsp; As
+Chief Justice under Henry II. he naturally was no favourite with
+Richard I., who deprived him of his office and made use of his
+wealth.&nbsp; He lived, however, to accompany Richard to the Holy
+Land, and died at the siege of Acre.&nbsp; His treatise on our
+laws is one of the earliest on record.&nbsp; It must be
+remembered also that Godwin, the author of &lsquo;Political
+Justice,&rsquo; and &lsquo;Caleb Williams,&rsquo; a novel still
+read&mdash;the husband of one gifted <!-- page 291--><a
+name="page291"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 291</span>woman, and
+the father of another&mdash;was at one time an Independent
+minister at Stowmarket.</p>
+<p>But to return to Dr. Young.&nbsp; He, like Mr. Newcomen, had
+become an East Anglian, and Smectymnuus may therefore more or
+less be said to have an East Anglian original.&nbsp; As the
+living of Stowmarket was at that time worth &pound;300 a year,
+and as &pound;300 a year then was quite equal to &pound;600 a
+year now, Dr. Young must have been in comfortable circumstances
+while at Stowmarket.&nbsp; A likeness of him is hung up, or was
+preserved, in Stowmarket Vicarage.&nbsp; &lsquo;It,&rsquo; wrote
+an old observer, &lsquo;possesses the solemn, faded yellowness of
+a man much given to austere meditation, yet there is sufficient
+energy in the eye and mouth to show, as he is preaching in Geneva
+gown and bands, that he is a man who could write and think, and
+speak with great vigour.&rsquo;&nbsp; One of Milton&rsquo;s
+biographers terms him, contemptuously, a Puritan who cut his hair
+short.&nbsp; The Rev. Mr. Hollingsworth writes that it is an
+error to suppose that Young remained long as chaplain to
+merchants abroad.&nbsp; &lsquo;He must have remained generally in
+constant residence, because we possess his signature to the
+vestry accounts, in a curious quarto book, which contains the
+annual accounts of Stow upland Parish for eighty-four
+years.&nbsp; At the parish meetings, <!-- page 292--><a
+name="page292"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 292</span>and at the
+audit of each year&rsquo;s accounts Vicar Young presided, with
+some exceptions, from the year 1629 to 1655, and his autograph is
+attached to each page.&rsquo;&nbsp; As an author, Dr. Young had
+distinguished himself before he appeared as one of the
+Smectymnians.&nbsp; In 1639, while the Stuarts and the Bishops
+were doing all they could to break down the sanctity of the
+Sabbath, and to make it a day of vulgar revelry and rustic sport,
+Dr. Young published a thin quarto in Latin, entitled &lsquo;Dies
+Dominica,&rsquo; containing a history of the institution of the
+Sabbath, and its vindication from all common and profane
+uses.&nbsp; There is no place of publication named, the signature
+is feigned, &lsquo;Theophilus Philo Kunaces Loncardiensis,&rsquo;
+and in the copy reserved at Stowmarket is added, in characters by
+no means unlike that of the handwriting of the Vicar himself,
+&lsquo;Dr. Thos. Young, of Jesus.&rsquo;&nbsp; The tractate is
+described as a very elaborate and learned compilation from the
+Fathers upon the sanctity of the Sabbath.&nbsp; A spirit of
+laborious and determined energy pervades it, nor is it unworthy
+the abilities and erudition of the author.&nbsp; The work was
+written at Stowmarket, and may have been published in
+Ipswich.&nbsp; Its paper and type are coarse; the name of the
+author was concealed, because at that time <!-- page 293--><a
+name="page293"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 293</span>a man who
+reverenced the Sabbath had a good chance of being brought before
+the Star Chamber, and of being roughly treated by Archbishop
+Laud, as an enemy to Church and State.&nbsp; About ten years
+before, Dr. Young had heard how, for writing his plea against
+Prelacy, Dr. Alexander Leighton had been cast into Newgate,
+dragged before the Star Chamber, where he was sentenced to have
+his ears cut off, to have his nose slit, to be branded in the
+face, to stand in the pillory, to be whipped at the post, to pay
+a fine of &pound;10,000, and to suffer perpetual
+imprisonment.&nbsp; Dr. Young might well shrink from exposing
+himself to similar torture.&nbsp; But Dr. Young had other
+warnings, and much nearer home.</p>
+<p>Dr. Young, like most of the men of that time, persecuted
+witches.&nbsp; These latter were supposed to have existed in
+great numbers, and a roving commission for their discovery was
+given to one Matthew Hopkins, of Manningtree, in Essex, to find
+them out in the eastern counties and execute the law upon
+them.&nbsp; It was a brutal business, and Hopkins followed it for
+three or four years.&nbsp; He proceeded from town to town and
+opened his courts.&nbsp; Stowmarket was one of the places he
+visited.&nbsp; The Puritans are said to have hung sixty <!-- page
+294--><a name="page294"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+294</span>witches in Suffolk, but the Puritans were not alone
+responsible.&nbsp; It is a fact that, up to fifty years ago two
+supposed witches lived in Stowmarket.</p>
+<p>Dr. Young escaped the Star Chamber, but, like most good men
+who would be free at that time he had to fly his native land for
+awhile.&nbsp; Milton refers to this exile in his Latin elegy:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&lsquo;Meantime
+alone<br />
+Thou dwellest, and helpless on a soil unknown,<br />
+Poor, and receiving from a foreign hand<br />
+The aid denied thee in thy native land.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It seems from this that the living at Stowmarket was under
+sequestration.&nbsp; A little while after Young is back in
+Stowmarket, and Milton thus describes his daily life&mdash;a
+personal experience of the poet&rsquo;s, not a flight of
+fancy:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Now, entering, thou shalt haply seated
+see<br />
+Besides his spouse, his infants on his knee;<br />
+Or, turning page by page with studious look<br />
+Some bulky paper or God&rsquo;s holy Book.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Good times came to Dr. Young.&nbsp; The seed he had sown bore
+fruit.&nbsp; For awhile England had woke up to attack the Stuart
+doctrine of royal prerogative in Church and State.&nbsp; The men
+of Suffolk had been the foremost in the fight, and in 1643 we
+find the Doctor in Duke&rsquo;s Place, London.&nbsp; A sermon was
+preached by him before <!-- page 295--><a
+name="page295"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 295</span>the House
+of Commons, and printed by order of the House.&nbsp; A Stowmarket
+Rector speaks of it naturally as a very prolix, learned, somewhat
+dull and heavy effort to encourage them to persevere in their
+civil war against the King; but he has the grace to add:
+&lsquo;There is much less of faction in it than many others, and
+it is rather the production of a contemplative than of an active
+partisan.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;One of his examples,&rsquo; writes
+Mr. Hollingsworth, &lsquo;is from 2 Sam. xiii. 28, where the
+command of Absalom was to kill Amnon: &ldquo;Could the command of
+a <i>mortal man</i> infuse that courage and valour into the
+hearts <i>of his servants</i> as to make them adventure upon a
+<i>desperate</i> design?&nbsp; And shall not the command of the
+<i>Almighty God</i> raise up the hearts of His people employed by
+Him in any work to which <i>He</i> calls them, raise up their
+hearts in following at His command!&rdquo;&rsquo;&nbsp; The
+Doctor had not cleared himself of all the errors of his
+times.&nbsp; He urged on his hearers, by the example of the
+Emperors, the necessity of maintaining the doctrine of the
+Trinity uncorrupt, by the aid of the civil power.&nbsp; He urged,
+however, on them personal holiness, in order that the reformation
+of the Church might be more easily accomplished.&nbsp; The two
+legislative enactments he wished them to pass <!-- page 296--><a
+name="page296"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 296</span>were to
+confer a power upon the Presbyterian clergy to exclude men from
+the Sacrament, and enforce a better observance of the
+Sabbath-day.&nbsp; The sermon is scarce, but is bound up with
+others in the Library at Cambridge, preached at the monthly fasts
+before the House of Commons.</p>
+<p>In the library of the Memorial Hall, Farringdon Street, where
+assuredly the portrait of the Stowmarket Rector should find a
+place, there is a copy of this sermon, which was preached at the
+last solemn fast.&nbsp; February 28, 1643, with the notice that
+&lsquo;It is this day ordered by the Commoners&rsquo; House of
+Parliament that Sir John Trevor and Mr. Rous do from this House
+give thanks to Mr. Young for the great paines hee tooke in the
+sermon hee preached that day at the intreaty of the said House of
+Commons at St. Margaret&rsquo;s, Westminster, it being the day of
+publike humiliation, and to desire him to print this
+sermon;&rsquo; which accordingly was done, under the title of
+&lsquo;Hope&rsquo;s Encouragement.&rsquo;&nbsp; The motto on the
+outside was: &lsquo;Which hope we have as an anchor of the soul
+both sure and steadfast, and entereth into that which is within
+the veil.&rsquo;&nbsp; The sermon was printed in London for Ralph
+Smith, at the sign of the Bible, in Cornhill, near the Royal
+Exchange.&nbsp; In <!-- page 297--><a name="page297"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 297</span>his sermon the preacher took for his
+text: &lsquo;Be of good courage, and He shall strengthen your
+heart, all ye that wait upon the Lord.&rsquo;&nbsp; The three
+propositions established are: First, that God&rsquo;s people are
+taught by the Lord in all their troubles to wait patiently on
+Him.&nbsp; The second is that such as wait patiently upon the
+Lord must rouse themselves with strength and courage to further
+wait upon Him; and that, thirdly, when God&rsquo;s people wait
+upon Him, He will increase their courage.&nbsp; The preacher
+quotes the Hebrew and Augustine, and reasons in a most undeniable
+manner in support of his propositions; but above all things he is
+practical.&nbsp; &lsquo;The work you are now called on to
+do,&rsquo; he says to the M.P.&rsquo;s, &lsquo;is a work of great
+concernment.&nbsp; It is the purging of the Lord&rsquo;s
+floor.&nbsp; As it hath reference both to the Church and the
+Commonwealth, a work sure enough to be encountered with great
+opposition.&nbsp; Yet I must say it is a work with the managing
+whereof God hath not so honoured others which have gone before
+you in your places, but hath reserved it to make you the
+instruments of His glory in advancing it, and that doth much add
+unto your honour.&nbsp; Was it an honour to the Tyrians that they
+were counted amongst the builders of the Temple when Hiram sent
+to <!-- page 298--><a name="page298"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+298</span>Solomon things necessary for that work?&nbsp; How,
+then, hath God honoured you, reserving to you the care of
+re-edifying His Church (the throne of the living God) and the
+repairing of the shattered Commonwealth, so far borne down before
+He raised you to support it, that succeeding ages may with honour
+to your names, say, &ldquo;This was the Reforming
+Parliament,&rdquo; a work which God, by His blessing on your
+unwearied pains, hath much furthered already, whilst He, by you,
+hath removed the rubbish that might hinder the raising up of that
+godly structure appointed and prescribed by the Lord in His
+Word.&rsquo;&nbsp; They were to stick to the truth, contended the
+preacher, quoting the edict of the Emperor Justinian in the Arian
+controversy, and the reply of Basil the Great to the
+Emperor&rsquo;s deputy: &lsquo;That none trained up in Holy
+Scriptures would suffer one syllable of Divine truth to be
+betrayed; but were ready, if it be required, to suffer any death
+in the defence thereof.&rsquo;&nbsp; People, he maintained, are
+ever carried on by the example of their governors.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;How,&rsquo; he asks, &lsquo;was the Eastern Empire
+polluted with execrable Arianism, whilst yet the Western
+continued in the truth?&nbsp; The historians give the reason of
+it.&nbsp; Constantine, an Arian, ruled in the East when at the
+same time <!-- page 299--><a name="page299"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 299</span>Constans and Constantius, sons to
+Constantine the Great, treading in the steps of their pious
+father, adhered to the truth professed by him, and so did as far
+ennoble the Western Empire with the truth as the other did defile
+the Eastern with his countenancing of error and
+heresy.&rsquo;&nbsp; The preacher here asks his hearers to make
+no laws against religion and piety, and &lsquo;recall such as
+have been made in time of ignorance against the same, and study
+to uphold and maintain such profitable and wholesome laws as have
+been formerly enacted for God and His people.&nbsp; Improve what
+was well begun by others before you, and not perfected by
+them.&rsquo;&nbsp; Under this latter head he dwelt on the
+possible abuse of the Holy Sacrament of the Lord&rsquo;s Supper,
+and the irreligious profanation of the Lord&rsquo;s Day.</p>
+<p>In 1643 the Earl of Manchester ejected many of the Royalist
+clergymen from their livings who were scandalous ministers.&nbsp;
+Dr. Sterne having been deprived of the mastership of Jesus
+College, Cambridge, the Stowmarket Vicar was placed there in his
+stead.&nbsp; He held the situation till 1654, when, on his
+refusal of the engagement, Government deprived him of his
+office.&nbsp; At the time the sermon was preached Dr. Young was
+one of the far-famed <!-- page 300--><a name="page300"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 300</span>Assembly of Divines which met in
+Henry VII.&rsquo;s chapel in accordance with the Solemn League
+and Covenant, which proposed three grand objects: &lsquo;To
+endeavour the extirpation of Popery, Prelacy superstition,
+heresy, and profaneness; to endeavour the preservation of the
+reformed religion in Scotland and the reformation of religion in
+the kingdoms of England and Ireland in doctrine, worship,
+discipline, and government according to the Word of God and the
+example of the best Reformed Church; and to endeavour to bring
+the Churches of God in the three kingdoms to the nearest
+conjunction and uniformity in religion&mdash;confession of faith,
+form of Church government, directory for worship and catechizing;
+that we and our posterity after us may as brethren live in faith
+and love, and that the Lord may delight to dwell in the midst of
+us.&rsquo;&nbsp; A clause was inserted to the effect that it was
+English prelacy which they contemned; and thus modified, after
+all due solemnities, and with their right hands lifted to heaven,
+was the Solemn League and Covenant sworn to by the English
+Parliament and by the Assembly of Divines in St. Margaret&rsquo;s
+Church, September 25, 1643.&nbsp; It was, writes a Presbyterian
+divine, too much the creature of the Long Parliament who convoked
+the meeting, <!-- page 301--><a name="page301"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 301</span>selected the members of Assembly,
+nominated its president, prescribed its bye-laws, and kept a firm
+hold and a vigilant eye on all their proceedings.&nbsp; Still,
+with all these drawbacks, it must be admitted that Parliament
+could hardly have made a selection of more pious, learned, and
+conscientious men.&nbsp; The Assembly consisted of men nominated
+by the members for each county sending in suitable names.&nbsp;
+The two divines appointed for Suffolk were Mr. Thomas Young, of
+Stowmarket, and Mr. John Phillips, of Rentall.&nbsp; The Vicar,
+it is said, sometimes acted as chairman, but this, as Mr.
+Hollingsworth remarks, is doubtful.</p>
+<p>Mr. Young&rsquo;s claim to fame rests on something greater
+than his sermon, or his position in the Assembly of Divines at
+Westminster, or his mastership of Jesus College.&nbsp; He was, as
+we have said, Milton&rsquo;s schoolmaster.&nbsp; The poet tells
+us:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;&rsquo;Tis education forms the common
+mind;<br />
+Just as a twig is bent the tree&rsquo;s inclined.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>If so, much of Milton&rsquo;s piety and lofty principle and
+massive learning must have come to him from the Stowmarket
+Vicar.&nbsp; In our day there is little chance of a young scholar
+becoming imbued with Miltonian ideas on the subject of civil and
+religious <!-- page 302--><a name="page302"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 302</span>liberty.&nbsp; That sublime genius
+which was to sing in immortal verse of</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Man&rsquo;s first disobedience, and the
+fruit<br />
+Of that forbidden tree, whose mortal taste<br />
+Brought death into the world, and all our woe,&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>must have owed much to Dr. Young&mdash;a debt which the poet
+acknowledged, as we have already seen, in no niggardly way.&nbsp;
+Amongst Milton&rsquo;s Latin letters is the following, which has
+been translated by Professor Masson thus: &lsquo;Although I had
+resolved with myself, most excellent preceptor, to send you a
+certain small epistle composed in metrical numbers, yet I did not
+consider that I had done enough unless I also wrote something in
+prose: for, truly, the singular and boundless gratitude of my
+mind which your deserts justly claim from me was not to be
+expressed in that cramped mode of speech, straitened by fixed
+feet and syllables, but in a free oration&mdash;nay, rather, if
+it were possible, in an Asiatic exuberance of words.&nbsp; To
+express sufficiently how much I owe you, were a work far greater
+than my strength, even if I should call into play all those
+commonplaces of argument which Aristotle or that dialectician of
+Paris (Ramus) has collected, or even if I should exhaust all the
+fountains of oratory.&nbsp; You complain <!-- page 303--><a
+name="page303"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 303</span>as justly
+that my letters have been to you very few and very short; but I,
+on the other hand, do not so much grieve that I have been remiss
+in a duty so pleasant and so enviable, as I rejoice, and all but
+exult, at having such a place in your friendship, as that you
+should care to ask for frequent letters from me.&nbsp; That I
+should never have written to you for over more than three years,
+I pray you will not misconceive, but, in accordance with your
+wonderful indulgence and candour, put the more charitable
+construction on it; for I call God to witness how much, as a
+father, I regard you, with what singular devotion I have always
+followed you in thought, and how I feared to trouble you with my
+writings.&nbsp; In sooth, I make it my first care, that since
+there is nothing else to commend my letters, that their rarity
+may commend them.&nbsp; Next, as out of that most vehement desire
+after you which I feel, I always fancy you with me, and speak to
+you, and beheld you as if you were present, and so, as always
+happens in love, soothe my grief by a certain vain imagination of
+your presence, it is, in truth, my fear, as soon as I meditate
+sending you a letter, that it should suddenly come into my mind
+by what an interval of earth you are distant from me, and so the
+grief of your absence, already <!-- page 304--><a
+name="page304"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 304</span>nearly
+lulled, should grow fresh and break up my sweet dream.&nbsp; The
+Hebrew Bible, your truly most acceptable gift, I have already
+received.&nbsp; These lines I have written in London, in the
+midst of town distractions, not, as usual, surrounded by books;
+if, therefore, anything in this epistle should please you less
+than might be, and disappoint your expectations, it will be made
+up for by another more elaborate one as soon as I have returned
+to the haunts of the Muses.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>When the above letter was written, Milton had become a
+Cambridge student, where he was to experience a new kind of
+tutor.&nbsp; Milton could not get on with Chappell as he did with
+Young.&nbsp; The tie between the Stowmarket Vicar and the poet
+was of a much more cordial character.</p>
+<p>Again the poet appears to have forwarded the following letter
+to the Stowmarket Vicarage.&nbsp; It is to be feared that few
+such precious epistles find their way there now.&nbsp; Milton
+writes to the Doctor: &lsquo;On looking at your letter, most
+excellent preceptor, this alone struck me as superfluous, that
+you excused your slowness in writing; for though nothing could
+come to me more desirable than your letters, how could I or ought
+I to hope that you should have so much leisure from serious and
+<!-- page 305--><a name="page305"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+305</span>more sacred affairs, especially as that is a matter
+entirely of kindness, and not at all of duty?&nbsp; That,
+however, I should suspect that you had forgotten me, your so many
+recent kindnesses to me would by no means allow.&nbsp; I do not
+see how you could dismiss out of your memory one laden with so
+great benefits by you.&nbsp; Having been invited by you to your
+part of the country, as soon as spring has a little advanced I
+will gladly come to enjoy the delights of the year, and not less
+of your conversation, and will then withdraw myself from the din
+of town to your Stoa of the Iceni, as to that most celebrated
+porch of Zeno or the Tusculan Villa of Cicero, where you with
+moderate means, but regal spirit, like some Serranus or Curius,
+placidly reign in your little farm, and contemning fortune, hold
+as it were a triumph over riches, ambition, pomp, luxury, and
+whatever the herd of man admire and are amazed by.&nbsp; But as
+you have deprecated the blame of slowness, you will also, I hope,
+pardon me the fault of haste; for having put off this letter, I
+preferred writing little, and that rather in a slovenly manner,
+to not writing at all.&nbsp; Farewell, much-to-be respected
+Sir.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The question is, Did Milton carry out this intention, and pay
+Stowmarket a visit?&nbsp; Professor <!-- page 306--><a
+name="page306"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 306</span>Masson
+thinks he may have been there in the memorable summer and autumn
+of 1630.&nbsp; The Rev. Mr. Hollingsworth, the Stowmarket
+historian argues that it is not unlikely that several, if not
+many, visits, extending over a period of thirty years, while the
+tutor held the living, were made by the poet to the place.&nbsp;
+Tradition has constantly associated his name with the
+mulberry-trees of the Vicarage, which he planted, but of these
+only one remains.&nbsp; &lsquo;This venerable relic of the
+past,&rsquo; continues the Vicar, &lsquo;is much decayed, and is
+still in vigorous bearing.&nbsp; Its girth, before it breaks into
+branches, is ten feet, and I have had in one season as much as
+ten gallons from the pure juices of its fruits, which yields a
+highly flavoured and brilliant-coloured wine.&rsquo;&nbsp; It
+stands a few yards distant from the oldest part of the house, and
+opposite the windows of an upstair double room, which was
+formerly the sitting-parlour of the Vicar, and where, it is to be
+believed, the poet and his friend had many a talk of the way to
+advance religion and liberty in the land, to remove hirelings out
+of the Church, and to abolish the Bishops.&nbsp; There too,
+perhaps, might have come to the guest visions of &lsquo;Paradise
+Lost.&rsquo;&nbsp; In his first work Milton throws out something
+like a hint of the great <!-- page 307--><a
+name="page307"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 307</span>poem which
+he was in time to write.&nbsp; &lsquo;Then, amidst,&rsquo; to
+quote his own sonorous language, &lsquo;the hymns and hallelujahs
+of saints, <i>someone</i> may, perhaps, be heard offering in high
+strains, in new and lofty measures, to sing and celebrate Thy
+Divine mercies and marvellous judgments in this land throughout
+all ages.&rsquo;&nbsp; We can easily believe how, in the
+Stowmarket Vicarage, the plan of the poet may have been talked
+over, and the heart of the poet encouraged to the work.&nbsp;
+Regarding Young as Milton did, we may be sure that he would have
+been only too glad to listen to his suggestions and adopt his
+advice.&nbsp; There must have been a good deal of plain living
+and high thinking at the Stowmarket Vicarage when Milton came
+there as an occasional guest.&nbsp; This is the more probable as
+Milton&rsquo;s earliest publications were in support of the views
+of Smectymnian divines.&nbsp; His friendship for Young probably
+led him into the field of controversy, for he owns that he was
+not disposed to this manner of writing &lsquo;wherein, knowing
+myself inferior to myself, led by the genial power of nature to
+another task, I have the use, as I may account, but of my left
+hand.&rsquo;&nbsp; It is a fact that Milton was thus drawn into
+the controversy, and what more natural than that he should have
+been <!-- page 308--><a name="page308"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 308</span>induced to do so by the Stowmarket
+Vicar in the Stowmarket Vicarage?&nbsp; The poet&rsquo;s family
+were familiar with that part of Suffolk, and his brother, Sir
+Christopher, who was a stanch Royalist and barrister, lived at
+Ipswich, but twelve miles off.&nbsp; He went to see Milton, and
+Milton might have visited Ipswich and Stowmarket at the same
+time.&nbsp; Be that as it may, tradition and probability alike
+justify the belief that Milton came to Stowmarket, and that he
+went away all the wiser and better, all the stronger to do good
+work for man and God, for his age and all succeeding ages.&nbsp;
+Young, as it may be inferred, was held in high honour by his
+friends.&nbsp; He was spoken of by two neighbouring ejected
+Rectors as the reverend, learned, orthodox, prudent, and holy Dr.
+Young.&nbsp; When he died, an epitaph was inscribed with some
+care by a friendly hand, and an unwilling admission is made of
+the opposition he had encountered.&nbsp; It is now illegible, and
+some of its lines appear to have been carefully erased&mdash;by
+some High Church chisel, probably.&nbsp; But the following copy
+was made when the epitaph was fresh and legible:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Here is committed to earth&rsquo;s trust<br
+/>
+Wise, pious, spotlesse, learned dust,<br />
+Who living more adorned the place<br />
+Than the place him.&nbsp; Such was God&rsquo;s grace.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><!-- page 309--><a name="page309"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+309</span>Is the verse of this epitaph from Milton&rsquo;s pen or
+not?&nbsp; Mr. Hollingsworth writes: &lsquo;The probability is
+quite in favour that the pupil should write the last memorial of
+one whom he so highly honoured and loved as his old master.&nbsp;
+Nor is the verse itself, with the exception of the last line,
+unlike the character of Milton&rsquo;s poetry, and this last may
+have been mutilated and rendered inharmonious by the action of
+the stone-cutter, who also confused the death of the father and
+son.&rsquo;&nbsp; It is pleasant to think, not only that Milton
+now and then came to the Stowmarket Vicarage, but that in the
+church itself there is a slight record of his poetical
+fame.&nbsp; Let me add, as a further illustration of the
+connection of the great poet with the county of Suffolk, that I
+am informed one of the family of the Meadowses, of Witnesham, was
+for a time one of his secretaries.</p>
+<p>Young died, aged sixty-eight, in the year 1655, when Milton
+was fully embarked in public life, when he could spare but little
+time; but we may be sure that he would be the last at that time
+of life to forget all that he owed to his tutor Young.&nbsp; Wife
+and son had predeceased the Vicar.&nbsp; It seems as if there was
+no one left but the poet to record on the marble in the middle
+aisle, in front <!-- page 310--><a name="page310"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 310</span>of the present reading-desk, the
+virtues of a character which had long exercised so beneficial an
+influence on his own, and which he had loved so well.&nbsp;
+Milton&rsquo;s regret for the loss of such a guide, philosopher,
+and friend must have been lasting and sincere.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 311--><a name="page311"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 311</span>CHAPTER XI.<br />
+<span class="smcap">in constable&rsquo;s county</span>.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">East Bergholt&mdash;The Valley of the
+Stour&mdash;Painting from nature&mdash;East Anglian girls.</p>
+<p>Charles Kingsley was wont to glorify the teaching of the
+hills, and to maintain that the man of the mountain is more
+imaginative and poetical than the man of the plain.&nbsp; There
+are many Scotch people, mostly those born in the Highlands, who
+tell us much the same.&nbsp; If the theory be true&mdash;and I am
+not aware that it is&mdash;the exceptions are striking and
+many.&nbsp; Lincolnshire is rather a flat country, but it gave us
+(I can never bring myself to call him Lord) Alfred
+Tennyson.&nbsp; Many of our greatest poets and artists were
+cockneys; and Constable, that sweet painter of cornfields and
+shady lanes and quiet rivers, used to say that the scenes of his
+boyhood made him a painter.&nbsp; I was one autumn in
+Constable&rsquo;s county, and I do not wonder at it.&nbsp; It is
+a wonderful district.&nbsp; I <!-- page 312--><a
+name="page312"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 312</span>trod all
+the while, it seemed to me, on enchanted ground: in the gilded
+mist of autumn, with its river and its marsh lands, where the
+cows lazily fed&mdash;or got under the pollards to be out of the
+way of the flies&mdash;where laughing children swarmed along the
+hedges in pursuit of the ripe blackberry, where every cottage
+front was a thing of beauty, with its ivy creeping up the roof or
+over the wall; while the little garden was a mass of
+flowers.&nbsp; We expected to see the old gods and goddesses
+again to participate in the joyousness of an ancient mirth.</p>
+<p>Nor was it altogether a flat land, sacred to fat cattle and
+wheat and turnips.&nbsp; All round me were the elements of
+romance.&nbsp; At one end of the Vale of Dedham is a hill whence
+you may look all along the valley (Constable has made it the
+subject of one of his pictures) as far as Harwich; and as I
+lingered by the Stour&mdash;the river which divides Essex and
+Suffolk&mdash;East Bergholt, clothed with woods and crowned with
+a church, in which there is a stained-glass window put up in
+honour of Constable, and a baptismal font, the gift of
+Constable&rsquo;s brother, unfolded to my wondering eye all her
+rural charms.&nbsp; There are people who love to climb hills; I
+hate to do so.&nbsp; It is all vanity and <!-- page 313--><a
+name="page313"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 313</span>vexation of
+spirit; when you get to the top of one hill the chances are all
+you see is another hill, to the top of which you will have to
+climb.&nbsp; Give me a country lane, with its luxuriant hedges,
+its shady trees, its flowers, its richness of greensward, its
+pigs and poultry and farmyard; there is poetry in such nooks and
+corners of the earth, as Burns and Bloomfield and Gerald Massey
+found.&nbsp; No wonder the place made Constable an artist, and an
+artist whose name will not speedily pass away.&nbsp; My dear sir
+or madam, the next time you are on your way from London to
+Ipswich, don&rsquo;t rush along at express speed; get out at
+Ardleigh, make your way to the Vale of Dedham, then walk along
+the Stour, and cross it by a couple of rustic bridges, and you
+are at East Bergholt, in Suffolk, where Constable was born, and
+if you do so you will bless me evermore.&nbsp; Then, if you like,
+rejoin the train at Manningtree, and resume your journey.&nbsp;
+Few East Anglians even are aware of the wealth of beauty in that
+quiet corner.&nbsp; &lsquo;The beauty of the surrounding
+scenery,&rsquo; writes Constable&rsquo;s biographer, &lsquo;its
+gentle declivities, its luxuriant meadows, flats sprinkled with
+flocks and herds, its well-cultivated Uplands, its woods and
+rivers, with mansions scattered, and churches, farms, and
+picturesque <!-- page 314--><a name="page314"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 314</span>cottages&mdash;all impart to this
+spot an amenity and elegance hardly anywhere else to be
+found.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The Constables have been long in the district.&nbsp; The
+grandfather was a farmer at a village close by.&nbsp; The father,
+who was well-to-do, purchased a water-mill at Dedham and two
+windmills at East Bergholt, where he lived.&nbsp; The great
+artist, his son John, was born in the last century, and was
+educated at Lavenham and the Dedham Grammar School, and when the
+lad had reached sixteen or seventeen became addicted to painting,
+his studio being in the house of a Mr. John Dunthorne, a painter
+and glazier, with whom he remained on terms of the greatest
+intimacy for many years.&nbsp; The father would fain have made
+the son a farmer.&nbsp; He preferred to be a miller, and in his
+young days was known in the district as the handsome
+miller.&nbsp; His windmills, when he took to painting, were
+wonderful, and well deserved the criticism of his brother, who
+used to say, &lsquo;When I look at a windmill painted by John, I
+see that it will go round, which is not always the case with
+those of other artists,&rsquo; for the simple reason that John
+knew what he was about, which the others did not.&nbsp; Again,
+his industrial career helped him in another way.&nbsp; A miller
+learns to study the clouds, and Constable&rsquo;s <!-- page
+315--><a name="page315"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+315</span>clouds were exceptionally life-like and real.&nbsp; The
+handsome young miller soon acquired artistic friends, one of them
+being Sir George Beaumont, the guide, philosopher, and friend of
+most of the geniuses of that time.&nbsp; Said another to him,
+&lsquo;Do not trouble yourself about inventing figures for a
+landscape; you cannot remain an hour in a spot without the
+appearance of some living thing, that will in all probability
+better accord with the scene and the time of day than any
+invention of your own.&rsquo;&nbsp; After a visit to his artist
+friends in London, he resumed his mill life, and in 1779 he
+finally commenced his artistic career, and painted all the
+country round.&nbsp; His studies were chiefly Dedham, East
+Bergholt, the Valley of the Stour, and the neighbouring village
+of Stratford.&nbsp; At Stoke Nayland he painted an altar-piece
+for the church.&nbsp; There is also another altar-piece in a
+neighbouring church, but his altar-pieces are not known or
+treasured like his other works.</p>
+<p>Cooper tells a good story of Constable.&nbsp; One day Stodart,
+the sculptor, met Fuseli starting forth with an old
+umbrella.&nbsp; &lsquo;Why do you carry the umbrella?&rsquo;
+asked the sculptor.&nbsp; &lsquo;I am going to see
+Constable,&rsquo; was the reply, &lsquo;and he is always painting
+rain.&rsquo;&nbsp; One can only remark that, if <!-- page
+316--><a name="page316"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+316</span>Constable was always painting rain, he always did it
+well.</p>
+<p>Another good story was told Redgrave by Lee.&nbsp; &lsquo;I
+hear you sell all your pictures,&rsquo; said Constable to the
+younger landscape-painter.&nbsp; &lsquo;Why, yes,&rsquo; said
+Lee; &lsquo;I&rsquo;m pretty fortunate.&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t you
+sell yours?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;No,&rsquo; said Constable,
+&lsquo;I don&rsquo;t sell any of my pictures, and I&rsquo;ll tell
+you why: when I paint a <i>bad</i> picture I don&rsquo;t like to
+part with it, and when I paint a <i>good</i> one I like to keep
+it.&rsquo;&nbsp; It is well known that one year when Constable
+was on the Council of the Royal Academy, one of his own pictures
+was passed by mistake before the judges.&nbsp; &lsquo;Cross
+it,&rsquo; said one.&nbsp; &lsquo;It won&rsquo;t do,&rsquo; said
+another.&nbsp; &lsquo;Pass on,&rsquo; said a third.&nbsp; And the
+carpenter was just about to chalk it with a cross, when he read
+the name of &lsquo;John Constable.&rsquo;&nbsp; Of course there
+were lame apologies, and the picture was taken from the condemned
+heap and placed with the works of his brother Academicians.&nbsp;
+But after work was over Constable took the picture under his arm,
+and, despite the remonstrance of his brother colleagues, marched
+off with it, saving: &lsquo;I can&rsquo;t think of its being hung
+after it has been fairly turned out.&nbsp; The work so condemned
+was the &lsquo;Stream bordered in with Willows,&rsquo; now in the
+South Kensington <!-- page 317--><a name="page317"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 317</span>Museum.&nbsp; Leslie once remarked
+to Redgrave that he would give any work he had painted for it, so
+warmly did he admire it.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Constable is the best landscape-painter we have,&rsquo;
+wrote Frith to his mother in 1835.&nbsp; &lsquo;He is a very
+merry fellow, and very rich.&nbsp; He told us an anecdote of a
+man who came to look at his pictures; he was a gardener.&nbsp;
+One day he called him into his painting-room to look at his
+pictures, when the man made the usual vulgar remarks, such as,
+&ldquo;Did you do all this, sir?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;What, all this?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;What, frame and all?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+At last he came to an empty frame that was hung against the wall
+without any picture in it, when he said to Constable, &ldquo;But
+you don&rsquo;t call this picture quite finished, do you,
+sir?&rdquo;&nbsp; Constable said that quite sickened him, and he
+never let any ignoramuses ever see his pictures again, or frames
+either.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Constable&rsquo;s great merits, writes Mr. Frith, were first
+recognised in France, with the result upon French landscape art
+that is felt at the present time.&nbsp; His advice to Frith was:
+&lsquo;Never do anything without nature before you if it be
+possible to have it.&nbsp; See those weeds and the dock
+leaves?&nbsp; They are to come into the foreground of this <!--
+page 318--><a name="page318"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+318</span>picture.&nbsp; I know dock leaves pretty well, but I
+should not attempt to introduce them into a picture without
+having them before me.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Constable died very suddenly in 1837.&nbsp; His fame, now that
+he is dead, is greater than when he was alive.&nbsp; His work
+abides in all its strength.</p>
+<p>There is little in East Bergholt to remind one of Constable,
+where his reputation remains as that of a genial and
+kindly-hearted man; but the landscape in all its essential
+features remains the same.&nbsp; The house in which he was born
+was pulled down in 1841, which is a great pity, as it is
+described as a large and handsome mansion.&nbsp; But I never saw
+a small village with so many attractive residences, though why
+anybody should live in any of them I could not, for the life of
+me, understand.&nbsp; Yet there they were, quite a street of
+them, all in beautiful order, as if they were the residences of
+wealthy citizens in the suburbs of a busy town.&nbsp; They ought
+to have been filled with handsome girls, as Charles Kingsley
+tells us East Anglia is famed for the beauty of its women; all I
+can say, however, is that I saw none of them, or any sign of life
+anywhere, beyond the inevitable tradesmen&rsquo;s carts.&nbsp;
+Independently of Constable, East Bergholt claims to be worth a
+pilgrimage for its rustic beauty, <!-- page 319--><a
+name="page319"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 319</span>which,
+however, becomes tame and common as you get away from it.&nbsp;
+The church is old, and has a history&mdash;of little consequence,
+however, to anyone now.&nbsp; One of its rectors was burned at
+Ipswich in Queen Mary&rsquo;s reign.&nbsp; His name, Samuel,
+ought to be preserved by a Church which, till lately, had few
+martyrs of its own.&nbsp; East Bergholt has also a Congregational
+and Primitive Methodist chapel, and a colony of Benedictine nuns,
+driven away from France by the great Revolution.&nbsp; We are a
+hospitable people, and we are proud to be so, but have we not
+just at this time too many refugee nuns and monks in our
+midst?</p>
+<h2><!-- page 320--><a name="page320"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 320</span>CHAPTER XII.<br />
+<span class="smcap">east anglian worthies</span>.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Suffolk cheese&mdash;Danes, Saxons, and
+Normans&mdash;Philosophers and statesmen&mdash;Artists and
+literati.</p>
+<p>Abbo Floriacencis, who flourished in the year <span
+class="smcap">a.d.</span> 910, describes East Anglia as
+&lsquo;very noble, and particularly because of its being watered
+on all sides.&nbsp; On the south and east it is encompassed by
+the ocean, on the north by the moisture of large and wet fens
+which, arising almost in the heart of the island, because of the
+evenness of the ground for a hundred miles and more, descend in
+great rivers into the sea.&nbsp; On the west the province is
+joyned to the rest of the island, and, therefore, may be entered
+(by land); but lest it should be harassed by the frequent
+incursions of the enemy it is fortifyed with an earthen rampire
+like a high wall, and with a ditch.&nbsp; The inner parts of it
+is a pretty rich soil, made exceeding pleasant by gardens and
+groves, rendered agreeable by its <!-- page 321--><a
+name="page321"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 321</span>convenience
+for hunting, famous for pasturage, and abounding with sheep and
+all sorts of cattle.&nbsp; I do not insist upon its rivers full
+of fish, considering that a tongue as it were of the sea itself
+licks it on one side, and on the other side the large fens make a
+prodigious number of lakes two or three miles over.&nbsp; These
+fens accommodate great numbers of monks with their desired
+retirement and solitude, with which, being enclosed, they have no
+occasion for the privacy of a wilderness.&rsquo;&nbsp; Before the
+monks came the place was held by the Iceni&mdash;a stout and
+valiant people, as Tacitus describes them.&nbsp; In the time of
+the Heptarchy, King Uffa was their lord and master.&nbsp; In
+later times Suffolk, when explored by Camden, was celebrated for
+its cheeses, which, to the great advantage of the inhabitants,
+were bought up through all England, nay, in Germany also, with
+France and Spain, as Pantaleon Medicus has told us, who scruples
+not to set them against those of Placentia both in colour and
+taste.&nbsp; To the Norfolk people, it must be admitted, Camden
+gives the palm.&nbsp; The goodness of the soil of that country,
+he argues, &lsquo;may be gathered from hence, that the
+inhabitants are of a bright, clear complexion, not to mention
+their sharpness of wit and admirable quickness in the <!-- page
+322--><a name="page322"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+322</span>study of our common law.&nbsp; So that it is at
+present, and always has been, reputed the common nursery of
+lawyers, and even amongst the common people you shall meet with a
+great many who (as one expresses it), if they have no just
+quarrel, are able to raise it out of the very quirks and niceties
+of the law.&rsquo;&nbsp; In our time it is rather the fashion to
+run down the East Anglians, yet that they have done their duty to
+their country no one can deny.&nbsp; &lsquo;They say we are
+Norfolk fules,&rsquo; said a waiter at a Norfolk hotel, to me, a
+little while ago; &lsquo;but I ain&rsquo;t ashamed of my county,
+for all that.&rsquo;&nbsp; Why should he be, the reader naturally
+asks?</p>
+<p>The Saxons of East Anglia gave the name of England to this
+land of ours; but before this time East Anglia had attained, by
+means of its sons and daughters, to fame far and near.&nbsp; If
+we may believe Gildas, a Christian church was planted in England
+in the time of Nero.&nbsp; Claudia, to whom Paul refers in
+Philippians and Timothy, was a British lady of great wit and
+greater beauty, celebrated by the poet Martial.&nbsp; She may
+have been converted by Paul, argued the Rev. Mr. Hollingsworth, a
+local historian, Rural Dean and Rector of Stowmarket; nor is it
+at all improbable, he adds, &lsquo;that Claudia, the British
+beauty, may have been <!-- page 323--><a name="page323"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 323</span>an Iceni, or East Anglian lady, as
+her brilliant complexion, for which so many in these counties are
+celebrated, had caused a vivid feeling of sensation and curiosity
+and envy even among the haughty dames of the imperial city of
+Rome.&rsquo;&nbsp; The Romans were glad to make terms with the
+Iceni till the unfortunate Boadicea perished in the revolt which
+she had so rashly raised.&nbsp; The Saxons came after the Romans,
+and took possession of the land.&nbsp; Saxon proprietors
+compelled the people, whose lives they spared, to till the very
+lands on which their fathers had lived under the Roman Government
+or their own chiefs.&nbsp; Pagan worship was reintroduced; but
+when Sigberht, the son of Redwald, King of East Anglia, reigned,
+he sent to France for Christian ministers, and one of them,
+Felix, a Burgundian, landed at Felixstowe, and there commenced
+his Christian labours.&nbsp; Felix was held in high repute by the
+Bishops in other parts of the kingdom.&nbsp; His opinions were
+quoted and revered.&nbsp; The diocese was large, and the fourth
+Bishop divided it into two parts, the second Bishop being planted
+at North Elmham, in Norfolk.&nbsp; In 955 the see was again
+united, when Erfastus, the twenty-second Bishop, removed to
+Thetford.&nbsp; A little while after the Bishop&rsquo;s residence
+was removed <!-- page 324--><a name="page324"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 324</span>to Norwich, and there it has ever
+since remained; but the land was not long permitted to remain in
+peace.&nbsp; In 870 a large party of Danes marched from
+Lincolnshire into Suffolk, defeated King Edmund, near Hoxne, and,
+as he would not become an idolater, shot him to death with
+arrows.&nbsp; Bury St. Edmunds still preserves the name and fame
+of one of the most illustrious of our Anglo-Saxon martyrs.&nbsp;
+King Alfred, with a policy worthy of his sagacity, made Guthrum,
+the Danish governor of Suffolk, a Christian, and continued him in
+his rule.&nbsp; The Danes in East Anglia were then an immense
+army, and thus at once they were turned from foes into
+friends.&nbsp; Guthrum was baptized, and it is to be hoped was
+all the better for it.&nbsp; At any rate, he returned to Suffolk
+and divided many of the estates which had been held by Saxon
+proprietors killed in war.&nbsp; He died in peace, and had a
+fitting funeral at Hadleigh.&nbsp; The children of those Danish
+soldiers were dangerous friends, and too frequently betrayed the
+Saxons.&nbsp; Blood is thicker than water, and as each succeeding
+band of Danish adventurers landed on our eastern coast, they were
+welcomed by such followers of Guthrum as had settled in Suffolk
+as friends and allies.&nbsp; Nevertheless, the Danes found the
+conquest <!-- page 325--><a name="page325"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 325</span>of the island impossible.&nbsp;
+Divine Providence, Mr. Hollingsworth tells us, did not suffer the
+Saxon race to be vanquished by those who were connected with them
+by blood.&nbsp; Nevertheless, the struggle was long and
+severe.&nbsp; The two races were equally matched in courage, but
+the Saxon surpassed his foe in that stern, unyielding endurance
+which enabled him to resist every defeat and prepare again for
+the contest.&nbsp; The whole surface of the country became
+studded with entrenchments, moats, and mounds, within whose line
+the harassed Saxon defended his property and all he valued in his
+home.&nbsp; History begins, as far as England is practically
+concerned, with the Norman Conquest.&nbsp; It was then the
+Norsemen, blue-eyed, fair-haired, the finest blood in Europe,
+planted themselves in Norfolk and Suffolk, and brought with them
+feudalism and civilization.&nbsp; It was in 787 that, according
+to the Saxon Chronicle, they first reached England; but it was
+not till William the Conqueror made the land his own that they
+settled as English lords, and divided between them the land in
+which their rapacious forefathers had won many a precious
+treasure.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;The red gold and the white silver<br />
+He covets as a leech does blood,&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>wrote an old poet of the Norseman.</p>
+<p><!-- page 326--><a name="page326"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+326</span>Let us take, as an illustration of the county, a
+Norfolk family.&nbsp; In Westminster Abbey there is monument to
+Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton, who was buried in the ruined chancel of
+the little church at Overstrand, near Northrepps, &lsquo;a droll,
+irregular, unconventional-looking place,&rsquo; as Caroline Fox
+calls it, where he loved at all times to live, and where he
+retired to die.&nbsp; The family from which Sir Thomas descended
+resided, about the middle of the sixteenth century, at Sudbury,
+in Suffolk.&nbsp; It was while at Earlham that he made his
+d&eacute;but as a public speaker at one of the earlier meetings
+of the Norfolk Bible Society.&nbsp; In the winter of 1817 he went
+over to France with some of the Gurneys and the Rev. Francis
+Cunningham, who was anxious to establish a Bible Society in
+Paris.&nbsp; He was also anxious to inquire into the way in which
+the gaols at Antwerp and Ghent were conducted.&nbsp; On his
+return he examined minutely into the state of the London gaols,
+and, to use his own expression, his inquiries developed a system
+of folly and wickedness which surpassed belief.&nbsp; In the
+following year he published a work entitled &lsquo;An Inquiry
+whether Crime be Produced or Prevented by our Present System of
+Penal Discipline,&rsquo; which ran through six editions, and
+tended powerfully to create a proper <!-- page 327--><a
+name="page327"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 327</span>public
+feeling on the subject.&nbsp; In 1819 we find him in Parliament
+seconding Sir James Mackintosh in his efforts to promote a reform
+of our criminal law&mdash;then the most sanguinary in
+Europe.&nbsp; One of his earliest efforts was to get the House to
+abolish the burning of widows in India; and in 1821 he received
+from Wilberforce the command to relieve him of a responsibility
+too heavy for his advancing years and infirmities&mdash;the care
+of the slave: a holy enterprise for which Mr. Buxton had been
+qualifying himself by careful thought and study, and which he was
+spared to carry to a successful end.&nbsp; At first he resided at
+Cromer Hall, an old seat of the Windham family, which no longer
+exists, having been pulled down and replaced by a modern
+residence.&nbsp; It was situated about a quarter of a mile from
+the sea, but sheltered from the north winds by closely
+surrounding hills and woods, and with its old buttresses, gables,
+and porches clothed with roses and jessamine, and its famed lawn,
+where the pheasants came down to feed, had a peculiar character
+of picturesque simplicity.&nbsp; The interior corresponded with
+its external appearance, and had little of the regularity of
+modern building.&nbsp; One attic chamber was walled up, with no
+entrance save through the window: and at different times <!--
+page 328--><a name="page328"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+328</span>large pits were discovered under the floor or in the
+thick walls&mdash;used, it was supposed, in old times by the
+smugglers of the coast.&nbsp; There is much picturesque scenery
+around Cromer, and large parties were often made up for
+excursions to Sherringham&mdash;one of the most beautiful spots
+in all the eastern counties, to the wooded dells of Felbrigg and
+Runton, or to the rough heath ground by the beach beacon.&nbsp;
+One who was a frequent guest at Cromer Hall wrote: &lsquo;I wish
+I could describe the impression made upon me by the extraordinary
+power of interesting and stimulating others which was possessed
+by Sir Fowell Buxton some thirty years ago.&nbsp; In my own case
+it was like having powers of thinking, powers of feeling, and,
+above all, the love of true poetry suddenly aroused within me,
+which, though I had possessed them before, had been till then
+unused.&nbsp; From Locke &ldquo;On the Human
+Understanding,&rdquo; to &ldquo;William of Deloraine, good at
+need,&rdquo; <i>he</i> woke up in me the sleeping principle of
+taste, and, in giving me such objects of pursuit, has added
+immeasurably to the happiness of my life.&rsquo;&nbsp; On a
+Sunday afternoon, we are told, his large dining-hall was filled
+with a miscellaneous audience of fishermen and neighbours, as
+well as of his own household, to whom he would read the <!-- page
+329--><a name="page329"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+329</span>Bible, commenting on it at the same time.&nbsp; Very
+simple and beautiful seems to us that far-away Norfolk life;
+except that his hospitalities were more bounded by want of room,
+his life at Northrepps was much the same as it had been at Cromer
+Hall.&nbsp; It is one of the pleasures of my life that I have
+heard Sir Thomas speak.&nbsp; In modern England the influence of
+the Buxton family and name is yet a power.</p>
+<p>Having already alluded to the Windhams and Felbrigg, it
+remains to say that the last of that illustrious line died in
+1810.&nbsp; Felbrigg was purchased by the Windhams as far back as
+1461.&nbsp; The public life of Windham, the statesman, may be
+considered as having commenced in 1783, when he undertook the
+office of Principal Secretary to Lord Northington, who was
+appointed Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.&nbsp; The great Marquis of
+Lansdowne, when he was last at Felbrigg, in 1861, said Mr.
+Windham had the best Parliamentary address of any man he had ever
+seen, which was enhanced by the grace of his person and the
+dignity of his manners.&nbsp; Still more glowing was the
+testimony borne to Mr. Windham by Earl Grey when he heard of his
+death.&nbsp; A mere glance at his diary is sufficient to convince
+us that Windham, <!-- page 330--><a name="page330"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 330</span>when in London, mixed with the first
+men and women of his time.&nbsp; The late Lord Chief Justice
+Scarlett, on being asked by his son-in-law to name the very best
+speech he had heard during his life, and that which he thought
+most worthy of study, answered, without hesitation,
+&lsquo;Windham&rsquo;s speech on the Law of
+Evidence.&rsquo;&nbsp; In a conversation with Lord Palmerston,
+Pitt observed of Windham: &lsquo;Nothing can be so well-meaning
+or eloquent as he is.&nbsp; His speeches are the finest
+productions possible of warm imagination and fancy.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+In 1800 we read in the Malmesbury Diaries that old George III.
+had meant Windham to be his First Minister.&nbsp; As a friend of
+Burke and Johnson, Windham&rsquo;s name will not easily fade
+away.&nbsp; It is to him we owe the most pathetic account of the
+closing hours of the Monarch of Bolt Court.</p>
+<p>Sir Cloudesley Shovel may well claim to be one of
+Norfolk&rsquo;s heroes.&nbsp; Born in an obscure village, an
+apprentice to a shoemaker, he obtained rank and fame as one of
+Queen Anne&rsquo;s most honoured Admirals.&nbsp; It is denied
+that he was in very humble circumstances, and it is a fact that
+his original letters were so well worded as to indicate that he
+had received a fair education.&nbsp; At any rate, he went to sea
+at ten years old with <!-- page 331--><a name="page331"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 331</span>his friend Sir John Hadough; and
+although not a cabin-boy in the modern acceptation of that term,
+he undertook his captain&rsquo;s errands, swimming on one
+occasion through the enemy&rsquo;s fire with some despatches for
+a distant ship, carrying the papers in his mouth, displaying a
+courage worthy of admiration.&nbsp; He distinguished himself in
+the Battle of Bantry Bay.&nbsp; As an enemy of France and Spain,
+he triumphed in many a fierce fight.&nbsp; Returning home flushed
+with victory, his ship and all on board were lost on the Scilly
+Isles in an October gale.&nbsp; Some uncertainty hangs over his
+last moments.&nbsp; It is asserted that he swam to shore alive,
+and that he was put to death for the sake of his ring of emeralds
+and diamonds.&nbsp; An ancient woman is stated to have confessed
+as much.&nbsp; For the honour of human nature, we would fain
+believe the story to be untrue.&nbsp; A still greater Norfolk
+hero was Lord Nelson, who is buried in St. Paul&rsquo;s
+Cathedral.&nbsp; &lsquo;My principle,&rsquo; said Nelson, on one
+occasion, &lsquo;is to assist in driving the French to the devil,
+and in restoring peace and happiness to mankind.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Whether he succeeded as regards the former we are not in a
+position to state; but peace and happiness, alas! are still far
+from being the <!-- page 332--><a name="page332"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 332</span>common property of mankind.&nbsp;
+The rectory house at Burnham Thorpe, where Nelson was born,
+exists no longer.&nbsp; Sir Cloudesley Shovel lived in a
+castellated stone house in the small agricultural village of
+Cockthorpe, originally fortified as a defence against the
+incursions of smugglers.&nbsp; A room in this house, entered by a
+doorway arched over with stone, is shown, which is still called
+by the villagers Sir Cloudesley&rsquo;s drawing-room.</p>
+<p>A chapter might be written about the Norfolk Cokes.&nbsp; Sir
+Edward Coke, the great lawyer, was buried at Tittleshale, in
+Norfolk.&nbsp; The well-known Coke, the distinguished
+agriculturist, inhabited that splendid Holkham, the fame of which
+exists in our day.&nbsp; It was begun by Lord Leicester in 1734,
+and finished by his Countess in 1764.&nbsp; Blomefield, the
+well-known Norfolk historian, speaks of it as a noble, stately,
+and sumptuous palace.&nbsp; Lord Coke and Lord Burlington were
+men of similar tastes and pursuits, and were diligent students of
+classical and Italian art.&nbsp; The Holkham Library still
+contains treasures rich and rare.&nbsp; Many of the latter formed
+part of the library of Sir Edward Coke; the title-page of the
+first edition of the &lsquo;Novum Organum,&rsquo; published in
+1620, bears the design of a ship passing through <!-- page
+333--><a name="page333"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+333</span>the Pillars of Hercules into an undulating sea.&nbsp;
+The Holkham copy is adorned by the inscription, &lsquo;Ex dono
+auctoris.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Above the ship, in the handwriting of Coke, is the
+couplet:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;It deserveth not to be read in schools,<br
+/>
+But to be freighted in the ship of fools.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Thomas Shadwell, the Poet Laureate and historiographer of
+William III., was a Norfolk man.&nbsp; He is buried in
+Westminster Abbey.&nbsp; It is said by Noble that he was an
+honest man.&nbsp; Of course he was.&nbsp; Chalmers accuses him of
+indecent conversation, or Lord Rochester would not have said that
+he had more wit and humour than any other poet.&nbsp; I am afraid
+he confers little honour on his native county.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Others,&rsquo; wrote Dryden in one of his satires,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;To some faint meaning make pretence,<br />
+But Shadwell never deviates into sense.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Sir Robert Walpole, who saved England from wooden shoes and
+slavery, was of a Norfolk family, yet flourishing; as are the
+Townshends, to whom we owe the introduction of the turnip.&nbsp;
+Norfolk also can boast of Sir Thomas Gresham and Sir Francis
+Walsingham.&nbsp; In Norfolk was born that &lsquo;great oracle of
+law, patron of the Church, and <!-- page 334--><a
+name="page334"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 334</span>glory of
+England,&rsquo; as Camden calls him, Sir Henry Spelman.&nbsp; At
+Bickling, in the same county, was born that ill-starred Anne
+Boleyn, of whom it is written that</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Love could teach a monarch to be wise,<br
+/>
+And Gospel light first beamed from Boleyn&rsquo;s
+eyes.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In the same neighbourhood, also, was born John Baconthorpe,
+the resolute doctor, of whom Pantias Pansa has written:
+&lsquo;This one resolute doctor has furnished the Christian
+religion with armour against the Jews stronger than that of
+Vulcan.&rsquo;&nbsp; Pansa was a Norfolk man, and so was the
+great botanist Sir W. Hooker.</p>
+<p>Who has not heard of Lynn, in Norfolk, where, when Eugene Aram
+was the usher,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Four-and-twenty happy boys<br />
+Came bounding out of school&rsquo;?</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It was in that old town Fanny Burney, the friend of Mrs.
