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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Memorials of Old Dorset, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Memorials of Old Dorset
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editors: Thomas Perkins
- Herbert Pentin
-
-Release Date: May 19, 2022 [eBook #68128]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Tim Lindell, Les Galloway and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MEMORIALS OF OLD DORSET ***
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-Obvious typographical errors have been silently corrected. Variations
-in hyphenation and accents have been standardised but all other
-spelling and punctuation remains unchanged.
-
-Italics are represented thus _italic_, bold thus =bold= and
-superscripts thus y^{en}.
-
-The repetition of the title immediately before the title page has been
-removed.
-
-The footnotes are at the end of the book.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration:
- Ringstead and Holworth.
-
- “Where one may walk along the undulating downs that skirt the Channel,
- held in place by parapets of cliff that break down straight into the
- sea; where one may walk mile after mile on natural lawn and not meet a
- soul—just one’s self, the birds, the glorious scenery, and God.”
- (_See page 109._)
-_From a water-colour sketch by Mr. William Pye._]
-
-
-
-
- MEMORIALS OF THE COUNTIES OF ENGLAND
-
- General Editor: REV. P. H. DITCHFIELD, M.A., F.S.A.
-
-
-
-
- MEMORIALS
- OF OLD DORSET
-
-
- EDITED BY
-
- THOMAS PERKINS, M.A.
-
- LATE RECTOR OF TURNWORTH, DORSET
-
- AUTHOR OF
-
- “_Wimborne Minster and Christchurch Priory_”
- “_Bath and Malmesbury Abbeys_” “_Romsey Abbey_” _&c._
-
- AND
-
- HERBERT PENTIN, M.A.
-
- VICAR OF MILTON ABBEY, DORSET
-
- VICE-PRESIDENT, HON. SECRETARY, AND EDITOR
- OF THE DORSET NATURAL HISTORY AND ANTIQUARIAN FIELD CLUB
-
- WITH MANY ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- LONDON
- BEMROSE & SONS LIMITED, 4 SNOW HILL, E.C.
- AND DERBY
- 1907
-
- [_All Rights Reserved_]
-
-
-
-
- TO
-
- THE RIGHT HONOURABLE
-
- LORD EUSTACE CECIL, F.R.G.S.
-
- PAST PRESIDENT OF THE DORSET NATURAL
- HISTORY AND ANTIQUARIAN FIELD CLUB
- THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED
- BY HIS LORDSHIP’S
- KIND
- PERMISSION
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-The editing of this Dorset volume was originally undertaken by the
-Rev. Thomas Perkins, the scholarly Rector of Turnworth. But he, having
-formulated its plan and written four papers therefor, besides gathering
-material for most of the other chapters, was laid aside by a very
-painful illness, which culminated in his unexpected death. This is
-a great loss to his many friends, to the present volume, and to the
-county of Dorset as a whole; for Mr. Perkins knew the county as few men
-know it, his literary ability was of no mean order, and his kindness to
-all with whom he was brought in contact was proverbial.
-
-After the death of Mr. Perkins, the editing of the work was entrusted
-to the Rev. Herbert Pentin, Vicar of Milton Abbey, whose knowledge of
-the county and literary experience as Editor of the Dorset Natural
-History and Antiquarian Field Club enabled him to gather up the threads
-where his friend Mr. Perkins had been compelled to lay them down, and
-to complete the work and see it safely through the press. As General
-Editor of the series, I desire to express my most grateful thanks to
-him for his kind and gracious services in perfecting a work which had
-unfortunately been left incomplete; and all lovers of Old Dorset and
-readers of this book will greatly appreciate his good offices.
-
-Few counties can rival Dorset either in natural beauty or historic
-interest, and it deserves an honoured place among the memorials of
-the counties of England. In preparing the work the Editors have
-endeavoured to make the volume comprehensive, although it is of
-course impossible in a single volume to exhaust all the rich store of
-historical treasures which the county affords. After a general sketch
-of the history of Dorset by the late Editor, the traces of the earliest
-races which inhabited this county are discussed by Mr. Prideaux, who
-tells of the ancient barrows in Dorset, and the details of the Roman
-occupation are shown by Captain Acland. Dorset is rich in churches,
-and no one was more capable to describe their chief features than Mr.
-Perkins. His chapter is followed by others of more detail, dealing
-with the three great minsters still standing—Sherborne, Milton, and
-Wimborne, the monastic house at Ford, and the memorial brasses of
-Dorset. A series of chapters on some of the chief towns and “islands”
-of the county follows, supplemented by a description of two well-known
-manor-houses. The literary associations of the county and some of its
-witchcraft-superstitions form the subjects of the concluding chapters.
-The names of the able writers who have kindly contributed to this
-volume will commend themselves to our readers. The Lord Bishop of
-Durham, the Rev. R. Grosvenor Bartelot, Mr. Sidney Heath, Mr. Wildman,
-Mr. Prideaux, Mr. Gill, Mrs. King Warry, and our other contributors,
-are among the chief authorities upon the subjects of which they treat,
-and our thanks are due to them for their services; and also to Mr.
-William Pye for the beautiful coloured frontispiece, to Mr. Heath for
-his charming drawings, and to those who have supplied photographs for
-reproduction. We hope that this volume will find a welcome in the
-library of every Dorset book-lover, and meet with the approbation of
-all who revere the traditions and historical associations of the county.
-
- P. H. DITCHFIELD,
- _General Editor_.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- Historic Dorset By the Rev. THOMAS PERKINS, M.A. 1
-
-
- The Barrows of Dorset By C. S. PRIDEAUX 19
-
- The Roman Occupation of Dorset By Captain J. E. ACLAND 28
-
- The Churches of Dorset By the Rev. THOMAS PERKINS, M.A. 44
-
- The Memorial Brasses of Dorset By W. DE C. PRIDEAUX 62
-
- Sherborne By W. B. WILDMAN, M.A. 75
-
- Milton Abbey By the Rev. HERBERT PENTIN, M.A. 94
-
- Wimborne Minster By the Rev. THOMAS PERKINS, M.A. 117
-
- Ford Abbey By SIDNEY HEATH 131
-
- Dorchester By the LORD BISHOP OF DURHAM, D.D. 145
-
- Weymouth By SIDNEY HEATH 157
-
- The Isle of Portland By Mrs. KING WARRY 177
-
- The Isle of Purbeck By A. D. MOULLIN 187
-
- Corfe Castle By ALBERT BANKES 200
-
- Poole By W. K. GILL 222
-
- Bridport By the Rev. R. GROSVENOR BARTELOT, M.A. 232
-
- Shaftesbury By the Rev. THOMAS PERKINS, M.A. 240
-
- Piddletown and Athelhampton By Miss WOOD HOMER 257
-
- Wolfeton House By ALBERT BANKES 264
-
- The Literary Associations of Dorset By Miss M. JOURDAIN 273
-
- Some Dorset Superstitions By HERMANN LEA 292
-
- Index 307
-
-
-
-
-INDEX TO ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- Ringstead and Holworth _Frontispiece_
- (_From a water-colour sketch by Mr. William Pye_)
-
- PAGE, OR
- FACING PAGE
-
- Bronze Age Objects from Dorset Round Barrows 20
- (_From photographs by Mr. W. Pouncy_)
-
- Part of the Olga Road Tessellated Pavement, Dorchester 38
- (_From a photograph by the Rev. T. Perkins_)
-
- Tessellated Pavement at Fifehead Neville 41
-
- St. Martin’s Church, Wareham 48
- (_From a photograph by the Rev. T. Perkins_)
-
- The Chapel on St. Ealdhelm’s Head 50
- (_From a drawing by Mr. Sidney Heath_)
-
- Brass to William Grey, Rector of Evershot 70
- (_From a rubbing by Mr. W. de C. Prideaux_)
-
- Sherborne Abbey (_From a drawing by Mr. Sidney Heath_) 76
-
- The Entrance to Sherborne School 86
- (_From a photograph by the Rev. T. Perkins_)
-
- Milton Abbey (_From a photograph by the Rev. T. Perkins_) 94
-
- The Paintings in Milton Abbey 95
-
- Milton Abbey: Interior (_From a photograph by Mr. S. Gillingham_) 96
-
- The Tabernacle in Milton Abbey ” ” ” 97
-
- Abbot Middleton’s Rebus 101
-
- St. Catherine’s Chapel, Milton Abbey 104
- (_From a photograph by Mr. S. Gillingham_)
-
- Holworth Burning Cliff in 1827 106
- (_From a coloured print by Mr. E. Vivian_)
-
- Liscombe Chapel (_From a photograph by Mr. S. Gillingham_) 107
-
- Milton Abbey in the year 1733 110
- (_From an engraving by Messrs. S. and N. Buck_)
-
- The Seal of the Town of Milton in America 116
-
- Wimborne Minster (_From a drawing by Mr. Sidney Heath_) 118
-
- The Chained Library, Wimborne Minster 128
- (_From a photograph by the Rev. T. Perkins_)
-
- Ford Abbey (_From a photograph by the Rev. T. Perkins_) 132
-
- Details from Cloisters, Ford Abbey 134
- (_From drawings by Mr. Sidney Heath_)
-
- The Chapel, Ford Abbey 136
- (_From a photograph by the Rev. T. Perkins_)
-
- Panel from Cloisters, Ford Abbey 136
- (_From a drawing by Mr. Sidney Heath_)
-
- The Seal of Ford Abbey (_From a drawing by Mr. Sidney Heath_) 140
-
- High Street, Dorchester 146
- (_From a photograph by the Rev. T. Perkins_)
-
- Judge Jeffreys’ Lodgings, Dorchester 149
- (_From a drawing by Mr. Sidney Heath_)
-
- Cornhill, Dorchester (_From a drawing by Mr. Sidney Heath_) 153
-
- “Napper’s Mite,” Dorchester ” ” ” 155
-
- The Quay, Weymouth ” ” ” 158
-
- Chest in the Guildhall, Weymouth ” ” ” 164
-
- Sandsfoot Castle, Weymouth ” ” ” 166
-
- Doorway, Sandsfoot Castle ” ” ” 167
-
- Some Weymouth Tokens ” ” ” 169
-
- The Arms of Weymouth ” ” ” 170
-
- Old House on North Quay, Weymouth 171
- (_From a drawing by Mr. Sidney Heath_)
-
- An Old Chair in the Guildhall, Weymouth 172
- (_From a drawing by Mr. Sidney Heath_)
-
- The Old Stocks, Weymouth (_From a drawing by Mr. Sidney Heath_) 176
-
- Portland Cottages ” ” ” 185
-
- “Kimmeridge Coal Money” 192
- (_From a photograph by Mr. A. D. Moullin_)
-
- Corfe Castle (_From a photograph by the Rev. T. Perkins_) 200
-
- The Town Cellars, Poole ” ” ” 222
-
- Shaftesbury ” ” ” 240
-
- Gold Hill, Shaftesbury ” ” ” 248
-
- Piddletown Church ” ” ” 258
-
- Athelhampton Hall ” ” ” 262
-
- Wolfeton House ” ” ” 264
-
- The East Drawing Room, Wolfeton House 268
- (_From a photograph by the Rev. T. Perkins_)
-
- William Barnes (_From a photograph by Messrs. Dickinsons_) 280
-
- Thomas Hardy (_From a photograph by the Rev. T. Perkins_) 284
-
- Came Rectory (_From a drawing by Mr. Sidney Heath_) 291
-
-
-
-
-HISTORIC DORSET
-
-BY THE REV. THOMAS PERKINS, M.A.
-
-
-The physical features due to the geological formation of the district
-now called Dorset have had such an influence on the inhabitants and
-their history that it seems necessary to point out briefly what series
-of stratified rocks may be seen in Dorset, and the lines of their
-outcrop.
-
-There are no igneous rocks, nor any of those classed as primary, but,
-beginning with the Rhætic beds, we find every division of the secondary
-formations, with the possible exception of the Lower Greensand,
-represented, and in the south-eastern part of the district several of
-the tertiary beds may be met with on the surface.
-
-The dip of the strata is generally towards the east; hence the earlier
-formations are found in the west. Nowhere else in England could a
-traveller in a journey of a little under fifty miles—which is about the
-distance from Lyme to the eastern boundary of Dorset—cross the outcrop
-of so many strata. A glance at a geological map of England will show
-that the Lias, starting from Lyme Regis, sweeps along a curve slightly
-concave towards the west, almost due north, until it reaches the sea
-again at Redcar, while the southern boundary of the chalk starting
-within about ten miles of Lyme runs out eastward to Beechy Head. Hence
-it is seen that the outcrops of the various strata are wider the
-further away they are from Lyme Regis.
-
-Dorset has given names to three well-known formations and to one less
-well known: (1) The Portland beds, first quarried for building stone
-about 1660; (2) the Purbeck beds, which supplied the Early English
-church builders with marble for their ornamental shafts; (3) Kimmeridge
-clay; and (4) the Punfield beds.
-
-The great variety of the formation coming to the surface in the area
-under consideration has given a striking variety to the character of
-the landscape: the chalk downs of the North and centre, with their
-rounded outlines; the abrupt escarpments of the greensand in the
-neighbourhood of Shaftesbury; the rich grazing land of Blackmore Vale
-on the Oxford clay; and the great Heath (Mr. Hardy’s Egdon) stretching
-from near Dorchester out to the east across Woolwich, Reading, and
-Bagshot beds, with their layers of gravel, sand, and clay. The chalk
-heights are destitute of water; the streams and rivers are those of
-the level valleys and plains of Oolitic clays—hence they are slow and
-shallow, and are not navigable, even by small craft, far from their
-mouths.
-
-The only sides from which in early days invaders were likely to come
-were the south and east; and both of these boundaries were well
-protected by natural defences, the former by its wall of cliffs and the
-deadly line of the Chesil beach. The only opening in the wall was Poole
-Harbour, a land-locked bay, across which small craft might indeed be
-rowed, but whose shores were no doubt a swamp entangled by vegetation.
-Swanage Bay and Lulworth Cove could have been easily defended. Weymouth
-Bay was the most vulnerable point. Dense forests protected the eastern
-boundary. These natural defences had a marked effect, as we shall see,
-on the history of the people. Dorset for many centuries was an isolated
-district, and is so to a certain extent now, though great changes
-have taken place during the last fifty or sixty years, due to the two
-railways that carry passengers from the East to Weymouth and the one
-that brings them from the North to Poole and on to Bournemouth. This
-isolation has conduced to the survival not only of old modes of speech,
-but also of old customs, modes of thought, and superstitions.
-
-It may be well, before speaking of this history, to state that the
-county with which this volume deals should always be spoken of as
-“Dorset,” never as “Dorsetshire”; for in no sense of the word is Dorset
-a shire, as will be explained further on.
-
-We find within the boundaries of the district very few traces of
-Palæolithic man: the earliest inhabitants, who have left well-marked
-memorials of themselves, were Iberians, a non-Aryan race, still
-represented by the Basques of the Pyrenees and by certain inhabitants
-of Wales. They were short of stature, swarthy of skin, dark of hair,
-long-skulled. Their characteristic weapon or implement was a stone
-axe, ground, not chipped, to a sharp edge; they buried their dead in a
-crouching attitude in the long barrows which are still to be seen in
-certain parts of Dorset, chiefly to the north-east of the Stour Valley.
-When and how they came into Britain we cannot tell for certain; it was
-undoubtedly after the glacial epoch, and probably at a time when the
-Straits of Dover had not come into being and the Thames was still a
-tributary of the Rhine. They were in what is known as the Neolithic
-stage of civilisation; but in course of time, after this country had
-become an island, invaders broke in upon them, Aryans of the Celtic
-race, probably (as Professor Rhys thinks, though he says he is not
-certain on this point) of the Goidelic branch. These men were tall,
-fair-haired, blue-eyed, round-skulled, and were in a more advanced
-stage of civilisation than the Iberians, using bronze weapons, and
-burying their dead, sometimes after cremation, in the round barrows
-that exist in such large numbers on the Dorset downs. Their better
-arms and greater strength told in the warfare that ensued: whether the
-earlier inhabitants were altogether destroyed, or expelled or lived
-on in diminished numbers in a state of slavery, we have no means of
-ascertaining. But certain it is that the Celts became masters of the
-land. These men were some of those who are called in school history
-books “Ancient Britons”; the Wessex folk in after days called them
-“Welsh”—that is, “foreigners”—the word that in their language answered
-to βάρβαροι and “barbari” of the Greeks and Romans. What they called
-themselves we do not know. Ptolemy speaks of them as “Durotriges,”
-the name by which they were known to the Romans. Despite various
-conjectures, the etymology of this word is uncertain. The land which
-they inhabited was, as already pointed out, much isolated. The lofty
-cliffs from the entrance to Poole Harbour to Portland formed a natural
-defence; beyond this, the long line of the Chesil beach, and further
-west, more cliffs right on to the mouth of the Axe. Most of the
-lowlands of the interior were occupied by impenetrable forests, and the
-slow-running rivers, which even now in rainy seasons overflow their
-banks, and must then, when the rainfall was much heavier than now, have
-spread out into swamps, rendered unnavigable by their thick tangle of
-vegetation. The inhabitants dwelt on the sloping sides of the downs,
-getting the water they needed from the valleys, and retiring for safety
-to the almost innumerable encampments that crowned the crests of the
-hills, many of which remain easily to be distinguished to this day.
-Nowhere else in England in an equal area can so many Celtic earthworks
-be found as in Dorset. The Romans came in due course, landing we know
-not where, and established themselves in certain towns not far from the
-coasts.
-
-The Celts were not slain or driven out of their land, but lived on
-together with the Romans, gradually advancing in civilisation under
-Roman influence. They had already adopted the Christian religion: they
-belonged to the old British Church, which lived on in the south-west
-of England even through that period when the Teutonic invaders—Jutes,
-Angles, Saxons—devastated the south-east, east, north, and central
-parts of the island, and utterly drove westward before them the Celtic
-Christians into Wales and the south-west of Scotland. Dorset remained
-for some time untouched, for though the Romans had cleared some of the
-forests before them, and had cut roads through others, establishing at
-intervals along them military stations, and strengthening and occupying
-many of the Celtic camps, yet the vast forest—“Selwood,” as the English
-called it—defended Dorset from any attack of the West Saxons, who
-had settled further to the east. Once, and once only, if we venture,
-with Professor Freeman, to identify Badbury Rings, near Wimborne, on
-the Roman Road, with the Mons Badonicus of Gildas, the Saxons, under
-Cerdic, in 516, invaded the land of the Durotriges, coming along the
-Roman Road which leads from Salisbury to Dorchester, through the gap
-in the forest at Woodyates, but found that mighty triple ramparted
-stronghold held by Celtic Arthur and his knights, round whom so much
-that is legendary has gathered, but who probably were not altogether
-mythical. In the fight that followed, the Christian Celt was
-victorious, and the Saxon invader was driven in flight back to his own
-territory beyond Selwood. Some place Mons Badonicus in the very north
-of England, or even in Scotland, and say that the battle was fought
-between the Northumbrians and the North Welsh: if this view is correct,
-we may say that no serious attack was made on the Celts of Dorset from
-the east. According to Mr. Wildman’s theory, as stated in his _Life of
-St. Ealdhelm_—which theory has a great air of probability about it—the
-Wessex folk, under Cenwealh, son of Cynegils, the first Christian King
-of the West Saxons, won two victories: one at Bradford-on-Avon in
-652, and one at the “Hills” in 658. Thus North Dorset was overcome,
-and gradually the West Saxons passed on westward through Somerset,
-until in 682 Centwine, according to the English Chronicle, drove the
-Welsh into the sea. William of Malmesbury calls them “Norht Walæs,”
-or North Welsh, but this is absurd: Mr. Wildman thinks “Norht” may be
-a mistake for “Dorn,” or “Thorn,” and that the Celts of Dorset are
-meant, and that the sea mentioned is the English Channel. From this
-time the fate of the Durotriges was sealed: their land became part of
-the great West Saxon kingdom. Well indeed was it for them that they had
-remained independent until after the time when their conquerors had
-ceased to worship Woden and Thunder and had given in their allegiance
-to the White Christ; for had these men still been worshippers of the
-old fierce gods, the Celts would have fared much worse. Now, instead
-of being exterminated, they were allowed to dwell among the West Saxon
-settlers, in an inferior position, but yet protected by the West
-Saxon laws, as we see from those of Ine who reigned over the West
-Saxons from 688 to 728. The Wessex settlers in Dorset were called by
-themselves “Dornsæte,” or “Dorsæte,” whence comes the name of Dorset.
-It will be seen then, that Dorset is what Professor Freeman calls a
-“ga”—the land in which a certain tribe settled—and differs entirely
-from those divisions made after the Mercian land had been won back
-from the Danes, when shires were formed by shearing up the newly
-recovered land, not into its former divisions which the Danish conquest
-had obliterated, but into convenient portions, each called after the
-name of the chief town within its borders, such as Oxfordshire from
-Oxford, Leicestershire from Leicester. The Danes did for a time get
-possession of the larger part of Wessex, but it was only for a time:
-the boundaries of Dorset were not wiped out, and there was no need to
-make any fresh division. So when we use the name Dorset for the county
-we use the very name that it was known by in the seventh century. It
-is also interesting to observe that Dorset has been Christian from the
-days of the conversion of the Roman Empire, that no altars smoked on
-Dorset soil to Woden, no temples were built in honour of Thunder, no
-prayers were offered to Freya; but it is also worth notice that the
-Celtic Christian Church was not ready to amalgamate with the Wessex
-Church, which had derived its Christianity from Papal Rome. However,
-the Church of the Conquerors prevailed, and Dorset became not only
-part of the West Saxon kingdom, but also of the West Saxon diocese,
-under the supervision of a bishop, who at first had his bishop-stool
-at Dorchester, not the Dorset town, but one of the same name on the
-Thames, not far from Abingdon. In 705, when Ine was King, it received a
-bishop of its own in the person of St. Ealdhelm, Abbot of Malmesbury,
-who on his appointment placed his bishop-stool at Sherborne: he did
-not live to hold this office long, for he died in 709. But a line
-of twenty-five bishops ruled at Sherborne, the last of whom—Herman,
-a Fleming brought over by Eadward the Confessor—transferred his see
-in 1075 to Old Sarum, as it is now called; whereupon the church of
-Sherborne lost its cathedral rank.
-
-The southern part of Dorset, especially in the neighbourhood of Poole
-Harbour, suffered much during the time that the Danes were harrying
-the coast of England. There were fights at sea in Swanage Bay, there
-were fights on land round the walls of Wareham, there were burnings of
-religious houses at Wimborne and Wareham. Then followed the victories
-of Ælfred, and for a time Dorset had rest. But after Eadward was
-murdered at “Corfes-geat” by his stepmother Ælfthryth’s order, and
-the weak King Æthelred was crowned, the Danes gave trouble again. The
-King first bribed them to land alone; and afterwards, when, trusting
-to a treaty he had made with them, many Danes had settled peacefully
-in the country, he gave orders for a general massacre—men, women and
-children—on St. Brice’s Day (November 13th), 1002. Among those who
-perished was a sister of Swegen, the Danish King, Christian though she
-was. This treacherous and cruel deed brought the old Dane across the
-seas in hot haste to take terrible vengeance on the perpetrator of the
-dastardly outrage. All southern England, including Dorset, was soon
-ablaze with burning towns. The walls of Dorchester were demolished,
-the Abbey of Cerne was pillaged and destroyed, Wareham was reduced
-to ashes. Swegen became King, but reigned only a short time, and his
-greater son, Cnut, succeeded him. When he had been recognised as King
-by the English, and had got rid of all probable rivals, he governed
-well and justly, and the land had rest. Dorset had peace until Harold
-had fallen on the hill of Battle, and the south-eastern and southern
-parts of England had acknowledged William as King. The men of the west
-still remained independent, Exeter being the chief city to assert its
-independence. In 1088 William resolved to set about to subdue these
-western rebels, as he called them. He demanded that they should accept
-him as King, take oaths of allegiance to him, and receive him within
-their walls. To this the men of Exeter made answer that they would pay
-tribute to him as overlord of England as they had paid to the previous
-King, but that they would not take oaths of allegiance, nor would they
-allow him to enter the city. William’s answer was an immediate march
-westward. Professor Freeman says that there is no record of the details
-of his march; but naturally it would lie through Dorset, the towns of
-which were in sympathy with Exeter. Knowing what harsh and cruel things
-William could do when it suited his purpose, we cannot for a moment
-doubt that he fearfully harried all the Dorset towns on the line of his
-march, seeking by severity to them to overawe the city of Exeter.
-
-In the wars between Stephen and Maud, Dorset was often the
-battle-ground of the rival claimants for the throne. Wareham,
-unfortunate then, as usual, was taken and re-taken more than once,
-first by one party, then by the other; but lack of space prevents the
-telling of this piece of local history.
-
-King John evidently had a liking for Dorset. He often visited it,
-having houses of his own at Bere Regis, Canford, Corfe, Cranborne,
-Gillingham, and Dorchester. In the sixteenth year of his reign he put
-strong garrisons into Corfe Castle and Wareham as a defence against his
-discontented barons.
-
-In the wars between his son, Henry III., and the Barons there was
-fighting again in Dorset, especially at Corfe. Dorset, among other
-sea-side counties, supplied ships and sailors to Edward III. and Henry
-V. for their expeditions against France.
-
-The Wars of the Roses seem hardly to have touched the county; but one
-incident must be mentioned: On April 14th, 1471, Margaret, wife of
-Henry VI., landed at Weymouth with her son Edward and a small band of
-Frenchmen; but she soon heard that on the very day of her landing her
-great supporter, though once he had been her bitterest enemy, Warwick
-the King-maker, had been defeated and slain at Barnet. This led her to
-seek sanctuary in the Abbey at Cerne, about sixteen miles to the north
-of Weymouth; but her restless spirit would not allow her long to stay
-in this secluded spot, and she started with young Edward, gathering
-supporters as she went, till on May 4th her army was defeated at
-Tewkesbury, and there her last hopes were extinguished when King Edward
-IV. smote her son, who had been taken prisoner, with gauntleted hand
-upon the mouth, and the daggers of Clarence and Gloucester ended the
-poor boy’s life.
-
-We hear nothing of resistance on the part of Dorset to the Earl of
-Richmond when he came to overthrow Richard III. Probably, as the
-Lancastrian family of the Beauforts were large landowners in Dorset,
-Dorset sympathy was enlisted on the side of the son of the Lady
-Margaret, great-granddaughter of John of Gaunt.
-
-Like all the rest of England, Dorset had to see its religious houses
-suppressed and despoiled; its abbots and abbesses, with all their
-subordinate officers, as well as their monks and nuns, turned out of
-their old homes, though let it in fairness be stated, not unprovided
-for, for all those who surrendered their ecclesiastical property to the
-King received pensions sufficient to keep them in moderate comfort, if
-not in affluence. Dorset accepted the dissolution of the monasteries
-and the new services without any manifest dissatisfaction. There was no
-rioting or fighting as in the neighbouring county of Devon.
-
-Dorset did not escape so easily in the days of the Civil War. Lyme,
-holden for the Parliament by Governor Creely and some 500 men, held
-out from April 20th to June 16th, 1644, against Prince Maurice with
-4,000 men, when the Earl of Essex came to its relief. Corfe Castle and
-Sherborne Castle were each besieged twice. Abbotsbury was taken by Sir
-Anthony Ashley Cooper in September, 1644. Wareham, also, was more than
-once the scene of fighting. In the north of Dorset a band of about
-5,000 rustics, known as “Clubmen,” assembled. These men knew little and
-cared less for the rival causes of King and Parliament which divided
-the rest of England; but one thing they did know and greatly cared for:
-they found that ever and again bands of armed horsemen came riding
-through the villages, some singing rollicking songs and with oaths on
-their lips, others chanting psalms and quoting the Bible, but all alike
-treading down their crops, demanding food, and sometimes their horses,
-often forgetting to pay for them; so they resolved to arm themselves
-and keep off Cavaliers and Roundheads alike. At one time they encamped
-at Shaftesbury, but could not keep the Roundheads from occupying the
-Hill Town; so they, to the number of 4,000, betook themselves to the
-old Celtic camp of Hambledon, some seven or eight miles to the south.
-Cromwell himself, in a letter to Fairfax, dated August 4th, 1645, tells
-what befell them there:
-
- We marched on to Shaftesbury, when we heard a great body of them was
- drawn up together about Hambledon Hill. I sent up a forlorn hope of
- about 50 horse, who coming very civilly to them, they fired upon
- them; and ours desiring some of them to come to me were refused with
- disdain. They were drawn into one of the old camps upon a very high
- hill. They refused to submit, and fired at us. I sent a second time to
- let them know that if they would lay down their arms no wrong should
- be done them. They still—through the animation of their leaders, and
- especially two vile ministers[1]—refused. When we came near they let
- fly at us, killed about two of our men, and at least four horses. The
- passage not being for above three abreast kept us out, whereupon Major
- Desborow wheeled about, got in the rear of them, beat them from the
- work, and did some small execution upon them, I believe killed not
- twelve of them, but cut very many, and put them all to flight. We have
- taken about 300, many of whom are poor silly creatures, whom, if you
- please to let me send home, they promise to be very dutiful for time
- to come, and will be hanged before they come out again.
-
-From which we see that “Grim old Oliver,” who could be severe enough
-when policy demanded it, yet could show mercy at times, for throughout
-this episode his dealings with the Clubmen were marked with much
-forbearance.
-
-Charles II., after his defeat at Worcester, September 3rd, 1651,
-during his romantic wanderings and hidings before he could get safe
-to sea, spent nearly three weeks in what is now Dorset, though most
-of the time he was in concealment at the Manor House at Trent, which
-was then within the boundaries of Somerset, having only recently been
-transferred to Dorset. This manor house belonged to Colonel Francis
-Wyndham. Hither on Wednesday, September 17th, came Jane Lane, sister
-of Colonel Lane, from whose house at Bentley, Worcestershire, she had
-ridden on a pillion behind one who passed as her groom, really Charles
-in disguise, with one attendant, Cornet Lassels. Jane and the Cornet
-left Trent the next day on their return journey, and Charles was
-stowed away in Lady Wyndham’s room, from which there was access to a
-hiding-place between two floors. His object was to effect his escape
-from one of the small Dorset ports. Colonel Wyndham rode next day to
-Melbury Sampford, where lived Sir John Strangways, to see if either of
-his sons could manage to hire a boat at Lyme, Weymouth, or Poole, which
-would take Charles to France. He failed in this, but brought back one
-hundred pounds, the gift of Sir John Strangways. Colonel Wyndham then
-went to Lyme to see one Captain Ellesdon, to whom he said that Lord
-Wilmot wanted to be taken across to France. Arrangements were then made
-with Stephen Limbrey, the skipper of a coasting vessel, to take a party
-of three or four royalist gentlemen to France from Charmouth. Lord
-Wilmot was described as a Mr. Payne, a bankrupt merchant running away
-from his creditors, and taking his servant (Charles) with him. It was
-agreed that Limbrey should have a rowing-boat ready on Charmouth beach
-on the night of September 22nd, when the tide was high, to convey the
-party to his ship and carry them safe to France, for which service he
-was to receive £60. September 22nd was “fair day” at Lyme, and as many
-people would probably be about, it was necessary that the party should
-find some safe lodging where they could wait quietly till the tide was
-in, about midnight. Rooms were secured, as for a runaway couple, at a
-small inn at Charmouth. At this inn on Monday morning arrived Colonel
-Wyndham, who acted as guide, and his wife and niece, a Mrs. Juliana
-Coningsby (the supposed eloping damsel), riding behind her groom
-(Charles). Lord Wilmot, the supposed bridegroom, with Colonel Wyndham’s
-confidential servant, Peters, followed. Towards midnight Wyndham and
-Peters went down to the beach, Wilmot and Charles waiting at the inn
-ready to be called as soon as the boat should come. But no signs of the
-boat appeared throughout the whole night. It seems that Mrs. Limbrey
-had seen posted up at Lyme a notice about the heavy penalty that
-anyone would incur who helped Charles Stuart to escape, and suspecting
-that the mysterious enterprise on which her husband was engaged might
-have something to do with helping in such an escape, she, when he came
-back in the evening to get some things he had need of for the voyage,
-locked him in his room and would not let him out; and he dared not
-break out lest the noise and his wife’s violent words might attract
-attention and the matter get noised abroad. Charles, by Wyndham’s
-advice, rode off to Bridport the next morning with Mistress Coningsby,
-as before, the Colonel going with them; Wilmot stayed behind. His horse
-cast a shoe, and Peters took it to the smith to have another put on;
-and the smith, examining the horse’s feet, said: “These three remaining
-shoes were put on in three different counties, and one looks like a
-Worcester shoe.” When the shoe was fixed, the smith went to a Puritan
-minister, one Bartholomew Wesley, and told him what he suspected.
-Wesley went to the landlady of the inn: “Why, Margaret,” said he, “you
-are now a maid of honour.” “What do you mean by that, Mr. Parson?” said
-she. “Why, Charles Stuart lay at your house last night, and kissed you
-at his departure, so that you cannot now but be a maid of honour.”
-Whereupon the hostess waxed wroth, and told Wesley that he was an
-ill-conditioned man to try and bring her and her house into trouble;
-but, with a touch of female vanity, she added: “If I thought it was the
-King, as you say it was, I should think the better of my lips all the
-days of my life. So, Mr. Parson, get you out of my house, or I’ll get
-those who shall kick you out.”
-
-However, the matter soon got abroad, and a pursuit began. Meanwhile,
-Charles and his party had pressed on into Bridport, which happened
-to be full of soldiers mustering there before joining a projected
-expedition to capture the Channel Islands for the Parliament. Charles’s
-presence of mind saved him. He pushed through the crowd into the
-inn yard, groomed the horse, chatted with the soldiers, who had no
-suspicion that he was other than he seemed, and then said that he must
-go and serve his mistress at table. By this time Wilmot and Peters had
-arrived, and they told him of the incident at the shoeing forge; so,
-losing no time, the party started on the Dorchester road, but, turning
-off into a by-lane, got safe to Broadwinsor, and thence once more to
-Trent, which they reached on September 24th. On October 5th Wilmot
-and Charles left Trent and made their way to Shoreham in Sussex. But
-they had not quite done with Dorset yet; for it was a Dorset skipper,
-one Tattersal, whose business it was to sail a collier brig, _The
-Surprise_, between Poole and Shoreham, who carried Charles Stuart and
-Lord Wilmot from Shoreham to Fécamp, and received the £60 that poor
-Limbrey might have had save for his wife’s interference.
-
-Dorset was the stage on which were acted the first and one of the
-concluding scenes of the Duke of Monmouth’s rebellion in 1685. On June
-11th the inhabitants of Lyme Regis were sorely perplexed when they saw
-three foreign-looking ships, which bore no colours, at anchor in the
-bay; and their anxiety was not lessened when they saw the custom house
-officers, who had rowed out, as their habit was, to overhaul the cargo
-of any vessel arriving at the port, reach the vessels but return not
-again. Then from seven boats landed some eighty armed men, whose leader
-knelt down on the shore to offer up thanksgiving for his safe voyage,
-and to pray for God’s blessing on his enterprise. When it was known
-that this leader was the Duke of Monmouth the people welcomed him, his
-blue flag was set up in the market place, and Monmouth’s undignified
-Declaration—the composition of Ferguson—was read. That same evening the
-Mayor, who approved of none of these things, set off to rouse the West
-in the King’s favour, and from Honiton sent a letter giving information
-of the landing. On June 14th, the first blood was shed in a skirmish
-near Bridport (it was not a decisive engagement). Monmouth’s men,
-however, came back to Lyme, the infantry in good order, the cavalry
-helter-skelter; and little wonder, seeing that the horses, most of them
-taken from the plough, had never before heard the sound of firearms.
-
-Then Monmouth and his men pass off our stage. It is not for the local
-Dorset historian to trace his marches up and down Somerset, or to
-describe the battle that was fought in the early hours of the morning
-of July 6th under the light of the full moon, amid the sheet of thick
-mist, which clung like a pall over the swampy surface of the level
-stretch of Sedgemoor. Once again Dorset received Monmouth, no longer
-at the head of an enthusiastic and brave, though a badly armed and
-undisciplined multitude, but a lonely, hungry, haggard, heartbroken
-fugitive. On the morning of July 8th he was found in a field near
-Horton, which still bears the name of Monmouth’s Close, hiding in a
-ditch. He was brought before Anthony Etricke of Holt, the Recorder
-of Poole, and by him sent under escort to London, there to meet his
-ghastly end on Tower Hill, and to be laid to rest in what Macaulay
-calls the saddest spot on earth, St. Peter’s in the Tower, the last
-resting-place of the unsuccessfully ambitious, of those guilty of
-treason, and also of some whose only fault it was that they were too
-near akin to a fallen dynasty, and so roused the fears and jealousy of
-the reigning monarch.
-
-Everyone has heard of the Bloody Assize which followed, but the names
-and the number of those who perished were not accurately known till a
-manuscript of forty-seven pages, of folio size, was offered for sale
-among a mass of waste paper in an auction room at Dorchester, December,
-1875.[2] It was bought by Mr. W. B. Barrett, and he found that it was
-a copy of the presentment of rebels at the Autumn Assizes of 1685,
-probably made for the use of some official of the Assize Court, as no
-doubt the list that Jeffreys had would have been written on parchment,
-and this was on paper. It gives the names of 2,611 persons presented
-at Dorchester, Exeter, and Taunton, as having been implicated in the
-rebellion, the parishes where they lived, and the nature of their
-callings. Of these, 312 were charged at Dorchester, and only about
-one-sixth escaped punishment. Seventy-four were executed, 175 were
-transported, nine were whipped or fined, and 54 were acquitted or were
-not captured. It is worth notice that the percentage of those punished
-at Exeter and Taunton was far less than at Dorchester. Out of 488
-charged at Exeter, 455 escaped; and at Taunton, out of 1,811, 1,378 did
-not suffer. It is possible that the Devon and Somerset rebels, having
-heard of Jeffreys’ severity at Dorchester, found means of escape.
-No doubt many of the country folk who had not sympathized with the
-rebellion would yet help to conceal those who were suspected, when they
-knew (from what had happened at Dorchester) that if they were taken
-they would in all probability be condemned to death or slavery—for
-those “transported” were really handed over to Court favourites as
-slaves for work on their West Indian plantations. It is gratifying to
-know that it has been discovered, since Macaulay’s time, that such of
-the transported as were living when William and Mary came to the throne
-were pardoned and set at liberty on the application of Sir William
-Young.
-
-Monmouth was the last invader to land in Dorset; but there was in the
-early part of the nineteenth century very great fear among the Dorset
-folk that a far more formidable enemy might choose some spot, probably
-Weymouth, on the Dorset coast for landing his army. Along the heights
-of the Dorset downs they built beacons of dry stubs and furze, with
-guards in attendance, ready to flash the news of Napoleon’s landing,
-should he land. The general excitement that prevailed, the false
-rumours that from time to time made the peaceable inhabitants, women
-and children, flee inland, and sent the men capable of bearing arms
-flocking seaward, are well described in Mr. Hardy’s _Trumpet Major_.
-But Napoleon never came, and the dread of invasion passed away for ever
-in 1805.