+Thrale and Dr. Johnson, the author of novels like
+&lsquo;Evelina,&rsquo; which people even read nowadays, was born
+on the 13th of June, 1752.&nbsp; She grew up low of stature, of a
+brown complexion.&nbsp; One of her friends called her the dove,
+which she thought was from the colour of her eyes&mdash;a
+greenish-gray; her last editor thinks it must have <!-- page
+335--><a name="page335"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+335</span>been from their kind expression.&nbsp; She was very
+short-sighted, like her father.&nbsp; In her portrait, taken at
+the age of thirty, merriment seems latent behind a demure
+look.&nbsp; At any rate, her countenance was what might be called
+a speaking one.&nbsp; &lsquo;Poor Fanny!&rsquo; said her father,
+&lsquo;her face tells what she thinks, whether she will or
+no.&nbsp; I long to see her honest face once more.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Poor Fanny&rsquo; lived to a good old age, and her
+gossiping diary is a mine of wealth as regards the Royal Family,
+and Johnson, and Mrs. Thrale, and the cleverest men and women of
+her time.</p>
+<p>Thomas Bilney, one of our Protestant martyrs, was a Norfolk
+man.&nbsp; It was a Norfolk knight, Sir Thomas Erpingham, who
+gave signal for the archers at Agincourt.&nbsp; Shakespeare
+refers to him in his &lsquo;King Henry V.&rsquo; as follows:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;<span
+class="smcap">King</span>.&mdash;Good-morrow, old Sir Thomas
+Erpingham;<br />
+A good soft pillow for that good white head<br />
+Were better than a churlish turf of France.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;<span class="smcap">Erp</span>.&mdash;Not so, my liege;
+this lodging likes me better,<br />
+Since I may say, now lie I like a king.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Many East Anglians helped to win the battle of
+Agincourt.&nbsp; The Earl of Kimberley still bears Agincourt on
+his shield.</p>
+<p>Let us now pass over into Suffolk.&nbsp; It is worth <!-- page
+336--><a name="page336"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+336</span>asking how Suffolk came to earn the nickname of Silly
+Suffolk.&nbsp; &lsquo;Silly,&rsquo; say the learned, is derived
+from the German <i>selig</i>, meaning &lsquo;holy or
+blessed,&rsquo; and is said to have been applied to Suffolk on
+account of the number of beautiful churches it contains; Suffolk,
+at any rate, is silly no longer.&nbsp; In the present day it
+shows to advantage, if we may judge by the enterprise and public
+spirit of such a town as Ipswich, for instance.&nbsp; Not long
+since, as I landed on the docks at Hamburg, I had the pleasure of
+seeing some dozen or more steam ploughs and agricultural
+implements waiting to be transported into the interior.&nbsp; The
+ploughs and implements bore well-known Suffolk names, such as
+Garrett and Sons or Ransomes, Sims and Jefferies, and were open
+manifestations of Suffolk skill and energy, and ability to hold
+its own against all comers.&nbsp; Amongst the women of the
+present generation, where are to be met the superiors of Mrs.
+Garrett Anderson or of Mrs. Fawcett, widow of the distinguished
+statesman, and mother of a sweet girl-graduate who has beaten all
+the men at her University?&nbsp; I was the other day at
+Haverhill, where Mr. D. Gurteen still lives to enjoy, at the ripe
+old age of eighty-three, the fruits of an energy on his part
+which has raised <!-- page 337--><a name="page337"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 337</span>Haverhill from a village of paupers
+into a flourishing community, whose manufactures are to be met
+with all over the land.&nbsp; One day, as I was walking along
+Gray&rsquo;s Inn Road, a fine, well-built man stopped me to ask
+me if I remembered him.&nbsp; When he mentioned his name I did
+directly.&nbsp; He was of the poorest of the poor in his home at
+Wrentham.&nbsp; He had done well in London.&nbsp; &lsquo;You
+know, sir,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;how poor our family was.&nbsp;
+Well, I had enough of poverty, and I made up my mind to come to
+London and be either a man or a mouse.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>In the London of to-day the heads of some of our greatest
+establishments are Suffolk men.&nbsp; We all know the stately
+pile in Holborn, once Meekings&rsquo;, now Wallis&rsquo;s, where
+all the world and his wife go to buy.&nbsp; Mr. Wallis hails from
+Stowmarket, and the man who fits up London shops in the most
+tasty style, Mr. Sage, of Gray&rsquo;s Inn Road, was a Suffolk
+carpenter, who, when out of work, with his last guinea got some
+cards printed, one of which got him a job, which ultimately led
+on to fame and fortune.</p>
+<p>No, Suffolk has long ceased to be silly.&nbsp; It must have
+deserved the title in the days which I can remember when a
+Conservative M.P., amidst <!-- page 338--><a
+name="page338"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+338</span>enthusiastic cheering, at Ipswich, intimated that it
+was quite as well the sun and moon were placed high up in the
+heavens, else</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Some reforming ass<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Would soon propose to pluck them down<br />
+And light the world with gas.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>One of the oddest, most attractive, and most original women of
+the last century was Elizabeth Simpson, a Suffolk girl, who ran
+away from her home, where she was never taught anything, at the
+age of sixteen, to make her fortune, and to win fame.&nbsp; In
+both cases she succeeded, though not so soon as she could have
+wished.&nbsp; Failing to touch the hard heart of the manager of
+the Norwich Theatre, a Welshman of the name of Griffiths, she
+packed up her things in a bandbox, and, good-looking and
+audacious, landed herself on the Holborn pavement.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;By the time you receive this,&rsquo; she wrote to her
+mother, &lsquo;I shall leave Standingfield perhaps for
+ever.&nbsp; You are surprised, but be not uneasy; believe the
+step I have undertaken is indiscreet, but by no means criminal,
+unless I sin by not acquainting you with it.&nbsp; I now endure
+every pang, am not lost to every feeling, on thus quitting the
+tenderest and best of parents, I would say most beloved, too, but
+cannot prove my affection, <!-- page 339--><a
+name="page339"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 339</span>yet time
+may.&nbsp; To that I must submit my hope of retaining your
+regard.&nbsp; The censures of the world I despise, as the most
+worthy incur the reproaches of that.&nbsp; Should I ever think
+you will wish to hear from me I will write.&rsquo;&nbsp; A
+pretty, unprotected, unknown girl of sixteen, in London, had, we
+can well believe, no easy time of it.&nbsp; Strangers followed
+her in the street, people insulted her in the theatre, suspicious
+landladies looked her up.&nbsp; Happily, a brother-in-law met her
+in a penniless state and took her home.&nbsp; Unhappily, at his
+house she met Inchbald, an indifferent and badly-paid
+actor.&nbsp; They were immediately married, and the girl rejoiced
+to think that she was an actress, and about to realize the
+ambition of her youth.&nbsp; It was no small part which the
+Suffolk girl felt herself qualified to fill.&nbsp; On the 4th of
+September, 1772, she made her d&eacute;but as Cordelia to her
+husband&rsquo;s Lear.&nbsp; In 1821 Mrs. Inchbald, famed for her
+&lsquo;simple story,&rsquo; which took the town by storm, was
+buried in Kensington Churchyard.&nbsp; But before she got there
+she had to endure much.&nbsp; At that time theatrical performers
+were much worse paid than they are now, when, as Mr. Irving tells
+us, any decent-looking young man, with a good suit of clothes,
+can command his five <!-- page 340--><a name="page340"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 340</span>or six pounds a week.&nbsp; Mrs.
+Inchbald and her husband had to drink of the cup of poverty, and
+its consequent degradation, to the dregs.&nbsp; On one occasion
+they took it into their heads to go to France, believing that
+they could make money&mdash;he by painting, she by writing.&nbsp;
+The scheme, as was to be expected, did not answer, and they were
+landed on their return somewhere near Brighton, in the September
+of 1776, literally without a crust of bread.&nbsp; On one
+occasion it was stated that they dined off raw turnips, stolen
+from a field as they wandered past.&nbsp; Next year, however, the
+world began to mend so far as they were concerned.</p>
+<p>At Manchester they met the Siddonses and J. P. Kemble, and one
+result of that meeting was peace and prosperity.&nbsp; At this
+time also the lady&rsquo;s husband died, and that was no great
+loss, as the lady was far too independent for a wife.&nbsp; Yet,
+if the great Kemble had proposed to her, as she used to tell
+Fanny Kemble, she would have jumped at him.&nbsp; To the last her
+habits of life were most penurious.&nbsp; She spent nothing on
+dress, she was indifferent in the matter of eating and drinking,
+and when she was making as much as from &pound;500 to &pound;900
+by a new play, in order to save a trifle she would sit in the
+depth of <!-- page 341--><a name="page341"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 341</span>winter without a fire.&nbsp; Only
+fancy any of our later lady-novelists thus ascetic and
+self-denying.&nbsp; The idea is absurd.&nbsp; She was to the last
+what Godwin described her, a mixture of lady and milkmaid.&nbsp;
+And yet the lady had ambition.&nbsp; She had an idea that she
+might be Lady Bunbury.&nbsp; However, she marred her chance, at
+the same time missing a rich Mr. Glover, who offered a marriage
+settlement of &pound;500 a year.&nbsp; Mrs. Inchbald, however,
+well knew how to take care of herself.&nbsp; No one better.&nbsp;
+She had learned the art in rather a hard school, and, besides,
+she knew how to take care of her poor relations.&nbsp; None of
+her sisters seem to have done well, and she had to aid them
+all.</p>
+<p>Sudbury was the birthplace of that William Enfield, whose
+&lsquo;Speaker&rsquo; was the terror and delight of more than one
+generation of England&rsquo;s ingenuous youth.&nbsp; Lord
+Chancellor Thurlow, of the rugged eyebrows and the savage look,
+and fellow-clerk with the poet Cowper, was born at Ashfield, an
+obscure village not far off.&nbsp; Robert Bloomfield, who wrote
+the &lsquo;Farmer&rsquo;s Boy,&rsquo; came from Honington, where
+his mother kept a village school, and where he became a
+shoemaker.&nbsp; Capel Loft, an amiable gentleman of literary
+sympathies and pursuits, and Bloomfield&rsquo;s warmest friend,
+<!-- page 342--><a name="page342"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+342</span>resided at Troston Hall, in the immediate neighbourhood
+of Honington.&nbsp; At one time there was no writer better known
+than John Lydgate, called the Monk of Bury, born at the village
+of Lydgate, in 1380.&nbsp; &lsquo;His language,&rsquo; writes a
+learned critic, &lsquo;is much less obsolete than
+Chaucer&rsquo;s, and a great deal more harmonious.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Stephen Gardener, Bishop of Winchester, and an enemy to the
+Reformation, was born at Bury.&nbsp; At Trinity St. Martin lived
+Thomas Cavendish, the second Englishman who sailed round the
+globe.&nbsp; Admiral Broke, memorable for his capture of the
+<i>Chesapeake</i>, when we were at war with America, was born at
+Nacton.&nbsp; The great non-juring Archbishop Sancroft was born
+at Fressingfield, where he retired to die, and where he is buried
+under a handsome monument.&nbsp; The great scholar, Robert
+Grosset&ecirc;te, Bishop of Lincoln, was born at
+Stradbrook.&nbsp; Of him Roger Bacon wrote that he was the only
+man living who was in possession of all the sciences.&nbsp;
+Wycliff, on innumerable occasions, refers to him with
+respect.&nbsp; Arthur Young, the celebrated agriculturist, some
+of whose sentences are preserved as golden ones&mdash;especially
+that which says, &lsquo;Give a man the secure possession of a
+rock, and he will make a garden of it&rsquo;&mdash;and whose
+valuable works, I am glad to see, <!-- page 343--><a
+name="page343"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 343</span>are
+republished, was born and lived near Bury St. Edmunds.&nbsp;
+Echard, the historian, was born at Barsham, in 1671.&nbsp; Porson
+was a Norfolk lad.</p>
+<p>Sir Thomas Hanmer was one of the most independent men that
+ever sat for the county of Suffolk.&nbsp; Mr. Glyde, of Ipswich,
+terms him the Gladstone of his age.&nbsp; Pope appears to
+stigmatize him as a Trimmer,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Courtiers and patrols in two ranks
+divide;<br />
+Through both he passed, and bowed from side to side.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>His garden at Mildenhall was celebrated for the quality of its
+grapes, and Sir Thomas used to send every year hampers filled
+with these grapes, and carried on men&rsquo;s shoulders, to
+London for the Queen.&nbsp; That stubborn Radical and
+Freethinker, Tom Paine, was born at Thetford.&nbsp; Sir John
+Suckling, a Suffolk poet, has written, at any rate, one verse
+never excelled:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Her feet beneath her petticoat,<br />
+Like little mice, stole in and out,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As if they feared the light.<br />
+But oh, she dances such a way,<br />
+No sun upon an Easter day<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Is half so fine a sight.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>England has in all parts of the world sons and daughters who
+have deserved well of the State, and not a few of them are East
+Anglians by birth <!-- page 344--><a name="page344"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 344</span>and breeding.&nbsp; May their fame
+be cherished and their examples followed by their successors in
+that calm, quiet, Eastern land&mdash;far from the madding
+crowd&mdash;where the roar and rush of our modern life are almost
+unknown&mdash;where farmers weep and wail but look jolly
+nevertheless!</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">the
+end</span>.</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<div class="gapmediumline">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">billing and
+sons</span>, <span class="smcap">printers</span>, <span
+class="smcap">guildford</span>.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EAST ANGLIA***</p>
+<pre>
+
+
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+</pre></body>
+</html>
diff --git a/30717.txt b/30717.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e78fd9b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/30717.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,7117 @@
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, East Anglia, by J. Ewing Ritchie
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: East Anglia
+ Personal Recollections and Historical Associations
+
+
+Author: J. Ewing Ritchie
+
+
+
+Release Date: December 20, 2009 [eBook #30717]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EAST ANGLIA***
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1893 Jarrold & Sons edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@pglaf.org
+
+
+
+
+_PRESS NOTICES OF THE FIRST EDITION_.
+
+
+ 'We cordially recommend Mr. Ritchie's book to all who wish to pass an
+ agreeable hour and to learn something of the outward actions and
+ inner life of their predecessors. It is full of sketches of East
+ Anglian celebrities, happily touched if lightly limned.'--_East
+ Anglian Daily Times_.
+
+ 'A very entertaining and enjoyable book. Local gossip, a wide range
+ of reading and industrious research, have enabled the author to
+ enliven his pages with a wide diversity of subjects, specially
+ attractive to East Anglians, but also of much general
+ interest.'--_Daily Chronicle_.
+
+ 'The work is written in a light gossipy style, and by reason both of
+ it and of the variety of persons introduced is interesting. To a
+ Suffolk or Norfolk man it is, of course, especially attractive. The
+ reader will go through these pages without being wearied by
+ application. They form a pleasant and entertaining contribution to
+ county literature, and "East Anglia" will, we should think, find its
+ way to many of the east country bookshelves.'--_Suffolk Chronicle_.
+
+ 'The book is as readable and attractive a volume of local chronicles
+ as could be desired. Though all of our readers may not see "eye to
+ eye" with Mr. Ritchie, in regard to political and theological
+ questions, they cannot fail to gain much enjoyment from his excellent
+ delineation of old days in East Anglia.'--_Norwich Mercury_.
+
+ '"East Anglia" has the merit of not being a compilation, which is
+ more than can be said of the great majority of books produced in
+ these days to satisfy the revived taste for topographical gossip.
+ Mr. Ritchie is a Suffolk man--the son of a Nonconformist minister of
+ Wrentham in that county--and he looks back to the old neighbourhood
+ and the old times with an affection which is likely to communicate
+ itself to its readers. Altogether we can with confidence recommend
+ this book not only to East Anglians, but to all readers who have any
+ affinity for works of its class.'--_Daily News_.
+
+ 'Mr. Ritchie's book belongs to a class of which we have none too
+ many, for when well done they illustrate contemporary history in a
+ really charming manner. What with their past grandeur, their present
+ progress, their martyrs, patriots, and authors, there is plenty to
+ tell concerning Eastern counties: and one who writes with native
+ enthusiasm is sure to command an audience.'--_Baptist_.
+
+ 'Mr. Ritchie, known to the numerous readers of the _Christian World_
+ as "Christopher Crayon," has the pen of a ready, racy, refreshing
+ writer. He never writes a dull line, and never for a moment allows
+ our interest to flag. In the work before us, which is not his first,
+ he is, I should think, at his best. The volume is the outcome of
+ extensive reading, many rambles over the districts described, and of
+ thoughtful observation. We seem to live and move and have our being
+ in East Anglia. Its folk-lore, its traditions, its worthies, its
+ memorable events, are all vividly and charmingly placed before us,
+ and we close the book sorry that there is no more of it, and
+ wondering why it is that works of a similar kind have not more
+ frequently appeared.'--_Northern Pioneer_.
+
+ 'It has yielded us more gratification than any work that we have read
+ for a considerable time. The book ought to have a wide circulation
+ in the Eastern counties, and will not fail to yield profit and
+ delight wherever it finds its way.'--_Essex Telegraph_.
+
+ 'Mr. Ritchie has here written a most attractive chapter of
+ autobiography. He recalls the scenes of his early days, and whatever
+ was quaint or striking in connection with them, and finds in his
+ recollections ready pegs on which to hang historical incident and
+ antiquarian curiosities of many kinds. He passes from point to point
+ in a delightfully cheerful and contagious mood. Mr. Ritchie's
+ reading has been as extensive and careful as his observation is keen
+ and his temper genial; and his pages, which appeared in _The
+ Christian World Magazine_, well deserve the honour of book-form, with
+ the additions he has been able to make to them.'--_British Quarterly
+ Review_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+ EAST ANGLIA.
+
+
+ _PERSONAL RECOLLECTIONS_
+ AND
+ _HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIONS_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ BY
+ J. EWING RITCHIE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ 'Behold, there came wise men from the East to Jerusalem.'
+
+ MATTHEW.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _SECOND EDITION_,
+ REVISED, CORRECTED, AND ENLARGED.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LONDON:
+ JARROLD & SONS, PATERNOSTER BUILDINGS, E.C.
+ 1893.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
+
+
+The chapters of which this little work consists originally appeared in
+the _Christian World Magazine_, where they were so fortunate as to
+attract favourable notice, and from which they are now reprinted, with a
+few slight additions, by permission of the Editor. In bringing out a
+second edition, I have incorporated the substance of other articles
+originally written for local journals. It is to be hoped, touching as
+they do a theme not easily exhausted, but always interesting to East
+Anglians, that they may help to sustain that love of one's county which,
+alas! like the love of country, is a matter reckoned to be of little
+importance in these cosmopolitan days, but which, nevertheless, has had
+not a little share in the formation of that national greatness and glory
+in which at all times Englishmen believe.
+
+One word more. I have retained some strictures on the clergy of East
+Anglia, partly because they were true at the time to which I refer, and
+partly because it gives me pleasure to own that they are not so now. The
+Church of England clergyman of to-day is an immense improvement on that
+of my youth. In ability, in devotion to the duties of his calling, in
+intelligence, in self-denial, in zeal, he is equal to the clergy of any
+other denomination. If he has lost his hold upon Hodge, that, at any
+rate, is not his fault.
+
+CLACTON-ON-SEA,
+ _January_, 1893.
+
+
+ CONTENTS.
+ CHAPTER I.
+
+ A SUFFOLK VILLAGE.
+Distinguished people born there--Its Puritans and 1
+Nonconformists--The country round
+Covehithe--Southwold--Suffolk dialect--The Great Eastern
+Railway
+ CHAPTER II.
+
+ THE STRICKLANDS.
+Reydon Hall--The clergy--Pakefield--Social life in a village 37
+ CHAPTER III.
+
+ LOWESTOFT.
+Yarmouth bloaters--George Borrow--The town fifty years 54
+ago--The distinguished natives
+ CHAPTER IV.
+
+ POLITICS AND THEOLOGY.
+Homerton academy--W. Johnson Fox, M.P.--Politics in 89
+1830--Anti-Corn Law speeches--Wonderful oratory
+ CHAPTER V.
+
+ BUNGAY AND ITS PEOPLE.
+Bungay Nonconformity--Hannah More--The Childses--The Queen's 122
+Librarian--Prince Albert
+ CHAPTER VI.
+
+ A CELEBRATED NORFOLK TOWN.
+Great Yarmouth Nonconformists--Intellectual life--Dawson 153
+Turner--Astley Cooper--Hudson Gurney--Mrs. Bendish
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+ THE NORFOLK CAPITAL.
+Brigg's Lane--The carrier's cart--Reform demonstration--The 185
+old dragon--Chairing M.P.'s--Hornbutton Jack--Norwich artists
+and literati--Quakers and Nonconformists
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ THE SUFFOLK CAPITAL.
+The Orwell--The Sparrows--Ipswich 226
+notabilities--Gainsborough--Medical men--Nonconformists
+ CHAPTER IX.
+
+ AN OLD-FASHIONED TOWN.
+Woodbridge and the country round--Bernard Barton--Dr. 252
+Lankester--An old Noncon.
+ CHAPTER X.
+
+ MILTON'S SUFFOLK SCHOOLMASTER.
+Stowmarket--The Rev. Thomas Young--Bishop Hall and the 283
+Smectymnian divines--Milton's mulberry-tree--Suffolk
+relationships
+ CHAPTER XI.
+
+ IN CONSTABLE'S COUNTY.
+East Bergholt--The Valley of the Stour--Painting from 311
+nature--East Anglian girls
+ CHAPTER XII.
+
+ EAST ANGLIAN WORTHIES.
+Suffolk cheese--Danes, Saxons, and Normans--Philosophers and 320
+statesmen--Artists and literati
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+A SUFFOLK VILLAGE.
+
+
+Distinguished people born there--Its Puritans and Nonconformists--The
+country round Covehithe--Southwold--Suffolk dialect--The Great Eastern
+Railway.
+
+In his published Memoirs, the great Metternich observes that if he had
+never been born he never could have loved or hated. Following so
+illustrious a precedent, I may observe that if I had not been born in
+East Anglia I never could have been an East Anglian. Whether I should
+have been wiser or better off had I been born elsewhere, is an
+interesting question, which, however, it is to be hoped the public will
+forgive me if I decline to discuss on the present occasion.
+
+In a paper bearing the date of 1667, a Samuel Baker, of Wattisfield Hall,
+writes: 'I was born at a village called Wrentham, which place I cannot
+pass by the mention of without saying thus much, that religion has there
+flourished longer, and that in much piety; the Gospel and grace of it
+have been more powerfully and clearly preached, and more generally
+received; the professors of it have been more sound in the matter and
+open and steadfast in the profession of it in an hour of temptation, have
+manifested a greater oneness amongst themselves and have been more
+eminently preserved from enemies without (albeit they dwell where Satan's
+seat is encompassed with his malice and rage), than I think in any
+village of the like capacity in England; which I speak as my duty to the
+place, but to my particular shame rather than otherwise, that such a dry
+and barren plant should spring out of such a soil.' I resemble this
+worthy Mr. Baker in two respects. In the first place, I was born at
+Wrentham, though at a considerably later period of time than 1667; and,
+secondly, if he was a barren plant--he of whom we read, in Harmer's
+Miscellaneous Works, that 'he was a gentleman of fortune and education,
+very zealous for the Congregational plan of church government and
+discipline, and a sufferer in its bonds for a good conscience'--what am
+I?
+
+Nor was it only piety that existed in this distant parish. If the reader
+turns to the diary of John Evelyn, under the date of 1679, he will find
+mention made of a child brought up to London, 'son of one Mr. Wotton,
+formerly amanuensis to Dr. Andrews, Bishop of Winton, who both read and
+perfectly understood Hebrew, Greek, Latin, Arabic and Syriac, and most of
+the modern languages, disputed in divinity, law and all the sciences, was
+skilful in history, both ecclesiastical and profane; in a word, so
+universally and solidly learned at eleven years of age that he was looked
+on as a miracle. Dr. Lloyd, one of the most deep-learned divines of this
+nation in all sorts of literature, with Dr. Burnet, who had severely
+examined him, came away astonished, and told me they did not believe
+there had the like appeared in the world. He had only been instructed by
+his father, who being himself a learned person, confessed that his son
+knew all that he himself knew. But what was more admirable than his vast
+memory was his judgment and invention, he being tried with divers hard
+questions which required maturity of thought and experience. He was also
+dexterous in chronology, antiquities, mathematics. In sum, an
+_intellectus universalis_ beyond all that we reade of Picus Mirandula,
+and other precoce witts, and yet withal a very humble child.' This
+prodigy was the son of the Rev. Henry Wotton, minister of Wrentham,
+Suffolk. Sir William Skippon, a parishioner, in a letter yet extant,
+describes the wonderful achievements of the little fellow when but five
+years old. He was admitted at Katherine Hall, Cambridge, some months
+before he was ten years old. In after-years he was the friend and
+defender of Bentley and the antagonist of Sir William Temple in the great
+controversy about ancient and modern learning. He died in 1726, and was
+buried at Buxted, in Sussex. It is clear that there was no such
+intellectual phenomenon in all London under the Stuarts as that little
+Wrentham lad.
+
+Of that village, when I came into the world, my father was the honoured,
+laborious and successful minister. The meeting-house, as it was called,
+which stood in the lane leading from the church to the highroad, was a
+square red brick building, vastly superior to any of the ancient
+meeting-houses round. It stood in an enclosure, one side of which was
+devoted to the reception of the farmers' gigs, which, on a Sunday
+afternoon, when the principal service was held, made quite a respectable
+show when drawn up in a line. By the side of it was a cottage, in which
+lived the woman who kept the place tidy, and her husband, who looked
+after the horses as they were unharnessed and put in the stable close by.
+The backs of the gigs were sheltered from the road by a hedge of lilacs,
+and over the gateway a gigantic elm kept watch and ward. The house in
+which we lived was also part of the chapel estate, and, if it was a
+little way off, it was, at any rate, adapted to the wants of a family of
+quiet habits and simple tastes. On one side of the house was a
+water-butt, and I can well remember my first sad experience of the
+wickedness of the world when, getting up one morning to look after my
+rabbits and other live stock, I found that water-butt had gone, and that
+there were thieves in a village so rural and renowned for piety as ours.
+I say renowned, and not without reason. Years and years back there was a
+pious clergyman of the name of Steffe, who had a son in Dr. Doddridge's
+Academy, at Daventry, and it is a fact that the great Doctor himself, at
+some time or other, had been a guest in the village.
+
+In 1741 the Doctor thus records his East Anglian recollections, in a
+letter to his wife: 'You have great reason to confide in that very kind
+Providence which has hitherto watched over us, and has, since the date of
+my last, brought us about sixty miles nearer London. From Yarmouth we
+went on Friday morning to Wrentham, where good Mrs. Steffe lives, and
+from thence to a gentleman's seat, near Walpole, where I was most
+respectfully entertained. As I had twenty miles to ride yesterday
+morning, he, though I had never seen him before last Tuesday, brought me
+almost half-way in his chaise, to make the journey easier. I reached
+Woodbridge before two, and rode better in the cool of the evening, and
+had the happiness to be entertained in a very elegant and friendly
+family, though perfectly a stranger; and, indeed, I have been escorted
+from one place to another in every mile of my journey by one, and
+sometimes by two or three, of my brethren in a most respectful and
+agreeable manner.' Dr. Doddridge's East Anglian recollections seem to
+have been uncommonly agreeable, owing quite as much, I must candidly
+confess, to the presence of the sisters as of the brethren. Writing to
+his wife an account of a little trip on the river, he adds: 'It was a
+very pleasant day, and I concluded it in the company of one of the finest
+women I ever beheld, who, though she had seven children grown up to
+marriageable years, or very near it, is still herself almost a beauty,
+and a person of sense, good breeding, and piety, which might astonish one
+who had not the happiness of being intimately acquainted with you.' What
+a sly rogue was Dr. Doddridge! How could any wife be jealous when her
+husband finishes off with such a compliment to herself?
+
+But to return to the good Mrs. Steffe, of whom I am, on my mother's side,
+a descendant. I must add that as there were great men before Agamemnon,
+so there were good people in the little village of Wrentham before Mrs.
+Steffe appeared upon the scene. The Brewsters, who were an ancient
+family, which seems to have culminated under the glorious usurpation of
+Oliver Cromwell, were eminently good people in Dr. Doddridge's
+acceptation of the term, and I fancy did much as lords of the manor--and
+as inhabitants of Wrentham Hall, a building which had ceased to exist
+long before my time--to leaven with their goodness the surrounding lump.
+It seems to me that these Brewsters must have been more or less connected
+with Brewster the elder--of Robinson's Church at Leyden, who, we are
+told, came of a wealthy and distinguished family--who was well trained at
+Cambridge, and, says the historian, 'thence, being first seasoned with
+the seeds of grace and virtue, he went to the Court, and there served
+that religious and godly Mr. Davison divers years, when he was Secretary
+of State, who found him so discreet and faithful as he trusted him, above
+all others that were about him, and only employed him in matters of great
+trust and secrecy; he esteemed him rather as a son than a servant, and
+for his wisdom and godliness in private, he would converse with him more
+like a familiar than a master.' When evil times came, this Brewster was
+living in the big Manor House at Scrooby, and how he and his godly
+associates were driven into exile by a foolish King and cruel priests is
+known, or ought to be known, to everyone. Of these Wrentham Brewsters,
+one served his country in Parliament, or I am very much mistaken. It was
+to their credit that they sought out godly men, to whom they might
+entrust the cure of souls. In this respect, when I was a lad, their
+example certainly had not been followed, and Dissent flourished mainly
+because the moral instincts of the villagers and farmers and small
+tradesmen were shocked by hearing men on the Sunday reading the Lessons
+of the Church, leading the devotions of the people, and preaching
+sermons, who on the week-days got drunk and led immoral lives. As to the
+right of the State to interfere in matters of religion, as to the danger
+to religion itself from the establishment of a State Church, as to the
+liberty of unlicensed prophesying, such topics the simple villagers
+ignored. All that they felt was that there came to them more of a
+quickening of the spiritual life, a fuller realization of God and things
+divine, in the meeting-house than in the parish church. They were not
+what pious Churchmen so much dread nowadays--Political Dissenters; how
+could they be such, having no votes, and never seeing a newspaper from
+one year's end to the other?
+
+It was to the Brewsters that the village was indebted for the ministry of
+the Rev. John Phillip, who married the sister of the pious and learned
+Dr. Ames, Professor of the University of Franeker. Calamy tells us that
+by means of Dr. Ames, Mr. Phillip had no small furtherance in his
+studies, and intimate acquaintance with him increased his inclination to
+the Congregational way. Archbishop Abbot, writing to Winwood, 1611,
+says: 'I have written to Sir Horace Vere touching the English preacher at
+the Hague. We heard what he was that preceded, and we cannot be less
+cognisant what Mr. Ames is, for by a Latin printed book he hath laden the
+Church and State of England with a great deal of infamous contumely, so
+that if he were amongst us he would be so far from receiving preferment,
+that some exemplary punishment would be his reward. His Majesty had been
+advertised how this man is entertained and embraced at the Hague, and how
+he is a fit person to breed up captains and soldiers there in mutiny and
+faction.' One of Dr. Ames's works, which got him into trouble, was
+entitled 'A Fresh Suit against Ceremonies,' a work which we may be sure
+would be as distasteful to the Ritualists of our day as it was to the
+Ritualists of his own. One of his works, his 'Medulla Theologiae,' I
+believe, adorned the walls of the paternal study. There is, belonging to
+the Wrentham Congregational Church Library, a volume of tracts,
+sixty-seven in number, of six or eight pages each, printed in 1622,
+forming a series of theses on theological topics, maintained by different
+persons, under the presidency of Dr. Ames; and I believe a son of the
+Doctor is buried in Wrentham Churchyard, as I recollect my father, on one
+occasion, had an old gravestone done up and relettered, which bore
+testimony to the virtues and piety and learning of an Ames. Thus if Mr.
+Phillip was chased out of Old England into New England for his
+Nonconformity, some of the good old Noncons remained to uphold the lamp
+which was one day to cast a sacred light on all quarters of the land.
+That some did emigrate with their pastor is probable, since we learn that
+there is a town called Wrentham across the Atlantic, said to have
+received that name because some of the first settlers came from Wrentham
+in England.
+
+Touching Mr. Phillip, a good deal has been written by the Rev. John
+Browne, the painstaking author of 'The History of Congregationalism in
+Suffolk and Norfolk.' It appears that his arrival in America was not
+unexpected, as the Christian people of Dedham had invited him to that
+plantation beforehand. He did not, however, accept their invitation, but
+being much in request, 'and called divers ways, could not resolve; but,
+at length, upon weighty reasons concerning the public service and
+foundations of the college, he was persuaded to attend to the call of
+Cambridge;' and, adds an American writer, 'he might have been the first
+head of that blessed institution.' On the calling of the Long
+Parliament, he and his wife returned to England, and in 1642 we find him
+ministering to his old flock. So satisfied were the neighbouring
+Independents of his Congregationalism, that when, in 1644, members of Mr.
+Bridge's church residing in Norwich desired to form themselves into a
+separate community, they not only consulted with their brethren in
+Yarmouth, but with Mr. Phillip also, as the only man then in their
+neighbourhood on whose judgment and experience they could rely. In 1643
+Mr. Phillip was appointed one of the members of the Assembly of Divines,
+and was recognised by Baillie in his Letters as one of the Independent
+men there. The Independents, as we know, sat apart, and were a sad thorn
+in the Presbyterians' side. Five of them, more zealous than the rest,
+formally dissented from the decisions of the Assembly, and afraid that
+toleration would not be extended to them, appealed to Parliament, 'as the
+most sacred refuge and asylum for mistaken and misjudged innocence.' Mr.
+Phillip's name, however, I do not find in that list; and possibly he was
+too old to be very active in the matter. He lived on till 1660, when he
+died at the good old age of seventy-eight. In the later years of his
+ministry he was assisted by his nephew, W. Ames, who in 1651 preached a
+sermon at St. Paul's, before the Lord Mayor and Aldermen, 'On the Saint's
+Security against Seducing Sports, or the Anointing from the Holy One.'
+It is to be feared, in our more enlightened age, a good Wrentham
+Congregational minister would have little chance of preaching before a
+London Lord Mayor. Talent is supposed to exist only in the crowded town,
+where men have no time to think of anything but of the art of getting on.
+
+Other heroic associations--of men who had suffered for the faith, who
+feared God rather than man, who preferred the peace of an approving
+conscience to the vain honours of the world--also were connected with the
+place. I remember being shown a bush in which the conventicle preacher
+used to hide himself when the enemy, in the shape of the myrmidons of
+Bishop Wren, of Norwich, were at his heels. That furious prelate, as
+many of us know, drove upwards of three thousand persons to seek their
+bread in a foreign land. Indeed, to such an extent did he carry out his
+persecuting system, that the trade and manufactures of the country
+materially suffered in consequence. However, in my boyish days I was not
+troubled much about such things. Dissent in Wrentham was quite
+respectable. If we had lost the Brewster family, whose arms were still
+to be seen on the Communion plate, a neighbouring squire attended at the
+meeting-house, as it was then the fashion to call our chapel, and so did
+the leading grocer and draper of the place, and the village doctor, the
+father of six comely daughters; and the display of gigs on a Sunday was
+really imposing. Alas! as I grew older I saw that imposing array not a
+little shorn of its splendour. The neighbouring baronet, Sir Thomas
+Gooch, M.P., added as he could farm to farm, and that a Dissenter was on
+no account to have one of his farms was pretty well understood. I fancy
+our great landlords have, in many parts of East Anglia, pretty well
+exterminated Dissent, to the real injury of the people all around. I
+write this advisedly. I dare say the preaching in the meeting-house was
+often very miserably poor. The service, I must own, seemed to me often
+peculiarly long and unattractive. There was always that long prayer
+which was, I fear, to all boys a time of utter weariness; but,
+nevertheless, there was a moral and intellectual life in our Dissenting
+circle that did not exist elsewhere. It was true we never attended
+dinners at the village public-house, nor indulged in card-parties, and
+regarded with a horror, which I have come to think unwholesome, the
+frivolity of balls or the attractions of a theatre; but we had all the
+new books voted into our bookclub, and, as a lad, I can well remember how
+I revelled in the back numbers of the _Edinburgh Review_, though even
+then I could not but feel the injustice which it did to what it called
+the Lake school of poets, and more especially to Coleridge and
+Wordsworth. Shakespeare also was almost a sealed book, and perhaps we
+had a little too much of religious reading, such as Doddridge's 'Rise and
+Progress,' or Baxter's 'Saint's Rest,' or Alleine's 'Call to the
+Unconverted,' or Fleetwood's 'Life of Christ'--excellent books in their
+way, undoubtedly, but not remarkably attractive to boys redolent of
+animal life, who had thriven and grown fat in that rustic village, on
+whose vivid senses the world that now is produced far more effect than
+the terrors or splendours of the world to come.
+
+The country round, if flat, was full of interesting associations. At the
+back of us--that is, on the sea--was the village of Covehithe, and when a
+visitor found his way into the place--an event which happened now and
+then--our first excursion with him or her--for plenty of donkeys were to
+be had which ladies could ride--was to Covehithe, known to literary men
+as the birthplace of John Bale, Bishop of Ossory, in Ireland. In
+connection with donkeys, I have this interesting recollection, that one
+of the old men of the village told me. At the time of the Bristol riots,
+he remembered Sir Charles Wetherall, the occasion of them, as a boy at
+Wrentham much given to donkey-riding. In the history of the drama John
+Bale takes distinguished rank. He was one of those by whom the drama was
+gradually evolved, and all to whom it is a study and delight must
+remember him with regard. His play of 'Kynge John' is described by Mr.
+Collier as occupying an intermediate place between moralities and
+historical plays--and it is the only known existing specimen of that
+species of composition of so early a date. Bale, who was trained at the
+monastery of White Friars, in Norwich, thence went to Jesus College,
+Cambridge, and was expelled in consequence of the zeal with which he
+exposed the errors of Popery. However, Bale had a friend and protector
+in Cromwell, Henry VIII.'s faithful servant. On the death of that
+nobleman Bale proceeded to Germany, where he appears to have been well
+received and hospitably entertained by Luther and Melancthon, and on the
+accession of Edward VI. he returned to England. In Mary's reign
+persecution recommenced, and Bale fled to Frankfort. He again returned
+at the commencement of Elizabeth's reign, and was made prebend of
+Canterbury, at which place he died at the age of sixty-three. Covehithe
+nowadays is not interesting so much as the birthplace of Bale, as on
+account of its ecclesiastical ruins, which are covered with ivy and
+venerable in their decay. The church was evidently almost a cathedral,
+and surely at one time or other there must have been an enormous
+population to worship in such a sanctuary; and yet all you see now is a
+public-house just opposite the church, a few cottages, and a farmhouse.
+A few steps farther bring you to the low cliff, and there is the sea ever
+encroaching on the land in that quarter and swallowing up farmhouse and
+farm. Miss Agnes Strickland, who lived at Reydon Hall--a few miles
+inland--has thus sung the melancholy fate of Covehithe:
+
+ 'All roofless now the stately pile,
+ And rent the arches tall,
+ Through which with bright departing smile
+ The western sunbeams fall.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ 'Tradition's voice forgets to tell
+ Whose ashes sleep below,
+ And Fancy here unchecked may dwell,
+ And bid the story flow.'
+
+Ah! what was that story? How the question puzzled my young head, as I
+walked in the sandy lane that led from my native village! How
+insignificant looked the little church built up inside! What had become
+of the crowds that at one time must have filled that ancient fane? How
+was it that no trace of them remained? They had vanished in the
+historical age, and yet no one could tell how or when. Nature was, then,
+stronger than man. He was gone, but the stars glittered by night and the
+sun shone by day, and the ivy had spread its green mantle over all. Yes!
+what was man, with his pomp and glory, but dust and ashes, after all!
+How I loved to go to Covehithe and climb its ruins, and dream of the
+distant past!
+
+Here in that eastern point of England it seemed to me there was a good
+deal of decay. Sometimes, on a fine summer day, we would take a boat and
+sail from the pretty little town of Southwold, about four miles from
+Wrentham, to Dunwich, another relic of the past. According to an old
+historian, it was a city surrounded with a stone wall having brazen
+gates; it had fifty-two churches, chapels, and religious houses; it also
+boasted hospitals, a huge palace, a bishop's seat, a mayor's mansion, and
+a Mint. Beyond it a forest appears to have extended some miles into what
+is now the sea. One of our local Suffolk poets, James Bird (I saw him
+but once, when I walked into his house, about twelve miles from Wrentham,
+having run away from home at the ripe age of ten, and told him I had come
+to see him, as he was a poet; and I well remember how then, much to my
+chagrin, he gave me plum-pudding for dinner, and sent me to play with his
+boys till a cart was found in which the prodigal was compelled to
+return), wrote and published a poetical romance, called 'Dunwich; or, a
+Tale of the Splendid City;' and Agnes Strickland also made it the subject
+of her melodious verse, commencing:
+
+ 'Oft gazing on thy craggy brow,
+ We muse on glories o'er.
+ Fair Dunwich! Thou art lonely now,
+ Renowned and sought no more.'
+
+Never has a splendid city more utterly collapsed. After a long ride over
+sandy lanes and fields, you come to the edge of a cliff, on which stand a
+few houses. There is all that remains of the Dunwich where the first
+Bishop of East Anglia taught the Christian faith, and where was born John
+Daye, the printer of the works of Parker, Latimer, and Fox, who, in the
+reign of Mary, became, as most real men did then, a prisoner and an exile
+for the truth. He has also the reputation of being the first in England
+who printed in the Saxon character. In the records of type-founding the
+name of Daye stands with that of the most illustrious. When the Company
+of Stationers obtained their charter from Philip and Mary, he was the
+first person admitted to their livery. In 1580 he was master of the
+company, to which he bequeathed property at his death. The following is
+the inscription which marks the place of his burial in Little Bradley,
+Suffolk:
+
+ 'Here lyes the DAYE that darkness could not blynd,
+ When Popish fogges had overcast the sunne;
+ This DAYE the cruel night did leave behind,
+ To view and show what bloudie actes were donne.
+ He set a FOX to write how martyrs runne
+ By death to lyfe, FOX ventured paynes and health.
+ To give them light Daye spent in print his wealth,
+ But GOD with gayne returned his wealth agayne,
+ And gave to him as he gave to the poore.
+ Two wyfes he had partakers of his payne:
+ Each wyfe twelve babes, and each of them one more,
+ Als was the last increaser of his store;
+ Who, mourning long for being left alone,
+ Sett up this tombe, herself turned to a stone.'
+
+Unlike Covehithe, Dunwich has a history. In the reign of Henry II., a
+MS. in the British Museum tells us, the Earl of Leicester came to attack
+it. 'When he came neare and beheld the strength thereof, it was terror
+and feare unto him to behold it; and so retired both he and his people.'
+Dunwich aided King John in his wars with the barons, and thus gained the
+first charter. In the time of Edward I. it had sixteen fair ships,
+twelve barks, four-and-twenty fishing barks, and at that time there were
+few seaports in England that could say as much. It served the same King
+in his wars with France with eleven ships of war, well furnished with men
+and munition. In most of these ships were seventy-two men-at-arms, who
+served thirteen weeks at their own cost and charge. Dunwich seems to
+have suffered much by the French wars. Four of the eleven ships already
+referred to were captured by the French, and in the wars waged by Edward
+III. Dunwich lost still more shipping, and as many as 500 men. Perhaps
+it might have flourished till this day had if not been for the curse of
+war. But the sea also served the town cruelly. That spared nothing--not
+the King's Forest, where there were hawking and hunting--not the homes
+where England nursed her hardy sailors--not even the harbour whence the
+brave East Anglians sailed away to the wars. In Edward III.'s time, at
+one fell swoop, the remorseless sea seems to have swallowed up '400
+houses which payde rente to the towne towards the fee-farms, besydes
+certain shops and windmills.' Yet, when I was a lad, this wreck of a
+place returned two members to Parliament, and Birmingham, Manchester and
+Sheffield not one. Between Covehithe and Dunwich stood, and still
+stands, the charming little bathing-place of Southwold. Like them, it
+has seen better days, and has suffered from the encroachments of the
+ever-restless and ever-hungry sea. It was at Southwold that I first saw
+the sea, and I remember naturally asking my father, who showed me the
+guns on the gun-hill--pointing seaward--whether that was where the
+enemies came from.
+
+Southwold appears to have initiated an evangelical alliance, which may
+yet be witnessed if ever a time comes of reasonable toleration on
+religious matters. In many parts of the Continent the same place of
+worship is used by different religious bodies. In Brussels I have seen
+the Episcopalians, the Germans, the French Protestants, all assembling at
+different times in the same building. There was a time when a similar
+custom prevailed in Southwold, and that was when Master Sharpen, who had
+his abode at Sotterley, preached at Southwold once a month. There were
+Independents in the towns in those days, and 'his indulgence,' writes a
+local historian, 'favoured the Separatists with the liberty and free use
+of the church, where they resorted weekly, or oftener, and every fourth
+Sunday both ministers met and celebrated divine service alternately. He
+that entered the church first had the precedency of officiating, the
+other keeping silence until the congregation received the Benediction
+after sermon.' Most of the people attended all the while. It was before
+the year 1680 that these things were done. After that time there came to
+the church 'an orthodox man, who suffered many ills, and those not the
+lightest, for his King and for his faith, and he compelled the
+Independents not only to leave the church, but the town also. We read
+they assembled in a malt-house beyond the bridge, where, being disturbed,
+they chose more private places in the town until liberty of conscience
+was granted, when they publicly assembled in a fish-house converted to a
+place of worship.' At that time many people in the town were Dissenters;
+but it was not till 1748 that they had a church formed. Up to that time
+the Southwold Independents were members of the Church at Wrentham, one of
+the Articles of Association of the new church being to take the Bible as
+their sole guide, and when in difficulties to resort to the neighbouring
+pastor for advice and declaration. Such was Independency when it
+flourished all over East Anglia.
+
+A writer in the _Harleian Miscellany_ says that 'Southwold, of sea-coast
+town, is the most beneficial unto his Majesty of all the towns in
+England, by reason all their trade is unto Iceland for lings.' In the
+little harbour of Southwold you see nowadays only a few colliers, and I
+fear that the place is of little advantage to her Majesty, however
+beneficial it may be as a health-resort for some of her Majesty's
+subjects. It is a place, gentle reader, where you can wander undisturbed
+at your own sweet will, and can get your cheeks fanned by breezes unknown
+in London. The beach, I own, is shingly, and not to be compared with the
+sands of Yarmouth and Lowestoft; but, then, you are away from the Cockney
+crowds that now infest these places at the bathing season, and you are
+quiet--whether you wander on its common, till you come to the Wolsey
+Bridge, getting on towards Halesworth, where, if tradition be
+trustworthy, Wolsey, as a butcher's boy, was nearly drowned, and where he
+benevolently caused a bridge to be erected for the safety of all future
+butcher-boys and others, when he became a distinguished man; or ramble by
+the seaside to Walberswick, across the harbour, or on to Easton
+Bavent--another decayed village, on the other side. Southwold has its
+historical associations. Most of my readers have seen the well-known
+picture of Solebay Fight at Greenwich Hospital. Southwold overlooks the
+bay on which that fight was won. Here, on the morning of the 28th May,
+1672, De Ruyter, with his Dutchmen, sailed right against those wooden
+walls which have guarded old England in many a time of danger, and found
+to his cost how invincible was British pluck. James, Duke of York--not
+then the drivelling idiot who lost his kingdom for a Mass, but James,
+manly and high-spirited, with a Prince's pride and a sailor's heart--won
+a victory that for many a day was a favourite theme with all honest
+Englishmen, and especially with the true and stout men who, alarmed by
+the roar of cannon, as the sound boomed along the blue waters of that
+peaceful bay, stood on the Southwold cliff, wishing that the fog which
+intercepted their view might clear off, and that they might welcome as
+victors their brethren on the sea. I can remember how, when an old
+cannon was dragged up from the depths of the sea, it was supposed to be,
+as it might have been, used in that fight, and now is preserved at one of
+the look-out houses on the cliff as a souvenir of that glorious struggle.
+The details of that fight are matters of history, and I need not dwell on
+them. Our literature, also, owes Southwold one of the happiest effusions
+of one of the wittiest writers of that age; and in a county history I
+remember well a merry song on the Duke's late glorious success over the
+Dutch, in Southwold Bay, which commences with the writer telling--
+
+ 'One day as I was sitting still
+ Upon the side of Dunwich Hill,
+ And looking on the ocean,
+ By chance I saw De Ruyter's fleet
+ With Royal James's squadron meet;
+ In sooth it was a noble treat
+ To see that brave commotion.'
+
+The writer vividly paints the scene, and ends as follows:
+
+ 'Here's to King Charles, and here's to James,
+ And here's to all the captains' names,
+ And here's to all the Suffolk dames,
+ And here's to the house of Stuart.'
+
+Well, as to the house of Stuart, the less said the better; but as to the
+Suffolk dames, I agree with the poet, that they are all well worthy of
+the toast, and it was at a very early period of my existence that I
+became aware of that fact. But the course of true love never does run
+smooth, and from none--and they were many--with whom I played on the
+beach as a boy, or read poetry to at riper years, was it my fate to take
+one as wife for better or worse. In the crowded city men have little
+time to fall in love. Besides, they see so many fresh faces that
+impressions are easily erased. It is otherwise in the quiet retirement
+of a village where there is little to disturb the mind--perhaps too
+little. I can well remember a striking illustration of this in the
+person of an old farmer, who lived about three miles off, and at whose
+house we--that is, the whole family--passed what seemed to me a very
+happy day among the haystacks or harvest-fields once or twice a year.
+The old man was proud of his farm, and of everything connected with it.
+'There, Master James,' he was wont to say to me after dinner, 'you can
+see three barns all at once!' and sure enough, looking in the direction
+he pointed, there were three barns plainly visible to the naked eye.
+Alas! the love of the picturesque had not been developed in my bucolic
+friend, and a good barn or two--he was an old bachelor, and, I suppose,
+his heart had never been softened by the love of woman--seemed to him
+about as beautiful an object as you could expect or desire. One emotion,
+that of fear, was, however, I found, strongly planted in the village
+breast. The boys of the village, with whom, now and then, I stole away
+on a birds'-nesting expedition, would have it that in a little wood about
+a mile or two off there were no end of flying serpents and dragons to be
+seen; and I can well remember the awe which fell upon the place when
+there came a rumour of the doings of those wretches, Burke and Hare, who
+were said to have made a living by murdering victims--by placing pitch
+plasters on their mouths--and selling them to the doctors to dissect. At
+this time a little boy had not come home at the proper time, and the
+mother came to our house lamenting. The good woman was in tears, and
+refused to be comforted. There had been a stranger in the village that
+day; he had seen her boy, he had put a pitch plaster on his mouth, and no
+doubt his dead body was then on its way to Norwich to be sold to the
+doctor. Unfortunately, it turned out that the boy was alive and well,
+and lived to give his poor mother a good deal of trouble. Another thing,
+of which I have still a vivid recollection, was the mischief wrought by
+Captain Swing. In Kent there had been an alarming outbreak of the
+peasantry, ostensibly against the use of agricultural machinery. They
+assembled in large bodies, and visited the farm buildings of the
+principal landed proprietors, demolishing the threshing machines then
+being brought into use. In some instances they set fire to barns and
+corn-stacks. These outrages spread throughout the county, and fears were
+entertained that they would be repeated in other agricultural districts.
+A great meeting of magistrates and landed gentry was held in Canterbury,
+the High Sheriff in the chair, when a reward was offered of 100 pounds
+for the discovery of the perpetrators of the senseless mischief, and the
+Lords of the Treasury offered a further reward of the same amount for
+their apprehension; but all was in vain to stop the growing evil. The
+agricultural interest was in a very depressed state, and the number of
+unemployed labourers so large, that apprehensions were entertained that
+the combinations for the destruction of machinery might, if not at once
+checked, take dimensions it would be very difficult for the Government to
+control. When Parliament opened in 1830, the state of the agricultural
+districts had been daily growing more alarming. Rioting and incendiarism
+had spread from Kent to Suffolk, Norfolk, Surrey, Hampshire, Wiltshire,
+Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Huntingdonshire, and Cambridgeshire, and a
+great deal of very valuable property had been destroyed. A mystery
+enveloped these proceedings that indicated organization, and it became
+suspected that they had a political object. Threatening letters were
+sent to individuals signed 'Swing,' and beacon fires communicated from
+one part of the country to the other. With the object of checking these
+outrages, night patrols were established, dragoons were kept in readiness
+to put down tumultuous meetings, and magistrates and clergymen and landed
+gentry were all at their wits' ends. Even in our out-of-the-way corner
+of East Anglia not a little consternation was felt. We were on the
+highroad nightly traversed by the London and Yarmouth Royal Mail, and
+thus, more or less, we had communications with the outer world. Just
+outside of our village was Benacre Hall, the seat of Sir Thomas Gooch,
+one of the county members, and I well remember the boyish awe with which
+I heard that a mob had set out from Yarmouth to burn the place down.
+Whether the mob thought better of it, or gave up the walk of eighteen
+miles as one to which they were not equal, I am not in a position to say.
+All I know is, that Benacre Hall, such as it is, remains; but I can never
+forget the feeling of terror with which, on those dark and dull winter
+nights, I looked out of my bedroom window to watch the lurid light
+flaring up into the black clouds around, which told how wicked men were
+at their mad work, how fiendish passion had triumphed, how some honest
+farmer was reduced to ruin, as he saw the efforts of a life of industry
+consumed by the incendiary's fire. It was long before I ceased to
+shudder at the name of 'Swing.'
+
+The dialect of the village was, I need not add, East Anglian. The people
+said 'I woll' for 'I will'; 'you warn't' for 'you were not,' and so on.
+A girl was called a 'mawther,' a pitcher a 'gotch,' a 'clap on the
+costard' was a knock on the head, a lad was a 'bor.' Names of places
+especially were made free with. Wangford was 'Wangfor,' Covehithe was
+'Cothhigh,' Southwold was 'Soul,' Lowestoft was 'Lesteff,' Halesworth was
+'Holser,' London was 'Lunun.' People who lived in the midland counties
+were spoken of as living in the shires. The 'o,' as in 'bowls,' it is
+specially difficult for an East Anglian to pronounce. A learned man was
+held to be a 'man of larnin',' a thing of which there was not too much in
+Suffolk in my young days. A lady in the village sent her son to school,
+and great was the maternal pride as she called in my father to hear how
+well her son could read Latin, the reading being reading alone, without
+the faintest attempt at translation. Sometimes it was hard to get an
+answer to a question, as when a Dissenting minister I knew was sent for
+to visit a sick man. 'My good man,' said he, 'what induced you to send
+for me?' 'Hey, what?' said the invalid. 'What induced you to send for
+me?' Alas! the question was repeated in vain. At length the wife
+interfered: 'He wants to know what the deuce you sent for him for.' And
+then, and not till then, came an appropriate reply. This story, I
+believe, has more than once found its way into _Punch_; but I heard it as
+a Suffolk boy years and years before _Punch_ had come into existence.
+
+One of the prayers familiar to my youth was as follows:
+
+ 'Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
+ Bless the bed that I lie on;
+ Four corners to my bed,
+ Four angels at my head;
+ Two to watch and one to pray,
+ And one to carry my soul away.'
+
+An M.P., who shall be nameless, supplies me with an apt illustration of
+East Anglian dialect. It was at the anniversary of a National School,
+with the great M.P. in the chair, surrounded by the benevolent ladies and
+the select clergy of the district. The subject of examination was
+Christ's entry into Jerusalem on an ass's colt. 'Why,' said the
+M.P.--'why did they strew rushes before the Saviour? can any of you
+children tell me?' Profound silence. The M.P. repeated the question. A
+little ragamuffin held up his hand. The M.P. demanded silence as the apt
+scholar proceeded with his answer. 'Why were the rushes strewed?' said
+the M.P. in a condescending tone. I don't know,' replied the boy,
+'unless it was to hull the dickey down.'
+
+Roars of laughter greeted the reply, as all the East Anglians present
+knew that 'hull' meant 'throw,' and 'dickey' is Suffolk for 'donkey,' but
+some of the Cockney visitors present were for a while quite unable to
+enjoy the joke.
+
+It is to be feared the three R's were not much patronized in East Anglia,
+if it be true that some forty or fifty years ago, in such a respectable
+town as Sudbury, it was the fashion for some fifty of the leading
+inhabitants to meet in the large bar-parlour of the old White Horse to
+hear the leading paper of the eastern counties read out by a scholar and
+elocutionist known as John. For the discharge of this important duty he
+was paid a pound a year, and provided with as much free liquor as he
+liked, and there were people who considered that the Saturday
+newspaper-reading did them more good than what they heard at church the
+next day.
+
+In some cases our East Anglian dialect is merely a survival of old
+English, as when we say 'axe' for 'ask.' We find in Chaucer:
+
+ 'It is but foly and wrong wenging
+ To axe so outrageous thing.'
+
+In his 'Envious Man,' Gowing made 'axeth' to rhyme with 'taxeth.' No
+word is more common in Suffolk than 'fare'; a pony is a 'hobby'; a thrush
+is a 'mavis'; a chest is a 'kist'; a shovel is a 'skuppet'; a chaffinch
+is a 'spink.' If a man is upset in his mind, he tells us he is 'wholly
+stammed,' and the Suffolk 'yow' is at least as old as Chaucer, who wrote:
+
+ 'What do you ye do there, quod she,
+ Come, and if it lyke yow
+ To daucen daunceth with us now.'
+
+An awkward lad is 'ungain.' A good deal may be written to show that our
+Suffolk dialect is the nearest of all provincial dialects to that of
+Chaucer and the Bible, and if anyone has the audacity to contradict me,
+why, then, in Suffolk phraseology, I can promise him--'a good hiding.'
+
+I am old enough to remember how placid was the county, how stay-at-home
+were the people, what a sensation there was created when anyone went to
+London, or any stranger appeared in our midst. From afar we heard of
+railways; then we had a railway opened from London to Brentwood; then the
+railways spread all over the land, and there were farmers who did think
+that they had something to do with the potato disease. The change was
+not a pleasant one: the turnpikes were deserted; the inns were void of
+customers; no longer did the villagers hasten to see the coach change
+horses, and the bugle of the guard was heard no more. For a time the
+Eastern Counties Railway had a somewhat dolorous career. It was thought
+to be something to be thankful for when the traveller by it reached his
+journey's end in decent time and without an accident. Now the change is
+marvellous. The Great Eastern Railway stands in the foremost rank of the
+lines terminating in London. It now runs roundly 20,000,000 of train
+miles in the course of a year. It carries a larger number of passengers
+than any other line. It carries the London working man twelve miles in
+and twelve miles out for twopence a day. It is the direct means of
+communication with all the North of Europe by its fine steamers from
+Harwich. It has yearly an increased number of season-ticket-holders. On
+a Whit Monday it gives 125,000 excursionists a happy day in the country
+or by the seaside. In 1891 the number of passengers carried was
+81,268,661, exclusive of season-ticket-holders. It is conspicuous now
+for its punctuality and freedom from accidents. It is, in short, a model
+of good management, and it also deserves credit for looking well after
+the interests of its employes, of whom there are some 25,000. It
+contributes to the Accident Fund, to the Provident Society, to the
+Superannuation Fund, and to the Pension Fund, to which the men also
+subscribe, in the most liberal manner, and besides has established a
+savings bank, which returns the men who place their money in it four per
+cent. It is a liberal master. It does its duty to its men, who deserve
+well of the public as of the Great Eastern Railway itself; but its main
+merit, after all, is that it has been the making of East Anglia.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+THE STRICKLANDS.
+
+
+Reydon Hall--The clergy--Pakefield--Social life in a village.
+
+As I write I have lying before me a little book called 'Hugh Latimer; or,
+The School-boy's Friendship,' by Miss Strickland, author of the 'Little
+Prisoner,' 'Charles Grant,' 'Prejudice and Principle,' 'The Little
+Quaker.' It bears the imprint--'London: Printed for A. R. Newman and
+Co., Leadenhall Street.' On a blank page inside I find the following:
+'James Ewing Ritchie, with his friend Susanna's affectionate regards.'
+Susanna was a sister of Miss Agnes Strickland, the authoress, and was as
+much a writer as herself. The Stricklands were a remarkable family,
+living about four or five miles from Wrentham, on the road leading from
+Wangford to Southwold, at an old-fashioned residence called Reydon Hall.
+They had, I fancy, seen better days, and were none the worse for that.
+The Stricklands came over with William the Conqueror. One of them was
+the first to land, and hence the name. A good deal of blue blood flowed
+in their veins. Kate--to my eyes the fairest of the lot--was named
+Katherine Parr, to denote that she was a descendant of one of the wives
+of the too-much-married Henry VIII., and in the old-fashioned
+drawing-room of Reydon Hall I heard not a little--they all talked at
+once--of what to me was strange and rare. Mr. Strickland had deceased
+some years, and the widow and the daughters kept up what little state
+they could; and I well remember the feeling of surprise with which I
+first entered their capacious drawing-room--a room the size of which it
+had never entered into my head to conceive of. It is to the credit of
+these Misses Strickland that they did not vegetate in that old house, but
+held a fair position in the world of letters. Miss Strickland herself
+chiefly resided in town. Agnes, the next, whose 'Queens of England' is
+still a standard book, was more frequently at home. The only one of the
+family who did not write was Sarah, who married one of the Radical
+Childses of Bungay, and who not till after the death of her husband
+became respectable and atoned for her sins by marrying a clergyman.
+Kate, as I have said, the fairest of the whole, married an officer in the
+army of the name of Traill, and went out to Canada, and wrote there a
+book called 'The Backwoods of Canada,' which was certainly one of the
+most popular of the four-and-sixpenny volumes published under the
+auspices of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful and Entertaining
+Knowledge. Our friend was Susanna, who wrote a volume of poems on
+Enthusiasm, and who seemed to me, with her dark eyes and hair, a very
+enthusiastic personage indeed. The reason of her friendship with our
+family was her deeply religious nature, which impelled her to leave the
+cold and careless service of the Church--not a little to the disgust of
+her aristocratic sisters, who, as of ancient lineage, not a little
+haughty, and rank Tories, had but little sympathy with Dissent.. Susanna
+was much at our house, and when away scarcely a day passed on which she
+did not write some of us a letter or send us a book. Then there was a
+brother Tom, a midshipman--a wonderful being to my inexperienced
+eyes--who once or twice came to our house seated in the family
+donkey-chaise, which seemed to me, somehow or other, not to be an
+ordinary donkey-chaise, but something of a far superior character. I
+have pleasant recollections of them all, and of the annuals in which they
+all wrote, and a good many of which fell to my share. Like her sister,
+Susanna married an officer in the army--a Major Moodie--and emigrated to
+Canada, where the Stricklands have now a high position, where she had
+sons and daughters born to her, and wrote more than one novel which found
+acceptance in the English market. The Stricklands gave me quite a
+literary turn. When I was a small boy it was really an everyday
+occurrence for me to write a book or edit a newspaper, and with about as
+much success as is generally achieved by bookmakers and newspaper
+editors, whose merit is overlooked by an unthinking public. Let me say
+in the Stricklands I found an indulgent audience. On one occasion I
+remember reciting some verses of my own composition, commencing,
+
+'I sing a song of ancient men,
+ Of warriors great and bold,
+Of Hercules, a famous man,
+ Who lived in times of old.
+He was a man of great renown,
+ A lion large he slew,
+And to his memory games were kept,
+ Which now I tell to you,'
+
+which they got me to repeat in their drawing-room, and which, though I
+say it that should not, evinced for a boy a fair acquaintance with
+'Mangnall's Questions' and Pinnock's abridgment of Goldsmith's 'History
+of Rome.' Happily, at that time, Niebuhr was unknown, and sceptical
+criticism had not begun its deadly work. We had not to go far for truth
+then. It was quite unnecessary to seek it--at any rate, so it seemed to
+us--at the bottom of a well; there it was right underneath one's
+nose--before one's very eyes in the printed pages of the printed book.
+
+Agnes Strickland did all she could to confer reputation on her native
+county. The tall, dark, self-possessed lady from Reydon Hall was a lion
+everywhere. On one occasion she visited the House of Lords, just after
+she had written a violent letter against Lord Campbell, charging him with
+plagiarism. Campbell tells us he had a conversation with her, which
+speedily turned her into a friend. He adds: 'I thought Brougham would
+have died with envy when I told him the result of my interview, and
+Ellenborough, who was sitting by, lifted his hands in admiration.
+Brougham had thrown me a note across the table, saying: "So you know your
+friend Miss Strickland has come to hear you."' Miss Strickland often
+visited Alison, the historian, at Possil House. He says of her that she
+had strong talents of a masculine rather than feminine
+character--indefatigable perseverance, and that ardour in whatever
+pursuit she engaged in without which no one could undergo similar
+fatigue. On one occasion she was descanting on the noble feeling of
+Queen Mary, 'That may all be very true, Miss Strickland,' replied the
+historian; 'but unfortunately she had an awkward habit of burning
+people--she brought 239 men, women, and children to the stake in a reign
+which did not extend beyond a few years!' 'Oh yes,' was her reply, 'it
+was terrible, dreadful, but it was the fault of the age--the temper of
+the times; Mary herself was everything that is noble and heroic.' Such
+was her feminine tendency to hero-worship. Another tendency of a
+feminine character was her love of talking. 'She did,' instances Sir
+Archibald, 'not even require an answer or a sign of mutual intelligence;
+it was enough if the one she was addressing simply remained passive. One
+day when I was laid up at Possil on my library sofa from a wound in the
+knee, she was kind enough to sit with me for two hours, and was really
+very entertaining, from the number of anecdotes she remembered of queens
+in the olden time. When she left the room she expressed herself kindly
+to Mrs. Alison as to the agreeable time she had spent, and the latter
+said to me on coming in, "What did you get to say to Miss Strickland all
+this time? She says you were so agreeable, and she was two hours here."
+"Say!" I replied with truth; "I assure you I did not say six words to her
+the whole time."' Agnes was a terrible one to talk--as, indeed, all the
+Stricklands were. In Suffolk such accomplished conversationalists were
+rare.
+
+It must have been, now I come to think of it, a dismal old house,
+suggestive of rats and dampness and mould, that Reydon Hall, with its
+scantily furnished rooms and its unused attics and its empty barns and
+stables, with a general air of decay all over the place, inside and out.
+It had a dark, heavy roof and whitewashed walls, and was externally
+anything but a showy place, standing, as it did, a little way from the
+road. It must have been a difficulty with the family to keep up the
+place, and the style of living was altogether plain; yet there I heard a
+good deal of literary life in London, of Thomas Pringle, the poet, and
+the Secretary of the Anti-Slavery Society, whose 'Residence in South
+Africa' is still one of the most interesting books on that quarter of the
+world, and of whom Josiah Conder, one of the great men of my smaller
+literary world at that time, wrote an appreciative biographical sketch.
+Mr. Pringle, let me remind my readers, was the original editor of
+_Blackwood's Magazine_, a magazine which still maintains its reputation
+as being the best of its class. Mr. Pringle, I believe, at some time or
+other, had visited Wrentham; at any rate, the Stricklands, especially
+Susanna, were among his intimate friends, and, from what I heard, I could
+well believe, when, at a later period, I visited his grave in Bunhill
+Fields, what I found recorded there--that 'In the walks of British
+literature he was known as a man of genius; in the domestic circle he was
+loved as an affectionate relative and faithful friend; in the wide sphere
+of humanity he was revered as the advocate and protector of the
+oppressed,' who 'left among the children of the African desert a memorial
+of his philanthropy, and bequeathed to his fellow-countrymen an example
+of enduring virtue.' At the home of the Pringles the Stricklands made
+many literary acquaintances, such as Alaric Watts, and Mrs. S. C. Hall,
+and others of whom I heard them talk. At that time, however, literature
+was not, as far as women were concerned, the lucrative profession it has
+since become, and I have a dim remembrance of their paintings--for in
+this respect the Stricklands, like my own mother, were very
+accomplished--being sold at the Soho Bazaar, a practice which helped to
+maintain them in the respectability and comfort becoming their position
+in life. But in London they never forgot the old home, and wrote so much
+about it in their stories, that there was not a flower, or shrub, or
+tree, or hedge, or mossy bank redolent in early spring of primroses and
+violets, to which they had not given, to my boyish eyes, a glory and a
+charm. This reference to painting reminds me of a feature of my young
+days, not without interest, in connection with the name of Cunningham--a
+name at one time well known in the religious world.
+
+The reader must be reminded that the reverend gentleman referred to was a
+_rara avis_, and that between him and the neighbouring clergy there was
+little sympathy--unless the common rallying cry of 'The Church in
+Danger!' was raised as an electioneering dodge. The clergyman at
+Wrentham at that time, who declared himself the appointed vessel of grace
+for the parish, I have been led to believe, since I have become older,
+was by no means a saint, and his brethren were notorious as evil-livers.
+Some twenty years ago one of them had his effects sold off, and his
+library was viewed with no little amusement by his parishioners, to many
+of whom, if popular fame be an authority, he was more than a spiritual
+father. The library contained only one book that could be called
+theological, and the title of that wonderfully unique volume was, 'Die
+and be Damned; or, An End of the Methodists.' All the other books were
+exclusively sporting, while the pictures were such as would have been a
+disgrace to Holywell Street. It was of him that the clerk said that
+'next Sunday there would be no Divine sarvice, as maaster was going to
+Newmarket.' Once upon a time after a sermon one of his flock approached
+him, as he had been preaching on miracles, to ask him to explain what a
+miracle really was. The reverend gentleman gave his rustic inquirer a
+kick, adding, 'Did you feel that?'
+
+'Oh yes, sir; but what of that?'
+
+'Why,' said the reverend gentleman, 'if you had not felt it, it would
+have been a miracle, that is all.' Yet that man was as popular as any
+parson in the district, perhaps more so, and it was with some indignation
+in certain quarters that the people learned that a new Bishop had come to
+Norwich, and that the parson had been deprived of his living for immoral
+conduct. Of another it is said that, calling on a poor villager, dying
+and full of gloomy anticipations as to the future, all he could say was,
+'Don't be frightened; I dare say you will meet a good many people you
+know.' I have often heard old men talk of the time when they used to
+take the parson home in a wheelbarrow--but that was before we had a
+Sunday-school, at which I was a regular teacher. The church had a
+Sunday-school, but not till after the one in the chapel had existed many
+years. Of these ornaments of the Church and foes of Dissent, some had
+apparently a sense of shame--one of them, at any rate, committed suicide.
+
+At Pakefield, some seven miles from Wrentham, and just on the borders of
+Lowestoft, then, as now, the most eastern extremity of England, resided
+the Rev. Francis Cunningham. He was a clergyman of piety and
+philanthropy, rare at that time in that benighted district, and in this
+respect he was aided by his wife, a little dark woman whom I well
+remember, a sister of the far-famed John Joseph Gurney, of Earlham. It
+is with pleasure I quote the following from the Journal of Caroline Fox:
+'A charming story of F. Cunningham coming in to prayers just murmuring
+something about the study being on fire, and proceeding to read a long
+chapter and make equally long comments thereupon. When the reading was
+over, and the fact became public, he observed, "Yes, I saw it was a
+little on fire, but I opened the window on leaving the room."' Mr.
+Cunningham had much to do with establishing a branch of the British and
+Foreign Bible Society in Paris in connection with the Buxtons. In this
+way, but on a smaller scale, the Cunninghams were equally distinguished,
+and one of the things they had established at Pakefield was an infant
+school, to which I, in company with my parents--indeed, I may add, the
+whole family--was taken, in order, if possible, that our little village
+should possess a similar institution. But my principal pilgrimages to
+the Pakefield vicarage were in connection with some mission to aid
+Oberlin in his grand work amongst the mountains and valleys of
+Switzerland. It appeared Mr. and Mrs. Cunningham had visited the good
+man, and watched him in his career, and had come back to England to gain
+for him, if possible, sympathy and friends. Mrs. Cunningham had taken
+drawings of the principal objects of interest, which had been
+lithographed, and these lithographs my mother, who in her way was as
+great an enthusiast as Susanna Strickland herself, was very anxious to
+obtain; the financial position of the family, however, forbade any
+thought of purchase. But she had a wonderful gift of painting, and she
+painted while we children were learning the Latin grammar, or preparing
+our lessons in the Delectus, much to my terror, as I had a habit of
+restlessness which, by shaking the table, not only impaired her work, but
+drew down upon me not a little of reproach; and with these paintings I
+was despatched on foot to Pakefield, where, in return for them, I was
+given the famous lithographs, which were to be preserved for many a year
+in the spare room we called the parlour--drawing-rooms at that time in
+East Anglia were, I think, unknown. What a joy it was to us children
+when that parlour had its fire lit, and we found out that company was
+coming--partly, I must add, for sensual reasons. We knew that the best
+tea-things were to be used, that unusual delicacies were to be placed
+upon the table, and I must do my mother the justice to say that she could
+cook as well as she could paint; but for other and higher motives, and
+not as an occasion of feasting or for the disuse of the economical
+pinafore which was always worn to keep our clothes clean, did we rejoice
+when we found there was to be tea in the parlour. If young people were
+coming, we were sure to dissect puzzles, or play some game which combined
+amusement with instruction; and if the party consisted of seniors, as on
+the occasion of the Book Club--almost all Dissenting congregations had
+their Book Clubs then--it was a pleasure to listen to my father's talk,
+who was a well-read man, and who, being a Scotchman, had inherited his
+full share of Scotch wit, which, however, was enlivened with quotations
+from 'Hudibras,' the only poet, alas! in whom he seemed to take any
+particular interest. There, in the parlour, were the fraternal meetings
+attended by all the neighbouring Independent ministers, all clad in sober
+black, and whose wildest exploits in rollicking debauchery were confined
+to a pipe and a glass of home-made wine. Madeira, port and sherry were
+unknown in ministers' houses, though now and then one got a taste of them
+at the houses of men better to do, and who, perhaps, had been as far as
+London once or twice in their lives. Of these neighbouring ministers,
+one of the most celebrated at that time was the Rev. Edward Walford, then
+of Yarmouth, who afterwards became tutor of Homerton College, and who,
+after the death of a favourite and accomplished daughter--I can still
+remember the gracefulness of her person--sank into a state of profound
+melancholy, which led him to shut himself from his friends, to give up
+all public preaching and tutorial work, and to consider himself as
+hopelessly lost. It is a curious fact that he dated his return to reason
+and happiness and usefulness after a visit paid him by my father, who
+happened to be in town, and who naturally was drawn to see his afflicted
+friend, with whom, in the days of auld lang syne, he had smoked many a
+pipe and held many an argument respecting Edwards on Freedom of the Will,
+and his favourite McKnight. Mrs. Walford, who was aware of my father's
+intended visit, had thoughtfully prepared pipes and tobacco, and placed
+them on the table of the room where the interview was to take place. My
+father went and smoked his pipe and talked as usual, poor Mr. Walford
+sitting sad and dejected, and refusing to be comforted all the while.
+When my father had left--owing, I suppose, to the force of old
+associations--actually the poor man approached the table, took up a pipe,
+filled it with tobacco, and smoked it. From that hour, strange to say,
+he recovered, wrote a translation of the Psalms, became a trustee of
+Coward's College, and took charge of a church at Uxbridge. This is 'a
+fac,' as Artemus Ward would say, and 'facs' are stubborn things. Of this
+Mr. Walford, the well-known publisher of that name in St. Paul's
+Churchyard was a son, and the firm of Hodder and Stoughton may be said to
+carry on his business, though on a larger scale.
+
+Dressed in rusty black, with hats considerably the worse for wear, with
+shoes not ignorant of the cobbler's art, unconscious of and careless for
+the fashions of the world, rarely in London, except on the occasion of
+the May Meetings--no one can tell, except those who, like myself, were
+admitted behind the scenes, as it were, how these good men lived to keep
+alive the traditions of freedom, civil and religious, in districts most
+under the sway of the ignorant squire and the equally ignorant parson of
+the parish. If there has been a decency and charm about our country life
+it is due to them, and them alone. Perhaps, more in the country than in
+the crowded city is the pernicious influence felt of sons of Belial,
+flushed with insolence and wine. It is difficult to give the reader an
+idea of the utter animalism, if I may so term it, of rural life some
+fifty years ago. For small wages these Dissenting ministers did a noble
+work, in the way of preserving morals, extending education, promoting
+religion, and elevating the aim and tone of |the little community in
+which they lived, and moved, and had their being. At home the
+difficulties of such of them as had large families were immense. The
+pocket was light, and too often there was but little in the larder. But
+they laboured on through good and bad report, and now they have their
+reward. Perhaps one of their failings was that they kept too much the
+latter end in view, and were too indifferent to present needs and
+requirements. They did not try to make the best of both worlds. I can
+never forget a remark addressed to me by all the good men of the class
+with whom I was familiar in my childhood as to the need of getting on in
+life and earning an honest penny, and becoming independent in a pecuniary
+point of view. I was to be a good boy, to love the Lord, to study the
+Assembly's Catechism, to read the Bible, as if outside the village there
+was no struggle into which sooner or later I should have to plunge--no
+hard battle with the world to fight, no temporal victory to win.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+LOWESTOFT.
+
+
+Yarmouth bloaters--George Borrow--The town fifty years ago--The
+distinguished natives.
+
+'I'm a-thinking you'll be wanting half a pint of beer by this time, won't
+you?'
+
+Such were the first words I heard as I left the hotel where I was a
+temporary sojourner about nine o'clock. Of course I turned to look at
+the speaker. He wore an oilskin cap, with a great flap hanging over the
+back of the neck; his oilskin middle was encased in a thick blue
+guernsey; his trousers were hidden in heavy jack-boots, which came up
+above his knees; his face was red, and his body was almost as round as
+that of a porpoise. When I add that the party addressed was similarly
+adorned and was of a similar build, the reader will guess at once that I
+was amongst a seafaring community, and let me add that this supposition
+is correct. I was, in fact, at Lowestoft, and Lowestoft just now is,
+with Yarmouth, the headquarters of the herring fishery. The truth is, as
+the poet tells us, 'Things are not what they seem,' and that many of the
+Yarmouth bloaters which we are in the habit of indulging in at breakfast
+in reality come from Lowestoft.
+
+It is worth going from London at the season of the year when the finest
+bloaters are being caught, to realize the peril and the enterprise and
+the industry connected with the herring trade, which employs some five
+hundred boats, manned by seven to twelve men, who work the business on
+the cooperative system, which, when the season is a good one, gives a
+handsome remuneration to all concerned, and which drains the country of
+young men for miles around. Each boat is furnished with some score of
+nets, and each net extends more than thirty-two yards. The boat puts off
+according to the tide, and if it gets a good haul, at once returns to the
+harbour with its freight; if the catch is indifferent, the boat stays
+out; the fish are salted as they are caught, and then the boat, generally
+at a distance of about twenty miles from the shore, waits till a
+sufficient number have been caught to complete the cargo. When that is
+the case, the boat at once makes for Lowestoft, and the fish are unloaded
+under a shed in heaps of about half a last (a last is professedly 10,000
+herrings, but really much more). At nine a bell rings and the various
+auctioneers commence operations. A crowd is formed, and in a very few
+minutes a lot is sold off to traders who are well known, and who pay at
+the end of the week. The auctioneer then proceeds to the next group,
+which is disposed of in a similar way. Other auctioneers in various
+parts of the enormous shed erected for their accommodation do the same,
+and then, as more boats arrive, other cargoes are sold, the sailors
+bringing a hundred as a sample from the boat. And thus all day long the
+work of selling goes on, and as soon as a lot are sold they are packed up
+with ice, if fresh, or with more salt, if already salted, and despatched
+by train to various quarters of England, where, it is to be presumed,
+they meet with a speedy and immediate sale. In this way as many as one
+hundred and ninety-eight trucks are sometimes sent off in a single day.
+But in London we are familiar with the kipper, the red herring, and the
+Yarmouth bloater, and to see how they are prepared for consumption I
+leave the market--always wet and fishy and slippery--and make my way to
+the extensive premises on the beach belonging to Mr. Thomas Brown--the
+only Brown whose name is familiar to the fish-dealer in every market in
+England, and the extent of whose business may be best realized by the
+reader when I state that Mr. Brown sends off from his factory as many as
+forty lasts a week.
+
+An intelligent foreman, after I have evaded the attack of a formidable
+dog which keeps watch and ward over the premises, explains to me the
+mystery of the trade. I find myself in the midst of a square. On one
+side are a great stack of oak and many casks of old salt. The latter, I
+gather, is sold to be used as manure. The former is applied to the fire,
+which gently smokes the Yarmouth bloater. On one side, the herrings, as
+they are received, are pickled--that is, first washed in fresh water, and
+then immersed in great tubs in which the water is mixed with salt. The
+next thing is to take them into a room in which several women are engaged
+in spitting them--that is, hanging them on rods--and then they are
+carried to the apartment where they are hung up, while oak logs are burnt
+beneath. In twelve hours they are sufficiently smoked, and then you have
+the real Yarmouth bloater. I am glad I have seen the process, as I have
+a horrible suspicion that the costermonger manufactures many a Yarmouth
+bloater in some filthy Whitechapel slum, the odour of which by no means
+tends to improve the flavour of so delicate a fish.
+
+But we have to discuss the red-herring, not of the artful politician,
+anxious to dodge his hearers, but of the breakfast-table. For this
+purpose I am taken to a large oven filled with oak sawdust, gathered from
+Ipswich, and oak shavings, which are also brought from a distance,
+principally from Bass's Brewery, and, indeed, from all the great works
+where oak is used; I see heaps of fire made from these ashes, which give
+out much heat, and at the same time much smoke. In a loft above are hung
+the herrings, and there they hang twelve days, till they gradually become
+of the colour of a guinea, when they are packed up and sent away in
+casks, while the bloaters go away in baskets of a hundred, in pots
+holding a smaller number, and in barrels in which as many as three
+hundred are stowed away. As to the kippered herring, he undergoes quite
+a different treatment. Some twenty or thirty women get hold of him, cut
+him open, take out his gut and wash him, and then he is hung over an oak
+fire and smoked for twelve hours, and thus, saturated with smoke inside
+and out, is regarded in many circles as a delicacy to be highly prized.
+But he must be got off the premises. Well, if we climb to a loft, we
+shall see a good many young women hard at work stripping the rods, on
+which he and his fellows have been suspended, and stowing the fish away.
+In the autumn especially the peculiar industries connected with the trade
+are very considerably exercised. All day long carts come in with the
+fish; all day long carts go out with the manufactured articles to the
+railway-station; day and night the men and women are at work; in one
+quarter the women make and mend the nets, which are then boiled in cutch
+and put on board the boats; in another quarter coopers are at work making
+boxes and casks and barrels. As to the baskets, the country is ransacked
+for them, and as soon as they are filled they take the train and away
+they go, to give a flavour to the potato dinner of the poor man, or to
+form a tasty adjunct to the dishes under which the breakfast table of his
+lord and master groans. In London we get the best--the smaller herrings
+go to the North, as the dwellers in those parts will not pay the price
+the Londoner does. Great is the joy and rejoicing, as well can be
+imagined, at Lowestoft when the herring season comes on. It is true, the
+Lowestoft fishers do not have it all to themselves. Yarmouth is a fierce
+rival in the race, and, as it has now superior accommodation, many a boat
+makes for that far-famed port. Then, the Scotch, when they have done
+their fishing, make for the English coast, and manage, as Scotchmen ever
+do, to gather a fair share of the spoil. As to the foreigners, they are
+not such formidable rivals as sometimes we are apt to believe. The
+Frenchman or the Dutchman comes, but that is when he is blown off by a
+gale from his own happy hunting-ground, and then we know, all the world
+over, the cry is, 'Any port in a storm.'
+
+Oh, these storms! how terrible they are! and how little, as we eat our
+Yarmouth bloater of a morning, or spread the bloater-paste as a covering
+to the thin slice of bread-and-butter, to tempt the languid appetite--how
+little do we who sit at home at ease realize their fury and their power!
+As I now write, twenty-one orphans are bewailing the loss of fathers who
+went out in a craft during the last gale, and of whom no sign has been
+seen, nor ever will. Hour by hour the women, weeping and watching on the
+sandy shore, saw one and another familiar boat come, more or less
+buffeted, into port. On more than one a hand had been washed away, but
+the craft and the rest of the crew were saved somehow. But one boat yet
+remained missing, and in vain the survivors were questioned as to what
+had become of the _Skimmer of the Sea_. Day by day anxious eyes swept
+the distant horizon. Day by day a sadder weight came down on weeping
+child and broken-hearted wife; and now all hope is gone, and all felt
+that in the fury of the gale the _Skimmer of the Sea_ foundered with all
+her hands. Well, as the good old Admiral said, as he and his men were
+about to perish, 'My lads, the way to heaven is as short by sea as by
+land.' But the wounded heart in the agony of its grief is slow to
+realize that fact. Sailors ought to be serious men; every halfpenny they
+earn is won at the risk of a life. In Lowestoft, I am glad to find, many
+of them are. 'The Salvation Army has done 'em a deal of good,' says a
+decent woman, with whom I happened to scrape an acquaintance at the most
+attractive coffee-house I have ever seen--the Coffee Pot at Mutford
+Bridge. 'Not that I holds with the Salvation Army myself, sir, but
+they've done the men a deal of good, and they don't spend their wages, as
+they used to do, in drink.'
+
+Lowestoft, when I was there last, had just lost one of its heroes--I mean
+the late Mr. George Borrow--whose 'Bible in Spain' was the talk of the
+season in religious and worldly circles alike, and whose writings on
+Gipsies and Wild Wales and the 'Bible in Spain' achieved at one time an
+enormous popularity. He lived--I can still remember his tall form--on a
+bank a couple of miles out of Lowestoft, sloping down to a large piece of
+water known in those parts as Oulton Broad. The tourist, if he looks to
+his right just after he has passed Mutford Bridge on the rail from
+Lowestoft to Beccles, across the wide sheet of water, which, as I saw it
+last, lay calm and blue in the fading glory of an autumnal sun, will
+perhaps see a white house at a distance, nestled in among the
+fir-trees--that was where George Borrow lived, and where he died, though
+he was buried in Brompton Cemetery by the side of his wife. You cannot
+make a mistake, for houses are rare in those parts. As his step-daughter
+observed to me, the proper way is by water; to get to the house by
+land--at least as I did--you walk along the rail for a couple of miles,
+then break off across a bit of a swamp, to a little lane that conducts
+you to Oulton Church--a very ancient one, which, however, is in a state
+of good repair and is noted partly on account of the fact that the
+steeple is built in the middle, and partly on account of its containing,
+so it is said, the earliest example of a brass to an ecclesiastic which
+is to be found in England. A narrow path from the church leads you to
+Oulton Hall, which came into the possession of Borrow by marriage, really
+a very plain, red-brick, capacious, comfortable-looking old farmhouse,
+only of a superior class. Keeping the Hall to the right, you reach a
+gate, which opens into a very narrow lane, full of mud in the winter and
+dust in the summer. The lane loses itself in the marshland, on the
+borders of Lake Lothing--a name supposed to have been derived from a
+certain Danish prince, murdered on the spot by a jealous Court retainer;
+and it is a fitting place for a murder, as in that lonely district there
+was no eye to pity, no ear to hear, no hand to save. Even to-day, as you
+look away from the train, there is little sign of life, save the sail of
+a distant wherry as it makes sluggishly for Norwich or Beccles, as it
+goes either into the Waveney or the Yare; or the gray wing of the heron
+as it flies heavily along the marsh; and that is all. Far away, perhaps,
+rises a ridge, with a house on it; or a steeple, with a few trees
+struggling to yield the barren spot a shelter from the suns of summer or
+the howling winds of winter; but all is still life there, and the
+habitations of men are few and far between. In the particular lane to
+which I have introduced the reader--there are but two--there is a little
+cottage on your left, and beyond, under a group of trees, mostly fir,
+which almost hide it from view, a home of a rather superior character, in
+a very dilapidated condition, with everything around it more or less
+untidy--that was where George Borrow lived and worked in his way for many
+a long day. The step-daughter and her husband reside there now--very
+ancient people, who are to be seen driving about Lowestoft in a little
+wicker car, drawn by an amiable and active donkey, an aged dog guarding
+the cottage during their temporary absence. The female, an ancient one,
+who did for the house, lives in the little cottage which the tourist will
+have already observed, and the interior of which presented, when I peeped
+in, a far greater idea of comfort than did Oulton Cottage, the residence
+of the late George Borrow. The picture one gets is rather a melancholy
+one. 'He was a funny-tempered man'--that seems to have been the idea of
+the few people around. Latterly he kept no company, and no one came to
+see him. All who did call on him, however, tell me that he was well
+dressed, but that all the interior of the house was dirty. Well, that
+was to be expected of a man who loved to live with the gipsies, and
+patter to them in Romany of Egyptian lore, for it could not have been
+want of means. Borrow must have made a good deal of money by his books,
+and I have heard his landed property estimated at five hundred per year.
+The house looked like the residence of a miser who would not lay out a
+penny in keeping up appearances or in repairs. It must be remembered,
+however, that the grand old man had long become bowed with age; that for
+some years before his death he was scarcely able to move himself without
+help; that the grasshopper, as it were, had become a burden. In summer
+time such a residence, in good repair and well furnished, would be
+perfectly charming. The house contains a sitting-room on each side of
+the entrance-hall. Behind is the kitchen, and above are four bedrooms
+and two attics--none of them large, I own, but at any rate capable of
+being made very cosy. On your right, in a little niche in the cliff, is
+a small stable. Lower down is a large summer-house, then full of books
+(amongst them, I believe, there were a hundred lexicons), where their
+learned proprietor loved to write. Farther down the lawn you come to the
+lake, where Borrow could enjoy his morning bath without fear of being
+disturbed, and where any amount of fish can be got. Just previous to my
+last visit to the spot a pike of more than twenty pounds' weight--I am
+afraid to say how many pounds more, lest the reader should think I was
+exaggerating--had been caught. For a real angler or sportsman such a
+house as that in which George Borrow spent the latter years of his long
+life must have been a perfect paradise. The world is utterly away from
+you, and, what is better still, in such a spot the world has no chance of
+finding you out. Approaching by road, you see no sign of the house till
+you are in it, so completely is it hidden in the nook of trees in which
+it stands. Only to the water is it open. It would be really beautiful
+to live there in the summer, and have a gondola to row into Beccles or
+Lowestoft or Bungay when you wanted to be gay.
+
+One good anecdote I heard of George Borrow the last time I was in the
+neighbourhood, which is worth repeating. My informant was an Independent
+minister, at that time supplying the pulpit at Lowestoft, and staying at
+Oulton Hall, then inhabited by a worthy Dissenting tenant. One night a
+meeting of the Bible Society was held at Mutford Bridge, at which the
+party from the Hall attended, and where George Borrow was one of the
+speakers. After the meeting was over, all the speakers went back to
+supper at Oulton Hall, and my friend among them, who, in the course of
+the supper, found himself attacked very violently by the clergyman for
+holding Calvinistic opinions. Naturally my friend replied that the
+clergyman was bound to do the same. 'How do you make that out?' 'Why,
+the Articles of your Church are Calvinistic, and to them you have sworn
+assent.' 'Oh yes, but there is a way of explaining them away.' 'How
+so?' said my friend. 'Oh,' replied the clergyman, 'we are not bound to
+take the words in their natural sense.' My friend, an honest, blunt East
+Anglian, intimated that he did not understand that way of evading the
+difficulty; but he was then a young man, and did not like to continue the
+discussion further. However, George Borrow, who had not said a word
+hitherto, entered into the discussion, opening fire on the clergyman in a
+very unexpected manner, and giving him such a setting down as the
+hearers, at any rate, never forgot. All the sophistry about the
+non-natural meaning of terms was held up by Borrow to ridicule, even
+contempt; and the clergyman was beaten at every point. 'Never,' says my
+friend, 'did I hear one man give another such a dressing as on that
+occasion.' It was not always, however, that Borrow thus shone. In the
+neighbourhood of Bungay lived a gentleman much given to collect around
+him men of literary taste and culture. A lecture was to be given in the
+neighbourhood, and all the men of light and leading around were invited.
+George Borrow was one of the earliest arrivals, and seated himself before
+the fire with a book in his hand, over which he nodded superciliously, as
+the host brought up all his guests in succession to be introduced to the
+lion of the town. At dinner which followed, which was rather a jovial
+one, and at which the bottle went round freely, so loud and general was
+the conversation that my friend, a clever lawyer, with remarkably good
+ears, was quite unable to catch a sentence from the great author's lips.
+Perhaps Borrow really did say nothing, or next to nothing. It is quite
+as likely that he did as not, as I have already informed the reader that
+'he was a funny-tempered man.'
+
+'Catherine Gurney,' writes Caroline Fox, 'gave us a note to George
+Borrow, so on him we called--a tall, ungainly man, with great physical
+strength, quick, penetrating eye, a confident manner, and a disagreeable
+tone and pronunciation.' We gather from the same lady that it was Joseph
+John Gurney who recommended George Borrow to the Committee of the Bible
+Society. 'So he stalked up to London, and they gave him a hymn to
+translate into the Manchow language, and the same to one of their people
+to translate also. When compared they proved to be very different. When
+put before their reader, he had the candour to say that Borrow's was much
+the better of the two. On this they sent him to Petersburg to get it
+printed, and then gave him business in Portugal.'
+
+One thing is clear--that Borrow was a lonely man, and evidently one who
+did not hold the resources of civilization in such esteem as Mr.
+Gladstone does. He loved Nature and her ways, and people like the
+gipsies, who are supposed to be of a similar way of thinking. He
+eschewed the hum of cities and the roar of the 'madding crowd.' He was
+big in body and in mind, and wanted elbow-room; and yet what would he
+have been if he had not lived in a city, and come under the stimulative
+influence of such men as Edward Taylor, of Norwich? It is idle to
+complain of cities, however they sully the air, and deface the land, and
+pollute the water, and rear the weak and vicious and the wicked--to
+remind us how low and depraved human nature can become when it is cut off
+from communion with Nature and Nature's God. Borrow owed much to cities,
+and was best appreciated by the men who dwelt in them. There is often a
+good deal of affectation about the love of rural solitude, nor does it
+often last long when there is a wife to have a voice in the matter. Yet
+in Borrow undoubtedly the feeling was sincere, and of him Wordsworth
+might have written--
+
+ 'As in the eye of Nature he has lived,
+ So in the eye of Nature let him die.'
+
+Lowestoft was a frequent attraction for a youthful ramble--perhaps almost
+too far, unless one could manage to get a lift in a little yellow-painted
+black-bodied vehicle called a whisky, which was grandfather's property,
+and into the shafts of which could be put any spare quadruped, whether
+donkey, or mule, or pony, it mattered little, and which afforded a
+considerable relief when a trip as far as Lowestoft was determined on.
+At that time there was no harbour, and the town consisted simply of one
+High Street, gradually rising towards the north, with a fine space for
+boys to play in between the cliff and the sea, called the denes. I can
+well remember being taken to view the works of the harbour before the
+water was let in, and not a little astonished at what then was to me a
+new world of engineering science and skill. In the High Street there was
+a little old-fashioned and by no means flourishing Independent Chapel,
+where at one time the preacher was the Rev. Mr. Maurice, the father of
+the Mr. Maurice to whom many owe a great awakening of spiritual life, and
+whose memory they still regard as that of a beloved and honoured teacher.
+Mr. Maurice was a Unitarian, I believe, and, when he retired, handed over
+the chapel to my father with the remark that it was no use his preaching
+there any longer. The preacher in my time was the Rev. George Steffe
+Crisp, a kindly, timid, tearful man, always in difficulties with his
+people, and who often resorted to Wrentham for advice. Latterly he
+retired from the ministry, and kept a shop and school. In this capacity
+one day my old friend John Childs, of Bungay, the far-famed printer--of
+whom I shall have much to say anon--called on him, when the following
+dialogue took place: 'Good-morning, Mr. Crisp.' 'Good-morning, Mr.
+Childs.' 'Well, how are you getting on?' 'Oh, very well; but there is
+one thing that troubles me much.' 'What is that?' 'That I am getting
+deaf, and can't hear my minister.' 'Oh,' was the cynical reply, 'you
+ought to be thankful for your privileges.'
+
+Lowestoft is reported to have been a fishing station as early as the time
+of the Romans; but the ancient town is supposed to have been long
+engulfed by the resistless sea, for there was to be seen till the 25th of
+Henry VIII. the remains of an old house upon an inundated spot--left dry
+at low water about four furlongs east of the present beach. The town has
+been the birthplace of many distinguished men--of Sir Thomas Allen, for
+instance, who was steadily attached to the Royal cause, and who after the
+Restoration rose high in command, and won many a victory over the Dutch
+and the Algerines; of Sir Andrew Leake, who fell in the attack on
+Gibraltar; of Rear-Admiral Richard Utbar, also a renowned fighter when
+England and Holland were at war. To the same town also belong Admiral
+Sir John Ashby, who died in 1693, and his nephew Vice-Admiral James
+Mighells. Nor must we fail to do justice to Thomas Nash, a facetious
+writer of considerable reputation in the latter part of the sixteenth
+century. The most witty of his productions is a satirical pamphlet in
+praise of red herrings, intended as a joke upon the great staple of
+Yarmouth, and the pretensions of that place to superiority over
+Lowestoft. It must be confessed that Nash is chiefly famous as a caustic
+pamphleteer and an unscrupulous satirist. For illustration we may point
+to his battle with Gabriel Harvey, the friend of Edmund Spenser, who
+desired that he might be epitaphed the inventor of the not yet
+naturalized English hexameter; and his other battle with Martin Mar
+Prelate, or the writer or writers who passed under that name, and who
+have acquired a reputation to which poor Nash can lay no claim. His one
+conspicuous dramatic effort is 'Summer's Last Will and Testament.' Nash
+wrote for bare existence--to use his own words, 'contending with the
+cold, and conversing with scarcity.' Nash lived in an unpropitious age.
+A recent French writer has placed him in the foremost rank of English
+writers. Dr. Jusserand, the author referred to, in his accounts of the
+English novel in the time of Shakespeare, tells us Nash was the most
+successful exponent in England of the picturesque novel. The picturesque
+novel is the forerunner of the realistic novel of modern times. It
+portrays the life and fortunes of the picaro--the adventurer who tries
+all roads to fortune. Spanish in its origin, it developed into a school
+in which Defoe and Thackeray distinguished themselves. 'Nash,' writes
+the French author, 'mingled serious scenes with his comedy, in order that
+his romances might more nearly resemble real life.' In fact (he writes),
+'Nash does not only possess the merit of learning how to observe the
+ridiculous side of human nature, and of portraying in a full light
+picturesque figures--now worthy of Teniers and now of Callot--some fat
+and greasy, others lean and lank; he possesses a thing very rare with the
+picturesque school, the faculty of being moved. He seems to have
+foreseen the immense field of study which was to be opened later to the
+novelist. A distant ancestor of Fielding, as Lilly and Sidney appear to
+us to be distant ancestors of Richardson, he understands that a picture
+of active life, reproducing only in the Spanish fashion scenes of comedy,
+is incomplete and departs from reality. The greatest jesters, the most
+arrogant, the most venturesome, have their days of anguish. No hero has
+ever yet remained imprisoned from the cradle to the grave, and no one has
+been able to live an irresponsible spectator, and not feel his heart
+sometimes beat the quicker, nor bow his head unmoved. Nash caught a
+glimpse of this.' As an illustration, Dr. Jusserand points to his 'Jack
+Wilton'--'The best specimen of the picturesque tale in English literature
+anterior to Defoe.' In Lowestoft they ought to keep his memory green.
+
+The writer well remembers the day when Mr., afterwards Sir, Morton Peto,
+assembled the inhabitants of Lowestoft in the then dilapidated Town Hall,
+and promised that if they would sell their ruined harbour works, and back
+him in making a railway, their mackerel and herrings should be delivered
+almost alive in Manchester, Liverpool, and London. The inhabitants
+believed in the power of the enchanter, and Lowestoft is metamorphosed.
+The old town remains upon its beautiful eminence, and memory clings to
+the cliffs and to the denes, tenanted only, the one by wild rabbits, the
+other by the merry children and the nets of the fishermen. But a new
+town has grown up around the harbour--a grand hotel, excellent
+lodging-houses, a new church; a great population have upset the romance,
+and borne witness to the spirit of enterprise which characterizes this
+generation. The new town has spread to Kirkley, has Londonized even
+quiet Pakefield, and awakened a sleeping neighbourhood to what men call
+life.
+
+At Lowestoft commence what are known to sailors as the Yarmouth Roads--a
+grand stretch of sea protected by the sands, where an armada might anchor
+secure; and it was a sight not to be seen now, when gigantic steamers do
+all the business of the sea, to watch the hundreds of ships that would
+come inside the Roads at certain seasons of the year. There, in the
+winter-time--that is, from Lowestoft to Covehithe--I have seen the beach
+strewed with wrecks, chiefly of rotten colliers, or ships in the corn
+trade; but inside 'Lowestoft Roads,' to which they were guided by a
+lighthouse on the cliff, they were supposed to be secure. Lowestoft at
+that time, with its charming sands, was little known to the gay world,
+and depended far more on the fishing than the bathing season. The former
+was a busy time, and kept all the country round in a state of excitement.
+Many were the men, for instance, who, even as far off as Wrentham, went
+herring or mackerel fishing in the big craft, which, drawn up on the
+beach when the season was over, seemed to me ships such as never had been
+seen by the mariners of Tyre and Sidon; but the chief interest to me were
+the vans in which the fish were carried from Lowestoft to London--light
+spring-carts with four wheels and two horses, that, after changing horses
+at our Spread Eagle, raced like lightning along the turnpike-road, at all
+hours, and even on Sundays--a sad grievance to the godly--beating the
+Yarmouth mail.
+
+Now and then, even at that remote period, when railways were not, and
+when Lowestoft was no port, nothing but a fishing-station, distinguished
+people came to Lowestoft, attracted by its bracing air and exceptional
+bathing attractions. I can in this way recollect Sir Edward Parry and M.
+Guizot. But there were other personages equally distinguished. One of
+these was Mrs. Siddons, with whom an old Dissenting minister--the Rev. S.
+Sloper, of Beccles, whom I can well remember--contracted quite an
+intimacy. She had already passed the zenith of her celebrity.
+'Providence,' writes my friend, Mr. Wilton Rix, of Beccles, in his 'East
+Anglian Nonconformity,' published as far back as 1851, 'had repeatedly
+and recently called her to tread in domestic life the path of sorrow, and
+her religious advantages, however few, had taught her that
+
+ '"That path alone
+ Leads to the land where sorrow is unknown."
+
+'"Sweet, sometimes," said she, "are the uses of adversity. It not only
+strengthens family affection, but it teaches us all to walk humbly with
+God." It is not surprising that she was disposed to cultivate the
+society of those who could blend piety with cheerfulness, and with whom
+she might be on friendly terms without ceremony. Such acquaintances she
+found in Mr. Sloper's family. Mrs. Siddons, with unassuming kindness,
+contributed to their amusement by specimens of her powerful reading. She
+joined willingly in the worship of the family, and maintained the same
+invaluable practice at her own lodgings.' Mr. Rix continues: 'Just at
+that time Mr. Sloper was requested to preach to his own people on an
+affecting and mournful occasion, the death of a suicide. Though he
+keenly felt the delicacy and difficulty of the task, a sense of duty and
+a possibility of usefulness overcame his scruples. He selected for his
+text the impressive sentiment of the Apostle, "The sorrow of the world
+worketh death." Mrs. Siddons was one of his auditors. She, who had been
+the honoured guest of Royalty, who had been enthroned as the Tragic Muse,
+and whose voice had charmed applauding multitudes, was seen in the humble
+Dissenting meeting-house at Beccles shedding abundant and unaffected
+tears at the plain and faithful exhibition of religious truth. Mr.
+Sloper's preaching was as powerfully recommended to her by the delightful
+illustration of Christian principles exhibited in his private character,
+as by the intrinsic importance of those principles, and the simple
+gravity and penetrating earnestness with which they were announced from
+his lips. He afterwards procured for her, at her request, a copy of
+Scott's admirable "Commentary on the Bible," which he accompanied with a
+letter, warmly urging upon her attention the great realities her
+profession had so manifest a tendency to exclude from her contemplations.
+Mrs. Siddons,' again I quote Mr. Rix, 'more than once expressed her
+gratitude for the interest Mr. Sloper had evinced in her eternal welfare;
+she thanked him in writing for the advice he had given her, adding an
+emphatic wish that God might enable her to follow it--a wish which her
+pious and amiable correspondent echoed with all the fervour of his heart.
+She returned into the glare of popularity, but a hope may easily be
+indulged that the pressure of subsequent relative afflictions and of old
+age were not permitted to come upon her unaccompanied by the impressions
+and consolations of true religion. Her elegant biographer, Mr. Campbell,
+draws a veil over the state of her mind during her last hours, which it
+would be deeply interesting to penetrate. Would she not then, if reason
+were undimmed, reflect upon the faithful counsel she received with
+Scott's Bible as being of infinitely greater value than the applause of
+myriads or the fame of ages?'
+
+Beccles, where this good Mr. Sloper lived, and where the writer of this
+extract was a respectable solicitor--I believe the firm of Rix and Son
+still exists--was a small market town about eight miles from Wrentham,
+inland. At that time it ranked as the third town in Suffolk. Towards
+the west it is skirted by a cliff, once washed by the estuary which
+separated the eastern portions of Norfolk and Suffolk. There is every
+reason to believe that ages back the mouth of the Yare was an estuary or
+arm of the sea, and extended with considerable magnitude for many miles
+up the country. The herring fishery was thus a principal source of
+emolument to the inhabitants, and in the time of the Conqueror the fee
+farm rent of the manor of Beccles to the King was 60,000 herrings, and in
+the time of the Confessor 20,000. About 956 the manor and advowson of
+Beccles were granted by King Edwy to the monks of Bury, and remained in
+their possession until the dissolution of the religious houses under
+Henry VIII.
+
+As I have said, and as I repeat, in these languid days--when the old
+creeds have lost their power and the old bottles are bursting with new
+wine--the glory of East Anglia was that it was the first to stand up in
+the face of priest or king for the truth--or what it held to be such.
+Amongst the early martyrs under Mary were three burnt at Beccles--Thomas
+Spicer, of Winston, labourer, John Deny, and Edmond Poole. This was in
+the year 1556. Their crime in the indictment, drawn up by Dr. Hopton,
+Bishop of Norwich, and his Chancellor, Dunning, according to Fox, was:
+
+'1. First was articulate against them that they belieued not the Pope of
+Rome to bee supreame head immediately in Christ on earth of the
+Universall Catholike Church.
+
+'2. That they belieued not holie bread and holie water, ashes, palmes,
+and all other like ceremonies used in the Church to bee good and laudable
+for stirring up the people to devotion.
+
+'3. Item that they belieued not afterwards of consecration spoken by the
+priest, the very naturall body of Christ, and no other substance of bread
+and wine to bee in the Sacrament of the altar.
+
+'4. Item that they belieued it to bee idolatry to worship Christ in the
+Sacrament of the altar.
+
+'5. Item that they tooke bread and wine in remembrance of Christ's
+Passion.
+
+'6. Item that they would not followe the crosse in procession nor bee
+confessed to a priest.
+
+'7. Item that they affirmed no mortal man to have in himself free will
+to do good or evill.'
+
+It appears that the writ had not come down, nevertheless these brave men
+were burnt at the stake. 'When they came,' continues Fox, 'to the
+reciting of the creed, Sir John Silliard spake to them, "That is well
+said, sirs. I am glad to heare you saie you do belieue the Catholike
+Church; that is the best word I heard of you yet."
+
+'To which his sayings Edmond Poole answered, "Though they belieue the
+Catholike Church, yet do they not belieue in their Popish Church, which
+is no part of Christ's Catholike Church, and, therefore, no part of their
+beliefe."
+
+'When they rose from praier they all went joyfullie to the stake, and,
+being bound thereto, and the fire burning about them, they praised God in
+such an audible voice that it was wonderful to all those who stood bye
+and heard them. Then one Robert Bacon, dwelling in the said Beccles, a
+very enemy to God's truth, and a persecutor of His people, being then
+present, within the hearing thereof willed the tormentors to throwe on
+faggots to stop the knaues breathes, as he termed them; so hot was his
+burning charitie. But these good men, not regarding their malice,
+confessed the truth, and yielded their lives to the death for the
+testimonie of the same very gloriouslie and joyfullie.'
+
+These men were the precursors of that Nonconformity which has made
+England the home of the free, and such men abounded in East Anglia.
+Under Queen Elizabeth they had as bad a time of it almost as under Queen
+Mary. For instance, we find under Dr. Freke, Bishop of Norwich, and in
+the reign of glorious Queen Bess, as her admirers term her, Mathew
+Hammond, a poor ploughwright, of Hethersett, was condemned as a heretic,
+had his ears cut off, and after the lapse of a week was committed, in the
+Castle ditch at Norwich, to the more agonizing torment of the flames.
+The translation of Dr. Whitgift to the See of Canterbury was the signal
+for augmented rigour. He was charged by his imperious mistress to
+restore religious uniformity, which she confessed, notwithstanding all
+her precautions, ran out of square. One of the first victims to this new
+_regime_ was William Fleming, Rector of Beccles. The living of Beccles
+at this period was vested in Lady Anne Gresham, the widow of Sir Thomas
+Gresham, the founder of the Royal Exchange. Previously to her marriage,
+she was the widow of William Rede, merchant, of London and Beccles.