-
- In the wild October night time, when the wind raved round the land,
- And the back-sea met the front-sea, and our doors were blocked with
- sand,
- And we heard the drub of Dead-man’s Bay, where bones of thousands
- are,
- (But) knew not what that day had done for us at Trafalgar.[3]
-
-The isolation of Dorset, which has been before spoken of, has had much
-to do with preserving from extinction the old dialect spoken in the
-days of the Wessex kings. Within its boundaries, especially in “outstep
-placen,” as the people call them, the old speech may be heard in
-comparative purity. Let it not be supposed that Dorset is an illiterate
-corruption of literary English. It is an older form of English; it
-possesses many words that elsewhere have become obsolete, and a grammar
-with rules as precise as those of any recognised language. No one not
-to the manner born can successfully imitate the speech of the rustics
-who, from father to son, through many generations have lived in the
-same village. A stranger may pick up a few Dorset words, only, in all
-probability, to use them incorrectly. For instance, he may hear the
-expression “thic tree” for “that tree,” and go away with the idea that
-“thic” is the Dorset equivalent of “that,” and so say “thic grass”—an
-expression which no true son of the Dorset soil would use; for, as
-the late William Barnes pointed out, things in Dorset are of two
-classes: (1) The personal class of formed things, as a man, a tree, a
-boot; (2) the impersonal class of unformed quantities of things, as a
-quantity of hair, or wood, or water. “He” is the personal pronoun for
-class (1); “it” for class (2). Similarly, “thëase” and “thic” are the
-demonstratives of class (1); “this” and “that” of class (2). A book
-is “he”; some water is “it.” We say in Dorset: “Thëase tree by this
-water,” “Thic cow in that grass.” Again, a curious distinction is made
-in the infinitive mood: when it is not followed by an object, it ends
-in “y”; when an object follows, the “y” is omitted:—“Can you mowy?” but
-“Can you mow this grass for me?” The common use of “do” and “did” as
-auxiliary verbs, and not only when emphasis is intended, is noteworthy
-(the “o” of the “do” being faintly heard). “How do you manage about
-threading your needles?” asked a lady of an old woman engaged in
-sewing, whose sight was very dim from cataract. The answer came: “Oh,
-he” (her husband) “dô dread ’em for me.” In Dorset we say not only
-“to-day” and “to-morrow,” but also “to-week,” “to-year.” “Tar’ble” is
-often used for “very,” in a good as well as a bad sense. There are
-many words bearing no resemblance to English in Dorset speech. What
-modern Englishman would recognise a “mole hill” in a “wont-heave,” or
-“cantankerous” in “thirtover”? But too much space would be occupied
-were this fascinating subject to be pursued further.
-
-National schools, however, are corrupting Wessex speech, and the
-niceties of Wessex grammar are often neglected by the children.
-Probably the true Dorset will soon be a thing of the past. William
-Barnes’ poems and Thomas Hardy’s Wessex novels, especially the latter,
-will then become invaluable to the philologist. In some instances Mr.
-Barnes’ spelling seems hardly to represent the sound of words as they
-are uttered by Dorset, or, as they say here, “Darset” lips.
-
-
-
-
-THE BARROWS OF DORSET
-
-BY C. S. PRIDEAUX
-
-
-The County of Dorset is exceedingly rich in the prehistoric
-burial-places commonly called barrows. At the present time considerably
-over a thousand are marked on the one-inch Ordnance Map, and,
-considering the numbers which have been destroyed, we may surely claim
-that Dorset was a populous centre in prehistoric times, owing probably
-to its proximity to the Continent and its safe harbours, as well as to
-its high and dry downs and wooded valleys.
-
-The long barrow is the earliest form of sepulchral mound, being the
-burial-place of the people of the Neolithic or Late Stone Age, a period
-when men were quite ignorant of the use of metals, with the possible
-exception of gold, using flint or stone weapons and implements, but who
-cultivated cereals, domesticated animals, and manufactured a rude kind
-of hand-made pottery. Previous to this, stone implements and weapons
-were of a rather rude type; but now not only were they more finely
-chipped, but often polished.
-
-The round barrows are the burial-places of the Goidels, a branch of the
-Celtic family, who were taller than the Neolithic men and had rounder
-heads. They belong to the Bronze Age, a period when that metal was
-first introduced into Britain; and although comparatively little is
-found in the round barrows of Dorset, still less has been discovered in
-the North of England, probably owing to the greater distance from the
-Continent.
-
-Hand-made pottery abounds, artistically decorated with diagonal lines
-and dots, which are combined to form such a variety of patterns that
-probably no two vessels are found alike. Stone and flint implements
-were still in common use, and may be found almost anywhere in Dorset,
-especially on ploughed uplands after a storm of rain, when the
-freshly-turned-up flints have been washed clear of earth.
-
-In discussing different periods, we must never lose sight of the fact
-that there is much overlapping; and although it is known that the
-long-barrow men had long heads and were a short race, averaging 5 ft.
-4 in. in height, and that the round-barrow men had round heads and
-averaged 5 ft. 8 in.,[4] we sometimes find fairly long-shaped skulls in
-the round barrows, showing that the physical peculiarities of the two
-races became blended.
-
-Long barrows are not common in Dorset, and little has been done in
-examining their contents. This is probably due to their large size,
-and the consequent difficulty in opening them. They are generally
-found inland, and singly, with their long diameter east and west;
-and the primary interments, at any rate in Dorset, are unburnt, and
-usually placed nearer the east end. Some are chambered, especially
-where large flat stones were easily obtainable, but more often they
-are simply formed of mould and chalk rubble. Their great size cannot
-fail to impress us, and we may well wonder how such huge mounds were
-constructed with the primitive implements at the disposal of Neolithic
-man. One near Pimperne, measured by Mr. Charles Warne, is 110 yards
-long, and there are others near Bere Regis, Cranborne, Gussage, and
-Kingston Russell; and within a couple of miles of the latter place,
-besides the huge long barrow, are dozens of round barrows, the remains
-of British villages, hut circles, stone circles, and a monolith.
-
-[Illustration: _PLATE I._ Figs. 1 3 2 4 6 5
-BRONZE AGE OBJECTS FROM DORSET ROUND BARROWS
-(IN THE DORSET COUNTY MUSEUM).
- _⅕ Scale._]
-
-[Illustration: _PLATE II._ Figs. 1 3 2 4
-BRONZE AGE OBJECTS FROM DORSET ROUND BARROWS
-(IN THE DORSET COUNTY MUSEUM).
- _⅕ Scale._]
-
-The late Lieut.-General Pitt-Rivers, in 1893, removed the whole of Wor
-Barrow, on Handley Down,[5] and made a very exhaustive examination of
-its contents, which presented many features of peculiar interest. This
-barrow, with ditch, was about 175 feet long, 125 feet wide, and 13½
-feet high; inside the mound on the ground level was an oblong space,
-93 ft. by 34 ft., surrounded by a trench filled with flints. The earth
-above the trench bore traces of wooden piles, which were, no doubt,
-originally stuck into the trench with the flints packed around to keep
-them in place, thus forming a palisade; the wooden piles in this case
-taking the place of the stone slabs found in the stone-chambered long
-barrows of Gloucestershire and elsewhere.
-
-Six primary interments by inhumation were discovered at the south-east
-part of the enclosure, with a fragment of coarse British pottery. Three
-of the bodies were in a crouched position. The remaining three had been
-deposited as bones, not in sequence, the long bones being laid out by
-the side of the skulls; and careful measurement of these bones shows
-that their owners were the short people of the long-headed or Neolithic
-race, which confirms the first part of Dr. Thurnam’s axiom: “Long
-barrows long skulls, round barrows round skulls.” Nineteen secondary
-interments of a later date were found in the upper part of the barrow
-and in the surrounding ditch, with numerous pieces of pottery, flint
-implements, fragments of bronze and iron, and coins, proving that the
-barrow was used as a place of burial down to Roman times.
-
-In Dorset the round barrows are generally found on the summits of the
-hills which run through the county, more particularly on the Ridgeway,
-which roughly follows the coast line from near Bridport to Swanage,
-where may be seen some hundreds of all sizes, from huge barrows over
-100 feet in diameter and 15 feet in height to small mounds, so little
-raised above the surface that only the tell-tale shadows cast by the
-rising or setting sun show where a former inhabitant lies buried.
-
-In the western part of the county they may be traced from Kingston
-Russell to Agger-Dun, through Sydling and Cerne Abbas to Bulbarrow, and
-in the east, from Swanage Bay to Bere Regis; and also near Dorchester,
-Wimborne, Blandford, and other places.
-
-In the Bronze Age cremation and inhumation were both practised; but
-in Dorset burials by cremation are the more common. The cremated
-remains were sometimes placed in a hole or on the surface line, with
-nothing to protect them from the weight of the barrow above; at other
-times they were covered by flat slabs of stone, built in the form
-of a small closed chamber or cist. Often they were placed on a flat
-piece of stone, and covered with an inverted urn, or put in an urn,
-with a covering slab over them; and they have been found wrapped in an
-animal’s skin, or in a bag of some woven material, or even in a wooden
-coffin.
-
-The inhumed bodies are nearly always found in a contracted posture,
-with the knees drawn up towards the chin; and a larger number face
-either east, south or west, than north. In the case of an inhumation,
-when the body was deposited below the old surface level, the grave
-was often neatly hewn and sometimes lined with slabs of stone, and
-it was the common custom to pile a heap of flints over it, affording
-a protection from wild animals; above the flints was heaped the main
-portion of the mound, which consisted of mould and chalk rubble.
-
-A ditch, with or without a causeway,[6] usually surrounds each barrow,
-but is so often silted up that no trace of it can be seen on the
-surface; it probably helped to supply the chalk rubble of the barrow.
-
-Bronze Age sepulchral pottery, which is hand-made, often imperfectly
-baked and unglazed, has been divided into four classes: the beaker or
-drinking vessel, the food vessel, the incense cup, and the cinerary
-urn. The two former are usually associated with inhumations; the two
-latter with cremations.
-
-As a type of prehistoric ceramic art in Britain, the Hon. J. Abercromby
-says that the beaker is the earliest, and the cinerary urn the
-latest.[7]
-
-Plate II., fig. 2, is a typical drinking vessel or beaker which was
-found in the hands of a skeleton during alterations to the Masonic
-Hall at Dorchester. It is made of thin, reddish, well-baked pottery,
-and from the stains inside it evidently contained food or liquid at
-some time. The beaker is more often met with than the food vessel,
-being found on the Continent as well as in England. The food vessel,
-on the other hand, is a type unrepresented outside the British
-Isles, and is entirely wanting in Wiltshire,[8] although common in
-the North of England, Scotland, and Ireland. In the Dorset County
-Museum at Dorchester there are several fine examples found in the
-county, and Plate I., fig. 1, represents one taken from a barrow near
-Martinstown.[9] It is of unusual interest, as one-handled food-vessels
-are rare. In this inhumed primary interment the vessel was lying in
-the arms of the skeleton, whilst close by was another and much smaller
-vessel, with the remains of three infants.
-
-The terms “drinking-vessel” and “food-vessel” may possibly be accurate,
-as these vessels may have held liquids or food; but there is no
-evidence to show that the so-called “incense cups” had anything to do
-with incense. The more feasible idea seems to be that they were used
-to hold embers with which to fire the funeral pile, and the holes with
-which they are generally perforated would have been most useful for
-admitting air to keep the embers alight.[10] These small vessels are
-usually very much ornamented, even on their bases, with horizontal
-lines, zigzags, chevrons, and the like, and occasionally a grape-like
-pattern. They are seldom more than three inches in height, but vary
-much in shape, and often are found broken, with the fragments widely
-separated, as if they had been smashed purposely at the time of the
-burial. Plate II., figs. 3 and 4, are from specimens in the Dorset
-County Museum, which also contains several other Dorset examples.
-
-There can be no doubt as to the use of the cinerary urn, which always
-either contains or covers cremated remains. The urn (Plate II., fig. 1)
-is from the celebrated Deverel Barrow, which was opened in 1825 by Mr.
-W. A. Miles. The shape of this urn is particularly common in Dorset,
-as well as another variety which has handles, or, rather, perforated
-projections or knobs. A third and prettier variety is also met with,
-having a small base, and a thick overhanging rim or band at the mouth,
-generally ornamented.
-
-It is rare to find curved lines in the ornamentation of Bronze Age
-pottery, but sometimes concentric circles and spiral ornaments are met
-with on rock-surfaces and sculptured stones. Mr. Charles Warne found in
-tumulus 12, Came Down, Dorchester, two flat stones covering two cairns
-with incised concentric circles cut on their surfaces.[11]
-
-There is no clear evidence of iron having been found in the round
-barrows of Dorset in connection with a Bronze Age interment; but of
-gold several examples may be seen in the County Museum, and one, which
-was found in Clandon Barrow, near Martinstown, with a jet head of a
-sceptre with gold studs, is shown in Plate I., fig 2. Others were
-discovered in Mayo’s Barrow and Culliford Tree.[12] Bronze, which is
-an alloy of copper and tin, is the only other metal found with primary
-interments in our Dorset round barrows.
-
-The County Museum possesses some excellent celts and palstaves; a set
-of six socketed celts came from a barrow near Agger-Dun, and look as
-if they had just come from the mould. They are ornamented with slender
-ridges, ending in tiny knobs, and have never been sharpened (two of
-them are figured in Plate I., figs. 3 and 4); another celt, from a
-barrow in the Ridgeway, is interesting as having a fragment of cloth
-adhering to it. Daggers are found, generally, with cremated remains,
-and are usually ornamented with a line or lines, which, beginning
-just below the point, run down the blade parallel with the cutting
-edges. The rivets which fastened the blade to the handle are often in
-position with fragments of the original wooden handle and sheath.[13]
-These daggers seem to be more common in Dorset than in the northern
-counties, and many examples may be seen in the County Museum, and two
-are illustrated in Plate I., figs. 5 and 6.
-
-Bronze pins, glass beads, amber and Kimmeridge shell objects, bone
-tweezers and pins, slingstones and whetstones, are occasionally met
-with; but by far the most common objects are the flint and stone
-implements, weapons, and flakes.
-
-In making a trench through a barrow near Martinstown,[14] more
-than 1,200 flakes or chips of flints were found, besides some
-beautifully-formed scrapers, a fabricator, a flint saw, most skilfully
-notched, and a borer with a gimlet-like point.
-
-Arrow-heads are not common in Dorset, but six were found in a barrow in
-Fordington Field, Dorchester. They are beautiful specimens, barbed and
-tongued; the heaviest only weighs twenty-five grains, and the lightest
-sixteen grains. Mr. Warne mentions the finding of arrow-heads, and also
-(a rare find in Dorset) a stone battle-axe, from a barrow on Steepleton
-Down.
-
-Charred wood is a conspicuous feature, and animal bones are also met
-with in the county, and in such positions as to prove that they were
-placed there at the time of the primary interment. Stags’ horns, often
-with the tips worn as though they had been used as picks, are found,
-both in the barrows and in the ditches.
-
-So far only objects belonging to the Bronze Age have been mentioned;
-but as later races used these burial-places, objects of a later date
-are common. Bronze and iron objects and pottery, and coins of every
-period, are often found above the original interment and in the
-ditches. This makes it difficult for an investigator to settle with
-certainty the different positions in which the objects were deposited;
-and unless he is most careful he will get the relics from various
-periods mixed. Therefore, the practice of digging a hole into one of
-these burial-mounds, for the sake of a possible find, cannot be too
-heartily condemned. Anyone who is ambitious to open a barrow should
-carefully read those wonderful books on _Excavations in Cranborne
-Chase_, by the late Lieut.-General Pitt-Rivers, before he puts a spade
-into the ground; for a careless dig means evidence destroyed for those
-that come after.
-
-Most Dorset people will remember the late curator of the County Museum,
-Mr. Henry Moule, and perhaps some may have heard him tell this story,
-but it will bear repeating. A labourer had brought a piece of pottery
-to the Museum, and Mr. Moule explained to him that it not only came
-from a barrow, but that it was most interesting, and that he would like
-to keep it for the Museum. The man looked surprised, and said, “Well,
-Meäster, I’ve a-knocked up scores o’ theäsem things. I used to level
-them there hipes (or heäps) an’ drawed awaÿ the vlints vor to mend the
-roads; an’ I must ha’ broke up dozens o’ theäse here wold pots; but
-they niver had no cwoins inzide ’em.” Those who knew Mr. Moule can
-imagine his horror.
-
-Much more remains to be done by Dorset people in investigating these
-most interesting relics of the past, for we know little of the builders
-of these mounds; and, as Mr. Warne says in his introduction to _The
-Celtic Tumuli of Dorset_:—
-
- If the Dorsetshire barrows cannot be placed in comparison with many
- of those of Wiltshire ... or Derbyshire, they may, nevertheless,
- be regarded with intense interest, as their examination has
- satisfactorily established the fact that they constitute the earliest
- series of tumuli in any part of the kingdom; whilst they identify
- Dorset as one of the earliest colonised portions of Britain.
-
-
-
-
-THE ROMAN OCCUPATION
-
-BY CAPTAIN J. E. ACLAND
-
-_Curator, Dorset County Museum_
-
-
-Although we are dealing with historic and not prehistoric times in
-describing the occupation of the County of Dorset by the Romans, it is
-to the work of the spade and not of the pen that we must turn for the
-memorials of that most interesting and important period, which lasted
-nearly four hundred years; when the all-powerful, masterful race, the
-conquerors of the world, held sway, enforced obedience to their laws,
-and inaugurated that system of colonisation which was perhaps the best
-the world has ever seen—a system designed and developed according
-to exact regulations, which savoured more of military discipline
-than of that civil liberty which we associate with the profession of
-agriculture.
-
-The Roman occupation was indeed an admirable combination of military
-and civil rule; and the memorials fall naturally into two distinct
-classes, corresponding with two distinct periods. There is, first, the
-period of conquest, embracing the years during which the Roman Legions
-drove back the native levies, and captured their strongholds; not in
-one summer campaign we may well believe, but year after year, with
-irresistible force, until the subjugated tribes laid down their arms
-and yielded the hostages demanded by the conquerors. Then followed the
-period of peace, of civilisation, and of colonising; of improving the
-roads, and marking out of farms; the days of trade and commerce, and
-of building houses, temples, and places for public amusement.
-
-Now both aspects of the occupation are to be seen as clearly at this
-day as if they were described in the pages of a book; and yet what is
-the fact? Scarcely a sentence can be found of written history which
-deals with it. General Pitt-Rivers, who, living in Dorset, devoted
-many years of his life to antiquarian research, asserts that having
-read with attention all the writings that were accessible upon that
-obscure period of history, some by scholars of great ability, nothing
-definite can be found to relate to the Roman Conquest. It is, however,
-generally assumed that it fell to the lot of Vespasian, in command of
-the world-famous “Legio Secunda,” to commence, if not to complete, the
-subjugation of the Durotriges, the people who are believed to have
-inhabited the southern portion of the county. The only reference to
-Vespasian’s campaign by contemporary historians is made by Suetonius.
-He says that Vespasian crossed to Britain, fought with the enemy some
-thirty times, and reduced to submission two most warlike tribes and
-twenty fortified camps, and the island (Isle of Wight) adjacent to
-the coast. In this statement, which is all too brief to satisfy our
-curiosity, may lie the main facts of the passing of Dorset into Roman
-power. The work begun by Vespasian may, indeed, have been completed by
-others—by Paulinus Suetonius, the Governor of Britain about the year
-60, and by Agricola; and where so much is left to conjecture, it is
-at least worth while to give once more the theory propounded by the
-well-known antiquary, the late Mr. Charles Warne, F.S.A. In a paper
-read before the Society of Antiquaries in June, 1867, he suggests that
-as the south-eastern parts of Britain had been previously visited by
-Roman armies, Vespasian directed his course further to the west, and
-either made the Isle of Wight the base of his operations or anchored
-his ships in the harbours of Swanage or Poole. Close by is the
-commencement of the long range of hills, The Ridgeway, which, with few
-interruptions, follows the coast line, and still shews by the number of
-the burial-mounds the district inhabited by the British.
-
-Mr. Warne proceeds to enumerate the various camps along this route,
-all at convenient distances from one another, some of which shew by
-their construction that they were Roman camps, and others British
-camps, captured by the conquering legions, as narrated by Suetonius.
-If Vespasian had pursued this plan of campaign, it would have had
-the additional advantage of enabling him to keep in touch with his
-transports. As one hill fortress after another was captured in the
-march westward along the Ridgeway heights, so the fleet might have
-changed its anchorage from Swanage Bay to Lulworth, from Lulworth to
-the shelter of Weymouth and Portland, and finally to the neighbourhood
-of Charmouth or Lyme Regis.
-
-There is this also to be said in favour of Mr. Warne’s conjecture.
-An attacking force must find out and capture the strongholds of the
-defenders, which would naturally be made more strongly, and therefore
-last longer than the camps of the invaders. And this is what we see in
-the suggested line of the Roman advance. First, on the east, Flowers,
-or Florus Bury Camp, and Bindun, then Mai-dun (Maiden Castle), after
-that Eggardun, and finally, at the western limit of the county, Conig’s
-Castle and Pylsdun. All these are (as far as can be seen now) British
-camps of refuge; all of them must have been captured before the Roman
-generals could feel secure in their own isolated position on a foreign
-shore. That they were one and all occupied by the conquerors is also
-most probable, and would account for the discovery of Roman relics
-within their areas. No Roman camps can be seen at all approaching in
-strength or size these magnificent hill fortresses. It is, of course,
-well known that the armies of Rome never halted for a night without
-forming an entrenchment of sufficient size to include not only the
-fighting men, but the baggage train, and though traces of these still
-remain on the hills of Dorset, the majority have long ago disappeared.
-
-Perhaps the most interesting example of the military occupation of
-the two races is to be seen at Hod Hill, near Blandford, where a
-well-defined Roman Camp is constructed within the area of a previously
-occupied British fortress, and here have been found spear heads, arrow
-heads, spurs and portions of harness, rings and fibulæ, and fragments
-of pottery, all indicating the Roman occupation; iron was found more
-generally than bronze, and the coins are those of the earlier emperors,
-including Claudius, in whose reign Vespasian made his conquests.
-Badbury, four miles north-west of Wimborne, Woodbury, near Bere Regis,
-and Hambledon, five miles north of Blandford, may be referred to as
-memorials of the time of the Roman occupation, though not of Roman
-construction.
-
-Poundbury Camp, with its Saxon appellation, deserves special mention,
-for, being situated on the outskirts of Dorchester, it has been studied
-more frequently perhaps than any other earthwork in the county. It
-has the form of an irregular square, with a single vallum, except on
-the more exposed west side, where it is doubled, and traces have been
-discovered of other ramparts now obliterated. On the north the camp
-overhangs the river and valley, once probably a lake or morass, and
-here the defences are slight. The area within the vallum is about
-330 yards from east to west, and 180 yards from north to south.
-Some authorities affirm that it was raised by the Danes about A.D.
-1002, when they attacked Dorchester. Stukeley regards it as one of
-Vespasian’s camps when engaged in his conquest of the Durotriges, while
-other antiquarians claim for it a British origin, prior to the Roman
-invasion. Mr. Warne, whose opinions are always worthy of most careful
-consideration, “holds it to be a safer speculation to regard it as a
-Roman earthwork,” and, no doubt, in form and general outline and size
-it is very similar to other Roman camps, and altogether different to
-the magnificent British fortress Maiden Castle, not two miles away.
-Many Roman relics have been found, including coins ranging from the
-times of Claudius to Constantine, and a tumulus is still to be seen
-within the vallum, which alone would be an argument against its Celtic
-origin.
-
-Poundbury is insignificant indeed when compared with Mai-dun, and it
-is impossible by mere description to convey an adequate impression
-of this great earth fortress, singled out by many as the finest work
-of its kind. It certainly surpasses all others in the land of the
-Durotriges, and probably nowhere in the world can entrenchments be
-seen of such stupendous strength. This camp, which is said to occupy
-120 acres, is in form an irregular oval, embracing the whole of the
-hill on which it stands; its length is nearly 800 yards, and width
-275 yards. On the north, facing the plain, there are three lines of
-ramparts, with intervening ditches, the slopes being exceedingly steep,
-and measuring over 60 feet from apex to base. On the south the number
-of ramparts is increased, but they are not so grand, and, indeed, as
-Mr. Warne remarks, they appear to have been left in an unfinished
-condition. At the east and west ends are the two principal entrances,
-and here the ingenuity of the designer is manifested in a surprising
-manner. At one end five or six ramparts, at the other as many as seven
-or eight are built, so as to cover or overlap one another; vallum and
-fossa, arranged with consummate skill, to complete the intricacies of
-entrance, and to compel an enemy to undertake a task of the utmost
-difficulty and danger.
-
-In later times this camp was, no doubt, occupied by Roman troops as
-summer quarters, its healthy position rendering it very suitable
-for the purpose. Perhaps, still later, it became the residence of
-some Roman magnate, who selected that fine eminence for his country
-villa; at any rate, there should be no difficulty in accounting for
-the discovery of Roman coins and implements, or even of villas, on
-the sites of the camps and castles of the British. Many a hard fought
-battle must have raged around their earthen walls.
-
- Ever and anon, with host to host,
- Shocks, and the splintering spear, the hard mail hewn,
- Shield breakings, and the clash of brands, the crash
- Of battle axes on shattered helms.
-
-Many a shout of victory must have been heard as the conquering legions
-forced their way over the ramparts and planted their eagles on the
-summit of the captured fortress. And once captured they must have
-been retained, at first perhaps by a fairly large garrison sufficient
-to prevent re-capture, then as the tide of battle ebbed from the
-neighbourhood the numbers might have been reduced; but the sites,
-always in some commanding position, would have been long utilised as
-points of observation and centres of control over the conquered tribes.
-
-No revolt is recorded as taking place in the west of Britain such as
-that led by Queen Boadicea in the east, in the year 61; so in looking
-back to the Roman occupation, it is reasonable to suppose that before
-the end of the first century it was reduced to the condition of a Roman
-province. Trade would soon commence with this, the latest, addition to
-the Empire, and the soldiers, no longer necessary except as garrisons
-and guardians of the peace, would be employed in improving the means
-of communication. The warlike Briton (in these parts at any rate) was
-transformed into a peaceful husbandman, who sowed and reaped, and paid
-his taxes, grumbling perhaps, but on the whole contented with his lot.
-
-Roads, or trackways, of some kind there certainly were in use by the
-British, linking tribe to tribe, or camp to camp, and, judging by the
-line of what we now term Roman roads, it is most probable that to a
-very great extent the ancient routes were taken as the foundation of
-the new system developed by the Romans. The details of this system
-are given by an authority of contemporary date in _The Itinerary
-of Antonine_, which is believed to have been compiled in the third
-century, and possibly corrected and added to later. In this work we
-find, as regards the County of Dorset, a description of roads which
-are easily recognised to-day, roads which are still in use throughout
-a considerable portion of their length. It must not be lost sight
-of that these roads are in very close connection with some of the
-principal British hill-fortresses, which fact would stamp them as being
-originally constructed by the British race, though to all appearance
-they are grand examples of Roman skill and energy. The main road, the
-Via Principalis, of the third and fourth centuries, comes to Dorset
-from Old Sarum, in Wiltshire, one of the grandest of British camps;
-it passes close to Badbury Camp, and then makes for Maiden Castle,
-and onwards to Eggardun, all of earlier date than the Roman invasion.
-But notwithstanding this obvious connection, the roads as we see them
-now bear witness to the power of Rome, and are, perhaps, some of the
-most obvious of the memorials of the past. They are described in the
-_XV. Iter._ of Antoninus, with the names of the Roman stations and the
-distances between them along the road from Silchester (Calleva) to
-Exeter (Isca Dumnoni), which forms a portion of the great Via Iceniana.
-
-After passing Old Sarum, this road crosses the north-east border of
-the modern county of Dorset at a small hamlet called Woodyates (near
-Cranborne), taking a south-westerly course; it passes over Woodyates
-and Handley Down, and is described by Sir R. Colt Hoare as being at
-that point “the finest specimen of a Roman road I know.” It runs by
-Badbury Camp, and thence to Dorchester, where the direction changes to
-due west, parallel with the coast line, and after leaving the county
-near Lyme Regis proceeds towards Exeter.
-
-It must not be supposed that this, or any other Roman road, can be
-traced exactly throughout its whole course. Far from it: the hand of
-the destroyer has been heavy indeed on these relics of the past, built
-with a prodigal expenditure of time and material. It is often the
-case that the modern “turnpike,” or county, road has been made on the
-very site of the ancient road, the old embankment being levelled to
-gain additional width. In other places cultivation and the demands of
-agriculture may have proved the cause of its obliteration. Here and
-there, especially on waste land and heather-clad downs the true Roman
-work may still be seen, though covered, perhaps, by grass; but with the
-aid of the Antonine _Itinerary_ much may be learnt and many a portion
-be recognised. He names, however, only two stations within the county,
-and the mileage is short by nearly twenty miles, so in all probability,
-through error in copying, one other station has been omitted. The two
-stations mentioned are Vindogladia and Durnovaria. Authorities differ
-greatly as to the true position of the former of these places; the
-other station, however, is remarkable for the proofs of its former
-importance. Here we find no less than four roads meeting, from north,
-south, east, and west, the east and west roads being the Via Iceniana;
-the others are roads of less importance, that to the south leading
-to the sea and towards the Roman settlement, Clavinio (or Jordan
-Hill), near Weymouth, and that to the north passing Stratton and on to
-Ilchester.
-
-Other branch roads were made as necessity required in different
-parts of the county. Thus we find traces of a road leaving the Via
-Principalis, near Badbury, to connect with the harbour of Poole, and
-another, starting from the same point, running northwards. Mr. Warne is
-considered to have made a very interesting and clever discovery of a
-station which is missing in the _XV. Iter._ of Antoninus. The distance
-there given between Vindogladia and Durnovaria is quite obviously too
-short by some fourteen miles. But on Kingston Down, near Bere Regis,
-the cultured eyes of the learned Dorset antiquarian discovered traces
-of a Roman settlement, and on due investigation being made, it was
-considered that there was sufficient proof to establish at this point
-a station called Ibernium, referred to by other writers as existing in
-the county.
-
-The position of Vindogladia, though a subject of long and frequent
-debate, and though stated by some to have been at Badbury, by others
-at Wimborne Minster, has now been accepted as on Gussage Down, not
-far from the north-west border of the county where crossed by the Via
-Iceniana. This is due to the researches of Sir R. C. Hoare, and stands
-on a par with Mr. Warne’s discovery of the other Roman station on the
-great military road.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We come now to a very interesting period of the Roman occupation,
-when we may imagine the military operations at an end, a firm and
-beneficial government established, and the colonists (at any rate),
-who usually obtained a third part of the conquered territory, becoming
-rich and enabled to build those houses that must have been the envy and
-admiration of the native population, with their decorative floors and
-walls, and ample comforts for seasons of heat or cold.
-
-Still, as we have said before, it is not to any printed records that
-we can turn for its history, but rather to the result of careful
-excavation and the relics unearthed after fifteen centuries’ burial
-in the soil: in a word, we trust to the use of the spade for bringing
-before our minds the life of the past and restoring the memorials of
-ancient Dorset.
-
-In Warne’s map of the county, prepared in the year 1865 after most
-patient research and personal investigation, there are more than fifty
-sites given where relics of the Roman colonisation have been found,
-exclusive of Durnovaria. Mr. Moule, writing in 1893, says: “Roman work
-of one kind and another has been found here in Dorset in eighty places,
-and that for the most part casually.” But year after year this number
-is increased, and, truth to tell, so frequent are the discoveries that
-in Dorchester the ordinary labourer, when excavating in the streets,
-or elsewhere, is ever on the alert, and many a treasure rewards his
-watchful care; and even children whose eyes have been trained aright
-will find, when digging in some neglected corner of garden or field,
-a bit of common pottery, a fragment of Samian ware, or perhaps a coin
-bearing the image of an Emperor of Rome. And thus our history is
-written: a word discovered here, a sentence there, until the story of
-the life of those days may be once more told afresh. The frequency of
-these discoveries is so far interesting that it draws attention to the
-large area over which the Roman settlers were distributed. No doubt
-they found this land of the Durotriges a pleasant land to dwell in, as
-we do now in this twentieth century. But here may be said, in passing,
-that Roman colonists were partly at least a Roman garrison. They were
-frequently old soldiers intended to keep in check the conquered nation,
-and liable to be called back to active service. But if there was no
-fear of a hostile rising, the military character of the colony would
-gradually be lost. And that, no doubt, soon happened here, for the very
-great majority of the relics of the Roman occupation are signs of its
-peaceful character.
-
-The discovery of the sites of Roman villas scattered in more or less
-isolated positions throughout the county tend also to prove this, and
-especially when the villa is shown to have possessed one of those
-beautiful mosaic floors which can only have belonged to a prosperous
-and wealthy colonist or to a British landowner left undisturbed in
-his possessions, and who employed the Roman craftsmen to build him
-a house. These tessellated floors have been frequently exposed to
-view in various parts of Dorset, and too frequently, alas! through
-ignorance or carelessness, been neglected or destroyed; others,
-again, have been examined, plans or drawings made, and been covered
-up once more. Among those which have been described may be mentioned:
-Thornford and Lenthay Green, near Sherborne; Halstock, six miles south
-of Yeovil; Rampisham, twelve miles north of Dorchester; Frampton,
-six miles north of Dorchester; Preston, near Weymouth; Creech, near
-Wareham; Fifehead Neville, north-west of Blandford; Hemsworth, five
-miles north of Wimborne; and in Dorchester itself no less than twenty
-different pavements, either complete or in portions, besides one on the
-upper area of Maiden Castle. It is difficult to assign a date, even
-approximately, to these villas, for the coins found amidst the _débris_
-cover practically the whole period of Roman occupation, and the other
-objects generally discovered on the site are not of much assistance.
-There are no records of inscribed stones being found, which might
-have helped; and, as a rule, the more valuable part of the building
-materials, such as cut stones, roof slabs, and timbers, must have been
-taken away when the houses were left; but the wells and refuse pits are
-the happy and profitable hunting-ground of the antiquary.
-
-The tessellated pavements are so interesting and attractive that it is
-worth while to describe them in detail. The system adopted in their
-construction seems to have been as follows:—If no provision was made
-for heating the rooms by means of a hypocaust or hot-air flues, the
-ground was prepared by rough levelling, and 6 to 8 inches thick of
-flints rammed, or coarse, gravelly mortar or concrete laid; on this 3
-or 4 inches of better class white cement, and above some fine cement to
-take the tessellæ; and after these were laid a liquid cement would be
-run into the interstices before the final polishing was commenced. The
-system of laying is well shewn in the annexed illustration, taken of
-a pavement _in situ_, before removal to the Dorset County Museum.
-
-[Illustration: PART OF THE OLGA ROAD TESSELLATED PAVEMENT, DORCHESTER.]
-
-The tessellæ themselves, as generally found in Dorset, consist of
-small cubes of stone or brick, but vary in size from about ⅜ or ½
-inch to 1½ inch; the smaller are used for the decorative portions;
-the larger for the borders, or for passages, or for the floors of
-houses of a humbler character. The colours are for the most part only
-four—namely: white, dark slate (or blue-black), red, and a sort of drab
-or grey; occasionally yellow is found, but not often.
-
-The materials of which the tessellæ are composed has given rise to much
-discussion and, indeed, much difference of opinion; but, as a general
-principle, it may be assumed that, wherever possible, local stone was
-used. The red tessellæ are merely brick or tile of a fine description;
-but, as a means of obtaining a scientific opinion of the other stones,
-microscopic sections have been cut from the tessellæ and submitted
-to an expert mineralogist, who has given them the following names.
-The very dark stone is a fine-grained ferruginous limestone; the grey
-is also a fine-grained limestone; the drab or yellow is an oolitic
-limestone; and the white is a hard chalk, showing foraminifera very
-well. It is believed that the colour may be altered by submitting the
-stone to heat, an opinion held by Professor Buckman, and explained in a
-very interesting chapter of his book, _Roman Art in Cirencester_.
-
-The mosaic floors found in Dorchester are, as a rule, of very simple
-but effective design, consisting of geometrical arrangements of the
-single guilloche, the twist or plait, the double guilloche (which is
-extremely handsome in mosaic work), and the ordinary fret. These, being
-arranged as outlines of intersecting squares and circles, leave spaces
-of varying dimensions, spandrels, or trefoils, which are utilised
-for the introduction of many diverse emblems, such as the fylfot or
-swastika, the duplex, sprays of foliage, urns, and interlacing knots.
-In the County Museum may be seen laid on the floor (in which position
-alone can full justice be done to the skill of the Italian artist) two
-nearly complete mosaic pavements. One of these shows the area of three
-adjoining rooms, with entrances or vestibules; the other pavement,
-found in 1905, is in excellent preservation, measuring 21 feet by 12
-feet 6 inches, and is remarkable for two ornamental vases, with two
-serpents issuing from each.
-
-The pavement at Preston, near Weymouth, still _in situ_, was discovered
-in 1852, the coins found near the villa dating from the middle of the
-third century. At Jordan Hill, close by, is the Roman settlement,
-Clavinio, which has been productive of a large number of very
-interesting relics.
-
-At the entrance to the village of Preston, coming from Weymouth, may be
-seen an arch spanning a small stream. The form and masonry of the arch,
-as well as its proximity to the other remains here noticed, point to
-the probability of Roman construction, and is of special interest, as
-examples of Roman masonry are but rarely found still existing in the
-county.
-
-The pavement at Lenthay Green was discovered in 1836, and was carefully
-removed to the dairy of Sherborne Castle. It contains a representation
-of a sitting figure playing on a lyre, and a second figure dancing and
-playing a pipe.
-
-The villa on Maiden Castle was discovered by Mr. Cunnington in 1882,
-and as a result of his excavations he sent to the County Museum many
-interesting objects: fragments of mosaic floor, wall-plaster, and roof
-tiles, a curious bronze plate (repoussé work) representing a helmeted
-figure holding a spear, and coins from Helena, A.D. 290, to Arcadius,
-A.D. 408.
-
-A mosaic floor at Frampton is remarkable for the introduction into the
-design of the Christian monogram ☧, known as the Labarum. Extensive
-excavations were made here at the end of the eighteenth century,
-and four different pavements were found. They contain numerous
-representations of heathen deities, Neptune being especially favoured;
-a motto worked into one of the borders runs: “_Neptuni vertex regmen
-sortiti mobile ventis_,” and some other words partly lost. The
-introduction of the monogram of Christ is probably of a later date than
-the original work. The pavement is now covered up, but Mr. Lysons,
-who superintended the excavations in 1797, obtained accurate drawings
-of the whole site, the mosaic work being shown in correct colours on
-seven large plates which were published, together with an accurate
-description.
-
-[Illustration: TESSELLATED PAVEMENT AT FIFEHEAD NEVILLE, DORSET.]
-
-The pavements uncovered at Fifehead Neville are also of great interest.
-The first was discovered in 1881, measuring about 14 feet by 12 feet,
-the design consisting of an urn, or vase, in the centre, around which
-seven small fish are depicted, and outside them are four sea-monsters,
-like dolphins. Coins found here date from A.D. 270 to 340. The second
-pavement, found in 1903, requires no description, as we are permitted,
-by the Editor of the Dorset Field Club, to reproduce an illustration
-which appears in the Club’s _Proceedings_. The general plan of the
-design is almost identical with a pavement found in Dyer Street,
-Cirencester, though the details are altogether different. They may well
-have been designed by the same artist.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Very little has been said, so far, of Dorchester itself, and yet the
-modern town is full of memories of the Roman Durnovaria. It lies within
-the boundaries of the ancient walls, their position, still plainly
-discernible in many places, being marked by broad walks and avenues of
-trees. One small portion of the masonry of the wall itself may still be
-seen in the West Walk. The position of the gates is also fairly easy to
-decide, though no vestige of them remains. The roads which issued from
-them have been referred to at a previous page.