+Under James I. and Bishop Wren, men of integrity and conscience fared
+worse than under Queen Elizabeth, and naturally the people thus
+persecuted formed themselves into a Church. That in Beccles dated from
+1652, and in the covenant drawn up on the occasion we find it was
+resolved:
+
+'1. That we will for ever acknowledge and admit the Lord to be our God
+in Jesus Christ, giving up ourselves to Him to be His people.
+
+'2. That we will alwaies endevour, through the grace of God assisting
+us, to walke in all His waies and ordinances, according to His written
+Word, which is the only sufficient rule of good life for every man.
+Neither will we suffer ourselves to be polluted by any sinful waies,
+either publike or private, but endeavour to abstaine from the very
+appearance of evill, giving no offence to the Jew or Gentile, or the
+Churches of Christ.
+
+'3. That we will humbly and willingly submit ourselves to the government
+of Christ in this Church--in the administration of the Word, the seals,
+and discipline.
+
+'4. That we will in all love approve our communion as brethren by
+watching over one another, and as such shall be; counsel, administer,
+relieve, assist, and bear with one another, serving one another in love.
+
+'5. Lastly, we do not covenant or promise these things in our own, but
+in Christ's strength; neither do we confine ourselves to the words of
+this covenant, but shall at all time account it our duty to embrace any
+further light or covenant which shall be revealed to us out of God's
+Word.'
+
+This covenant, however, was not to prevent in after time censure being
+cast on others who, endeavouring to preserve its spirit, were led to
+think differently from the majority. For instance, we find in 1656 two
+persons, who had been members of the Independent church at Beccles,
+received adult baptism, and in so doing were considered to have given
+'offence' to the church, and were desired to appear and give an account
+of their practices.
+
+At one time there was little of what we know as congregational singing.
+In 1657 it was agreed by the Beccles church 'that they do put in practice
+the ordinance of singing in the publick upon the forenoon and afternoon
+of the Lord's daies, and that it be between praier and sermon; and also
+it was agreed that the New England translation of the Psalmes be made use
+of by the church at their times of breaking of bread, and it was agreed
+that the next Lord's day, seventh night, might be the day to enter upon
+the work of singing in publick.' It is interesting to note that one of
+the pastors of the Beccles church was a Mr. Nokes, who had been
+trained--where Calamy and many others were trained--at the University of
+Utrecht, and that in the same year in which Dr. Watts accepted the
+pastoral office, he addressed to Mr. Nokes a poem on 'Friendship,' which
+is still included in the Doctor's works. Dissent, when I was a boy, was
+considered low. We were contemptuously termed 'pograms,' a term of
+reproach the origin of which I have never learnt. The landed gentry, the
+small squires, the lawyers and the doctors, and the tradespeople who
+pandered to their prejudices and fattened on their patronage, were slow
+to say a word in favour of a Dissenter. The poor who went to chapel were
+excluded from many benefits enjoyed by their fellow-parishioners. It was
+the fashion to treat them with scorn, yet I have heard one of the most
+excellent and finished gentlemen in the district declare that he heard
+better talk in my father's parlour than he did anywhere else in the
+neighbourhood, and I can well believe it, for the Dissenting minister, as
+a rule, at that time, was a better read man, and a more studious one,
+than the clergyman of the district, in spite of his University education;
+and in matters affecting the welfare of the nation, and that came under
+the denomination of politics, his views were far more rational than those
+of Churchmen in general, and the clergy in particular. We learn from
+Milton's State Papers that the churches of East Anglia petitioned Oliver
+Cromwell that the three nations might enjoy the blessings of a godly,
+upright magistracy; that they might have Courts of Judicature in their
+own country; and that honest men of known fidelity and uprightness might
+be authorized to determine trivial matters of debt or difference.
+Assuredly the East Anglian saints--the latter term was, and, strange to
+say, is still, used as a term of reproach--were wise and right-thinking
+men where Church government and public policy were concerned. We love to
+read the story of the Pilgrim Fathers. With what rapture Mrs. Hemans
+wrote:
+
+ 'What sought they thus afar?
+ Bright jewels of the mine?
+ The wealth of seas? the spoils of war?
+ They sought a faith's pure shrine.
+
+ 'Ay, call it holy ground,
+ The soil where first they trod;
+ They left unstained what there they found--
+ FREEDOM TO WORSHIP GOD.'
+
+But it seems to me that a greater glory was won by, and a greater honour
+should be paid to, the men who did not cross the Atlantic; who did not
+seek an asylum in a foreign land; who remained at home to suffer--to die,
+if need be, to uphold the rights of conscience, and to fight the good
+fight of faith. It is not even in our tolerant, and, as we deem it, more
+enlightened day, that full justice is done to these men. In what calls
+itself good society you meet men and women whose ancestors were
+Dissenters, and yet who are ashamed of the fact--a fact of which no one
+can be ashamed who feels how in East Anglia, at any rate, the religious
+teaching of Dissent purified the life of the people, enlarged their
+political views, and helped this great land of ours to sweep into a
+better and a younger day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+POLITICS AND THEOLOGY.
+
+
+Homerton academy--W. Johnson Fox, M.P.--Politics in 1830--Anti-Corn Law
+speeches--Wonderful oratory.
+
+About 1830 there was, if not a good deal of actual light let into such
+dark places as our Suffolk village--where it was considered the whole
+duty of man, as regards the poor, to attend church and make a bow to
+their betters (a rustic ceremony generally performed by pulling the lock
+of hair on the forehead with the right hand), and to be grateful for the
+wretched station of life in which they were placed--at any rate, a great
+shaking among the dry bones. One summer morning an awe fell on the
+parish as it ran from one to another that the guard of the Yarmouth and
+London Royal Mail had left word with the ostler at the Spread Eagle that
+George the Fourth was dead; then a certain dull sound as of cannon firing
+afar off had been wafted across the German Ocean, and had given rise to
+mysterious speculations on the subject of Continental wars, in which
+Suffolk lads might have to ''list' as 'sogers'; and last of all there
+came that grand excitement when--North and South, East and West--the
+nation rose as one man to demand political and Parliamentary Reform. It
+was a delusion, perhaps, that cry, but it was a glorious one,
+nevertheless; that the millennium could be delayed when we had
+Parliamentary Reform no one for a moment doubted. The sad but undeniable
+fact that mostly men are fools with whom beer is omnipotent had not then
+entered into men's minds, and thus England and Scotland some sixty years
+ago wore an aspect of activity and enthusiasm of which the present
+generation can have no idea, and which, perhaps, can never occur again.
+
+Far away in the distant city which the Suffolk villagers called Lunnon,
+there was a Suffolk lad, whose relations kept a very little shop just by
+us, who was born at Uggeshall--pronounced Ouchell by the common
+people--on a very small farm, and who, as Unitarian preacher and
+newspaper writer, had been and was doing his best in the good cause; but
+it was not the influence of W. Johnson Fox--for it is of him I
+write--that did much in our little village to leaven the mass with the
+leaven of Reform. While quite a lad the Foxes went to Norwich, where the
+future preacher and teacher worked as a weaver boy. In after-years it
+was often my privilege to meet Mr. Fox, who had then attained no small
+share of London distinction, amongst whose hearers were men, often many
+of the most distinguished _literati_ of the day--such as Dickens and
+Forster--and who was actually to sit in Parliament as M.P. for Oldham,
+where, old as he was--and Mr. Gladstone says, 'People who wish to succeed
+in Parliament should enter it young'--he occupied a most respectable
+position, all the more creditable when you remember that Parliament, even
+at that recent date, was a far more select and aristocratic assembly than
+any Parliament of our day, or of the future, can possibly be. Mr. Fox
+had been educated at Homerton Academy--as such places were then termed
+(college is the word we use now)--under the good and venerable Dr.
+Pye-Smith, whose 'Scripture Testimony to the Messiah' was supposed to
+have given Unitarianism a deadly blow, but whom I chiefly remember as a
+very deaf old man, and one of the first to recognise the fact that the
+Bible and geology were not necessarily opposed to each other, and to
+welcome and proclaim the truth--at that time received with fear and
+trembling, if received at all--that the God of Nature and the God of
+Revelation were the same. There was a good deal of free inquiry at
+Homerton Academy, which, however, Mr. Fox assured me, gradually subsided
+into the right amount of orthodoxy as the time came for the student to
+exchange his sure and safe retreat for the fiery ordeal of the deacon and
+the pew. My father and Johnson Fox had been fellow-students, and for
+some time corresponded together. The correspondence in due time,
+however, naturally ceased, as it was chiefly controversial, and nothing
+can be more irksome than for two people who have made up their minds, and
+whom nothing can change, to be arguing continually, and the friendship
+between them in some sense ceased as the one remained firm to, and the
+other wandered farther and farther from, the modified Calvinism of the
+Wrentham Church and pulpit, where, as in all orthodox pulpits at that
+time, it was taught that men were villains by necessity, and fools, as it
+were, by a Divine thrusting on; that for some a Saviour had been
+crucified, that there might be a way of escape from the wrath of an angry
+and unforgiving God; whilst for the vast mass--to whom the name of Christ
+had never been made known, to whom the Bible had never been sent--there
+was an impending doom, the awful horror of which no tongue could tell, no
+imagination conceive. But to the last Mr. Fox--especially if you met him
+with his old-fashioned hat on in the street--looked far more of a Puritan
+divine than of the literary man, or the chief of the advanced thinkers in
+Church and State, or an M.P. At a later time what pleasure it gave me to
+listen to this distinguished East Anglian as he appeared at the crowded
+Anti-Corn Law meetings held in Covent Garden or Drury Lane! Ungainly in
+figure, monotonous in tone, almost without a particle of action, regarded
+as free in his religious opinions by the vast majority of his audience,
+who were, at that time, prone, even in London, to hold that Orthodoxy,
+like Charity, covered a multitude of sins. What an orator he was! How
+smoothly the sentences fell from his lips one after the other; with what
+happy wit did he expose Protectionist fallacies, or enunciate Free Trade
+principles, which up to that time had been held as the special property
+of the philosopher, far too subtle to be understood and appreciated by
+the mob! With what felicity did he illustrate his weighty theme; with
+what clearness did he bring home to the people the wrong and injustice
+done to every one of them by the landlord's attempt to keep up his rent
+by a tax on corn; and then with what glowing enthusiasm did they wait and
+listen for the climax, which, if studied, and perhaps artificial, seemed
+like the ocean wave to grow grander and larger the nearer it came, till
+it fell with resistless force on all around. It seems to me like a
+dream, all that distant and almost unrecorded past. I see no such
+meetings, I hear no such orators now. As Mr. Disraeli said of Lord
+Salisbury when he was Lord Robert Cecil, there was a want of finish about
+his style, and the remark holds good of the orator of to-day as
+contrasted with the platform speaker of the past. It is impossible to
+fancy anyone in our sober age attempting, to say nothing of succeeding in
+the attempt (my remarks, of course, do not apply to Irish audiences or
+Irish orators), to get an audience to rise _en masse_ and swear never to
+fold their arms, never to relax their efforts, till their end was gained
+and victory won; yet Mr. Fox did so, and long as I live shall I remember
+the night when, in response to his impassioned appeal, the whole
+house--and it was crowded to the ceiling--rose, ladies in the boxes,
+decent City men in the pit, gods in the gallery--to swear never to tire,
+never to rest, never to slacken, till the peasant at the plough, the
+cotton-spinner in the mill, the collier in the mine, the lone widow
+stitching for life far into the early morning in her wretched garret, and
+the pauper in his still more wretched cellar, ate their untaxed loaf. As
+the 'Publicola' of the _Weekly Dispatch_, Mr. Fox laboured to the end of
+his life in the good cause of Peace, Retrenchment, and Reform. It is not
+right that his memory should remain unrecorded--his life assuredly was an
+interesting one. Harriet Martineau writes in her autobiography that 'his
+editorial correspondence with me was unquestionably the reason, and in
+great measure the cause, of the greatest intellectual progress I ever
+made before the age of thirty.'
+
+But it was not from William Johnson Fox that at that time came to our
+small village the grain of light that was to leaven the lump around.
+Lecturing and oratory, and even public tea-meetings, were things almost
+unknown. Now and then a deputation from the London Missionary Society
+came to Wrentham, and in this way I remember William Ellis, then a
+missionary from Madagascar, and Mr. George Bennett, who, in conjunction
+with the Rev. Mr. Tyerman, had been on a tour of inspection to the
+islands of the South Seas, and to whose tales of travel rustic audiences
+listened with delight. Once upon a time--but that was later--the
+Religious Tract Society sent a deputation in the shape of a well-known
+travelling secretary, Mr. Jones. This Mr. Jones was inclined to
+corpulency, and I can well remember how we all laughed when, on one
+occasion, the daughter of a neighbouring minister, having opened the door
+in reply to his knock, ran delightedly into her papa's study to announce
+the arrival of the Tract Society!
+
+A great impression was also made in all parts of the country by the
+occasional appearances of the Anti-Slavery Society's lecturers. In 1831,
+as Sir G. Stephen tells us, the younger section of the Anti-Slavery body
+resolved to stir up the country by sending lecturers to the villages and
+towns of the country. The M.P.'s did not much like it. The idea was
+novel to them. 'Trust to Parliament,' said they; the outsiders replied,
+'Trust to the people.' This scheme of agitation, however, was rejected,
+and would have fallen to the ground had not a benevolent Quaker of the
+name of Cropper come forward. 'Friend S., what money dost thou want?'
+'I want 20,000 pounds, but I will begin if I can get one.' 'Then, I will
+give thee 500 pounds.' Joseph Sturge immediately followed with a promise
+of 250 pounds, and Mr. Wilberforce twenty guineas; and 1,000 pounds was
+raised, and competent agents sent out. It proved by no means an easy
+matter to obtain these lecturers, for their duty was not confined to
+lecturing; they had also to revive drooping anti-slavery societies and to
+establish new ones. Also they were to have collections at the end of
+every lecture. One of them who came to Wrentham was Captain Pilkington.
+'Pilkington,' writes Sir George Stephen, 'was a pleasing lecturer, and
+won over many by his amiable manners; but he wanted power, and resigned
+in six months.' We in Wrentham, however, did not think so, and I can to
+this day recall the sensation he created in our rustic minds as he
+described the horrors of slavery, and showed us the whip and chains by
+which those horrors were caused. To the Dissenting chapel most of these
+lecturers were indebted for their audience, and if I ever worked hard as
+a boy, it was to get signatures to anti-slavery petitions. Naturally, a
+Church parson came to regard all that was attacked by Reformers as a
+bulwark of the Establishment, and in our part the Meetingers' were the
+sole friends of the slave.
+
+As was to be expected, the reading of the village was of the most limited
+description. It is true we children jumped for joy as once a month came
+the carrier's cart from Beccles, with the books for the club--the
+_Evangelical Magazine_, for all the principal families of the
+congregation, and the _Penny Magazine_ and _Chambers's Journal_--then but
+in their infancy--for ourselves; but, apart from that, there was no
+reading worth mentioning. That which most astonishes the tourist in
+Ireland is the way in which people read the newspapers. In our Suffolk
+village the very reverse was the case, partly because there were few
+newspapers to read, partly because there were few to read them, and
+partly because they were dear to buy. The one paper which we took in was
+the _Suffolk Chronicle_, which made its appearance on Saturday morning,
+the price of which was sixpence, and which was edited by a sturdy Radical
+of the name of King, who to the last held to the belief that to have a
+London letter full of literary or critical talk for the Suffolk farmers
+was, not to put too fine a point on it, to throw pearls before swine.
+And perhaps he was right. I can well remember, when one of my early
+poetical contributions appeared in its columns, how a fear was expressed
+to me by a farmer's widow in our parish, lest 'it had cost me a lot o'
+money' to have that effort of my muse in print. Mr. Childs, of Bungay,
+had many experiences, equally rustic and still more illustrative of the
+simplicity of the class. Once upon a time one of them came in a great
+state of excitement for a copy of the 'Life of Mr. General Gazetteer.'
+On another occasion a farmer's wife came in search of a Testament. She
+wanted it directly, and she wanted it of a large type. A specimen was
+selected, which met with the worthy woman's approval. But the question
+was, could she have it in half an hour, as she would be away for that
+time shopping in the town, and would call for it on her return. She was
+told that she could, and great was her astonishment when, on calling on
+her return for the Testament, there it was, printed in the particular
+type she had selected, ready for her use.
+
+I have a very strong idea that the calm of the country and the peaceful
+occupations of the people had not a very rousing influence upon the
+intellect. I may go further, and say that the cares of the farm, when
+high farming was unknown, did not much lift at that time the master above
+the man. The latter wore a smock-frock, while the former, perhaps,
+sported a blue coat with brass buttons, and had rather a better kind of
+head-dress, and ambled along on a little steady cob, that knew at which
+ale-house to call for the regular allowance, quite as well as his master.
+But as regards talk--which was chiefly of bullocks and pigs--well, there
+really was no very great difference after all. To such religion was the
+mainspring which kept the whole intellect going; and religion was to be
+had at the meeting. And I can well remember how strange it seemed to me
+that these rough, simple, untutored sons of the soil could speak of it
+with enthusiasm, and could pray, at any rate, with astonishing fervour.
+Away from the influence of the meeting-house there existed a Boeotian
+state of mind, only to be excited by appeals to the senses of the most
+palpable character, a state of mind in which faith--the evidence of
+things not seen, according to Paul--was quite out of the question; and I
+regret to say that, notwithstanding the activity of the last fifty years
+and the praiseworthy and laborious efforts of the East Anglian clergy in
+all quarters, suitably to rouse and feed the intellect of the East
+Anglian peasantry, a good deal yet remains to be done. Only a year or
+two ago, riding on an omnibus in a Suffolk village, the driver asked me
+if people could go to America by land. 'Of course not,' was my reply.
+'Why do you ask such a question?' Well, it came out that he had 'heerd
+tell how people got to Americay in ten days; and he did not see how they
+could do that unless they went by land, and had good hosses to get 'em
+there at that time.' On my explaining the real state of affairs, he
+admitted, by way of apology, that he was not much of a traveller himself.
+Once he had been to Colchester; but that was a long time ago.
+
+But to return to the _Suffolk Chronicle_. It was my duty as a lad, when
+it had been duly studied at home, to take it to the next subscriber, and
+I fancy by the time the paper had gone its round it was not a little the
+worse for wear. But there were other political impulses which tended to
+create and feed the sacred flame of civil and religious liberty. In one
+corner of the village lived a small shopkeeper, who stored away, among
+his pots and pans of treacle and sugar and grocery, a few well-thumbed
+copies, done up in dirty brown paper, of the squibs and caricatures
+published by Hone, whom I can just remember, a red-faced old gentleman in
+black, in the _Patriot_ office, and George Cruikshank, with whom I was to
+spend many a merry hour in after-life. This small shopkeeper was one of
+the chapel people--a kind of superintendent in the Sunday-school, for
+which office he was by no means fitted, but there was no one else to take
+the berth, and as the family also dealt with him in many ways, I had
+often to repair to his shop. It was then our young eyes were opened as
+to the wickedness in high places by the perusal of the 'Political House
+that Jack built,' and other publications of a similar revolutionary
+character. Nothing is sacred to the caricaturist, and half a century ago
+bishops and statesmen and lords and kings were very fair subjects for the
+exercise of his art. In our day things have changed for the better,
+partly as the result of the Radical efforts, of which respectability at
+that time stood so much in awe. London newspapers rarely reached so far
+as Wrentham. It was the fashion then to look to Ipswich for light and
+leading. However, as the cry for reform increased in strength, and the
+debates inside the House of Commons and out waxed fiercer, now and then
+even a London newspaper found its way into our house, and I can well
+remember how our hearts glowed within us as some one of us read, while
+father smoked his usual after-dinner pipe, previous to going out to spend
+the afternoon visiting his sick and afflicted; and how such names as Earl
+Grey, and Lord John Russell, and Lord Brougham--the people then called
+him Harry Brougham; it was a pity that he was ever anything else--were
+familiar in our mouths as household words.
+
+In another way also there came to the children in Wrentham the growing
+perception of a larger world than that in which we lived, and moved, and
+had our being. One of the historic sites of East Anglia is Framlingham,
+a small market town, lying a little off the highroad to London, a few
+miles from what always seemed to me the very uninteresting village of
+Needham Market, though at one time Godwin, the author of 'Caleb
+Williams,' preached in the chapel there. There is now a public school
+for Suffolk boys at Framlingham, and it may yet make a noise in the
+world. Framlingham in our time has given London Mr. Jeaffreson, a
+successful man of letters, and Sir Henry Thompson, a still more
+successful surgeon. In my young days it was chiefly noted for its
+castle. The mother of that amiable and excellent lady, Mrs. Trimmer,
+also came from Framlingham; and it is to be hoped that the old town may
+have had something to do with the formation of the character of a woman
+whom now we should sneer at, perhaps, as goody-goody, but who, when
+George the Third was King, did much for the education and improvement of
+the young. I read in Mrs. Trimmer's life 'that her father was a man of
+an excellent understanding, and of great piety; and so high was his
+reputation for knowledge of divinity, and so exemplary his moral conduct,
+that, as an exception to their general rule, which admitted no laymen, he
+was chosen member of a clerical club in the town (Ipswich) in which he
+resided. From him,' continues the biographer of the daughter, 'she
+imbibed the purest sentiments of religion and virtue, and learnt betimes
+the fundamental principles of Christianity.' Well, it is hoped Mr. Kirby
+did his best for his daughter; but, after all, how much more potent is
+the influence of a mother! And hence I may claim for Framlingham a fair
+share in the formation of even so burning and shining a light as Mrs.
+Trimmer.
+
+The name Framlingham, say the learned, or did say--for what learned men
+say at one time does not always correspond with what they say at
+another--is composed of two Saxon words, signifying the habitation of
+strangers; and to strangers the place is still rich in interest. In its
+church sleeps the unfortunate, but heroic, Earl of Surrey, whose
+harmonious verse still delights the students of English literature. Some
+say he was born at Framlingham. This is matter of doubt; but there is no
+doubt about the fact that he was buried there by his son, the Earl of
+Northampton, who erected a handsome monument to his father's memory. The
+monument is an elevated tomb, with the Earl's arms and those of his lady
+in the front in the angles, and with an inscription in the centre. It
+has his effigy in armour, with an ermined mantle, his feet leaning
+against a lion couchant. On his left is his lady in black, with an
+ermined mantle and a coronet. Both have their hands held up as in
+prayer. On a projecting plinth in front is the figure of his second son,
+the Earl of Northampton, in armour, with a mantle of ermine, kneeling in
+prayer. Behind, in a similar plinth, kneeling with a coronet, and in
+robes, is his eldest daughter, Jane, Countess of Westmoreland, on the
+right; and his third daughter Catherine, the wife of Lord Henry Berkeley
+on the left. The monument is kept in order, and painted occasionally, as
+directed by the Earl of Northampton, out of the endowment of his hospital
+at Greenwich. In repairing the monument in October, 1835, the Rev.
+George Attwood, curate of Framlingham, discovered the remains of the Earl
+lying embedded in clay, directly under his figure on his tomb. It is
+difficult now to find what high treason the chivalrous and poetic and
+gallant Earl had been guilty of; but at that time our eighth Henry ruled
+the land, and if he wished anyone out of the way, he had not far to go
+for witnesses or judge or jury ready to do his wicked and wanton will.
+To the shame of England be it said, the Earl of Surrey was beheaded when
+he was only thirty years of age. No particulars are preserved of his
+deportment in prison or on the scaffold, but from the noble spirit he
+evinced at his trial, and from his general character, it cannot be
+doubted that he behaved in the last scene of his existence with fortitude
+and dignity. On the barbarous injustice to which he was sacrificed
+comment is unnecessary; but regret at his early fate is increased by the
+circumstance that Henry was in extremities when he ordered his execution,
+and that his swollen and enfeebled hands were unequal to the task of
+signing his death-warrant. In this respect more fortunate was the father
+of Surrey, the Duke of Norfolk, who is buried near the altar of the
+church at Framlingham. He also was condemned to death, but in the
+meanwhile the King died, and his victim was set free. Not far off is the
+tomb of Henry Fitzroy, a natural son of King Henry. He was a friend of
+Surrey, and was to have married his sister. The other monuments which
+adorn the interior of this magnificent church are a table of black
+marble, supported by angels, to the memory of Sir Robert Hitcham, a mural
+monument by Roubillac, and others to commemorate virtues and graces, as
+embodied in the lives of decent men and women in whom the world has long
+ceased to take any interest.
+
+The venerable castle--here I quote Dr. Dugdale's 'British
+Traveller'--with its eventful history, imparts the strongest interest to
+the town of Framlingham. Tradition refers its origin to the sixth
+century, and ascribes it to Redwald, one of the early Saxon monarchs.
+St. Edmund the Martyr fled hither in 870, and was besieged by the Danes,
+who took Framlingham and held it fifty years. The Norman King gave the
+castle to the Bigods. The castle passed through many hands. It was
+there Queen Mary took shelter when, after the death of Edward VI., Lady
+Jane Grey was called to the throne, and thence she came to London, on the
+capture of the former, to take possession of the crown. It was an evil
+day for England when she came to Framlingham Castle and beguiled the
+hearts of the Suffolk men. Old Fox tells us that when Mary had returned
+to her castle at Framlingham there resorted to her 'the Suffolke men,
+who, being alwayes forward in promoting the proceedings of the Gospel,
+promised her their aid and help, so that she would not attempt the
+alteration of the religion which her brother, King Edward, had before
+established by laws and orders publickly enacted, and received by the
+consent of the whole realm in his behalf. She afterwards agreed with
+such promise made unto them that no innovation should be made of
+religion, as that no man would or could then have misdoubted her.
+"Victorious by the aid of the Suffolke men," Queen Mary soon forgot her
+promise. They of course remonstrated. It was, methinks,' adds Fox, 'an
+heavie word that she answered to the Suffolke men afterwards which did
+make supplication unto her grace to performe her promise. "For so much,"
+saith she, "as you being but members desire to rule your head, you shall
+one day perceive the members must obey their head, and not look to rule
+over the same."' Well, Queen Mary was as good as her word. As Fox adds,
+'What she performed on her part the thing itself and the whole story of
+the persecution doth testifie.' But the stubborn Suffolk gospellers were
+not to be put down, and a remnant had been left in Framlingham, as well
+as in other parts of the country. At Framlingham we find a Richard
+Goltie, son-in-law of Samuel Ward, of Ipswich, was instituted to the
+rectory in 1630. In 1650 he refused the engagement to submit to the then
+existing Government, and was removed, when Henry Sampson, M.A., a fellow
+of Pembroke Hall, Cambridge, was appointed by his college to the vacancy.
+He continued there till the Restoration, when Mr. Goltie returned and
+took possession of the living, which he continued to hold till his death.
+Not being satisfied to conform, Mr. Sampson continued awhile preaching at
+Framlingham to those who were attached to his ministry, in private houses
+and other buildings, and by his labours laid the foundation of the
+Congregational or Independent Church in that town, as appears from a note
+in the Church Book belonging to the Dissenters meeting at Woodbridge, in
+the Quay Lane. Mr. Sampson collected materials for a history of
+Nonconformity, a great part of which is incorporated in Calamy and
+Palmer's works. It was to him that John Fairfax, of Needham Market,
+wrote, when he and some other ministers were shut up in Bury Gaol for the
+crime of preaching the Gospel. It appears that they had met in the
+parish church, at Walsham-le-Willows, where, after the liturgy was read
+by the clergyman of the parish, a sermon was preached by a non-licensed
+minister. The party were then taken and committed to prison, where they
+remained till the next Quarter Sessions, when they were released upon
+their recognisances to appear at the next Assizes. Then, it seems,
+though not convicted upon any other offence, upon the suggestion of the
+justices, to whom they were strangers, they were committed again to
+prison, on the plea that _they were persons dangerous to the public
+peace_. Thus were Dissenters treated in the good old times. Mr. Sampson
+seems to have fared somewhat better. After his removal, he travelled on
+the Continent, returned to London, entered himself at the College of
+Physicians, and lived and died in good repute. The old congregation
+having become Unitarian, a new one was formed, and of this Church a
+pillar was Mr. Henry Thompson--a gentleman well known and widely honoured
+in his day. This Mr. Thompson had a son, who was sent to Wrentham to be
+educated for awhile with myself. An uncle of his, one of the most
+amiable of men, lived at Southwold, close by, and I presume it was by his
+means that the settlement was effected. Be that as it may, the change
+was a welcome one, as it gave me a pleasant companion for nearly five
+years of boyish life. I confess my two sisters--one of whom has, alas!
+long been in her grave--did all they could in the way of sports and
+pastimes to meet my wants and wishes, and act like boys; but the fact is,
+though it may be doubted in these days of Women's Rights, girls are not
+boys, nor can they be expected to behave as such.
+
+I confess the advent of this young Thompson from Framlingham was a great
+event in our small family circle. In the first place he came from a
+town, and that at once gave him a marked superiority. Then his father
+kept a horse and gig, for it was thus young Thompson came to Wrentham,
+and all the world over a gig has been a symbol of the respectability dear
+to the British heart; and he had been for that time and as an only son
+carefully and intelligently trained by one of the family who, in the
+person of the late Edward Miall, founder of the _Nonconformist_, and M.P.
+for Bradford, was supposed to be the incarnation of what was termed the
+dissidence of Dissent. Young Thompson was also what would be called a
+genteel youth, and gave me ideas as to wearing straps to my trousers,
+oiling my hair, and generally adorning my person, which had never entered
+into my unsophisticated head. He also had been to London, and as
+Framlingham was some twenty miles nearer the Metropolis--the centre of
+intelligence--than Wrentham, the intelligence of a Framlingham lad was of
+course expected, _a fortiori_, to be of a stronger character than that of
+one born twenty miles farther from the sun of London. There was also a
+good deal of talent in the family on the mother's side. Mrs. Thompson
+was a Miss Medley, and Mr. Medley was an artist of great merit, the son
+of Mr. Medley, of Liverpool, a leading Baptist minister in his day, and a
+writer of hymns still sung in Baptist churches. Mr. Medley was also
+active as a Liberal, and was credited by us boys with a personal
+acquaintance with no less illustrious an individual than the great
+Brougham himself. Once or twice he came to lodge during the summer at
+Southwold; naturally he was visited there by his grandson, who would
+return well primed with political anecdote to our rustic circle, and was
+deemed by me more of an authority than ever. Once or twice, too, I had
+the honour of being a visitor, and heard Mr. Medley, a fine old
+gentleman, who lived to a very advanced age, talk of art and artists and
+other matters quite out of my usual sphere. It is not surprising, then,
+that the grandson became in time quite an artist himself, though he is
+better known to the world, not so much in that capacity, but as Sir Henry
+Thompson, certainly not the least distinguished surgeon of our day. In
+Lord Beaconsfield's last novel, 'Endymion,' we have a passing reference
+to one Wrentham lad, Sir Charles Wetherell, as 'the eccentric and too
+uncompromising Wetherell.' Assuredly the fame of another lad, Sir Henry
+Thompson, connected with Wrentham, will longer live.
+
+This reference to Sir Henry Thompson reminds me of his early attempts at
+rhyme, which I trust he will forgive me for rescuing from oblivion. Once
+upon a time we captured a young cuckoo, and having carefully gorged it
+with bread-and-milk, and left it in a nest in an outhouse, which we
+devoted mainly to rabbits, the next morning the poor bird was found to be
+dead. A prize was offered for the best couplet. Three of us contended.
+My sister wrote:
+
+ 'This lonely sepulchre contains
+ A little cuckoo's dead remains.'
+
+I wrote:
+
+ 'To our grief, cuckoo sweet
+ Is lying underneath our feet.'
+
+Thompson took quite a different and, read by the light of his subsequent
+career, a far more characteristic view of the case. He took care, as a
+medical man, to dwell on the cause which had terminated the career of so
+interesting a bird. According to him,
+
+ 'It had a breast as soft as silk,
+ And died of eating bread-and-milk.'
+
+Assuredly in this case the child was father to the man.
+
+But the great awakening of the time, that which made the dry bones live,
+and fluttered the dove-cotes of Toryism--we never heard the word
+Conservative then--was the General Election. At that time we were always
+having General Elections. We had one, of course, when George IV. died
+and King William reigned in his stead; we had another when the Duke was
+out and the Whigs came in; and then we had another when the cry ran
+through the land, and reached even the most remote villages of East
+Anglia, of 'The Bill, the whole Bill, and nothing but the Bill!' Voters
+were brought down, or up, as the case might be, from all quarters of the
+land. Coaches-full came tearing along, gorgeous with election flags, and
+placarded all over with names of rival candidates. Gentlemen of ancient
+lineage called to request of the meanest elector the favour of his vote
+and influence. It was with pain the Liberals of our little village
+resolved to vote against our Benacre neighbour, Sir Thomas Gooch, who had
+long represented the county, but of whom the Radicals spoke derisively as
+Gaffer Gooch, or the Benacre Bull, and chose in his stead a country
+squire known as Robert Newton Shaw, utterly unknown in our quarter of the
+county.
+
+It was rather a trying time for the Wrentham Liberals and Dissenters to
+do their duty, for Sir Thomas was a neighbour, and always was a pleasant
+gentleman in the parish, and had power to do anyone mischief who went
+against him. Our medical man did not vote at all. Our squire actually,
+I believe, supported Sir Thomas, and altogether respectable people found
+themselves in an extremely awkward position. At Southwold the people
+were a little more independent, for Gaffer Gooch rarely illuminated that
+little town with his presence; and as my father, with the economy which
+is part and parcel of the Scotchman as he leaves his native land, but
+which rarely extends to his children, had, by teaching gentlemen's sons
+and other ways, been able to save a little, which little had been devoted
+to the purchase of cottage property in Southwold (well do I remember the
+difficulty there was in collecting the rents; never, assuredly, were
+people so much afflicted or so unfortunate when the time of payment
+came), it was for Southwold that he claimed his vote. I, as the son, was
+permitted to share in the glories of that eventful day. The election
+took place at school-time, and my companion was Henry Thompson. We had
+to walk betimes to Frostenden, where Farmer Downing lived, who was that
+_rara avis_ a Liberal tenant farmer; but of course he did not vote tenant
+farmer, but as a freeholder. It was with alarm that Mrs. Downing saw her
+lord and master drive off with us two lads in the gig. There had been
+riots at London, riots as near as Ipswich, and why not at Halesworth? A
+mile or two after we had started we met, per arrangement, the Southwold
+contingent, who joined us with flags flying and a band playing, and all
+the pride and pomp and circumstance of war. We rode in a gig, and our
+animal was a steady-going mare, and behaved as such; but all had not gigs
+or steady-going mares. Some were in carts, some were on horseback, some
+in ancient vehicles furbished up for the occasion; and as the band played
+and the people shouted, some of the animals felt induced to dance, and
+especially was this restlessness on the part of the quadrupeds increased
+as we neared Halesworth, in the market-place of which was the
+polling-booth, and in the streets of which we out-lying voters riding in
+procession made quite a show. Halesworth, or Holser, as it was called,
+was distant about nine miles, lying to the left of Yoxford, a village
+which its admirers were wont to call the Garden of Suffolk. In 1809 the
+Bishop of Norwich wrote from Halesworth: 'The church in this place is
+uncommonly fine, and the ruins of an old castle (formerly the seat of the
+Howards) are striking and majestic.' But when we went there the ruins
+were gone--the more is the pity--and the church remained, at that time
+held by no less a Liberal than Richard Whately, afterwards Archbishop of
+Dublin. I used at times to meet with a country gentleman--a brother of a
+noble lord--who after he had spent a fortune merrily, as country
+gentlemen did in the good old times, came to live on a small annuity,
+and, in spite of his enormous daily consumption of London porter at the
+leading inn of the town, managed to reach a good old age. The hon.
+gentleman and I were on friendly terms, and sometimes he would talk of
+Whately, who had often been at his house. But, alas! he remembered
+nothing of a man who became so celebrated in his day except that he would
+eat after dinner any number of oranges, and was so fond of active
+exercise that he would take a pitchfork and fill his tumbrels with
+manure, or work just like a labourer on a farm. Of the Doctor's aversion
+to church-bell ringing we have a curious illustration in a letter which
+appeared in the _Suffolk Chronicle_ in 1825: 'A short time since a
+wedding took place in the families of two of the oldest and most
+respectable inhabitants of the town, when it was understood that the
+Rector had, for the first time since his induction to his living, given
+permission for the bells to greet the happy pair. After, however,
+sounding a merry peal a short hour and a half, a message was received at
+the belfry that the Rector thought they had rung long enough. The
+tardiness with which this mandate was obeyed soon brought the rev.
+gentleman in person to enforce his order, which was then reluctantly
+complied with to the great disappointment of the inhabitants, and
+mortification of the ringers, several of whom had come from a
+considerable distance to assist in the festivities of the day.' The
+Independent chapel was an old-fashioned meeting-house, full of heavy
+pillars, which, as they intercepted the view of the preacher, were
+favourable to that gentle sleep so peculiarly refreshing on a Sunday
+afternoon--especially in hot weather--in the square and commodious family
+pew. The minister was an old and venerable-looking divine of the name of
+Dennant, who was always writing little poems--I remember the opening
+lines of one,
+
+ 'A while ago when I was nought,
+ And neither body, soul, nor thought'--
+
+and whose 'Soul Prosperity,' a volume of sober prose, reached a second
+edition. His grandson, Mr. J. R. Robinson, now the energetic manager of
+the _Daily News_, may be said to have achieved a position in the world of
+London of which his simple-hearted and deeply-devotional grandfather
+could never have dreamed. As I was the son of a brother minister, Mr.
+Dennant's house was open to myself and Thompson, though we did not go
+there on the particular day of which I write. The leading tradesman of
+the town was a Liberal, and had at least one pretty daughter, and there
+we went. Most of the day, however, we mixed with the mob which crowded
+round, while the voters--you may be sure, not all of them sober--were
+brought up to vote. The excitement was immense; there was the hourly
+publication of the state of the poll--more or less unreliable, but,
+nevertheless, exciting; and what a tumult there was as one or other of
+the rival candidates drove up to his temporary quarters in a carriage and
+pair, or carriage and four, made a short speech, which was cheered by his
+friends and howled at derisively by his foes, while the horses were being
+changed, and then drove off at a gallop to make the same display and to
+undergo the same ordeal elsewhere! To be sure, there was a little rough
+play; now and then a rush was made by nobody in particular, and for no
+particular reason; or, again, an indiscreet voter--rendered additionally
+so by indulgence in beer--gave occasion for offence; but really, beyond a
+scrimmage, a hat broken, a coat or two torn or bespattered with mud, a
+cockade rudely snatched from the wearer, little harm was done. The
+voters knew each other, and had come to vote, and had stayed to see the
+fun. For the timid, the infirm, the old, the day was a trying one; but
+there was an excitement and a life about the affair one misses now that
+the ballot has come into play, and has made the voter less of a man than
+ever. Of course the shops were shut up. All who could afford to do so
+kept open house, and at every available window were the bright, beaming
+faces of the Suffolk fair--oh, they were jolly, those election days of
+old! Well, in East Anglia, as elsewhere, spite of the parsons, spite of
+the landlords, spite of the slavery of old custom, spite of old
+traditions, the freeholders voted Reform, and Reform was won, and
+everyone believed that the kingdom of heaven was at hand. In ten years,
+I heard people say, there would be no tithes for the farmer to pay, and
+welcome was the announcement; for then, as now, the agricultural interest
+was depressed, and the farmer was a ruined man. Now one takes but a
+languid interest in the word Reform, but then it stirred the hearts of
+the people; and how they celebrated their victory, how they hoisted flags
+and got up processions and made speeches, and feasted and hurrahed,
+'twere tedious to tell. All over the land the people rejoiced with
+exceeding joy. Old things, they believed, had passed away--all things
+had become new.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+BUNGAY AND ITS PEOPLE.
+
+
+Bungay Nonconformity--Hannah More--The Childses--The Queen's
+Librarian--Prince Albert.
+
+In the beginning of the present century, a disgraceful attack on
+Methodism--by which the writer means Dissent in all its
+branches--appeared in what was then the leading critical journal of the
+age, the _Edinburgh Review_. 'The sources,' said the writer, a clergyman
+(to his shame be it recorded) of the Church of England--no less
+distinguished a divine than the far-famed Sydney Smith--'from which we
+shall derive our extracts are the Evangelical and Methodistical magazines
+for the year 1807, works which are said to be circulated to the amount of
+18,000 or 20,000 every month, and which contain the sentiments of
+Arminian and Calvinistic Methodists, and of the Evangelical clergymen of
+the Church of England. We shall use the general term of Methodism to
+designate these three classes of fanatics, not troubling ourselves to
+point out the finer shades and nicer discriminations of lunacy, but
+treating them as all in one general conspiracy against common-sense and
+rational orthodox Christianity.' To East Anglia came the reputed worthy
+Canon for an illustration of what he termed their policy to have a great
+change of ministers. Accordingly, he reprints from the _Evangelical
+Magazine_ the following notice of an East Anglian Nonconformist
+ordination, which, by-the-bye, in no degree affects the charge unjustly
+laid at the door of these 'fanatics,' as engaged 'in one general
+conspiracy against common-sense and rational orthodox Christianity.'
+'Same day the Rev. W. Haward, from Hoxton Academy, was ordained over the
+Independent Church at Rendham, Suffolk; Mr. Pickles, of Walpole, began
+with prayer and reading; Mr. Price, of Woodbridge, delivered the
+introductory discourse, and asked the questions; Mr. Dennant, of
+Halesworth, offered the ordinary prayer; _Mr. Shufflebottom_ [the italics
+are the Canon's], of Bungay, gave the charge from Acts xx. 28; Mr.
+Vincent, of Deal, the general prayer; and Mr. Walford, of Yarmouth,
+preached to the people from Phil. ii. 16.' As a lad, I saw a good deal
+of Bungay, though I never knew the Shufflebottom whose name seems to have
+been such a stumbling-block and cause of offence to the Reverend Canon of
+St. Paul's. I say Reverend Canon of St. Paul's, because, though the
+writer had not gained that honour when the review appeared, it was as
+Canon he returned to the charge when he sanctioned the republication of
+it in his collected works. It was at Bungay that I had my first painful
+experience of the utter depravity of the human heart--a truth of which,
+perhaps, for a boy, I learned too much from the pulpit. The river
+Waveney runs through Bungay, and one day, fishing there, I lent a
+redcoat--with whom, like most boys, I was proud to scrape an
+acquaintance--my line, he promising to return it when I came back from
+dinner. When I did so, alas! the red-coat was gone.
+
+Nonconformity in Bungay seems to have originated in the days of the Lord
+Protector, in the person of Zephaniah Smith, who was the author of: (1)
+'The Dome of Heretiques; or, a discovery of subtle Foxes who were tyed
+tayle to tayle, and crept into the Church to do mischief'; (2) 'The
+Malignant's Plot; or, the Conspiracie of the Wicked against the Just,
+laid open in a sermon preached at Eyke, in Suffolk, January 23, 1697.
+Preached and published to set forth the grounds why the Wicked lay such
+crimes to the charge of God's people as they are cleare off'; (3) 'The
+Skillful Teacher.' Beloe says of this Smith that 'he was a most singular
+character, and among the first founders of the sect of the Antinomians.'
+One of the first leaders of this sect is said by Wood to have been John
+Eaton, who was a minister and preacher at Wickham Market, in which
+situation and capacity Smith succeeded him. This Smith published many
+other tracts and sermons, chiefly fanatical and with fantastical titles.
+One is described by Wood, and is called 'Directions for Seekers and
+Expectants, or a Guide for Weak Christians in these discontented times.'
+'I shall not give an extract from these sermons,' writes Beloe, who is
+clearly, like Wood, by no means a sympathetic or appreciative critic,
+'though very curious, but they are not characterized by any peculiarity
+of diction, and are chiefly remarkable for the enthusiasm with which the
+doctrine of the sect to which the preacher belonged is asserted and
+vindicated. The hearers also must have been endowed with an
+extraordinary degree of patience, as they are spun out to a great
+length.' Mr. Smith's ministry at Bungay led to a contention, which
+resulted in an appeal to the young Protector, Richard Cromwell. Then we
+find Mr. Samuel Malbon silenced by the Act of Uniformity, who is
+described as a man mighty in the Scriptures, who became pastor to the
+church in Amsterdam. In 1695 we hear of a conventicle in Bungay, with a
+preacher with a regularly paid stipend of 40 pounds a year. Till 1700
+the congregation worshipped in a barn; but in that year the old
+meeting-house was built, and let to the congregation at 10 pounds per
+annum. In 1729 it was made over to the Presbyterians or Independents
+worshipping there, 'for ever.' The founders of that conventicle seem to
+have suffered for their faith; yet the glorious Revolution of 1688 had
+been achieved, and William of Orange--who had come from a land which had
+nobly sheltered the earlier Nonconformists--was seated on the throne.
+
+Bungay, till Sydney Smith made it famous, was not much known to the
+general public. It was on the borders of the county and out of the way.
+The only coach that ran through it, I can remember, was a small one that
+ran from Norwich through Beccles and Bungay to Yarmouth; and, if I
+remember aright, on alternate days. There was, at any rate, no direct
+communication between it and London. Bungay is a well-built market town,
+skirted on the east and west by the navigable river Waveney, which
+divides it from Norfolk, and was at one time noted for the manufacture of
+knitted worsted stockings and Suffolk hempen cloth; but those trades are
+now obsolete. The great Roger Bigod--one of the men who really did come
+over with the Conqueror--built its castle, the ruins of which yet remain,
+on a bold eminence on the river Waveney. 'The castle,' writes Dugdale,
+'once the residence and stronghold of the Bigods, and by one of them
+conceived to be impregnable, has become the habitation of helpless
+poverty, many miserable hovels having been reared against its walls for
+the accommodation of the lowest class.' The form of the castle appears
+to have been octangular. The ruins of two round fortal towers and
+fortresses of the west and south-west angles are still standing, as also
+three sides of the great tower or keep, the walls of which are from 7 to
+11 feet thick and from 15 to 17 feet high. In the midst of the ruins, on
+what is called the Terrace, is a mineral spring, now disused, and near it
+is a vault, or dungeon, of considerable depth. Detached portions of the
+wall and their foundations are spread in all directions in the castle
+grounds, a ridge of which, about 40 yards long, forms the southern
+boundary of a bowling-green which commands delightful prospects. The
+mounds of earth raised for the defence of the castle still retain much of
+their original character, though considerably reduced in height. One of
+them, facing the south, was partly removed in 1840, with the intention of
+forming a cattle market. As a boy I often heard of the proud boast of
+Hugh Bigod, second Earl, one of King Stephen's most formidable opponents,
+as recorded by Camden:
+
+ 'Were I in my castle of Bungay,
+ Upon the river Waveney,
+ I would not care for the King of Cockeney.'
+
+In ancient times the Waveney was a much broader stream than it is now,
+and Bungay was called _Le Bon Eye_, or the good island, then being nearly
+surrounded by water. Hence the name, in the vulgar dialect, of Bungay.
+To 'go to Bungay to get a new bottom' was a common saying in Suffolk.
+
+In 1777 we find Hannah More writing to Garrick from Bungay, which she
+describes as 'a much better town than I expected, very clean and
+pleasant.' 'You are the favourite bard of Bungay'--at that time the
+tragedians of the city of Norwich were staying there--'and,' writes
+Hannah, who at that time had not become serious and renounced the
+gaieties of the great world, 'the dramatic furore rages terribly among
+the people, the more so, I presume, from being allowed to vent itself so
+seldom. Everybody goes to the play every night,--that is, every other
+night, which is as often as they perform. Visiting, drinking, and even
+card-playing, is for this happy month suspended; nay, I question if, like
+Lent, it does not stop the celebration of weddings, for I do not believe
+there is a damsel in the town who would spare the time to be married
+during this rarely-occurring scene of festivity. It must be confessed,
+however, the good folks have no bad taste.' It must be recollected that
+Hannah More in reality belongs to East Anglia. She was the daughter of
+Jacob More, who was descended from a respectable family at Harleston. He
+was a High Churchman, but all his family were Nonconformists. His mother
+used to tell young people that they would have known how to value Gospel
+privileges had they lived like her, when at midnight pious worshippers
+went with stealthy steps through the snow to hear the words of
+inspiration delivered by a holy man at her father's house; while her
+father, with a drawn sword, guarded the entrance from violent or profane
+intrusion, adding that they boarded the minister and kept his horse for
+10 pounds a year. An unfortunate lawsuit deprived the Mores of their
+property, and thus it was that the celebrated Hannah was born at
+Gloucestershire, and not in Suffolk or Norfolk. The family mansion was
+at Wenhaston, not very far from Wrentham.
+
+In my young days Bungay owed all its fame and most of its wealth to the
+far-famed John Childs, who was one of our first Church Rate martyrs, to
+whom is due mainly the destruction of the Bible-printing monopoly, and to
+whom the late Edward Miall was much indebted for establishing the
+_Nonconformist_ newspaper. For many years it was the habit of Mr. Childs
+to celebrate that event by a dinner, at which the wine was good and the
+talk was better. Old John Childs, of Bungay, had a cellar of port which
+a dean might have envied; and many was the bottle that I cracked with him
+as a young man, after a walk from Wrentham to Bungay, a distance of
+fourteen miles, to talk with him on things in general, and politics in
+particular. He was emphatically a self-made man--a man who would have
+made his way anywhere, and a man who had a large acquaintance with the
+reformers of his day in all parts of the country. On one occasion the
+great Dan O'Connell came to pay him a visit, much to the delight of the
+Suffolk Radicals, and to the horror of the Tories. The first great
+dinner at which I had the honour of being present, and to which I was
+taken by my father, who was a great friend of Mr. Childs, was on the
+occasion of the presentation to the latter of a testimonial by a
+deputation of distinguished Dissenters from Ipswich in connection with
+his incarceration in the county gaol at Ipswich, for having refused to
+pay rates for the support of a Church in which he did not believe, and
+for the performance of a service in which he took no part. At that time
+'the dear old Church of England,' while it was compelled to tolerate
+Dissent, insisted on Dissent being taxed to the uttermost farthing; and
+that it does not do so now, and that it is more popular in consequence,
+is due to the firm stand taken by such men as John Childs of Bungay. He
+was a great phrenologist. In his garden he had a summer-house, which he
+facetiously termed his scullery, where he had some three hundred plaster
+casts, many of which he had taken himself of public individuals and
+friends and acquaintances. My father was honoured in this way, as also
+my eldest sister. Sir Henry Thompson and I escaped that honour, but I
+have not forgotten his dark, piercing glance at our heads, when, as boys,
+we first came into his presence, and how I trusted that the verdict was
+satisfactory. Of course the Childses went to Meeting, but when I knew
+Bungay Mr. Shufflebottom had been gathered to his fathers, and the Rev.
+John Blaikie, a Scotchman, and therefore always a welcome guest at
+Wrentham, reigned in his stead. Mr. Childs had a large and promising
+family, few of whom now remain. His daughter was an exceptionally gifted
+and glorious creature, as in that early day it seemed to me. She also
+died early, leaving but one son, Mr. Crisp, a partner in the well-known
+legal firm of Messrs. Ashurst, Morris, and Crisp. It was in the little
+box by the window of the London Coffee House--now, alas! no more--where
+Mr. Childs, on the occasion of his frequent visits to London, always
+gathered around him his friends, that I first made the acquaintance of
+Mr. Ashurst, the head of the firm--a self-made man, like Mr. Childs, of
+wonderful acuteness and great public spirit. In religion Mr. Ashurst was
+far more advanced than the Bungay printer. 'It is not a thing to reason
+about,' said the latter; and so to the last he remained orthodox,
+attended the Bungay Meeting-house, invited the divines of that order to
+his house, put in appearance at ordination services, and openings of
+chapels, and was to be seen at May Meetings when in town, where
+occasionally his criticisms were of a freer order than is usually met
+with at such places.
+
+'The Bungay Press,' wrote a correspondent of the _Bookseller_, on the
+death of Mr. Charles Childs, who had succeeded his father in the
+business, 'has been long known for its careful and excellent work.
+Established some short time before the commencement of the present
+century, its founder had, for twenty years, limited its productions to
+serial publications and books of a popular and useful character, and in
+the year 1823, soon after Mr. John Childs had taken control of the
+business, upwards of twenty wooden presses were working, at long hours,
+to supply the rapidly-increasing demand for such works as folio Bibles,
+universal histories, domestic medicine books, and other publications then
+issuing in one and two shilling numbers from the press.' Originally Mr.
+Childs had been in a grocer's shop at Norwich. There he was met with by
+a Mr. Brightley, a printer and publisher, who, originally a schoolmaster
+at Beccles, had suggested to young Childs that he had better come and
+help him at Bungay than waste his time behind a counter. Fortunately for
+them both the young man acceded to the proposal, and travelled all over
+England driving tandem, and doing everywhere what we should now call a
+roaring trade. Then he married Mr. Brightley's daughter, and became a
+partner in the firm, which was known as that of John and R. Childs, and,
+latterly of Childs and Son. 'Uncle Robert,' as I used to hear him
+called, was little known out of the Bungay circle. He had a nice house,
+and lived comfortably, marrying, after a long courtship, the only one of
+the Stricklands who was not a writer. Agnes was often a visitor at
+Bungay, and not a little shocked at the atrocious after-dinner talk of
+the Bungay Radicals. 'Do you not think,' said she, in her somewhat
+stilted and tragic style of talk, one day, to a literary man who was
+seated next her, author of a French dictionary which the Childses were
+printing at the time--'Do you not think it was a cruel and wicked act to
+murder the sainted and unfortunate Charles I.?' 'Why, ma'am,' stuttered
+the author, while the dinner-party were silent, 'I'd have p-p-poisoned
+him.' The gifted authoress talked no more that day. Naturally, as a
+lad, seeing so much of Bungay, I wished to be a printer, but Mr. Childs
+said there was no use in being a printer without plenty of capital, and
+so that idea was renounced.
+
+But to return to Mr. John Childs. About the year 1826, in association
+with the late Joseph Ogle Robinson, he projected and commenced the
+publication of a series of books known in the trade as the 'Imperial
+Edition of Standard Authors,' which for many years maintained an
+extensive sale, and certainly then met an admitted literary want,
+furnishing the student and critical reader, in a cheap and handsome form,
+with dictionaries, histories, commentaries, biographies, and
+miscellaneous literature of acknowledged value and importance, such as
+Burke's works, Gibbon's 'Decline and Fall,' Howe's works, the writings of
+Lord Bacon--books which are still in the market, and which, if I may
+speak from a pretty wide acquaintance with students' libraries fifty
+years ago, were in great demand at that time. The disadvantage of such a
+series is that the books are too big to put in the pocket or to hold in
+the hand. But I do not know that that is a great disadvantage to a real
+student who takes up a book to master its contents, and not merely to
+pass away his time. To study properly a man must be in his study. In
+that particular apartment he is bound to have a table, and if you place a
+book on a table to read, it matters little the size of the page, or the
+number of columns each page contains. Mr. Childs set the fashion of
+reprinting standard authors on a good-sized page, with a couple of
+columns on each page. That fashion was followed by Mr. W. Smith--a Fleet
+Street publisher, than whom a better man never lived--and by Messrs.
+Chambers; but now it seems quite to have passed away. On the failure of
+Mr. Robinson, Mr. Childs' valuable reprints were placed in the hands of
+Westley and Davis, and subsequently with Ball, Arnold, and Co.; and
+latterly, I think, the late Mr. H. G. Bohn reissued them at intervals.
+As to his part publications, when Mr. Childs had given up pushing them,
+he disposed of them all to Mr. Virtue, of Ivy Lane, Paternoster Row, who
+then secured almost a monopoly of the part-number trade, and thus made a
+large fortune. 'I love books that come out in numbers,' says Lord
+Montford in 'Endymion,' 'as there is a little suspense, and you cannot
+deprive yourself of all interest by glancing at the last part of the last
+volume.' And so I suppose in the same way there will always be a
+part-number trade, though the reapers in the field are many, and the
+harvest is not what it was.
+
+Active and fiery in body and soul, Mr. John Childs, at a somewhat later
+period, with the sympathy and advocacy of Mr. Joseph Hume and other
+members of Parliament, and aided to a large extent by Lord Brougham,
+succeeded in procuring the appointment of a Committee of the House of
+Commons to inquire into the existing King's Printers' Patent for printing
+Bibles and Acts of Parliament, the period for the renewal of which was
+near at hand. The principle upon which the patent was originally granted
+appeared to be _correctness secured only by protection_--a fallacy which
+the voluminous evidence of the Committee most completely exposed. The
+late Alderman Besley, a typefounder, and a great friend of John Childs,
+as well as Robert Childs, practical printers, gave conclusive evidence on
+this head, and the result was that, although the patent was renewed for
+thirty years, instead of sixty as before, the Scriptures were sold to the
+public at a greatly reduced price, and the trade in Bibles, though
+nominally protected, has ever since been practically free.
+
+Nor did Mr. Childs' labours end here. In Scotland the right of printing
+Bibles had been granted exclusively to a company of private persons,
+Blaire and Bruce, neither of whom had any practical knowledge of the art
+of printing, or took any interest in the different editions of the Bible.
+The same men also had the supplying all the public revenue offices of
+Government with stationery, by which means they enjoyed an annual profit
+of more than 6,000 pounds a year. When the Government, in an economical
+mood, ordered them to relinquish the latter contract, not only were they
+compensated for the loss, but were continued in their vested rights as
+regards Bible-printing. In Scotland there was no one to interfere with
+their rights. In England patents had been given not only to the firm of
+Messrs. Strahan, Eyre and Spottiswoode, but to each of the two
+Universities of Cambridge and Oxford. Up to 1821 the Bibles of the
+English monopolists came freely into Scotland, but then a prohibition,
+supported by decisions in the Court of Sessions and the House of Lords,
+was obtained. In 1824 Dr. Adam Thompson, of Coldstream, and three
+ministers were summoned to answer for the high crime and misdemeanour of
+having, as directors of Bible societies, delivered copies of an edition
+of Scriptures which had been printed in England, but which the Scotch
+monopolists would not permit to circulate in Scotland. Bible societies
+in Scotland had received, in return for their subscription to the London
+society, copies of an octavo Bible in large type, to which the Scotch
+patentees had no corresponding edition, and which was much prized by the
+aged. And it was because Dr. Thompson and others helped to circulate it,
+as agents of the London Bible Society, that they were proceeded against.
+The Scotch Bible, in consequence of the monopoly, was as badly printed as
+the English one. In order to show how monopoly had failed to secure good
+work, a gentleman sent to the Archbishop of Canterbury an enormous list
+of errors which he had found in the Oxford Nonpareil Bible. In an old
+Scotch edition the apostle is made to say, 'Know ye not that the
+righteous shall _not_ inherit the kingdom of God?' In another edition
+'The four beasts of the Apocalypse' are '_sour_ beasts.' Dr. Lee,
+afterwards Principal of Edinburgh University, felt deeply the injustice
+done by the monopoly, and the heavy taxation consequently imposed upon
+the British and Foreign Bible Society; but he was a man of the study
+rather than of the street. Yet in 1837 the monopoly, powerfully defended
+as it was by Sir Robert Inglis, who dreaded cheap editions of the Word of
+God, as necessarily incorrect and leading to wickedness and infidelity of
+all kinds, fell, and it was to John Childs, of Bungay, that in a great
+measure the fall was due, while owing to the repeated labours of Dr. Adam
+Thompson and others, we got cheaper Bibles and Testaments on the other
+side of the Tweed.
+
+If you turn to the life of Dr. Adam Thompson, of Coldstream, the man who
+had the most publicly to do with the fall of the monopoly, there can be
+no doubt on this head. Though specially interested in the English
+patents, Mr. Childs was aware that the one for Scotland fell, to be
+renewed sooner by twenty years, and he kept dunning Joseph Hume on the
+subject, who, Radical Reformer, at that time had his hands pretty full.
+Mr. Childs had got so far as to have his Committee, and to get the
+evidence printed. What was the next step? Dr. Thompson's biographer
+shall tell us. 'Mr. Childs had been looking out for a Scottish
+Dissenting minister of proved ability, zeal, and influence, who should
+feel the immense and urgent importance of the question, and after
+mastering the unjust principles and the injurious results of the
+monopoly, should testify to these before the Committee, in a weighty and
+pointed manner, and effectively bring them also before the ministers and
+people of Scotland. He fixed upon Dr. Thompson, and the letter in which
+he wrote to the Doctor to prepare for becoming a witness was the
+beginning of a ten years' copious correspondence, the first in a series
+of many hundreds of very lengthy letters, in which Mr. Childs, with great
+shrewdness, sagacity, and vigour, and with perfect confidence of always
+being in the right, acted as universal censor, pronouncing oracularly
+upon all ecclesiastical and political men and organs, expressing
+unqualified contempt for the House of Lords, and very small satisfaction
+with the House of Commons, showing no mercy to Churchmen, and little but
+asperity to Dissenters, and denouncing all British journals as base or
+blind except the _Nonconformist_.' Only two of these letters are
+published in Dr. Thompson's biography. I give one, partly because it is
+interesting, and partly because it is characteristic. Unfortunately, of
+all John Childs' letters to myself, written in a fine, bold hand, exactly
+reproduced by his son and grandson, so that I could never tell one from
+the other, I have preserved none. Childs thus wrote to Dr. Thompson,
+July 15th, 1839:
+
+ 'MY DEAR FRIEND,
+
+ 'You will be happy to know that I went into Newgate this morning with
+ my friend Ashurst, and heard their pardon read to the Canadians.
+ They were released this afternoon, and Mr. Parker and Mr. Wixon have
+ been dining with me, and are gone to a lodging, taken for them by Mr.
+ A., where they may remain till their departure on Wednesday. I have
+ just sent to Mr. Tidman to inform him they will worship God and
+ return thanks in his place to-morrow, if all be well. How
+ wonderfully God has appeared for these people! My dear friend, when
+ I first saw them in January all things appeared to be against them,
+ but all has been overruled for good.
+
+ 'At the time you left on Monday evening, Lord John was making known
+ to the House of Commons, in your own words, the plan proposed by
+ yourself, and adopted by him, to my amazement. Most heartily do I
+ congratulate you on the termination of the event, so decidedly
+ honourable to yourself in every way. I do not expect you will
+ approve of all that I have done, but I felt it to be my duty to
+ address a letter to the _Pilot_ on the subject, calling attention to
+ the liberty taken with you, and the manner in which you were
+ humbugged when in concert with the London societies, and the absolute
+ triumph of your cause when conducted with single-handed integrity,
+ intelligence, and energy. If it shall happen that you do not approve
+ of all I have said, I am sure you ought, because without you, and
+ with you, if you had left it to the fellows here, Scotland's
+ Dissenters would have now appeared the degraded things which, on the
+ Bible subject, the English Dissenters have appeared in my eyes for
+ some years past. It is due to you. I was fairly rejoiced when I saw
+ Lord John's declaration, because I could see from his answer to Sir
+ James Graham that he meant the thing should be done. Scotland ought
+ to have a day of rejoicing and thanksgiving, and as I said to a
+ friend to whom I wrote in Edinburgh, "You ought to have a
+ monument--the Thompson monument." "That, sir," the guide would say,
+ "is erected to honour a man by whose honest energy and zeal Scotland
+ was freed from the most degrading tyranny--that of a monopoly in
+ printing the Word of God." The tablet should bear that memorable
+ sentence of yours on the first day of your examination, "All
+ monopolies are bad." Of all monopolies religious monopolies are the
+ worst, and of all religious monopolies a monopoly of the Word of God
+ is the most outrageous.' Alas! I have heard nothing of the Thompson
+ monument.
+
+Such a man was John Childs. One more busy in body and brain I never
+knew. That he was disposed to be cynical was natural. Most men who see
+much of the world, and who do not wear coloured glasses, are so. Take
+the history of the Bible monopoly. The work of its abolition was
+commenced by John Childs, of Bungay, carried on and completed as far as
+Scotland was concerned by Dr. Adam Thompson, while the British public in
+its usual silliness awarded 3,000 pounds to Dr. Campbell, on the plea--I
+quote the words of the late Dr. Morton Brown, of Cheltenham--that, 'God
+gave the honour very largely to our friend, Dr. Campbell, to smite this
+bloated enemy of God and man full in the forehead.' The bloated enemy,
+as regards Scotland, was dead before Dr. Campbell had ever penned a line.
+As regards England, I believe it still exists.
+
+It must have been about 1837 that the name of John Childs, of Bungay, was
+made specially notorious by reason of his refusal to pay Church-rates,
+and when he had the honour of being the first person imprisoned for their
+non-payment. He was proceeded against in the Ecclesiastical Courts, and
+as his refusal to pay was solely on conscientious grounds, he did not
+contest the matter. The result was, he was sent to Ipswich Gaol for the
+non-payment of a rate of 17s. 6d., the animus of the ecclesiastical
+authorities being manifested by the endorsement of the writ, 'Take no
+bail.' It was the first death-blow to Church-rates. The local
+excitement it created was intense and unparalleled. In the House of
+Commons Sir William Foulkes presented several petitions from Norfolk, and
+Mr. Joseph Hume several from Suffolk, on the subject. One entire sitting
+of the House of Commons was devoted to the Bungay Martyr, as Sir Robert
+Peel ironically termed him. The Bungay Martyr had however, right on his
+side. It was found that a blot had been hit, and it had to be removed.
+
+The excitement produced by putting Mr. Childs into gaol was intense at
+that time all over the land. 'I beg to inform you,' wrote a Halesworth
+Dissenter, Mr. William Lincoln, to the editor of the _Patriot_, at that
+time the organ of Dissent, 'that my highly-esteemed and talented friend,
+Mr. John Childs, of Bungay, has just passed through this town, in custody
+of a sheriff's officer, on his way to our county gaol, by virtue of an
+attachment, at the suit of Messrs. Bobbet and Scott, churchwardens of
+Bungay, for non-payment of 17s. 6d. demanded of him as a Church-rate, and
+subsequent refusal to obey a citation for appearance at the Bishop's
+Court.' Naturally the writer remarked: 'It will soon be seen whether
+proceedings so well in harmony with the days of fire and faggot are to be
+tolerated in this advanced period of the nineteenth century.' When, in
+due time, Mr. Childs obtained his release, the event was celebrated at
+Bungay in fitting style. I find in a private diary the following note:
+'This day week was a grand day at Bungay. I heard there were not less
+than six or seven thousand people there to welcome his return, and the
+request of the police, that the greatest order might be observed, was
+fully acted up to. Miss C. did not enter Bungay with her father. I
+suppose when she found so great a multitude of horsemen, gigs,
+pedestrians and banners, they thought it better for the young lady and
+the younger children to retire to the close carriages. Mr. C. during his
+imprisonment had letters from all parts of the kingdom.' I remember the
+leading Dissenters came to Bungay with a piece of plate, to present to
+Mr. Childs, to commemorate his heroism. A dinner was given by Mr. Childs
+in connection with the presentation. At that dinner, lad as I was, I was
+permitted to be present. I had never seen anything so grand or stately
+before; and that was my first interview with John Childs, a dark,
+restless, eagle-eyed man, whom I was to know better and love more for
+many a long day. I took to Radical writing, and nothing could have
+pleased John Childs better. I owed much to his friendship in after-life.
+
+In 1833 the Church-rate question was originally raised in Bungay, and
+many of the Dissenters refused to pay. The local authorities at once
+took high ground, and put twelve of the recusants into the Ecclesiastical
+Court. They caved in, leaving to John Childs the honour of martyrdom.
+At the time of Mr. Childs' imprisonment he had recently suffered from a
+severe surgical operation, and it was believed by his friends impossible
+that he could survive the infliction of imprisonment. The Rev. John
+Browne writes: 'A committee very generously formed at Ipswich undertook
+the management of his affairs, and when they learned at the end of eleven
+days' imprisonment that he had undergone a most severe attack, indicating
+at least the possibility of sudden death, they sent a deputation to the
+Court to pay the sum demanded. The Court, however, required, as well as
+the money, the usual oath of canonical obedience, and this Mr. Childs
+refused to give. He was told by his friends that he would surely die in
+prison, but his reply was, 'That is not my business.' But it seems so
+much had been made of the matter by the newspapers that Mr. Childs was
+released without taking the oath. Charles Childs, the son, followed in
+his father's steps. At Bungay the Churchmen seemed to have determined to
+make Dissenters as uncomfortable as possible. Actually five years after
+they had thrown the father into prison, the churchwardens proceeded
+against the son, having been baffled in repeated attempts to distrain
+upon his goods, and cited him into the Ecclesiastical Court, where it
+took two and a half years to determine whether the sum of three shillings
+and fourpence was due. At the end of that time the judge decided it was
+not, and the churchwardens had to pay Mr. Childs' costs as well as their
+own, which in the course of time amounted to a very respectable sum.
+Charles Childs, who died suddenly a few years since, and who never seemed
+to me to have aged a day since I first knew him, was truly a chip of the
+old block. He was much in London, as he printed quite as much as his
+father for the leading London publishers. An enlightened patriot, he was
+in very many cases successful in resisting the obstacles raised from time
+to time by party spirit or Church bigotry. On more than one occasion he
+conducted a number of his workmen through an illegally-closed path, and
+opened it by the destruction of the fences, repeated appeals to the
+persistent obstructions having proved unavailing. He was a man of
+scholarly and literary attainments, a clever talker, well able to hold
+his own, and during the Corn Law and Currency agitation he contributed
+one or more articles on these subjects to the _Westminster Review_, then
+edited by his friend, the late General Perronet Thompson, a very foremost
+figure in Radical circles forty years ago, always trying to get into
+Parliament--rarely succeeding in the attempt. 'How can he expect it,'
+said Mr. Cobden to me one day, 'when, instead of going to the principal
+people to support him, he finds out some small tradesman--some little
+tailor or shoemaker--to introduce him?' Once upon a time the _Times_
+furiously attacked Charles Childs. His reply, which was able and
+convincing, was forwarded, but only procured admission in the shape of an
+advertisement, for which Mr. Childs had to pay ten pounds. The corner of
+East Anglia of which I write rarely produced two better men than the
+Childs, father and son. They are gone, but the printing business still
+survives, though no longer carried on under the well-known name. By
+their noble integrity and public spirit they proved themselves worthy of
+a craft to which light and literature and leading owe so much. It is to
+such men that England is under lasting obligations, and one of the
+indirect benefits of a State Church is that it gives them a grievance,
+and a sense of wrong, which compels them to gird up their energies to act
+the part of village Hampdens or guiltless Cromwells. All the manhood in
+them is aroused and strengthened as they contend for what they deem right
+and just, and against force and falsehood. Poets, we are told, by one
+himself a poet,
+
+ 'Are cradled into poetry by wrong;
+ They learn in suffering what they teach in song.'
+
+Nonconformists have cause especially to rejoice in the bigotry and
+persecution to which they have been exposed, since it has led them by a
+way they knew not, to become the champions of a broader creed and a more
+general right than that of which their fathers dreamed. It is easy to
+swim with the stream; it requires a strong man to swim against it. Two
+hundred years of such swimming had made the Bungay Nonconformists strong,
+and gave to the world two such exceptionally sturdy and strengthful men
+as John and Charles Childs. I was proud to know them as a boy; in
+advancing years I am prouder still to be permitted to bear this humble
+testimony to their honest worth. It is because Nonconformity has raised
+up such men in all parts of the land, that a higher tone has been given
+to our public life, that politics mean something more than a struggle
+between the ins and the outs, and that 'Onward' is our battle-cry.
+
+Of the young men more or less coming under the influence of the Childs's,
+perhaps one of the most successful was the late Bernard Bolingbroke
+Woodward, Librarian to her Majesty. When I first knew him he was in a
+bank at Norwich. Thence he passed to Highbury College, and in due time,
+after he had taken his B.A. degree, settled as the Independent minister
+at Wortwell, near Harleston, in Norfolk. There he became connected with
+John Childs, and, amidst much hard work, edited for the firm a new
+edition of 'Barclay's Universal English Dictionary.' In 1860, on the
+death of Mr. Glover, who had for many years filled the post of Librarian
+to the Queen at Windsor Castle, Mr. Woodward's name was mentioned to the
+Prince, in reply to inquiries for a competent successor. Acting on the
+advice of a friend at head-quarters, Mr. Woodward forwarded to Prince
+Albert the same printed testimonials which he had sent in when he was a
+candidate for the vacant secretaryship of a large and popular society,
+and to those alone he owed his appointment to the office of Librarian to
+the Queen. An interview took place at Windsor Castle, which was highly
+satisfactory; but before the appointment was finally made, Mr. Woodward
+informed Her Majesty and the Prince that there was one circumstance which
+he had omitted to mention, and which might disqualify him for the post.
+'Pray, what is that disqualification?' asked the Prince. 'It is,'
+replied Mr. Woodward, 'that I have been educated for, and have actually
+conducted the services of an Independent congregation in the country.'
+'And why should that be thought to disqualify you?' asked the Prince.
+'It does nothing of the sort. If that is all, we are quite satisfied,
+and feel perfectly safe in having you for a librarian.' Am I not
+justified in saying that at one time Bungay influences reached far and
+near?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+A CELEBRATED NORFOLK TOWN.
+
+
+Great Yarmouth Nonconformists--Intellectual life--Dawson Turner--Astley
+Cooper--Hudson Gurney--Mrs. Bendish.
+
+When David Copperfield, Dickens tells us, first caught sight of Yarmouth,
+it seemed to him to look rather spongy and soppy. As he drew nearer, he
+remarks, 'and saw the whole adjacent prospect, lying like a straight, low
+line under the sky, I hinted to Peggotty that a mound or so might have
+improved it, and also that if the land had been a little more separated
+from the sea, and the town and the tide had not been quite so much mixed
+up, like toast-and-water, it would have been much nicer.' He adds: 'When
+we got into the street, which was strange to me, and smelt the fish, and
+pitch, and oakum, and tallow, and saw the sailors walking about, and the
+carts jingling up and down over the stones, I felt that I had done so
+busy a place injustice.' In this opinion his readers who know Yarmouth
+will agree. Brighton and Hastings and Eastbourne might envy Yarmouth its
+sandy beach, where you can lead an amphibious life, watching the
+fishing-smacks as they come to shore with cargoes often so heavy as to be
+sold for manure; watching the merchant-ships and yachts that lie securely
+in the Roads, or the long trail of black smoke of Scotch or northern
+steamers far away; watching the gulls ever skimming the surface of the
+waves; or the children, as they build little forts and dwellings in the
+sand to be rudely swept to destruction by the advancing tide. In the
+golden light of summer, how blue is the sky, how green the sea, how
+yellow the sand, how jolly look the men and handsome the women! What
+health and healing are in the air, as it comes laden with ozone from the
+North Sea! You have the sea in front and on each side to look at, to
+walk by, to splash in, to sail on. The danger is, that you grow too fat,
+too ruddy, too hearty, too boisterous. As we all know, Venus was born
+out of the sea, and out there on that eastern peninsula, of which
+Yarmouth is the pride and ornament, there used to flourish bonny lasses,
+as if to show that the connection between the ocean and lovely woman is
+as intimate as of yore. Yarmouth and Lowestoft owe a great deal to the
+Great Eastern Railway, which has made them places of health-resort from
+all parts of England; and truly the pleasure-seeker or the holiday-maker
+may go farther and fare worse.
+
+I was a proud boy when first I set foot in Yarmouth. How I came to go
+there I can scarcely remember, but it is to be presumed I accompanied my
+father on one of those grand occasions--as far as Nonconformist circles
+are concerned--when the brethren met together for godly comfort and
+counsel. It is true Wrentham was in Suffolk, and Yarmouth was in
+Norfolk, but the Congregational Churches of that quarter had always been
+connected by Christian fellowship and sympathy, and hence I was taken to
+Yarmouth--at that time far more like a Dutch than an English town--and
+wonderful to me was the Quay, with its fine houses on one side and its
+long line of ships on the other--something like the far-famed Bompjes of
+Rotterdam--and the narrow rows in which the majority of the labouring
+classes were accustomed to live. 'A row,' wrote Charles Dickens, 'is a
+long, narrow lane or alley, quite straight, or as nearly so as may be,
+with houses on each side, both of which you can sometimes touch with the
+finger-tips of each hand by stretching out your arms to their full
+extent. Many and many a picturesque old bit of domestic architecture is
+to be hunted up among the rows. In some there is little more than a
+blank wall for the double boundary. In others the houses retreat into
+busy square courts, where washing and clear-starching are done, and
+wonderful nasturtiums and scarlet-runners are reared from green boxes
+filled with that scarce commodity, vegetable mould. Most of these rows
+are paved with pebbles from the beach, and to traverse them a peculiar
+form of low cart, drawn by a single horse, is employed.' This to me was
+a great novelty, as with waggons and carts I was familiar, but not with a
+Yarmouth cart--now, I find, replaced by wheelbarrows. In Amsterdam, at
+the present day, you may see many such quaint old rows. But in Amsterdam
+you have an evil-smelling air, while in Yarmouth it is ever fresh and
+crisp, and redolent, as it were, of the neighbouring sea. The
+market-place and the big church were at the back of this congeries of
+quays and rows, and the sea and the old pier were at quite a respectable
+distance from the town. I fancy the Yarmouth of the London bathers has
+now extended down to the sandy beach, and the rough and rude old pier has
+given place to one better adapted to the wants and requirements of an
+increasingly well-to-do community. Far more Dutch than English was the
+Yarmouth of half a century ago, I again say.
+
+As to the Yarmouth Independent parson, I shall never forget him. He was
+a very big man, with great red cheeks that hung over his collar like
+blown bladders, and was always on stilts. He preached in a big
+meeting-house, now no more, the pillars of which intercepted alike the
+view and the sound. One winter evening he was holding forth, in his
+usual heavy style, to a few good people--with whom, evidently, all
+pleasure was out of the question--who came there, as in duty bound, and
+sat like martyrs all the while, and all were as grave as the preacher,
+when a wicked boy rushed in and, in a hurried manner, called out, 'Fire!
+fire!' The effect, I am told, was electrical. For once the good parson
+was in a hurry, and moved as quickly and spoke as rapidly as his fellows;
+but never had there been so much excitement in his chapel since he had
+been its pastor. Once, I remember, he came to town, and dropped in at
+the close of a party rather convivially inclined, in the Old London
+Coffee House. As the reverend gentleman advanced to greet his friends, a
+London lawyer, with all the impudence of his class, muttered, in a
+whisper intended to be heard, and which was heard, by everyone, 'Yarmouth
+bloater.' The good man said nothing, but it was evident he thought all
+the more, as the group were more or less tittering over the fitness of
+the comparison. The lawyer who made the remark was also the son of a
+London minister, and, therefore, might have been expected to have known
+better. I fear the Yarmouth minister never forgave him. Well, it only
+served him right, as he had a horrible way of making young people very
+uncomfortable. 'Well, Master James,' said he to me on one occasion, when
+all the brethren had come to dine at Wrentham, and when I was admitted,
+in conformity with the golden maxim in all well-regulated family circles,
+that little children were to be seen and not heard (perhaps in our day
+the fault is too much in an opposite direction), 'can you inform me which
+is the more proper form of expression--a pair of new gloves, or a new
+pair of gloves?' Of course I gave the wrong answer, as I blushed up to
+the ears at finding myself the smallest personage in the room, publicly
+appealed to by the biggest. He meant well, I dare say. His only object
+was to draw me out; but the question and the questioner gave me a bad
+quarter of an hour, and I never got over the unpleasant sensation of
+which he had unconsciously been the originator in my youthful breast.
+
+At that time Yarmouth people were supposed to be a little superior. They
+were well-to-do, and lived in good style, and, as was to be expected,
+considering the sanitary advantages of the situation, were in good health
+and spirits. They got a good deal of their intellectual character from
+Norwich, which at the time set the fashion in such matters. In 1790 two
+societies were established in that city for the private and amicable
+discussion of miscellaneous questions. One of these, the Tusculan, seems
+to have devoted the attention of its members exclusively to political
+topics; while the Speculative, although it imposed no restrictions on the
+range of inquiry, was of a more philosophical character. William Taylor
+was a member of both, and it is difficult to say whether he distinguished
+himself most by his ingenuity in debate, by the novelty of the
+information which he brought to bear on every point, or by the lively
+sallies of imagination with which he at once amused and excited his
+hearers. The papers read by himself embraced an infinite variety of
+subjects, from the theory of the earth, then unillumined by the
+disclosures of modern geologists, to the most elaborate and refined
+productions of its rational tenants, and he was seldom at a loss to place
+on new ground or in a fresh light the matter of discussion introduced by
+others. Writers of every tongue, studied by him with observant
+curiosity, stored his retentive memory with materials ready to be applied
+on every occasion, moulded by his Promethean talent into the most
+animated and alluring forms. As a speaker and converser he was eminently
+characterized by a constant flow of brilliant ideas, by a rapid
+succession of striking images, and by a never-failing copiousness of
+words, often quaint, but always correct. A similar society was formed at
+Yarmouth, under the auspices of Dr. Aiken, at which William Taylor also
+occasionally attended. The Rev. Thomas Compton has given the following
+description of these visits: 'We were, moreover, sometimes gratified by
+the presence of our literary friends from Norwich. I have there
+repeatedly listened to the mild and persuasive eloquence of the late Dr.
+Enfield. A gentleman, too, still living, who has lately added to his
+literary fame by a biographical work of high repute (I scarcely need add
+that I allude to Mr. W. Taylor) would sometimes instruct us by his
+various and profound knowledge, or amuse us with his ingenious
+paradoxes.' When we recollect how at this time the poetical puerilities
+of Bath Easton flourished in the West, we may claim that Norwich and
+Yarmouth, if not as favoured by fashion, had at any rate a claim to
+intellectual reputation at least quite equal to that city of the _ton_.
+Dr. Sayers, whose biography William Taylor had written, and whose
+'Dramatic Sketches of Northern Mythology' had created a great sensation
+at the time, was of Yarmouth extraction.
+
+The Rev. Mr. Compton writes: 'In Yarmouth, where I lived at this time,
+and where Lord Chedworth was accustomed to pay an annual visit, there was
+then a society of gentlemen who met once a fortnight for the purpose of
+amicable discussion. Our members--alas! how few remain--were of all
+parties and persuasions, and some of them of very distinguished
+attainments. A society thus constituted was in those days as pleasant as
+it was instructive. The most eager disputation was never found to
+endanger the most perfect goodwill, nor did any bitter feuds arise from
+this entire freedom of opinion till the prolific period of the French
+Revolution. On this subject our controversies became very impassioned.
+The present Sir Astley Cooper, then a very young man, was accustomed to
+pass his vacations with his most excellent father, Dr. Cooper, a name
+ever to be by me beloved and revered. It was the amusement of our young
+friend to say things of the most irritating nature, I believe--like Lady
+Florence Pemberton in the novel--merely to see who would make the ugliest
+face. Thus circumstanced, it was not in my philosophy to be the coolest
+of the party.' We can well imagine the consequences. There was a row,
+and the literary society came to grief. As time went on matters became
+worse instead of better, and the town was split up into parties--Liberal
+or the reverse, Church or Dissent, but all of one mind as regards their
+views being correct; and as to the weakness or wickedness of persons who
+thought otherwise. The evil of this spirit knew no bounds, and the
+demoralizing effect it produced was especially apparent at election
+times. When Oldfield wrote his 'Origin of Parliaments,' the town, he
+tells us, was under the influence of the Earl of Leicester, and was for
+many years represented by some of his Lordship's family. The right of
+election was in the burgesses at large, of whom there were at that time
+one thousand. The Reform Bill did little to improve the state of
+affairs; it led to greater bribery and corruption and intimidation than
+ever, and now, as a Parliamentary borough, Yarmouth has ceased to exist.
+'Sugar,' it seems, was the slang term used for money, and the honest
+voters were too eager to get it. Alas! in none of our seaport towns is
+the standard of morality very high. Yarmouth, at any rate, is not worse
+than Deal. In old days the excitement of a Yarmouth election much
+affected our village. It lasted some days. The out-voters were brought
+from the uttermost parts of the earth. As there were no railways,
+stage-coaches were hired to bring them down from town; and when they
+changed horses at Wrentham, quite a crowd would assemble to look at the
+flags, and the free and independents on their way to do their duty,
+overflowing with enthusiasm and beer.
+
+Sir Astley Cooper was much connected with Yarmouth in his young days,
+when his father was the incumbent of the parish church. Some of his
+boyish pranks were peculiar. Here is one of them: 'Having taken two
+pillows from his mother's bed, he carried them up the spire of Yarmouth
+Church, at a time when the wind was blowing from the north-east; and as
+soon as he had ascended as high as he could, he ripped them open, and,
+shaking out their contents, dispersed them in the air. The feathers were
+carried away by the wind, and fell far and wide over the surface of the
+market-place, to the great astonishment of a large number of persons
+assembled there. The timid looked upon it phenomenon predictive of some
+calamity; the inquisitive formed a thousand conjectures; while some,
+curious in natural history, actually accounted for it by a gale of wind
+in the north blowing wild-fowl feathers from the island of St. Paul's.'
+On another occasion he got into an old trunk, which the family had agreed
+to get rid of as inconvenient in the house. In this case he had to pay
+the penalty, when he emerged from the chest in the carpenter's shop. The
+men, who had complained terribly of its weight, were not inclined to
+allow young Astley to get off free. One of Astley's tricks had, however,
+a good motive, as it was intended to cure an old woman of her besetting
+sin--a tendency to take a drop too much. In order to cure the old woman
+of this weakness, he dressed himself as well as he could to represent the
+sable form of his satanic majesty. Alas! instead of being surprised, the
+old lady was too far-gone for that, and listened with tipsy gravity to
+the distinguished visitor's discourse. In her case it was true, as Burns
+wrote:
+
+ 'Wi' tipenny we fear nae evil;
+ Wi' usquebae we'll face the deevil.'
+
+One of his tricks nearly led to unpleasant consequences. Whilst out
+shooting one day, near Yarmouth, he killed an owl--a bird familiarly
+known in Yarmouth by the sobriquet of 'Brother Billy.' Having arrived at
+home, he went up into his mother's room, with the bird concealed behind
+his coat, and, assuming a countenance full of fear and sorrow, exclaimed,
+'Mother, mother, I've shot my brother Billy!' but the alarm and distress
+instantly depicted on the distracted countenance of his parent induced
+him as quickly as possible to pull the owl from under his coat. This at
+once exposed the truth and allayed the apprehensions of his mother's
+mind, but the effects of the shock it caused did not so immediately pass
+away. Dr. Cooper determined to punish his son, and he therefore confined
+him, according to his usual mode of correction, in his own house. Astley
+was, however, but little disposed to remain passive in his imprisonment,
+and in the wantonness of his ever-active disposition amused himself by
+climbing up the chimney, and having at length reached the summit,
+endeavoured, by imitating the well-known tone of the chimney-sweeper, and
+calling out as lustily as he could, 'Sweep, sweep!' to attract the
+attention of the people below. Even on his father the incorrigible lad
+seems on more than one occasion to have tried his little game. One day,
+while the worthy Doctor was marrying a couple in the church, Master
+Astley concealed himself in a turret close by the altar, and, imitating
+his father's voice, repeated in a subdued tone the words of the
+marriage-service as the ceremony proceeded, to the consternation of his
+father, who said that he had never observed an echo in that place before.
+Once or twice the lad's life was in peril, as when his foot slipped on
+the top of the church, and he was unpleasantly suspended for some time
+between the rafters of the ceiling and the floor of the chancel. On
+another occasion he had a narrow escape from drowning. It seems that on
+the Yare are little boats out together very slightly, for the purpose of
+carrying a man, his gun, and dog over the shallows of Braydon, in pursuit
+of the flights of wild-fowl which at certain seasons haunt these shoals.
+When the boat is thus loaded, it only draws two or three inches of water,
+and is quite unfit for sea. Young Astley nearly lost his life in
+attempting to take one of these boats out to open sea. In this way young
+Astley Cooper, from his fearless and enterprising disposition, soon
+became a sort of leader of the Yarmouth boys, and at their head, for a
+time, seems to have devoted himself to every kind of amusement within his
+reach--riding, boating, fishing, and not unfrequently sports of a less
+harmless character, such as breaking lamps and windows, ringing the
+church bells at all hours, disturbing the people by frequent alterations
+of the church clock, so that if any mischief were committed it was sure,
+says his admiring biographer, to be set down to him.
+
+The two men who shed most literary fame on the Yarmouth of my childhood
+were Dawson Turner and Hudson Gurney, who in this respect resembled each
+other, that they were both bankers and both antiquarians more or less
+distinguished. Dawson Turner was a man of middle height and of saturnine
+aspect, who had the reputation of being a hard taskmaster to the ladies
+of his family, who were quite as intelligent and devoted to literature as
+himself. He published a 'Tour in Normandy'--at that time scarcely anyone
+travelled abroad--and much other matter, and perhaps as an
+autograph-collector was unrivalled. Most of his books, with his notes,
+more or less valuable, are now in the British Museum. Sir Charles Lyell,
+when a young man, visited the Turner family in 1817, and gives us a very
+high idea of them all. 'Mr. Turner,' he says, in a letter to his father,
+'surprises me as much as ever. He wrote twenty-two letters last night
+after he had wished us "Good-night." It kept him up till two o'clock
+this morning.' Again Sir Charles writes: 'What I see going on every hour
+in this family makes me ashamed of the most active day I ever spent at
+Midhurst. Mrs. Turner has been etching with her daughters in the parlour
+every morning at half-past six.' Of Hudson Gurney in his youth we get a
+flattering portrait in one of the charming 'Remains of the Late Mrs.
+Trench,' edited by her son, Archbishop of Dublin. Writing from Yarmouth
+in 1799, she says: 'I have been detained here since last Friday, waiting
+for a fair wind, and my imprisonment would have been comfortless enough
+had it not have been for the attention of Mr. Hudson Gurney, a young man
+on whom I had no claims except from a letter of Mr. Sanford's, who,
+without knowing him, or having any connection with him, recommended me to
+his care, feeling wretched that I should be unprotected in the first part
+of my journey. He has already devoted to me one evening and two
+mornings, assisted me in money matters, lent me books, and enlivened my
+confinement to a wretched room by his pleasant conversation. Mr. Sanford
+having described me as a person travelling about _for her health_, he
+says his old assistant in the Bank fancied I was a decrepit elderly lady
+who might safely be consigned to his youthful partner. His description
+of his surprise thus prepared was conceived in a very good strain of
+flattery. He is almost two-and-twenty, understands several languages,
+seems to delight in books, and to be uncommonly well informed.' Little
+credit, however, is due to Mr. Hudson Gurney for his politeness in this
+case. The lovely and lively widow--she had married Colonel St. George at
+the age of eighteen, and the marriage only lasted two or three years, the
+Colonel dying of consumption--must have possessed personal and mental
+attractions irresistible to a cultivated young man of twenty-two. Had
+she been old and ugly, it is to be feared his business engagements would
+have prevented the youthful banker devoting much time to her ladyship's
+service.
+
+Yarmouth is intimately connected with literature and the fine arts. It
+was off Yarmouth that Robinson Crusoe was shipwrecked; and the testimony
+he bears to the character of the people shows how kindly disposed were
+the Yarmouth people of his day. 'We,' he writes, 'got all safe on shore,
+and walked afterwards on foot to Yarmouth, where, as unfortunate men, we
+were used with great humanity, not only by the magistrates of the town,
+who assigned us good quarters, but also by particular merchants and
+owners of ships, and had money given us, sufficient to carry us either to
+London or back to Hull, as we thought fit.' It was from Yarmouth that
+Wordsworth and Coleridge sailed away to Germany, then almost a _terra
+incognita_. Leman Blanchard was born at Yarmouth, as well as Sayers, the
+first, if not the cleverest, of our English caricaturists. One of the
+most brilliant men ever returned to Parliament was Winthrop Mackworth
+Praed, M.P. for Yarmouth, whose politics as a boy I detested as much as
+in after-years I learned to admire his genius. One of the most fortunate
+men of our day, Sir James Paget, the great surgeon, was a Yarmouth lad,
+and the See of Chester was filled by an accomplished divine, also a
+Yarmouth lad. Southey, when at Yarmouth, where his brother was a student
+for some time, was so much struck with the uniqueness of the epitaphs in
+the Yarmouth Church, that he took the trouble to copy many of them. One
+was as follows:
+
+ 'We put him out to nurse;
+ Alas! his life he paid,
+ But judge not; he was overlaid.'
+
+And hence it may be inferred that in Yarmouth the custom of baby-farming
+has long flourished. Possibly thence it may have extended itself to
+London. Amongst the truly great men who have lived and died in Yarmouth,
+honourable mention must be made of Hales, the Norfolk Giant. In times
+past soldiers and sailors and royal personages were often to be seen at
+Yarmouth. It was at Yarmouth the heroes, returning from many a distant
+battle-field, often landed. Nelson on one occasion--that is, after the
+affair of Copenhagen--when he landed, at once made his way to the
+hospital to see his men. To one of them, who had lost his arm, he said,
+'There, Jack, you and I are spoiled for fishermen.'
+
+A good deal of Puritanism seems to have come into England by way of
+Yarmouth. In Queen Elizabeth's time, 300 Flemings settled there, who had
+fled from Popery and Spain in their native land. In Norwich the Dutch
+Church remains to this day. Some of them seem to have been the friends
+and teachers of the far-famed, and I believe unjustly maligned, Robert
+Browne. In Norfolk the seed fell upon good soil. While sacerdotalism
+was more or less being developed in the State Church, the Norfolk men
+boldly protested against Papal abominations, as they deemed them, and
+swore to maintain the gospel of Geneva and Knox. One of the men
+imprisoned when Bancroft was Archbishop of Canterbury, for attending a
+conventicle, was Thomas Ladd, 'a merchant of Yarmouth.' The writ ran:
+'Because that, on the Sabbath days, after the sermons ended, sojourning
+in the house of Mr. Jachler, in Yarmouth, who was late preacher in
+Yarmouth, joined with him in repeating the substance and heads of the
+sermons that day made in the church, at which Thomas Ladd was usually
+present.' In 1624 the penal laws for suppressing Separatists were
+strictly enforced in Yarmouth, and one of the teachers of a small society
+of Anabaptists was cast into prison, and the Bishop of Norwich wrote a
+letter of thanks to the bailiffs for their activity in this matter, which
+is preserved to this day. But, nevertheless, people still continued to
+worship God according to the dictates of conscience; we find the Earl of
+Dorset in his reply to the town of Yarmouth, as to the way in which the
+town should be governed, adds: 'I should want in my care of you if I
+should not let you know that his Majesty is not only informed, but
+incensed against you for conniving at and tolerating a company of
+Brownists among you. I pray you remember there was no seam in the
+Saviour's garment.' Bridge was the founder of the Yarmouth
+Congregational Church, somewhere about the time of the commencement of
+the Civil War. The people declared for the Parliament. Colonel Goffe
+was one of its representatives in the House of Commons. All along, the
+town seems to have been puritanically inclined, and to have been in this
+matter more independent than neighbouring towns. At one time they were
+so tolerant that the Independents seem to have worshipped in one end of
+the church while the regular clergyman performed the service in the
+other; but that did not last long, and when the Independents had a place
+of worship of their own, they were not a little troubled by Friends and
+Papists claiming for themselves the liberty the Independents had sought
+and won. In 1655 the peace of the Church was disturbed by Quaker
+doctrines. It appears two females, members of the Church, had joined
+them, and refused to return. We read: 'The messenger appointed to visit
+May Rouse, brought in an account of her disowning and despising the
+Church; she would not come at all unless she had a message from the
+Spirit moving her.' She came, however, a week after (December 11), but
+by reason of the cold weather was desired to come in again the next
+Tuesday. She did so, and gave in these two reasons why she forsook the
+Church: 1. Because the doctrine of the Gospel of Faith was not holden
+forth; 2. Because there wanted the right administration of baptism.
+
+In 1659 the Church at Yarmouth, feeling the times to be full of trouble
+and of peril, said:
+
+'1. We judge a Parliament to be expedient for the preservation of the
+peace of these nations; and withal, we do desire that all due care be
+taken that the Parliament be such as may preserve the interests of Christ
+and His people in these nations.
+
+'2. As touching the magistrates' power in matters of faith and worship,
+we have declared our judgments in our late (Free Savoy) confession, and
+though we greatly prize our Christian liberties, yet we profess our utter
+dislike and abhorrence of a universal toleration, as being contrary to
+the mind of God in His Word.
+
+'3. We judge that the taking away of tithes for the maintenance of
+ministers until as full a maintenance be equally secured and as legally
+settled, tends very much to the destruction of the ministry, and the
+preaching of the Gospel in these nations.
+
+'4. It is our desire that countenance be not given unto, nor trust
+reposed in, the hand of Quakers, they being persons of such principles as
+are destructive to the Gospel, and inconsistent with the peace of modern
+societies.'
+
+In five years the Yarmouth people had a Roland for their Oliver; the King
+had got his own again, and he and the Parliament of the day looked upon
+the Independents or Presbyterians as mischievous as the Quakers; and as
+to tithes, they were quite as much resolved, the only difference being
+that King and Parliament insisted on their being paid to Episcopalians
+alone. In 1770 Lady Huntingdon writes: 'Success has crowned our labours
+in that wicked place, Yarmouth.'
+
+Mrs. Bendish, in whom the Protector was said to have lived again, was
+quite a character in Yarmouth society. Bridget Ireton, the granddaughter
+of the Protector, married in 1669 Mr. Thomas Bendish, a descendant of Sir
+Thomas Bendish, baronet, Ambassador from Charles I. to the Sultan. She
+died in 1728, removing, however, in the latter years of her life to
+Yarmouth. Her name stands among the members of the church in London of
+which Caryl had been pastor, and over which Dr. Watts presided. To her
+the latter addressed at any rate one copy of verses to be found in his
+collected works. She recollected her grandfather, and standing, when six
+years old, between his knees at a State Council, she heard secrets which
+neither bribes nor whippings could extract from her. Her grandfather she
+held to be a saint in heaven, and only second to the Twelve Apostles.
+Asked one day whether she had ever been at Court, her reply was, 'I have
+never been at Court since I was waited upon on the knee.' Yet she
+managed to dispense with a good deal of waiting, and never would suffer a
+servant to attend her. God, she said, was a sufficient guard, and she
+would have no other. She is described as loquacious and eloquent and
+enthusiastic, frequenting the drawing-rooms and assemblies of Yarmouth,
+dressed in the richest silks, and with a small black hood on her head.
+When she left, which would be at one in the morning, perched on her
+old-fashioned saddle, she would trot home, piercing the night air with
+her loud, jubilant psalms, in which she described herself as one of the
+elect, in a tone more remarkable for strength than sweetness. In the
+daytime she would work with her labourers, taking her turn at the
+pitchfork or the spade. The old Court dresses of her mother and Mrs.
+Cromwell were bequeathed by her to Mrs. Robert Luson, of Yarmouth, and
+were shown as recently as 1834, at an exhibition of Court dresses held at
+the Somerset Gallery in the Strand. As was to be expected, Mrs. Bendish
+was enthusiastic in the cause of the Revolution of 1688, and the printed
+sheets relating to it were dropped by her secretly in the streets of
+Yarmouth, to prepare the people for the good time coming. Her son was a
+friend of Dr. Watts as well as his mother. He died at Yarmouth,
+unmarried, in the year 1753, and with him the line of Bendish seems to
+have come to an end. Another daughter of Ireton was married to Nathaniel
+Carter, who died in 1723, aged 78. His father, John Carter, was
+commander-in-chief of the militia of the town in 1654. He subscribed the
+Solemn League and Covenant, being then one of the elders of the
+Independent congregation. He was also bailiff of the town, and an
+intimate friend of Ireton. He died in 1667. On his tombstone we read:
+
+ 'His course, his fight, his race,
+ Thus finished, fought, and run,
+ Death brings him to the place
+ From whence is no return.'
+
+He lived at No. 4, South Quay, and it was there, so it is said, that the
+resolve was made that King Charles should die.
+
+He is gone, but his room still remains unaltered--a large wainscoted
+upper chamber, thirty feet long, with three windows looking on to the
+quay, with carved and ornamented chimney-piece and ceiling. A great
+obscurity, as was to be expected, hangs over the transaction, as even now
+there are men who shrink from lifting up a finger against the Lord's
+anointed. Dinner had been ordered at four, but it was not till eleven,
+that it was served, and that the die had been cast. The members of the
+Secret Council, we are told, 'after a very short repast, immediately set
+off by post--many for London, and some for the quarters of the army.'
+Such is the account given in a letter, written in 1773, by Mr. Mewling
+Luson, a well-known resident in Yarmouth, whose father, Mr. William
+Luson, was nearly connected the Cromwell family. Nathaniel Carter, the
+son-in-law of Ireton, was in the habit of showing the room, and relating
+the occurrence connected with it, which happened when he was a boy.
+Cromwell was not at that council. He never was in Yarmouth; but that
+there was such consultation there is more than probable. Yarmouth was
+full of Cromwellites. In the Market Place, now known as the Weavers'
+Arms, to this day is shown the panelled parlour whence Miles Corbet was
+used to go forth to worship in that part of the church allotted to the
+Independents. Miles Corbet was the son of Sir Thomas Corbet, of
+Sprouston, who had been made Recorder of Yarmouth in the first year of
+Charles, and who was one of the representatives of the town in the Long
+Parliament. The son was an ardent supporter of the policy of Cromwell,
+and, like him, laboured that England might be religious and free and
+great, as she never could be under any king of the Stuart race; and he
+met with his reward. 'See, young man,' said an old man to Wilberforce,
+as he pointed to a figure of Christ on the cross, 'see the fate of a
+Reformer.' It was so emphatically with Miles Corbet. Under the date of
+1662 there is the following entry in the church-book:
+
+ '1662.--Miles Corbet suffered in London.'
+
+He was a member of the church there, and was one of the judges who sat on
+the trial of King Charles I. His name stands last on the list of those
+who signed the warrant for that monarch's execution. Corbet fled into
+Holland at the Restoration, with Colonels Okey and Barkstead. George
+Downing--a name ever infamous--had been Colonel Okey's chaplain. He
+became a Royalist at the Restoration, and was despatched as Envoy
+Extraordinary into Holland, where, under a promise of safety, he
+trepanned the three persons above named into his power, and sent them
+over to England to suffer death for having been members of the Commission
+for trying King Charles I. For this service he was created a baronet.
+The King sent an order to the Sheriffs of London on April 21, 1662, that
+Okey's head and quarters should have Christian burial, as he had
+manifested some signs of contrition; but Barkstead's head was directed to
+be placed on the Traitor's Gate in the Tower, and Corbet's head on the
+bridge, and their quarters on the City gates.
+
+Foremost amongst the noted women of the Independent Church must be
+mentioned Sarah Martin, of whose life a sketch appeared in the _Edinburgh
+Review_ as far back as 1847. A life of her was also published by the
+Religious Tract Society. Sarah, who joined the Yarmouth church in 1811,
+was born at Caistor. From her nineteenth year she devoted her only day
+of rest, the Sabbath, to the task of teaching in a Sunday-school. She
+likewise visited the inmates of the workhouse, and read the Scriptures to
+the aged and the sick. But the gaol was the scene of her greatest
+labours. In 1819, after some difficulty, she obtained admission to it,
+and soon seems to have acquired an extraordinary influence over the minds
+of the prisoners. She then gave up one day in the week to instruct them
+in reading and writing. At length she attended the prison regularly, and
+kept an exact account of her proceedings and their results in a book,
+which is now preserved in the public library of the town. As there was
+no chaplain, she read and preached to the inmates herself, and devised
+means of obtaining employment for them. She continued this good work
+till the end of her days in 1843, when she died, aged fifty-three. A
+handsome window of stained glass, costing upwards of 100 pounds, raised
+by subscription, has been placed to her memory in the west window of the
+north aisle of St. Nicholas Church. But her fame extends beyond local
+limits, and is part of the inheritance of the universal Church. It was
+in Mr. Walford's time that Sarah Martin commenced her work. Mr. Walford
+tells us, in his Autobiography, that the Church had somewhat degenerated
+in his day, that the line of thought was worldly, and not such as became
+the Gospel. It is clear that in his time it greatly revived, and, even
+as a lad, the intelligence of the congregation seemed to lift me up into
+quite a new sphere, so different were the merchants and ship-owners of
+Yarmouth from the rustic inhabitants of my native village. In this
+respect, if I remember aright, the family of Shelley were particularly
+distinguished. One dear old lady, who lived at the Quay, was
+emphatically the minister's friend. She had a nice house of her own and
+ample means, and there she welcomed ministers and their wives and
+children. It is to be hoped, for the sake of poor parsons, that such
+people still live. I know it was a great treat to me to enjoy the
+hospitality of the kind-hearted Mrs. Goderham, for whose memory I still
+cherish an affectionate regard. To live in one of the best houses on the
+Quay, and to lie in my bed and to see through the windows the masts of
+the shipping, was indeed to a boy a treat.
+
+A little while ago I chanced to be at Norwich, when the thought naturally
+occurred to me that I would take a run to Yarmouth--a journey quickly
+made by the rail. In my case the journey was safely and expeditiously
+accomplished, and I hastened once more to revisit the scenes and
+associations of my youth. Alas! wherever I went I found changes. A new
+generation had arisen that knew not Joseph. The wind was howling down
+the Quay; the sand was blown into my mouth, my nose, my ears; I could
+scarcely see for the latter, or walk for the former; but, nevertheless, I
+made my way to the pier. Only one person was on it, and his back was
+turned to me. As he stood at the extreme end, with chest expanded, with
+mouth wide open, as if prepared to swallow the raging sea in front and
+the Dutch coast farther off, I thought I knew the figure. It was a
+reporter from Fleet Street and he was the only man to greet me in the
+town I once knew so well. Yes; the Yarmouth of my youth was gone. Then
+a reporter from Fleet Street was an individual never dreamt of. And so
+the world changes, and we get new men, fresh faces, other minds. The
+antiquarian Camden, were he to revisit Yarmouth, would not be a little
+astonished at what he would see. He wrote: 'As soon as the Yare has
+passed Claxton, it takes a turn to the south, that it may descend more
+gently into the sea, by which means it makes a sort of little tongue or
+slip of land, washt on one side by itself, on the other side by the sea.
+In this slip, upon an open shore, I saw Yarmouth, a very neat harbour and
+town, fortified both by the nature of the place and the contrivance of
+art. For, though it be almost surrounded with water, on the west with a
+river, over which there is a drawbridge, and on either side with the sea,
+except to the north, where it is joined to the continent; yet it is
+fenced with strong, stately walls, which, with the river, figure it into
+an oblong quadrangle. Besides the towers upon these, there is a mole or
+mount, to the east, from whence the great guns command the sea (scarce
+half a mile distant) all round. It has but one church, though very large
+and with a stately high spire, built near the north gate by Herbert,
+Bishop of Norwich.' In only one respect the Yarmouth of to-day resembles
+that of Camden's time. Then the north wind played the tyrant and plagued
+the coast, and it does so still.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+THE NORFOLK CAPITAL.
+
+
+Brigg's Lane--The carrier's cart--Reform demonstration--The old
+dragon--Chairing M.P.'s--Hornbutton Jack--Norwich artists and
+literati--Quakers and Nonconformists.
+
+Many, many years ago, when wandering in the North of Germany, I came to
+an hotel in the Fremden Buch, of which (Englishmen at that time were far
+more patriotic and less cosmopolitan than in these degenerate days) an
+enthusiastic Englishman had written--and possibly the writing had been
+suggested by the hard fare and dirty ways of the place:
+
+ 'England, with all thy faults, I love thee still.'
+
+Underneath, a still more enthusiastic Englishman had written: 'Faults?
+What faults? I know of none, except that Brigg's Lane, Norwich, wants
+widening.' For the benefit of the reader who may be a stranger to the
+locality, let me inform him that Brigg's Lane leads out of the fine
+Market Place, for which the good old city of Norwich is celebrated all
+the world over, and that on a recent visit to Norwich I found that the
+one fault which could be laid at the door of England had been
+removed--that Brigg's Lane had been widened--that, in fact, it had ceased
+to be a lane, and had been elevated into the dignity of a street.
+
+My first acquaintance with Norwich, when I was a lad of tender years and
+of limited experience, was by Brigg's Lane. I had reached it by means of
+a carrier's cart--the only mode of conveyance between Southwold,
+Wrentham, Beccles and Norwich--a carrier's cart with a hood drawn by
+three noble horses, and able to accommodate almost any number of
+travellers and any amount of luggage. As the driver was well known to
+everyone, there was also a good deal of conversation of a more or less
+friendly character. The cart took one day to reach Norwich--which was,
+and it may be is, the commercial emporium of all that district--and
+another day to return. The beauty of such a conveyance, as compared with
+the railway travelling of to-day, was that there was no occasion to be in
+a flurry if you wanted to travel by it. Goldsmith--for such was the
+proprietor and driver's name--when he came to a place was in no hurry to
+leave it. All the tradesmen in the village had hampers or boxes to
+return, and it took some time to collect them; or messages and notes to
+send, and it took some time to write them; and at the alehouse there was
+always a little gossip to be done while the horses enjoyed their pail of
+water or mouthful of hay. Even at the worst there was no fear of being
+left behind, as by dint of running and holloaing you might get up with
+the cart, unless you were very much behind indeed. But you may be sure
+that when the day came that I was to visit the great city of Norwich I
+was ready for the carrier's cart long before the carrier's cart was ready
+for me. Why was it, you ask, that the Norwich journey was undertaken?