-
-It has been asserted recently—and, indeed, proved to the satisfaction
-of many local authorities—that the course of a Roman aqueduct can be
-traced here and there to the west of Dorchester skirting the adjacent
-valleys and hills. It is believed to have been an open water-course,
-obtaining its supply from the source of a small stream some twelve
-miles distant.
-
-Perhaps, however, the most remarkable relic of the Roman occupation
-is the amphitheatre, said to be the best preserved in Britain. It is
-larger than the so-called “Bull Ring” of Cirencester, and, being quite
-free from trees and bushes, stands out more boldly than the similar
-work at Silchester. It is built of chalk, now covered with grass,
-somewhat elliptical in plan, the height of the sides being given as
-about 30 feet, and the internal measurements 218 feet by 163 feet. On
-each side of the entrance there are walks which ascend gradually to the
-centre of the mounds, where there are small platforms as if for seating
-the principal spectators or judges, but there are no traces of steps
-or ledges for the accommodation of the general public; and, judging by
-the remarks of early Roman writers, it is very probable that the people
-were obliged to stand throughout the public games.
-
-But in addition to these more obvious relics of a bygone age, the
-subsoil of Dorchester is full of treasures that emphasise the Roman
-occupation. It would be impossible to describe in these pages even
-the most interesting of the objects that have been brought to light
-in recent years, but it is fortunate that they find their way very
-frequently to the County Museum, of which the people of Dorset are
-justly proud. It must suffice at the present time to mention that in
-its cases may be seen a fine collection of objects made of Kimmeridge
-shale; glass hairpins, brooches and bracelets, and a metal mirror;
-pottery of all kinds; many examples of mosaic floors, fragments of wall
-plaster retaining their brilliant colouring, three curious antefixæ, a
-Roman sword handle, which is believed to be almost unique, and a base
-and capital of a column of a temple. In looking at these memorials of
-the past, and stepping the while on the ancient pavements, the mind is
-taken back with irresistible force to the men and women who made use of
-them in their daily occupations—the Romans, who for a period of four
-hundred years exercised their wise and beneficial influence over the
-people of Britain.
-
-
-
-
-THE CHURCHES OF DORSET
-
-BY THE REV. THOMAS PERKINS, M.A.
-
-
-Out of about three hundred churches which are to be found in Dorset,
-three stand out as far ahead of all the rest—the church (once
-collegiate, now parochial) of Wimborne Minster; the church of the
-Benedictine Abbey at Sherborne, now the parish church; and the great
-Benedictine Abbey Church at Milton, now in parochial use. These three,
-which receive separate treatment in the present volume, are the only
-three Dorset churches that can rank with the great parish churches of
-England.
-
-There were before the Reformation many religious houses, each with
-its own church, in the county, but at the time of the Dissolution,
-in the reign of Henry VIII., most of these, as being of no further
-use, fell into decay, and their ruins were regarded as quarries of
-hewn stone whenever such material was needed in the neighbourhood.
-Of the Benedictine nunnery of Shaftesbury, once one of the most
-wealthy religious foundations in the kingdom, nothing remains save
-the foundations, which recent excavations have disclosed to view; of
-Cistercian Bindon, only the gatehouse and a few ivy-clad walls, rising
-only a few feet above the ground; of Benedictine Cerne, a splendid
-barn and a beautiful gatehouse, and a few fragments incorporated in
-some farm buildings; of its daughter abbey at Abbotsbury, a still
-larger barn, testifying to the wealth of the community, and some
-ruined walls—this is all that remains to mark the spots where day
-after day through many centuries the words of prayer and praise rose
-almost without ceasing, and monks and nuns lived their lives apart from
-the busy world, spending their time in meditation, in adorning their
-churches with the carving of capital and boss or miserere, in copying
-and illuminating manuscripts, in teaching the young, in giving alms to
-the needy, in tilling their lands in the days while yet they cherished
-the high ideals of the founders of their orders, before they lapsed
-into luxury and riotous living.
-
-A few monastic barns remain in other places, as at Tarrant Crawford
-and Liscombe. These owe their preservation to the fact that they could
-at once be utilized; for those who received grants of abbey lands, no
-less than their predecessors, required buildings wherein to store their
-corn; whereas the refectory, dormitory, cellars, and other domestic
-buildings designed for a community of monks or nuns were useless when
-such communities no longer existed; and the churches, unless they could
-be turned to account as parish churches, would also be of no use.
-
-After the three great ministers already mentioned there is a wide gap,
-for though many of the Dorset parish churches are of architectural
-or archæological interest, either generally or because they contain
-some special object—a Saxon font, a Norman doorway, a Decorated Easter
-sepulchre, a canopied tomb, or the effigy of a noble who fought in
-the French wars of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries—yet as a
-rule the churches are comparatively, if not actually, small, and are
-for the most part built in the Perpendicular style, the most prosaic
-and uninteresting of the mediæval styles of architecture, though in
-mason-craft it can hold its own against all the rest. And, moreover,
-Dorset Perpendicular is not equal to that which is to be found in the
-neighbouring county of Somerset. We look in vain for the splendid
-fifteenth century towers which are the glory of the Somerset churches;
-here and there in isolated places, and, strange enough, not on the
-Somerset border, we find traces of the Somerset influence; but for the
-most part the Dorset towers are utilitarian appendages, not structures
-carefully designed with a view to beauty of outline and richness and
-appropriateness of ornament, as the finest of the Somerset towers are.
-Spires of mediæval date are rare in Dorset. There are but two—one at
-Winterborne Steepleton, near Dorchester, and one at Trent, a parish
-added for administration purposes to the County of Dorset in 1895;
-there is a spire also at Iwerne[15] Minster, but it cannot be called
-a mediæval one, for though the tower of this church was formerly
-surmounted by a beautiful spire, yet that to be seen to-day is only a
-reproduction, built of some of the stones of the old spire, which was
-taken down at the beginning of the nineteenth century. The upper part
-above the lower of the two moulded bands, preserves the original slope;
-the lower has a different slope, as the builder had, in a vertical
-distance of about ten feet, to connect the base of the original spire
-with the horizontal section of the upper part, which was originally
-about thirty feet above the base. The original spire was forty feet in
-height; the present one is only twenty feet. The stone not used in the
-rebuilding was sold to a road contractor for metalling the roads.
-
-The hand of the restorer has been laid very heavily on Dorset
-churches. In some cases, where there was absolutely no necessity for
-it, old churches were entirely destroyed to make room for smart new
-buildings; others have been restored—a few judiciously, the majority
-injudiciously; a few only, so far, have entirely escaped. Many causes
-in Dorset, as elsewhere, have led to extensive restoration—the desire
-to adapt the building to the form of worship fashionable at the time,
-or to put back, as it is called, the church into what was supposed
-to be its original form, as if such a thing were possible; the
-love of uniformity, which has led to the removal of seventeenth and
-eighteenth century additions, such as pulpits and galleries, which were
-supposed to be out of keeping with the main portion of the church;
-by which removals much interesting history has been destroyed. Oak
-pews, sometimes carved, have been swept away in order to put in more
-comfortable benches of pitch pine; encaustic tiles have taken the
-place of the old stones, which, if they had become uneven, might have
-been relaid; ancient plaster has been stripped from walls, and the
-stones pointed; churchyards have been levelled, and, in some cases, the
-paths have been paved with old headstones. Unfortunately for Dorset,
-there has been found no lack of money to carry out these supposed
-“improvements,” so that the work of “restoration” has been done most
-thoroughly throughout the length and breadth of the county, and there
-is now little more that is likely to be done. It is, indeed, almost too
-late to utter the prayer of Thomas Hardy:—
-
- From restorations of Thy fane,
- From smoothings of Thy sward,
- From zealous churchmen’s pick and plane,
- Deliver us, good Lord![16]
-
-But despite the fact that Dorset is architecturally much poorer at
-the beginning of the twentieth century than at the beginning of the
-nineteenth, there is still much that the archæologist may take joy in,
-though his joy may be mingled with regret at treasures of old time that
-have vanished for ever.
-
-One of the most interesting ecclesiastical buildings in Dorset is the
-little church, disused for many years save for an occasional service,
-of St. Martin, at Wareham. Some of it is probably of Saxon date; in
-size and proportion it bears a remarkable likeness to St. Ealdhelm’s
-recently re-discovered church of St. Lawrence, at Bradford-on-Avon.
-This is specially interesting, as it is said that St. Ealdhelm founded
-a monastery or nunnery at Wareham, and the similarity of this church
-to that which he built at Bradford gives some confirmation to the
-belief that this church also was built by him during the time of his
-episcopate at Sherborne (705-709). Some authorities, while recognising
-the church as of Saxon foundation, would date it approximately 1050.
-The chancel arch is low, like that at Bradford, but not so narrow; the
-nave, though subsequently lengthened, is short, narrow, and high—long
-and short work may be seen in the coigns of the walls; all these seem
-to indicate its Saxon origin. The church, however, has been enlarged
-from time to time; the north aisle is divided from the nave by
-round-headed arches; the windows at the east of the chancel and aisle,
-now walled up, are of the Perpendicular period; and a window in the
-south wall of the nave is of Decorated date; but an early Norman one
-may be seen on the north side of the chancel. The tower, with a gabled
-roof, is an early addition to the building. When, in 1762, a great fire
-destroyed about a third of the town of Wareham, many of those whom
-this disaster rendered homeless found a refuge within the walls of
-the little church, which even then had ceased to be used for service.
-Beneath the church a vast number of burials took place; it would seem
-that the limited space within the walls was used over and over again
-for this purpose.
-
-Among other examples of Saxon work to be found in Dorset may be
-mentioned a walled-up doorway, with triangular head, on the south
-wall of Worth Matravers church, in the Isle of Purbeck; a fragment of
-herring-bone work in Corfe Castle, which may possibly be a portion
-of a wall of the chapel founded here by St. Ealdhelm, though it may,
-on the other hand, be of Norman date; and fonts at Toller Fratrum
-and Martinstown; and the carved stone over the doorway of Tarrant
-Rushton, the chancel arch of which church is also probably of
-pre-Conquest date.
-
-[Illustration: ST. MARTIN’S CHURCH, WAREHAM.]
-
-Norman work is naturally more abundant. The church at Studland, in the
-Isle of Purbeck, is no doubt the most complete example to be met with
-in the county. It is also a fine example of restoration at its best.
-The church was in great danger of falling, owing to the sinking of an
-artificial bed of clay on which the foundations of some of the walls
-were laid; wide cracks had opened in the walls, in the chancel arch,
-and other places; the mortar of the core of the walls had perished;
-but by underpinning the walls, grouting with cement, the insertion of
-metal tie-beams, and stopping the cracks, the church has been made
-safe. There is little work of post-Norman date, but it is by no means
-certain that the Norman builders built the church from its foundations;
-there is good reason to suppose that a previous church of rude rubble
-masonry existed here, and that a great part of the original walls was
-left standing, and that the Norman builders cut out portions of the old
-walls to insert their own more perfect work in various places. It is
-a long, narrow church, without aisles; a low central tower, probably
-never completed, covered with a gable roof, stands between the nave and
-chancel. The tower arches are low, and the roof is vaulted. The Norman
-work probably dates from about 1130. The church bears some resemblance
-to the well-known church at Iffley, but the decoration is not so
-elaborate.
-
-Next to Studland in interest comes the church of Worth Matravers,
-also in the Isle of Purbeck. Here, however, the tower stands at the
-west end. The chancel is Early English, the roof is of wood; but the
-chancel arch is elaborately carved, as is also the door within the
-south porch. In the parish of Worth stands a unique building—the chapel
-of St. Ealdhelm, on St. Ealdhelm’s (or, as it is often incorrectly
-called, St. Alban’s) Head. It shares with the later chapel of St.
-Catherine, near Abbotsbury, the peculiarity of being built, within and
-without, walls and roof alike, of stone. The chapel of St. Ealdhelm
-stands four square, with a pyramidal roof, now surmounted by a cross,
-which has taken the place of the cresset in which the beacon fire
-blazed on nights of storm or national danger. No doubt it showed
-one of the “twinkling points of fire” of Macaulay’s ballad when the
-Armada had been sighted off Alderney. There is a legend that it was
-built by St. Ealdhelm, who, finding that he could not by land get at
-the heathen of what we now call Dorset, came in a boat and climbed
-the cliff, and afterwards founded this chapel to mark the spot where
-he landed. That he landed here is probable enough, but the style of
-architecture—Norman—shows that it was built long after St. Ealdhelm’s
-time. It is far more likely that his chapel was built on the hill at
-“Corfes-geat,” now crowned with the ruins of Corfe Castle. Another
-more romantic story tells us that this chapel on St. Ealdhelm’s Head
-was founded by the Norman Lord of the Manor, who, when his daughter,
-who had just been married, set out from Poole Haven to sail down
-channel to her home, came to this high spot to watch the vessel that
-bore her pass, and saw it wrecked on the rocks below. Hence it is said
-that he built this chapel so that masses might be said there for her
-soul’s rest. Be this as it may, it is certain that for many centuries
-the chaplain received his yearly stipend of fifty shillings from the
-Royal Treasury, and the chapel was a seamen’s chantry, where prayers
-for their safety might be offered, and whose flaming beacon served
-as a lighthouse. A narrow Norman window, or, rather, a slit, near
-the north-west corner of the east wall, alone admits light. A Norman
-doorway, in the opposite wall, is the only entrance. The stone vault is
-supported by ribs springing from a central pier, an arrangement similar
-to that common in polygonal chapter houses. The local name for the
-building was at one time “The Devil’s Chapel,” and people sought to
-gain their objects by some process of incantation, one part of the rite
-being the dropping of a pin into a hole in the central pier, a custom
-not altogether abandoned even now. On Worth “club walking day,” in
-Whitsun week, the building was used as a dancing room; at other times
-of the year as a coastguard store. It has, however, been refitted as a
-chapel, and service for the coastguard station is held at stated times
-by the rector of Worth.
-
-[Illustration: THE CHAPEL ON ST. EALDHELM’S HEAD.]
-
-It is neither possible nor desirable to mention all the Norman work
-which is to be found in Dorset, but attention must be called to that
-at Bere Regis. In this church may especially be noticed some curious
-carved heads on some of the capitals; on one, an arm comes down from
-above, and the hand raises the eyelids—evidently the gift of sight
-is here indicated; on another in like manner the fingers open the
-mouth—probably the gift of speech is here represented, although the
-carving might be intended to represent the gift of taste.
-
-Work of the Early English period (thirteenth century) is not very
-common in Dorset. We meet with it, however, in the east end of Wimborne
-Minster, in the churches of Knighton, Cranborne, Corfe Mullen,
-Portesham, and Worth, among others.
-
-Nor is the Decorated style more fully represented. The best examples
-are Milton Abbey Church, which is almost entirely in this style, and
-the aisles of Wimborne Minster; but it may also be seen in Gussage St.
-Michael, Tarrant Rushton, and Wooton Glanville, and at St. Peter’s,
-Dorchester, a well-preserved arch for the Easter sepulchre of this
-period may be seen. It was customary in such arches to set up at Easter
-a movable wooden structure representing the grave in Joseph’s garden,
-where certain rites commemorating the Burial and Resurrection were
-performed. These sepulchres were very elaborate, and associated with
-them were figures, of course of small size, representing Christ, the
-Father, the Holy Ghost, the armed guard, and angels and devils.
-
-The great majority of the Dorset churches are of Perpendicular date,
-and in churches of earlier date there are few that do not contain
-some addition or insertion made after the time when this peculiarly
-English style had had its birth in the Abbey Church at Gloucester, and
-had been adopted by William of Edington and William of Wykeham in the
-transformation of the Norman Cathedral Church at Winchester during the
-latter half of the fourteenth century.
-
-Why was it that so many churches were built during the fifteenth
-century? Probably because conditions had changed, and the building
-was no longer the work chiefly of the bishops or of the religious
-orders as it had been up to the thirteenth century, or of the nobles
-as it had been in the fourteenth, but of the people. The French wars
-of Edward III. emptied the purses of the nobles and the monasteries;
-the Black Death also counted many monks among its victims, and had
-entirely swept away many of the smaller religious houses, and decreased
-the numbers of brethren in the larger;[17] and the middle class rose
-after the Black Death to a position that it had never occupied before.
-This class demanded parish churches, as well as trade halls and guild
-chapels, and built them, too—that is, supplied money to pay masons.
-Architecture became more of a trade and less of an art. Norfolk and
-Somerset were especially rich districts at a time when England exported
-the raw material, wool, and not, as now, manufactured goods; and hence
-in these two counties some of the largest and grandest parish churches
-were built. And Dorset, lying as it does on the Somerset border,
-showed, though in less degree, the results of the new conditions. It
-has no churches of this period to match in size St. Mary Redcliffe at
-Bristol, or St. Mary Magdalene’s at Taunton; it has no Perpendicular
-towers to rival those of Shepton Mallet, St. Cuthbert’s at Wells, or
-Huish Episcopi; but it has some fine examples, nevertheless, distinctly
-traceable to Somerset influence. The parent design in Dorset may
-perhaps be seen in Piddletrenthide, 1487; Fordington St. George,
-the top of which tower has not been very wisely altered of late, is
-a little more in advance; St. Peter’s, Dorchester, and Charminster
-are still further developed; the two last probably are the finest
-individual towers in the county. Bradford Abbas may be thought by some
-more beautiful, but the builder borrowed details from the Quantock
-group of churches. The tower at Cerne is probably by the same builder
-as Bradford, judging from the similarity of the buttresses and
-pinnacles in the two churches. Beaminster also has a fine tower, and
-so has Marnhull, though the general effect of the latter is ruined by
-the clumsy modern parapet. Milton Abbey tower has good details. In all
-these cases, excepting Cerne, there are double windows in the belfry
-stage; but this arrangement is not so common in Dorset as in Somerset,
-and the writer knows no instance of triple windows. A Somerset feature
-that is very commonly met with in Dorset is an external stair-turret,
-an arrangement not found in the East of England. The Somerset builders
-often placed pinnacles on the offsets of their buttresses; these are
-rarely seen in Dorset. Generally, the Dorset towers are not so richly
-ornamented as those of Somerset.
-
-It has been said before that there are only two Dorset churches with
-spires built before the Reformation. A few words may not be out of
-place descriptive of the two. Steepleton is a long, narrow church,
-with nave and chancel, but no aisle. A blocked-up Norman arch, and a
-pointed one, similarly blocked, in the north wall of the nave, indicate
-that originally a chapel, or chapels, stood here. A curious stone,
-carved with the figure of a floating angel, probably taken from the
-interior, was at some time built into the exterior of the south wall
-of the nave. It has by this means escaped destruction, but the damp
-has caused lichen to grow on it. It bears a strong resemblance to the
-angel to be seen over the chancel arch of St. Lawrence’s Church at
-Bradford-on-Avon. It is not unlikely that the corresponding angel is
-on a stone that has been used in blocking one of the arches mentioned
-before. They possibly date from pre-Conquest days, or, at any rate,
-from a time before the pre-Conquest style had died out in this
-remote village, and may have formed part of a representation of the
-Ascension. The western stone may possibly date from the fourteenth
-century, as a window in its east face, now covered by the raised roof,
-shows geometrical tracery; the windows in the other faces are much
-later—probably they have been altered. The main octagonal spire that
-rises from the tower does not seem to have been part of the original
-design. On the four spaces between the corners of the tower and the
-spire are four spirelets; these do not stand as pinnacles of the tower,
-nor are they used, as sometimes spirelets were used, to hide the
-awkward junction of a broad spire with a square tower, for this is not
-a broad, but rises, as fourteenth century spires generally do, from the
-tower roof, though here a parapet hardly exists.
-
-Trent Steeple, standing midway on the south side of the church,
-is a very beautiful one; the tower has double-light windows, with
-geometrical tracery, and a pierced parapet, with pinnacles, from
-which rises a very graceful spire, the edges of which have a circular
-moulding. The spire is slightly twisted from some subsidence, and
-cracks have occurred in the tower. The church has no aisles, but the
-projecting tower, the lower part of which serves as an entrance porch,
-on the south, and the chapel and organ chamber on the north, give
-it a very picturesque appearance. A modern addition is a distinctly
-pleasant feature, namely, an octagonal baptistery, which stands
-beyond the church at the west end of the nave. The interior is also
-pleasing. There are bench ends of oak, black with age, a reading desk
-on the north side, of like material, and a fine oak chancel screen.
-The carved wooden pulpit, if not entirely modern, is very largely so.
-In the churchyard are the steps and base of a churchyard cross. It is
-an exceedingly beautiful church, and the few houses in its immediate
-neighbourhood, with stone mullioned windows, are all in keeping with
-the church. The straggling cottages, the winding lanes, render it one
-of the most picturesque villages in the county. It was a distinct loss
-to Somerset and gain to Dorset when this parish was transferred from
-the former to the latter county.
-
-This sketch of the Dorset churches would be incomplete without
-reference to some of the noteworthy features to be met with in the
-fittings of some of them. The cast-lead font of St. Mary’s, Wareham,
-on which figures of the Apostles are still distinguishable from each
-other, despite the rough usage to which they have been subjected, may
-possibly date from Saxon days, and from the resemblance it bears to
-the font in Dorchester Abbey, Oxfordshire, they may well have been
-contemporaneous. If so, it gives countenance to the belief that this
-font dates from the time when, as yet, the whole Wessex kingdom was one
-diocese with its Bishop-stool at the Oxfordshire Dorchester—that is,
-sometime between the conversion of Cynegils by St. Birinus in 635 and
-the division of the diocese into the two separate sees of Winchester
-and Sherborne in 705; as after this event the Oxfordshire Dorchester
-would have little to do with Dorset.
-
-The church at Piddletown has escaped the drastic restoration that has
-destroyed the interest of so many of our Dorset churches. Archæologists
-may well rejoice that the gallery and pews have not been swept away
-with ruthless zeal, and will pray that they may, for many years to
-come, stand as witnesses of what was being done in Dorset at a time
-when the storm was gathering that was destined for a while to overthrow
-the power of king and priest.
-
-In Bloxworth Church there still remains in its stand the hour-glass by
-which the preacher regulated the length of his sermon. This probably
-was placed in its position about the middle of the seventeenth century.
-The people in those days liked sermons, and expected to be able to
-listen to one for at least an hour, though sometimes the preacher, when
-all the sand had run into the lower half of the hour-glass, would give
-his congregation another hour, turning the glass; and sometimes yet
-once again the glass was turned. As we look on this relic of sermon
-loving days, we cannot help thinking of the eyes of the weary children,
-doomed to sit under these long-winded preachers, turned on the slowly
-trickling sand, and the sense of relief they must have felt when the
-last grain had run down, and the hour of their enforced listening was
-at an end.
-
-To this same seventeenth century may be ascribed many of the
-elaborately carved oaken pulpits which are to be found in Dorset, as,
-for instance, those at Beaminster, Netherbury, Charminster, Iwerne
-Minster, and Abbotsbury. In the last may still be seen two holes caused
-by bullets fired by Cromwell’s soldiers when the church was garrisoned
-by Royalists under General Strangways.
-
-At Frampton a stone pulpit, of fifteenth century date, much restored,
-still exists. At Corton Chapel a fine pre-Reformation stone altar
-stands, which escaped destruction when the order for the removal of
-stone altars was issued in 1550, because Corton was one of those free
-chapels which had been suppressed and deprived of its revenue three
-years before by the Chantry Act of 1 Edward VI.
-
-In the neighbouring church at Portesham a window on the north side
-of the nave shews signs of the influence which on the Continent led
-to the Flamboyant style. A fine Jacobean screen may be seen at West
-Stafford Church, which was removed from its original position and put
-further to the east when the church was lengthened a few years ago.
-
-In Hilton Church there are twelve noteworthy mediæval panel paintings,
-each more than six feet high, representing the Apostles. These once
-belonged to Milton Abbey.
-
-When Tarrant Rushton Church was restored, on the eastern face of the
-chancel arch were found two earthenware vases. Their use is a matter of
-doubt, but an idea formerly prevailed that such vessels gave richness
-to the voice, and from this idea they were sometimes let into the
-walls, and were known as acoustic vases.
-
-Dorset is fairly rich in monumental effigies in stone and alabaster.
-One of the most beautiful and best preserved of the latter is that
-erected in Wimborne Minster by the Lady Margaret, in memory of her
-father and mother, John Beaufort, Duke of Somerset, and his wife.
-Cross-legged effigies are to be seen in Wareham, Bridport, Piddletown,
-Wimborne Minster, Dorchester, Trent, Horton, Wimborne St. Giles, and
-Stock Gaylard. The first four bear a close resemblance to one another.
-The knight wears a sleeved tunic or hauberk of mail, a hooded coif, and
-over this a helmet. This costume indicates a date before the middle
-of the twelfth century. The feet rest upon an animal. At one time the
-fact that the legs were crossed was held to indicate that the person
-represented was a Crusader; if the legs were crossed at the ankles it
-was supposed that he had made one pilgrimage to the East; if at the
-knees, two; if higher up, three. But all this is probably erroneous,
-for on the one hand some known Crusaders are not represented with their
-legs crossed, while others who are known not to have gone to the Holy
-Land are so represented. And even a stronger proof may be adduced,
-namely, that some of the crossed-legged effigies represent knights
-who lived after the Crusades were over; for example, that found on
-the tomb of Sir Peter Carew at Exeter, who died in 1571. In Mappowder
-Church there is a miniature cross-legged effigy, about two feet long.
-This is often spoken of as a “boy crusader”—a child who is supposed to
-have gone with his father to the Holy Land, and to have died there.
-But this is probably a mistake. Similar diminutive effigies are found
-in divers places; for instance, that at Salisbury which goes by the
-name of the “Boy Bishop,” and Bishop Ethelmer’s (1260) at Winchester.
-Many authorities think that, as it was customary in the twelfth and
-thirteenth centuries to bury different parts of the body in different
-places, these effigies mark the spot where the heart was buried. The
-figure at Mappowder holds a heart in its hands, and this certainly
-lends countenance to this theory. A similar monument formerly existed
-at Frampton, but it has disappeared. At Trent is a crossed-legged
-effigy of a “franklin”—a civilian who was allowed to wear a sword.
-There are two figures in St. Peter’s, Dorchester, laid on the sills of
-windows; it is said they were removed from the old Priory Church. These
-are of later date, namely, the end of the fourteenth century. They wear
-plate armour, and on their heads pointed bassinets, while the great
-helms that were worn over these serve as pillows for their heads to
-rest on.
-
-At West Chelborough there is a curious monument without date or name:
-a lady lies asleep on a bed with a child enveloped in the folds of
-her drapery; probably this indicates that she died in giving birth to
-the infant. Another curious monument is met with in Sandford Orcas
-Church, whereon may be seen William Knoyle kneeling with one of his
-wives in front, and one behind him, and behind the latter, four corpses
-of children; the knight and first wife have skulls in their hands, to
-indicate that they were dead when the monument (1607) was erected;
-the second wife is dressed in black to show her widowhood; her seven
-children are also represented, the four girls by her, and the three
-boys behind the father. It will be noticed that the recumbent figures
-of earlier time gave place to kneeling figures in the sixteenth
-century, when the husband and wife were often represented opposite to
-each other, with their children behind them in graduated sizes. These
-are far less pleasing than the monuments of earlier date; but worse
-was to come, an example of which may be seen at St. Peter’s Church,
-Dorchester, in the monument of Denzil, Lord Holles, so well known in
-the history of the reign of Charles I.
-
-A bare mention must suffice for other monuments. In Marnhull, Thomas
-Howard (1582), a man of huge stature, lies between his two wives, small
-delicate women, who are absolutely alike in person and dress. It would
-seem as if their effigies were mere conventional representations. In
-the neighbouring church of Stalbridge lies an emaciated corpse in a
-shroud without date or name.
-
-In Netherbury is a mutilated alabaster figure with “S.S.” on the
-collar; at Melbury Sampford the alabaster effigy of William Brounyng,
-who died 1467, wears plate armour and the Yorkist collar. At
-Charminster are several canopied tombs of the Trenchards, in Purbeck
-marble, of a form found in many Wessex churches, and the figure of a
-daughter of Sir Thomas Trenchard, wife of Sir William Pole, who died
-in 1636. She kneels before a book lying open on a desk, and wears a
-fur tippet. In Chideock Chapel may be seen a knight in plate armour,
-possibly Sir John Chideock, who died in 1450. In Came Church are the
-recumbent figures of Sir John Miller and his wife Anna (1610).
-
-In Farnham, over the altar, is a plain stone in memory of one Alexander
-Bower, a preacher of God’s Word, who is said to have died “in the year
-of _Christes_ incarnation (1616).” This is interesting as showing the
-unabridged form of the possessive case.
-
-Built in the wall over the door of Durweston Church is a piece of
-carving, which originally was above the altar and beneath the east
-window, representing a blacksmith shoeing a horse; and over the west
-door of Hinton Parva is a carving of an angel, a cross, and a butterfly.
-
-The finest timber roof in the county is undoubtedly that of Bere Regis
-nave. It is said that Cardinal Morton placed this roof upon the church
-when he was Archbishop of Canterbury. He was born near, or in, this
-village, and after the battle of Towton was attainted. In the central
-shield on the roof the arms of Morton are impaled with the arms of
-the See of Canterbury; this gives the date of the erection somewhere
-between 1486 and 1500, but a Cardinal’s hat on one of the figures
-limits the date still further, as it was not until 1493 that Morton
-became a Cardinal. The figures, which project from the hammer beams
-and look downwards, are popularly known as the Apostles, but the dress
-precludes this idea, as one is habited as a Deacon, and one, as said
-above, wears a Cardinal’s hat. The painting of the roof is modern, done
-when the roof was restored.
-
-One of the most remarkable buildings of the fifteenth century is St.
-Catherine’s Chapel, on the lofty hill which overlooks the sea near
-Abbotsbury. In the construction of this, wood plays no part—all is
-solid stone. The roof is formed of transverse ribs, richly bossed where
-ridge and purloin ribs intersect them, and each of the two rectangular
-compartments between every pair of ribs on either side thus formed is
-simply foliated like blank window lights. There is not a thin stone
-vault below a stone outer roof above with a space between them, but it
-is stone throughout, and on St. Catherine’s wind-swept hill the chapel
-has stood uninjured since the Benedictine Monks of Abbotsbury built
-this chantry nearly five hundred years ago. The massive buttresses,
-from which no pinnacles rise, the parapet pierced by holes for letting
-out the water, the turret with its flat cap, in which once the beacon
-fire used to be lighted in its iron cresset, render the chapel still
-more unique. Nowhere else in England, save on St. Ealdhelm’s Head, can
-such a solidly-built structure be found. The simple tracery of the
-windows remains, but the glass has disappeared. The windows are boarded
-up to keep out the rain and the interior is bare. Resting on a hill
-top, washed by the pure breezes, such a chapel is fitly dedicated to
-St. Catherine of Alexandria.
-
-
-
-
-THE MEMORIAL BRASSES OF DORSET
-
-BY W. DE C. PRIDEAUX
-
-
-Dorset is by no means rich in the number of its monumental brasses.
-Haines, in his list (1861), gives their number as thirty-three,
-distributed over twenty-four churches; but recent researches and
-alterations in the county boundaries have rendered his list no longer
-strictly accurate. Yet only about one hundredth of the brasses to be
-found in England are preserved in Dorset, though its area is about
-one fiftieth of the area of England; and so it will be seen that the
-number of its brasses is considerably below the average, although it
-must be remembered that brasses are very unequally divided, the Eastern
-counties having by far the largest proportion.
-
-The earliest known brasses in England date from the latter part of the
-thirteenth century; and for three centuries this form of memorial was
-in great favour. Brasses had many advantages over carved effigies in
-stone; they occupied less space, formed no obstruction in the churches,
-were more easily executed, and possibly cheaper. Fortunately, also,
-they have lasted longer, and have preserved a wealth of valuable detail
-relating to costume and heraldry far in excess of any other form of
-monument.
-
-Monumental brasses may be divided roughly into two classes: those in
-which the figure is engraved on a rectangular plate, the background
-being plain or filled in with diapered or scroll work, which is seen to
-such great advantage on many Continental brasses, and those in which
-there is no background, the plate being cut around the outline of the
-figure, and fastened down into a similarly shaped shallow matrix or
-casement in the stone slab. Examples of both kinds are found in Dorset;
-but none of our examples are of very early date. One of the oldest,
-commemorating Joan de St. Omer, dated 1436 (an engraving of which may
-be seen in Hutchins’ _Dorset_, vol. ii., p. 380, and a rubbing by the
-late Mr. Henry Moule in the library of the Society of Antiquaries,
-London[18]), has disappeared from St. Peter’s Church, Dorchester,
-although the matrix still remains. The Oke brass at Shapwick, if of
-contemporary workmanship, may be older.
-
-Sometimes brasses were pulled out and sold by the churchwardens for
-the value of the metal.[19] Sometimes, indeed, brasses which had
-commemorated some warrior, priest, or worthy of former times were taken
-up, turned over, re-engraved, and made to do duty in honour of someone
-else, as may be seen in the retroscript brasses at Litton Cheney; but
-in several cases the brass, after weathering the stormy times of the
-civil wars, and escaping the greed of those whose business it was to
-guard their church from the mutilation, were lost through the gross
-neglect of the nineteenth century restorer. The writer knows of several
-specimens now loose and in danger.
-
-The following is a list of all the known brasses in Dorset:—
-
- _Beaminster._—Ann, the wife of Henry Hillary, of Meerhay, 1653.
-
- Elizabeth, the wife of William Milles, and daughter of John Hillary,
- of Meerhay, 1674.
-
- Mrs. Ann Hillary, died 1700.
-
- William Milles, Esq., of Meerhay, and Mary, his wife. He died 1760,
- aged 82; she died 1771, aged 95.
-
- And outside the wall of south aisle, inscriptions to—
-
- Elizabeth Smitham, 1773, aged 61.
-
- Rev. Edmund Lewis, 1766, aged 40.
-
- Joseph Symes, gent., 1776, aged 75; also Frances, his wife, 1737, aged
- 47.
-
- And on a large slab in the floor of south aisle, formerly on an altar
- tomb—
-
- Pray for the soule of S^{r} John Tone,[20]
- Whose bodye lyeth berid under this tombe,
- On whos soule J’hu have mercy A Pat’nost’ & Ave.
-
- All small inscriptions only.
-
-_Bere Regis._—J. Skerne and Margaret, his wife, 1596. Kneeling figures,
-with heraldic shield and an eight-line engraved verse, on altar tomb.
-
- Robert Turberville, 1559. Inscription only.
-
-_Bryanston._—John Rogers and Elizabeth, his wife, 1528. Inscription
-below matrices of their effigies and heraldic shields.
-
- Cecilia Rogers, wife of Sir Richard Rogers, of Bryanston. A ten-line
- verse below matrices of her effigy and heraldic shields, 1566.
-
-_Bridport._—Edward Coker, gent. Inscription only, 1685.
-
-_Caundle Purse._—William Longe, 1500; Elizabeth Longe, 1527; Richard
-Brodewey, rector, 1536. All small effigies, the two latter with
-inscriptions; and all loose when seen by the writer, with the exception
-of a small plate to Peter Hoskyns, 1682, above Longe altar tomb.
-
-_Compton Valence._—Thomas Maldon, rector, rebuilder of church, 1440.
-Half effigy, from which issue two scrolls, with words from Ps. li. 1.
-
-_Chesilborne._—A small inscribed brass to John Keate, 1552, and
-Margaret, his wife, 1554.
-
-_Corfe Mullen._—A small effigy of Richard Birt. Below this there is a
-mutilated inscription to Ricardus Birt and Alicia, his wife, 1437.
-
-_Crichel, Moor._—Isabel Uvedale, 1572. An effigy with a ten-line
-engraved verse.
-
- William Cyfrewast, Esquyer, 1581. Inscription and two six-line verses.
-
-_Crichel, Long._—Johan’ Gouys. A small inscription only.
-
-_Cranborne._—Margaret, daughter of Henry Ashelie, the wife of William
-Wallop, 1582. Inscription only. There is another inscribed plate
-bearing date 1631; otherwise illegible.
-
-_Dorchester, St. Peter._—Inscription and scroll to the lost figure of
-Joan de St. Omer, widow of Robert More, 1436.
-
- William and Johanna Sillon. Part of inscription. Inscription to John
- Gollop.
-
-_Evershot._—William Grey, rector, 1524, with chalice and host.
-Inscription below effigy composed of quite a different alloy.
-
-_Fleet Old Church._—Robert and Margaret Mohun, with seventeen children,
-1603.
-
- Maximillian Mohun, his son, showing his wife and thirteen children.
-
-_Holme Priory._—Richard Sidwaye, gent., 1612.
-
-_Knowle._—John Clavell, 1572, and two wives; the first with three sons
-and one daughter; the second wife, Susan, daughter of Robert Coker, of
-Mappowder, is kneeling alone.
-
-_Litton Cheney._—Ralph Henvil, of Looke, 1644. Anne Henvill, daughter
-of Richard Henvill, of Looke, 1681. Inscriptions only.
-
- There is also an interesting retroscript brass, in two pieces, having
- three inscriptions:—
-
- 1.—Johes Chapman, ffysch mōger, 1471.
-
- 2.—Alexandriam (?) Warnby, 1486.
-
- 3.—Johis Newpton et Thome Neupto.
-
-_Lytchett Matravers._—Thomas Pethyn (_als._ Talpathyn), rector, in
-shroud, _c._ 1470.
-
- Margaret Clement, “generosa, specialis benefactrix reedificacionis
- huius ecclesie,” 1505.
-
- A matrix of a very large fret (the arms of Matravers), with marginal
- inscription, to Sir John Matravers, 1365.
-
-_Langton._—John Whitewod, gent., and his two wives, Johanna and Alicia;
-three effigies, with inscription, bearing dates 1457, 1467, and portion
-of scrolls.
-
-_Melbury Sampford._—Sir Gyles Strangwayes, 1562, in tabard. Two
-shields, with thirteen and fourteen quarterings respectively, and
-inscriptions to Henry Strangwayes, Esq., who “died at the syege of
-Bolleyne,” and his wife, Margaret, daughter of Lord George Rosse; and
-to Sir Gyles Strangwayes and his wife, Joan, eldest daughter of John
-Wadham, Esq. There are also strip brasses around recumbent marble
-effigies of Sir Gyles Strangwayes the elder, and William Brunyng, and a
-rectangular brass plate to Laurencius Sampford, _miles_, and another to
-John and Alicia Brounyng, with three coats of arms.
-
-_Milton Abbey._—Sir John Tregonwell, D.C.L., 1565, in tabard, with
-heraldic shields and inscription.
-
- John Artur, a monk of the Abbey. A small brass of about the middle of
- the fifteenth century.
-
-_Milborne St. Andrew._—John Morton, Esq., 1521, son of Richard Morton,
-and nephew of John Morton, Cardinal. Brass plate on altar tomb, below
-matrix of a knight in armour.
-
-_Moreton._—James Frampton, 1523. He is shown kneeling, with text on
-scrolls.
-
-_Owermoigne._—John Sturton, Esq., 1506. Inscription, “causyd this
-wyndowe to be made.”