+The answer is not difficult to give. The Reform agitation at that time
+had quickened the entire intellectual and social life of the people. At
+length had dawned the age of reason, and had come the rights of man. The
+victory had been won all along the line, and was to be celebrated in the
+most emphatic manner. We Dissenters rejoiced with exceeding joy; for we
+looked forward, as a natural result, to the restoration of that religious
+equality in the eye of the law of which we had been unrighteously
+deprived, and in consequence of which we had suffered in many ways. We
+joined, as a matter of course, in the celebration of the victory which we
+and the entire body of Reformers throughout the land had gained; and how
+could that be done better than by feeding the entire community on old
+English fare washed down by old English ale? And this was done as far as
+practicable everywhere. For instance, at Bungay there was a public feast
+in the Market Place, and on the town-pump the Messrs. Childs erected a
+printing-press, which they kept hard at work all day printing off papers
+intended to do honour to the great event their fellow-townsmen were
+celebrating in so jovial a manner. In Norwich the demonstration was to
+be of a more imposing character, and as an invitation had come to the
+heads of the family from an old friend, a minister out of work, and
+living more or less comfortably on his property, it seemed good to them
+to accept it, and to take me with them, deeming, possibly, that of two
+evils it was best to choose the least, and that I should be safer under
+their eye at Norwich than with no one to look after me at home. At any
+rate, be that as it may, the change was not a little welcome, and much
+did I see to wonder at in the old Castle, the new Gaol, the size of the
+city, the extent of the Market Place, the smartness of the people, and
+the glare of the shops. It well repaid me for the ride of twenty-six
+miles and the jolting of the carrier's cart along the dusty roads.
+
+As I look into the mirror of the past, I see, alas! but a faded picture
+of that wonderful banquet in Norwich to celebrate Reform. There was a
+procession with banners and music, which seemed to me endless, as it
+toiled along in the dust under the fierce sun of summer, the spectators
+cheering all the way. There were speeches, I dare say, though no word of
+them remains; but I have a distinct recollection of peeping into the
+tents or tent, where the diners were at work, and of receiving from some
+one or other of them a bit of plum-pudding prepared for that day, which
+seemed to me of unusual excellence. I have a distinct recollection also
+of the fireworks in the evening, the first I had ever seen, on the Castle
+plain, and of the dense crowd that had turned out to see the sight; but I
+can well remember that I enjoyed myself much, and that I was awfully
+tired when it was all over.
+
+Another memory also comes to me in connection with the old Dragon,--not
+of Revelation, but of Norwich--a huge green monster, which was usually
+kept in St. Andrew's Hall, and dragged out at the time of city
+festivities. Men inside of it carried it along the street, and the sight
+was terrible to see, as it had a ferocious head and a villainous tail,
+and resembled nothing that is in the heaven above or the earth beneath or
+the waters under the earth. I fancy, however, since the schoolmaster has
+gone abroad, that kind of dragon has ceased to roar. I think it was at a
+Norwich election that I saw it for the first and the only time, and it
+followed in the procession formed to chair the Members--the Members being
+seated in gorgeous array on chairs, borne on the heads of people, and
+every now and then, much to the delight of the mob, though I should
+imagine very little to his own, the chair, with the Member in it, was
+tossed up into the air, and by this means it was supposed the general
+public were able to get a view of their M.P. and to see what manner of
+man he was. It was in some such way that I, as a lad, realized, as I
+never else should have done, the red face and the pink-silk stockings of
+the Hon. Mr. Scarlett, the happy candidate who pretended to enjoy the
+fun, as with the best grace possible under the circumstances he smiled on
+the ladies in the windows of the street, as he was borne along and bowed
+to all. From my recollection of the chairing I saw that time, I am more
+inclined to admire the activity of Wilberforce, of whom we read, when
+elected for Hull, 'When the procession reached his mother's house, he
+sprang from the chair, and, presenting himself with surprising quickness
+at a projecting window--it was that of the nursery in which his childhood
+had been passed--he addressed the populace with such complete effect that
+he was afterwards able to decide the election of its successor.' At
+Norwich the Hon. Mr. Scarlett did well in not attempting a similar
+display of agility. Perhaps, however, it is quite as well that we have
+got rid of the chairing and the humour--Heaven help us!--to which it gave
+rise on the part of an English mob.
+
+There was a delightful flavour of antiquity about the Norwich of that
+day--its old fusty chapels and churches, its old bridges and narrow
+streets. All the people with whom I came into contact on that festival
+seemed to me well stricken in years. It was not so very long since, old
+Hornbutton Jack had been seen threading his way along its ancient
+streets. With a countenance much resembling the portraits of Erasmus,
+with gray hair hanging about his shoulders, with his hat drawn over his
+eyes and his hands behind him, as if in deep meditation; John Fransham,
+the Norwich metaphysician and mathematician, might well excite the
+curiosity of the casual observer, especially when I add that he was
+bandy-legged, that he was short of stature, that he wore a green jacket,
+a broad hat, large shoes, and short worsted stockings. A Norwich weaver
+had helped to make Fransham a philosopher. Wright said Fransham could
+discourse well on the nature and fitness of things. He possessed a
+purely philosophical spirit and a soul well purified from vulgar errors.
+Fransham made himself famous in his day. There is every reason to
+believe that he had been for some time tutor to Mr. Windham. He is once
+recorded to have spent a day with Dr. Parr. Many of his pupils became
+professional men; with one of them, Dr. Leeds, the reader of Foote's
+comedies, if such a one exists, may be acquainted. The tutor and his
+pupil, as Johnny Macpherson and Dr. Last, were actually exhibited on the
+stage. But to return to Norwich antiquities. I have a dim memory of
+some old place where the Dutch and Huguenot refugees were permitted to
+meet for worship, and even now I can recognise there the possibility of
+another Sir Thomas Browne--unless the Norwich of my boyhood has undergone
+the destructive process we love to call improvement--not even disturbed
+in his quiet study by the storm of civil war, inditing his thoughts as
+follows: 'That crystal is nothing else but ice strongly congealed; that a
+diamond is softened or broken by the blood of a goat; that bays preserve
+from the mischief of lightning and thunder; that the horse hath no gall;
+that a kingfisher hanged by the bill showeth where the wind lay; that the
+flesh of peacocks corrupteth not;' and so on--questions, it may be, as
+pertinent as those learnedly discussed in half-crown magazines at the
+present day.
+
+As a boy, I was chiefly familiar with Norwich crapes and bombazines and
+Norwich shawls, which at that time were making quite a sensation in the
+fashionable world. It was at a later time that I came to hear of Old
+Crome and the Norwich school. Of him writes Mr. Wedmore, that 'he died
+in a substantial square-built house, in what was a good street then, in
+the parish of St. George, Colegate, having begun as a workman, and ended
+as a bourgeois. He was a simple man, of genial company. To the end of
+his life he used to go of an evening to the public-house as to an
+informal club. In the privileged bar-parlour, behind the taps and
+glasses, he sat with his friends and the shopkeepers, talking of local
+things. But it is not to be supposed that because his life was from end
+to end a humble one, though prosperous even outwardly after its kind,
+Crome was deprived of the companionship most fitted to his genius, the
+stimulus that he most needed. The very existence of the Norwich Society
+of Artists settles that question. The local men hung on his words; he
+knew that he was not only making pictures, but a school. And in the
+quietness of a provincial city a coterie had been formed of men bent on
+the pursuit of an honest and homely art, and of these he was the chief.'
+Dying, his last words were, 'Hobbema, oh, Hobbema, how I loved thee!' In
+my young days Mr. John Sell Cotman chiefly represented Norwich, although
+in later times he became connected with King's College, London. A lady
+writes to me: 'I think it was in the summer of 1842 Mr. Cotman came down
+to Norwich to visit his son John, who at that time was occupying a house
+on St. Bennet's Road. He visited us at Thorpe several times, and was
+unusually well and in good spirits, with sketchbook or folio always in
+hand. His father and sisters, too, were then living in a small house at
+Thorpe, and from the balcony of their house, which looked over the valley
+of the Wensum, he made one of his last interesting sketches, twelve of
+which, after his death, the following year, were selected by his sons for
+publication.'
+
+Evelyn gives us a pleasant picture of Norwich when he went there 'to see
+that famous scholar and physitian, Dr. T. Browne, author of the "Religio
+Medici" and "Vulgar Errors," etc., now lately knighted.' Evelyn
+continues: 'Next morning I went to see Sir Thomas Browne, with whom I had
+corresponded by letter, though I had never seen him before, his whole
+house and garden being a Paradise and cabinet of rarities, and that of
+the best collection, especially medals, books, plants and natural things.
+Amongst other curiosities, Sir Thomas has a collection of all the eggs of
+all the foule and birds he could procure; that country, especially the
+promonotary of Norfolck, being frequented, as he said, by severall kinds,
+which seldom or never go further into the land, as cranes, storkes,
+eagles, and a variety of water-foule. He led me to see all the
+remarkable places of this ancient citty, being one of the largest and
+certainly, after London, one of the noblest of England, for its venerable
+cathedrall, number of stately churches, cleannesse of the streetes and
+building of flints so exquisitely headed and squared, as I was much
+astonished at; but he told me they had lost the art of squaring the
+flints, in which at one time they so much excelled, and of which the
+churches, best houses, and walls are built.' Further, Evelyn tells us:
+'The suburbs are large, the prospect sweete with other amenities, not
+omitting the flower-gardens, in which all the inhabitants excel. The
+fabric of stuffs brings a vast trade to this populous towne.'
+
+Long has Norwich rejoiced in clever people. In the life of William
+Taylor, one of her most distinguished sons, we have a formidable array of
+illustrious Norwich personages, in whom, alas! at the present time the
+world takes no interest. Sir James Edward Smith, founder and first
+President of the Linnaean Society, ought not to be forgotten. Of Taylor
+himself Mackintosh wrote: 'I can still trace William Taylor by his
+Armenian dress, gliding through the crowd in Annual Reviews, Monthly
+Magazines, Athenaeums, etc., rousing the stupid public by paradox, or
+correcting it by useful and seasonable truth. It is true that he does
+not speak the Armenian or any other tongue but the Taylorian, but I am so
+fond of his vigour and originality, that for his sake I have studied and
+learned the language. As the Hebrew is studied by one book, so is the
+Taylorian by me for another. He never deigns to write to me, but in
+print I doubt whether he has many readers who so much understand, relish,
+and tolerate him, for which he ought to reward me by some of his
+manuscript esoteries.' More may be said of William Taylor. It was he
+who made Walter Scott a poet. Taylor's spirited translation of Burger's
+'Leonore' with the two well-known lines--
+
+ 'Tramp, tramp along the land they rode,
+ Splash, splash along the sea,'
+
+opened up to Scott a field in which for a time he won fame and wealth.
+
+Of Mrs. Taylor, wife of the grandson of the eminent Hebraist, Mackintosh
+declared that she was the Madame Roland of Norwich. We owe to her Mrs.
+Austen and Lady Duff Gordon. Mr. Reeve, the translator of De
+Tocqueville's 'Democracy,' has preserved the memory of his father, Dr.
+Henry Reeve, by the republication of his 'Journal of a Tour on the
+Continent.' Let me also mention that Dr. Caius, the founder of Caius
+College, Cambridge, was a Norwich man.
+
+To Noncons Norwich offers peculiar attractions. We have in Dr.
+Williams's library 'The Order of the Prophesie in Norwich'; and Robinson,
+the leader of the Pilgrim Fathers, had a Norwich charge. Even in a later
+day some of the Norwich divines had a godly zeal for freedom, worthy of
+Milton himself, and on which the Pilgrim Fathers would have smiled
+approval. It is told of Mark Wilks, the brother of Matthew, and the
+grandfather of our London Mark Wilks, that when a deputation went from
+Norwich during the Thelwall and Horne Tooke trials, when, if the
+Castlereagh gang had had their will, there would have been found a short
+and easy way with the Dissenters, and came back on the Sunday morning,
+entering the place after the service had commenced, that he called out,
+'What's the news?' as he saw them enter. 'Acquitted,' was the reply.
+'Thank God!' said the parson, as they all joined in singing
+
+ 'Praise God from whom all blessings flow.'
+
+It is a fact that Wilks's first sermon in the Countess of Huntingdon's
+Chapel at Norwich was from the text, 'There is a lad here with five
+barley loaves and a few small fishes.' Let me tell another story, this
+time in connection with that Old Meeting which has so much to attract the
+visitor at Norwich. It had a grand old man, William Youngman, amongst
+its supporters; I see him now, with his choleric face, his full fat
+figure, his black knee-breeches and silk stockings, his gold-headed cane.
+He was an author, a learned man, as well as a Norwich merchant, the very
+Aristarchus of Dissent--a kind-hearted, hospitable man withal, if my
+boyish experience may be relied on. One Sunday there came to preach in
+the Old Meeting a young man named Halley from London, who lived to be
+honoured as few of our Dissenting D.D.'s have been. He was young, and he
+felt nervous as he looked from the pulpit on the austere critic in his
+great square pew just beneath. Well, thought the young preacher, a
+sermon on keeping the Sabbath will be safe, and he selected that for his
+morning discourse. The service over, up comes the grand old man. 'The
+next time, young man, you preach, preach on something you understand;'
+and, having said so, he bought a pennyworth of apples of a woman in the
+street, leaving the young man to digest his remarks as best he could.
+Again the service was to be carried on. The young man was in the pulpit,
+the grand old man below. There was singing and prayer, but no sermon,
+the young man having bolted after opening the service. I like better the
+picture of Norwich I get in Sir James Mackintosh's Life, where Basil
+Montague tells us how he and Mackintosh, when travelling the Norfolk
+circuit, always hastened to Norwich to spend their evenings in the circle
+of which Mrs. Taylor was the attraction and the centre. The wife of a
+Norwich tradesman, we see her sitting sewing and talking in the midst of
+her family, the companion of philosophers, who compared her to Lucy
+Hutchinson, and a model wife. Far away in India Sir James writes to her:
+'I know the value of your letters. They rouse my mind on subjects which
+interest us in common--friends, children, literature, and life. Their
+moral tone cheers and braces me. I ought to be made permanently happy by
+contemplating a mind like yours; which seems more exclusively to derive
+its gratifications from its duties than almost any other.' It was in the
+Norwich Octagon that these Taylors worshipped. Their Unitarianism seemed
+to have affected them more favourably than it did Harriet Martineau,
+whose family also attended there. I remember Edward Taylor, who was the
+Gresham Professor of Music. But theologically, I presume, the palm of
+excellence in connection with the Octagon is to be awarded to Dr. Taylor,
+the great Hebrew scholar. He wrote to old Newton: 'I have been looking
+through my Bible, and can't find your doctrine of the Atonement.' 'Last
+night I could not see to get into bed,' replied old Newton, 'because I
+found I had my extinguisher on the candle. Take off the extinguisher,
+and then you will see.'
+
+Leaving theology, let us get up on the gray old castle, which is to be
+turned into a museum, and look round on the city lying at our feet.
+Would you have a finer view? Cross the Yare and walk up the new road
+(made by the unemployed one hard winter) to Mousehold Heath, and after
+you have done thinking of Kitt's rebellion--an agrarian one, by-the-bye,
+and worth thinking about just at this time--and of the Lollards, who were
+burnt just under you, look across to the city in the valley, with its
+heights all round, more resembling the Holy City, so travellers say, than
+any other city in the world. In the foreground is the cathedral, right
+beyond rises the castle on the hill; church spires, warehouses, public
+buildings, private dwellings, manufactories, chimneys' smoke, complete
+the landscape fringed by the green of the distant hills. There are a
+hundred thousand people there--to be preached to and saved.
+
+Windham was rather hard on the Norwich of his day. In his diary, in
+1798, he records a visit to Norwich, of which city he was the
+representative. On October 9 he dined at the Swan--'dinner, like the
+sessions dinner, but ball in the evening distinguished by the presence of
+Mrs. Siddons.' On the 10th he dined at the Bishop's--'A party, of, I
+suppose, fifty, chiefly clergy. I felt the same enjoyment that I
+frequently do at large dinners--they afford, in general, what never fails
+to be pleasant--solitude in a crowd.' On the 11th he writes: 'Dined with
+sheriffs at King's Head. Robinson, the late sheriff, was there, and much
+as he may be below his own opinion of himself, he is more to talk to than
+the generality of those who are found on those occasions. I could not
+help reflecting on the very low state of talents or understanding in
+those who compose the whole, nearly, of the society of Norwich. The
+French are surely a more enlightened and polished people.' Perhaps
+Windham would have fared better had he dined with some of the leading
+Dissenters. Few of the clergy of East Anglia at that time would have
+been fitting company for the friend of Johnson and Burke. In Norwich,
+Mr. Windham often managed to make himself unpopular. For instance,
+towards the end of the session of 1788, Mr. Windham called the attention
+of Government to a requisition from France, which was then suffering the
+greatest distress from a scarcity of grain. The object of this
+requisition was to be supplied with 20,000 sacks of flour from this
+country. So small a boon ought, he thought, to be granted from motives
+of humanity; but a Committee of the House of Commons having decided
+against it, the Ministers, though they professed themselves disposed to
+afford the relief sought for, could not, after such a decision, undertake
+to grant it upon their own responsibility. The leading part which Mr.
+Windham took in favour of this requisition occasioned, amongst some of
+his constituents at Norwich, considerable clamour. He allayed the storm
+by a private letter addressed to those citizens of Norwich who were most
+likely to be affected by a rise in the price of provisions; but the fact
+that Norwich should thus have backed up the inhuman policy of refusing
+food to France showed how strong at that time was the force of passion,
+and how hard it is to break down hereditary animosity. As a further
+illustration of manners and habits of the East Anglian clergy, let me
+mention that when, in 1778, Windham made the speech which pointed him out
+to be a man of marked ability in connection with the call made on the
+country for carrying on the American War, one of the Canons of the
+cathedral, and a great supporter of the war, exclaimed: 'D--n him! I
+could cut his tongue out!'
+
+In my young days, in serious circles, there was no name dearer than that
+of Joseph Gurney--a fine-looking man with a musical voice, always ready
+to aid with money, or in other ways, all that was right and good, or what
+seemed to him such. In the 'Memorials of a Quaker Lady' he is described
+thus: 'He sat on the end seat of the first cross-form, and both preached
+and supplicated. I was very much struck with him. His fine person, his
+beautiful dark, glossy hair, his intelligent, benign, and truly amiable
+countenance, made a deep impression upon me. And as he noticed me most
+kindly, as I was introduced to him by Elizabeth Fry, as the little girl
+his sister Priscilla wanted to bring to England, I felt myself greatly
+honoured.' The Gurneys have an ancient lineage, and had their home in
+Gourney, in Upper Normandy. One of them, of course, fought in the ranks
+of the winners at the battle of Hastings. Another was a crusader.
+Another had done good service at Acre, as a follower of Richard of the
+Lion Heart. When the main line came to an end, one branch settled in
+Norfolk. Gurney's Bank at Norwich was one of the institutions of the
+city, and was as famous in my day as at a later time was the great house
+of Overend and Gurney, which, when it fell, created a panic in financial
+circles all the world over.
+
+At Earlham, the home of the Gurneys, we learn how much may be done by a
+family, and how widespread its influence for good or evil may become.
+Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton certainly stands foremost, not alone amongst the
+East Anglians, but the philanthropists of later years. At the age of
+sixteen young Buxton went to Earlham as a guest. His biographer writes:
+'They received him as one of themselves, early appreciating his masterly,
+though still uncultivated mind; while, on his side, their cordial and
+encouraging welcome seemed to draw out all his latent powers. He at once
+joined with them in reading and study, and from this visit may be dated a
+remarkable change in the whole tone of his character; he received a
+stimulus not merely in the acquisition of knowledge, but in the formation
+of studious habits and intellectual tastes. Nor could the same influence
+fail of extending to the refinement of his disposition and manners.' At
+that time Norwich--the Buxtons being witnesses--was distinguished for
+good society, and Earlham was celebrated for its hospitality. Mr.
+Gurney, the father, belonged to the Society of Friends, but his family
+was not brought up with any strict regard to its peculiarities. He put
+little restraint on their domestic amusements, and music and dancing were
+among their favourite recreations. The third daughter, Mrs. Fry, had,
+indeed, united herself more closely with the Society of Friends; but her
+example had not then been followed by any of her brothers and sisters.
+'I know,' wrote Sir Thomas, in later years, 'no blessing of a temporal
+nature--and it is not only temporal--for which I ought to render so many
+thanks as my connection with the Earlham family. It has given a colour
+to my life. Its influence was most positive, and pregnant with good at
+that critical period between school and manhood. They were eager to
+improve; I caught the infection. I was resolved to please them, and in
+the college at Dublin, at a distance from all my friends and all control,
+their influence and the desire to please them kept me hard at my books,
+and sweetened the task they gave. The distinctions I gained at college
+(little valuable as distinctions, but valuable because habits of
+industry, perseverance and resolution were necessary to attain
+them)--these boyish distinctions were exclusively the result of the
+animating passion in my mind to carry back to them the prizes which they
+prompted and enabled me to win.'
+
+Wilberforce, when he was staying at Lowestoft in 1816, wrote: 'I am still
+full of Earlham and its excellent inhabitants. One of our great
+astronomers stated it as probable there may be stars whose light has been
+travelling to us from the Creation, and has not yet reached our little
+planet. In the Earlham family a new constellation has broken in upon us,
+for which you must invent a name, as you are fond of star-gazing, and if
+it indicates a little monstrosity (as they are apt to give the collection
+of stars the names of strange creatures--dragons, bears, etc.), the
+various stars of which the Earlham assemblage is made,' continues
+Wilberforce, 'will include also much to be respected and loved.' At that
+time Mrs. Opie was one of the Norwich stars. Caroline Fox, who went to
+dine with her described her as in great force and really jolly. 'She is
+enthusiastic about Father Mathew, reads Dickens voraciously, takes to
+Carlyle, but thinks his appearance rather against him--talks much and
+with great spirit of people, but never ill-naturedly.'
+
+'Norwich,' as described by Camden, 'on account of its wealth,
+populousness, neatness of buildings, beautiful churches, with the number
+of them--for it has a matter of fifty parishes--as also the industry of
+its citizens, loyalty to their Prince, is to be reckoned among the most
+considerable cities in Britain. It was fortified with walls that have a
+great many turrets and eleven gates.' Camden, quoting one writer after
+another, adds the eulogy of Andrew Johnston, a Scotchman, as follows:
+
+ 'A town whose stately piles and happy seat
+ Her citizens and strangers both delight;
+ Whose tedious siege and plunder made her bear
+ In Norman battles an unhappy share,
+ And feel the sad effects of dreadful war.
+ These storms o'erblown, now blest with constant peace,
+ She saw her riches and her trade increase.
+ State here by wealth, by beauty yet undone,
+ How blest if vain excess be yet unknown!
+ So fully is she from herself supplied
+ That England while she stands can never want a head.'
+
+From Norwich went Robinson to help to build up in Amsterdam that Church
+of the Pilgrim Fathers which was to be in its turn the mother of a great
+Republic such as the world had never seen. He has been styled the Father
+of Modern Congregationalism; be that as it may, when he bade farewell in
+that quaint old harbour, Delfhaven--which looks as if not a brick or a
+building had been touched since--he was doing a work from which neither
+himself nor those who stood with him could ever have expected such
+wonderful results. That emigration to Holland in Wren's time was a great
+loss of money and men to England, and was an indication of Nonconformist
+strength which wise Churchmen would have conciliated rather than driven
+to extremities. 'In sooth it was,' wrote Heylin, 'that the people in
+many great trading towns which were near the sea, having long been
+discharged of the bond of ceremonies, no sooner came to hear the least
+noise of a conformity, but they began to spurn against it; and when they
+found that all their striving was in vain, that they had lost the comfort
+of their lecturers and that their ministers began to shrink at the very
+name of a visitation, it was no hard matter for those ministers and
+lecturers to persuade them to remove their dwellings and transport their
+trades.' 'The sun of heaven,' say they, 'doth shine as comfortably in
+other places; the Sun of Righteousness much brighter.' 'Better to go and
+dwell in Goshen, find it where we can, than tarry in the midst of such an
+Egyptian darkness as is now falling on the land.' One of the preachers
+who gave that advice and acted in accordance with it was William Bridge,
+M.A. Against him Wren was so furious that he fled to Holland and settled
+down as one of the pastors of the church at Rotterdam. In 1643 we find
+him pastor of the church at Norwich and Yarmouth, and one of the Assembly
+of Divines. In 1644 the church was separated--a part meeting at Yarmouth
+and a part at Norwich. This was done on the advice of Mr. John Phillip,
+of Wrentham--a godly minister of great influence in his denomination in
+his day.
+
+As was to be expected, I was taken to the Old Meeting House at Norwich,
+where many learned men had preached, and where many men almost as learned
+listened. The gigantic pews, in which a small family might have lived,
+filled me with amazement. And equally appalling to me was the
+respectability of the people, of a very different class from that of our
+Wrentham chapel. Close by was the Octagon Chapel, where the Unitarians
+worshipped, equally impressive in its respectability. But what struck me
+most was the new and fashionable Baptist chapel of St. Mary's, where the
+venerable and learned Kinghorn preached--a great Hebrew scholar and the
+champion of strict communion--against Robert Hall, and other degenerate
+Baptists, who were ready to admit to the Lord's Table any Christians,
+whether properly baptized--that is, by immersion when adults--or merely
+sprinkled as infants. Up to this day I confound the worthy man with John
+the Baptist, probably because he looked so lank and long and lean. He
+was a man of singularly precise habits, so much so that I heard of an old
+lady who always regulated her cooking by his daily walk, putting the
+dumplings into the pot to boil when he went, and taking them out when he
+returned. I could write much about him, but _cui bono_? who cares about
+a dead Baptist lion? Not even the Baptists themselves. On going into
+their library in Castle Street the other day, to look at Kinghorn's life,
+I found no one had taken the trouble to cut the pages. In the front
+gallery of St. Mary's, Mr. Brewer, the Norwich schoolmaster, had sittings
+for the boys of his school, including his own sons, who, at King's
+College and elsewhere, have done much to illustrate our national history
+and literature. If I remember aright, one of the congregation was a
+jolly-looking old gentleman who, as Uncle Jerry, laid the foundation of a
+mustard manufactory, which has placed one of the present M.P.'s for
+Norwich at the head of a business of unrivalled extent. When Mr.
+Kinghorn died, his place was taken by Mr. Brock, better known as Dr.
+Brock, of Bloomsbury Chapel, London. Under Mr. Brock's preaching the
+reputation of St. Mary's Chapel was increased rather than diminished. As
+a young man himself at that time, he was peculiarly attractive to the
+young, and the singing was very different from the rustic psalmody of my
+native village, in spite of the fact that we had a bass-viol at all
+times, and on highly-favoured occasions such an array of flutes and
+clarionets as really astonished the natives and delighted me.
+
+But to return to the Old Meeting. Calamy writes of one of the Norwich
+ministers, of the name of Cromwell, that 'he enjoyed but one peaceable
+day after his settlement, being on the second forced out of his
+meeting-house, the licenses being called in, and then for nine years
+together he was never without trouble. Sometimes he was pursued with
+indictments at sessions, at assizes, and then with citations of the
+ecclesiastical courts; and at other times feigned letters, rhymes or
+libels were dropped in the streets or church and fathered upon him, so
+that he was forced to make his house his prison. At length that was
+broken open, and he absconded into the houses of his friends, till he
+contracted his old disease' a second time. It is said that he was
+invited on one occasion to dine with Bishop Reynolds, when several young
+clergy were present. When Mr. Cromwell retired, the Bishop rose and
+attended him, and then a general laugh ensued. On his return his
+lordship rebuked his guests for their unmannerly conduct, and told them
+that Mr. Cromwell had more solid divinity in his little finger than all
+of them had in their bodies. It must be remembered that, like most of
+the early Independent ministers, Mr. Cromwell had a University training;
+and even in my young days the respect shown to a learned ministry kept up
+not a little of the high standard which had been laid down by the fathers
+and founders of Dissent. In these more degenerate days it is to be
+questioned whether as much can be said. The Old Meeting House at Norwich
+was finished as far back as 1643. The only pastor of the church who was
+not an author was the Rev. Dr. Scott, who died in 1767. In the Octagon
+Chapel the preachers had been still more distinguished. One of them was
+the Rev. Dr. Taylor, author of the famous Hebrew Concordance, which was
+published in two volumes folio, and was the labour of fourteen years. He
+left Norwich to become tutor at the newly-erected Academy at Warrington;
+but his son, Mr. Edward Taylor, the Gresham Professor of Music, was often
+a visitor at Wrentham, where he had a little property, which he valued,
+as it gave him a vote. Another of the preachers at the Octagon was the
+Rev. R. Alderson, who afterwards became Recorder of Norwich. The Mr.
+Edward Taylor of whom I have just written was baptized by him. One day,
+being under examination as a witness in court, Alderson questioned him as
+to his age. 'Why,' said Taylor, a little nettled, 'you ought to know,
+for you baptized me.' 'I baptized you!' exclaimed Alderson. 'What do
+you mean?' The Recorder never liked to be reminded of his having been a
+preacher. The Marchioness of Salisbury is of this family. Perhaps, of
+these Unitarian preachers, one of the most distinguished was Dr. William
+Enfield, whose 'Speaker' was one of the books placed in the hands of
+ingenuous youth, and whose 'History of Philosophy' was one of the works
+to be studied in their riper years. Norwich, indeed, was full of learned
+men. Its aged Bishop, Bathurst, was the one voter for Reform, much to
+the delight of William IV., who said that he was a fine fellow, and
+deserved to be the helmsman of the Church in the rough sea she would soon
+have to steer through. His one offence in the eyes of George III. was
+that he voted against the King--that is, in favour of justice to the
+Catholics. With such a Bishop a Reformer, no wonder that all Norwich
+went wild with joy when the battle of Reform was fought and won. Bishop
+Stanley, who succeeded, was also in his way a great Liberal, and invited
+Jenny Lind to stay with him at the palace. I often used to see him at
+Exeter Hall, where his activity as a speaker afforded a remarkable
+contrast to the quieter style of his more celebrated son.
+
+Accidentally looking into the life of Bishop Bathurst, I find printed in
+the Appendix some interesting conversations at Earlham, where Joseph John
+Gurney lived. On one occasion, when Dr. Chalmers was staying there,
+Joseph John Gurney writes: 'W. Y. breakfasted with us, and with his usual
+strong sense and talent called forth the energies of Chalmers' mind.
+They conversed on the subject of special Providence, and of the unseen
+yet unceasing superintendence of the Creator of all the events which
+occur in this lower world. Said W. Y.: "Mr. Barbauld, the husband of the
+authoress, was once a resident in my house. He was a man of low opinions
+in religion, and denied the agency of an unseen spirit on the mind of
+man." I remarked that when the mind was determined to a certain right
+action by a combination of circumstances productive of the adequate
+motives, and meeting from various quarters precisely at the right point
+for the purpose in view, this was in itself a sufficient evidence of an
+especial Providence, and might be regarded as the instrumentality through
+which the Holy Spirit acts. Mr. Barbauld admitted the justice of this
+argument.' Again I read: 'W. Y. supported the doctrine that nature is
+governed through the means of general laws--laws which broadly and
+obviously mark the wisdom and benevolence of God.' One extract more: 'W.
+Y. expressed his admiration of the masterly manner in which Dr. Chalmers,
+in his "Bridgewater Treatise," has fixed on the atheist a moral
+obligation to inquire into the truth of religion; but, said he, might not
+the disciples of Irving, by the same rule, oblige us to an inquiry into
+the supposed evidences of their favourite doctrine that Christ is about
+to appear and to reign personally on earth? Might not even the Mahometan
+suppose in the Christian a similar necessity as it relates to the
+pretensions of the false prophet?' If Joseph Gurney sent for W. Y. to
+converse with Dr. Chalmers as a genial spirit, surely the name of one so
+honourable and of one so friendly both to my father and myself should not
+be omitted. W. Y. loved a joke. He was very stout, and wore tight black
+knee breeches with shoes and silk stockings. I remember how he made me
+laugh one day as he described what happened to his knee-breeches as he
+stooped to tie up his shoes ere attending a place of worship. To cut a
+long story short, I may add W. Youngman did not go to church that day.
+Originally I think he was a dyer.
+
+Harriet Martineau, as all the world knows, was born at Norwich. In her
+somewhat ill-natured autobiography she writes: 'Norwich, which has now no
+social claims to superiority at all, was in my childhood a rival of
+Lichfield itself, in the time of the Sewards, for literary pretensions
+and the vulgarity of pedantry. William Taylor was then at his best, when
+there was something like fulfilment of his early promise, when his
+exemplary filial duty was a fine spectacle to the whole city, and before
+the vice which destroyed him had coarsened his morale and destroyed his
+intellect. During the war it was a great distinction to know anything of
+German literature, and in Mr. Taylor's case it proved a ruinous
+distinction. He was completely spoiled by the flatteries of shallow men,
+pedantic women, and conceited lads.' Yet this man was the friend of
+Southey and opened up a new world to the English intellect, and perhaps
+in days to come will have a more enduring reputation than Harriet
+Martineau herself. The lady does not err on the side of good nature in
+her criticism. All she can say of Dr. Sayers is: 'I always heard of him
+as a genuine scholar, and I have no doubt he was superior to his
+neighbours in modesty and manners. Dr. Enfield, a feeble and superficial
+man of letters, was gone also from the literary supper-table before my
+time. There was Sir James Smith, the botanist, made much of and really
+not pedantic and vulgar like the rest, but weak and irritable. There was
+Dr. Alderson, Mrs. Opie's father, solemn and sententious and eccentric in
+manner, but not an able man in any way;' and thus the leading lights of
+Norwich are contemptuously dismissed. 'The great days of the Gurneys
+were not come yet. The remarkable family from which issued Mrs. Fry and
+Priscilla and Joseph John Gurney were then a set of dashing young people,
+dressed in gay riding habits and scarlet boots, as Mrs. Fry told us
+afterwards, and riding about the country to balls and gaieties of all
+sorts. Accomplished and charming young ladies they were; and we children
+used to overhear some whispered gossip about the effects of their charms
+on heart-stricken young men; but their final characteristics were not yet
+apparent.'
+
+It is to a Norwich man that we owe the publication of Hansard's
+Parliamentary Debates. Luke Hansard, to whom they owe their name, was
+born in Norwich, 1725, was trained as a printer, went to London with but
+a guinea in his pocket, was employed by Hughes, the printer of the House
+of Commons, succeeded to the business and became widely known for his
+despatch and accuracy in printing Parliamentary papers and debates. He
+died in 1828, but the business was continued by his family, and to refer
+to Hansard became the invariable custom when an M.P. was to be condemned
+out of his own mouth--as Hansard was supposed never to err. Recently
+Hansard has been carried on by a company, but the old name still remains.
+
+Dr. Stoughton has in vain, in a number of the _Congregationalist_,
+attempted to record the memory of a man well known and much honoured in
+his day--the Rev. John Alexander, of Norwich. The portrait is a failure.
+It gives us no idea of the man with his rosy face, his curly black hair,
+his merry, twinkling eye, his joyous laugh, when mirth befitted the
+occasion, or his tender sympathy where pain and sorrow and distress had
+to be endured. Mr. Alexander's jubilee was celebrated in St. Andrew's
+Hall in 1867, when the Mayor and a crowd of citizens did him honour, and
+a sum of money for the purchase of an annuity was presented, thus
+obviating the necessity of doing to him as on one occasion he in his
+humorous way suggested should be done with old ministers when past
+work--that they should be shot. In 1817 Mr. Alexander had come to
+Norwich to preach in the old Whitfield Tabernacle in place of Mr. Hooper,
+one of the tutors at Hoxton Academy. When I went to Norwich he had built
+a fine chapel in Prince's Street, and amongst the hearers was Mr. Tillet,
+then in a lawyer's office, a young man famous for his speeches at the
+Mechanics' Institute and in connection with a literary venture, the
+_Norwich Magazine_, not destined to set the Thames on fire; latterly an
+M.P. for Norwich and proprietor and editor, I believe, of one of the most
+popular of East Anglian journals, the _Norfolk News_. It was in Prince's
+Street Chapel I first learned to realize how influential was the
+Nonconformist public, of which I frankly admit in our little village,
+with Churchmen all round, I had but a limited idea. It seemed to me that
+we were rather a puny folk, but at Norwich, with its chapels and pastors
+and people, I saw another sight. There was the Rev. John Alexander, with
+an overflowing audience on the Sunday and an active vitality all the
+week, now dining at the palace with the Bishop or breakfasting at Earlham
+with the Gurneys, now meeting on terms of equality the literati of the
+place (at that time Mrs. Opie was still living near the castle, and Mr.
+Wilkins was writing his life of the far-famed Norwich doctor, the learned
+and ingenious author of the 'Religio Medici'), now visiting the afflicted
+and the destitute, now carrying consolation to the home of the mourner.
+John Alexander was a man to whom East Anglian Nonconformity owes much.
+In the old city there was a good deal of young intelligence, and a good
+deal of it amongst the Noncons. Dr. Sexton was one of the Old Meeting
+House congregation, as was Lucy Brightwell, a lady not unknown to the
+present generation of readers. To a certain extent a Noncon. is bound to
+be more or less intelligent. He finds a great State Establishment of
+religion wherever he goes. It enjoys the favour of the Court. It is
+patronized by the aristocracy. It enlists among its supporters all who
+wish to rise in the world or to make a figure in society. By means of
+the endowed schools of the land, it offers to the young, even of the
+humblest birth, a chance of winning a prize. Conform, it says, and you
+may be rich and respectable. It was said of a late Bishop of Winchester
+that he would forgive a man anything so long as he were but a good
+Churchman, and even now one meets in society with people who regard a
+Dissenter as little better than a heathen or a publican. A man who can
+thus voluntarily place himself at a disadvantage, to a certain extent,
+must have exercised his intellect and be ready to give a reason for the
+faith that is in him. Naturally, men are of the religion of the country
+in which they are born--Roman Catholics in Italy, Mahometans in Turkey,
+Buddhists in the East. It requires more power and strength of mind and
+decision of character to dissent from the Church of the State than to
+support it. 'How was it,' asked Dr. Storrar, Chairman of the Convocation
+of the University of London, the other day, 'that the lads educated at
+Mill Hill Grammar School had done so well at Cambridge and Oxford?' The
+reply, said the Doctor, was--I don't give his words, merely the idea--to
+be found in the fact that a couple of centuries ago there were men of
+strong intellect and tender consciences who refused to renounce their
+opinions at the command of a despotic power. They had been succeeded by
+their sons with the same quickness of intellect and conscience.
+Generations one after another had come and gone, and the children of
+these old Nonconformists thus came to the school with an hereditary
+intelligence, destined to win in the gladiatorship of the school, the
+college, or the world.
+
+Let me now give an anecdote of Dr. Bathurst, the Lord Bishop of Norwich,
+too good to be lost. It is told by Sir Charles Leman, who described him
+in 1839 as gradually converting his enemies into friends by his uniform
+straightforwardness and enlarged Christian principle. One of his clergy,
+who had been writing most abusively in newspapers, had on one occasion
+some favour to solicit, which he did with natural hesitation. The Bishop
+promised all in his power and in the kindest manner, and when the
+clergyman was about to leave the room he suddenly turned with, 'My lord,
+I must say, however, I much regret the part I have taken against you; I
+see I was quite in the wrong, and I beg your forgiveness.' This was
+readily accorded. 'But how was it,' the clergyman continued, 'you did
+not turn your back on me? I quite expected it.' 'Why, you forget that I
+profess myself a Christian,' was the reply.
+
+Of a later Bishop--Stanley--whom I can well remember, a dark, energetic
+little man, making a speech at Exeter Hall, we hear a little in Caroline
+Fox's memories of old friends. In 1848 she writes: 'Dined very
+pleasantly at the palace; the Bishop was all animation and good humour,
+but too unsettled to leave any memorable impression. I like Mrs. Stanley
+much--a shrewd, sensible, observing woman. She told me much about her
+Bishop, how very trying his position was on first settling at Norwich;
+for his predecessor was an amiable, indolent old man, who let things take
+their course, and a very bad course too, all which the present man has to
+correct as way opens, and continually sacrifice popularity to a sense of
+right.'
+
+The following anecdote of Miss Fox and her friends calling at a cottage
+in the neighbourhood of Norwich is too good to be lost. 'A young woman,'
+she writes, 'told us that her father was nearly converted, and that a
+little more teaching would complete the business,' adding, 'He quite
+believes that he is lost, which is, of course, a great consolation to the
+old man.' That story is racy of the soil. It is in that way the East
+Anglian peasantry who have any religion at all talk; they have no hope of
+a man who does not feel that he is lost. Well, there are many ways to
+heaven, and that must comfort some of us who still believe that man was
+made in the image of his Maker, a little lower than the angels, crowned
+with glory and honour, and not destined to an eternity of misery for the
+sins of a day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+THE SUFFOLK CAPITAL.
+
+
+The Orwell--The Sparrows--Ipswich notabilities--Gainsborough--Medical
+men--Nonconformists.
+
+Those who imagine Suffolk to be a flat and uninteresting county, with no
+charms for the eye and no associations worth speaking of, are much
+mistaken. There are few lovelier rivers in England than the Orwell, on
+which Ipswich stands, up which river the fiery Danes used to sail to
+plunder all the country round, and on the banks of which Gainsborough
+learned to love Nature and draw her in all her charms. The town itself
+stands in a valley, but it has gradually crept up the hills on each side,
+so that almost everywhere you have a pleasing prospect and breathe a
+bracing air. A few miles, or, rather, a short walk, brings you to
+Henley, which has the reputation of being the highest land in Suffolk,
+and on the other side there is a railway that connects Ipswich with
+Felixstowe, just as the Crystal Palace is connected with the City.
+Ipswich may claim to be the most prosperous and enterprising of all the
+Suffolk towns. It goes with the times. Its citizens are active and
+pushing men of business, and have enlightened ideas as well. They are
+also Liberal in politics and practical in religion, and are never behind
+in coming forward when there is a chance of benefiting themselves or
+their fellow-creatures. And yet Ipswich has a history as long as the
+dullest cathedral town. It was a place of note during the existence of
+the Saxon Heptarchy. Twice it had the honour of publicly entertaining
+King John; and there is a tradition that in the curious and
+beautifully-ornamented house in the Butter Market--formerly the residence
+of Mr. Sparrow, the Ipswich coroner, whose old family portraits,
+including one of the Jameses, presented to an ancestor of the family,
+filled me not a little with youthful wonder--Charles II. was secreted by
+one of the Sparrows of that day, when he came to hide in Ipswich after
+the battle of Worcester. 'The house is now a shop,' but, observes Mr.
+Glyde, a far-famed local historian, 'a concealed room in the upper story
+of the house, which was discovered during some alterations in 1801, is
+well adapted for such a purpose.' And, at any rate, the gay and
+graceless monarch, in search of a hiding-place, might have gone farther
+and fared worse. Be that as it may, Ipswich can rejoice in the fact that
+it was the birthplace of Cardinal Wolsey; and that he was one of the
+first educational reformers of the day must be admitted, at any rate, in
+Ipswich, of which, possibly, he would have made a second Cambridge.
+Alas! of his efforts in that direction, the only outward and visible sign
+is the old gateway in what is called College Street, which remains to
+this day. Ipswich fared well in the Elizabethan days, when her Gracious
+Majesty condescended to visit the place. Sir Christopher Hatton, the
+dancing Lord Chancellor, who led the brawls, when
+
+ 'The seals and maces danced before him,'
+
+lived in a house near the Church of St. Mary-le-Tower. Sir Edward Coke
+resided in a village not far off, and in 1597 the M.P. for Ipswich was no
+other than the great Lord Bacon, who by birth and breeding was
+emphatically a Suffolk man. From Windham's diary, it appears that at
+Ipswich that distinguished statesman experienced a new sensation. In
+1789 he writes: 'Left Ipswich not till near twelve. Saw Humphries there,
+and was for the first time entertained with some sparring; felt much
+amused with the whole of the business.'
+
+In the early part of the present century Miss Berry, on returning from
+one of her Continental trips, paid Ipswich a visit, having landed at
+Southwold. 'Appearance of Ipswich very pretty in descending towards it,'
+is the entry in her diary. About the same time Bishop Bathurst made his
+visitation tour, and he writes to one of his lady correspondents: 'You
+will be glad that, during the three weeks I passed in Suffolk, I did not
+meet a single unpleasant man, nor experience a single unpleasant
+accident.' With the name of the Suffolk hero Captain Broke, of the
+_Shannon_. (I can well remember the Shannon coach--which ran from
+Yoxford to London--the only day-coach we had at that time), Ipswich is
+inseparably connected. He was born at Broke Hall, just by, and there
+spent the later years of his life. Another of our naval heroes, Admiral
+Vernon, the victor of Porto Bello, resided in the same vicinity. At one
+time there seems to have been an attempt to connect Ipswich with the Iron
+Duke. In the memoir of Admiral Broke we have more than one reference to
+the Duke's shooting in that neighbourhood, and actually it appears that,
+unknown to himself, he was nominated as a candidate to the office of High
+Steward. Ipswich, however, preferred a neighbour, in the shape of Sir
+Robert Harland. At a later day the office was filled by Mr. Charles
+Austin, the distinguished writer on Jurisprudence.
+
+One of the celebrated noblemen who lived in Ipswich was Lord Chedworth.
+He wore top-boots, and wore them till they were not fit to be seen. When
+new boots were sent home he was accustomed to set them on one side, and
+get his manservant to wear them a short time to prepare them for his own
+feet. Sometimes the man would tell his lordship that he thought the
+boots were ready, but his lordship would generally reply, 'Never mind,
+William; wear them another week.' While at Ipswich his lordship was
+frequently consulted, owing to his legal attainments and well-known
+generous disposition, by tradesmen and people in indigent circumstances.
+The applicants were ushered into the library, where, surrounded by books,
+they found his lordship. The chairs and furniture of the room, like his
+lordship's clothes, had not merely seen their best days, but were
+comparatively worthless, and the old red cloak which invariably enveloped
+his shoulders made him look more like a gipsy boy than a peer of the
+realm. His lordship's legacies to Ipswich ladies and others, especially
+of the theatrical profession, were of the most liberal character.
+
+Ipswich in its old days had its share of witches. One of the most
+notorious of them was Mother Hatheland, who in due course was tried,
+condemned and executed. From her confession in 1645 it appears 'the said
+Mother Hatheland hath been a professor of religion, a constant hearer of
+the Word for these many years, yet a witch, as she confessed, for the
+space of nearly twenty years. The devil came to her first between
+sleeping and waking, and spake to her in a hollow voice, telling her that
+if she would serve him she would want nothing. After often solicitations
+she consented to him. Then he stroke his claw (as she confessed) into
+her hands, and with her blood wrote the covenant.' Now, as the writer
+gravely remarks, the subtlety of Satan is to be observed in that he did
+not press her to deny God and Christ, as he did others, because she was a
+professor, and he might have lost all his hold by pressing her too far.
+Satan appears to have provided her with three imps, in the shape of two
+little dogs and a mole.
+
+As the home of Gainsborough Ipswich has enduring claims on the English
+nation and on lovers of art and artists everywhere. That must have been
+a Suffolk man who passed the following criticism on Gainsborough's
+celebrated picture of 'Girl and Pigs,' of which Sir Joshua Reynolds
+became the purchaser at one hundred guineas, though the artist asked but
+sixty: 'They be deadly like pigs; but who ever saw pigs feeding together,
+but one on 'em had a foot in the trough?' Gainsborough had an
+enthusiastic attachment to music. It was the favourite amusement of his
+leisure hours, and his love for it induced him to give one or two
+concerts to his most intimate acquaintances whilst living in Ipswich. He
+was a member of a musical club, and painted some of the portraits of his
+brother members in his picture of a choir. Once upon a time,
+Gainsborough was examined as a witness on a trial respecting the
+originality of a picture. The barrister on the other side said: 'I
+observe you lay great stress on a painter's eye; what do you mean by that
+expression?' 'A painter's eye,' replied Gainsborough, 'is to him what
+the lawyer's eye is to you.' As a boy at the Grammar School of his
+native town, it is to be feared he loved to play truant. One day he went
+out to his usual sketching haunts to enjoy the nature which he loved
+heartily, previously presenting to his uncle, who was master of the
+school, the usual slip of paper, 'Give Tom a holiday,' in which his
+father's handwriting was so exactly imitated that not the slightest
+suspicion of the forgery ever entered the mind of the master. Alas!
+however, the crime was detected, and his terrified parent exclaimed in
+despair, 'Tom will one day be hanged.' When, however, he was informed
+how the truant schoolboy had employed his truant hours, and the boy's
+sketches were laid before him, forgetful of the consequences of forgeries
+in a commercial society, he declared, with all the pride of a father,
+'Tom will be a genius,' and he was right.
+
+Worthy Mr. Pickwick seems to have known Ipswich about the same time as
+myself. 'In the main street of Ipswich,' wrote the biographer of that
+distinguished individual, 'on the left-hand side of the way, a short
+distance after you have passed through the open space fronting the Town
+Hall, stands an inn known far and wide by the appellation of the Great
+White Horse, rendered the more conspicuous by a stone statue of some
+rapacious animal, with flowing mane and tail, distantly resembling an
+insane carthorse, which is elevated above the principal door. The Great
+White Horse is famous in the neighbourhood in the same degree as a prize
+ox, a county paper chronicled turnip, or unwieldy pig, for its enormous
+size. Never were such labyrinths of uncarpeted passages, such clusters
+of mouldy, ill-lighted rooms, such huge numbers of small dens for eating
+or sleeping in, beneath any one roof as are collected together between
+the four walls of the Great White Horse of Ipswich.' This was the great
+hotel of the Ipswich of my youth. As regards hotels, Ipswich has not
+improved, but in every other way it has much advanced. One of the old
+inns has been turned into a fine public hall, admirably adapted for
+concerts and public meetings. The new Town Hall, Corn Exchange, and
+Post-office are a credit to the town. The same may be said of the new
+Museum and the Grammar School and the Working Men's College and that
+health resort, the Arboretum; while by means of the new dock ships of
+fifteen hundred tons burden can load and unload. Nowadays everybody says
+Ipswich is a rising town, and what everyone says must be right. The
+Ipswich people, at any rate, have firmly got that idea into their heads.
+Its fathers and founders built the streets narrow, evidently little
+anticipating for Ipswich the future it has since achieved. The Ipswich
+of to-day is laid out on quite a different scale. It has a tram road
+service evidently much in excess of the present population, and as you
+wander in the suburbs you come to a sign-post bearing the name of a
+street in which not even the enterprise of the speculative builder has
+been able at present to plant a single dwelling. When Ipswich has
+climbed up its surrounding hills, and taken up all the building sites at
+present in the market, it will be a goodly and gallant town, almost
+fitted to invite the temporary residence of holiday-making Londoners who
+are fond of the water. At all times it is a pretty sail to Harwich and
+thence to Felixstowe, that quiet watering-place, a seaside residence that
+has still a pleasant flavour of rusticity about it, with a fine crisp
+sea-sand floor for a promenade.
+
+When I was a boy Ipswich was resorted to by Londoners in the summer-time.
+As an illustration, I give the case of Mr. Ewen, one of the deacons of
+the Weigh House Chapel, when the Rev. John Clayton was the pastor. In
+his memories of the Clayton family, the Rev. Dr. Aveling writes of Mr.
+Ewen, that 'he was so sensitively conscientious in the discharge of his
+official duties at the Weigh House, that he was never absent from town on
+the days when the Lord's Supper was administered, and when he was
+expected to assist in the administration of the elements. His London
+residence was in Lincoln's Inn Fields, but having a house and property in
+the town of Ipswich, he passed his summer months there. Yet so intent
+was he upon duly filling his place in the sanctuary of God, that he
+regularly travelled by post-chaise once in every month, and returned in
+the same manner, that he might be present, together with his pastor and
+the brethren, at the table of the Lord. The length and the expense of
+the journey (and travelling was not then what it is now) did not deter
+him from what he at least deemed to be a matter of Christian obligation.'
+Dr. Aveling is quite right when he tells us travelling is not what it
+was. It took almost a day to go from Ipswich to London when I was a boy,
+and now the journey is done by means of the Great Eastern Railway in
+about an hour and a half. It seems marvellous to one who, like myself,
+remembers well the past, to leave Liverpool Street at 5.0 p.m. precisely,
+and to find one's self landed safe and well in Ipswich soon after
+half-past six. The present generation can have no conception of
+travelling in England in the olden time.
+
+There were some wonderful old Radicals in Ipswich, though it was, and is,
+the county town of the most landlord-ridden district in England. Some of
+them got the great Dan O'Connell to pay the town a visit, and some of
+them nobly stood by old John Childs when he became famous all the world
+over as the Church-rate martyr. The lawyers and the doctors were mostly
+Tories, but the tradesmen and the merchants were not a little leavened
+with the leaven of Dissent. Mr. Hammond was, however, a Liberal surgeon,
+and as such flourished. His Whig principles, writes Mr. Glyde, brought
+him many patients, and his skill and sound qualities retained them. Dr.
+Garrord, the well-known London practitioner, was an apprentice of Mr.
+Hammond's; and this reminds me that among the Ipswich men who have risen
+is Mr. Sprigg, the Premier of Cape Colony when Sir Bartle Frere was at
+the head of affairs there. The father of Mr. Sprigg was the respected
+pastor of a Baptist chapel in the town. The only Ipswich minister whom I
+can remember was the Rev. Mr. Notcutt, who preached in the leading
+Independent chapel, now pulled down to make way for a much more
+attractive building. All I can recollect about him is, that once, when a
+lad, I fainted away when he was preaching. No sermon ever affected me so
+since; and that effect was due, it must be confessed, not to the
+preacher, who seemed to me rather aged and asthmatic, but to the heat of
+the place, in consequence of the crowd attracted to the meeting-house on
+some special occasion.
+
+But to return to the doctors. Of one of them, who was famed for his love
+of bleeding his patients, not metaphorically, but in the old-fashioned
+way, with the lancet, it is recorded that on the occasion of his taking a
+holiday two of his patients died. Lamenting the fact to a friend, the
+following epigram was the result:
+
+ 'B--- kills two patients while from home away--
+ A clever fellow this same B---, I wot;
+ If absent thus his patients he can slay,
+ How he must kill them when he's on the spot!'
+
+Perhaps one of the noted physicians of my boyhood was Mr. Stebbing. 'He
+was once,' writes Mr. Glyde, 'called in to see one of the Ipswich
+Dissenting ministers, who had taken life very easily, and had grown
+corpulent. After examining the patient and hearing his statement as to
+bodily state, he replied: "You've no particular ailment; mind and keep
+your eyes longer open, and your mouth longer shut, and you will do very
+well in a short time."' On another occasion a raw and very poor-looking
+young fellow called upon him for advice. The doctor told him to go home
+and eat more pudding, adding, 'That's all you want; physic is a very good
+thing for one to live by, but a precious bad thing for you to take.' One
+of the Ipswich characters of my boyhood, of whom Mr. Glyde has preserved
+an anecdote, was old Tuxford, the veterinary surgeon. He used to declare
+that he never took more than one meal a day--a breakfast; but when asked
+of what that consisted, he said, 'A pound of beefsteak, seven eggs, three
+cups of tea, and a quartern of rum.' It may also be mentioned that
+before Mrs. Garrett Anderson was born, Ipswich had a lady physician in
+the person of Miss Stebbing, daughter of the doctor to whom I have
+already referred. 'She was,' says one who knew her well, 'a woman of
+general education, with more than ordinary tact and discernment, combined
+with the true womanly power of analyzing and observing. She had good
+physical powers, and, like her worthy father, was somewhat pungent in her
+remarks and eccentric in her habits. She entered the ranks as a medical
+practitioner during her father's life. The benefit of his advice so
+aided her perceptive powers as to make her quite an expert in various
+ways, and she continued to practise long after his decease, occasionally
+attending males as well as females. Her knowledge of midwifery caused a
+large number of ladies to engage her services.
+
+Of the Radicals of Ipswich, the only one with whom I came into contact
+was Mr. John King, the proprietor and editor of what was then, at any
+rate, a far-famed journal--the _Suffolk Chronicle_. Astronomy was his
+hobby, and he had ideas on the subject which, unfortunately, I failed to
+catch. He had built himself an observatory, if I remember aright, at his
+residence on Rose Hill, where he would sweep the heavens nightly, to see
+what could be seen. He was a Radical of the old type, a tall, dark,
+bilious-looking man, a little hard and dry, perhaps, who seemed to think
+that it was no use to throw pearls before swine, and to serve up for the
+chaw-bacons a too rich intellectual treat, and his policy was a
+successful one. Priest-ridden as Suffolk was, the _Suffolk Chronicle_
+was the leading paper of the county, and had a large circulation, and,
+let me add, did good service in its day. Now I find Ipswich rejoices in
+a well-conducted daily journal, the _East Anglian Times_, which I hear,
+and am glad to hear, is a fine property, and I see all the leading towns
+in Suffolk have a paper to themselves, even if they can't get up a decent
+paragraph of local news--and some of them I know, from my experiences of
+Suffolk life, are quite unequal to that--once a week. The plan is to
+have some sheets already printed in London, at some great establishment,
+whence perhaps a hundred little towns are supplied, and then the local
+news and advertisements are added on, and Little Pedlington has its
+_Observer_, and Eatanswill its _Gazette_. When I was a boy, such a thing
+was out of the question, as to each paper a fourpenny-halfpenny stamp was
+attached. As the stamps had to be paid for in advance, and as, besides,
+there was an eighteen-penny duty on every advertisement, it was not quite
+such an easy matter to run a paper then as it has since become. I fancy
+the old-established journals suffered much by the change, which
+completely revolutionized the newspaper trade; at any rate, so far as the
+country was concerned. In this connection, let me add that it was to an
+Ipswich journalist we owe the establishment of penny readings on anything
+like a large and successful scale. They were originated by Mr. Sully, at
+that time the proprietor and editor of the _Ipswich __Express_, a paper
+intended to steer between the ferocious Toryism of the _Ipswich Journal_,
+and the equally ferocious Radicalism of the _Suffolk Chronicle_. As was
+to be expected, the attempt did not succeed. As in love and in war, so
+in politics and theology, moderation is a thing hateful to gods and men.
+The electioneering annals of Ipswich can testify to that fact. I have a
+dim recollection of an election petition which ended in Sir Fitzroy
+Kelly's admitting that he had stated what was not true, but he did it as
+a lawyer, not as a gentleman, and in sending one of the finest old
+gentlemen I ever knew to gaol, because he would not tell what he knew of
+the matter. There was not much half-and-half work in the Ipswich
+politics of my young days.
+
+When people fight fiercely in politics, it is natural to expect an equal
+earnestness in religious matters. It was so emphatically with respect to
+the Ipswich of the past. 'The Reformed religion, after those fiery days
+of persecution,' writes John Quick, 'was now revived, and flourished
+again in the country, under the auspicious name of our English Deborah,
+Queen Elizabeth; and Ipswich, the capital town of Suffolk, was not more
+famous for its spacious sheds, large and beautiful buildings, rich and
+great trade, and honourable merchants, both at home and abroad, than it
+was for its learned and godly ministers and its religious intolerants.'
+Of the godly ministers, one of the most famous was Samuel Ward, who was
+buried in St. Mary-le-Tower Church. In 1666 he preached a sermon at St.
+Paul's Cross. But he meddled with politics. For instance, in 1621 he
+published a caricature picture, entitled 'Spayne and Rome Defeated.' It
+is thus described: The Pope and his Council are represented in the centre
+of the piece, and beneath, on one side the Armada, and on the other the
+Gunpowder Treason. Gondomar, the Spanish Ambassador, complained of it as
+insulting to his master. Ward was placed in custody. Being
+Puritanically inclined, he was, in addition, prosecuted in the Consistory
+Court of Norwich by Bishop Harsnet for Nonconformity. Ten years later,
+when 600 persons were contemplating a removal from Ipswich to New
+England--as a place where they could worship God without fear of priest
+or king--the blame was cast by Laud on Ward. Rushworth informs us that
+the charges laid against him were that he preached against the common
+bowing at the name of Jesus and against the King's 'Book of Sports,' and
+further said that the Church of England was ready to ring changes in
+England, and that the Gospel stood on tiptoe as ready to be gone; and for
+this he was removed from his lectureship and sent to gaol. John Ward,
+his brother, Rector of St. Clement's, was a member of the Assembly of
+Divines, and was called to preach two sermons before the House of
+Commons, for which he received the thanks of the House. At that time we
+find a reference to Ipswich as a place which 'the Lord hath long made
+famous and happy as a valley of Gospel vision.' Such places, alas! seem
+to have been commoner formerly than they are now.
+
+One of the Congregational churches of Ipswich, at any rate, has very
+interesting historical associations. 'Salem Chapel,' writes the Rev.
+John Browne, in his 'History of Congregationalism in Suffolk and
+Norfolk,' 'stands in St. George's Lane, opposite the place where St.
+George's Chapel formerly stood, where Bilney was apprehended when
+preaching in favour of the Reformation, and where he so enraged the monks
+that they twice plucked him out of the pulpit.' The last time I was at
+Ipswich I saw bricklayers at work at the old Presbyterian church in St.
+Nicholas Street, which it would be a pity to see modernized, being such a
+fine illustration of the old-fashioned Dissenting Meeting-house, before
+it became the fashion to have a taste and to build Gothic chapels in
+which it is difficult to see or hear, and the only advantage of which is
+that they are an exact copy of the steeple-houses against which at one
+time Nonconformist England waged remorseless war. One of the pastors of
+this congregation removed to Mill Hill Chapel, Leeds, where he succeeded
+Dr. Priestley; another was the author of a 'History and Description of
+Derbyshire'; while one of the supplies was the Rev. Robert Alderson,
+afterwards of the Octagon Chapel, Norwich, who ultimately became a lawyer
+and Recorder of Norwich. Perhaps one of the most singular scenes
+connected with Dissenting chapels in Ipswich was that which took place in
+the old chapel in Tackard, now Tacket, Street. In 1766 the minister
+there was the Rev. Mr. Edwards, who, it appears, was sent for to the gaol
+to see two men who had been found guilty of house-breaking, and who,
+according to the law as it then stood, were to be hung. Mr. Edwards did
+so, and stayed with them two hours. As the result of this visit they
+were brought to a penitent state of mind. They had heard that Mr.
+Edwards had prepared a sermon for them and desired them to attend. This
+was a mistake, but notwithstanding they obtained permission to go to the
+chapel, where Mr. Edwards was conducting a church meeting. A report of
+the purpose got abroad, and many persons came to the meeting, upon which
+it was thought most proper that the church business should be laid aside,
+and that Mr. Edwards should go into the pulpit. This he did, and after
+singing and prayer the prisoners came in with their shackles and fetters
+on. Mr. Edwards, in describing the scene, says:
+
+'Many were moved at the sight. As for myself, I was obliged for some
+time to stop to give vent to tears. When I recovered I gave out part of
+a hymn suitable to the occasion, then prayed. The subject of discourse
+was, "This is a faithful saying," and the poor prisoners shed abundance
+of tears while I was explaining the several parts of the text, and
+especially when I turned and addressed myself immediately to them. The
+house was thronged, and I suppose not a dry eye in the whole
+place--nothing but weeping and sorrow; and the floods of tears which
+gushed from the eyes of the two prisoners were very melting.'
+
+The good man continues: 'When we had concluded I went and spoke some
+encouraging words by way of supporting them under their sorrow. They
+then desired I should see them in the evening, which I did, and called
+upon Mr. Blindle on the way; the old gentleman went along with me to the
+prison, and was one who prayed with them with much fervour and
+enlargement of heart. We spent nearly two hours with them, and a crowd
+of people were present.' On another occasion we find an American Indian
+preaching in the pulpit--a novelty in 1767. He came over with a Dr.
+Whitaker, of Norwich, in America, to collect money for the education and
+conversion of Indians, and at Tackard Street the people raised the very
+respectable sum of 80 pounds for the purpose. In 1561 Queen Elizabeth
+paid Ipswich a visit. At that time the place was a little too Protestant
+for her. Strype writes: 'Here Her Majesty took a great dislike to the
+impudent behaviour of most of the ministers and readers, there being many
+weak ones among them, and little or no order observed in the public
+service, and few or none wearing the surplice, and the Bishop of Norwich
+was thought remiss, and that he winked at schismatics. But more
+particularly she was offended with the clergy's marriage, and that in
+cathedrals and colleges there were so many wives and children and widows
+seen, which, she said, was contrary to the intent of the founders, and so
+much tending to the interruption of the studies of those who were placed
+there. Therefore she issued an order to all dignitaries, dated August 9,
+at Ipswich, to forbid all women to the lodgings of cathedrals or
+colleges, and that upon pain of losing their ecclesiastical promotion.'
+From this it is clear that when Elizabeth was Queen there was little
+chance of the Women's Rights Question finding a favourable hearing. The
+Queen was succeeded by monarchs after her own heart. In 1636 Prynne
+published his 'Newes from Ipswich,' 'discovering certain late detestable
+practices of some domineering Lordly Prelates to undermine the
+established doctrine and discipline of our Church, extirpate all orthodox
+sincere preachers and preaching of God's Word, usher in popery, idolatry
+and superstition.' For this publication Prynne was sentenced to be fined
+5,000 pounds to the King, to lose the remainder of his ears, to be
+branded on both cheeks, and to be perpetually imprisoned in Carnarvon
+Castle. At that time the Ipswich people were far too Liberal for the
+powers existing. Ipswich news nowadays is little calculated to displease
+anyone, and governments and kings are less prone to take offence at the
+exercise of free thought and free speech.
+
+Ipswich people make their way. Miss Reeve--who wrote the 'Old English
+Baron,' a popular tale years ago--was the daughter of the Rev. William
+Reeve of St. Nicholas Church. Another Ipswich lady, Mrs. Keeley, who
+lives on in her grand old age, was certainly one of the most popular
+performers of her day.
+
+Two hundred years ago, no city man was better known than Thomas Firmin,
+who was born at Ipswich, described in his biography as 'a very large and
+populous town in the county of Suffolk,' in 1632. He was of Puritan
+parentage, and bound apprentice in the city of London, and then began
+business as a linen-draper on the modest capital of 100 pounds. In a
+little while he married and was enabled to dispense a generous
+hospitality, seeking all opportunities of becoming acquainted with
+persons of worth, whether foreigners or his fellow-countrymen. Amongst
+his special friends were Wilkins, Bishop of Chester, and Archbishop
+Tillotson, at that time the afternoon lecturer at St. Lawrence's. During
+the time of the plague he managed to secure work for the London poor, and
+after the fire he erected a warehouse on the banks of the Thames, where
+coal and corn were sold at cost price. In 1676 he built a great factory
+in Little Britain, for the employment of the needy and industrious in the
+linen manufacture; he also relieved poor debtors in prison. The great
+work of his later years was in connection with the Blue Coat School. He
+was also one of the Governors of St. Thomas's Hospital, which he did much
+to rescue from the wretched condition in which he found it. When the
+French refugees, in consequence of the revocation of the Edict of Nantes,
+were driven over to this country, Firmin exerted himself powerfully on
+their behalf, and sent some of them to Ipswich to engage in manufacturing
+there. He also had a good deal to do with Ireland, when, as now, the
+country was torn by contending factions. At a large expense he also
+educated many boys and set them up in trade. He was also one of the
+first of the avowed and ardent friends and advocates of a free thought,
+of which there were few supporters in England at that day--even among the
+countrymen of Milton and John Locke. Unitarians were rare in the days
+when Firmin proclaimed himself one. Altogether he was one of the best
+men of his age, and well deserved to be buried in Christchurch, Newgate,
+among the Bluecoat School boys, to whom he had ever been such a friend,
+and to have the memorial pillar erected in his honour by Lady Clayton in
+Marden Park, Surrey. It is to be hoped that the memorial remains,
+though, alas! the noble mansion at one time inhabited by Wilberforce, and
+where the great philanthropist's celebrated son, the Bishop of Oxford was
+born, and where I have spent more than one pleasant day when Sir John
+Puleston lived there, has been since burnt down.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+AN OLD-FASHIONED TOWN.
+
+
+Woodbridge and the country round--Bernard Barton--Dr. Lankester--An old
+Noncon.
+
+The traveller as he leaves the English coast for Antwerp or Rotterdam or
+the northern ports of Germany, may remember that the last glimpse of his
+native land is the light from Orford Ness, which is a guiding star to the
+mariner as he ploughs his weary way along the deep. Of that part of
+Suffolk little is known to the community at large. When I was a boy it
+was looked upon as an _ultima Thule_, where the people were in a
+primitive state of civilization; where shops and towns and newspapers and
+good roads were unknown; where traditions of smuggling yet remained. Few
+ever went into that region, and those who did, when they returned, did
+not bring back with them encouraging reports. Barren sandy moors, along
+which the bitter east wind perpetually blew, fatal alike to vegetation
+and human life, were the chief characteristics of a district the natives
+of which were not rich, at any rate as regards this world's goods.
+Orford, like Dunwich, was once a place of some importance. 'A large and
+populous town with a castle of reddish stone,' writes Camden, but in his
+time a victim of the sea's ingratitude; 'which withdraws itself little by
+little, and begins to envy it the advantages of a harbour.' In the time
+of Henry I., writes Ralph de Coggeshall, when Bartholomew de Glanville
+was Governor of its castle, some fishermen there caught a wild man in
+their nets. 'All the parts of his body resembled those of a man. He had
+hair on his head, a long-peaked beard, and about the breast was exceeding
+hairy and rough. But at length he made his escape into the sea, and was
+never seen more,' which was a pity, as undoubtedly he was the 'missing
+link.' Besides, as Camden remarks, the fact was a confirmation of what
+the common people of his time remarked. 'Whatever is produced in any
+part of nature is in the sea,' and shows 'that not all is fabulous what
+Pliny has written about the Triton on the coasts of Portugal, and the sea
+man in the Straits of Gibraltar.' Nor is that the only wonder connected
+with the district. Close by is Aldborough, where the poet Crabbe learned
+to become, as Byron calls him,
+
+ 'Nature's sternest painter, but the best;'
+
+and as Camden writes, 'Hard by, when in the year 1555 all the corn
+throughout England was choakt in the ear by unseasonable weather, the
+inhabitants tell you that in the beginning of autumn there grew peas
+miraculously among the rocks, and that they relieved the dearth in those
+parts. But the more thinking people affirm that pulse cast upon the
+shore by shipwreck used to grow there now and then, and so quite exclude
+the miracle.' At the present the crag-beds are the most interesting
+feature to the visitor, especially if he be of a geological turn. These
+are so rich in fossil shells that you may find some of the latter in
+almost every house in Ipswich. The Coralline Crag is the oldest bed; but
+this formation does not occur in an undisturbed state, except in
+Sudbourne Park and about Orford. A drive thither from Ipswich, through
+Woodbridge, conveys the traveller through some of the loveliest scenery
+in Suffolk, and the numerous exposures of Coralline Crag in Sudbourne
+Park, which is about two miles from Orford, will amply repay the
+traveller, on account of the number of fossils which he can there obtain,
+and the ease with which he can extract them. In this neighbourhood live
+the far-famed Garrett family, one of whom, as Mrs. Dr. Anderson, is well
+known in London society, as is also her sister, Mrs. Fawcett, the wife of
+the late popular M.P. for Hackney. Close by is Leiston Abbey, originally
+one of Black Canons, consisting of several subterranean chapels, various
+offices and a church, which appears to have been a handsome structure,
+faced with flint and freestone. The interior was plain and undecorated,
+yet massive. A large extent of the neighbouring fields was enclosed with
+walls, which have been demolished, as was to be expected, for the sake of
+the materials. We hear much of the dead cities of the Zuyder Zee. On
+her eastern coast England has her dead cities. Dunwich, of which I have
+already spoken, is one. Orford, now known solely by its lighthouse, is
+another; Blythburgh, in the church of which is the tomb of Anna, King of
+the East Angles, who was slain in 654, is a third. Like Tyre and Sidon,
+these places had their merchant princes, who lived delicately, and whose
+ships traded far and near. It is said incorrectly of Love, that it
+
+ 'At sight of human ties
+ Spreads its soft wings and in a moment flies.'
+
+The remark is truer of commerce, which is a law to itself, and which
+defies Acts of Parliament and royal patronage. Hence it is the east
+coast of Suffolk is so rich in melancholy remains of ancient cities, now
+given over to decay. In my young days the chief town of this district
+was Woodbridge. Manufactories were then unknown. The steam-engine had
+not then been utilized for the everyday use of man, and farmers,
+peasants, coal and corn merchants, solely inhabited the district, and in
+Woodbridge especially the latter rose and flourished for a time.
+
+How it was, I know not, but nevertheless such was the fact, that the
+Ipswich of my youthful days seemed to have little, if any, literary
+associations connected with it. The celebrated Mr. Fulcher published his
+'Ladies' Pocket-book' at Sudbury, which had a great reputation in its
+day, and for which very distinguished people used to write. It was, in
+fact, more of an annual than a pocket-book, and was patronized
+accordingly. Then there was James Bird, living at Yoxford, 'the garden
+of Suffolk,' as it was called. Woodbridge had a still higher reputation.
+James Bird kept a shop, and was supposed to be a Unitarian; but Bernard
+Barton was in a bank, and, besides, he was a Quaker, and Quakers all the
+world over are, or were, famous for their goodness and their wealth. The
+fame of the Quaker-poet conferred quite a literary reputation on the
+district, and the more so as no one at that time associated Quakerism
+with literary faculty in any way. Now and then, it is true, the
+Stricklands talked of a charming young Quaker, who indeed once or twice
+called at our house to see Susanna when she was staying there; but Allan
+Ransome--for it is to him I refer--did not pursue literature or poetry to
+any great extent, and instead preferred to develop the manufacture of
+agricultural implements--a manufacture which, carried on under the same
+name, is now one of the chief industries of the busy and thriving town of
+Ipswich, and employs quite a thousand men. Woodbridge then bore away the
+palm from the county capital, as the home of literature and poetry and
+romance. As a town, it is more prettily situated than are most East
+Anglian villages and towns. The principal thoroughfare, as you rode
+through it by one of the Yarmouth coaches, that connected it at that time
+with the Metropolis, was long and narrow. If you turned off to the right
+you came to the Market-place, where were the leading shops. On your left
+you reached the Quay and the river, where a few coasters were employed,
+chiefly in the coal and corn trade. In our time Woodbridge has done its
+duty to the State. Dr. Edwin Lankester the well-known coroner for
+Middlesex, came from Melton, close by, the High Street of which gradually
+terminates in the Woodbridge thoroughfare; and the lately deceased Lord
+Hatherley, one of England's most celebrated lawyers, was educated in that
+district, and took his wife from the same happy land. The body of the
+late Lord Hatherley, the great Whig Lord Chancellor, we were told the
+other day, was interred in the family vault of Great Bearings, Suffolk.
+His mother was a Woodbridge lady, a Miss Page. Lord Hatherley's father
+was the far-famed Liberal Alderman, Sir Matthew Wood, for many years M.P.
+for the City of London, and Queen Caroline's trusted friend and
+counsellor. Lord Hatherley married, in 1830, Charlotte, the only
+daughter of the late Major Edward Moore, of Great Bealings, Suffolk, but
+was left a widower in 1878. He devoted much time to religious work, so
+long as he had the strength to undertake it. He was the author of a work
+entitled 'The Continuity of Scripture, as declared by the Testimony of
+Our Lord and the Evangelists and the Apostles', which has passed through
+three or four editions. He was created an Hon. D.C.L. of Oxford in 1851,
+was an Hon. Student of Christ Church, Oxford, a Governor of the
+Charterhouse, and a member of the Fishmongers' Company, of which his
+father had at one time been Prime Warden. Major Moore himself was a
+great authority on Suffolk literature and antiquities, and published more
+than one book--now very scarce--on the interesting theme.
+
+As to Dr. Lankester, all Woodbridge was scandalized when it was announced
+that he was articled to a medical man. 'What, make a doctor of him!'
+said the local gossips at the time. 'They had much better make a butcher
+of him.' And not a little were the good people astonished when he came
+to town, and was signally successful as a medical lecturer, and as an
+advocate of the sanitary principles which in our day have come to be
+recognised as essential to the welfare of the State. Dr. Lankester was
+in great request as a writer on medical subjects in a popular manner, and
+did undoubtedly much good in his day. A good many genteel people lived
+in the neighbourhood of Woodbridge, and it had a society to which it can
+lay no claim at the present time. Edward Fitzgerald, the friend of
+Thackeray and Carlyle, himself an author of no mean repute, lived close
+by.
+
+That genteel people should have pitched their tents in or around
+Woodbridge is not much to be wondered at, as the neighbourhood was
+certainly attractive and convenient at the same time. The scenery around
+is as interesting as any that could be found, at any rate, in that part
+of England. The drive from Tuddenham to Woodbridge, says Mr. Taylor, in
+his 'Ipswich Handbook,' is perhaps unequalled in Suffolk. On the road
+you pass through the villages of Little and Great Bealings, and if you
+are on the look-out for spots which an artist would love to study, you
+may make a very short detour to Playford. The churches, both of Little
+and of Great Bealings, are very ancient, and well deserve a visit; but
+the Woodbridge Road itself passes through some very pretty scenery.
+Rushmere Heath, in the early summer time, when the gorse is in bloom, is
+one mass of yellow, in the cleared spaces of which may usually be seen a
+gipsy encampment. The gibbet once stood on this heath, and in former
+times it seems to have been the place where executions usually took
+place. It was here that in 1783 a woman, named Bedingfield, was burnt
+for murdering her husband. In the early part of this century, when there
+were many alarms as to a French invasion, and it was the firm belief of
+the old ladies that one fine morning Bony would land upon our shores, and
+carry them all away captive, many were the reviews of soldiers held there
+by the Duke of Cambridge--whose house has been pointed out to me at
+Woodbridge--and the Duke of Kent. At that time it was the fashion to
+exercise the volunteers on a Sunday, a practice which would not be
+sanctioned in our more religious age. It is a beautiful ride through
+Kesgrave. Dense plantations abound on both sides, and in May the chorus
+of nightingales is described as something wonderful. In the word
+'Kesgrave' we have an allusion to the barrows or tumuli to be seen on
+Kesgrave Heath. There are several of these erections remaining to this
+day, and perhaps tradition is warranted in speaking of the spot as the
+site whereon the Danes and Saxons met in deadly fight. It is certain
+that the former frequently came up the Deben and the Orwell. At
+Martlesham you see a creek, richly wooded on both sides, which flows up
+from the River Deben. It is a striking object at high water, but by no
+means so striking as the sign of the village public-house--the head of a
+huge wooden lion painted with the brightest of reds. It was originally
+the figure-head of a Dutch man-of-war, one of the fleet defeated at the
+famous battle of Sole Bay. Be that as it may, no sign is better known
+than that of Martlesham Red Lion. 'As red as Martlesham Lion' is still a
+common figure of speech throughout East Suffolk, and I am glad to see
+that in the beautiful East Anglian etchings of Mr. Edwards, a Suffolk
+lawyer, who turned artist, Martlesham Red Lion has justice done to it at
+last.
+
+Woodbridge, which the guide-book in 1844 described as a thriving town and
+port--I question whether it is thriving now--is situated on the western
+bank of the Deben, about nine miles above the mouth of the river, and
+about eight miles to the north of Ipswich. In Domesday Book the place is
+called Udebridge, of which its present name is no doubt a corruption.
+Mr. William White, whom I have already quoted, says: 'Fifty years ago
+only one daily coach and a weekly waggon passed through the town to and
+from London; but more than twelve conveyances (coaches, omnibuses and
+carriers' waggons) now pass daily between the hours of six in the morning
+and twelve at noon, and persons may travel from Woodbridge to London in a
+few hours for ten shillings, instead of paying three times that amount,
+and being thirteen hours on the road, as was formerly the case.' The
+railway has now rendered it possible for people to travel at a quicker
+speed and at a cheaper rate. In London we have a Woodbridge Street, in
+the neighbourhood of Clerkenwell Green, which points to a connection
+between the poorer part of the City and the picturesque Suffolk town on
+the banks of the Deben, and this gives me occasion to speak of Thomas
+Seckford, Esq., one of the masters of the Court of Requests, and Surveyor
+of the Court of Wards and Liveries in the reign of Queen Elizabeth. He
+was not less distinguished in the profession of the law than in the other
+polite accomplishments of the age in which he lived, and to his patronage
+of his servant, Christopher Saxton, the public were indebted for the
+first set of county maps, which were engraved by his encouragement and at
+his request. He represented Ipswich in three Parliaments, and died
+without issue in 1588, aged seventy-two. In Woodbridge his name is
+perpetuated by a handsome pile of buildings known as the Seckford
+Almshouses and Schools, to which the property in Clerkenwell is devoted.
+At the time of his decease that property produced about 112 pounds a
+year; in 1768 it was said to be of the yearly value of 563 pounds. In
+1826 an Act of Parliament was obtained to enable the governors of the
+almshouses to grant building and other leases, to take down many of the
+old buildings, to erect new premises, and repair and alter old ones, and
+to lay out new streets on the charity estate in Clerkenwell, and, in
+consequence, we find in 1830 the estate producing a rental of more than
+3,000 pounds a year. In 1844 the yearly rental had risen to 4,000
+pounds. Since then it has much increased, and all this is devoted to the
+benefit of the Woodbridge poor.
+
+In 1806 Bernard Barton, the Quaker poet, came to live at Woodbridge.
+When fourteen years old he was apprenticed to Mr. Samuel Jessup, a
+shopkeeper in Halstead, Essex. 'There I stood,' he writes, 'for eight
+years behind the counter of the corner shop at the top of Halstead Hill,
+kept to this day (November 9, 1828) by my old master and still worthy
+uncle, S. Jessup.' In Woodbridge he married a niece of his old master,
+and went into partnership with her brother as corn and coal merchant.
+But she died in giving birth to the Lucy Barton whose name still, unless
+I am mistaken, adorns our literature. Bernard gave up business and
+retired into the bank of the Messrs. Alexander, where he continued for
+forty years, working within two days of his death. He had always been
+fond of books, and was one of the most active members of a Woodbridge
+Book Club, and had been in the habit of writing and sending to his
+friends occasional copies of verse. In 1812 he published his first
+volume, called 'Metrical Effusions,' and began a correspondence with
+Southey. A complimentary copy of verses which he had addressed to the
+author of the 'Queen's Wake,' just then come into notice, brought him
+long and vehement letters from the Ettrick--letters full of thanks to
+Barton and praises of himself, and a tragedy 'that will astonish the
+world ten times more than the "Queen's Wake,"' to which justice could not
+be done in Edinburgh, and which Bernard Barton was to try to get
+represented in London. In 1825 one of Bernard's volumes of poems had run
+into a fifth edition, and of another George IV. had accepted the
+dedication. Thus prompted to exertion, he worked too hard; banking all
+day and writing poetry all night were too much for him. Lamb, however,
+cheered up the dyspeptic poet. 'You are too much apprehensive about your
+complaint,' he wrote. 'I know many that are always writing of it and
+live on to a good old age. I knew a merry fellow--you partly know him,
+too--who, when his medical adviser told him he had drunk all _that part_,
+congratulated himself, now his liver was gone, that he should be the
+longest liver of the two.' Southey wrote in a soberer vein. 'My friend,
+go to bed early; and if you eat suppers, read afterwards, but never
+compose, that you may lie down with a quiet intellect. There is an
+intellectual as well as a religious peace of mind, and without the former
+be assured there can be no health for a poet.'
+
+At times Bernard Barton seems to have been troubled about money matters.
+On one occasion he appears to have made up his mind to have done with
+banking and devote himself to literature. 'Keep to your bank,' wrote
+Lamb, 'and the bank will keep you. Trust not to the public: you may
+hang, starve, drown yourself, for anything that worthy personage cares.
+I bless every star that Providence, not seeing good to make me
+independent, has seen it next good to settle me on the stable foundation
+of Leadenhall. Sit down, good B. B., in the banking office. What! is
+there not from six to eleven p.m. six days in the week? and is there not
+all Sunday?' Fortunately for B. B., friends came to his rescue. A few
+members of his Society, including some of the wealthier of his own
+family, raised among them 1,200 pounds for his benefit. The scheme
+originated with Joseph John Gurney, of Norwich, and in 1824 when the
+money was collected, it was felt that 1,200 pounds was a great deal for a
+poet to receive. Bernard Barton's daughter married a Suffolk gentleman,
+well-to-do in the world, but the lady and gentleman had not congenial
+minds, and parted almost as soon as the honeymoon was over.
+
+B. B. was a great correspondent. As a banker's clerk, necessarily his
+journeys were few and far between. Once or twice he visited Charles
+Lamb. He once also met Southey at Thomas Clarkson's, at Playford Hall,
+perhaps the most picturesque old house in East Anglia, where the latter
+resided, and of which I have a distinct recollection, as, on the terrace
+before the moat with which it was surrounded, I once saw the venerable
+philanthropist and his grandchildren. Now and then B. B. also visited
+the Rev. Mr. Mitford at Benhall, a village between Woodbridge and
+Saxmundham, who was then engaged in editing the Aldine edition of the
+English Poets. But B. B.'s correspondents were numerous. Poor,
+unfortunate L. E. L. sent him girlish letters. Mrs. Hemans was also a
+correspondent, as were the Howitts and Mrs. Opie and Dr. Drake, of
+Hadley, whose literary disquisitions are now, alas! forgotten; and poor
+Charles Lloyd, whose father wrote of his son's many books 'that it is
+easier to write them than to gain numerous readers.' Dr. Bowring and
+Josiah Conder were also on writing terms with the Quaker poet. His
+excursions, his daughter tells us, rarely extended beyond a few miles
+round Woodbridge, to the vale of Dedham, Constable's birthplace and
+painting-room; or to the neighbouring seacoast, including Aldborough,
+doubly dear to him from its association with the memory and poetry of
+Crabbe. Once upon a time he dined with Sir Robert Peel, when he had the
+pleasure of meeting Airy, the late Astronomer Royal, whom he had known as
+a lad at Playford. The dinner with Sir Robert Peel ended satisfactorily,
+as it resulted in the bestowal by the Queen on the poet of a pension of
+100 pounds a year. He was now beyond the fear of being tempted to commit
+forgery, and being hung in consequence--a possibility, which was the
+occasion of one of Lamb's wittiest letters. The gentle Elia made merry
+over the chance of a Quaker poet being hung.
+
+Amiable and liberal as was Bernard Barton, he could and did strike hard
+when occasion required. In East Anglia, when I was a lad, there was a
+great deal of intolerance--almost as much as exists in society circles at
+the present day--and that is saying a great deal. Churchmen, in their
+ignorance, were ready to put down Dissent in every way, and occasionally,
+by their absurdity, they roused the righteous ire of the Quaker poet.
+One of them, for instance, had said at a public meeting: 'This was the
+opinion he had formed of Dissenters, that they were wolves in sheep's
+clothing.' Whereupon B. B. wrote:
+
+ 'Wolves in sheep's clothing! bitter words and big;
+ But who applies them? first the speaker scan;
+ A suckling Tory! an apostate Whig!
+ Indeed a very silly, weak young man!
+
+ 'What such an one may either think or say,
+ With sober people matters not one pin;
+ In _their_ opinion his own senseless bray
+ Proves _him_ the ASS WRAPT IN A LION'S SKIN!'
+
+Better is the following address to a certain Dr. E.:
+
+ 'A bullying, brawling, champion of the Church,
+ Vain as a parrot screaming on her perch;
+ And like that parrot screaming out by rote,
+ The same stale, flat, unprofitable note;
+ Still interrupting all debate
+ With one eternal cry of "Church and State!"
+ With all the High Tory's ignorance increased,
+ By all the arrogance that makes the priest;
+ One who declares upon his solemn word
+ The Voluntary system is absurd;
+ He well may say so, for 'twere hard to tell
+ Who would support him did not law compel.'
+
+A prophet, it is said, is not honoured in his own country. Bernard
+Barton was happily the rare exception that proves the rule. I remember
+being at the launching of a vessel, bought and owned by a Woodbridge man,
+called the _Bernard Barton_; it was the first time I had ever seen a ship
+launched, and I was interested accordingly. The ultimate fate of the
+craft is unknown to history. On one occasion she was reported in the
+shipping list amongst the arrivals at some far-off port as the _Barney
+Burton_. Such is fame!
+
+Of his local reputation Bernard was not a little proud. His little town
+was vain of him. It was something to go into the bank and get a cheque
+cashed by the poet. The other evening I went to the house of a
+Woodbridge man who has done well in London, and lives in one of the few
+grand old houses which yet adorn Stoke Newington Green--just a stone's
+throw from where Samuel Rogers dwelt--and there in the drawing-room were
+Bernard Barton's own chair and cabinet preserved with as much pious care
+as if he had been a Shakespeare or a Milton. Bernard Barton made no
+secret of his vocation, and when the time had come that he had delivered
+himself of a new poem, it was his habit to call on one or other of his
+friends and discuss the matter over a bottle of port--port befitting the
+occasion; no modern liquor of that name--
+
+ 'Not such as that
+ You set before chance comers,
+ But such whose father grape grew fat
+ On Lusitanian summers.'
+
+And then there was a good deal of talk, as was to be expected, on things
+in general, for B. B. loved his joke and was full of anecdote--anecdote,
+perhaps, not always of the most refined character. But what could you
+expect at such happy times from a man brimful of human nature, who had to
+pose all life under the double weight of decorum imposed on him, in the
+first place as a Quaker, and in the second place as a banker's clerk?
+
+Bernard Barton, as I recollect him, was somewhat of a dear old man--short
+in person, red in face, with dark brown hair. He was, as I have said, a
+clerk in a bank, but his poetry had elevated him, somehow, to the rank of
+a provincial lion, and at certain houses, where the dinner was good and
+the wine was ditto, he ever was a welcome guest. I dined with him at the
+house of a friend in Woodbridge, and it seemed to me that he cared more
+for good feeding and a glass of wine and a pinch of snuff than the sacred
+Nine. Of course at that time I had not been educated up to the fitting
+state of mind with which the philosopher of our day proceeds to the
+performance of the mysteries of dinner. Dining had at that time not been
+elevated to the rank of a science, to the study of which the most acute
+intellects devote their highest energies; nor had flowers then been
+invoked to lend an additional grace to the dining-table. Besides,
+dinners such as Mr. Black gives at Brighton, scientific dinners, such as
+those feasts with which Sir Henry Thompson regales his friends, were
+unknown. Nevertheless, now and then we managed to dine comfortably off
+roast beef or lamb, a slice of boiled or roast fowl, a bit of
+plum-pudding or fruit tart, a crust of bread and cheese, with--tell it
+not in Gath, publish it not in the streets of Askalon--sherry and Madeira
+at dinner, and a few glasses of fine old fruity port after. Some
+Shakespearian quotations--unknown to me then, for Shakespeare was little
+quoted in purely evangelical circles, either in Church or Dissent--a
+reference to Sir Walter Scott's earlier German translations, formed about
+the sum and substance of the conversation which took place between the
+poet and my host; all the rest was principally social gossip and an
+exchange of pleasantries between the poet and his friend, whom he
+addressed familiarly as 'mine ancient.' It was a great treat to me, of
+course, to dine with Bernard Barton, the Quaker poet. Once upon a time a
+Quaker minister had come to Woodbridge on a preaching tour, and all the
+Quakers, male and female, small and great, rich and poor, were ranged
+before him. When Bernard Barton was announced, the good old man said,
+'Barton--Barton--that's a name I don't recollect.' The bearer of the
+name replied it would be strange if he did, seeing that they had never
+met before. Suddenly looking up, the minister exclaimed, 'Art thou the
+versifying man?' Unlike the venerable stranger, I had no need to ask the
+question, as in my mother's album there was more than one letter from the
+genial B. B.
+
+I can well recall the room in which I dined with the poet. My host had
+come into a handsome fortune by marrying a wealthy widow--one of the
+possibilities of a Dissenting minister's situation--and he had retired
+from the ministry to cultivate literature and literary men. As I think
+of that room and that dinner, I am reminded of the wonderful contrast
+effected within the last age. At that time the dinner-table presented a
+far less picturesque appearance than it does now. We had always pudding
+before meat; the latter was solid, and in the shape of a joint. Nor was
+it handed round by servants, but carved by the host or his lady. Silver
+forks were unknown, and electro-plate had not then been invented.
+Vegetables, also, were deficient as regards quantity and quality compared
+with the supply at a respectable dinner nowadays. In manners the change
+is equally remarkable. It was said of a nobleman, a personal friend of
+George III., and a model gentleman of his day, that he had made the tour
+of Europe without ever touching the back of his travelling carriage.
+That includes an idea of self-denial utterly unknown to all the young
+people of to-day. The study now is how to make our houses more
+comfortable, and to furnish them most luxuriously. Then, perhaps, there
+was but one sofa in the house, and that was repellent rather than
+attractive. Easy-chairs were few and far between. Lounging of any kind
+was out of the question. In the drawing-room, the furniture was of the
+same uncomfortable description, and there were none of the modern
+appliances which exist to make ladies and gentlemen happy. Couches,
+antimacassars, photographs, were unknown. One picture invariably to be
+seen was a painting of a favourite steed, with the owner looking at it in
+a state of intense admiration; and a few family portraits might be
+ostentatiously displayed. As to pianos, there never was but one in the
+house; and a billiard-table would have been considered as the last refuge
+of human depravity. In sitting-rooms and bedrooms and passages there was
+a great deficiency of carpets and of oilcloth. But furniture was
+furniture then, and could stand a good deal of wear and tear; while as to
+the spare bed in the best room, with its enormous four posts and its
+gigantic funereal canopy and its heavy curtains, through which no breath
+of fresh air could penetrate, all I can say is that people slept in it
+and survived the operation--so wonderfully does nature adapt itself to
+circumstances the most adverse.
+
+This reference to Bernard Barton reminds me of a portrait he has left in
+one of his pleasant letters of a Suffolk yeoman, a class of whose virtues
+I can testify from personal experience. 'He was a hearty old yeoman of
+eighty-six, and had occupied the farm in which he lived and died about
+fifty-five years. Social, hospitable, friendly, a liberal master to his
+labourers, a kind neighbour, and a right merry companion within the
+limits of becoming mirth. In politics a stanch Whig, in his theological
+creed as sturdy a Dissenter; yet with no more party spirit in him than a
+child. He and I belonged to the same book-club for about forty years.
+. . . Not that he greatly cared about books or was deeply read in them, but
+he loved to meet his neighbours and get them round him on any occasion or
+no occasion at all. As a fine specimen of the true English yeoman, I
+have met with few to equal, if any to surpass him, and he looked the
+character as well as he acted it, till within a few years, when the
+strong man was bowed by bodily infirmity. About twenty-six years ago, in
+his dress costume of a blue coat and yellow buckskins, a finer sample of
+John Bullism you would rarely see. It was the whole study of his long
+life to make the few who revolved round him in his little orbit as happy
+as he seemed to be himself. Yet I was gravely queried when I happened to
+say that his children had asked me to write a few lines to his memory,
+whether I could do this in keeping with the general tone of my
+poetry--the speaker doubted if he was a decidedly pious character! He
+had at times in his altitude been known to vociferate a song, of which
+the chorus was certainly not teetotalism:
+
+ '"Sing old Rose, and burn the bellows,
+ Drink and drive dull care away."'
+
+Bernard Barton goes on to describe the deceased yeoman as a diligent
+attendant at the meeting-house, a frequent and serious reader of the
+Bible, and the head of an orderly and well-regulated house. He is
+described as knowing Dr. Watts' hymns almost by heart, and as singing
+them on Sunday at meeting with equal fervour and unction. Bernard Barton
+feared in 1847--the date of his epistle--the breed of such men was dying
+out. It is to be feared in East Anglia the race is quite extinct. In
+our meeting-house at Wrentham, when I was a lad, there were several such.
+I am afraid there is not one there now. The sons and daughters have left
+the old rustic houses, and gone out into the world. They have become
+respectable, and go to church, and have lost a good deal of the vigour
+and independence of their forefathers. In all the East Anglian
+meeting-houses fifty years ago such men abounded. Of a Sunday, with
+their blue coats and kerseymere knee-breeches, and jolly red laces, they
+looked more like country squires than common farmers. They drove up to
+the meeting-house yard with very superior gigs and cattle. In their
+houses creature comforts of all known kinds were to be found. Tea--a
+hearty meal, not of mere bread-and-butter, but of ham and cake as
+well--was served up in the parlour, with a glass or two of real
+home-brewed ale, amber-coloured, of a quality now unknown, and which was
+wonderfully refreshing after a long walk or drive. Then, if it were
+summer, there was a stroll in the big garden, well planted with
+fruit-trees and strawberry-beds, and adorned with flowers--old-fashioned,
+perhaps, but rich, nevertheless, in colour and perfume. In one corner
+there was sure to be an arbour, all covered with honeysuckle, such as
+Izaak Walton himself would have approved; and there, while the seniors
+over their long pipes discussed politics and theology, and corn and
+cattle, the younger ones would make their first feeble efforts, all
+unconsciously, perhaps, to conjugate the verb 'to love.' Outside the
+church organizations these old yeomen lived and died. There was a
+flavour of the world about them. They would dine at market ordinaries,
+and perhaps would stop an hour in the long room of the public-house,
+where they put up their horses, to smoke a pipe and take a drop of
+brandy-and-water for the good of the landlord. Now and then--sometimes
+to the sorrow of their wives, who were often church-members--they would
+join, as I have indicated, in a song of an objectionable character when
+severely criticised. Perhaps their parson would be much exercised on
+their behalf; but surely the noble spirit of humanity in these old
+yeomen, at any rate, was as worthy of admiration as the Puritanic faith
+of the past--or as the honest doubt of the present age. If I mistake
+not, the fine old yeoman to whom Bernard Barton referred lived not far
+from Seckford Hall.
+
+Woodbridge has some claim to consideration from the Nonconformist point
+of view. In 1648 a schoolmistress, Elizabeth Warren, published a
+pamphlet, 'The Old and Good Way Vindicated, in a Treatise, wherein Divers
+Errours, both in Judgment and Practice incident to these Declining Days,
+are Unmasked for the Caution of humble Christians.' From the same town
+also there issued 'The Preacher Sent: a Vindication of the Liberty of
+Public Preaching by Some Men not Ordained.' The author of this book, or
+one of the authors of it, was the Rev. Frederick Woodall, the first
+pastor of the Free Church--'a man of learning, ability, and piety, a
+strict Independent, zealous for the fifth monarchy, and a considerable
+sufferer after his ejectment.' He had, we are told, to contend with a
+tedious embarrassment, through the persecuting spirit that for many years
+prevailed, and considerably cramped the success of his ministry.
+Woodbridge is one of the churches which Mr. Harmer refers to in his
+'Miscellaneous Works,' as being rigidly Congregationalist, and which
+conducted its affairs rather according to the heads of Savoy Confession
+than the heads of Agreement. When I was a boy the pastor was a Mr.
+Pinchback, who seems to have been a worthy successor of godly men,
+equally attractive and successful. He had previously settled at Ware.
+It is recorded of the good divine that on one occasion he had to leave
+his wife at the point of death, as it seemed, to go to chapel. In the
+course of the service he mentioned the fact of her illness, and announced
+in consequence that he would preach her funeral sermon on the following
+Sunday. But when the following Sunday came the lady was better, and
+lived for many years to assist her husband in his godly work. In the
+rural districts the Baptists flourished immensely.
+
+At Grundisburgh there preached for many years to a large congregation a
+worthy man of the name of Collins, who was one of the leading lights of
+the body which rejoiced in a John Foreman and a Brother Wells. People
+who live in London cannot have forgotten Jemmy Wells, of the Surrey
+Tabernacle, and his grotesque and telling anecdotes. One can scarcely
+imagine how people could ever believe the things Wells used to say as to
+the Lord's dealings with him; but they did, and his funeral--in South
+London, at any rate--was almost as numerously attended as that of Arthur,
+Duke of Wellington. I expect high-and-dry Baptists have been not a
+little troublesome in their day, and in East Anglia they were more
+numerous than in London. It may be that they have helped to weaken
+Dissent in that part of the world. Men of independent intellect must
+have been not a little shocked by that unctuous familiarity with God and
+the devil which is the characteristic of that class. On a Sunday morning
+Jemmy Wells, as his admirers called him, would describe in the most
+graphic manner what the devil had said to him in the course of the week;
+and on one memorable occasion, at any rate, described with much force the
+shame he felt at having to tell the gentleman in black that his people's
+memories, unfortunately, were somewhat remiss in the matter of pew-rents.
+Brother Collins avoided such flights, but he was an attractive preacher
+to all the country round, nevertheless. Truly such a one was needed in
+that district. At Rendham, a village near Saxmundham, lived a godly
+minister of the Church of England. In 1844, speaking to a friend of the
+writer, he said that when he came into the county, between thirty and
+forty years before, there was only one other clergyman and himself
+between Ipswich and Great Yarmouth who preached the Gospel, and that
+sometimes the squire of the parish would hold up his watch to him to bid
+him close his sermon. In some places where he went to preach he had to
+have a body-guard to prevent his being mobbed and pelted with rotten eggs
+on account of his evangelical principles.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+MILTON'S SUFFOLK SCHOOLMASTER.
+
+
+Stowmarket--The Rev. Thomas Young--Bishop Hall and the Smectymnian
+divines--Milton's mulberry-tree--Suffolk relationships.
+
+'My father destined me,' writes John Milton, in his 'Defensio Secunda,'
+'while yet a little boy, for the study of humane letters, which I served
+with such eagerness that, from the twelfth year of my age, I scarcely
+ever went from my lessons to bed before midnight, which, indeed, was the
+first cause of injury to my eyes, to whose natural weakness there were
+also added frequent headaches; all which not retarding my natural
+impetuosity in learning, he caused me to be instructed both at the
+Grammar School and under other masters at home.' Of the latter, the best
+known was the Rev. Thomas Young, the Puritan minister, of Stowmarket,
+Suffolk.
+
+It is generally claimed for Young that he was an East Anglian. Professor
+Masson has, however, settled the question that he was a Scotchman, of the
+University of Aberdeen. Be that as it may, like most Scotchmen, he made
+his way to England, and was employed by Mr. Milton, the scrivener of
+Bread Street, to teach his gifted son. As he seems to have been married
+at the time, it is not probable that he resided with his pupil, but only
+visited him daily. Never had master a better pupil, or one who rewarded
+him more richly by the splendour of his subsequent career. The poet,
+writing to him a few years after he ceased to be his pupil, speaks of
+'the incredible and singular gratitude he owed him on account of the
+services he had done him,' and calls God to witness that he reverenced
+him as his father. In a Latin elegy, after implying that Young was
+dearer to him than Socrates to Alcibiades, or than the great Stagyrite to
+his generous pupil, Alexander, he goes on to say: 'First, under his
+guidance, I explored the recesses of the Muses, and beheld the sacred
+green spots of the cleft summit of Parnassus and quaffed the Pierian
+cups, and, Clio favouring me, thrice sprinkled my joyful mouth with
+Castalian wine;' from which it is clear that Young had done his duty to
+his pupil, and that the latter ever regarded him with an affection as
+beautiful as rare. Never did a Rugby lad write of Arnold as Milton of
+Thomas Young. How long the latter's preceptorship lasted cannot be
+determined with precision. 'It certainly closed,' writes Professor
+Masson, in that truly awful biography of his, 'when Young left England at
+the age of thirty-five, and became pastor of the congregation of British
+merchants settled at Hamburg.'
+
+As one of the leaders of the Presbyterian party, Dr. Thomas Young became
+Vicar of Stowmarket in due time. He was one of the Smectymnian divines.
+As it is not every schoolboy who knows what the term means, let me
+explain who they were. Two or three hundred years ago people were much
+more controversial than they are now, and very fierce was the battle on
+the subject of the relative claims, from a Scriptural point of view, of
+Prelacy or Presbytery. One of the most distinguished champions of the
+former was Dr. Hall, Bishop of Norwich--a simple, godly, learned man, who
+deserves to be held in remembrance, if only for the way in which he got
+married. 'Being now settled,' he writes, 'in that sweet and civil county
+of Suffolk, the uncouth solitariness of my life, and the extreme
+incommodity of that single housekeeping, drew my thoughts, after two
+years, to condescend to the necessity of a married state, which God no
+less strangely provided for me; for walking from the church on Monday, in
+the Whitsun week, with a grave and reverend minister, I saw a comely and
+modest gentlewoman standing at the door of that house where we were
+invited to a wedding-dinner, and inquiring of that worthy friend whether
+he knew her, "Yes," quoth he, "I know her well, and have bespoken her for
+your wife." When I further demanded an account of that answer, he told
+me she was the daughter of a gentleman whom he much respected--Mr. George
+Whinniff, of Brettenham; that out of an opinion he had of the fitness of
+that match for me he had already treated with her father about it, whom
+he found very apt to entertain it. Advising me not to neglect the
+opportunity, and not concealing the just praises of the modesty, piety,
+good disposition, and other virtues that were lodged in that seemly
+presence, I listened to the motion as sent from God, and at last, upon
+due prosecution, happily prevailed, enjoying the comfortable society of
+that meet-help for the space of forty-nine years.' A young clergyman so
+good and amiable ought to have fared better as regards the days in which
+his lot was passed. Hall should have lived in some theological Arcadia.
+As it was, he had to fight much and suffer much. In those distracted
+times he was all for peace. When the storm was brewing in Church and
+State, which for a time swept away Bishop and King, he published--but,
+alas! in vain--his 'Via Media.' 'I see,' he wrote, 'every man to rank
+himself unto a side, and to draw in the quarrel he affecteth. I see no
+man either holding or joining their hands for peace.' Bishop Hall was
+the most celebrated writer of his time in defence of the Church of
+England. Archbishop Laud got him to write on 'The Divine Right of
+Episcopacy,' nor could he have well placed the subject in abler hands.
+This was followed, after Laud had fallen, with 'An Humble Remonstrance to
+the High Court of Parliament,' in which treatise he vindicated the
+antiquity of liturgies and Episcopacy with admirable skill, meekness, and
+simplicity, yet with such strength of argument that five Presbyterian
+divines clubbed their wits together to frame an answer. These
+Presbyterian ministers were--Stephen Marshal, then lecturer at St.
+Margaret's, whom Baillie terms the best of the preachers in England;
+Edmund Calamy, who had long been a celebrated East Anglian preacher,
+first at Swaffham, then at Bury St. Edmunds, who, as we all know, refused
+a bishopric when offered him, and whom, therefore, at any rate, his
+adversaries must allow to have been sincere; Thomas Young, Matthew
+Newcomen, and William Spurstow. To this reply was given the name of
+Smectymnuus--a startling word, as Calamy calls it, made up of the initial
+letters of these names. This work, which was published in 1641, gave,
+says Dr. M'Crie, the first serious blow to Prelacy. It was composed in a
+style superior to that of the Puritans in general, and was, by the
+confession of the learned Bishop Wilkins, a capital work against
+Episcopacy. Dr. Kippis says, 'This piece is certainly written with great
+fierceness and asperity of language,' and quotes, as evidence, some
+strong things said against the practice of the prelates. But Neal, who
+has given a long account of the work, states that, if the rest of the
+clergy had been of the same temper and spirit with Bishop Hall, the
+controversy between him and the Smectymnian divines might have been
+compromised.
+
+Stowmarket, as I have said, had the honour of being placed under the
+pastoral care of one of these Smectymnian divines. He came there in
+March, 1628, on the presentation of Mr. John Howe, a gentleman then
+residing in the town, and a man of wealth, whose ancestors had been great
+cloth-manufacturers in that place and neighbourhood. Since the time of
+Edward III. the cloth manufacture had been very active in Suffolk, and it
+is little to the credit of its merchants that we find them, in 1522,
+petitioning for the repeal of a royal law which inflicted a penalty
+against those who sold cloth which, when wetted, shrunk up, on the plea
+that, as such goods were made for a foreign market, the home-consumer was
+not injured. Stowmarket, when I was a lad, had reached its climax in a
+pecuniary sense. In the early part of the present century it was spoken
+of as a rising town. Situated as it was in the centre of the county, it
+was a convenient mart for barley, and great quantities of malt were made.
+Its other manufactures were sacking, ropes, and twine. Its tanneries
+were of a more recent date, as also its manufactory of gun-cotton,
+connected with which at one time there was an explosion of a most fatal
+and disastrous character. In 1763 it was connected with Ipswich by means
+of a canal, which was a great source of prosperity to the town. Up to
+the time of the great Reform Bill, it was the great place for county
+meetings, and for the nomination of the county representatives. In our
+day it has a population of 4,052. When I was a lad it was one of the
+first towns to welcome the Plymouth Brethren into Suffolk, and they are
+there still. The Independent Chapel for awhile suffered much from them.
+The pastor was a very worthy but somewhat dry preacher. His favourite
+quotation in the pulpit, when he would describe the attacks of the enemy
+of God and man, was
+
+ 'He worries whom he can't devour
+ With a malicious joy.'
+
+Suffolk had its great lawyers as well as Norfolk. The first to head the
+list is Ranulph de Glanville, a man of great parts, deep learning, for
+the times, eminent alike for his legal abilities and energetic mind. He
+was said, by one account, to have been born at Stowmarket. It is certain
+he founded Leiston Abbey, near Aldborough, and Bentley Priory. As Chief
+Justice under Henry II. he naturally was no favourite with Richard I.,
+who deprived him of his office and made use of his wealth. He lived,
+however, to accompany Richard to the Holy Land, and died at the siege of
+Acre. His treatise on our laws is one of the earliest on record. It
+must be remembered also that Godwin, the author of 'Political Justice,'
+and 'Caleb Williams,' a novel still read--the husband of one gifted
+woman, and the father of another--was at one time an Independent minister
+at Stowmarket.
+
+But to return to Dr. Young. He, like Mr. Newcomen, had become an East
+Anglian, and Smectymnuus may therefore more or less be said to have an
+East Anglian original. As the living of Stowmarket was at that time
+worth 300 pounds a year, and as 300 pounds a year then was quite equal to
+600 pounds a year now, Dr. Young must have been in comfortable
+circumstances while at Stowmarket. A likeness of him is hung up, or was
+preserved, in Stowmarket Vicarage. 'It,' wrote an old observer,
+'possesses the solemn, faded yellowness of a man much given to austere
+meditation, yet there is sufficient energy in the eye and mouth to show,
+as he is preaching in Geneva gown and bands, that he is a man who could
+write and think, and speak with great vigour.' One of Milton's
+biographers terms him, contemptuously, a Puritan who cut his hair short.
+The Rev. Mr. Hollingsworth writes that it is an error to suppose that
+Young remained long as chaplain to merchants abroad. 'He must have
+remained generally in constant residence, because we possess his
+signature to the vestry accounts, in a curious quarto book, which
+contains the annual accounts of Stow upland Parish for eighty-four years.