-
- On a loose plate, now lost, Nicholas Cheverel, Esq., and Jane, his
- wife, who both died in the year 1548.
-
-_Piddlehinton._—Thomas Browne, parson for 27 years, in hat and clerical
-habit, having staff and book, with a twelve-line verse and inscription,
-1617.
-
- There was formerly a brass inscription to John Chapman, 1494, in the
- north aisle.
-
-_Piddletown._—Roger Cheverell, 1517. Half effigy, with inscription and
-two shields of arms.
-
- Christopher Martyn, Esq., 1524. Kneeling effigy, in tabard, with
- shield of arms and partial representation of the Trinity.
-
- Nicholas Martyn, Esq., and wife, 1595, with three sons and seven
- daughters, with armorial brass and inscription between effigies, on
- back of altar tomb.
-
-_Pimperne._—Mrs. Dorothy Williams, wife of John Williams, curate, 1694.
-A very curious effigy, with skeleton below. “Edmund Colepeper fecit.”
-
-_Puncknowle._—William Napper, Esq., brother of Sir Robert Napper, in
-armour; by his wife, Anne, daughter of Wm. Shelton, Esq., of Onger
-Park, he had six sons. Brass engraved _c._ 1600, before his death.
-
-_Rampisham._—Thomas Dygenys and his wife Isabel. Two figures, with
-inscription at their feet, “gud benefactors to this churche.” Both died
-in 1523.
-
-_Shaftesbury, St. Peter._—Inscription to Stephen, son and heir of
-Nicholas Payne, steward of the Monastery, 1508. On the slab are
-matrices of four brass shields. This was removed from the Abbey.
-
- In Holy Trinity churchyard is half a large blue slab, having thereon
- the matrix of a large brass which local tradition says was to King
- Edward the Martyr.
-
-_Shapwick._—Inscription to Richard Chernok, _als._ Hogeson, vicar, 1538.
-
- A fine effigy of Maria, heiress of Lord de Champneys, and wife of
- John Oke. The inscription is to the latter; the former has a dog at
- her feet. Her first husband was Sir William Tourney, and she married
- William Oke in the reign of Richard II.; so it is quite likely that
- this brass is of the fourteenth century.
-
-_Sturminster Marshall._—An effigy of Henry Helme, vicar, in gown, with
-moustache and pointed beard. He was the founder of Baylye House (the
-vicarage), 1581. The inscription is a ten-line verse. The brass is
-fastened on a black marble slab.
-
- Also, “Here lyeth Wylla’ Benett, on whose sowle Gode have merci.” (No
- date.)
-
-_Swanage, als. Swanwich._—William Clavell (effigy lost), with Margaret
-and Alicia, his wives, _c._ 1470.
-
- John Harve, 1510. Inscription only:—
-
- Suche as I was, so be you, and as I am, so shall you be,
- And of the soule of John Harve God have mercy.
-
- Henry Welles, of Godlinstone, 1607, and Marie, his first wife, 1560.
- Inscriptions only.
-
- Susan Cockram, wife of Brune Cockram, parson of Swanw^{ch}, 1641.
-
- Thomas Serrell, the sonn of Anthony Serrell, of Swanwhich, 1639.
-
-_Swyre._—John Russell, Esq., and Elizabeth, his wife, daughter of John
-Frocksmer, Esq., 1505. Inscription, with arms.
-
- James Russell, Esq. (son of John Russell), and Alys, his wife,,
- daughter of John Wise, Esq., 1510. Inscription, with arms.[21]
-
- George Gollop, of Berwick, tenth son of Thomas Gollop, of Strode,
- Dorset; brass, _c._ 1787. Long inscription only, to many of this
- family.
-
-_Tincleton._—Inscription to Thomas Faryngdon, _armiger_, 1404.
-
-_Tarrant Crawford._—In the year 1862, a small brass plate was found on
-the Abbey site in memory of “d’ns Joh’es Karrant.”
-
-_Thorncombe._—Sir Thomas and Lady Brook. Two fine effigies, with long
-inscription. Sir Thomas died 1419; Lady Brook, 1437; “on whose soules
-God have mercy and pite that for us dyed on the rode tree. Ame’.”
-
-_Upwey._—William Gould, 1681. Inscription only, on outer side of north
-wall of chancel, opposite altar tomb.
-
-_West Stafford._—Inscription to Giles Long, 1592, “then Lord of Frome
-Bellett and patrone of the parsonage and Stafford.”
-
-_Wimborne Minster._—St. Ethelred, King of the West Saxons, martyr,
-“Anno Domini 873 (871?) 23 die Aprilis per manus dacorum paganorum
-occubuit.” Half effigy, engraved _c._ 1440; inscription restored _c._
-1600.
-
-_Woolland._—Mary, daughter of Robert Williams, of Herringston, and wife
-of Robert Thornhull, and then of Lewis Argenton, 1616. The inscription
-of twelve lines is curious and descriptive, beginning:—
-
- Here lyeth our landladie loved of all,
- Whom Mary Argenton last wee did call.
-
-_Yetminster._—John Horsey, Esquire, 1531, Lord of the Manor of Clifton,
-and Elizabeth, his wife, Lady of the Manor of Turges Melcombe. Two fine
-effigies, with scrolls at sides and inscription at foot.
-
-Of the foregoing brasses, the following deserve a longer notice:—
-
-_Bere Regis._—J. Skerne and Margaret, his wife. This monument consists
-of two kneeling figures, fourteen inches high, cut round the outline,
-and represented as kneeling on the pavement; between them is a
-rectangular plate, with coat of arms (Skerne impaling Thornhull), and
-an inscription on another plate below. Skerne wears a long gown, with
-sleeves nearly touching the ground; his wife, a dress, with ruff and a
-widow’s wimple. The inscription states that the memorial was erected by
-the aforesaid Margaret in 1596.
-
-In the same church there is an inscription to Sir Robert Turberville,
-1559. There are also remains of three altar tombs, all with empty
-matrices; two in the south aisle probably mark the last resting-places
-of members of the Turberville family. It is of these that John
-Durbeyfield, in Thomas Hardy’s _Tess_, boasted, “I’ve got a gr’t family
-vault at Kingsbere and knighted forefathers in lead coffins there.”
-
-[Illustration: WILLIAM GREY, 1524. RECTOR OF EVERSHOT.]
-
-_Caundle Purse._—The brass of W. Longe, 26 ins. high, represents a man
-in armour, with long flowing hair; the head is inclined to the right.
-Its matrix was found by the writer in the North, or Longe, Chantry.
-The brass is heavy, being ⅜-in. thick; it is poor in execution, and
-is, unfortunately, away from its slab.
-
- The monument of Richard Brodewey, rector, is far more interesting. The
- head has been broken off; the figure, only ten inches high, represents
- the priest as laid out for burial, clad in eucharistic vestments. This
- brass is specially noteworthy, because it is the only known memorial
- in England in which the maniple is represented as buttoned or sewn, so
- as to form a loop to prevent it from slipping off the wrist. This was
- the final form that the maniple assumed; in earlier times it simply
- hung over the arm without attachment.
-
-_Evershot._—The brass commemorating William Grey is rather larger than
-that at Caundle Purse, and is in better condition. Like Brodewey,
-Grey is represented as laid out in his eucharistic vestments—amice,
-alb, maniple, stole, and chasuble; between his raised hands he holds
-a chalice, with the host (similar to Henry Denton, priest, Higham
-Ferrers, 1498). There are only about a dozen representations of
-chaliced priests in England, so that this memorial may be classed among
-rare examples. It was customary to bury a chalice (usually of some
-secondary metal) with all ecclesiastics in priests’ orders.[22]
-
-_Fleet._—The two brasses in this church are engraved on rectangular
-plates. In each, the husband kneels on the opposite side to the wife
-(he dexter, she sinister), with a _prie Dieu_ between them. Their many
-sons and daughters kneel behind the father and mother respectively.
-
-_Milton Abbey._—Sir John Tregonwell is represented, kneeling, in a
-tabard; and this is the latest tabard brass in England.
-
- Another very interesting and almost unique brass in the Abbey is
- that to John Artur, of this place “_monachus_.” Brasses to monks are
- exceedingly rare.
-
-_Moreton._—The inscription on the monument of James Frampton is
-unusual; the letters are raised above the background, instead of being
-sunk in it.
-
-_Piddletown._—The effigy of Roger Cheverell has only the upper part
-left—10½ in. by 6 in. in size. The dress is that of a civilian of
-good standing, for the cloak is lined with fur; the head is bare and
-the hair long.
-
- Christopher Martyn’s brass is engraved on a rectangular plate. The
- lower half is occupied by the inscription; above it kneels the figure
- in conventional armour, with a tabard bearing arms over. A scroll
- comes from the mouth, bearing, in abbreviated form, the prayer,
- “Averte faciem tuam a peccatis meis, et omnes iniquitates meas dele.”
- Two shields, one low on the right side of the figure, another high
- above the left shoulder, bear the well-known Martyn arms; and above
- the former, the All Father sits on a throne, with two fingers of
- the right hand raised in blessing, and the left hand holds between
- the knees a Tau-shaped cross, on which the Son is nailed. There
- is, however, no dove, so that it cannot be regarded as a complete
- representation of the Trinity. At Bere Regis there is a matrix of an
- enthroned figure of almost identical outline.
-
- The memorial to Nicholas Martyn and his wife belongs to the other
- type of brass. In the centre, indeed, are two rectangular plates,
- one bearing the heraldic shield (Martyn impaling Wadham), the other
- the inscription; but the other plates are cut round the figures, and
- have little background. On the right or dexter side, the husband,
- clad in armour, but not wearing a helmet, kneels, with hands clasped
- in prayer, before an altar covered with a fringed cloth, on which
- lies an open book; behind him kneel his three sons, wearing cloaks,
- with ruffs around their necks. On the left-hand side, Margaret, his
- wife, kneels before a similar altar and book; behind her are her
- seven daughters, all engaged in prayer. They all wear Elizabethan
- costume—hoods, large ruffs, long bodied peaked stomachers and skirts,
- extended by farthingales of whalebone.
-
-_Thorncombe._—The brasses to Sir Thomas and Lady Brooke, of Holditch
-and Weycroft, are two of the most distinguished to be found of the
-fourteenth century. He was sheriff of Somerset, 1389, and of Devon,
-1394, and is shown clad in a long gown with deep dependent sleeves,
-guarded with fur around the skirt, and pulled in at the waist by a belt
-studded with roses; within the gown a second garment appears, with four
-rows of fur around the skirt. His hair is short, and his feet rest on a
-greyhound couchant, collared. Lady Brooke wears a long robe, fastened
-across the breast by a cordon with tassels, over a plain gown; her
-hair is dressed in semi-mitre shape, and confined by a richly jewelled
-net, over which is placed the cover-chief, edged with embroidery and
-dependent to the shoulders. At her feet is a little dog, collared and
-belled. Sir Thomas and his wife each wear the collar of SS.; their arms
-are in tightly-fitting sleeves, and the hands are raised in prayer.
-The inscription around the effigies has been restored, and plain
-shields inserted in place of originals, which would have shown Gules
-on a chevron argent a lion rampant sable; Brooke with, among others,
-Cheddar, Mayor of Bristol, 1360-1, and Hanham.
-
-_Wimborne Minster._—The Ethelred effigy here is only half length.
-The king is represented, in part, in priestly vestments. (“As kings
-by their coronation are admitted into a sacred as well as a civil
-character, the former of these is particularly manifested in the
-investiture with clerical garments.”) Though the brass commemorates
-a king of the West Saxons, it dates only from 1440. The inscription
-is on a copper plate, and the king’s death is said thereon to have
-occurred in 873, two years too late. A brass plate on which the date
-is correctly given is preserved in the Minster Library. It is supposed
-that the figure and the plate bearing the inscription were removed
-from the matrix and hidden for safety in the time of the Civil Wars,
-and that the plate could not be found when the figure was replaced, so
-that the copper one now on the slab was engraved to take the place of
-the one lost, which, however, was afterwards found, but not laid on the
-stone. It is a noteworthy fact that the effigy is fastened to the stone
-with nails of copper, not of brass; doubtless these are contemporary
-with the copper plate which bears the inscription. The Ethelred brass
-is the only brass commemorating a king that is to be found in England,
-and is so illustrated in Haines’ _Manual_, p. 74.
-
-_Wraxall._—Elizabeth Lawrence, wife of Mr. William Lawrence, 1672. A
-six-line verse and an impaled coat of arms.
-
-_Yetminster._—This brass, one of the finest in Dorset, was at one time
-loose at East Chelborough Rectory, but it has now been fixed to a slab
-on the south wall of the church. It was originally laid on a large
-stone in the floor of the chancel. John Horsey is represented in full
-and very richly ornamented armour; his wife is in a graceful gown and
-mantle, with dependent pomander, and fine head-dress.
-
-
-
-
-SHERBORNE
-
-BY W. B. WILDMAN, M.A.
-
-
-Sherborne, as far as we can tell, owes its existence as a town to the
-fact that it was chosen in 705 to be the site where the bishop-stool
-was fixed of St. Ealdhelm, the first bishop of Western or Newer Wessex.
-Sherborne, like its daughter-towns Wells and Salisbury, is a Bishop’s
-town; but, unlike them, it was also, from 998 to 1539, the seat of a
-Benedictine Monastery. Thus Sherborne has suffered two distinct shocks
-in its career; the first came upon it when it lost its bishop in 1075;
-the second, when its Abbey was dissolved in 1539.
-
-Another point worth mentioning concerning the past dignity of the town
-is this, that Sherborne, or at any rate, a part of it—Newland—was
-once actually a borough, as was also what we may call the suburb of
-Castleton.
-
-This part of Sherborne is still called the Borough of Newland; it was
-given burghal privileges by Richard Poore, Bishop of Sarum, in 1228,
-and, according to Hutchins, it actually sent members to the House of
-Commons in 1343. But long after Newland got rid of this then burdensome
-privilege it still kept the name and other privileges of a borough,
-and both it and Castleton were for administrative purposes outside
-the Hundred of Sherborne; they kept their own tourns twice a year,
-and their own courts every three weeks; they had their own view of
-frank-pledge quite apart from the rest of the town and Hundred. It
-is not known to what bishop Castleton owed its title and dignity of
-_burgus_.
-
-When Sherborne came into being, the surrounding country bore a very
-different look from that which we see to-day. It lay on the western
-edge of the great forest of Selwood, a fragment of which still
-remains to us here in Sherborne Castle Park. There were then no trim
-water-meadows, and the course of our river was marked by moor and
-marsh. Here, in the last fold of the Wessex hills, under which lies the
-great plain of Somerset, Ealdhelm’s seat was fixed, in a site central
-and convenient for the new district, which had barely a quarter of a
-century before been added to the West Saxon realm.
-
-Sherborne was never a walled town; it lay under the protection of the
-fortified palace of its bishop, and in troublous times of Danish inroad
-its site was a safe one. The story that Swegen ravaged the town rests
-on nothing like contemporary evidence; on the other hand, the safety
-of its position, coupled with the fact that it was once the second
-city of Wessex, accounts for its being chosen by King Æthelbald for
-his capital, so to speak, when Winchester, in 860, was laid waste by
-the Danes; indeed, the change may have taken place soon after 856.
-Sherborne continued to be the capital of Wessex till about the year
-878. During a considerable part of that time we may well believe
-that King Alfred spent his boyhood here, almost certainly during
-King Æthelberht’s reign; and here, in this centre of education which
-Ealdhelm had founded, he may well have received such education as he
-got during his boyhood. There is no other centre of education which has
-so good a claim to him; here were buried his two brothers, Æthelbald
-and Æthelberht, who successively reigned before Æthelred and himself.
-Æthelberht was his guardian after his father’s death. Alfred must have
-known Sherborne well; he was a benefactor of our church, and we claim
-his boyhood.
-
-[Illustration: Sherborne Abbey
- _Sidney Heath_]
-
-But besides Alfred and Ealdhelm, early Sherborne claims other heroes;
-Ealhstan, our bishop, the first West Saxon general to win a decisive
-victory over the Danes, was the right-hand man of Kings Ecgberht,
-Æthelwulf, Æthelbald, and Æthelberht; he was the most powerful man
-of his time. Here, in Sherborne, he lies buried beside Æthelbald and
-Æthelberht.
-
-We claim, too, among our Sherborne bishops, St. Heahmund, who fell
-fighting against the Danes at Merton (probably Marden, Wilts.);
-Asser, the biographer of King Alfred, who is said to lie buried among
-us; Werstan, another warrior who fell in battle; St. Wulfsy and St.
-Alfwold, names rather forgotten now, but great and famous in their day.
-St. Osmund, who compiled the _Use of Sarum_, was one of our abbots; and
-St. Stephen Harding, the author of the _Carta Caritatis_, and the real
-founder of the Cistercian Order, is the earliest scholar of Sherborne
-School whom History records as such.
-
-Nor can Sherborne forget what it owes to the great Roger Niger, that
-dark, stalwart Bishop of Sarum, who built the Norman Castle here and
-the Norman part of our Abbey Church, who organized the English Court
-of Exchequer, was the trusted adviser of the “Lion of Justice,” Henry
-I., and deserved a better end than to break his heart in a contest with
-such a poor creature as King Stephen.
-
-Our Abbot, William Bradford, will not be forgotten by lovers of
-architecture, for under his rule in the fifteenth century the choir of
-our Abbey Church was rebuilt; while to another Abbot, Peter Ramsam, we
-owe, later in the same century, the restoration of our nave. To Abbot
-Mere we are indebted for a little building, which every visitor to
-Sherborne knows, the Conduit, which stands in our old market-place, now
-called by the somewhat affected name of the “Parade.” This conduit,
-though it was built, as we have said, by Abbot Mere (1504-1535), is
-described by one of those omniscient gentlemen who have lately been
-enlightening us about the beauties of Wessex, as “a structure of the
-fourteenth century.” It originally stood on the north side of the nave
-of the Abbey Church, inside the Cloister Court, which is now a part of
-Sherborne School; but it was removed to its present site, or nearly
-its present site, by the school governors in the latter part of the
-sixteenth century. It is to this day the property of the school.
-
-And so we are brought to the time when our ecclesiastical lords, the
-Bishop of Sarum and the Abbot of Sherborne, passed away from us, and
-their places were taken by lay lords. Here, too, we meet with famous
-names. We have the Protector Somerset, to whom, indirectly, Sherborne
-School may owe its post-Reformation endowment. We have, also, Henry,
-Prince of Wales, that “young Marcellus of the House of Stuart,” the
-eldest son of James I., whose hatchment, as that of a squire of
-Sherborne, still hangs in our Abbey Church; we have Walter Ralegh,
-that restless, strenuous soul, whose dearly-loved home Sherborne was,
-where he would gladly have been buried; we have John Digby, first Earl
-of Bristol, whose name stands high among those of English worthies in
-the reigns of James I. and Charles I., a man worthy to have lived in a
-better age, and to have hazarded his all in a better cause. And another
-name insistently presents itself to anyone who has followed Sherborne
-history—that of Hugo Daniel Harper. To him Sherborne town and school
-owe much that is precious and enduring. That a little town like ours
-has kept something of its ancient state, that here we can still so
-easily call back the past of Wessex, can still see standing in beauty
-and dignity these buildings which the Middle Age has left us—all this
-is in no small degree owing to that famous headmaster of Sherborne
-School and to his successors.
-
-We now proceed to write more particularly of the most interesting of
-these ancient buildings and institutions. They are four in number: the
-Abbey Church, the School, the old Castle, and the Almshouse.
-
-With the exception of a small part of the west front of the Abbey
-Church, there is, so far as we can tell, not a single piece of wall
-standing now in Sherborne which was standing in the year 1107, when
-Roger of Caen became Bishop of Sarum and Abbot of Sherborne. We know
-that the doorway, now blocked up, on the north side of the west front
-of the church, and, therefore, also some of the adjoining wall, is
-older than Bishop Roger’s time; but with that exception, we are
-forced to admit that the Norman from Caen pulled down all the rest of
-Ealdhelm’s church. If he left any more of it, either time has destroyed
-this, or he so used the walls that they cannot now be recognised with
-any certainty. At the same time there is a piece of outside wall at the
-north end of the north transept, in the old slype, which looks very
-like pre-Norman work.
-
-The church which Roger built extended as far east as the present church
-does, excluding the lady chapels; for the lady chapel of the thirteenth
-century must have abutted on the Norman east end, just as it now does
-on the Perpendicular ambulatory. The church extended probably rather
-further to the west than the present church does, for there exists
-evidence to show that, before the parish church of All Hallows was
-built on to the west end of the Abbey Church in the fourteenth century,
-the west front of the Abbey Church was embellished with a large porch
-of Norman work.
-
-The chief traces of Roger’s work still existing in the church are the
-piers and arches that carry the tower, the transept walls, the arches
-leading from the transept into the side aisles of the nave, and the
-walls of these aisles. Other interesting traces of Roger’s work will
-be found in the little chapel which projects eastwards from the north
-transept; also in the south and west walls of the early English chapel
-on the north side of the north aisle of the choir, commonly called
-Bishop Roger’s Chapel, and now used as the vestry; these Norman walls
-were outside walls of Roger’s church before this early English addition
-was made. There is also the jamb of a window to be seen on the outside
-of the east wall of the south transept, the only relic which gives us
-an idea of what the Norman clerestory was like.
-
-The choir of Roger’s church extended west of the central tower, and to
-allow room for the stall-work, the shafts of the east and west tower
-arches were corbelled off above the line of the stalls, as may still
-be seen in the existing church. That part of the Abbey nave which lay
-to the west of the Norman choir was used, until the building of All
-Hallows, as the parish church; and the fine Norman south porch, which
-has been rather over-restored in the nineteenth century, was, no doubt,
-a parochial porch, for it faces the town, not the monastic buildings,
-which are on the north side of the church.
-
-The tower up to the floor of the bell-chamber is Norman. Over the
-pier-arches which carry it, except on the east side, there is a passage
-in the thickness of the wall, with an arcade of semi-circular arches
-resting on circular and octagonal shafts, eleven inches in diameter.
-On the east side the Norman pier-arch was removed at the rebuilding of
-the choir in the fifteenth century, and the removal of this arch so
-weakened the tower that its condition in the course of years became
-dangerous. The tower was made secure in 1884-5, and these shafts on the
-north-west and south sides of the lantern, which had been concealed by
-the fifteenth century masonry, were again displayed to view.
-
-A large lady chapel was added in the thirteenth century; the fine Early
-English arch, by which it was entered from the church, may still be
-seen in the east wall of the ambulatory. The centre of this arch is to
-the south of that of the fifteenth century arch, and hence the corbels
-of the Perpendicular vaulting do not correspond at all with the Early
-English arch; one of them is actually constructed to hang as a pendant,
-free of this arch altogether.
-
-The changes made inside the church in the fourteenth century were so
-slight as to need no mention. Outside the church, however, a great
-change took place, for towards the end of this century the church of
-All Hallows was built. The great west porch was pulled down so that
-All Hallows might stand directly against the west front of the Norman
-church. There are still to be seen remnants of All Hallows, viz., the
-lower part of the north wall of the north aisle, and four responds
-built into the west wall of the Abbey Church. When All Hallows was
-standing with its pinnacled western tower, one would have seen a church
-some 350 feet long, with a central and a western tower. This latter
-tower had a ring of bells of its own, at least five in number; and it
-was to this ring of the parish, not to the Abbey, that Wolsey gave our
-great bell.
-
-In the fifteenth century Sherborne saw great things in the way of
-building; not only was the Almshouse then built, but the church also
-underwent those changes which gave it the appearance it keeps to-day.
-The choir was taken down during the last year or two of Abbot John
-Brunyng’s rule, and rebuilt from the ground by his successor, William
-Bradford (1436-1459). During this same century the smaller lady chapel,
-called the Bow Chapel, was built, and the nave restored in the style
-of the time by Abbot Peter Ramsam (1475-1504). To these two men we
-owe our present splendid fabric. Any visitor to Sherborne Abbey can
-for himself easily perceive the differences which mark off the choir
-as a building from the nave. The choir from floor to vault is one
-harmonious piece of work, so lovely, so complete, that the wit of man
-could scarcely design anything finer; while the nave is a compromise,
-for in the nave yet stand the old Norman piers cased in Perpendicular
-panelling, and the effect which the nave gives us is that of two
-stories distinctly marked off the one from the other, the lower story
-bearing strong traces of its Norman origin, the upper or clerestory
-plainly a Perpendicular work, and worthy of the companion clerestory
-of the choir. The pillars of the southern arcade of the nave are not
-opposite those of the northern arcade, and the arches are of different
-widths; the clerestory arches of the nave, on the other hand, are of
-equal widths, and hence the clerestory arches are not directly above
-the arcade arches. This compromise has, however, been effected so
-cleverly that few people notice the irregularity.
-
-The rebuilding of the Abbey Church choir in the fifteenth century
-recalls to our mind the great quarrel between the Abbey and the
-townsfolk, which came to a head in the year 1437. It has already been
-noted that in ancient times the townsfolk had been allowed by the Abbot
-and Convent to use the western part of the Abbey Church nave as a
-parish church. Thus the Abbey Church had become a divided church—part
-was conventual, part parochial. But as time went on this arrangement
-ceased to please one or other, or both, parties, and the consequence
-was that All Hallows was built at the west end of the Abbey Church
-for the use of the parishioners. After this addition was made, the
-large Norman doorway at the west end of the south aisle of the Abbey
-Church nave was narrowed by the insertion of a smaller doorway. Now,
-All Hallows had not the _status_ of a parish church; technically, the
-parish church was still the western part of the Abbey Church nave, and
-here it was still necessary for all Sherborne children to be baptised
-in the font, which originally stood where the present font stands. The
-parishioners, to get to the font, had to enter All Hallows’ Church, and
-pass thence into the Abbey Church through the Norman doorway, which
-had been narrowed. This the parishioners regarded as a grievance. It
-appears, also, that the Abbot had moved the font from the place where
-it now stands to some other site which the parishioners regarded as
-inconvenient. The parishioners, therefore, in 1436, took the law into
-their own hands, and eight of them are charged before the bishop with
-having set up a font in All Hallows. The Abbot, of course, regarded
-this as a usurpation of the rectorial rights of the Convent; he
-complained, also, of another grievance, to wit, that the parish bells
-rang to matins at too early an hour, and disturbed the morning slumbers
-of the monks. For though they got up at midnight to sing matins and
-lauds, they went to bed again, and slept till the hour for prime,
-somewhere between 6 and 7 a.m. Abbot Bradford, therefore, appealed to
-the Bishop of Sarum, Robert Nevile, who came to Sherborne and held
-an inquiry on the 12th November, 1436, in what is now the chapel of
-the school, but was then the Abbot’s hall. He examined one hundred
-or more of the parishioners, many of whom had not approved of the
-high-handed course taken in the matter of the font. After a thorough
-investigation, the Bishop, by the advice of his counsel learned in the
-law, gave his decision from his manor of Ramsbury, on the 8th January,
-1437. It was to this effect—(_a_) that the font in All Hallows was to
-be at once utterly destroyed and removed and carried out of the church
-by those who had caused it to be set there; (_b_) that the ringing of
-the bells to matins for the parishioners throughout the year was not
-to be made till after the sixth hour had struck on the _clocka_ or
-_horologium_ of the monastery, except on the following solemn feasts:
-All Saints, Christmas, Epiphany, and Easter; (_c_) that the font of
-the Abbey Church was to be replaced in its old accustomed position,
-and all infants born or to be born in Sherborne were, as of old, to be
-baptised therein; (_d_) that the intermediate door and entrance for the
-procession of parishioners to the font was to be enlarged and arched
-so as to give ample space and bring it to its original form; (_e_)
-that the manner of the procession and other ceremonies about the font
-were to be observed in the old and wonted way; (_f_) that there must
-be made, at the expense of the monastery, in the nave of the monastic
-church, close to the monks’ choir, a partition, so that there should be
-a distinct line of separation between the monks and the parishioners;
-(_g_) that the replacing of the Abbey Church font in its wonted place,
-and the enlarging of the door, must effectually be completed before the
-following Christmas.
-
-This admirable judgment was not received by the disputants with the
-respect which it deserved; delays and evasions on both sides brought
-about a violent termination of the dispute. The monks induced “one
-Walter Gallor a stoute Bocher dwelling yn Sherborne” to enter All
-Hallows, where “he defacid cleane the Fontstone; the townsmen, aided
-by an Erle of Huntindune lying in these Quarters ... rose in playne
-sedition ... a Preste of Alhalowes shot a shaft with fier into the
-Toppe of that part of St. Marye Church that divided the Est Part that
-the monks usid; and this Partition chauncing at that tyme to be thakked
-yn the Rofe was sette a fier, and consequently al the hole Chirch, the
-Lede and Belles meltid, was defacid.” After the fire the monks were
-induced to agree to the legal transformation of All Hallows’ _Chapel_
-into the parish _Church_, in order to get rid of the parishioners
-altogether.
-
-The monks never removed the smaller doorway by which the old Norman
-entrance was narrowed; there it stands to this day, a monument of that
-stormy time, and connected with it there is still a curious tale to
-tell. Among the eight parishioners who, “casting behind them the fear
-of God,” set up the obnoxious font in All Hallows, and complained of
-the narrowed doorway, there was a certain Richard Vowell. Anyone who
-now examines this doorway will notice that the wall, which now blocks
-it up, is almost wholly occupied by a large monumental tablet to the
-memory of Benjamin Vowell, who died in 1783, and to his three wives;
-thus, as Professor Willis neatly showed, the doorway which in the
-fifteenth century Richard Vowell felt to be too narrow, Benjamin Vowell
-in the eighteenth blocked up altogether. The “partition” referred to,
-which was being thatched, must have been the tower, which was being
-raised in height, and was covered with a temporary roof of thatch to
-keep out the rain; no doubt, also, the new choir, which was already
-built as high as the springing-stones of the vault, was also thatched
-for the same purpose. The reddened stones in the choir and tower still
-bear witness to this fire.
-
-John Barnstaple, last Abbot of Sherborne, surrendered the Abbey into
-the hands of King Henry VIII. on the 18th March, 1539. He received a
-pension of £100 a year, and the Rectory of Stalbridge in 1540; this
-living had been in the patronage of the Abbot and Convent. He died in
-1560; we know neither the place of his death nor of his burial, but
-he certainly was not buried at Stalbridge; he left a small legacy to
-Sherborne School.
-
-Henry VIII. sold the Abbey Church, and the demesne lands of the
-Abbey, to Sir John Horsey, of Clifton Maybank; Sir John, in 1540,
-sold the Abbey Church to the parishioners; the lead, however, with
-which the church was roofed, had not been granted to Sir John, and
-the parishioners had to buy that through him from the King. The
-parishioners appear to have begun at once to sell All Hallows for
-building stone. The parish accounts for 1540 and 1541 are missing, but
-that for 1542-3 shows the process of selling going merrily on, until,
-finally, in the account for 1548-9, we get the last of it in such
-entries as these: “George Swetnam, for vi. yerds off one syde off the
-Tower, xxs.; Robert ffoster, for foundation stones of ye Northe Syde of
-ye Tower, xiiis.; Mr. Sergyer, for a yard off the grace table off the
-sowthe syde and for the dore yn the north syde off ye Tow^{r}, xs.”!
-
-It may be interesting to set down here what the parishioners paid
-for the Abbey Church and lead. We have already noted that the parish
-accounts for 1540 and 1541 are missing. They were not missing,
-however, in the eighteenth century, as is evident from an entry in
-the parish account book in use from 10th April, 1721, to 4th April,
-1809. This entry is due to Francis Fisher, a Sherborne attorney, who
-was steward to the Governors of the School during the years 1720-1730.
-He tells us that by an indenture made the 28th September, 1545,
-between the King on the one part and Sir John Horsey on the other, the
-parishioners paid £230 for the body of the church and tower and for
-the lead. He adds that the parish account rolls give us the following
-information: In 1540 the parish paid £40 for the church, in 1541 £26
-13s. 4d. for the same, in 1541 £17 17s. 6d. for the bells of the
-Abbey, in 1542 £100 for the lead, in 1544 £80 in full payment for the
-church and lead. So that, if the King got in 1545 £230, and the parish
-actually paid £264 10s. 10d., Sir John put into his pocket the balance.
-However we may regard this matter, the parishioners of Sherborne made
-an excellent bargain.
-
-No man can doubt but that the dissolution of the monastery meant
-serious loss to Sherborne. Its Abbots had ruled wisely and well, as
-far as we can judge, a strip of territory stretching, though not in an
-unbroken line, from Stalbridge to Exmouth. Anyone who will make for
-himself a map of the manors in Dorset and Devon belonging to our Abbey,
-will see that this is so; and besides these, our Abbey held other lands
-as well, so that when Sherborne ceased to be the _caput_ of this fair
-estate, much that had once come our way ceased to come hither any more.
-Though the presence of the school here has in later times done much to
-redeem this loss, one cannot say that it has entirely done so.
-
-[Illustration: THE ENTRANCE TO SHERBORNE SCHOOL.]
-
-Of all the ancient institutions in Sherborne, that one which has kept
-its dwelling-place longest, which is to-day what it was before Wessex
-became one with England, is Sherborne School. The old Castle is a ruin,
-the Almshouse dates only from the fifteenth century, the Abbey
-Church became the parish church only in 1540. But the School, though it
-suffered pecuniary loss in 1539 by the dissolution of the monastery,
-suffered no breach of continuity; it was in existence when the
-Almshouse was founded, it educated St. Stephen Harding in the eleventh
-century, and we have no reason to think that its existence suffered
-any break from Ealdhelm’s day till then. A school with such a history
-may well call forth some reverence from those who love Wessex and know
-something of its history. Our school has roots which stretch down into
-the very beginnings of things Christian among the West Saxons, and
-there is certainly no existing school in Wessex that can rival its
-claim to antiquity.
-
-Sherborne School is fortunate in possessing many ancient documents
-illustrative of its history; among these special mention must be made
-of a series of accounts commencing in 1553 and continuing to the
-present time. Only eleven are missing. Till towards the end of the
-eighteenth century they are written on rolls of parchment, and are for
-the most part in excellent condition. Besides these there are a few
-early court rolls of the school manors at Bradford Bryan and Barnesby,
-Lytchett Matravers and Gillingham, and schedules and leases of its
-other lands. Among these documents, too, are records belonging to the
-old chantries, with the lands, of which Edward VI. endowed the school;
-some of these go back to the reign of Henry VII.
-
-There is no existing minute book of the governors’ proceedings older
-than that which begins in 1592; but, luckily, a draft of minutes exists
-relating to the years 1549 and 1550, relating, that is to say, to the
-time of transition from the old condition of things which obtained
-before the dissolution of the monastery, to the new condition created
-by the charter granted to the school by Edward VI. The series of minute
-books from 1592 onward is complete.
-
-From the school statutes much can be gathered about the character
-of the education given in the school. The oldest statutes of the
-post-Reformation epoch are lost; they were based, as we learn from the
-accounts, on those drawn up by Dean Colet for his school, once attached
-to St. Paul’s Cathedral. In 1592, however, a new set was drawn up for
-the School of Sherborne by its visitor, Richard Fletcher, Bishop of
-Bristol, who, as Dean of Peterborough some years before, had imposed on
-him the terrible task of attending Queen Mary Stuart on the scaffold.
-Great stress is laid in these statutes on the “abolishing of the Pope
-of Rome and all fforrein powers superiorities and authorities.” From
-time to time after this new statutes were made to suit the changing
-educational and political views. The statutes all still exist, except
-those made in 1650 by the Puritans; of these all trace is lost, except
-the bill for engrossing them, which amounted to 25s. Statutes were
-drawn up in 1662 by Gilbert Ironside, Bishop of Bristol, which the
-Governors were unwilling to accept, because by these statutes the
-headmaster was protected from arbitrary interference on the part of the
-Governors. It was not till 1679 that Bishop William Gulston succeeded
-in making them accept a new body of statutes, which contain almost all
-that Gilbert Ironside proposed, together with some additional matter.
-In Bishop Ironside’s draft and Bishop Gulston’s statutes, it is laid
-down that it is never lawful “for subjects to take up armes ag^{t}
-theire Soveraigne upon any pretence w^{t}soever.” The language used in
-and out of school in all official matters was Latin, and no scholar was
-to go about the town alone, but with “a companion one of the Schollars
-that may be a witness of his conversation and behaviour under penalty
-of correction.” The system of monitorial rule has always been in
-vogue in the school; in 1592 these rulers are called _Impositores_—a
-somewhat awkward term one must admit; in 1662 and 1679 they are called
-_Prepositores_; nowadays they are called _Prefects_. In 1679 they were
-four in number: “One for discipline in the Schoole, to see all the
-Schollars demeane themselves regularly there, the Second for manners
-both in the Schoole and abroad any where, the Third for the Churche and
-Fields, the Fourth to be _Ostiarius_, to sitt by the doore, to give
-answere to strangers and to keepe the rest from running out.”
-
-When the assizes were held at Sherborne, the judge sat in what is now
-the schoolhouse dining-hall—it was then the big schoolroom; and just
-before the assizes took place, we get from time to time an entry of the
-following kind in the school accounts: “for washinge of ye King, 6d.”
-The King referred to is the statue of Edward VI., which still adorns
-the room; it is of painted Purbeck marble, and is the work of a certain
-Godfrey Arnold; it cost £9 5s. 4d., and was set up in 1614.
-
-The two royal coats of arms, which may still be seen on the south wall
-of the old house of the headmaster, and over the south door of the
-schoolhouse dining-hall, were taken down by order of a Commonwealth
-official in 1650; but they were carefully preserved, and were restored
-to their old positions at the Restoration. That on the old house dates
-from 1560; that on the dining-hall from 1607. They used to be bright
-with tinctures and metals, but since 1670 they have been “only washed
-over with oil or some sad colour, without any more adorning.” The
-chronogram on the dining-hall is unique, for it can be made to give two
-different dates, according to the ways in which the significant letters
-are taken. Mr. Hilton, our chief authority on chronograms, knows of
-no other which gives two dates in this fashion. The first date which
-our chronogram gives is 1550, the date of the granting of the charter;
-the second date which it gives is 1670, that of the rebuilding of the
-dining-hall.
-
-Among other school buildings of ancient date we must not omit the
-library, partly of the thirteenth century, but certainly restored in
-the fifteenth; and the school chapel, with its undercroft of the
-twelfth century, and its upper story of the fifteenth. The undercroft
-is a very precious relic of the past, but the school chapel, which was
-once the Abbot’s Hall, has undergone changes and additions; it still
-keeps its fine fifteenth century timber roof. The library, on the other
-hand, has gone through little change. It was the Guest House of the
-Monastery, and has kept its timber roof of the fifteenth century. It
-is curious that the windows on the east side of the room are not quite
-opposite those on the west side, nor is the divergence uniform; the
-large window in the south end of the room is not in the middle of the
-wall, but rather towards the west side.
-
-The modern buildings of the school harmonize well with the older work,
-for they are all built of the same lovely stone, and the style in which
-they are built, though it is in no sense an imitation of this older
-work, is yet in harmony with and worthy of it. One of these buildings
-deserves more than passing notice, viz., the new big schoolroom,
-completed in 1879. The whole group of buildings, with its surroundings,
-classrooms, museum, laboratory, drawing school, music house, Morris
-tube range, bath and fives courts, deserves more attention than it
-usually gets from visitors to Sherborne. These sojourners often forget
-that the north side of the exterior of the church is likely to be as
-interesting as the south side; if once they take the trouble to get to
-this north side, they will be surprised to find how much fine work,
-ancient and modern, is to be seen there.