+At the parish meetings, and at the audit of each year's accounts Vicar
+Young presided, with some exceptions, from the year 1629 to 1655, and his
+autograph is attached to each page.' As an author, Dr. Young had
+distinguished himself before he appeared as one of the Smectymnians. In
+1639, while the Stuarts and the Bishops were doing all they could to
+break down the sanctity of the Sabbath, and to make it a day of vulgar
+revelry and rustic sport, Dr. Young published a thin quarto in Latin,
+entitled 'Dies Dominica,' containing a history of the institution of the
+Sabbath, and its vindication from all common and profane uses. There is
+no place of publication named, the signature is feigned, 'Theophilus
+Philo Kunaces Loncardiensis,' and in the copy reserved at Stowmarket is
+added, in characters by no means unlike that of the handwriting of the
+Vicar himself, 'Dr. Thos. Young, of Jesus.' The tractate is described as
+a very elaborate and learned compilation from the Fathers upon the
+sanctity of the Sabbath. A spirit of laborious and determined energy
+pervades it, nor is it unworthy the abilities and erudition of the
+author. The work was written at Stowmarket, and may have been published
+in Ipswich. Its paper and type are coarse; the name of the author was
+concealed, because at that time a man who reverenced the Sabbath had a
+good chance of being brought before the Star Chamber, and of being
+roughly treated by Archbishop Laud, as an enemy to Church and State.
+About ten years before, Dr. Young had heard how, for writing his plea
+against Prelacy, Dr. Alexander Leighton had been cast into Newgate,
+dragged before the Star Chamber, where he was sentenced to have his ears
+cut off, to have his nose slit, to be branded in the face, to stand in
+the pillory, to be whipped at the post, to pay a fine of 10,000 pounds,
+and to suffer perpetual imprisonment. Dr. Young might well shrink from
+exposing himself to similar torture. But Dr. Young had other warnings,
+and much nearer home.
+
+Dr. Young, like most of the men of that time, persecuted witches. These
+latter were supposed to have existed in great numbers, and a roving
+commission for their discovery was given to one Matthew Hopkins, of
+Manningtree, in Essex, to find them out in the eastern counties and
+execute the law upon them. It was a brutal business, and Hopkins
+followed it for three or four years. He proceeded from town to town and
+opened his courts. Stowmarket was one of the places he visited. The
+Puritans are said to have hung sixty witches in Suffolk, but the Puritans
+were not alone responsible. It is a fact that, up to fifty years ago two
+supposed witches lived in Stowmarket.
+
+Dr. Young escaped the Star Chamber, but, like most good men who would be
+free at that time he had to fly his native land for awhile. Milton
+refers to this exile in his Latin elegy:
+
+ 'Meantime alone
+ Thou dwellest, and helpless on a soil unknown,
+ Poor, and receiving from a foreign hand
+ The aid denied thee in thy native land.'
+
+It seems from this that the living at Stowmarket was under sequestration.
+A little while after Young is back in Stowmarket, and Milton thus
+describes his daily life--a personal experience of the poet's, not a
+flight of fancy:
+
+ 'Now, entering, thou shalt haply seated see
+ Besides his spouse, his infants on his knee;
+ Or, turning page by page with studious look
+ Some bulky paper or God's holy Book.'
+
+Good times came to Dr. Young. The seed he had sown bore fruit. For
+awhile England had woke up to attack the Stuart doctrine of royal
+prerogative in Church and State. The men of Suffolk had been the
+foremost in the fight, and in 1643 we find the Doctor in Duke's Place,
+London. A sermon was preached by him before the House of Commons, and
+printed by order of the House. A Stowmarket Rector speaks of it
+naturally as a very prolix, learned, somewhat dull and heavy effort to
+encourage them to persevere in their civil war against the King; but he
+has the grace to add: 'There is much less of faction in it than many
+others, and it is rather the production of a contemplative than of an
+active partisan.' 'One of his examples,' writes Mr. Hollingsworth, 'is
+from 2 Sam. xiii. 28, where the command of Absalom was to kill Amnon:
+"Could the command of a _mortal man_ infuse that courage and valour into
+the hearts _of his servants_ as to make them adventure upon a _desperate_
+design? And shall not the command of the _Almighty God_ raise up the
+hearts of His people employed by Him in any work to which _He_ calls
+them, raise up their hearts in following at His command!"' The Doctor
+had not cleared himself of all the errors of his times. He urged on his
+hearers, by the example of the Emperors, the necessity of maintaining the
+doctrine of the Trinity uncorrupt, by the aid of the civil power. He
+urged, however, on them personal holiness, in order that the reformation
+of the Church might be more easily accomplished. The two legislative
+enactments he wished them to pass were to confer a power upon the
+Presbyterian clergy to exclude men from the Sacrament, and enforce a
+better observance of the Sabbath-day. The sermon is scarce, but is bound
+up with others in the Library at Cambridge, preached at the monthly fasts
+before the House of Commons.
+
+In the library of the Memorial Hall, Farringdon Street, where assuredly
+the portrait of the Stowmarket Rector should find a place, there is a
+copy of this sermon, which was preached at the last solemn fast.
+February 28, 1643, with the notice that 'It is this day ordered by the
+Commoners' House of Parliament that Sir John Trevor and Mr. Rous do from
+this House give thanks to Mr. Young for the great paines hee tooke in the
+sermon hee preached that day at the intreaty of the said House of Commons
+at St. Margaret's, Westminster, it being the day of publike humiliation,
+and to desire him to print this sermon;' which accordingly was done,
+under the title of 'Hope's Encouragement.' The motto on the outside was:
+'Which hope we have as an anchor of the soul both sure and steadfast, and
+entereth into that which is within the veil.' The sermon was printed in
+London for Ralph Smith, at the sign of the Bible, in Cornhill, near the
+Royal Exchange. In his sermon the preacher took for his text: 'Be of
+good courage, and He shall strengthen your heart, all ye that wait upon
+the Lord.' The three propositions established are: First, that God's
+people are taught by the Lord in all their troubles to wait patiently on
+Him. The second is that such as wait patiently upon the Lord must rouse
+themselves with strength and courage to further wait upon Him; and that,
+thirdly, when God's people wait upon Him, He will increase their courage.
+The preacher quotes the Hebrew and Augustine, and reasons in a most
+undeniable manner in support of his propositions; but above all things he
+is practical. 'The work you are now called on to do,' he says to the
+M.P.'s, 'is a work of great concernment. It is the purging of the Lord's
+floor. As it hath reference both to the Church and the Commonwealth, a
+work sure enough to be encountered with great opposition. Yet I must say
+it is a work with the managing whereof God hath not so honoured others
+which have gone before you in your places, but hath reserved it to make
+you the instruments of His glory in advancing it, and that doth much add
+unto your honour. Was it an honour to the Tyrians that they were counted
+amongst the builders of the Temple when Hiram sent to Solomon things
+necessary for that work? How, then, hath God honoured you, reserving to
+you the care of re-edifying His Church (the throne of the living God) and
+the repairing of the shattered Commonwealth, so far borne down before He
+raised you to support it, that succeeding ages may with honour to your
+names, say, "This was the Reforming Parliament," a work which God, by His
+blessing on your unwearied pains, hath much furthered already, whilst He,
+by you, hath removed the rubbish that might hinder the raising up of that
+godly structure appointed and prescribed by the Lord in His Word.' They
+were to stick to the truth, contended the preacher, quoting the edict of
+the Emperor Justinian in the Arian controversy, and the reply of Basil
+the Great to the Emperor's deputy: 'That none trained up in Holy
+Scriptures would suffer one syllable of Divine truth to be betrayed; but
+were ready, if it be required, to suffer any death in the defence
+thereof.' People, he maintained, are ever carried on by the example of
+their governors. 'How,' he asks, 'was the Eastern Empire polluted with
+execrable Arianism, whilst yet the Western continued in the truth? The
+historians give the reason of it. Constantine, an Arian, ruled in the
+East when at the same time Constans and Constantius, sons to Constantine
+the Great, treading in the steps of their pious father, adhered to the
+truth professed by him, and so did as far ennoble the Western Empire with
+the truth as the other did defile the Eastern with his countenancing of
+error and heresy.' The preacher here asks his hearers to make no laws
+against religion and piety, and 'recall such as have been made in time of
+ignorance against the same, and study to uphold and maintain such
+profitable and wholesome laws as have been formerly enacted for God and
+His people. Improve what was well begun by others before you, and not
+perfected by them.' Under this latter head he dwelt on the possible
+abuse of the Holy Sacrament of the Lord's Supper, and the irreligious
+profanation of the Lord's Day.
+
+In 1643 the Earl of Manchester ejected many of the Royalist clergymen
+from their livings who were scandalous ministers. Dr. Sterne having been
+deprived of the mastership of Jesus College, Cambridge, the Stowmarket
+Vicar was placed there in his stead. He held the situation till 1654,
+when, on his refusal of the engagement, Government deprived him of his
+office. At the time the sermon was preached Dr. Young was one of the
+far-famed Assembly of Divines which met in Henry VII.'s chapel in
+accordance with the Solemn League and Covenant, which proposed three
+grand objects: 'To endeavour the extirpation of Popery, Prelacy
+superstition, heresy, and profaneness; to endeavour the preservation of
+the reformed religion in Scotland and the reformation of religion in the
+kingdoms of England and Ireland in doctrine, worship, discipline, and
+government according to the Word of God and the example of the best
+Reformed Church; and to endeavour to bring the Churches of God in the
+three kingdoms to the nearest conjunction and uniformity in
+religion--confession of faith, form of Church government, directory for
+worship and catechizing; that we and our posterity after us may as
+brethren live in faith and love, and that the Lord may delight to dwell
+in the midst of us.' A clause was inserted to the effect that it was
+English prelacy which they contemned; and thus modified, after all due
+solemnities, and with their right hands lifted to heaven, was the Solemn
+League and Covenant sworn to by the English Parliament and by the
+Assembly of Divines in St. Margaret's Church, September 25, 1643. It
+was, writes a Presbyterian divine, too much the creature of the Long
+Parliament who convoked the meeting, selected the members of Assembly,
+nominated its president, prescribed its bye-laws, and kept a firm hold
+and a vigilant eye on all their proceedings. Still, with all these
+drawbacks, it must be admitted that Parliament could hardly have made a
+selection of more pious, learned, and conscientious men. The Assembly
+consisted of men nominated by the members for each county sending in
+suitable names. The two divines appointed for Suffolk were Mr. Thomas
+Young, of Stowmarket, and Mr. John Phillips, of Rentall. The Vicar, it
+is said, sometimes acted as chairman, but this, as Mr. Hollingsworth
+remarks, is doubtful.
+
+Mr. Young's claim to fame rests on something greater than his sermon, or
+his position in the Assembly of Divines at Westminster, or his mastership
+of Jesus College. He was, as we have said, Milton's schoolmaster. The
+poet tells us:
+
+ ''Tis education forms the common mind;
+ Just as a twig is bent the tree's inclined.'
+
+If so, much of Milton's piety and lofty principle and massive learning
+must have come to him from the Stowmarket Vicar. In our day there is
+little chance of a young scholar becoming imbued with Miltonian ideas on
+the subject of civil and religious liberty. That sublime genius which
+was to sing in immortal verse of
+
+ 'Man's first disobedience, and the fruit
+ Of that forbidden tree, whose mortal taste
+ Brought death into the world, and all our woe,'
+
+must have owed much to Dr. Young--a debt which the poet acknowledged, as
+we have already seen, in no niggardly way. Amongst Milton's Latin
+letters is the following, which has been translated by Professor Masson
+thus: 'Although I had resolved with myself, most excellent preceptor, to
+send you a certain small epistle composed in metrical numbers, yet I did
+not consider that I had done enough unless I also wrote something in
+prose: for, truly, the singular and boundless gratitude of my mind which
+your deserts justly claim from me was not to be expressed in that cramped
+mode of speech, straitened by fixed feet and syllables, but in a free
+oration--nay, rather, if it were possible, in an Asiatic exuberance of
+words. To express sufficiently how much I owe you, were a work far
+greater than my strength, even if I should call into play all those
+commonplaces of argument which Aristotle or that dialectician of Paris
+(Ramus) has collected, or even if I should exhaust all the fountains of
+oratory. You complain as justly that my letters have been to you very
+few and very short; but I, on the other hand, do not so much grieve that
+I have been remiss in a duty so pleasant and so enviable, as I rejoice,
+and all but exult, at having such a place in your friendship, as that you
+should care to ask for frequent letters from me. That I should never
+have written to you for over more than three years, I pray you will not
+misconceive, but, in accordance with your wonderful indulgence and
+candour, put the more charitable construction on it; for I call God to
+witness how much, as a father, I regard you, with what singular devotion
+I have always followed you in thought, and how I feared to trouble you
+with my writings. In sooth, I make it my first care, that since there is
+nothing else to commend my letters, that their rarity may commend them.
+Next, as out of that most vehement desire after you which I feel, I
+always fancy you with me, and speak to you, and beheld you as if you were
+present, and so, as always happens in love, soothe my grief by a certain
+vain imagination of your presence, it is, in truth, my fear, as soon as I
+meditate sending you a letter, that it should suddenly come into my mind
+by what an interval of earth you are distant from me, and so the grief of
+your absence, already nearly lulled, should grow fresh and break up my
+sweet dream. The Hebrew Bible, your truly most acceptable gift, I have
+already received. These lines I have written in London, in the midst of
+town distractions, not, as usual, surrounded by books; if, therefore,
+anything in this epistle should please you less than might be, and
+disappoint your expectations, it will be made up for by another more
+elaborate one as soon as I have returned to the haunts of the Muses.'
+
+When the above letter was written, Milton had become a Cambridge student,
+where he was to experience a new kind of tutor. Milton could not get on
+with Chappell as he did with Young. The tie between the Stowmarket Vicar
+and the poet was of a much more cordial character.
+
+Again the poet appears to have forwarded the following letter to the
+Stowmarket Vicarage. It is to be feared that few such precious epistles
+find their way there now. Milton writes to the Doctor: 'On looking at
+your letter, most excellent preceptor, this alone struck me as
+superfluous, that you excused your slowness in writing; for though
+nothing could come to me more desirable than your letters, how could I or
+ought I to hope that you should have so much leisure from serious and
+more sacred affairs, especially as that is a matter entirely of kindness,
+and not at all of duty? That, however, I should suspect that you had
+forgotten me, your so many recent kindnesses to me would by no means
+allow. I do not see how you could dismiss out of your memory one laden
+with so great benefits by you. Having been invited by you to your part
+of the country, as soon as spring has a little advanced I will gladly
+come to enjoy the delights of the year, and not less of your
+conversation, and will then withdraw myself from the din of town to your
+Stoa of the Iceni, as to that most celebrated porch of Zeno or the
+Tusculan Villa of Cicero, where you with moderate means, but regal
+spirit, like some Serranus or Curius, placidly reign in your little farm,
+and contemning fortune, hold as it were a triumph over riches, ambition,
+pomp, luxury, and whatever the herd of man admire and are amazed by. But
+as you have deprecated the blame of slowness, you will also, I hope,
+pardon me the fault of haste; for having put off this letter, I preferred
+writing little, and that rather in a slovenly manner, to not writing at
+all. Farewell, much-to-be respected Sir.'
+
+The question is, Did Milton carry out this intention, and pay Stowmarket
+a visit? Professor Masson thinks he may have been there in the memorable
+summer and autumn of 1630. The Rev. Mr. Hollingsworth, the Stowmarket
+historian argues that it is not unlikely that several, if not many,
+visits, extending over a period of thirty years, while the tutor held the
+living, were made by the poet to the place. Tradition has constantly
+associated his name with the mulberry-trees of the Vicarage, which he
+planted, but of these only one remains. 'This venerable relic of the
+past,' continues the Vicar, 'is much decayed, and is still in vigorous
+bearing. Its girth, before it breaks into branches, is ten feet, and I
+have had in one season as much as ten gallons from the pure juices of its
+fruits, which yields a highly flavoured and brilliant-coloured wine.' It
+stands a few yards distant from the oldest part of the house, and
+opposite the windows of an upstair double room, which was formerly the
+sitting-parlour of the Vicar, and where, it is to be believed, the poet
+and his friend had many a talk of the way to advance religion and liberty
+in the land, to remove hirelings out of the Church, and to abolish the
+Bishops. There too, perhaps, might have come to the guest visions of
+'Paradise Lost.' In his first work Milton throws out something like a
+hint of the great poem which he was in time to write. 'Then, amidst,' to
+quote his own sonorous language, 'the hymns and hallelujahs of saints,
+_someone_ may, perhaps, be heard offering in high strains, in new and
+lofty measures, to sing and celebrate Thy Divine mercies and marvellous
+judgments in this land throughout all ages.' We can easily believe how,
+in the Stowmarket Vicarage, the plan of the poet may have been talked
+over, and the heart of the poet encouraged to the work. Regarding Young
+as Milton did, we may be sure that he would have been only too glad to
+listen to his suggestions and adopt his advice. There must have been a
+good deal of plain living and high thinking at the Stowmarket Vicarage
+when Milton came there as an occasional guest. This is the more probable
+as Milton's earliest publications were in support of the views of
+Smectymnian divines. His friendship for Young probably led him into the
+field of controversy, for he owns that he was not disposed to this manner
+of writing 'wherein, knowing myself inferior to myself, led by the genial
+power of nature to another task, I have the use, as I may account, but of
+my left hand.' It is a fact that Milton was thus drawn into the
+controversy, and what more natural than that he should have been induced
+to do so by the Stowmarket Vicar in the Stowmarket Vicarage? The poet's
+family were familiar with that part of Suffolk, and his brother, Sir
+Christopher, who was a stanch Royalist and barrister, lived at Ipswich,
+but twelve miles off. He went to see Milton, and Milton might have
+visited Ipswich and Stowmarket at the same time. Be that as it may,
+tradition and probability alike justify the belief that Milton came to
+Stowmarket, and that he went away all the wiser and better, all the
+stronger to do good work for man and God, for his age and all succeeding
+ages. Young, as it may be inferred, was held in high honour by his
+friends. He was spoken of by two neighbouring ejected Rectors as the
+reverend, learned, orthodox, prudent, and holy Dr. Young. When he died,
+an epitaph was inscribed with some care by a friendly hand, and an
+unwilling admission is made of the opposition he had encountered. It is
+now illegible, and some of its lines appear to have been carefully
+erased--by some High Church chisel, probably. But the following copy was
+made when the epitaph was fresh and legible:
+
+ 'Here is committed to earth's trust
+ Wise, pious, spotlesse, learned dust,
+ Who living more adorned the place
+ Than the place him. Such was God's grace.'
+
+Is the verse of this epitaph from Milton's pen or not? Mr. Hollingsworth
+writes: 'The probability is quite in favour that the pupil should write
+the last memorial of one whom he so highly honoured and loved as his old
+master. Nor is the verse itself, with the exception of the last line,
+unlike the character of Milton's poetry, and this last may have been
+mutilated and rendered inharmonious by the action of the stone-cutter,
+who also confused the death of the father and son.' It is pleasant to
+think, not only that Milton now and then came to the Stowmarket Vicarage,
+but that in the church itself there is a slight record of his poetical
+fame. Let me add, as a further illustration of the connection of the
+great poet with the county of Suffolk, that I am informed one of the
+family of the Meadowses, of Witnesham, was for a time one of his
+secretaries.
+
+Young died, aged sixty-eight, in the year 1655, when Milton was fully
+embarked in public life, when he could spare but little time; but we may
+be sure that he would be the last at that time of life to forget all that
+he owed to his tutor Young. Wife and son had predeceased the Vicar. It
+seems as if there was no one left but the poet to record on the marble in
+the middle aisle, in front of the present reading-desk, the virtues of a
+character which had long exercised so beneficial an influence on his own,
+and which he had loved so well. Milton's regret for the loss of such a
+guide, philosopher, and friend must have been lasting and sincere.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+IN CONSTABLE'S COUNTY.
+
+
+East Bergholt--The Valley of the Stour--Painting from nature--East
+Anglian girls.
+
+Charles Kingsley was wont to glorify the teaching of the hills, and to
+maintain that the man of the mountain is more imaginative and poetical
+than the man of the plain. There are many Scotch people, mostly those
+born in the Highlands, who tell us much the same. If the theory be
+true--and I am not aware that it is--the exceptions are striking and
+many. Lincolnshire is rather a flat country, but it gave us (I can never
+bring myself to call him Lord) Alfred Tennyson. Many of our greatest
+poets and artists were cockneys; and Constable, that sweet painter of
+cornfields and shady lanes and quiet rivers, used to say that the scenes
+of his boyhood made him a painter. I was one autumn in Constable's
+county, and I do not wonder at it. It is a wonderful district. I trod
+all the while, it seemed to me, on enchanted ground: in the gilded mist
+of autumn, with its river and its marsh lands, where the cows lazily
+fed--or got under the pollards to be out of the way of the flies--where
+laughing children swarmed along the hedges in pursuit of the ripe
+blackberry, where every cottage front was a thing of beauty, with its ivy
+creeping up the roof or over the wall; while the little garden was a mass
+of flowers. We expected to see the old gods and goddesses again to
+participate in the joyousness of an ancient mirth.
+
+Nor was it altogether a flat land, sacred to fat cattle and wheat and
+turnips. All round me were the elements of romance. At one end of the
+Vale of Dedham is a hill whence you may look all along the valley
+(Constable has made it the subject of one of his pictures) as far as
+Harwich; and as I lingered by the Stour--the river which divides Essex
+and Suffolk--East Bergholt, clothed with woods and crowned with a church,
+in which there is a stained-glass window put up in honour of Constable,
+and a baptismal font, the gift of Constable's brother, unfolded to my
+wondering eye all her rural charms. There are people who love to climb
+hills; I hate to do so. It is all vanity and vexation of spirit; when
+you get to the top of one hill the chances are all you see is another
+hill, to the top of which you will have to climb. Give me a country
+lane, with its luxuriant hedges, its shady trees, its flowers, its
+richness of greensward, its pigs and poultry and farmyard; there is
+poetry in such nooks and corners of the earth, as Burns and Bloomfield
+and Gerald Massey found. No wonder the place made Constable an artist,
+and an artist whose name will not speedily pass away. My dear sir or
+madam, the next time you are on your way from London to Ipswich, don't
+rush along at express speed; get out at Ardleigh, make your way to the
+Vale of Dedham, then walk along the Stour, and cross it by a couple of
+rustic bridges, and you are at East Bergholt, in Suffolk, where Constable
+was born, and if you do so you will bless me evermore. Then, if you
+like, rejoin the train at Manningtree, and resume your journey. Few East
+Anglians even are aware of the wealth of beauty in that quiet corner.
+'The beauty of the surrounding scenery,' writes Constable's biographer,
+'its gentle declivities, its luxuriant meadows, flats sprinkled with
+flocks and herds, its well-cultivated Uplands, its woods and rivers, with
+mansions scattered, and churches, farms, and picturesque cottages--all
+impart to this spot an amenity and elegance hardly anywhere else to be
+found.'
+
+The Constables have been long in the district. The grandfather was a
+farmer at a village close by. The father, who was well-to-do, purchased
+a water-mill at Dedham and two windmills at East Bergholt, where he
+lived. The great artist, his son John, was born in the last century, and
+was educated at Lavenham and the Dedham Grammar School, and when the lad
+had reached sixteen or seventeen became addicted to painting, his studio
+being in the house of a Mr. John Dunthorne, a painter and glazier, with
+whom he remained on terms of the greatest intimacy for many years. The
+father would fain have made the son a farmer. He preferred to be a
+miller, and in his young days was known in the district as the handsome
+miller. His windmills, when he took to painting, were wonderful, and
+well deserved the criticism of his brother, who used to say, 'When I look
+at a windmill painted by John, I see that it will go round, which is not
+always the case with those of other artists,' for the simple reason that
+John knew what he was about, which the others did not. Again, his
+industrial career helped him in another way. A miller learns to study
+the clouds, and Constable's clouds were exceptionally life-like and real.
+The handsome young miller soon acquired artistic friends, one of them
+being Sir George Beaumont, the guide, philosopher, and friend of most of
+the geniuses of that time. Said another to him, 'Do not trouble yourself
+about inventing figures for a landscape; you cannot remain an hour in a
+spot without the appearance of some living thing, that will in all
+probability better accord with the scene and the time of day than any
+invention of your own.' After a visit to his artist friends in London,
+he resumed his mill life, and in 1779 he finally commenced his artistic
+career, and painted all the country round. His studies were chiefly
+Dedham, East Bergholt, the Valley of the Stour, and the neighbouring
+village of Stratford. At Stoke Nayland he painted an altar-piece for the
+church. There is also another altar-piece in a neighbouring church, but
+his altar-pieces are not known or treasured like his other works.
+
+Cooper tells a good story of Constable. One day Stodart, the sculptor,
+met Fuseli starting forth with an old umbrella. 'Why do you carry the
+umbrella?' asked the sculptor. 'I am going to see Constable,' was the
+reply, 'and he is always painting rain.' One can only remark that, if
+Constable was always painting rain, he always did it well.
+
+Another good story was told Redgrave by Lee. 'I hear you sell all your
+pictures,' said Constable to the younger landscape-painter. 'Why, yes,'
+said Lee; 'I'm pretty fortunate. Don't you sell yours?' 'No,' said
+Constable, 'I don't sell any of my pictures, and I'll tell you why: when
+I paint a _bad_ picture I don't like to part with it, and when I paint a
+_good_ one I like to keep it.' It is well known that one year when
+Constable was on the Council of the Royal Academy, one of his own
+pictures was passed by mistake before the judges. 'Cross it,' said one.
+'It won't do,' said another. 'Pass on,' said a third. And the carpenter
+was just about to chalk it with a cross, when he read the name of 'John
+Constable.' Of course there were lame apologies, and the picture was
+taken from the condemned heap and placed with the works of his brother
+Academicians. But after work was over Constable took the picture under
+his arm, and, despite the remonstrance of his brother colleagues, marched
+off with it, saving: 'I can't think of its being hung after it has been
+fairly turned out. The work so condemned was the 'Stream bordered in
+with Willows,' now in the South Kensington Museum. Leslie once remarked
+to Redgrave that he would give any work he had painted for it, so warmly
+did he admire it.
+
+'Constable is the best landscape-painter we have,' wrote Frith to his
+mother in 1835. 'He is a very merry fellow, and very rich. He told us
+an anecdote of a man who came to look at his pictures; he was a gardener.
+One day he called him into his painting-room to look at his pictures,
+when the man made the usual vulgar remarks, such as, "Did you do all
+this, sir?" "Yes." "What, all this?" "Yes." "What, frame and all?"
+At last he came to an empty frame that was hung against the wall without
+any picture in it, when he said to Constable, "But you don't call this
+picture quite finished, do you, sir?" Constable said that quite sickened
+him, and he never let any ignoramuses ever see his pictures again, or
+frames either.'
+
+Constable's great merits, writes Mr. Frith, were first recognised in
+France, with the result upon French landscape art that is felt at the
+present time. His advice to Frith was: 'Never do anything without nature
+before you if it be possible to have it. See those weeds and the dock
+leaves? They are to come into the foreground of this picture. I know
+dock leaves pretty well, but I should not attempt to introduce them into
+a picture without having them before me.'
+
+Constable died very suddenly in 1837. His fame, now that he is dead, is
+greater than when he was alive. His work abides in all its strength.
+
+There is little in East Bergholt to remind one of Constable, where his
+reputation remains as that of a genial and kindly-hearted man; but the
+landscape in all its essential features remains the same. The house in
+which he was born was pulled down in 1841, which is a great pity, as it
+is described as a large and handsome mansion. But I never saw a small
+village with so many attractive residences, though why anybody should
+live in any of them I could not, for the life of me, understand. Yet
+there they were, quite a street of them, all in beautiful order, as if
+they were the residences of wealthy citizens in the suburbs of a busy
+town. They ought to have been filled with handsome girls, as Charles
+Kingsley tells us East Anglia is famed for the beauty of its women; all I
+can say, however, is that I saw none of them, or any sign of life
+anywhere, beyond the inevitable tradesmen's carts. Independently of
+Constable, East Bergholt claims to be worth a pilgrimage for its rustic
+beauty, which, however, becomes tame and common as you get away from it.
+The church is old, and has a history--of little consequence, however, to
+anyone now. One of its rectors was burned at Ipswich in Queen Mary's
+reign. His name, Samuel, ought to be preserved by a Church which, till
+lately, had few martyrs of its own. East Bergholt has also a
+Congregational and Primitive Methodist chapel, and a colony of
+Benedictine nuns, driven away from France by the great Revolution. We
+are a hospitable people, and we are proud to be so, but have we not just
+at this time too many refugee nuns and monks in our midst?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+EAST ANGLIAN WORTHIES.
+
+
+Suffolk cheese--Danes, Saxons, and Normans--Philosophers and
+statesmen--Artists and literati.
+
+Abbo Floriacencis, who flourished in the year A.D. 910, describes East
+Anglia as 'very noble, and particularly because of its being watered on
+all sides. On the south and east it is encompassed by the ocean, on the
+north by the moisture of large and wet fens which, arising almost in the
+heart of the island, because of the evenness of the ground for a hundred
+miles and more, descend in great rivers into the sea. On the west the
+province is joyned to the rest of the island, and, therefore, may be
+entered (by land); but lest it should be harassed by the frequent
+incursions of the enemy it is fortifyed with an earthen rampire like a
+high wall, and with a ditch. The inner parts of it is a pretty rich
+soil, made exceeding pleasant by gardens and groves, rendered agreeable
+by its convenience for hunting, famous for pasturage, and abounding with
+sheep and all sorts of cattle. I do not insist upon its rivers full of
+fish, considering that a tongue as it were of the sea itself licks it on
+one side, and on the other side the large fens make a prodigious number
+of lakes two or three miles over. These fens accommodate great numbers
+of monks with their desired retirement and solitude, with which, being
+enclosed, they have no occasion for the privacy of a wilderness.' Before
+the monks came the place was held by the Iceni--a stout and valiant
+people, as Tacitus describes them. In the time of the Heptarchy, King
+Uffa was their lord and master. In later times Suffolk, when explored by
+Camden, was celebrated for its cheeses, which, to the great advantage of
+the inhabitants, were bought up through all England, nay, in Germany
+also, with France and Spain, as Pantaleon Medicus has told us, who
+scruples not to set them against those of Placentia both in colour and
+taste. To the Norfolk people, it must be admitted, Camden gives the
+palm. The goodness of the soil of that country, he argues, 'may be
+gathered from hence, that the inhabitants are of a bright, clear
+complexion, not to mention their sharpness of wit and admirable quickness
+in the study of our common law. So that it is at present, and always has
+been, reputed the common nursery of lawyers, and even amongst the common
+people you shall meet with a great many who (as one expresses it), if
+they have no just quarrel, are able to raise it out of the very quirks
+and niceties of the law.' In our time it is rather the fashion to run
+down the East Anglians, yet that they have done their duty to their
+country no one can deny. 'They say we are Norfolk fules,' said a waiter
+at a Norfolk hotel, to me, a little while ago; 'but I ain't ashamed of my
+county, for all that.' Why should he be, the reader naturally asks?
+
+The Saxons of East Anglia gave the name of England to this land of ours;
+but before this time East Anglia had attained, by means of its sons and
+daughters, to fame far and near. If we may believe Gildas, a Christian
+church was planted in England in the time of Nero. Claudia, to whom Paul
+refers in Philippians and Timothy, was a British lady of great wit and
+greater beauty, celebrated by the poet Martial. She may have been
+converted by Paul, argued the Rev. Mr. Hollingsworth, a local historian,
+Rural Dean and Rector of Stowmarket; nor is it at all improbable, he
+adds, 'that Claudia, the British beauty, may have been an Iceni, or East
+Anglian lady, as her brilliant complexion, for which so many in these
+counties are celebrated, had caused a vivid feeling of sensation and
+curiosity and envy even among the haughty dames of the imperial city of
+Rome.' The Romans were glad to make terms with the Iceni till the
+unfortunate Boadicea perished in the revolt which she had so rashly
+raised. The Saxons came after the Romans, and took possession of the
+land. Saxon proprietors compelled the people, whose lives they spared,
+to till the very lands on which their fathers had lived under the Roman
+Government or their own chiefs. Pagan worship was reintroduced; but when
+Sigberht, the son of Redwald, King of East Anglia, reigned, he sent to
+France for Christian ministers, and one of them, Felix, a Burgundian,
+landed at Felixstowe, and there commenced his Christian labours. Felix
+was held in high repute by the Bishops in other parts of the kingdom.
+His opinions were quoted and revered. The diocese was large, and the
+fourth Bishop divided it into two parts, the second Bishop being planted
+at North Elmham, in Norfolk. In 955 the see was again united, when
+Erfastus, the twenty-second Bishop, removed to Thetford. A little while
+after the Bishop's residence was removed to Norwich, and there it has
+ever since remained; but the land was not long permitted to remain in
+peace. In 870 a large party of Danes marched from Lincolnshire into
+Suffolk, defeated King Edmund, near Hoxne, and, as he would not become an
+idolater, shot him to death with arrows. Bury St. Edmunds still
+preserves the name and fame of one of the most illustrious of our
+Anglo-Saxon martyrs. King Alfred, with a policy worthy of his sagacity,
+made Guthrum, the Danish governor of Suffolk, a Christian, and continued
+him in his rule. The Danes in East Anglia were then an immense army, and
+thus at once they were turned from foes into friends. Guthrum was
+baptized, and it is to be hoped was all the better for it. At any rate,
+he returned to Suffolk and divided many of the estates which had been
+held by Saxon proprietors killed in war. He died in peace, and had a
+fitting funeral at Hadleigh. The children of those Danish soldiers were
+dangerous friends, and too frequently betrayed the Saxons. Blood is
+thicker than water, and as each succeeding band of Danish adventurers
+landed on our eastern coast, they were welcomed by such followers of
+Guthrum as had settled in Suffolk as friends and allies. Nevertheless,
+the Danes found the conquest of the island impossible. Divine
+Providence, Mr. Hollingsworth tells us, did not suffer the Saxon race to
+be vanquished by those who were connected with them by blood.
+Nevertheless, the struggle was long and severe. The two races were
+equally matched in courage, but the Saxon surpassed his foe in that
+stern, unyielding endurance which enabled him to resist every defeat and
+prepare again for the contest. The whole surface of the country became
+studded with entrenchments, moats, and mounds, within whose line the
+harassed Saxon defended his property and all he valued in his home.
+History begins, as far as England is practically concerned, with the
+Norman Conquest. It was then the Norsemen, blue-eyed, fair-haired, the
+finest blood in Europe, planted themselves in Norfolk and Suffolk, and
+brought with them feudalism and civilization. It was in 787 that,
+according to the Saxon Chronicle, they first reached England; but it was
+not till William the Conqueror made the land his own that they settled as
+English lords, and divided between them the land in which their rapacious
+forefathers had won many a precious treasure.
+
+ 'The red gold and the white silver
+ He covets as a leech does blood,'
+
+wrote an old poet of the Norseman.
+
+Let us take, as an illustration of the county, a Norfolk family. In
+Westminster Abbey there is monument to Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton, who was
+buried in the ruined chancel of the little church at Overstrand, near
+Northrepps, 'a droll, irregular, unconventional-looking place,' as
+Caroline Fox calls it, where he loved at all times to live, and where he
+retired to die. The family from which Sir Thomas descended resided,
+about the middle of the sixteenth century, at Sudbury, in Suffolk. It
+was while at Earlham that he made his debut as a public speaker at one of
+the earlier meetings of the Norfolk Bible Society. In the winter of 1817
+he went over to France with some of the Gurneys and the Rev. Francis
+Cunningham, who was anxious to establish a Bible Society in Paris. He
+was also anxious to inquire into the way in which the gaols at Antwerp
+and Ghent were conducted. On his return he examined minutely into the
+state of the London gaols, and, to use his own expression, his inquiries
+developed a system of folly and wickedness which surpassed belief. In
+the following year he published a work entitled 'An Inquiry whether Crime
+be Produced or Prevented by our Present System of Penal Discipline,'
+which ran through six editions, and tended powerfully to create a proper
+public feeling on the subject. In 1819 we find him in Parliament
+seconding Sir James Mackintosh in his efforts to promote a reform of our
+criminal law--then the most sanguinary in Europe. One of his earliest
+efforts was to get the House to abolish the burning of widows in India;
+and in 1821 he received from Wilberforce the command to relieve him of a
+responsibility too heavy for his advancing years and infirmities--the
+care of the slave: a holy enterprise for which Mr. Buxton had been
+qualifying himself by careful thought and study, and which he was spared
+to carry to a successful end. At first he resided at Cromer Hall, an old
+seat of the Windham family, which no longer exists, having been pulled
+down and replaced by a modern residence. It was situated about a quarter
+of a mile from the sea, but sheltered from the north winds by closely
+surrounding hills and woods, and with its old buttresses, gables, and
+porches clothed with roses and jessamine, and its famed lawn, where the
+pheasants came down to feed, had a peculiar character of picturesque
+simplicity. The interior corresponded with its external appearance, and
+had little of the regularity of modern building. One attic chamber was
+walled up, with no entrance save through the window: and at different
+times large pits were discovered under the floor or in the thick
+walls--used, it was supposed, in old times by the smugglers of the coast.
+There is much picturesque scenery around Cromer, and large parties were
+often made up for excursions to Sherringham--one of the most beautiful
+spots in all the eastern counties, to the wooded dells of Felbrigg and
+Runton, or to the rough heath ground by the beach beacon. One who was a
+frequent guest at Cromer Hall wrote: 'I wish I could describe the
+impression made upon me by the extraordinary power of interesting and
+stimulating others which was possessed by Sir Fowell Buxton some thirty
+years ago. In my own case it was like having powers of thinking, powers
+of feeling, and, above all, the love of true poetry suddenly aroused
+within me, which, though I had possessed them before, had been till then
+unused. From Locke "On the Human Understanding," to "William of
+Deloraine, good at need," _he_ woke up in me the sleeping principle of
+taste, and, in giving me such objects of pursuit, has added immeasurably
+to the happiness of my life.' On a Sunday afternoon, we are told, his
+large dining-hall was filled with a miscellaneous audience of fishermen
+and neighbours, as well as of his own household, to whom he would read
+the Bible, commenting on it at the same time. Very simple and beautiful
+seems to us that far-away Norfolk life; except that his hospitalities
+were more bounded by want of room, his life at Northrepps was much the
+same as it had been at Cromer Hall. It is one of the pleasures of my
+life that I have heard Sir Thomas speak. In modern England the influence
+of the Buxton family and name is yet a power.
+
+Having already alluded to the Windhams and Felbrigg, it remains to say
+that the last of that illustrious line died in 1810. Felbrigg was
+purchased by the Windhams as far back as 1461. The public life of
+Windham, the statesman, may be considered as having commenced in 1783,
+when he undertook the office of Principal Secretary to Lord Northington,
+who was appointed Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. The great Marquis of
+Lansdowne, when he was last at Felbrigg, in 1861, said Mr. Windham had
+the best Parliamentary address of any man he had ever seen, which was
+enhanced by the grace of his person and the dignity of his manners.
+Still more glowing was the testimony borne to Mr. Windham by Earl Grey
+when he heard of his death. A mere glance at his diary is sufficient to
+convince us that Windham, when in London, mixed with the first men and
+women of his time. The late Lord Chief Justice Scarlett, on being asked
+by his son-in-law to name the very best speech he had heard during his
+life, and that which he thought most worthy of study, answered, without
+hesitation, 'Windham's speech on the Law of Evidence.' In a conversation
+with Lord Palmerston, Pitt observed of Windham: 'Nothing can be so
+well-meaning or eloquent as he is. His speeches are the finest
+productions possible of warm imagination and fancy.' In 1800 we read in
+the Malmesbury Diaries that old George III. had meant Windham to be his
+First Minister. As a friend of Burke and Johnson, Windham's name will
+not easily fade away. It is to him we owe the most pathetic account of
+the closing hours of the Monarch of Bolt Court.
+
+Sir Cloudesley Shovel may well claim to be one of Norfolk's heroes. Born
+in an obscure village, an apprentice to a shoemaker, he obtained rank and
+fame as one of Queen Anne's most honoured Admirals. It is denied that he
+was in very humble circumstances, and it is a fact that his original
+letters were so well worded as to indicate that he had received a fair
+education. At any rate, he went to sea at ten years old with his friend
+Sir John Hadough; and although not a cabin-boy in the modern acceptation
+of that term, he undertook his captain's errands, swimming on one
+occasion through the enemy's fire with some despatches for a distant
+ship, carrying the papers in his mouth, displaying a courage worthy of
+admiration. He distinguished himself in the Battle of Bantry Bay. As an
+enemy of France and Spain, he triumphed in many a fierce fight.
+Returning home flushed with victory, his ship and all on board were lost
+on the Scilly Isles in an October gale. Some uncertainty hangs over his
+last moments. It is asserted that he swam to shore alive, and that he
+was put to death for the sake of his ring of emeralds and diamonds. An
+ancient woman is stated to have confessed as much. For the honour of
+human nature, we would fain believe the story to be untrue. A still
+greater Norfolk hero was Lord Nelson, who is buried in St. Paul's
+Cathedral. 'My principle,' said Nelson, on one occasion, 'is to assist
+in driving the French to the devil, and in restoring peace and happiness
+to mankind.' Whether he succeeded as regards the former we are not in a
+position to state; but peace and happiness, alas! are still far from
+being the common property of mankind. The rectory house at Burnham
+Thorpe, where Nelson was born, exists no longer. Sir Cloudesley Shovel
+lived in a castellated stone house in the small agricultural village of
+Cockthorpe, originally fortified as a defence against the incursions of
+smugglers. A room in this house, entered by a doorway arched over with
+stone, is shown, which is still called by the villagers Sir Cloudesley's
+drawing-room.
+
+A chapter might be written about the Norfolk Cokes. Sir Edward Coke, the
+great lawyer, was buried at Tittleshale, in Norfolk. The well-known
+Coke, the distinguished agriculturist, inhabited that splendid Holkham,
+the fame of which exists in our day. It was begun by Lord Leicester in
+1734, and finished by his Countess in 1764. Blomefield, the well-known
+Norfolk historian, speaks of it as a noble, stately, and sumptuous
+palace. Lord Coke and Lord Burlington were men of similar tastes and
+pursuits, and were diligent students of classical and Italian art. The
+Holkham Library still contains treasures rich and rare. Many of the
+latter formed part of the library of Sir Edward Coke; the title-page of
+the first edition of the 'Novum Organum,' published in 1620, bears the
+design of a ship passing through the Pillars of Hercules into an
+undulating sea. The Holkham copy is adorned by the inscription, 'Ex dono
+auctoris.'
+
+Above the ship, in the handwriting of Coke, is the couplet:
+
+ 'It deserveth not to be read in schools,
+ But to be freighted in the ship of fools.'
+
+Thomas Shadwell, the Poet Laureate and historiographer of William III.,
+was a Norfolk man. He is buried in Westminster Abbey. It is said by
+Noble that he was an honest man. Of course he was. Chalmers accuses him
+of indecent conversation, or Lord Rochester would not have said that he
+had more wit and humour than any other poet. I am afraid he confers
+little honour on his native county. 'Others,' wrote Dryden in one of his
+satires,
+
+ 'To some faint meaning make pretence,
+ But Shadwell never deviates into sense.'
+
+Sir Robert Walpole, who saved England from wooden shoes and slavery, was
+of a Norfolk family, yet flourishing; as are the Townshends, to whom we
+owe the introduction of the turnip. Norfolk also can boast of Sir Thomas
+Gresham and Sir Francis Walsingham. In Norfolk was born that 'great
+oracle of law, patron of the Church, and glory of England,' as Camden
+calls him, Sir Henry Spelman. At Bickling, in the same county, was born
+that ill-starred Anne Boleyn, of whom it is written that
+
+ 'Love could teach a monarch to be wise,
+ And Gospel light first beamed from Boleyn's eyes.'
+
+In the same neighbourhood, also, was born John Baconthorpe, the resolute
+doctor, of whom Pantias Pansa has written: 'This one resolute doctor has
+furnished the Christian religion with armour against the Jews stronger
+than that of Vulcan.' Pansa was a Norfolk man, and so was the great
+botanist Sir W. Hooker.
+
+Who has not heard of Lynn, in Norfolk, where, when Eugene Aram was the
+usher,
+
+ 'Four-and-twenty happy boys
+ Came bounding out of school'?
+
+It was in that old town Fanny Burney, the friend of Mrs. Thrale and Dr.
+Johnson, the author of novels like 'Evelina,' which people even read
+nowadays, was born on the 13th of June, 1752. She grew up low of
+stature, of a brown complexion. One of her friends called her the dove,
+which she thought was from the colour of her eyes--a greenish-gray; her
+last editor thinks it must have been from their kind expression. She was
+very short-sighted, like her father. In her portrait, taken at the age
+of thirty, merriment seems latent behind a demure look. At any rate, her
+countenance was what might be called a speaking one. 'Poor Fanny!' said
+her father, 'her face tells what she thinks, whether she will or no. I
+long to see her honest face once more.' 'Poor Fanny' lived to a good old
+age, and her gossiping diary is a mine of wealth as regards the Royal
+Family, and Johnson, and Mrs. Thrale, and the cleverest men and women of
+her time.
+
+Thomas Bilney, one of our Protestant martyrs, was a Norfolk man. It was
+a Norfolk knight, Sir Thomas Erpingham, who gave signal for the archers
+at Agincourt. Shakespeare refers to him in his 'King Henry V.' as
+follows:
+
+ 'KING.--Good-morrow, old Sir Thomas Erpingham;
+ A good soft pillow for that good white head
+ Were better than a churlish turf of France.
+
+ 'ERP.--Not so, my liege; this lodging likes me better,
+ Since I may say, now lie I like a king.'
+
+Many East Anglians helped to win the battle of Agincourt. The Earl of
+Kimberley still bears Agincourt on his shield.
+
+Let us now pass over into Suffolk. It is worth asking how Suffolk came
+to earn the nickname of Silly Suffolk. 'Silly,' say the learned, is
+derived from the German _selig_, meaning 'holy or blessed,' and is said
+to have been applied to Suffolk on account of the number of beautiful
+churches it contains; Suffolk, at any rate, is silly no longer. In the
+present day it shows to advantage, if we may judge by the enterprise and
+public spirit of such a town as Ipswich, for instance. Not long since,
+as I landed on the docks at Hamburg, I had the pleasure of seeing some
+dozen or more steam ploughs and agricultural implements waiting to be
+transported into the interior. The ploughs and implements bore
+well-known Suffolk names, such as Garrett and Sons or Ransomes, Sims and
+Jefferies, and were open manifestations of Suffolk skill and energy, and
+ability to hold its own against all comers. Amongst the women of the
+present generation, where are to be met the superiors of Mrs. Garrett
+Anderson or of Mrs. Fawcett, widow of the distinguished statesman, and
+mother of a sweet girl-graduate who has beaten all the men at her
+University? I was the other day at Haverhill, where Mr. D. Gurteen still
+lives to enjoy, at the ripe old age of eighty-three, the fruits of an
+energy on his part which has raised Haverhill from a village of paupers
+into a flourishing community, whose manufactures are to be met with all
+over the land. One day, as I was walking along Gray's Inn Road, a fine,
+well-built man stopped me to ask me if I remembered him. When he
+mentioned his name I did directly. He was of the poorest of the poor in
+his home at Wrentham. He had done well in London. 'You know, sir,' he
+said, 'how poor our family was. Well, I had enough of poverty, and I
+made up my mind to come to London and be either a man or a mouse.'
+
+In the London of to-day the heads of some of our greatest establishments
+are Suffolk men. We all know the stately pile in Holborn, once
+Meekings', now Wallis's, where all the world and his wife go to buy. Mr.
+Wallis hails from Stowmarket, and the man who fits up London shops in the
+most tasty style, Mr. Sage, of Gray's Inn Road, was a Suffolk carpenter,
+who, when out of work, with his last guinea got some cards printed, one
+of which got him a job, which ultimately led on to fame and fortune.
+
+No, Suffolk has long ceased to be silly. It must have deserved the title
+in the days which I can remember when a Conservative M.P., amidst
+enthusiastic cheering, at Ipswich, intimated that it was quite as well
+the sun and moon were placed high up in the heavens, else
+
+ 'Some reforming ass
+ Would soon propose to pluck them down
+ And light the world with gas.'
+
+One of the oddest, most attractive, and most original women of the last
+century was Elizabeth Simpson, a Suffolk girl, who ran away from her
+home, where she was never taught anything, at the age of sixteen, to make
+her fortune, and to win fame. In both cases she succeeded, though not so
+soon as she could have wished. Failing to touch the hard heart of the
+manager of the Norwich Theatre, a Welshman of the name of Griffiths, she
+packed up her things in a bandbox, and, good-looking and audacious,
+landed herself on the Holborn pavement. 'By the time you receive this,'
+she wrote to her mother, 'I shall leave Standingfield perhaps for ever.
+You are surprised, but be not uneasy; believe the step I have undertaken
+is indiscreet, but by no means criminal, unless I sin by not acquainting
+you with it. I now endure every pang, am not lost to every feeling, on
+thus quitting the tenderest and best of parents, I would say most
+beloved, too, but cannot prove my affection, yet time may. To that I
+must submit my hope of retaining your regard. The censures of the world
+I despise, as the most worthy incur the reproaches of that. Should I
+ever think you will wish to hear from me I will write.' A pretty,
+unprotected, unknown girl of sixteen, in London, had, we can well
+believe, no easy time of it. Strangers followed her in the street,
+people insulted her in the theatre, suspicious landladies looked her up.
+Happily, a brother-in-law met her in a penniless state and took her home.
+Unhappily, at his house she met Inchbald, an indifferent and badly-paid
+actor. They were immediately married, and the girl rejoiced to think
+that she was an actress, and about to realize the ambition of her youth.
+It was no small part which the Suffolk girl felt herself qualified to
+fill. On the 4th of September, 1772, she made her debut as Cordelia to
+her husband's Lear. In 1821 Mrs. Inchbald, famed for her 'simple story,'
+which took the town by storm, was buried in Kensington Churchyard. But
+before she got there she had to endure much. At that time theatrical
+performers were much worse paid than they are now, when, as Mr. Irving
+tells us, any decent-looking young man, with a good suit of clothes, can
+command his five or six pounds a week. Mrs. Inchbald and her husband had
+to drink of the cup of poverty, and its consequent degradation, to the
+dregs. On one occasion they took it into their heads to go to France,
+believing that they could make money--he by painting, she by writing.
+The scheme, as was to be expected, did not answer, and they were landed
+on their return somewhere near Brighton, in the September of 1776,
+literally without a crust of bread. On one occasion it was stated that
+they dined off raw turnips, stolen from a field as they wandered past.
+Next year, however, the world began to mend so far as they were
+concerned.
+
+At Manchester they met the Siddonses and J. P. Kemble, and one result of
+that meeting was peace and prosperity. At this time also the lady's
+husband died, and that was no great loss, as the lady was far too
+independent for a wife. Yet, if the great Kemble had proposed to her, as
+she used to tell Fanny Kemble, she would have jumped at him. To the last
+her habits of life were most penurious. She spent nothing on dress, she
+was indifferent in the matter of eating and drinking, and when she was
+making as much as from 500 to 900 pounds by a new play, in order to save
+a trifle she would sit in the depth of winter without a fire. Only fancy
+any of our later lady-novelists thus ascetic and self-denying. The idea
+is absurd. She was to the last what Godwin described her, a mixture of
+lady and milkmaid. And yet the lady had ambition. She had an idea that
+she might be Lady Bunbury. However, she marred her chance, at the same
+time missing a rich Mr. Glover, who offered a marriage settlement of 500
+pounds a year. Mrs. Inchbald, however, well knew how to take care of
+herself. No one better. She had learned the art in rather a hard
+school, and, besides, she knew how to take care of her poor relations.
+None of her sisters seem to have done well, and she had to aid them all.
+
+Sudbury was the birthplace of that William Enfield, whose 'Speaker' was
+the terror and delight of more than one generation of England's ingenuous
+youth. Lord Chancellor Thurlow, of the rugged eyebrows and the savage
+look, and fellow-clerk with the poet Cowper, was born at Ashfield, an
+obscure village not far off. Robert Bloomfield, who wrote the 'Farmer's
+Boy,' came from Honington, where his mother kept a village school, and
+where he became a shoemaker. Capel Loft, an amiable gentleman of
+literary sympathies and pursuits, and Bloomfield's warmest friend,
+resided at Troston Hall, in the immediate neighbourhood of Honington. At
+one time there was no writer better known than John Lydgate, called the
+Monk of Bury, born at the village of Lydgate, in 1380. 'His language,'
+writes a learned critic, 'is much less obsolete than Chaucer's, and a
+great deal more harmonious.' Stephen Gardener, Bishop of Winchester, and
+an enemy to the Reformation, was born at Bury. At Trinity St. Martin
+lived Thomas Cavendish, the second Englishman who sailed round the globe.
+Admiral Broke, memorable for his capture of the _Chesapeake_, when we
+were at war with America, was born at Nacton. The great non-juring
+Archbishop Sancroft was born at Fressingfield, where he retired to die,
+and where he is buried under a handsome monument. The great scholar,
+Robert Grossetete, Bishop of Lincoln, was born at Stradbrook. Of him
+Roger Bacon wrote that he was the only man living who was in possession
+of all the sciences. Wycliff, on innumerable occasions, refers to him
+with respect. Arthur Young, the celebrated agriculturist, some of whose
+sentences are preserved as golden ones--especially that which says, 'Give
+a man the secure possession of a rock, and he will make a garden of
+it'--and whose valuable works, I am glad to see, are republished, was
+born and lived near Bury St. Edmunds. Echard, the historian, was born at
+Barsham, in 1671. Porson was a Norfolk lad.
+
+Sir Thomas Hanmer was one of the most independent men that ever sat for
+the county of Suffolk. Mr. Glyde, of Ipswich, terms him the Gladstone of
+his age. Pope appears to stigmatize him as a Trimmer,
+
+ 'Courtiers and patrols in two ranks divide;
+ Through both he passed, and bowed from side to side.'
+
+His garden at Mildenhall was celebrated for the quality of its grapes,
+and Sir Thomas used to send every year hampers filled with these grapes,
+and carried on men's shoulders, to London for the Queen. That stubborn
+Radical and Freethinker, Tom Paine, was born at Thetford. Sir John
+Suckling, a Suffolk poet, has written, at any rate, one verse never
+excelled:
+
+ 'Her feet beneath her petticoat,
+ Like little mice, stole in and out,
+ As if they feared the light.
+ But oh, she dances such a way,
+ No sun upon an Easter day
+ Is half so fine a sight.'
+
+England has in all parts of the world sons and daughters who have
+deserved well of the State, and not a few of them are East Anglians by
+birth and breeding. May their fame be cherished and their examples
+followed by their successors in that calm, quiet, Eastern land--far from
+the madding crowd--where the roar and rush of our modern life are almost
+unknown--where farmers weep and wail but look jolly nevertheless!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE END.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ BILLING AND SONS, PRINTERS, GUILDFORD.
+
+
+
+
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