-
-Sherborne Old Castle is situated on an elevated piece of ground to the
-east of the town; this ground is about 300 yards long by 150 yards
-broad; the surface has been made level, and an oval area, 150 yards
-long by 105 yards broad, has been traced out, and its edges scarped
-to a steep slope, with a ditch about 45 feet deep. The material taken
-away in forming this scarp and ditch has been thrown outward, so that
-the counter scarp is formed of a mound more or less artificial. It was
-within this area, above described, that our Pageant of 1905 was given.
-
-The remains of the Castle are as follows: parts of the curtain wall,
-with the gatehouse, the keep, the chapel and hall, along with other
-parts of the domestic buildings—all ruinous. The builder of this
-castle was Bishop Roger; and William of Malmesbury, who knew it well,
-has described the masonry in glowing terms. All that remains is of
-this Norman period, though it was somewhat restored and altered
-in the fifteenth century. The keep belongs to the class of square
-keeps. To judge from two windows of the chapel which still remain
-in a fragmentary condition, that building must have been of a very
-ornate character. The barrel vaulting of the basement of the keep is
-worth study, and a Norman pillar, still standing and supporting a
-quadripartite vault, is well known to students of architecture. There
-is also a Norman chimney with three flues in the gatehouse.
-
-The ruinous condition of the Castle is not so much due to time as to
-gunpowder, for in 1645, after the Castle was taken by Fairfax, it was
-blown up by order of the Long Parliament, so as to be no longer tenable
-as a fortress. After this, while the troops of the Parliament occupied
-Sherborne, their barracks were the school, and their “Court of Guard”
-the schoolhouse dining-hall.
-
-This is not the place to deal with the vicissitudes in the tenure of
-Sherborne Castle—how the Bishops of Sherborne lost and regained it.
-It finally passed from Bishop Henry Cotton into the hands of Queen
-Elizabeth in 1599. Sir Walter Ralegh had, however, been tenant of it
-since 1592, and when Queen Elizabeth got the fee-simple of it, she
-gave it to Ralegh. Ralegh, however, did not care to live in it; other
-magnates in this part of the world were building fine modern houses,
-and he followed their example. Thus arose the modern Castle, known in
-former days as Sherborne Lodge, on the other side of the lake, the
-central and loftier part of which is due to Ralegh. There is no trace
-of any evidence that Sherborne Castle was ever besieged before the
-great Civil War. It was used at times in the Middle Ages as a prison;
-for example, in King John’s reign. King John himself stayed here in
-1207 and in 1216.
-
-After some tragic vicissitudes the Sherborne estate came to the Digbys
-in 1617, and since this date, with the exception of the troublous
-period of the great Civil War, it has remained with them.
-
-Sherborne Castle was twice besieged during the Civil War, first
-in 1642, and again in 1645. The first siege was uneventful and
-unimportant. In 1644 Charles I. had been here after his successful
-campaign in the West; Prince Rupert, too, had come, and there had
-been great doings with reviews of men in Sherborne Park, after which
-followed the second battle of Newbury and the self-denying ordinance
-and the creation of the New Model. The second siege, that of 1645, was
-more important; not only was Fairfax drawn hither by it, but Cromwell,
-too, came as general of cavalry. Though the Parliamentary troops
-destroyed much of the old castle that we should like to see standing
-now, we must, on the whole, acquit them of having done any great injury
-to the buildings of the church or school.
-
-In 1688, King William III.—then Prince of Orange—on his advance from
-Exeter to London, stayed in the modern castle here; his proclamation to
-the English people is said to have been printed in the drawing-room at
-a printing-press set up on the great hearth-stone, which was cracked by
-it.
-
-Let us now turn to the last of our four ancient institutions, viz., the
-Almshouse. This institution is certainly older than the year 1437, in
-which year, by a license from King Henry VI. to Robert Nevile, Bishop
-of Sarum, to Humfrey Stafford, Kt., Margaret Goghe, John Fauntleroy,
-and John Baret, it was refounded in honour of St. John the Baptist and
-St. John the Evangelist. It is actually older than this, because some
-accounts of the charity exist for a few years prior to this date. Some
-day, no doubt, the history of the institution will be more fully worked
-out than it is at present. Plenty of material exists in its account
-rolls which could hardly fail to throw light on old Sherborne life.
-
-According to the deed of foundation, there were, we are told, to be
-twenty brethren, called the Masters of SS. Johns’ House—they are now
-called master and brethren—together with a perpetual priest to pray
-for the good estate and the souls of the founders and inmates. The
-house was to contain twelve poor men and four poor women, who were
-to be governed by one of themselves, called the Prior, of their own
-election, and a woman of domestic ability was to buy their food and
-dress it, wash their clothes and make their beds, who should be called
-the Housewife of SS. Johns’ House. The older part of the building was
-finished in 1448, and here still stand, not much altered from what
-they were then, the chapel, ante-chapel, and dining-hall, with a long
-dormitory over the dining-hall; this dormitory used to open into the
-chapel, so that the sick and infirm might hear the service, and, so far
-as they could, join in it. The chapel contains an interesting triptych
-of the fifteenth century by a Flemish artist, name unknown. One cannot
-imagine a more desirable haven of rest than this for those who are
-fortunate enough to become its inmates.
-
-Enough has now been told to show that among old English towns Sherborne
-holds a peculiarly interesting place. It still keeps much of its
-old-world look and ancient dignity, and its inhabitants, many of whom
-bear the names of the old stock who were living here in in the time
-of Henry VI., are a kindly race, among whom it is a pleasure and a
-privilege to live.
-
-
-
-
-MILTON ABBEY
-
-BY THE REV. HERBERT PENTIN, M.A.
-
-
-The county of Dorset is one of the few counties in England that contain
-three great minsters in good repair and in parochial use—Sherborne,
-Wimborne, and Milton. And each of these minsters is of Saxon and
-Royal foundation. King Athelstan, the grandson of Alfred the Great,
-founded the Monastery and Collegiate Church of Milton for Secular
-Canons, in or about the year 938. In the year 964 King Edgar and
-Archbishop Dunstan of Canterbury converted the monastery into an abbey,
-with forty Benedictine monks, and chose a very able man, Cynewearde
-(or Kynewardus), as the first Abbot. This Cynewearde, a few years
-afterwards, to the loss of Milton, was made Bishop of Wells.
-
-The original minster built by Athelstan was a noble stone building of
-its time, and was very rich in shrines and relics. The King gave a
-piece of our Saviour’s Cross, a great cross of gold and silver with
-precious stones, and many bones of the saints, which were placed in
-five gilt shrines. The bones of his mother were also brought to the
-church (for burial). We also know that the Saxon Minster was restored
-and enlarged, if not rebuilt, in Norman times. It has been reasonably
-conjectured that the size of the Norman Abbey was that of the choir
-and presbytery of the present church. Some large fragments of Norman
-masonry have been dug up,[23] which show that the Norman Abbey was a
-building of some considerable architectural pretensions; and encased
-in the south wall of the present choir and presbytery are the remains
-of two enriched Norman arches which escaped destruction in the fire of
-1309. In that year the church was struck by lightning, and was almost
-entirely burnt to the ground. Thirteen years later, however, under
-Abbot Walter Archer, the present Abbey Church was commenced on the same
-site, but on a much larger and grander scale; and building operations
-went on, from time to time, until within a short period before the
-Dissolution in 1539.
-
-[Illustration: MILTON ABBEY.]
-
-[Illustration: KING ATHELSTAN.
-Founder of Milton Abbey.
-(_From a Painting in the Church._)]
-
-[Illustration: “ATHELSTAN’S MOTHER.”
-Buried in Milton Abbey.
-(_From a Painting in the Church._)]
-
-The following styles of architecture are represented in the main
-portions of the church, built of stone from Ham Hill and Tisbury:—First
-Decorated, the choir and presbytery of seven bays, with aisles; Second
-Decorated, the south transept; Third Decorated, the two western piers
-of the “crossing”; Perpendicular, the north transept and central tower.
-The Perpendicular work was undertaken by the penultimate Abbot, William
-de Middleton, assisted by Bishop Thomas Langton, of Salisbury and of
-Winchester, the Abbey of Cerne, and the families of Bingham, Coker,
-Latimer, Morton, and others.
-
-At the Dissolution, the Abbey estates were granted by Henry VIII. to
-Sir John Tregonwell, who had helped to procure the King’s divorce from
-Catharine of Aragon; but the whole of the Abbey Church was preserved
-for the parishioners, with the exception of the Ladye Chapel, which
-was pulled down, although some of its vaulting shafts can still be
-seen outside the east end of the church. The last of the Abbots (John
-Bradley, B.D.), after leaving Milton in Tregonwell’s hands, was
-consecrated Suffragan Bishop of St. Asaph, with the title of Bishop
-of Shaftesbury,[24] and the Abbey Church of Milton then passed under
-the sole spiritual control of Richard Hall, Vicar of Milton, and his
-successors.
-
-[Illustration: MILTON ABBEY: INTERIOR.]
-
-Unfortunately, the Abbey underwent a “restoration” in 1789, when the
-church was despoiled of many of its fittings; and chantry chapels
-and other valuable objects of interest went down under the hand of
-the “restorer.” But Sir Gilbert Scott, in 1865, restored the church
-at the expense of the late Baron Hambro, and left the Abbey in
-its present beautiful condition, and, as far as was possible, in its
-original state.
-
-[Illustration: THE TABERNACLE.]
-
-The view of the church at the beginning of this chapter will save the
-necessity of a description of its exterior. But the interior contains
-many things which demand notice.
-
-And first of all must be mentioned the “ornament,” which many
-antiquaries consider to be a Tabernacle for reserving the Eucharist.
-This very beautiful and richly carved “Sacrament-house” dates from the
-fifteenth century, and is made of oak in the form of a spire composed
-of four storeys, the lowest containing the opening through which the
-reserved elements may have been passed. It is not in its original
-position, but is now fastened to the west wall of the south transept
-beneath the triforium.
-
-The great altar-screen is a very lofty, beautiful, and peculiarly rich
-construction, even though the two long rows of ornamental niches now
-lack the statues of the saints that once stood in them—saints with
-“very bluff countenances, painted in very bright colours and heavily
-gilded.” On its lower portion there is a Latin inscription, which bids
-prayers for the souls of William Middleton, Abbot of Milton, and Thomas
-Wilken, Vicar of the parish, who worthily decorated (“_honorifice
-depinxerunt_”) the screen in 1492. The three stone sedilia in the
-sanctuary are fine specimens. The bosses throughout the church are of
-very rich design.
-
-The Abbey also contains two fifteenth century oil paintings of a
-crude description, one of which represents Athelstan, the founder,
-giving to the first head of the monastery a model of the minster
-(with three spires)[25] over which he was to preside. The other
-painting is supposed to represent Athelstan’s mother—Egwynna, “_femina
-illustris_.”[26]
-
-The tombs of the abbots within the Abbey are most interesting. In
-front of the altar steps there is a Purbeck marble grave-slab of the
-fourteenth century, which was once inlaid with the brass figure of an
-abbot clad in _pontificalia_, with a marginal Latin inscription in
-Lombardic capitals:
-
- ABBA : VALTERE : TE : FATA : CITO : RAPVERE : TE : RADINGA : DEDIT :
- SED : MORS : MALE : NOS : TVA : LEDIT.
-
-This is the slab of an Abbot of Milton whose Christian name was Walter,
-and who was formerly a monk of Reading, probably Walter de Sydelinge,
-who died in 1315. In the north transept there is a thirteenth century
-grave-slab of another abbot. This slab is also of Purbeck marble, but
-the upper portion is broken off. The remaining portion shows part of
-an incised figure of an abbot, with pastoral staff, chasuble, stole,
-maniple, alb, and an imperfect marginal inscription in Norman French:
-
- VVS ⁝ KI ⁝ PAR ⁝ I ⁝ CI ⁝ PASSET ⁝ PVR ⁝ LEALME ⁝ PRIE...
- ...RCI ⁝ LISET ⁝ LE ⁝ PARDVN ⁝ I ⁝ CI[27]
-
-There are other large marble grave-slabs, without inscriptions, in the
-church, which are supposed to cover abbots, monks, and benefactors.
-On some there are the matrices of missing brasses. One, in front of
-the altar steps, shows the outline of a civilian in a plain gown, and
-his wife wearing a “butterfly” head-dress, with their five sons and
-four daughters, _circa_ 1490. In St. John the Baptist’s Chapel, at the
-east end of the north aisle of the church, there is a small fifteenth
-century brass to John Artur, one of the monks of the Abbey, with a
-Latin inscription, which bids God have mercy on his soul. In the same
-chapel, a very fine coloured armorial brass over Sir John Tregonwell’s
-altar-tomb contains the latest tabard example on a brass in England
-(1565).[28]
-
-But to mention all the ancient or modern memorials (some of wondrous
-beauty, such as those of Lord and Lady Milton, and Baron Hambro) would
-take far too much space. A marble tablet in the vestry informs the
-reader that John Tregonwell, Esquire, who died in the year 1680, “by
-his last will and testament gave all the bookes within this vestry to
-the use of this Abby Church for ever, as a thankfuld acknowledgement of
-God’s wonderfull mercy in his preservation when he fell from the top
-of this Church.” This incident happened when he was a child; he was
-absolutely uninjured, his stiff skirts having acted as a parachute.[29]
-The chained library of sixty-six leather-bound volumes comprises the
-works of the Latin and Greek Fathers and other early Christian writers,
-and some standard theological works of the seventeenth century. The
-books have been kept at the vicarage for many years.
-
-[Illustration: ABBOT MIDDLETON’S REBUS.]
-
-The abbey now contains very little painted glass.[30] There is a
-large “Jesse window” by the elder Pugin in the south transept, and
-some coloured coats of arms and devices of kings, nobles, and abbots
-in some of the other windows. The dwarfed east window contains the
-only pre-Reformation glass in the church.[31] The Abbatial Arms are
-emblazoned in several parts of the building. They consist of three
-baskets of bread, each containing three loaves. On one of the walls in
-the south aisle, near the vestry, there is the carved coloured rebus of
-Abbot William de Middleton, with the date 1514 in Arabic numerals—the
-4 being represented by half an eight. It comprises the letter W with a
-pastoral staff, and a windmill on a large cask—in other words, a mill
-and a tun (Mil-ton). The old miserere seats still remain in the choir,
-but the carving thereon is not very elaborate, and many of them have
-been renewed. The inscriptions on the Communion plate (which consists
-of two large silver barrel-shaped flagons, a bell-shaped chalice, and
-a large and a small paten) tell us that “John Chappell, Sitteson and
-Stationer of London, 1637,” and “Mary Savage, 1658,” and “Maddam Jane
-Tregonwell, widdow, 1675,” gave these to “Milton Abby.”
-
-There are several other interesting things in the church, albeit not
-ancient—_e.g._, the rood-loft, the font, and the pulpit.
-
-The rood-loft, although not entirely ancient, is composed of ancient
-materials. When the party-walls of St. John the Baptist’s Chapel,
-the chantry of Abbot William de Middleton, and other side-chapels,
-were destroyed or mutilated at the “restoration” in 1789, some of the
-materials were used to reconstruct the rood-loft. The eastern cornice,
-for instance, is probably a portion of Abbot Middleton’s chantry, and
-bears thirteen coats of arms, including those of the Abbeys of Milton,
-Sherborne, and Abbotsbury, and the families of Chidiock, Latimer, Lucy,
-Stafford of Hooke, Thomas of Woodstock, and others.
-
-The font of the Abbey, in the south transept, is modern, but of unusual
-design. It is composed of two beautiful life-sized white marble female
-figures, representing Faith and Victory, with a baptismal shell at
-their feet.
-
-Near the font is an oak case containing a fourteenth century coffin
-chalice and paten, and fragments of a wooden pastoral staff and
-sandals, discovered during the restoration of the church in 1865.[32]
-
-The pulpit is also modern, of carved oak; but it is interesting,
-because it contains statues of all the patron saints connected with the
-Abbey and the parish, and of these there are no fewer than six, viz.:
-St. Sampson of Dol, St. Branwalader,[33] St. Mary the Blessed Virgin,
-St. Michael the warrior-archangel, St. Catherine of Alexandria, and St.
-James the Great.
-
-St. Catherine of Alexandria is the patron-saint of “King Athelstan’s
-Chapel,” which stands in the woods at the top of the hill to the east
-of the Abbey. And this little church has also had a history well worth
-the telling. When Athelstan was fighting for his throne he had to pass
-through the county of Dorset, and he encamped on Milton Hill, and threw
-up an earthwork, or made use of one already existing there, the remains
-of which can still be seen beyond the east end of the chapel. During
-the night he believed that some supernatural revelation was made to
-him, assuring him that he would conquer his many enemies and become
-King of all England. He pushed on, and at Brunanburh, “Christ helping
-him, he had the victory, and there slew five kings and seven earls”
-(_Saxon Chronicle_). The song commemorating this important and decisive
-victory is given in the _Old English Chronicle_; and the first stanza
-of Professor Freeman’s version and that of Lord Tennyson reads thus:
-
- Now Æthelstan King,
- Of Earls the Lord,
- In warriors the ring giver
- And his brother eke,
- Eadmund Ætheling,
- Eld-long glory
- Won in the fight
- With the swords’ edge
- By Brunanburh,
- The boardwall they clave,
- And hewed the war-linden,
- With hammer’s leavings
- Offspring of Eadward.
- _Freeman._
-
- Athelstan King,
- Lord among Earls,
- Bracelet bestower and
- Baron of Barons,
- He, with his brother
- Edmund Atheling
- Gaining a life-long
- Glory in battle,
- Slew with the sword-edge
- There by Brunanburh,
- Brake the shield-wall,
- Hew’d the linderwood,
- Hack’d the battle-shield,
- Sons of Edward, with hammer’d brands.
- _Tennyson._
-
-[Illustration: ST. CATHERINE’S CHAPEL.]
-
-Athelstan, being a thoroughly religious man, as well as a great
-warrior, expressed his thankfulness to God in the way usual in
-those times. He founded the monastery at Milton, and erected the
-_ecclesiola_, afterwards dedicated to St. Catherine, within the
-entrenchment where he received the remarkable revelation. Chapels on
-the top of hills were often dedicated to St. Catherine of Alexandria,
-on account of the legend which tells that St. Catherine’s body was
-buried by angels on Mount Sinai. Other instances, in many places,
-of this dedication with its connection still remain—in Dorset, for
-example, at Abbotsbury and Holworth. The little church at Milton did
-its work in Saxon times, and then underwent a considerable restoration
-in Norman days. It also underwent a lesser restoration in the early
-part of the sixteenth century. As it stands at present, it consists
-of a nave and chancel. The main walls, which are very thick, and the
-door arches are Norman. On the west jamb of the south door there is
-a curious and rare inscription in Lombardic capitals relating to an
-indulgence:
-
- INDVLGENCIA ⁝ H’ ⁝ SC̄I ⁝ LOCI ⁝ C ⁝ E ⁝ X ⁝ DIES ⁝[34]
-
-The windows in the nave are Early Norman and Perpendicular. The old
-west front was taken down for some reason in the eighteenth century,
-and at this time an effigy of a monk in his habit (lying along and
-resting on his hands, looking down at the Abbey below) was destroyed.
-Some paintings also perished at the same time. The chancel was also
-partly rebuilt, and the roof raised, but the Transition-Norman
-chancel-arch was preserved. On the south side of the altar is a
-pedestal, on which the statue of St. Catherine may have formerly
-stood. The encaustic tiles in the chancel were removed from the Abbey
-Church in the year 1865. Some of these mediæval tiles are heraldic,
-and contain the arms of the See of Exeter, the Earls of Cornwall,
-Gloucester and Hertford, and others. A tile manufactured at Malvern has
-an inscription and date, 1456.
-
-In pre-Reformation days King Athelstan’s Chapel was possibly used as
-the _capella extra portas_—the chapel, that is, outside the gates of
-the monastery, at which strangers and women who were not admitted
-within the gates might hear Mass. That women used St. Catherine’s
-Chapel for another purpose is also possible. St. Catherine is the
-patron-saint of spinsters, and in days gone by she was supposed to
-have the power of finding a husband for those who sought her aid. The
-following Milton rhymes in use to-day may be echoes of the mediæval
-Latin doggerels:—
-
- St. Catherine, St. Catherine, O lend me thine aid,
- And grant that I never may die an old maid.
-
- A husband, St. Catherine,
- A _good_ one, St. Catherine;
- But arn-a-one better than
- Narn-a-one, St. Catherine.
-
- Sweet St. Catherine,
- A husband, St. Catherine,
- Handsome, St. Catherine,
- Rich, St. Catherine,
- _Soon_, St. Catherine.
-
-After the Reformation the chapel was allowed to decay and to become
-desecrated. In the eighteenth century there is a record that it was
-being used as a pigeon-house. Then, when more houses were needed
-in the parish, the “Chapel Royal” was turned into a labourer’s
-cottage—the interior was whitewashed, and a ceiling added; the chancel
-became a bedroom, and the nave a living room, with a kitchen grate
-and chimney affixed. Afterwards the little church was used as a
-carpenter’s workshop, and then as a lumber store. But, in 1901, the
-neglected building was cleaned out, and a service was held there on
-St. Catherine’s night (November 25th). The parishioners assembled in
-the building, the roof of which was full of holes (admitting ivy,
-wind and wet), the windows had long been broken, and the south wall
-was dangerously bulging. Confession of wrong was made for the past
-desecrations, and prayers were offered that the Church of St. Catherine
-might for the future be reverently treated as a “holy place” (as the
-Indulgence-inscription calls it); and, happily, the building has since
-been most conservatively restored by Mr. Everard Hambro, the lord of
-the manor. Thus, the little church which commemorates a very critical
-event in the early history of England has been saved from further
-desecration and
-
-[Illustration: THE SEA-SIDE HAMLET OF MILTON.
-_Holworth, in 1827, showing the Burning Cliff._]
-
-decay; and King Athelstan’s Chapel is once again used for the service
-of God, while remaining a valuable historic relic of Saxon days.
-
-[Illustration: LISCOMBE CHAPEL.]
-
-Another _capella_ belonging to the Abbey, but now in private ownership,
-has been less fortunate. Liscombe Chapel,[35] in the parish of Milton,
-five miles from the Abbey Church and two miles from Chesilborne, is
-still desecrated. This little building, built principally of flint,
-stone, and large blocks of rock chalk, is entire, and consists of
-chancel and nave, divided by a handsome Transition-Norman arch, with
-massive rounded columns. The east window and the two other chancel
-windows are Norman, with some later work inserted. But the chapel of
-Liscombe has been desecrated for a long time. The nave thereof is now
-used as a bakehouse (there is a large open grate, oven, and chimney in
-the centre), and the chancel is used as a log-house. A flight of stone
-stairs has been erected in the chancel, which leads to the bedrooms
-over the bakehouse and log-house. The bedrooms have been ceiled, and
-the whole interior of the little church has been whitewashed, including
-the handsome chancel arch; the roof of the building is of thatch. An
-old stone sundial is preserved in the west wall. Warne, in his _Ancient
-Dorset_, states that the chapel is credited with being “tenanted by
-a supernatural visitor”; and this is still believed by the country
-folk. The house adjoining this desecrated sanctuary is also ancient,
-and built chiefly of flint and stone. It possesses several interesting
-windows of various dates (including a _loup_ in the east wall), and
-an old stone sundial on its south wall. The interior contains some
-oak-work, portions of which may be pre-Reformation. This house is now
-used as a labourer’s cottage; but there is a tradition that it was
-formerly inhabited by the monks, who ministered (“_Divina celebrant_:”)
-in the little church. And the building itself, from its position and
-evident antiquity, lends colour to the tradition; but there are marks
-that it became the manor farmhouse after the Dissolution. There is
-also a tradition that the stream which now runs through the hamlet
-of Liscombe was formerly larger than it is now, and that there were
-fish-ponds close by, and that the monks at Liscombe supplied their
-overlord, the Abbot of Milton, with fresh-water fish.
-
-Milton Abbey also possessed three other Norman _capellae_—in Woolland,
-Whitcombe, and Holworth respectively; but Woolland is now a separate
-ecclesiastical parish; Whitcombe is a donative held by the Rector
-of Came (it was held for many years by William Barnes, the Dorset
-poet); and Holworth, alone of the three, still remains a part of the
-ecclesiastical parish of Milton.
-
-Holworth is sixteen miles from the Abbey Church, and now possesses a
-modern chapel, on a hill near the “Burning Cliff,” known as the Chapel
-of St. Catherine-by-the-Sea. It is said that in days gone by the monks
-at Holworth supplied their Abbot, at Milton, with salt-water fish.
-The hamlet of Holworth, overlooking Weymouth Bay and Portland Roads,
-has been well described as resting in “a most lonely and most lovely
-valley by the sea, an earthly paradise, which those who have discovered
-cherish and dream about. It is far away from the haunts of men, and
-remote from the cares of life; where the newspaper is two days’ old
-before it invades the religious calm of a mind attuned by the most
-exquisite scenery to rise to thoughts above this world; where one may
-walk along the undulating downs that skirt the Channel, held in place
-by parapets of cliff that break down straight into the sea; where one
-may walk mile after mile on natural lawn and not meet a soul—just one’s
-self, the birds, the glorious scenery, and God.”[36]
-
-The hamlet of Holworth is, indeed, worthy of being a portion of the
-parish that is acknowledged to be one of the most beautiful places
-in Dorset. The village of Milton lies enfolded between richly-wooded
-hills, at the foot of a wonderfully picturesque descent. Sir Frederick
-Treves, in his _Highways and Byways in Dorset_, says that “there is
-nothing like to it in any part of England.” He calls it a “surprising”
-village, “a toy town.” The first impression on seeing it “is one of
-amazement, for the place is both extraordinary and unexpected.” Each
-of the houses is of the same pattern, and each is separated from the
-others by a chestnut tree. The builder of this unique village, as will
-be seen, was Joseph, Lord Milton (afterwards Earl of Dorchester). The
-old town of Milton lay near the south side of the Abbey Church; but
-the ancient town was pulled down by Lord Milton about the year 1780,
-as it was too close to his new mansion (in which he had incorporated
-the magnificent fifteenth century monastic refectory), and proved an
-annoyance to him. The death, in 1775, of his wife (“the most noble and
-most excellent Lady Caroline, Lady Milton, daughter of Lyonel, Duke
-of Dorset, the wisest and most lovely, the best and most virtuous of
-women”), to whom he was passionately attached, and the suicide, in
-the following year, of his eldest son (the husband of “the beautiful
-Anne Seymour Damer”[37]), probably had a hardening influence on Lord
-Milton’s character, and made him use his giant’s strength tyrannously
-like a giant. At any rate, he swept away the old town, and the “new
-town” was then built, further off, as a substitute. Some fragmentary
-particulars of the old town of Milton have been gathered together,[38]
-which perhaps are of sufficient interest to be reproduced here.
-
-The old town was one of the most ancient in Dorset. It grew up with the
-Abbey, and was known as Middleton (of which Milton is a contraction),
-because it was the middle town of the county. It contained shops of all
-kinds, four inns, a pre-Reformation Grammar School, almshouses built in
-1674, and a brewery, which helped to supply Weymouth, Poole, and other
-large towns in Dorset. Milton Abbey ales were at one time among the
-most famous in the county; they could also be obtained in London. The
-tradesmen of old Milton were prosperous, but the “working classes” were
-very poor. Their staple food was barley cake; and to keep down expenses
-they saved every morsel of fat and made their own candles in pewter
-moulds. Two, if not more, of the leading shopkeepers issued “tokens” in
-the seventeenth century,[39] specimens of which exist; and among the
-old parish papers are a number of apprenticeship indentures which bound
-poor boys to various tradesmen in the place. The girls of the parish
-were taught to spin.
-
-[Illustration: MILTON ABBEY, IN THE YEAR 1733.
-_Showing the old Monastic house on the left, and the old town on the
-right of the church._]
-
-The handsome fifteenth century market cross was one of the finest in
-the kingdom, quite worthy of its position near the Abbey Church. It
-had an ascent of no fewer than thirty steps. Its site is marked in the
-present park by a very massive octagonal socket stone, which is said to
-be a portion of the original cross. The parish registers state that,
-in the days of the Commonwealth, banns of marriage were published “in
-the markett.”[40] The weekly market was well attended, it being the
-central market of the county, and was held around the market cross.
-The annual fair was held on St. Sampson’s Eve and Day, July 27th and
-28th, St. Sampson being the chief patron saint of the Abbey. This fair,
-like the market, was granted by King Athelstan; but it was practically
-discontinued when the old town was pulled down.
-
-The sports in old Milton were badger-baiting under the cedar trees
-in the Abbey churchyard; cock-squailing, cock-fighting, and “fives,”
-outside the west end of the church; bowls were played on the bowling
-green, and ringing was very popular. The ringers only claimed “bread
-and beare” for their services each year—on the Restoration Day of
-Charles II. (May 29th), on Guy Fawkes’ Day (November 5th), and on
-Christmas Day. They were also paid on special occasions, such as “for
-ringing ye Bishope throu Towne”; but episcopal visits were rare. During
-Lent the children went “shroving” and “Lent crocking.” On Shrove
-Tuesday the children, carrying sticks, knocked at the doors of the
-principal residents and repeated this doggerel verse:
-
- Please I’ve come a-shroving
- For a piece of pancake,
- Or a little ruckle cheese
- Of your own making.
- If you don’t give me some,
- If you don’t give me none,
- I’ll knock down your door
- With a great marrow bone
- And a-way I’ll run.
-
-The result of this threat was that the children were given hot
-half-pence, apples, eggs, a piece of pancake, or a hunch of
-ruckle-cheese. A ruckle-cheese was a small sour-milk home-made cheese,
-weighing about one pound. It could be ruckled—_i.e._, rolled along
-the ground. Hence its name. In the evening the “Lent-crocking” began.
-Those people who had not given the children anything when they came
-“a-shroving” were then punished by having pieces of crockery and pans
-and other missiles thrown at their doors. In this way real damage
-was often done, and the two parish constables do not seem to have
-interfered. The practice of shroving is still continued in the present
-village of Milton: it is one of the customs that have survived the
-demolition of the old town. It obtains in other Dorset parishes, but is
-gradually dying out.
-
-The Abbey churchyard was a very large one. Its area was about three
-times the area of the Abbey Church. The sports which took place
-therein have been already mentioned. It was also used as a public
-flogging-place for offenders against the law. Lord Milton, when he
-decided to pull down the old town, had all the headstones in the
-churchyard removed, broken up, or buried. In converting the churchyard
-into lawns, many bones of parishioners were turned up and irreverently
-treated; and the superstitious tradition in the present village is
-that, in consequence of this, Lord Milton died of a gruesome disease.
-There was an ancient cross in the churchyard called the “Druid’s
-Cross,” and also a preaching cross.[41] It is hardly necessary to add
-that these perished with the churchyard.
-
-The old Grammar School, founded by Abbot Middleton in 1521, was also
-pulled down. It was one of the chief public schools in the south-west
-of England, and was known as “the Eton of the West.”[42] It had, as
-a rule, between eighty to one hundred boys, mostly boarders, sons of
-the leading county families. There were several boarding-houses for
-the boys in Milton, and the existence of the school helped on the
-prosperity of the town. Two of its most distinguished _alumni_ were
-Thomas Masterman Hardy, Nelson’s favourite captain, who in after life
-did not forget his old friends at Milton[43]; and Thomas Beach, a
-native of Milton, the famous Dorset portrait painter, who from 1772 to
-1800 “limned the features of everybody who was anybody.”
-
-It must be admitted, reluctantly, that the Grammar School boys were an
-undoubted nuisance to Lord Milton. They lived within a stone’s throw of
-his mansion, they broke into his privacy and seclusion, they scoured
-his gardens and plantations in every direction, stole his fruit, and
-disturbed his game. Records exist of the expulsion of some boys bearing
-the most honoured of Dorset names for persistent stone-throwing down
-chimneys, and for stealing cucumbers from the Abbey gardens, and
-game-fowl eggs for the purpose of rearing birds to compete in fighting.
-In the Abbey Church the Grammar School boys sat in a large gallery
-which stretched from the rood-loft to the west wall. This gallery was
-pulled down by Lord Milton’s orders as soon as he had removed the
-school. The headmaster and assistant-masters of the school, being in
-Holy Orders, frequently held the position of Vicar or Curate of the
-Abbey Church. Among them was John Hutchins, the Dorset historian, who
-was Curate of the Abbey and “usher” of the school.[44]
-
-It must not be thought that Lord Milton’s “fine quarter-deck
-high-handedness” aroused no outcry. The parishioners regarded his
-action as a cruel piece of tyranny, and they resisted it with stubborn
-and obstinate opposition.[45] For over twenty years his lordship was
-involved in considerable trouble and expense while gradually getting
-all the houses into his possession, in order that he might raze them
-to the ground. Mr. Harrison, a resident solicitor, refused to sell his
-lease, although he was offered three times its value; so Lord Milton
-let the water from the “Abbot’s Pond” (a small pond which then lay just
-below the Abbey Church) creep around the premises. Mr. Harrison at once
-entered an action against his lordship for flooding his house, and the
-lawyer won the case. A few days afterwards Lord Milton went to London,
-and on his way to Blandford he heard the Abbey bells ringing. This he
-interpreted as a sign of parochial joy at his defeat and departure;
-and nothing would satisfy him but the sale of the offending bells.
-The bells were really ringing to commemorate Guy Fawkes’ Day: it was
-November 5th. But the bells had to go: “the autocrat” had spoken.
-And his friend, the Dean of Norwich, had said that “bell-ringing
-caused much idleness and drinking.” There is a record that, when
-the parishioners saw their bells carted away, they stood at their
-house-doors weeping, even though two of the bells were saved for the
-new Church of St. James.
-
-In pulling down the old town Lord Milton preserved the Abbey Church,
-and employed James Wyatt to restore it. Much havoc was then wrought
-in the interior, but at the same time the vast building underwent a
-thorough repair, which it needed very badly. There is a tradition that
-this restoration cost Lord Milton no less than £60,000; but this seems
-a fabulous sum.
-
-With the materials from the demolished buildings of the old town
-Lord Milton built the present village of Milton (he also built some
-ecclesiastical-looking sham “ruins” in the park, which are still
-standing);[46] and the stone and timber from the old Abbey tithe-barn
-were used to construct a new church in the new village. The few
-interesting things in this church, which is dedicated to St. James
-the Great, were originally possessions of the Abbey—two bells of the
-fourteenth and sixteenth centuries respectively, a thirteenth century
-Purbeck marble octagonal font, an old pulpit, two pewter plates, two
-oak coffin-stools, and three elaborately-bound volumes, in black
-letter, of Fox’s _Acts and Monuments of the Christian Martyrs_ (1632),
-which aforetime were chained in the Abbey to a desk covered with “red
-shagg” and studded with 200 brass nails.
-
-But although St. James’ Church suffers loss by comparison with the
-other more ancient churches in the parish, its churchyard is remarkable
-in that it is higher than the church itself. The dead are buried not
-below the level of the church, but above the level of its roof. This is
-certainly unusual.
-
-Yet it may be regarded as a fitting _finale_ for the inhabitants of a
-parish that has been described truly as “a curiosity, surprising, and
-remarkable.”
-
-[Illustration:
- THE SEAL OF THE TOWN OF
- MILTON IN AMERICA.
- _Incorporated 1662._]
-
-
-
-
-WIMBORNE MINSTER
-
-BY THE REV. THOMAS PERKINS, M.A.
-
-
-Wimborne Minster, as it is called to distinguish it from the village
-of Wimborne St. Giles and Monkton-up-Wimborne, is at the present day
-a bright, clean, prosperous-looking little market town, showing few
-remains of olden times save in its church. There is no doubt that its
-name is connected with the little river or “bourne” on which it stands,
-for the two villages mentioned above, bearing names of which Wimborne
-forms a part, stand on the same stream, which, like some other Dorset
-rivers—the Var or Frome, the Piddle or Trent—bears two names, the Wim
-or the Allen.
-
-And yet it is an ancient place. Here, early in the eighth century,
-Cudburh, or Cuthberga, sister of Ine, the famous King of the West
-Saxons, whose laws were the foundation of the liberties of his
-subjects, and show a spirit of tolerance hitherto unknown towards the
-conquered Celts, founded a nunnery. Here, in 851, the then Earl of
-Devon is said to have defeated the Danes; here Æthelred, the brother
-and immediate predecessor of Ælfred on the West Saxon throne, having
-died of a wound received in battle with the Danes, we know not where,
-was buried in 871. Hither came the Danes again, plundering the town
-and destroying the convent. Hither, too, after the death of Ælfred, in
-901, came Æthelwold, the Ætheling (son of Ælfred’s brother, Æthelred,
-who had been passed over as too young to rule when his father died)
-rebelling against the new King, Ælfred’s son, Eadward the Unconquered,
-and possessed himself of Wimborne. Eadward marched from the south
-against him, and encamped within the rampart of Badbury Rings, a few
-miles to the west of Wimborne; hence he sent a message to Æthelwold,
-bidding him surrender. To this Æthelwold returned stout answer that
-he would either live or die in Wimborne. But after the messenger had
-gone back he took counsel with himself, and decided that as the first
-alternative was impossible, and the second unpleasant, he would see if
-a third course were not open to him—namely, to live elsewhere. So he
-fled to Normandy, and thence to Northumberland, which was then under
-Danish rule, and, throwing in his lot with the enemies of Wessex, he
-collected a band of freebooters from beyond the sea, and received some
-assistance from the East Anglian Danes. But all to no purpose, for the
-“Unconquered” King overthrew him and his Danish allies in many fights,
-and recovered all the booty they had carried off.
-
-But it is the church that is the centre of interest of Wimborne.
-Ine, King of the West Saxons, had two sisters, perhaps more, but
-only two are connected with Wimborne. Cuthberga was betrothed to the
-Northumbrian King, Æcgfred, or Osric, as he is often called, but when
-she met him she found his rough northern manners and his intemperate
-habits little in harmony with her more refined disposition and mode of
-life. Therefore, she persuaded him to allow her to devote herself to a
-religious life, and retired to the nunnery at Barking; and afterwards,
-at what exact date we do not know, but probably not later than 705, she
-founded a nunnery at Wimborne, her sister being associated with her in
-the work. Both of these royal ladies were buried within the precincts,
-and in due time canonised as St. Cuthberga and St. Cwenberga; the
-former was commemorated as a virgin on August 31st. A special service
-appointed for the day may still be read in a Missal kept in the
-Cathedral Library at Salisbury.
-
-[Illustration: WIMBORNE MINSTER.]
-
-The convent of Wimborne can boast of another illustrious lady among
-those who took the veil within its walls—St. Walburga, or Walpurgis.
-Somewhere about the end of the seventh or beginning of the eighth
-century, she was born in Sussex, and was educated at the newly-founded
-nunnery at Wimborne, and became in due course a nun; here she stayed
-for yet another twenty-seven years. Then, by the desire of her uncle,
-St. Boniface, and her brother Wilibald, she set out with thirty other
-nuns to found religious houses in Germany. She first settled at
-Bischofsheim, in the diocese of Maintz, and in 754 became Abbess of the
-Benedictine house at Heidenheim, which was situated within the diocese
-of Eichstädt, in Bavaria, of which her brother, Wilibald, was Bishop.
-Another brother, Winebald, was head of the Benedictine monastery in
-the same place; and when he died, in 760, Walburga received the charge
-of this house in addition to her own, and continued to rule both until
-her death in 779. She was buried in a hollow rock at Eichstädt, from
-which a bituminous oil, afterwards called Walpurgis’ oil, exuded. This
-was supposed to possess miraculous powers of healing, so that her grave
-was much visited by pilgrims, and a church was built over it. She is
-commemorated at different times in different places, but chiefly on May
-1st, a day originally celebrated with heathen ceremonies, emblematical
-of the birth of Summer. Hence some of the heathen rites still lingered
-on, just as certain of our Christmas customs are of heathen origin. The
-readers of Göethe’s _Faust_ cannot help remembering the revels of the
-witches on the Brocken on Walpurgis’ night.
-
-The nunnery at Wimborne perished in some plundering raid of the Danes
-some time during the ninth century. Whether Ælfred did anything to
-restore it we do not know, but a king of the name of Eadward, either
-Ælfred’s son, the “Unconquered,” or the Confessor, founded a college
-of secular priests at Wimborne. Again, we know not whether the church
-of this college occupied the site of the old convent church or not. The
-names of the deans from 1224 until the Dissolution, in 1547, have come
-down to us. The only one of these whose name is known in history is the
-last but one—Cardinal Pole, who held this position from 1517 till 1537,
-being only seventeen years of age at the time of his appointment. When
-the deanery was abolished, Wimborne Minster became a Royal Peculiar,
-under the administration of three priest-vicars. The arrangement was
-a somewhat unusual one; each of the three was responsible for the
-services for one week, one of the other two acted as his curate in
-the Minster, and the other took charge of the chapelry of Holt. The
-next week they changed places; and so on continually. This curious
-arrangement continued in force till 1876, when one vicar retired on
-a pension, another removed to Holt, where a parsonage had been built
-for him, and the third became sole vicar of the Minster and the parish
-attached to it.
-
-The history of the church is best read in its stones; written records
-are scanty. The central part, all in Norman style, the work of the
-twelfth century, is the oldest; from this the building gradually
-extended north, south, east, and west, as well as upwards, in the
-course of the next three centuries; but the builders who enlarged did
-not wantonly destroy the work of their predecessors. Probably the
-chief cause of this was lack of funds; there was no shrine of saint,
-nor tomb of martyr, nor wonder-waking relic to attract pilgrims,
-whose alms, had they come, would have enriched the church, as many
-another church was enriched, and had to pay the penalty of over-much
-wealth in the form of demolition and reconstruction. Wimborne Minster
-was simply enlarged; the outer walls, of course, had sometimes to be
-pulled down. Thus in the thirteenth century the Norman east end,
-which was probably apsidal, had to be demolished to afford space for
-eastward extension, and the date of this extension is determined by
-the character of the east window; the windows of the aisles proclaim
-themselves to be of fourteenth century date; the western tower is a
-century later. The church is one of the few that possess two towers,
-set tandem fashion, one at the crossing, the other at the west end.
-It is not a very satisfactory arrangement from an artistic point of
-view, and has in the few instances in which it has been introduced been
-unfortunate. Hereford had two towers thus placed, but the western one
-fell; Wymondham, in Norfolk, has two still standing, but the east end
-of the church is a ruin; Wimborne central tower was once surmounted by
-a spire, but this fell. Exeter and Ottery have two towers, but these
-are placed in a different manner, their bases forming the north and
-south ends of the transept.
-
-The central tower at Wimborne is the older. It is supported on four
-massive Norman piers; the east and west arches beneath it are wider
-than the other two; to bring the capitals from which they spring all
-into one horizontal plane and the crowns of the four arches all into
-another horizontal plane, the builders made the wider arches segments
-of a circle less than semi-circles, and the narrower ones segments
-greater than semi-circles, giving them the shape of horse-shoes. Above
-this lower stage are three others—the triforium stage, with a gallery
-in the thickness of the wall; above this comes the clerestory, added
-later; and above it another stage, still later, because here, in place
-of the simple arches seen on the outside of the lower stages, we find
-interesting arches forming lancet-headed openings; above this is a
-heavy, ugly parapet and set of pinnacles, erected in 1608 after the
-fall of the central spire. The western tower is higher than the central
-one, contains the bells, and, just outside the easternmost window, on
-the north side of the belfry stage, there stands the wooden figure of a
-soldier, who strikes the quarter-hours on two bells, one on each side
-of him, and is known as the “Quarter Jack.”
-
-Inside this western tower, on the face of the south wall, is a curious
-clock made by Peter Lightfoot, a monk of Glastonbury, in the early part
-of the fourteenth century. It tells not only the time of day, but the
-day of the month and the age of the moon. The earth is represented by a
-globe in the centre; the sun by a ball on a disc, which travels round
-it in twenty-four hours, showing the time of day; the moon as a globe
-on another disc, which revolves once in a lunar month. Half of this
-globe is painted black, the other half is gilt, and the age of the moon
-is indicated by the respective proportions of black and gilt shown, for
-the ball itself rotates on its axis; when the moon is full the gilt
-half is entirely visible; when new, the black half. The clock is still
-in working order. A screen separates the lower stage of the tower from
-the nave, and forms a baptistry, in which stands an octagonal font of
-Norman character, large enough for baptising an infant by immersion.
-
-From the west end, the church presents a very imposing appearance. The
-nearer pillars, it is true, are rather mean; they are of fourteenth
-century date, and very plain. It has been, with some probability,
-conjectured that they were brought from some other church which had
-been pulled down just before the time when this church was extended
-westward, possibly when the western tower was built. The pillars of
-the original nave are cylindrical and massive, the arches of the
-main arcading resting upon them are pointed; above is a plain wall;
-the division between the original and the added work is shown by
-the different character of the mouldings of the arches, and of the
-string-course above them, and by the fact that to the east there are
-the original Norman clerestory windows, while the walls to the west are
-not broken by any openings whatever.
-
-The floor of the presbytery is raised considerably above that of
-the choir, and this is itself higher than the floor of the nave, so
-that the altar stands at a considerable elevation. One peculiarity is
-noteworthy—there are no altar rails, but their place is taken by three
-massive oaken benches, covered at all times with the “houseling linen,”
-fair white cloths—the use of which goes back to very early times. The
-benches which now stand across the presbytery floor, close to the
-topmost of the flight of steps leading up to it, are the remains of ten
-such benches, which were made in Puritan times for communicants to sit
-on as they received the sacred elements. When the custom of kneeling
-was revived, these benches were placed on the steps; and on “Sacrament
-Sundays,” the clerk, after morning prayer, went to the lectern and
-bade those who were prepared to receive the Holy Communion to draw
-near, whereupon intending communicants left the nave and knelt at the
-benches, or in the choir stalls, until the officiating clergy brought
-them the sacramental bread and wine. In 1852, when sundry changes were
-being made in the arrangements of the church, all these benches except
-three were removed—the three which were in use as altar-rails.
-
-The beautiful triplet of windows, over the altar, end the long vista
-seen from the west. Beneath the presbytery floor is a vaulted crypt.
-This is not, as many crypts are, dark and gloomy, but well lit by
-triangular windows, which from the outside are seen to be just above
-the level of the churchyard. This crypt does not retain its original
-altar, but its place is marked by a piscina on the southern side; two
-arches open out into the choir aisles, through which those kneeling in
-the aisles might look down on the priest officiating at the altar of
-the crypt.
-
-There are several monuments worthy of notice, but by far the most
-interesting is the Beaufort altar-tomb on the south side of the
-presbytery. This was erected, to the memory of her father and mother,
-by the Lady Margaret, foundress of Christ’s and St. John’s Colleges,
-at Cambridge, well known for her many benefactions, and from the fact
-that she was the mother of Henry VII. As the history of this family—the
-Beauforts—is interesting, and its details little touched on by the
-writers of English history, it may not be out of place, especially
-as they were connected with Wimborne, to give an outline of it here.
-Everyone knows that John of Gaunt was the third son of Edward III.
-and the father of Henry IV., but many know only in a general way that
-the House of Tudor traced through him their claim to the English
-crown. John of Gaunt married Blanche, great-granddaughter of Edmund
-Crouchback, second son of Henry III., who was created Earl of Lancaster
-in 1257. Her father, on account of his valour in the French wars of
-Edward III., had been made a Duke—a new title as far as England was
-concerned, for the only English Duke that had been previously created
-was the Duke of Cornwall, better known as the Black Prince. Through
-Blanche, his wife, John of Gaunt succeeded to the estates of the Duke
-of Lancaster, among them to the Castle of Beaufort, in Anjou. He was
-himself in 1362 created Duke of Lancaster. Among Blanche’s maids of
-honour was one Kate, daughter of Sir Payne Roet, and widow of Sir Owen
-Swynford. When Blanche died, John married Constance of Castile, but
-took unto himself Kate Swynford as his mistress; by her he became the
-father of four children, all born at Beaufort Castle. As they were
-illegitimate, they took the name of their birthplace as a surname.
-The eldest of these was John de Beaufort, and the second, Henry, the
-celebrated Cardinal Beaufort. When Constance died, these four children
-were legitimatised by a Bull of Urban VI., then by Richard II., then by
-Act of Parliament. The Duke then married Kate. On January 13th, 1396,
-John de Beaufort was created Earl of Somerset. He died in 1410, leaving
-four sons and two daughters; the eldest, Henry, did not long survive
-his father, and his title and estates passed to his next brother, John.
-He greatly distinguished himself in the French wars, and was made Duke
-of Somerset, Earl of Kendale, Lieutenant of the Duchy of Aquitaine and
-Captain-General of the whole realm of France and Normandy. In 1436
-the Duke of Bedford, the Regent, died, and as the King, Henry VI.,
-was still a minor, another regent had to be appointed. The Duke of
-Lancaster thought he should have obtained this important post, but it
-was conferred on the Duke of York, and Lancaster therefore retired from
-active service, and in 1440 married Margaret, widow of Oliver St. John,
-and daughter of John, Lord Beauchamp, of Bletsoe Manor, Bedfordshire.
-This John, Duke of Somerset, and Margaret, his wife, are they whose
-figures lie side by side in alabaster on their altar-tomb at Wimborne.
-Their right hands are clasped together; angels guard their heads; his
-feet rest on a dog, hers on an antelope; he is clad in complete armour,
-the face and right hand alone bare; the left hand holds the right-hand
-gauntlet, which he has taken off before taking the lady’s hand. On
-the apex of the arch, above the tomb, hangs the helm which he, during
-his life, used to wear in tournaments. Their only child was born in
-1441—Margaret, of whom mention has been made. Her father died in 1444,
-aged thirty-nine years, and the Duchy of Somerset became extinct in the
-Beaufort family. His death took place at Kingston Lacy, an estate close
-to Wimborne, belonging to the Beaufort family. His widow and daughter
-went to live on the Bedfordshire property. In about four years time,
-the widow married her third husband, Lord Welles. Young Margaret, when
-only nine years of age, was sought by the Duke of Suffolk as a wife
-for his son, John de la Pole, and by King Henry VI. as wife for his
-half-brother, Edmund Tudor, Earl of Richmond, son of Catherine, the
-Queen of Henry V., by her second husband, Sir Owen Tudor. Margaret was
-a clever girl, well educated, knowing even then Latin and French; but
-sorely distraught was she to know which of the two suitors to choose:
-so she consulted an old gentlewoman, who advised her to commit the
-matter to St. Nicholas. She took the advice, prayed to the saint, and
-fell asleep, and about four o’clock next morning, whether sleeping or
-waking she could not tell, saw one standing in her room, habited in
-a bishop’s robes, who bade her accept Edmund Tudor as a husband. She
-told her mother, and she was betrothed to the Earl of Richmond, and
-they were married in 1455, when she was fourteen years of age and he
-twenty-four. They lived at Pembroke Castle, which belonged to Jasper
-Tudor, Earl of Pembroke. In 1456 her only son, Henry, afterwards Henry
-VII., was born, and shortly after this her husband died. He was buried
-at Caermarthen Abbey, and when the monastery was suppressed, his body
-was removed to the Cathedral Church at St. David’s. His mother, anxious
-to keep quite aloof from party strife (for the War of the Roses had
-already broken out), lived on at Pembroke, educating her son. In 1459
-she married her second husband, Sir Humphrey Stafford; widowhood, for
-one of exalted rank, not being a desirable condition in those times of
-war and turmoil. It has been seen that her mother was thrice married,
-and Margaret followed her example, for when Sir Humphrey died in 1481,
-she, at the end of a year, being then about forty years of age, married
-Thomas, Lord Stanley. After fifteen years she separated from him with
-his consent, in order to devote herself to a religious life, and
-retired to the convent at Woking, in Surrey. It must not be supposed
-that she had a peaceful or happy life. Her thoughts were centred on
-her only son, and many were the years of separation from this son that
-his mother had to endure. The story of his wanderings, his dangers,
-his detention in Brittany, are too long to be told here—suffice it to
-say that Richard III. became so odious to the chief nobles that at
-last it was arranged that Henry Tudor, Earl of Richmond, Margaret’s
-son, should be recognised by the Lancastrian party as their leader,
-and should claim the throne; and that in order to gain the adherence
-of those members of the Yorkist party who were opposed to Richard, a
-marriage should take place between Henry and Elizabeth, the daughter
-of Edward IV. Both the mothers agreed to the union: but the first
-attempt at invasion by Richmond was a failure, and Richard seemed free
-from all danger; and with a view to win over his Yorkist opponents,
-he made up his mind to marry Elizabeth himself, although she was his
-own brother’s child. This step led to a fresh invasion—this time a
-successful one—and the death of Richard on Bosworth field virtually
-placed the crown on Henry’s head (1485). So at last the Lady Margaret’s
-troubles were at an end, and she saw her son crowned and wedded, and
-the red and white roses twined together. It remains only to speak of
-her benefactions. Those at Cambridge are well known; and the writer of
-this chapter, who once held at Christ’s College one of the scholarships
-she founded, cherishes the memory of the royal and pious lady with all
-due gratitude. But it is of her benefactions at Wimborne that mention
-must now be made. About 1498 she built the beautiful monument to her
-father and mother in the Minster; founded a chantry, where, for her own
-soul, and for those of her son, her parents, and ancestors, Mass was
-to be duly said. She founded and endowed the Grammar School, though,
-as its endowments were greatly added to by Queen Elizabeth, its name
-was afterwards changed from the Lady Margaret’s to that of Queen
-Elizabeth’s Free Grammar School.
-
-The Lady Margaret just outlived her son; both died in the same year,
-1509, but she rather later than he.
-
-Of the other monuments space forbids mention of any, save that of
-Anthony Etricke, if it can be called a monument, for it is really the
-sarcophagus that contains the body of this eccentric magistrate, who
-lived at Holt, and was recorder of Poole. He desired, for some reason,
-to be buried neither above the ground nor under it, neither within
-the church nor outside of it; and in order to carry out this strange
-wish, he got permission to cut a niche in the south wall, partly below
-the level of the surface of the churchyard, and in it fixed a slate
-sarcophagus. In this he ordered his coffin to be deposited when he
-died; and he made all the preparations he could beforehand, even to the
-painting of the date of his death on the side of the slate coffin. He
-had a presentiment that he should die in 1691, but he lived till 1703,
-so that the real date of his death had to be placed on the coffin. The
-other date was not obliterated, but the new one was painted on the
-other, and the two may be seen there to-day. The arms of his family are
-painted on the lid, and, as he left twenty shillings per annum to keep
-coffin and niche in good repair, the sarcophagus is bright and smart as
-paint, gilding, and varnish can make it.
-
-[Illustration: THE CHAINED LIBRARY, WIMBORNE MINSTER.]
-
-The chained library, as it is called, is placed in a chamber above the
-vestry, rebuilt when the church was restored. It was formed by the Rev.
-William Stone, Principal of New Inn Hall, Oxford, afterwards one of
-the “three vicars” of the church. By his will he left some land to St.
-Margaret’s Hospital, and his collection of books to the Minster. These
-were brought from Oxford in 1686, and placed in what was then known
-as the Treasury. They were chiefly the writings of the Fathers, with
-certain other theological books, and were intended for the free use
-of the people of Wimborne. In these days few would care to pore over
-these dry and heavy tomes, or make use of the library, for it does not
-contain any novels, standard or ephemeral; but there were days when it
-was used for study. In 1725 a catalogue was made, and the number of the
-books was then two hundred; when next catalogued, about one hundred
-and fifty years later, the number had dropped to one hundred and
-eighty-five, despite the fact that ten books not mentioned in the
-former catalogue were on the shelves. There is but one MS., bearing
-date 1343, “Regimen Animarum,” written on vellum, and containing some
-illuminated initials. The majority of the books were printed between
-1520 and 1710. The most interesting are: a Polyglot Bible (1657), a
-Breeches’ Bible (1595), and Sir Walter Ralegh’s _History of the World_
-(1614). No less than one hundred and four pages of this _History_ have
-had a hole burnt through them. Tradition says that Matthew Prior, the
-poet, was reading this book by candle light, and fell asleep; when he
-awoke he found that some snuff from his candle had fallen on the book
-and done the mischief. He stuck small pieces of parchment over the
-hole in every page, and inserted the missing letters or words with pen
-and ink. But the interesting tradition has been controverted in modern
-times.
-
-The books were originally chained to the shelves, one end of the chain
-being fastened to the edge of the binding, the other to a ring which
-would slide along a rod. Many of the books had got loose in the course
-of years, and lay dusty and uncared for; but at the restoration, new
-rods were fastened along the new shelves, and the old chains repaired
-and put to their former use.
-
-In two oaken chests in this room many deeds relating to the Collegiate
-Church (the earliest dating from the time of Henry III., the latest
-from that of Henry VIII.) are preserved. Among them is the deed
-founding the Chantry and Grammar School, drawn up by the executors of
-the Lady Margaret’s will; and also the charter granted by Charles I.
-to the Governors of the church, from which they derive the powers of
-appointing clergy, choristers, clerk, vergers, etc., which powers they
-use to-day.
-
-There is one other ancient ecclesiastical foundation in the
-neighbourhood of Wimborne, about a quarter of a mile from the town
-on the road to Blandford. It is now an almshouse, where three poor
-married couples, three poor single men, and the same number of
-unmarried women, are maintained; but its original purpose was to
-relieve only such of the poor as were suffering from leprosy. It is
-generally said to have been founded by John of Gaunt, and so to have
-been another connection between that family and Wimborne. There is, it
-may be said, an old kitchen at Canford which is still called “John of
-Gaunt’s Kitchen”; whether he had anything to do with the building of
-the kitchen or the endowment of the Lazar-house we do not know, but
-it is certain that he did not found the latter, for, in the reign of
-King John, Hugo of Lingiveria gave to it an acre of land, and in 1282
-the Bishop of Exeter gave an indulgence to any who would contribute
-to its support. A deed of the date of Henry VIII. refers to a Bull of
-Innocent IV., dated 1245, in which this hospital is mentioned. Various
-gifts of land, vestments, plate, etc., were bestowed on the hospital,
-to which a small chapel dedicated to St. Margaret and St. Anthony is
-attached. A chantry was founded here by one John Redcoddes, in order
-that a priest might daily say masses for his soul’s welfare. The
-chapel, the architecture of which shows that it was originally built
-in the thirteenth century, still stands, and is fitted up for service.
-Hither once a week one of the clergy comes from the Minster to conduct
-a service, which the almshouse people attend.
-
-Other than the buildings already mentioned, there is little mediæval
-work to be seen in Wimborne. The old Free Grammar School buildings
-have given place to modern ones erected in 1851, and the school is now
-managed by a governing body appointed under a scheme drawn up by the
-Charity Commissioners. So “the old order changeth, giving place to the
-new”; but, seen from far or near, the two-towered Minster, with its
-parti-coloured walls of deep red and drab stone, rises grand and old
-amid its modern surroundings—a noble memorial of the mediæval builder’s
-art.
-
-
-
-
-FORD ABBEY
-
-BY SIDNEY HEATH
-
-
-Various authorities agree with Camden in stating that Ford Abbey
-(originally in Devon, but now included in the county of Dorset),
-near Chard, was founded in the year 1140, for Cistercian monks, by
-Adeliza, daughter of Baldwin de Brioniis, and a grand-niece of William
-the Conqueror. The circumstances of its origin are interesting and
-romantic. It appears that Adeliza’s brother, Richard of Okehampton,
-had given, in 1133, certain lands at Brightley, within his barony,
-to an Abbey of the Cistercian Order, and had secured twelve monks
-to dwell therein from Gilbert, Abbot of Waverley, in Surrey. This
-small community remained at Brightley for five years, when they, “by
-reason of great want and barrenness, could abide there no longer,”
-and commenced a return journey to their original home in Surrey. On
-their way they passed through Thorncombe, the parish wherein Ford is
-situated, where they encountered Adeliza, who, hearing with great
-regret of the failure of her brother’s enterprise, exclaimed: “Behold
-my manor where you now are, which is very fruitful and well wooded,
-which I give you for ever in exchange for your barren lands at
-Brightley, together with the mansion-house and other houses. Stay there
-until a more convenient monastery may be built for you upon some other
-part of the estate.” The site selected by the monks for the erection
-of the Abbey was in a valley, on the left bank of the river Axe, at a
-place called, according to Leland, “Hertbath” (_balneum cervorum_),
-and which, from its nearness to a ford crossing the river at this
-spot, subsequently became known as _Ford_.
-
-Such is the accepted origin of the splendid pile of buildings which
-sprang up in this fertile and sequestered valley in 1148, and which
-still, notwithstanding the pillage at its dissolution, and its many
-structural alterations, commands our admiration and our attention;
-although, if we except some small portion of what is known as “the
-chapel,” at the eastern end of the south front, nothing now remains of
-the original foundation erected by the pious Adeliza.
-
-The original purpose of this ancient part of the building, known as
-“the chapel,” is somewhat obscure. It has been commonly regarded as
-that portion of the religious house which its name indicates, and
-as being the burial-place of its founder and other benefactors. Dr.
-Oliver, however, in the supplement to his _Monasticon_, speaks of it
-as the “Chapter House”—a likely suggestion. In his _Memoir of Thomas
-Chard, D.D._, Dr. J. H. Pring writes:
-
- That except in the deed of surrender, and a short reference made to it
- by Hearne, I have not been able to discover the slightest notice of
- “the Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Ford” in any of the numerous
- accounts which have been given of the abbey; though when we read of
- frequent interments, some on the north, others on the south side of
- the choir—others, such as that of Robert Courtenay, who, we are told,
- was buried on the 28th July, 1242, in the chancel, before the high
- altar, under a stately monument exhibiting the figure of an armed
- knight—there can be little doubt, I think, that these took place, not
- in what is now known as the Chapel, but in the Abbey Church, which
- stood at the east end of the abbey, about two hundred feet above the
- chapel.
-
-[Illustration: FORD ABBEY.]
-
-This portion of the edifice, whose original uses are conjectural,
-shows, both inside and out, considerable vestiges which appear to
-suggest a Norman origin, and which we may assume were possibly
-erected under the immediate auspices, if not under the personal
-superintendence, of the Lady Adeliza. The exterior angles of the
-eastern end exhibit the quoins so characteristic of the Norman style of
-building, and the interior has many fine examples of Anglo-Norman
-work, in the pillars, the groined stone roof, the arches at either end,
-of a slightly pointed character, with the well-known zig-zag or chevron
-moulding. The eastern window is of much later date, being Perpendicular
-in style, and it is believed to have been inserted by Thomas Chard, the
-last Abbot, as the upper panel of the left-hand side depicts a stag’s
-head, whilst the companion panel, parallel to it, contains faint traces
-of the oft-repeated monogram, T. C.
-
-The next feature in point of antiquity is what is now termed the
-“Monks’ Walk,” a range of ivy-clad buildings running back for nearly
-four hundred feet from the eastern end of the Abbey in a northerly
-direction, and it is thought that a similar range ran parallel to it.
-The remaining wing is on the eastern side, and consists of two storeys,
-the lower of which possesses some beautiful Early English work, and
-the upper one was probably the monks’ dormitory. In the centre is an
-archway of fourteenth century date, and along the entire length of the
-wing is a series of lancet windows, almost perfect on the western side,
-but destroyed or built up on the eastern. Hearne thus notices this wing:
-
- But now, though one of the chief uses of the cloisters was for
- walking, yet in Religious Houses they had sometime galleries for the
- same end. We have an instance of it in Ford Abbey in Devonshire,
- which is one of the most entire abbeys in England; in the east front
- whereof, which is the oldest of the two fronts (though the south front
- be the chiefest), there is a gallery called the Monks’ Walk, with
- small cells on the right hand, and little narrow windows on the left.
-
-Great as is the antiquarian interest of these fragments of what we may
-reasonably presume to have formed part of the original foundation, the
-greater part of the existing fabric is the work of Abbot Chard, of whom
-we shall have something to say later. The best view of the building is
-obtained from the front, where nearly all that meets the eye affords a
-striking instance of the consummate taste and devoted perseverance of
-this remarkable man under circumstances that may well have discouraged
-the boldest. The storm which culminated in the dissolution of the
-monastic houses was gathering; but instead of being filled with dismay,
-as were so many of his fellow-churchmen, Thomas Chard spared no effort
-to beautify his beloved abbey, perhaps that the very glamour of her
-loveliness might enchant the eyes of the spoilers and turn them from
-their purpose of ruthless spoliation. To a great extent, his work was
-preserved, for, although the abbey did suffer, and that grievously,
-yet it escaped the wanton wreckage by which most of these foundations
-throughout the land were devastated.
-
-[Illustration: Sidney Heath. 1907
-Details from Cloisters. Ford Abbey.]
-
-The first portion of Chard’s building to claim attention is the
-cloister, late Perpendicular in style, with mullions and window tracery
-which present an appearance at once good and bold, and show no signs
-of the debasement and formality that are so characteristic of the late
-buildings of this period. Above the windows a frieze of stonework
-depicts on shields the arms of various benefactors to the Abbey—as
-those of Courtenay quartering Rivers, Poulett, the Bishop of Exeter,
-etc.; and on many shields appear either the monogram or the name of
-Thomas Chard.
-
-An excellent account of the cloister—and, indeed, of the whole Abbey—is
-contained in a very rare little volume, entitled, a _History of Ford
-Abbey_, written anonymously many years ago, but acknowledged by
-ecclesiologists to be the work of one who for a long period must have
-resided there, and who thus, by daily associations with the fabric,
-became more familiar with its minute architectural details than
-could possibly be the case with anyone who had not enjoyed a similar
-privilege. As this volume is rare, as well as interesting and accurate
-in regard to its architectural information, no apology is needed for
-quoting certain passages from it here. In reference to the cloister we
-learn that:
-
- The cloister is divided by a suite of rooms and arcade from the
- grand porch-tower, so conspicuous for its architectural beauty, and
- which in days gone by was no doubt the original entrance. It is
- richly ornamented with first-rate sculpture, some of it obviously
- unfinished; the central boss in the vaulting uncut; and the blank
- shield in the centre, below the basement window, encircled by the
- garter, was doubtless intended for the royal arms. The uncut shield
- on the sinister side, having the pelican and dolphin for supporters,
- was for Courtenay. The two small shields cut are charged with a lion
- rampant for De Redvers, and cheeky two bars for Baldwin de Brioniis.
- Immediately over the arch of the door is a large scroll shield of a
- more modern date, bearing the arms of Prideaux, impaling those of his
- second wife, Ivery. On the upper part of this elegant specimen of Dr.
- Chard’s taste, in the centre shield, are his initials, T.C., with the
- crosier and _mitre_ (Dr. Chard was a Suffragan Bishop); and the two
- smaller shields, with the T.C., crosier, and abbot’s cap, alternate
- with the stag’s head cabossed—supposed to be the bearing of the then
- Bishop of Exeter; and just below the battlement of the tower is the
- following inscription:—
-
- AN̄’O D’N̄I MILLESIMO QUINGESIMO VIC^{MO} OCTA^O. A D’N̄O
- FACTUM EST THOMA CHARD, ABB.
-
-Now, while there is no doubt that Chard united in his own person the
-offices of Abbot and Suffragan Bishop, the above account is at fault in
-attributing “the stag’s head cabossed” to the then Bishop of Exeter,
-for it formed no part of the armorial bearings either of Bishop Oldham
-or of his successor, Veysey. In a letter from Dr. Chard to Cardinal
-Wolsey “the stag’s head cabossed” is used as the _seal_, and is
-expressly referred to in the body of the letter as “_sigillum meum_,”
-and we find the same device associated with his name or monogram in
-various parts of the Abbey buildings; the most probable solution
-being that it relates to the ancient cognizance of the Abbey, or the
-site whereon it stands, which, as we have already seen, was Hertbath
-(_balneum cervorum_).
-
-[Illustration: Panel from Cloisters. Ford Abbey.]
-
-Further confirmation of Dr. Chard’s double office of Bishop and Abbot
-is found in a remarkable panel in the frieze (_see illustration_),
-which appears to have been designed for the purpose of attesting this
-fact, if not in actual words, yet in unmistakable and appropriate
-symbolism. The small top corner shields of this panel contain the
-letters T. C., and the lower ones an abbot’s and a bishop’s staff,
-respectively; whilst on the hatchment-shaped panel in the centre
-occurs the stag’s head and bishop’s staff, the name “Tho. Chard” on a
-scroll entwined round an abbot’s staff; and above these, as a fitting
-termination to the whole, appears the abbot’s cap, surmounted by the
-bishop’s mitre.
-
-[Illustration: THE CHAPEL, FORD ABBEY.]
-
-The entrance porch contains a fine west window of the same character as
-those of the adjoining great hall, which in their turn correspond with
-those of the cloister, and above them is a frieze of grotesque animals.
-To quote once more from the book already referred to:
-
- This part of the building has been shorn of its length, as, on minute
- inspection, will appear. The royal arms are not in the centre, as they
- no doubt originally were. They consist of a rose crowned, encircled
- with a garter, and supported by a dragon and greyhound, the badges of
- Henry VII.... Although the remaining portion of this wing has been
- altered, it was built by Thomas Chard, the battlements corresponding
- with the tower and chapel; and as a more decisive proof that it was
- so, there is, at the western end of the building, but hid by ivy, the
- portcullis cut in stone, another of the badges of Henry VII.; and to
- the north, or back side, are the initials T. C., with the crosier and
- cap.
-
-The ancient guest-chamber, so integral a part of these old foundations,
-appears to have been at right angles to the great hall, as it was
-noticed some years ago on the collapse of portions of the ceiling that
-the ancient timber roof was still _in situ_. We shall have a little
-to say later about the alteration and adaptation of the interior for
-the purposes of a modern mansion, when, happily, much of Dr. Chard’s
-work was not disturbed; but we have, unfortunately, no record of the
-condition of the fabric prior to the restorations of the above prelate,
-and his task seems to have been little less than the rebuilding of the
-greater part of the edifice. The antiquary Leland, visiting the Abbey
-during Dr. Chard’s alterations, writes: “_Cœnobium nunc sumptibus plane
-non credendis abbas magnificentissime restaurat_.”[47] This beautiful
-structure had scarcely had its delicate stonework mellowed by the soft
-winds from the Devonshire moors, when the Dissolution, long impending,
-burst in fury upon the larger religious houses, and on March 8th, 1539,
-Thomas Chard was induced to sign the surrender of his beloved Abbey
-of Ford, which was endeared to him by many sacred associations, and on
-which he had lavished his own private fortune and the artistic genius
-of a master mind. The following is a translation (according to Dr.
-Pring) of the document of surrender, the wording of which, we may be
-sure, accorded ill with the reluctant hands that attached the names and
-seals:—
-
- To all the faithful in Christ, to whom this present writing shall
- come: Thomas Chard, abbot of the monastery or abbey, and of the
- Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary, of Ford, in the county of Devon,
- of the Cistercian order, and the same place and convent, everlasting
- salvation in the Lord.
-
- [Sidenote:
-
- Per me Thomā abbem
- Willūs Rede, prior
- John Cosen
- Robte Yetminster.
- Johēs Newman.
- Johēs Bridgwat^{r}.
- Thomas Stafford.
- Johēs Ffawell.
- W. Winsor.
- Elizeus Oliscomb.
- William Keynston.
- William Dynyngton.
- Richard Kingesbury.
- ]
-
- Know ye that we, the aforesaid abbot and convent, by our unanimous
- assent and consent, with our deliberate minds, right, knowledge,
- and mere motion, from certain just and reasonable causes especially
- moving our minds and consciences have freely, and of our own accord
- given and granted, and by these presents do give, grant, and surrender
- and confirm to our illustrious prince, Henry VIII., by the grace of
- God, king of England, lord of Ireland, supreme head of the Church
- of England in this land, all our said monastery or abbacy of Ford
- aforesaid. And also all and singular manors, lordships, messuages,
- etc. In testimony whereof, we, the aforesaid abbot and convent, have
- caused our common seal to be affixed to these presents. Given at our
- Chapter House of Ford aforesaid, on the 8th day of the month of March,
- and in the thirtieth year of the reign of King Henry aforesaid. Before
- me, William Petre, one of the clerks, etc., the day and year above
- written.
-
- By me, Willm̄n Petre.
-
-No sooner had the document been signed than the work of pillage
-commenced; but one is inclined to agree with the Devonshire historian
-Prince, that, “by what lucky chance he knew not, Ford Abbey escaped
-better than its fellows, and continueth for the greatest part standing
-to this day.” At the same time, there is little doubt that much havoc
-took place, although, perhaps, not to the extent recorded by Risdon,
-who says it now merely “somewhat showeth of what magnificence once it
-was.”
-
-It is just possible that Thomas Chard’s beautiful work softened the
-hearts of the spoilers, and its very wealth of ornament caused it to be
-retained as too valuable a prize to be utterly demolished; but, whether
-standing entire or razed to the ground, it appears to have been an
-encumbrance, for on October 28th, in the year of its surrender, it was
-granted by the King, “with all and singular its manors, lordships, and
-messuages, etc.,” to Richard Pollard, Esq.
-
-At the time of its dissolution the annual revenues of the Abbey were
-computed at £374 10s. 6¼d. by Dugdale, and at £381 10s. 6d. by
-Speed, and the net revenue was, no doubt, somewhere between these two
-sums.
-
-Born probably at Tracy, near Awliscombe, Honiton, about the year 1470,
-Thomas Chard was one of the most distinguished ecclesiastics of his
-day, and evidently, as his works attest, an accomplished architect and
-a most munificent man. The highly ornamental façade of the institution
-over which he presided as last abbot is considered to be the finest
-example of its kind in the West of England. On entering holy orders,
-Chard appears to have held several livings in Somerset, Devon, and
-Cornwall, and was elected Abbot of Ford about 1520. Previous to this,
-in 1508, he was appointed Suffragan to Bishop Oldham by the title
-“Episcopus Solubricencis,” in 1513 Warden of the College of Lady St.
-Mary, at Ottery, and in 1515 Prior of the Benedictine or Cluniac Priory
-of Montacute. It has been suggested that as Dr. Chard was Warden of
-Ottery College about the time that the beautiful Dorset Chapel was
-built (1513-18)—one of the most lovely pieces of Perpendicular building
-we possess—the inspiration of this eminent architect may have done much
-to influence the splendid design of this portion of the Church of Lady
-St. Mary at Ottery.
-
-It was Bishop Chard who officiated for Bishop Veysey, of Exeter, at the
-noble obsequies of Katherine Courtenay, daughter of Edward IV., and
-widow of William Courtenay, Earl of Devon, buried at Tiverton in 1527.
-It is thought that his choice for this office was determined by his
-headship of the Monastery of Ford, of which foundation the Courtenays
-had always been great patrons and benefactors.
-
-The burial place of Thomas Chard is unknown, but may possibly be in
-the chapel of the Hospital of St. Margaret, near Honiton. Dr. Oliver,
-who visited this chapel many years ago, writes: “The west door is
-secured by a large sepulchral slab, to which was formerly affixed a
-brass plate.” This has long since disappeared, but many writers agree
-that there is little doubt that this slab covered the dust of the
-Abbot-Bishop.
-
-[Illustration: Seal of Ford Abbey.
-Full Size]
-
-The old abbey seal,[48] which had eluded the research of many
-antiquaries, including the editors of Dugdale’s _Monasticon_, was
-discovered by Mr. Davidson, of Sector, near Axminster. It is of oval
-form, the usual shape for monastic seals, and is divided into three
-compartments, in the uppermost of which is a bell suspended in a
-steeple, and in the canopy beneath we see the Blessed Virgin with the
-Divine Infant on her knee. On one side is the shield of Courtenay,
-bearing—_or_, three torteaux, with a label of three points. On the
-other side is the shield of Beaumont—barry of six, _vair_ and _gules_.
-The lowest compartment occupies rather more than half the seal inside
-the inscription, and shows an abbot standing, in his right hand a
-pastoral staff, and holding in his left hand a book; and at his feet
-are three monks kneeling, with their hands together in supplication.
-
-With this description of the seal the claims of Ford Abbey to figure in
-this volume of “Memorials” are practically finished, yet it may be of
-interest to continue a little further in the personal and architectural
-history of this wonderful old house. As we have seen, Henry VIII.
-granted the abbey and all its appurtenances to Richard Pollard, Esq.,
-who was subsequently knighted by Henry VIII., and from this gentleman
-it passed to his son, Sir John Pollard, who sold it to his cousin,
-Sir Amias Poulett, of Hinton St. George, and Curry Mallet, who had
-held the office of head steward of the abbey under the _régime_ of Dr.
-Chard (as had his father, Sir Hugh Poulett, before him), and who was
-for a short time the custodian of Mary Queen of Scots. From Sir Amias
-Poulett, the abbey and estates passed by purchase to William Rosewell,
-Esq., Solicitor-General to Queen Elizabeth, and thence to his son, Sir
-Henry Rosewell, who, in 1649, conveyed them to Sir Edmund Prideaux,
-Bart., of Netherton, county Devon. He was educated at Cambridge, and
-after being admitted a student of the Inner Temple was called to the
-Bar, 23rd November, 1623. He was returned as Burgess for Lyme Regis and
-took part against the King. He appears to have been a man of marked
-abilities, as in 1643 we find him appointed one of the Commissioners of
-the Great Seal, and three years later he was granted the privileges of
-a King’s Counsel, the combined offices being worth some £7,000 a year.
-It is somewhat singular that, while holding the first-named office he
-was allowed to retain his seat in Parliament, and when he relinquished
-the Great Seal, the House of Commons, as an acknowledgment of his
-valuable services, ordered that he should practise within the Bar,
-and have precedence next after the Solicitor-General, to which office
-he himself was raised in 1647. Although attached to the Parliamentary
-cause he took no part in the King’s trial, nor in the trials of the
-Duke of Hamilton and others. Nevertheless, he shortly afterwards
-accepted from the dominant party the office of Attorney-General, a
-post which he retained for the remainder of his life. His remarkable
-organising abilities were shown in 1649, when, as Master of the Post
-Messengers and Carriers, a post he had acquired in 1644, he established
-a weekly conveyance to every part of the kingdom, a great improvement
-on the system he had found in vogue, and under which letters were sent
-by special messengers, one of whose duties it was to supply relays of
-horses at a given mileage. It is said that the emoluments accruing to
-his private purse from this improved postal service were not less than
-£15,000 a year. Sir Edmund was twice married, and by his first wife
-Jane, daughter and sole heiress of Henry Collins, Esq., of Ottery St.
-Mary, he had a daughter Mary. His second wife was Margaret, daughter
-and co-heir of William Ivery, of Cotthay, Somerset, and by her he had
-three daughters, and a son Edmund, who succeeded him at Ford Abbey.
-It was Sir Edmund Prideaux who brought Inigo Jones to the Abbey to
-carry out certain alterations, which he did by inserting square-headed
-windows in the walls of the state rooms, and by adding these and other
-classical affectations on to the old Gothic building he destroyed the
-harmonious composition of the whole, and it is not, perhaps, a matter
-of regret that this architect died in 1654, before his designs for
-converting this fine old house into a sham “classical” building were
-carried out, although the interior of the house was embellished with
-magnificent decorations and the whole place made into a beautiful,
-comfortable, and habitable mansion.
-
-Edmund Prideaux, the younger, had for his tutor John Tillotson,
-who afterwards became Archbishop of Canterbury. Although he took
-but little part in the grave political troubles of his day, he is
-remembered in history as the entertainer of the ill-starred Duke of
-Monmouth, who visited Ford in 1680, on his journey of pleasure to the
-west country, where he was royally entertained by his host, whose
-connection with his noble guest did not end here, as after the Rye
-House affair he was suspected of favouring the Duke, and the house was
-searched for arms. When the Duke subsequently landed at Lyme Regis in
-1685, Mr. Prideaux, like a prudent man, remained quietly at home, but
-was visited at night by a small party of rebels requiring horses, and
-it is said that one of them while in the house drank to the health of
-Monmouth, which indiscretion becoming known in London, a warrant was
-issued for Mr. Prideaux’s arrest, and he was taken to the Tower on a
-charge of high treason. Notwithstanding that nothing could be proved
-against him, he was kept a close prisoner until he had paid the sum of
-£15,000 to the infamous Jeffreys, when his pardon was signed on March
-20th, 1685. On the accession of William III. he petitioned Parliament
-for leave to bring in a Bill to charge the estates of Jeffreys with the
-restitution of this money, but the Act failed to pass.
-
-The sole surviving daughter of Edmund Prideaux (and his wife, Amy
-Fraunceis), in 1690, married her cousin, Francis Gwyn, Esq., of
-Llansandr, co. Glamorgan, who thus inherited Ford Abbey, and was
-succeeded in the estates by his fourth son, Francis Gwyn, who, dying
-without issue in 1777, devised this house and all his other lands
-to his kinsman, John Fraunceis, or Francis, of Combe-Florey, on
-condition of his taking the name of Gwyn, and in this family the
-Abbey remained until the decease of a John Francis Gwyn, in 1846,
-when it was purchased by G. F. W. Miles, Esq., and afterwards by Miss
-Evans. It is now the property of Mrs. Freeman Roper. The famous Jeremy
-Bentham rented the abbey early in the nineteenth century and here he
-entertained James Mill and other social and literary magnates. One of
-the numerous Francis Gwyns was Queen Anne’s Secretary for War, and to
-him Her Majesty presented the magnificent tapestries now hung in the
-saloon. They are worked from original cartoons by Raphael, said to have
-been designed at the request of Pope Leo. Charles I. is said to have
-purchased the cartoons on the advice of Rubens, and to have removed
-them from Brussels in 1630. They were first placed, it is thought, at
-Whitehall, and William III. had them hung at Hampton Court Palace,
-where they remained until 1865, when they were taken to their present
-home, the Victoria and Albert Museum. These designs were the property
-of His Majesty King Edward VII., who has, I think, recently bequeathed
-them to the nation.
-
-It was in 1842 that, for the convenience of county business, the parish
-of Thorncombe, containing Ford Abbey, was transferred to the county of
-Dorset.
-
-
-
-
-DORCHESTER[49]
-
-BY THE LORD BISHOP OF DURHAM, D.D.
-
-
-If Bede is right, the Roman armies did not leave our shores till A.D.
-452. Whether it was then, so near the end of the old Western Empire,
-or a little earlier, it must have been a dark hour for Dorset, which
-no doubt saw something of the embarkation; some considerable force,
-in that strict order which to the last the legions maintained, would
-no doubt march from Durnovaria to Clavinio (Weymouth) to take ship.
-The light of history falls faint over Dorset and Dorchester for many
-a year from that Roman exodus. But it is interesting to find that the
-“Saxons,” to use the familiar term, took a century and a half to master
-Dorset; our fathers must have made a stubborn fight against endless
-raids. It is at least possible that the victory of Badon Hill—in
-which, says the Arthurian legend, the Saxon hordes were ruinously
-beaten by the “Britons,” led perhaps by a Rome-trained chief—was
-won in Dorset; Badbury, near Wimborne, in the belief of Edwin Guest
-of Cambridge, was Badon. But Wessex in due time absorbed Dorset and
-Dorchester; and now our fields and woodlands were well sprinkled with
-royal manors, while our town, beyond a doubt, still kept much of its
-old dignity and culture; for the Saxons left the walled cities largely
-alone, after disarming their inhabitants. Durnovaria, with its name
-changed to Dorceastre, still stood fenced with its massive wall and
-still contained many a stately house, tessellated and frescoed. Kings
-of Wessex doubtless visited Dorset often, for the chase, and for
-sustenance on their manors, and to keep state at Dorceastre. Alfred,
-in all likelihood, was known by sight in the town. His grandson,
-Athelstan, allowed it the right of coinage—a sure testimony to its
-importance.
-
-It suffered sorely from the Danes a century later. Sweyn, in 1002,
-taking awful revenge for the massacre wrought by Ethelred the
-“Unredy”—that is to say, the “Counsel-less”—marched from Devon to Wilts
-by Dorset, and left Dorchester a desolation. It is said that he tore
-down the walls, but this, almost for certain, was not so; they were
-too massive to be wrecked without long labour, which the rovers would
-not care to spend; and there is large evidence for their existence
-far into the seventeenth century. However, Danish fire and sword must
-have left the town black and blood-stained within its ramparts. Half a
-century later, under the Confessor, Dorchester counted 172 houses; the
-number is recorded in _Domesday Book_ (1085-6) as large, in contrast to
-the eighty-eight at the date of the survey. Very likely the building
-of the Norman Castle (where now stands the Prison) had to do with the
-shrinkage; the castle was sure to be a centre of spoliation.
-
-The restless John was in the town in 1201, and often later—hunting, no
-doubt, and taking his “one night’s firm,” the statutable sustenance due
-to the King and his men. Under Edward I., in 1295, we sent burgesses to
-the first English Parliament. Our last burgess sat from 1874 till 1885.
-Dorchester is now only the centre of an electoral division.
-
-In that same reign appears the first mention of our town churches:
-Holy Trinity, St. Peter’s, and All Saints’. Not that the parishes are
-no older than that date; indeed, the porch of St. Peter’s contains a
-twelfth century fragment.
-
-[Illustration: HIGH STREET, DORCHESTER.]
-
-The reign of Edward III. experienced the terror of the Great Plague,
-carried from China over Asia to Europe, where literally millions of
-people perished. It burst into England, alas! from a ship which put
-in at the Dorset shore, and no doubt our town owed to that awful
-scourge the low state of industry recorded a little later. Things had
-mended by the time of Henry VI., and from then, upon the whole, the
-place has been prosperous. In the seventeenth century it was busy with
-cloth-making and, as now, with the brewing of beer. In the old times of
-farming it was a great centre of grain commerce. Stories are told of
-Dorchester fair-days, when wheat-laden wagons stood ranged in long file
-from Cornhill, along South Street, and far out upon the Weymouth road.
-
-The town had its troubles in “the great century.” In August, 1613, a
-fierce fire swept it almost clean away. The old churches of Trinity and
-All Saints vanished, with nearly every other building within the walls
-(and some outside their circuit, in Fordington), save only St. Peter’s
-and the houses near it—among which would be that now almost solitary
-relic of picturesque Old Dorchester, “Jeffreys’ lodgings.”
-
-But the rebuilding must have been energetic, for in the Civil Wars we
-find Dorchester populous and active enough to be a troublesome focus of
-“malignity.” “A place more entirely disaffected to the King, England
-had not,” says Clarendon. One probable cause of this attitude lay in
-the commanding influence of John White, Rector of Holy Trinity from
-1606 to 1648. White was an Oxonian, a man of culture and piety, and
-evidently of strong personal influence. Preachers to-day may envy, if
-they please, the pulpit privileges given him by the town. The borough
-records show, for example, that in 1630 one Nycholls was brought
-to justice for having “offered speeche concerning Mr. John White’s
-preaching.” White helped to plan the colony of Massachusetts, but
-he did not join the emigration. His power was felt at home, in the
-Westminster Assembly, and in the politics of Dorchester.
-
-In 1642 the walls were solidly repaired, and outside works thrown
-up at, among other points, Maumbury Ring. Watch was kept day and
-night at the gates and on St. Peter’s Tower. But the spirit of the
-town strangely failed when, on the approach of the enemy, one Master
-Strode predicted that the walls would hold off the King’s men for
-just half-an-hour. The Governor, Sir Walter Erle, hearing that Lord
-Carnarvon was coming with two thousand men, and Prince Maurice’s
-artillery besides, promptly left the place, and the citizens opened the
-gates on a promise that they should be spared violence. Carnarvon would
-have kept the promise with chivalrous fidelity, but Maurice let his men
-loose, and Dorchester was so badly handled that Carnarvon threw up his
-command and went to serve the King in person. A little later the town
-behaved much more bravely, and baffled a small Irish force under Lord
-Inchiquin till help from Weymouth completed the rout of the Royalists.
-Later again Essex occupied the town in force; and then Sir Lewis Dives,
-for the King, surprised it with brilliant success, but was badly beaten
-on a second attempt. Yet later there was a skirmish at Dorchester, when
-the royalist _Mercurius_ says that no less a captain than Cromwell
-himself was put to flight by Lord Goring; but the account lacks full
-confirmation. A story of that skirmish clings to a corner of lower
-Fordington, a curve in the road near Grey’s Bridge, known as Tupp’s, or
-Tubb’s, Corner; it is said that a Cromwellian hero of that name fled
-thereby at a speed memorable for all time.
-
-A still darker experience than that of war awaited Dorchester not
-long after. When Monmouth fought at Sedgemoor (1685) our Dorset
-peasants were among the bravest of his rude but heroic army. And when
-the abortive rising was over, the Bloody Assizes began, and Jeffreys
-sat at Dorchester. His lodgings are still shown, the most striking
-house-front in the town, with its black timbers and long, low windows;
-and still, in the Town Hall, is kept the chair from which the terrible
-Chief Justice, in a court hung with red, dealt out death with grim
-smiles and ghastly jests. Nearly three hundred men, told that it was
-their only hope, pleaded guilty, but for most of them the only result
-was a few days’ respite. Seventy-four were executed at Dorchester,
-with all the horrible circumstances of death for treason. For years
-afterwards grim human relics of that evil time still clung to the
-railings round St. Peter’s, greeting the entering worshippers.
-
-[Illustration: JUDGE JEFFREYS’ LODGINGS]
-
-This was not quite the last scene of horror at Dorchester, though
-it was alone in its dreadful kind. As late as within the eighteenth
-century an unhappy woman, convicted of the murder of her husband, was
-hanged and then burned within Maumbury, amidst a vast gazing multitude.
-
-It is a relief to think that about the same time the town put on a
-beauty of a sort unique, I think, in England. The walls had somehow
-largely disappeared within the last half of the seventeenth century;
-and now it was proposed to plant double rows of trees all along the
-line of their foundations. By 1712 the planting was complete, and for
-nearly two complete centuries Dorchester has been surrounded by the
-noble range of avenues which we call The Walks, renewed from time to
-time, and kept with increasing care. From close to Glide Path Hill
-(“Glippath”) the visitor can walk under long successive aisles of
-sycamores or chestnuts on a well-laid gravel road, now facing east,
-now south, now west, now north, till he finds himself close to the
-foot of High Street, within ten minutes of his point of departure. I
-have seen the noble avenues at King’s Lynn, and those of the Backs at
-Cambridge are only less dear to me than our Walks. But I do not think
-that anything even there can quite equal these bowery ramparts of our
-ancient town—certainly not when we put together the natural charm and
-the historical interest.
-
-The Walks were still young about the year 1730, when a poet, in the
-course of a tour from London to Exeter with a group of friends, rode
-through Dorchester. It was Pope’s intimate, John Gay. The travellers
-first saw the town, of course, from Stinsford Hill, over a foreground
-which then, no doubt, was less full of trees. The reaches of the Frome
-and the broad water-meadows pleased Gay, as well they might, and in his
-delightful verse-journal we read his impression:
-
- Now the steep hill fair Dorchester o’erlooks,
- Border’d by meads and wash’d by silver brooks.
-
-In 1762 we find recorded as noteworthy the paving and fencing of a
-side-walk in the lower High Street; and in 1774 came the first public
-lighting of the streets. A decade later Miss Burney (Mme. D’Arblay)
-gives a lively picture of Dorchester as she saw it when travelling in
-the suite of George III. to Weymouth: “The city had so antique an air,
-I longed to investigate its old buildings. The houses have the most
-ancient appearance of any that are inhabited that I have happened to
-see; and inhabited they were indeed! There was an amazing quantity of
-indigenous residers—old women and young children,” who, as she shrewdly
-remarks, could not have come in from a distance, and so formed an index
-of population. Yet the town could not have counted then more than 3,000
-inhabitants. It contains now just 10,500.
-
-We reach at last the nineteenth century. The town, like the county,
-and like all rural England, was in grave alarm in 1830 at the time
-of the “rick-burnings.” Mrs. Mary Frampton’s _Journal_ speaks much
-of the scenes of riot and of wild alarms. I possess letters written
-by my mother, then the young mistress of Fordington Vicarage,[50] in
-which she speaks of the nightly watch and ward kept all around, and of
-her husband’s active share in it, and the relief, under the terrible
-strain, which was given by the friendly attitude of Fordington towards
-him. Just later the Frampton _Journal_ describes the battle royal of
-an election scene on Poundbury (Pummery, as I must be allowed still to
-call it), when the greatest of all Dorset’s sons, the seventh Earl of
-Shaftesbury, then Lord Ashley, stood for the county.
-
-That date brings me to times only a little previous to my own memory,
-and well within the memory of my brothers and friends, and familiar of
-course to my father, who from 1829 to 1880, as Vicar of Fordington,
-laboured alike for the spiritual and social good of his parishioners.
-I may be allowed to close my narrative with a small sheaf of
-reminiscences from his and other memories. Then, after a brief glance
-of the mind’s eye over my native town, my task of love is done.
-
-My father knew very old people who “remembered when rooms were first
-carpeted at Dorchester.” One aged parishioner could recall the change
-of style in the calendar in 1752; the children were taken to _a stile_
-in the Great Field as a memento. He and my mother saw, from Maumbury,
-about 1832, the Princess Victoria with her mother, passing in their
-carriage on the way to Weymouth. My brother, since 1880 Bishop in
-Mid-China, recalls the bringing into the town, in carts, about 1834, of
-loads of saplings sent to be planted along the London Road; and a noble
-avenue they made, which now, alas! is no more than a relic of itself.
-
-I just remember the days of the stage coaches in Dorchester. I see
-the old _Emerald_ still, and hear the bugle of the guard. In 1852 I
-travelled by coach to Dorchester from Bath. And how vividly I can see
-the excitement of the crowd on the arrival of the first South-Western
-train, in 1847! An old woman still runs across my field of view,
-crying out: “There, I did never zee a coach avore goo wi’out ’osses!”
-I remember, two years later, Prince Albert’s arrival at the station,
-where he took carriage for Weymouth, there to lay the first stone of
-the Breakwater. Very vividly I recall the thousands of lamps festooned
-along the Walks to illuminate an entertainment for old people after
-the Crimean peace. Two years earlier, a few weeks before the Alma,
-I remember the awful outburst of the cholera in Fordington; it was
-brought from London in tainted clothing which was sent to the wash in a
-Fordington cottage. My father “stood between the dead and the living”
-at that dark time, and, with admirable assistance, was able, under God,
-to bar the pestilence from entering the town.
-
-[Illustration: CORNHILL]
-
-But I must not ramble further into narrative. Dorchester, with its
-integral neighbour, Fordington (incorporated into the borough in 1835),
-is very dear to my heart, and it is not easy to put narrow limits upon
-reminiscence. Yet scarcely a word has been said here about our chief
-architectural features of the place. I have but named Trinity Church,
-the third structure in succession to that which perished in 1613, as
-All Saints’ Church is the second in like sequence—All Saints’, whose
-fine spire, raised in 1852, gave a wholly new feature to the town. St.
-Peter’s is the ecclesiastical crown of Dorchester—a noble Perpendicular
-church, with a dignified tower, vocal with eight fine bells; in its
-churchyard stands a bronze statue of our Dorset poet, William Barnes.
-At the head of High Street, where the tree-vaulted Bridport road
-runs out westward, stands the modern St. Mary’s, the church of West
-Fordington; the pretty original church, Christ Church, now the chapel
-of the Artillery Barracks, was built by my father’s efforts in 1847,
-when the parish was divided from old Fordington. The County Hall
-and Town Hall are leading features of the High Street. The present
-Town Hall, in 1849, took the place of a building visible still to my
-memory, under which opened an archway leading into North Square, and
-which itself succeeded, in 1791, “The Cupola,” near the Town Pump. The
-Museum, where my brother, Henry Moule, long superintended and developed
-the excellent geological and antiquarian collections, is a handsome
-modern feature of the middle High Street; it stands at a point where,
-almost within the oldest living memory, projecting houses so narrowed
-the roadway that the stage-coach could pass up and down only with great
-caution. The County Hospital, founded in 1841, has grown into abundant
-usefulness, and makes, with its beautiful little chapel, a dignified
-feature of the place. In South Street the quaint front of the “Napper’s
-Mite” almshouses, and the Grammar School, are conspicuous.
-
-[Illustration: “NAPPER’S MITE”]
-
-With Fordington Church, St. George’s, let me close. As I write[51] it
-is about to be largely rebuilt, for Fordington has grown fast; and the
-north aisle of 1833 is, indeed, very far from beautiful. But, whilst
-I rejoice that space and form should be added to the church, my mind
-must still and always see it as it was, with its simple chancel of
-1750; its rude, partly Norman, north aisle; its pulpit of 1592, now
-approached by a rood-stair re-opened in 1863; its remarkable eleventh
-century _tympanum_ at the south door, which shows (probably) St. George
-routing the Saracens at Antioch, in armour of the Bayeux type; and
-its very noble fifteenth century tower, a model of proportion. Let us
-climb that tower, by the stairs familiar to me all my days, and from it
-bid farewell to Dorchester. Beautiful is the prospect, near and far.
-Below us lies the spacious churchyard, a burial-place, in parts, ever
-since the Roman period. Westward you see Dorchester, tower, spire, and
-bowery Walks, with Poundbury beyond them. South-westward lies expanded
-the vast field of Fordington, which till 1870 was unbroken by fence,
-and was tilled by the farmers on a system of annual exchange, older,
-probably, than the Christian era. Beyond it stretches the green,
-massive rampart of Maiden Castle, and, more distant still, the aerial
-dome of Blackdown, crowned by the monumental tower which commemorates
-Nelson’s Hardy. North-westward we can almost see beautiful Wolfeton
-House, cradle of the greatness of the Bedfords. Northward, we look down
-on the roofs and lanes of dear old Fordington; and eastward lie the
-long, fair levels of the Swingbridge meadows, where Frome is sluiced
-into hundreds of channels, bright with living water. The bowery slopes
-of Stinsford and Kingston flank the meadows; and then, eastward, the
-broad valley leads the eye away to the vanishing yet abiding line of
-the Purbecks, a cloud of tenderest blue. South-eastward, over the
-village and its bartons, the woods of Came appear, and the sea-ridge
-runs above them with its long line of Danish burial-mounds. Almost in
-sight are Max Gate, the home of Mr. Hardy, our renowned novelist, and
-the thatched roof of Came Rectory, once the home of our poet, William
-Barnes—deep student, true pastor, clear and tender seer of nature and
-of man.
-
- O fields and streams, another race
- Already comes to take our place,
- To claim their right in you,
- Our homes to hold, our walks to rove—
- But who shall love you with our love,
- Shall know you as we knew?
-
-
-
-
-WEYMOUTH
-
-BY SIDNEY HEATH
-
-
-It has become customary in recent years for topographical and other
-writers to depict Weymouth, if not exactly as a town of mushroom
-growth, at least as one whose history and antiquity date no further
-back than from the time when George III. found its salubrious air so
-suited to his health. True, the aspect of the modern town has little
-left of its pre-Georgian days to tempt the archæologist or allure the
-casual literary worker; but a few hours spent among the old records
-of the town would speedily remove this first impression of modernity,
-and convince even the most sceptical antiquary that the old town of
-Weymouth is one of the most ancient in the county of Dorset. The casual
-visitor may, therefore, be forgiven his impression that Weymouth was
-founded by George III.; for so nearly were the older buildings swept
-away at the time of this royal invasion that even loyal Weymouth
-citizens now find it difficult to realise how living a thing was the
-ancient past of their town, since whatever was left untouched by the
-Georgian builders has been well-nigh destroyed in more recent times to
-make way for what is called modern convenience and improvement.
-
-The word Weymouth is derived directly from the Saxon “Waegemuth,”
-_waeg_ meaning a wave, that is the sea; and _mutha_, an opening. The
-Celtic name for the river Wey, allied to the Welsh word _gwy_, meaning
-water, seems to have caused some confusion in the Saxon mind, and have
-led them to regard the mouth of the estuary (the Backwater) as the
-inlet of the sea rather than the outlet of a small stream.
-
-[Illustration: The Quay Weymouth]
-
-The earliest beginnings of the town are lost in obscurity; yet, even
-if we are not prepared to accept the assertion of certain historians
-that the Tyrian and Phœnician merchants traded here in their numerous
-visits to these shores, we have evidence of a more than respectable
-antiquity in some traces and memorials of the Roman occupation, in the
-way of roads, coins, and pottery; while at Preston, an almost adjoining
-village, remains of a Roman villa may still be seen, and considerable
-Roman remains have been found at Radipole.
-
-There are very few records or official documents antecedent to the
-reign of William I., and naturally many chasms occur in the continuity
-of the recorded history of Weymouth. The earliest mention of the
-place is in Saxon annals, which state that King Athelstan, A.D. 938,
-granted to the Abbey of Middleton (Milton), in Dorset, in order that
-masses might be said for his soul and the souls of his ancestors and
-successors, Kings of England:
-
- All that water within the shore of Waymuth, and half the stream of
- that Waymuth out at sea: twelve acres for the support of the wear and
- its officer, three thaynes and a saltern by the wear, and sixty-seven
- hides of land in its neighbourhood.
-
-The next mention of the place occurs in a Saxon charter of King
-Ethelred II., wherein the King gives land to his minister, Atsere,
-during his life, and licence to leave the inheritance of it as he
-wills. The charter is signed by the King with the sign of the cross;
-by Dunstan, Archbishop of Canterbury, and Oswald, Archbishop of York;
-and the Bishops Athelwold, Living, and Hirwold. The date of this
-interesting document is either obliterated or was never inserted; but
-in 980 Dunstan was Grand-Master of the fraternity of free and accepted
-Masons in England, and both he and Oswald died about 988.
-
-We find no further record of Weymouth until 1042, when Edward the
-Confessor caused a charge to be brought by Robert, Bishop of London,
-accusing his mother, Queen Emma, of consenting to the death of her son
-Alfred, of endeavouring to poison Edward, another of her sons, and of
-maintaining an infamous connection with her kinsman, Alwin, Bishop of
-Winton, to the King’s and her own dishonour. The Queen was ordered to
-purge herself by “fiery ordeal,” which she did at Winchester Cathedral
-in the presence of the King and his nobles; and, having passed
-barefooted and blindfold over nine red-hot ploughshares without harm,
-she was adjudged to have cleared herself of the accusations and to have
-furnished her accusers with an example of what female chastity is able
-to accomplish. The King publicly solicited his mother’s pardon; but
-the Church of Winton was not so easily appeased at the charge brought
-against its Bishop, and forced the repentant King to submit to severe
-penance, and to give nine manors to Holy Mother Church, accordingly—“Ex
-libello donatorium Wintoniæ Ecclesiæ, S. Edwardus rex, dedit Portelond,
-Wikes, Hellwell, et Waimuth maneriis, cum ceteris aliis, ad Wintoniæ
-ecclesiæ”; and this grant was confirmed by a bull of Pope Innocent II.
-
-In _Domesday_ there are several parcels of land separately surveyed
-under the name of _wai_ and _waia_, with no additional name to
-distinguish them, and they are held by different individuals.
-
-Henry I. granted by a charter (without date) to the Prior and Monks of
-St. Swithun, Winton, the ports of “Waimuth and Melecumb, with all their
-appurtenances, together with the manors of Wike and Portelond,” which
-King Edward gave them, and that they might enjoy all the liberties,
-wrecks, and all free customs, by sea and by land, as they had ever
-enjoyed them. This charter was confirmed by Henry II.
-
-In the reign of Henry III. the manor appears to have been considered
-as a dependency of Wyke, and again as appertaining to Portland, but
-it is certain that in the early part of this reign it was granted to
-Henry Blois, Bishop of Winchester, and his successors, as appears by
-the entry on the Charter Rolls. The Bishops did not keep the manor
-long, for it soon became the property of the opulent family of Clare,
-from whom was descended Edward IV. It would be tedious to trace the
-varying fortunes of the Clare family, who were for centuries among the
-most powerful in the kingdom; and although much could be written of
-the subsequent holders of the manor, the following brief records must
-suffice for several decades:—
-
- * * * * *
-
-40 Edward III.—Lionel, Duke of Clarence, held the boroughs of Weymouth
-and Wareham, the manors of Portland and Wyke, with many others.
-
-22 Richard II.—Roger Mortimer, Earl of March, held the borough of
-Weymouth, the manors of Portland and Wyke, with many others.
-
-11 Henry V.—Anna, wife of Edward, Earl of March, held the borough of
-Weymouth, etc.
-
- * * * * *
-
-By the marriage of Ann Mortimer, sister of the Earl of March, with
-Richard de Conysburgh, Earl of Cambridge, the manor fell to the house
-of York, for their son, Richard Plantagenet, Duke of York, succeeded
-them; and in 11 Henry VI., the King granted to Richard, Duke of
-York, livery of Weymouth, and all the castles, manors, lands, etc.,
-which Ann, late wife of Edmund, _Comes Marchiæ_, held in dower of the
-inheritance of the Duke.
-
-The town is mentioned by Leland (1538), Coker (1630 _circa_), and
-Camden. The first-named writes:
-
- The Tounlet of Waymouth lyith strait agayn Milton (Melcombe) on the
- other side of the haven, and at this place, the Trajectus is by a bote
- and a rope, bent over the haven, so that yn the fery-bote they use no
- ores.
-
-In another part of the Itinerary we read:
-
- Waiymouth Town rite agen Milton, on the other side of the Haven yt is
- bigger than Miltoun ys now. The Est South Est point of the Haven of
- Waymouth ys caulid St. Aldelm’s point, being a litl foreland. Ther ys
- a Chapelle by on the Hille. The Paroch Chirch ys a mile of—a Kay for
- shippes in the town—the Haven Mouth almost at hand. Half a mile and
- more to the New Castelle—an open Barbecane to the Castelle. Weimouth
- is counted 20 miles from Pole.
-
-Camden states that in the reign of Edward III., the King got together
-a powerful army and fleet for the purpose of invading France, and the
-town provided twenty ships and 264 mariners for the siege of Calais;
-but these figures are disputed by Hackluit, who says there were but
-fifteen ships and 263 mariners. In March, 1347, the bailiffs of
-Weymouth seized all the goods, chattels, jewels, and armour of Geoffry,
-Earl of Harcautly, who had joined the army of the French King. In 1377
-the town suffered considerably from the fleet of Charles V., when great
-portions of the ports of Dartmouth, Plymouth, Portsmouth, Hastings, and
-Weymouth were destroyed.
-
-The next event of importance was the landing here, on April 14th, 1471,
-of Margaret of Anjou, the consort of Henry VI., on her return from
-France with her son, Prince Edward.
-
-So the tide of history swept on, with periodical ravages from pirates
-and enemies, until the appearance off the harbour of a large foreign
-fleet of eighty sail, which had voyaged from Middleburg on January
-10th, 1505, to escort Philip and Johanna to their Kingdom of
-Castile; but a violent hurricane caused the ships to run to Weymouth
-for shelter. The inhabitants, being unaware of the quality of their
-visitors, and alarmed at so formidable an array of vessels, speedily
-armed themselves, and sent word to Sir Thomas Trenchard, at Wolfeton,
-who, with Sir John Carew, marched into the town at the head of some
-hastily improvised troops. On the rank of the visitors becoming known,
-Sir Thomas invited them to his house at Wolfeton until he could advise
-the King, Henry VII., of the fortuitous circumstance. As soon as Henry
-had notice of the arrival of these royal visitors, he despatched the
-Earl of Arundel with a troop of 300 horse, carrying torches, to escort
-them to London.
-
-There is much in the minor history of the town that one would fain
-linger over, but we must confine ourselves to those larger and more
-far-reaching historical events with which the old life of Weymouth was
-so closely bound up.
-
-In 1544 the bailiffs of Weymouth received the following letter from the
-King, Henry VIII.:—
-
- (By the King.)
-
- Henr. R.
-
- Trustie and well beloved, we greate you well. And whereas betweene us
- and the Emperor upon provocation of manyfolde injuries committed by
- the Frenche Kyng unto us both particularlie; And for his confederation
- wyth the Turke, against ye whole commonwealthe of Christendome. It ys
- agreede that eche of us aparte, in person, with his puissant Armie in
- several parties this soommer, shall invade the Realme of Fraunce; and
- beyng not yet furneyshed as to our honour appertayneth:—
-
- We have appoynted you to send us the nombre of xv hable fotemen, well
- furneyshed for the warres as appertayneth, whereof iii to bee archers,
- every oone furneyshed with a goode bowe in a cace, with xxiii goode
- arrows in a cace, a goode sworde, and a dagger, and the rest to be
- billmen, havyng besydes theyre bill, a goode sworde, and a dagger, to
- be levyed of your owne servants and tenants.
-
- And that you put the saide nombre in such a redyness, furnished with
- coats and hosen of such colours as is appointed for the battel of our
- Armey.
-
- As they faile not within oone houres warnyng to march forward to such
- place as shall be appoynted accordinglie:—
-
- Yeven under our Sygnete at our palace of Westmr., the v^{th} daie of
- June, the xxxv yere of our reigne.
-
- Henr. R.
-
-Weymouth had been created a borough in the reign of Edward II., at the
-time that his nephew, Gilbert of Clare, Earl of Gloucester, was lord
-of the manor (one of whose sisters had married Piers Gaveston, and the
-other sister was the wife of Hugh le Despencer); and although the town
-is styled a “burg” in several documents relating to previous reigns, it
-was not until the nineteenth year of the reign of Edward II. that it
-returned a representative to Parliament.
-
-The borough of Weymouth and the adjoining one of Melcombe (which
-together now make up modern Weymouth) had long viewed each other
-with jealous eyes; and so many complaints being made through their
-respective members, the Parliament prepared a charter, at the
-suggestion of Cecil, it is said, which was approved by Queen Elizabeth
-in the thirteenth year of her reign, which united these two discordant
-elements into one borough.
-
-The merchants of the town, like all those of our southern ports, played
-a zealous and active part in fitting out ships to fight the Armada; and
-from a MS. in the Cottonian Library we learn that the following vessels
-set out from Weymouth in 1588, with instructions to guard the coast and
-seek out the Invincible Armada:—
-
- Name. Tonnage. Master. Men.
- _The Gallion_ 100 Richard Miller 50
- _The Catherine_ 60 30
- _The Heath Hen_ 60 30
- _The Golden Lion_ 120 60
- _The Sutton_ 70 Hugh Preston 40
- _The Expedition_ 70 50
-
-[Illustration: A Relic of the Armada.]
-
-Notwithstanding that their largest vessel was only of 120 tons, the
-Weymouth contingent captured two of the galleons and brought them as
-prizes into the harbour. The only other vessels sent by the county
-on this occasion were two from Lyme Regis—_The Revenge_, of 60 tons,
-and _The Jacob_, of 90 tons—and four from Poole. In the Guildhall
-there is a memorial of the event in the shape of a massive iron-bound
-chest (_see illustration_), believed to have been brought from one
-of the captured galleons; and many other relics are scattered over
-the county, as at Bingham’s Melcombe, where there is a magnificent
-oval dining-table, of massive form and marvellous workmanship, with
-the crest of a Spanish grandee in the centre, the whole mounted on a
-sea-chest in lieu of legs. Many Spanish coins have been washed ashore
-on the Chesil Bank, and it is possible that others of the ill-fated
-ships sank in the vicinity of Portland, or that the dons threw their
-money and valuables overboard rather than let them fall into the hands
-of their captors.
-
-Little is recorded during the next fifty years, save the building of a
-wooden bridge of seventeen arches to unite the two towns, in 1594; and
-thirteen years later the town was visited by one of those great plagues
-which periodically swept over mediæval England.
-
-The outbreak of the Civil War in 1642 found the county fairly evenly
-divided in support of the rival parties, and Corfe Castle became the
-headquarters of the Royalist, and Bingham’s Melcombe that of the
-Parliamentary forces. In 1643 the Earl of Carnarvon seized and held
-for the King, Weymouth, Melcombe, and Portland, and left them in
-charge of Prince Maurice, whose troops are said to have pillaged and
-ravaged the district. The following year the Earl of Essex defeated
-the Royalist troops, and took the town for the Parliament, when he
-was assisted by a fleet under the Lord High Admiral, the Earl of
-Warwick. The towns proved a rich prize for the captors, as, in addition
-to much ammunition, etc., no less than sixty ships fell into their
-hands. The troubles of the inhabitants, however, were far from over,
-as in 1645 Sir Lewis Dyves received orders from the King to make
-an attempt to re-capture Weymouth, which, with the help of Sir W.
-Hastings, the Governor of Portland, he succeeded in doing, and drove
-the defenders across the harbour into Melcombe. On June 15th, 1644, the
-town surrendered to the Parliamentary Commander, Sir William Balfour,
-the final overthrow being largely due to the Earl of Warwick, who
-appeared off the harbour with a large fleet, originally mobilised
-for the relief of Lyme Regis. The spoils of war which fell into the
-hands of the captors included 100 pieces of ordnance, 2,000 muskets,
-150 cases of pistols, 200 barrels of powder, and 1,000 swords, in
-addition to sixty ships of various tonnage lying in the harbour. The
-losses sustained by the combined towns in the Civil War amounted to
-£20,000, as a certificate from the Justices, in the Parliamentary Roll,
-testifies. The town to-day shows no trace of the fierce bombardments it
-underwent, but a house in Maiden Street has a “bogus” memento in the
-shape of a cannon ball foolishly inserted in the masonry some decades
-since.
-
-[Illustration: Sandsfoot Castle]
-
-In 1649 the inhabitants petitioned Parliament for a grant of £3,000, to
-enable them to enlarge Melcombe Church, build a new bridge, and free
-the harbour from rubbish.
-
-[Illustration: Doorway Sandsfoot Castle]
-
-The “Old Castle,” otherwise Sandsfoot Castle, situated about half a
-mile from Weymouth proper, is to-day nothing but a mere shell of the
-former stronghold. It was built by Henry VIII., about 1539, and was
-part of his scheme for the fortification of various parts of the coast,
-particularly Portsmouth, Portland, and Weymouth, against a possible
-invasion on the part of Papal Europe on his throwing off the Roman yoke
-in 1540. Leland calls it “a right goodlie and warlyke castel, havyng
-one open barbicane.” The existing masonry shows its form to have been
-a parallelogram, and from its commanding position it, no doubt, was a
-fortress of considerable strength. It is difficult to identify, from
-its crumbling remains, the various portions of the castle, but that
-portion to the north, from its vaulted character, appears to have been
-the Governor’s apartment; while fronting south was the gun platform, as
-the embrasure shows. This platform would also flank its east and west
-sides, which were also pierced for big guns, while almost level with
-the ground was the barbican, with two tiers of loop-holes for small
-arms.
-
-On a tombstone at Whitchurch Canonicorum is the following inscription:—
-
- Here lyeth Iohn Wadham of Catherstone, Esquyer, who deceased A.D.
- 1584, who was dewring his life time Captayne of the Queene’s Ma^{ties}
- castell called Sandesfote, besides Waymouth in the countye of Dorset.
-
-Among its other Governors were George Bamfield, 1631; Sir Anthony
-Ashley Cooper, 1643; Colonel Ashburnham and Colonel William Sydenham,
-1644; and Humphrey Weld, of Lulworth, 1685. It is a matter for regret
-that this old building should have been so neglected, as each year sees
-large masses of its masonry falling over the cliff. As a writer as long
-ago as 1829 said:
-
- Its remains even now attract many an inquisitive enquiry as to why it
- has been so neglected, as where the neighing of hostile steeds, and
- the busy clang of arms once sounded to the battle’s din, the humble
- grass now grows, its walls are the dormitories of the birds of the
- air, and its rooms afford pasturage to the cattle; a change certainly
- more gratifying to us as a nation; but still its bold towering
- appearance, as seen ascending the hill, or viewing it from the hill,
- reminds us of some bygone tale.
-
-In addition to the castle, the town was further protected by several
-forts. Probably none of these were in the nature of permanent
-fortifications, except the Blockhouse, which stood near the east end
-of Blockhouse Lane. The New Fort, or Jetty Fort, was erected at the
-entrance of the harbour, at the end of the old pier, and was dismantled
-in 1661, although in Hutchins’ time three guns were placed in position
-on the same site. Then there was Dock Fort, under the hill, west of
-the Jetty Pier, St. Nicholas’ Chapel converted into a fort by the
-Parliamentary troops, and a small fort called the Nothe Fort.
-
-Few events seem to have occurred during the Protectorate that need
-recording beyond the great naval victory gained by Blake over Van
-Tromp, off Portland; and, as some compensation for the damage done to
-their property during the reign of his father, Charles II. granted the
-town in 1660 an annuity of £100 a year for ten years from the Customs’
-dues. It was during this reign that tradesmen coined small money or
-tokens for the convenience of those wishing to buy small quantities
-of goods, as but little small money was coined by authority. In 1594
-the Mayor of Bristol was granted permission to coin a token, and the
-benefit to the community proved so great that the custom spread to
-other towns. Weymouth coined many of these tokens (_see illustration_),
-which were made of copper, brass, or lead, and decorated as fancy
-dictated. Every person and tradesman in the town was obliged to take
-them, and they undoubtedly answered the purpose of providing the people
-with small money. In 1672, however, Charles II. ordered to be coined
-a sufficient number of half-pence and farthings for the exigencies
-of the State, and these _numorum famuli_ were prohibited as being an
-infringement of the King’s prerogative.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- The Town Token
-
- Thomas Hyde
-
- Bartholomew Beer
-
- James Stanley
-
- James Budd
-
- Some Weymouth
- Tokens]
-
-The grant of armorial bearings to Weymouth and Melcombe Regis bears the
-date of May 1st, 1592. The seals of the town were eight in number, a
-description of which is recorded in Ellis’s _History of Weymouth_.
-
-When the ill-starred Duke of Monmouth landed at Lyme Regis in 1685,
-no Weymouthians seem to have flocked to his standard. Upon the
-failure of the rebellion the participants of the neighbourhood were
-quickly disposed of by Judge Jeffreys, who opened his Bloody Assize
-at Dorchester, and ordered them to be hanged at Greenhill, and their
-bodies to be dismembered and exhibited throughout the county as a
-warning to rebels.
-
-[Illustration: Arms of Weymouth]
-
-So we come down to the close of the seventeenth century with little to
-record save devastating fires, plagues, and storms. A general period of
-poverty and depression seems then to have overtaken the two towns. The
-causes leading to this change, which had begun to show itself in the
-reign of Elizabeth, were many and various, and may be briefly ascribed
-to the concrete result of the vicious rule of the Stuarts, the removal
-of the wool trade to Poole, the loss of the Newfoundland trade, and
-the injury received during the Civil War. Ellis tells us that, at the
-beginning of the eighteenth century, “scarcely any idea can be formed
-of the general devastation and depression that everywhere prevailed.
-Houses were of little value ... the population had dwindled to a mere
-nothing ... old tenements fell down ... the inhabitants consisted
-chiefly of smugglers and fishermen.”
-
-Before we turn to the brighter days which set in towards the middle
-of the reign of George III., a short account must be given of the
-larger memorials of the town—_e.g._, the old bridge, the priory, and
-the parish church, although it must be confessed that of important
-antiquities dating before the Georgian era the town has little to show
-beyond a few remnants of Jacobean houses, part of one solitary pillar
-of the chapel, and possibly a few old doorways; and in later and minor
-memorials the town is little better off. There is, in the Guildhall,
-the fine iron-bound chest before mentioned, and another, said to be
-of similar origin, bequeathed by the late Sir Richard Howard. There is
-also an ancient chair with a cardinal’s hat carved on the back, and
-the old stocks and whipping-post; but for the most part nothing has
-survived save the truly Georgian, such as round windows, picturesque
-doorways, and part of the old Gloucester Lodge, now an hotel—an
-altogether disappointing record in comparison with the long and varied
-history of the place.
-
-[Illustration: Old House on North Quay. Weymouth]
-
-Of the old chapel,[52] the one remaining stone is preserved in the
-wall of a school. The chapel was a chapel of ease to Wyke Regis, the
-mother-church of Weymouth, and was dedicated to St. Nicholas. It stood
-on the summit of a hill overlooking the old town of Weymouth, and its
-site is commemorated in the name “Chapelhaye,” by which the district is
-known. There are several documents extant relating to this chapel, and
-among extracts from the _Liceirce_ is the following:—
-
- None shall fail at the setting forth of the procession of Corpus
- Christi day, on pain of forfeiting one pound of wax, and each brother
- shall pay six pennies to the procession, and pay yearly.
-
-This relates to the fraternity or guild in the Chapel of St. Nicholas,
-which was founded by a patent granted in 20 Henry VIII. to Adam
-Moleyns, Dean of Sarum, and certain parishioners of Wyke Regis, and
-known as “The Fraternity or Guild of St. George in Weymouth.”
-
-[Illustration: Old Chair at Weymouth.]
-
-Before the building of a bridge across the harbour the means of direct
-communication between the two towns was, so Leland says in 1530, by
-means of a boat, drawn over by a rope affixed to two posts, erected on
-either side of the harbour, a contrivance which was in use at Portland
-Ferry as late as 1839. In 1594 this primitive method of crossing gave
-way on the erection of the wooden bridge before referred to, erected
-at the expense of several wealthy merchants of London, who appear to
-have had trading interests here. This, in its turn, was so seriously
-injured during the Civil Wars, that it fell to pieces, and was rebuilt
-in 12 Anne by Thomas Hardy, Knt., William Harvey, James Littleton,
-and Reginald Marriott, the towns’ Parliamentary representatives, and
-it continued in use until 1741, when a bridge sixty yards long, with
-a draw-bridge in the centre, took its place. The celebrated Bubb
-Dodington, the first and only Lord Melcombe, contributed largely to its
-cost. In 1770 another bridge was erected some seventy yards westward,
-thus increasing the length of the harbour; but as the inhabitants were
-forced to make a considerable detour to reach it, they petitioned
-against the proposed alteration, but to no purpose. In 1820 it was
-determined to erect the first bridge of stone,[53] which is still in
-use, and only calls for mention here from the fact that on pulling down
-some adjacent houses an urn filled with silver coins of Elizabeth,
-James I., and Charles I. was found; and it is said that some of the
-inhabitants had a fine haul of “treasure trove” on this occasion. More
-interesting, perhaps, was the discovery of a gilt brass crucifix,
-four inches long; and on the wall of one of the demolished houses was
-painted the following verse:—
-
- God saue our Queene Elizabethe,
- God send hir happie dayes;
- God graunt her grace to
- Persevir in his most holie wayes.
- A. Dom. 1577.
-
-The old priory, or, as it was more commonly called, the “Friary,” stood
-in Maiden Street. It was a house of the Dominican Friars, dedicated
-in the name of St. Winifred, although Speed gives Dominic as the
-dedicatory saint. Leland writes of it as “a fayre house of Freres in
-the est part of the town.” The ancient chair now in the Guildhall
-came from this priory, and it was said to possess miraculous powers of
-healing the sick, and otherwise blessing the devout who were privileged
-to sit upon it. The priory shared the fate of the other monastic
-foundations at the Dissolution.
-
-Of churches which can be rightly considered as memorials, Weymouth
-has no example, as the oldest is that of St. Mary, the parish church.
-The foundation-stone was laid on October 4th, 1815; this church was
-erected partly on the site of a former church. It is a large, simple,
-and unpretentious building, of which some hard things have been said
-and written, but it is at least well built and free from sham, although
-of its architecture the less said the better. It is, however, somewhat
-redeemed by an excellently designed cupola containing one bell. Inside,
-an altar-piece by Sir James Thornhill, a native of the town, whose
-daughter married his pupil Hogarth, claims attention; as also does the
-following curious inscription, in which the artist, by contracting
-the word “worthiest,” has conveyed the very opposite estimate of the
-deceased’s character to that intended:—
-
- UNDERTH LIES YE BODY OF
- CHRISR. BROOKS ESQ. OF JAMAICA
- WHO DEPARD. THIS LIFE 4 SEPR. 1769
- AGED 38 YEARS, ONE OF YE WORST. OF MEN
- FRIEND TO YE DISTRESD.
- TRULY AFFECTD. & KIND HUSBAND
- TENDER PART. & A SINCR. FRIEND.
-
-An old chalice belonging to the former church which stood on this site
-was in the possession of Mr. Ellis. It was made of pewter, weighed
-(without the lid, which was missing) 4½ lbs., and held four pints.
-On the front was engraved:
-
- HOLINESS UNTO THE LORD,
- ZACH. XIV., VER. 20.
- JOHN STARR,
- CHURCHWARDEN,
- 1633.
-
-About the middle of the eighteenth century a gentleman of Bath, Ralph
-Allen (the original of Fielding’s “Squire Allworthy”), having been
-recommended sea-bathing for his health, found the shore of Melcombe so
-suitable for his purpose that he spoke of it to the Duke of Gloucester.
-His Royal Highness came, sampled the salt water, and built Gloucester
-Lodge, to which house he shortly afterwards invited the King, George
-III., who spent eleven weeks here, with his Queen and family, in the
-summer of 1789. The result of this and subsequent visits was that His
-Majesty purchased the house and converted it into a royal residence. A
-great stimulus was thus given to the town, which entered upon a period
-of prosperity; for here George III. held court, and heard the news of
-some of Nelson’s and Wellington’s victories. Very gay, indeed, was
-the life of those days, with music, feasting, and dancing, which took
-place in what is now called “the Old Rooms” (formerly an inn), across
-the harbour. It was at Gloucester Lodge that His Majesty received his
-ministers, and from whence he and Queen Charlotte used to walk to the
-little theatre in Augusta Place to witness the performances of Mrs.
-Siddons and her contemporaries. Queen Charlotte’s second keeper of
-robes was Fanny Burney (Madame D’Arblay), the chronicler of George
-III., and the author of _Evelina_ and _Camilla_, for which last she
-received 3,000 guineas, with which sum she built Camilla Cottage, at
-Mickleham, near Dorking.
-
-At Weymouth, in 1785, was born Thomas Love Peacock, the author of _The
-Monks of St. Mark_, and other works. He was Under-Secretary to Sir
-Home Popham, and afterwards Chief Examiner and Clerk to the East India
-Company, from which post he retired in 1856 with a pension of £1,333
-per annum. He was a friend of Shelley, whom he had met on a walking
-tour in Wales in 1812. He died in 1866, aged eighty years.
-
-In the long list of eminent men who have represented the towns in
-Parliament we find the names of Francis Bacon (Lord Verulam), Sir
-Christopher Wren, and the celebrated political adventurer, Bubb
-Dodington.
-
-One of the most interesting studies for the topographer lies in tracing
-the origin of the names of the streets of a town; and the names of
-the principal streets of Weymouth are distinctly traceable to their
-origin. St. Nicholas’ Street derives its name from the patron-saint
-of maritime towns; Francis Street comes probably from Franchise; Boot
-Lane (formerly Buckler’s), from an inn called “The Boot”; Helen Lane,
-from Queen Eleanor, who held the manor of Melcombe; Maiden Street, from
-Queen Elizabeth, who united the boroughs; and St. Edmund’s Street, St.
-Thomas’ Street, and St. Mary’s Street, possibly from chapels dedicated
-in honour of these saints.
-
-
-[Illustration: The Old Stocks, Weymouth.]
-
-
-
-
-THE ISLE OF PORTLAND
-
-BY MRS. KING WARRY
-
-
-To the stranger of antiquarian or geological tastes Portland must ever
-be of interest; but the casual visitor—seeing it for the first time
-in the glare of the noonday sun, amidst eddying clouds of stone-dust
-tossed hither and thither by blustering winds, or when the over-charged
-atmosphere settles like a misty cap on the Verne Heights—is apt, if
-he have formed expectations, to be woefully disappointed. The fact is
-that nowhere, perhaps, is the Spirit of Place more coy and difficult
-of access than in modern Portland, having retreated before barracks,
-fortifications, and prison, before traction-engines and signs of
-commercial prosperity. But, properly wooed, it can still be won, and
-once found, how well it repays the trouble of seeking! A mere cycle
-run or drive through the island is emphatically _not_ the way to see
-Portland Isle, especially the Portland of the past. The visitor needs
-to walk, saunter, and lounge idly for at least a few days, and then,
-if he have a well-stored mind and fail to experience the subtle,
-indefinable sensation called “charm,” he must be strangely lacking in
-that spiritual perception which alone makes man feel at one with the
-universe and with God.
-
-The convict establishment and Government quarries have displaced much
-which lent an interest to the island; the barracks and harbour works
-have displaced still more—but fortunately we retain a few records
-which, scanty though they be, reveal a something of the past. Gone
-is the barrow of that king whose very name is lost; and this supposed
-last resting-place of a mighty chieftain, swept through long centuries
-by pure sea-laden breezes, is now desecrated by quarrying operations:
-the barrow of Celtic Bran is but an empty name, though Mound Owl still
-remains in part, a silent witness of Saxon prowess and possibly of the
-fierceness of the contest maintained so long in Royal Dorset.
-
-Gone, also, is the sometime well-preserved earthwork on the Verne
-Hill, formerly attributed to Roman or Dane, and now believed to have
-been older than either. Only a slight vestige of the double fosse-way
-remains; though an old man, but lately passed away, has told us that
-in the days of his youth he could stand on that part of the West Cliff
-known as Priory and distinctly trace it throughout its length as it
-tended downwards towards the harbour, once the scene alike of peaceful
-commercial intercourse or sanguinary combats. Looking across Portland
-Mere from the hill-top, one can imagine it all—from the probable
-peaceful Phœnician trader and Roman trireme to the Viking rovers and
-much-dreaded “long ships,” even as can be pictured in some degree the
-character of the opposite coast before the altered tidal action inside
-Portland breakwater had caused beautiful Smallmouth Sands to vanish
-and Sandsfoot Castle to stand perilously near the crumbling cliff-edge
-in ruinous state; whilst the opposite Portland Castle still remains,
-casting much of its original reflection in the Mere waters, a standing
-witness to the uneasy conscience of Henry VIII. respecting French
-designs.
-
-Page upon page of unwritten history lay open to the observant eye
-as recently as some sixty years or so ago, all traces of which are
-rapidly vanishing before modern requirements. Barrows, earthworks,
-and so-called Druidical circles were then so strongly in evidence
-(especially one well-preserved circle near where the prison Governor’s
-house now stands) as to make one think that religious observances of
-one kind or another must have been strongly marked during those early
-days. Indeed, the Bill itself—cleaving the clear waters within sight
-of the foam-tossed Race and equally dangerous Shambles, its point
-accentuated by the curious outstanding Pulpit Rock—is often termed
-“Beel” by the old islanders, and is by some supposed to derive its name
-from Baal.
-
-The former bold outline of the West Cliff is in part lost, owing to
-land-slides during the past century; and lost, likewise (owing to tidal
-action), is the old pathway round the Weirs underneath, towards the
-lighthouses, which formed a pleasant ramble seventy odd years ago.
-But the view from the cliff-tops, both east and west, must be much
-the same as in immediately-preceding centuries, and it is only those
-who have watched the flickering lights and shadows and roseate glow
-over-spreading the white coast-line in early day right away to St.
-Ealdhelm’s, or faced the sunset on the West Cliff, who can appreciate
-one of the chief charms of Portland, viz., the varying character of the
-coast-line, both far and near—that coast which surely no Englishman can
-survey without emotion, abounding as it does in memories of the deeds
-which helped to make our England.
-
-The Bay itself is glorious to look down upon, with its pebbly ridge
-dividing it from that other water more like lake than sea; whilst
-straight away, cloud-cleaving in the haze, is Blackdown, capped by
-Hardy’s Monument, over which hover greyish-purple shadows, changing
-into those tones and half-tones which are so charming in Dorset
-“distances.”
-
-The East Weirs, again, were an ideal place for a day’s ramble, with
-their wild undergrowth, dog-roses and honeysuckle sending their
-fragrance along the sea-laden breezes. Set off on one hand by the grey,
-grim cliffs above, and the restless waters on the other, they merge
-into a chaotic jumble of rocks and grass, terminating abruptly in a
-ledge overlooking one of the gems of the isle—the beautiful little
-cove of Church Hope. This cove is guarded above by weather-beaten Bow
-and Arrow Castle, the old ruined church, and Pennsylvania Castle, the
-latter lying at the head of a romantic grassy slope studded with trees,
-and the whole forming a delightful rest for tired eyes in treeless,
-stony Portland Isle.
-
-Bow and Arrow, or Rufus Castle, is worth more than a mere passing
-allusion, but space forbids. Its alternative name may show the period
-of its erection; it was probably built about the same time as the
-ancient church which preceded the adjacent ruined building. Its
-original strength is apparent at a glance, and its position on the
-summit of a crag overlooking the channel is distinctly striking. Old
-Portlanders believed the above-mentioned crag to have once been near
-the centre of the island, and the Shambles to have been the site of
-butchers’ shops. When we recall the great historic land-slides on the
-north-east in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and remember
-how the old people are stated to have spoken of them with bated breath,
-in reference to the terror they had caused the then living inhabitants,
-who had believed the whole island to be slipping away, the tradition
-does not seem so wildly impossible.
-
-Recorded history is so silent respecting the early years of Portland,
-that one fancies it must have inherited its full share of that
-barbarism into which Britain relapsed after the departure of the
-Romans, its very name having been lost; for that it was the “Vindilis,”
-or “Vindilia,” of Roman times, is open to grave doubts, the latest
-edition of the _Antonine Itinerary_ stating that place to have been
-Belle Isle. It is much more generally accepted that Portland was
-referred to in the _Anglo-Saxon Chronicle_ as the landing-place of the
-men “who came in three long ships from Hæretha Land (Denmark), A.D.
-787.” Terrible, indeed, must have been the depredations of these wild
-northmen during this and subsequent periods, for floating traditions
-to linger on till past the middle of the nineteenth century. It is well
-within the writer’s memory that rebellious children were sometimes
-threatened with being carried off by “the cruel wild men, who come over
-the beach in the middle of the night and carry away naughty children”—a
-threat which was varied by references to “Old Arripay” or “Boney.” The
-“wild men” seemed too remote, and “Arripay” too nebulous to a child’s
-mind to cause much fear; but “Boney” was a real terror to the little
-conscience-stricken individual, so familiar with frequent allusions
-to the threatened French invasion under Buonaparte as to consider him
-still living, and to regard him with a mighty dread.
-
-There is a legend still extant that after the defeat of the Danes at
-Charmouth they landed at Portland and carried off some maidens, whom
-they imprisoned in the bottom of their ship. Owing to a fearful storm,
-the Danes perished, whilst the ship containing the bound girls was
-driven backwards during the night and cast ashore. When the light of
-morning broke, to their great joy, they found themselves at the very
-place from which they had been stolen.
-
-Duke Æthelhelm defeated the Danes here in 837; and in 1052 Earl Godwin
-landed and plundered the island.
-
-Edward the Confessor granted the manor to the church at Winchester,
-which grant must have been revoked by the Conqueror, as _Domesday Book_
-states: “The King holds the island which is called Porland.” Later on
-we find the Prior and Convent of Winchester held Portland, which may
-account for certain lands there still being called Priory. It must not
-be forgotten that the manor in ancient times included the dependencies
-of Wyke, Weymouth, and Helwell. Interesting references to grants of the
-Manor may be seen at the British Museum. Amongst the more noteworthy
-names in this connection may be cited those of Gilbert de Clare,
-Earl of Gloucester and Hertford, Lionel Duke of Clarence, and Cecilia
-Duchess of York. Later still we find Henry VIII. granting the Manor
-and Isle to Catherine Howard, and then to Catherine Parr, Portland
-having formed part of Jane Seymour’s possessions. In a closet over the
-gun-room at Portland Castle is the following inscription:—
-
- God, save, Kinge, Henri, the viii, of, that, name, and, Prins, Edvard,
- begottin, of, Quene, Jane, my, Ladi, Mari, that, goodli, Virgin, and,
- the, Ladi, Elizabeth, so, towardli, with, the, Kinge’s, honorable,
- counselers.
-
-Amongst the Lansdowne MSS. in the British Museum is one entitled
-“Remembrance for Lord Burghly as to certain fixtures of Sir W. Raleigh
-relating to Portland Castle, 1587”; and in 1625 the name of Gilbert
-Rawleigh is cited as Governor of the Castle.
-
-We can fancy those stirring times in 1558, when Coker tells us that off
-Portland, in full view of those on shore, was witnessed a great fight
-with the Invincible Armada, two of whose treasure-ships were brought
-into Portland Roads. For long years after, during a ground-swell,
-dollars and “ducky-stones” were picked up on Portland Beach, and
-were supposed to be a portion of that treasure which was to have
-been used in subjugating England. _En passant_, it may be said that
-the ducky-stone (a piece of solid silver about the size and somewhat
-the shape of a small saucer) did not derive its name from the ducat,
-but from the Portland game of “ducky,” which consisted in trying
-to dislodge a stone poised lightly on the top of a larger stone—a
-matter eliciting some of that skill in stone-slinging for which the
-Portlanders (often termed the British Baleares) were once noted.
-
-Again, in 1653, the celebrated running fight between Van Tromp and
-Blake took place off Portland, memories of which, together with the
-landing of the Duke of Monmouth “down Lyme way” some thirty odd years
-later, lingered in the talk of the old people down to our own times.
-Their memories were also very keen respecting the days of “good” Queen
-Anne (when certain Portlanders were “touched” for “the Evil”), of
-“forty-five,” and of the chief battles of Marlborough, Wellington,
-and Nelson—the victory of the Nile, with its attendant rejoicings,
-assuming a greater importance than any other, as perhaps was befitting
-in a coast people who could recognise the value of this French defeat;
-but most of all were their hearts stirred by tales of the long list
-of brave ships which had met their doom on the rocks, of hair-breadth
-escapes and thrilling rescues, and great was the indignation expressed
-if any allusion were made to the old mainland belief, that the island
-inhabitants had ever been wreckers.
-
-The Portlanders, ever loyal at heart, probably sided wholly with the
-King during the contests between Charles and his Parliament; but the
-place changed hands several times during the struggle. Cromwell must
-have felt assured of this loyalty, as he appears to have been in
-vengeful mood towards the old Parsonage House, the “Island Ancient
-Records” containing the following entry:—
-
- One Personage House in the Villidge of Wakem Demolished and burnt down
- by the Usurper Oliver Cromwell and hant been rebuilded every since.
-
-The method of quarrying stone is too well known to need comment; but
-one curious custom which prevailed among the quarrymen until quite
-recent times may here be cited, known as “jumping the broomstick.” On
-the marriage of one of their number, the quarrymen all adjourned to the
-George Inn, where the bachelors were ranged on one side and the married
-men on the other, a broomstick lying between. Chanting a doggerel
-couplet, the married men had a tug-of-war with the single men, and,
-pulling the newly-made bridegroom across the broomstick, he was made to
-stand “drinks all round.”
-
-The more closely the descent of the Portland people is investigated,
-the more probable appears the persistent island tradition that three
-families successively settled in the island amongst the original
-inhabitants, viz.: the Combens (valley men?), the Pearces from Ireland,
-and the Whites, “who came from the sea, Dover way.” This corresponds
-in the main with the Belgic inroads, the Irish incursions in the west
-during the third and subsequent centuries, and with the Jutish, or
-mixed Jutish and Frisian settlement at Portland, of which there is
-considerable proof. Anyway, one strong Frisian characteristic tallied
-well with the intense independence of the old Portlander, coupled with
-the occasional phrase, “as free as the air,” and the proudly-repeated
-assertion, “None over us but the Sovereign; she” (in the case of the
-late Queen) “is Lady of the Manor.”
-
-The inbred distrust of strangers, called _kimberlins_ (pointing,
-perhaps, to a comparatively pure-blooded community), coupled with his
-insularity, gave a certain reserve to the old Portlander; but, once his
-confidence won, none more communicative or hospitable than he. True
-alike to his preferences and aversions, full of prejudices, but loyal,
-brave and manly, proud of his word of honour, he was by no means to be
-despised either as friend or foe. Quarrelsome he certainly was if his
-sense of right were in any way disturbed; otherwise he was peaceful and
-law-abiding, except as regards smuggling; and it was, perhaps, this
-probable old Frisian love of freedom which made him consider that what
-came by the sea was free to all, and to resent tax or toll thereon. Not
-long since an underground passage was unearthed between two old houses,
-one of which had secret recesses behind two sideboards. This may have
-been a fair sample of many such houses in the old smuggling days.
-
-The Portlander was also proud of his old Saxon customs, of his Court
-Leet and his Reeve (Anglo-Saxon, _gerefa_), of his “share and share
-alike” system (_gavel-kind_) regarding division of property, and of
-his pre-feudal method of conveyance of land, viz.: by church-gift, a
-method still frequently adhered to.
-
-In a MS. account of Portland Isle (1696) Stowe has left an amusing
-account of the way in which land was set apart for daughters during the
-parents’ lifetime. The father, with some of the principal inhabitants,
-would stand in the church porch after Evening Service, and declare
-aloud his intention, naming his daughters in full, and specifying
-the exact boundaries of each piece of land, after which all the
-congregation would rise up and bless the daughters by name.
-
-[Illustration: _Portland Cottages_]
-
-An old-time Portland wedding was an amusing ceremony. The bride and
-bridegroom always walked to church, followed by their friends in
-couples. After the wedding-feast the whole party perambulated the
-island, calling at their friends’ houses _en route_. The well-to-do
-kept up festivities perhaps for two or three days. It was the proud
-boast of an old lady of the last century that she had had more couples
-follow her at her wedding in 1809 than had ever been known in the
-island, and that her wedding had been kept up longer than any other.
-She had been followed by nearly seventy couples, and the wedding
-festivities had been celebrated for a week afterwards.
-
-An island funeral was a peculiarly mournful sight, the coffin being
-carried by relays of bearers, followed by a long procession of
-mourners, walking slowly two by two, clad in garments of the deepest
-woe. If, however, the deceased were an infant or very young child, the
-bearers would consist of young girls dressed completely in white.
-
-The fourteenth of May, when the cows were turned into the Common,
-was kept as a gala day. Girls dressed in white, and club-walking,
-and general rejoicing took place. There was also a very old custom
-of keeping the household fires going from November to May, and not
-permitting them to be lit again (except for necessary cooking) from May
-till November. An old Portlander who died about 1830 was the last to
-adhere rigidly to this rule.
-
-Superstition of all kinds was rife, and so akin were some of the old
-beliefs to those of Devon and Cornwall as to betray a common origin.
-Numerous and varied were the healing remedies employed by the old
-people; whilst, coupled with many cooking recipes, which would be
-regarded to-day with feelings akin to disgust, are some which can still
-be appreciated, such as Royal Pudding, roast Portland lamb, and the
-most approved method of cooking wheat-ears—all dishes beloved by King
-George III., and prepared for him at the old “Portland Arms,” when His
-Most Gracious Majesty visited the Island.
-
-
-
-
-THE ISLE OF PURBECK
-
-BY A. D. MOULLIN
-
-
-North of the irregular coast-line of Dorset, from Lulworth on the
-west to Handfast Point and Old Harry Rocks on the east (a distance of
-twelve miles), and extending inland for some five to eight miles, lies
-a district of about a hundred square miles in area, known as the Isle
-of Purbeck. It is an island only in the same sense as Thanet. It is
-bounded on the north by Poole Harbour and the river Frome; on the west,
-partly by Luckford Lake, a tributary of the Frome; and an imaginary
-line running southward to the rugged coast-line forms its southern and
-eastern boundary.
-
-It is strange to tell that this more or less undefined limitation has
-had a marked effect on the character and customs of the people who
-inhabit the Isle of Purbeck, as compared with the dwellers in the other
-portions of the county. They, like the people of Portland, claim for
-themselves a distinct individuality, due, possibly, in some measure
-to the hereditary rights of quarrying which have done much to keep
-families together, and minimised the introduction of a foreign element
-into their midst. These quarrying rights have always been jealously
-guarded, and the unwritten laws regulating this industry stringently
-enforced.
-
-The centre of the island is dominated by Corfe Castle; and such
-importance was centred in this old-world town and fortress that the
-lord of the manor of Corfe was also Lord-Lieutenant of Purbeck.
-
-Originally the whole of this interesting district was a royal
-deer-warren, and much of it was covered with forest. Here Norman and
-Plantagenet kings enjoyed the chase; and summary justice was meted out
-to those who infringed the Forest laws.
-
-In early times, one of the most important towns in the county was
-Wareham; and although it is on the north bank of the river Frome,
-one of the boundaries of Purbeck, still it is usually considered to
-belong to the island. Of its great antiquity there is, fortunately,
-ample record. King Alfred set up a mint in the town; and it was here
-that, in 876, he attacked the Danes who had sailed up the Frome to
-Wareham, where they soon took possession of the Castle and entrenched
-themselves in a strong position behind the walls and earthworks, and
-found it a convenient centre for ravaging the neighbourhood at their
-leisure. Alfred had meanwhile defeated these Scandinavian pirates in
-a sea-fight, which possibly was the first naval victory gained by the
-English. Probably disheartened by this defeat, the Danes agreed to
-terms of peace, promising to sail away quietly to their own country;
-instead of which some of them rode off towards Exeter, hoping to be
-joined by the rest of their men in the ships which lay off Wareham.
-Their treachery was not destined to succeed, for a mighty storm arose,
-and wrecked about a hundred of the Danish ships off Old Harry Rocks,
-near Swanage. This loss temporarily broke the power of the northern foe.
-
-The Church of Lady St. Mary in Wareham was in 978 the temporary
-resting-place of the body of Edward the Martyr, although the
-pre-Conquest Church which occupied the same site has passed away.
-It is interesting to think that for more than a thousand years
-religious services have been conducted on this spot. Of the several
-ecclesiastical buildings once possessed by this town there remain
-only three: St. Mary’s, just mentioned, and two others now no longer
-regularly used for service.
-
-The Purbeck Hills, which nearly bisect the Isle from east to west,
-divide the heathland with its china clay and marshes on the north from
-the stone measures known as the Purbeck beds on the south. The chalk
-hills of the range attain in places to a height of nearly 700 feet,
-and form an imposing barrier when viewed either from land or sea. The
-Romans were not slow to discover the properties of the china clay, from
-which they made pottery on an extensive scale, and tiles and tesserae
-with which to adorn their houses.
-
-Of the many old manor-houses with which this district abounds, space
-will only admit the mention of a few. Some three miles to the south of
-Wareham is Creech, a very ancient manor, with the house rebuilt in the
-seventeenth century. According to Hutchins, the manor is mentioned as
-early as Edward the Confessor’s time, and in the _Domesday Book_ it is
-said to belong to the Earl of Morton; afterwards, until the dissolution
-of the monasteries, it was held by Bindon Abbey, after which it was
-given to Sir John Horsey, and towards the end of the seventeenth
-century it was purchased by an ancestor of the Bond family, its present
-holders. Crossing the densely wooded slope of the Purbeck Hills, and
-descending on the other side towards the sea, we find another ancient
-manor-house, that of Great Tyneham, built about 1570. It is one of the
-largest of the many old manor-houses of that period.
-
-East and West Lulworth, although, strictly speaking, outside the
-confines of the Island, are so closely associated with it that a
-passing comment may not be out of place. At West Lulworth is a Cove
-almost encircled by the distorted and upheaved strata of the Purbeck
-beds. These form a natural harbour, which, when once seen, is not
-easily forgotten. There is a tradition, which forms the basis of one
-of Mr. Hardy’s stories in _Life’s Little Ironies_, that the great
-Napoleon was seen here in 1804 seeking a suitable landing-place for
-the flat-bottomed barges in which he hoped to bring his legions across
-the channel to invade England. If this story is true, how he must have
-gazed with interest at the beacon-fires on each promontory and hill-top
-ready to be lit to give warning of the impending peril.
-
-About half a mile to the east of the Cove, well above the action of
-the sea, are extensive remains of a “Fossil Forest,” with many of the
-tree-trunks in position.
-
-The village of East Lulworth, where once stood a monastery, is about
-a mile inland from the sea. Near this is Lulworth Castle, the seat of
-the Weld family, a conspicuous object looking like a fortress, with its
-four massive corner towers, which give the grey stone structure a grim
-appearance from the sea. It was built between 1588 and 1609, largely of
-stone brought from the ruins of Bindon Abbey; and there is still to be
-seen at the Castle an exquisitely carved oak door which is said to have
-belonged to the Abbey. The Castle has had many royal visitors—James I.,
-Charles II., the Duke of Monmouth, George III., and Queen Charlotte
-among the number. The unhappy Mrs. FitzHerbert, morganatic wife of
-George IV., was first married to Mr. Weld, and lived here; her portrait
-and diamond and pearl necklace are still kept at the Castle.
-
-From Tyneham towards St. Ealdhelm’s Head extend the shallows of
-the dangerous Kimmeridge Ledge, with its interesting formation of
-bituminous shale underlying the Portland Beds, a kind of coal which may
-be easily burnt, and is, indeed, used for fuel by many of the cottagers
-of the district, notwithstanding the unpleasant smell it emits when
-burning, and the dense shower of soot that falls from the smoke. In the
-early part of last century a fire broke out and smouldered for many
-months, at Holworth, on a continuation of this outcrop further to the
-west, and was known as the Burning Cliff. At times volumes of smoke
-arose, the pungent smell of which was distinctly perceptible as far off
-as Weymouth when the wind was blowing from the east.
-
-From the days of Sir William Clavel, in the reign of Charles I., the
-minerals of Kimmeridge have from time to time been worked, and many and
-various have been the schemes for exploiting this bituminous deposit,
-and even at the present day samples are occasionally sent for with the
-view to extracting mineral oil. But one must go back to a much more
-remote period for the first evidence of early workings. The Romans,
-during their occupation of this part of the coast, were not slow to
-discover the value of this supply of fuel, which may possibly have been
-worked long before their arrival.
-
-The expert Roman craftsmen found also that the shale was capable of
-being turned and fashioned into various kinds of ornamental articles
-resembling those made of jet; so they set up lathes on the spot to turn
-out these articles, which, no doubt, met with a ready sale among the
-fashionable dwellers in Durnovaria (Dorchester). That the existence of
-these lathes was an actual fact is proved by the hundreds of discs or
-cores which remain to this day, and are found in and with the Roman
-pottery fashioned from the Wealdon clay of the district. These discs
-are usually from 1¼ to 2½ inches in diameter, with central holes
-to attach them to the lathe mandril, and were the discarded centres of
-rings and other ornaments made from the shale. By local tradition these
-discs have always been known as “Kimmeridge coal money,” and although
-present-day antiquaries laugh at the idea of their ever having been
-used as money, the writer ventures to suggest the possibility of the
-correctness of such a theory. They are found in considerable numbers
-securely hidden away a short distance below the surface of the ground,
-usually between stones placed on edge and covered over by another flat
-stone. The care with which they were secreted indicates that they
-were considered of some value to the owner. May not the Celts have
-collected and used them as tallies or tokens? These discs, bearing the
-tool marks of the turner, would have been impossible to counterfeit by
-the uncivilised races of that day, to whom the use of the lathe was
-unknown. The value of local traditionary names is considerable, and the
-foregoing appears to be a feasible suggestion as to the authenticity of
-the name, “Kimmeridge coal money.”
-
-This part of the coast has a desolate and forbidding appearance, due to
-its black, shaley formation.
-
-Looking eastward, St. Ealdhelm’s Head stands out in majestic grandeur,
-rising out of the sea more than 350 feet in height, and crowned at
-its seaward end by the Norman chapel dedicated to St. Ealdhelm, first
-Bishop of Sherborne.
-
-About a mile and a half inland we come upon the little church of
-Worth Matravers, in the centre of the village of that name; it is
-probably the most ancient building in Purbeck of which anything now
-remains. Here we find traces of Saxon work, with that of Norman
-added; the chancel arch is a good example of the latter. It is now
-generally considered possible that here was one of the two sacred
-edifices built by St. Ealdhelm in Purbeck and mentioned in ancient
-records. The divided buttress on the north wall, and the grave-stone of
-Benjamin Jesty are objects of interest. On the latter is the following
-inscription:—
-
- Sacred to the memory of Benjamin Jesty of Downshay, who departed
- this life April 16th, 1816, aged 70. He was born at Yetminster in
- this county, and was an upright honest man, particularly noted for
- having been the first person (known) that introduced the cowpox by
- inoculation, and who from his strength of mind made the experiment
- from the cow on his wife and two sons in the year 1774.
-
-From Worth Church to Swanage there is a track or path known still as
-Priestway, originally used by the priests of Worth passing backwards
-and forwards between Swanage and Worth churches, the latter of which
-is said to have been the mother-church. Sir Charles Robinson says that
-Worth is the Saxon word for village, and that the second half of the
-name was added because it was owned by Sir John Matravers, who had
-charge of Edward II. during his imprisonment at Corfe Castle.
-
-[Illustration: “KIMMERIDGE COAL MONEY.”]
-
-From the elevated road along the cliffs may be seen a series of
-terraces, known locally as Lynchets, cut out on the slopes of the hills
-facing the sea; as to the use and origin of these escarpments there
-have been many theories and much discussion. That they are artificial
-and not natural there can be little doubt, and the labour expended in
-their formation must have been enormous. From their position, facing
-south-east, south, and south-west, one may fairly assume that their
-object was for agricultural purposes. They are to be found in several
-other parts of Dorset, as well as in other counties.
-
-Dr. Colley March[54] says the word lynchet is derived from the
-Anglo-Saxon _hlinc_, meaning a ridge of land. He tells us that in the
-reign of Henry VIII. an Act was passed compelling all farmers with
-sixty acres of pasture or arable land to cultivate one rood, where the
-soil was suitable, for growing flax or hemp for cordage for the needs
-of the navy, and concludes as follows:—
-
- In fine the law that compelled farmers to cultivate flax, the
- permission to do so in any place they were able to secure, the
- importance of suitable soil, and the necessity of prompt and efficient
- drainage, that could but be obtained on a sloping surface will account
- for a good many of the numerous lynchets of Dorset.
-
-Fully to appreciate the rugged features of the cliffs between St.
-Ealdhelm’s and Durlston Head, they should be viewed from the sea,
-for the indentations and caverns of this iron-bound coast are indeed
-wonderful. All along the sea-board quarrying was carried on for
-centuries, and some of the caves are due to the hand of man. Many of
-these caverns fulfilled a double duty, providing blocks of stone by
-day and sheltering cargoes of smuggled goods by night. This part of
-the coast enjoyed quite a notoriety for its contraband trading during
-the early part of the last century, and the stories told of the daring
-Purbeck smugglers would fill a volume.
-
-Mr. William Hardy, of Swanage, has published an interesting little book
-called _Smuggling Days in Purbeck_, in which he tells of many curious
-hiding-places for the illicit goods; one he mentions, which long
-remained undiscovered, was under the roof of Langton Church, a most
-unlikely place to attract suspicion. It became necessary at one time
-to double the number of revenue men, or coastguards; and it must have
-been a strange sight to see these men setting out for the night’s vigil
-carrying a one-legged stool, so that in the event of their falling
-asleep they might topple over and wake up. Smuggling became such a
-profitable business that most of the inhabitants of the district were
-more or less engaged in it.
-
-Although less exciting, and perhaps less profitable, the quarrying
-industry was extensively carried on—as, indeed, it had been from very
-early times. A walk over the hills from Swanage to Worth discloses
-vast numbers of disused quarry shafts, and a few others still being
-worked. These hills are literally honey-combed with old workings, which
-occasionally fall in, leaving curious depressions on the surface. The
-stone lies in thin beds of varying quality, some of the upper ones
-being full of fossil remains. The higher stratum of Purbeck marble has
-been extensively quarried, and in bygone ages provided the elegant
-shafts which adorn the columns of many of our great monastic churches.
-The outcrop of marble may be seen in the reef of rocks which extends
-beyond Durlston Bay and forms Peveril Point.
-
-Whilst on the subject of quarries, it is most interesting to note the
-conditions said to have been granted to Purbeck by an ancient charter.
-No man is allowed to open or work at a quarry who is not the son of
-parents who were themselves both children of marblers, as they were
-called, and this rule was rigidly enforced. Once a year, on Shrove
-Tuesday, all the marblers of the district repaired to Corfe Castle
-to register their names in the books of the Company of Marblers, and
-to pay an annual tribute of a pound of pepper and a football to the
-lord of the manor of Ower, as acknowledgment of a certain ancient
-right-of-way to that place for the purpose of shipping stone, this
-being necessary before there were any facilities at Swanage for so
-doing. A good description of this ancient custom is given in Sir
-Charles Robinson’s _Picturesque Rambles in the Isle of Purbeck_.
-
-Looking down from the lofty hills upon the little town, a man who had
-been absent for twenty or thirty years would hardly recognise in the
-Swanage of to-day the village that he had left. Swanage, with its
-up-to-date pier, its esplanade and sea-wall, its red-brick villas,
-and the various requirements of the modern residents, resembles the
-isolated little town of fifty years ago as little as the garden of a
-London square resembles a primeval forest. The quaint old stone houses,
-with porches supported by pillars, projecting over the foot-way, and
-roofed with massive slabs of split stone, the narrow and winding
-streets, have nearly all disappeared, but fortunately there are still
-some few left to delight the eye of the artist.
-
-The twelfth century tower of the parish church, built originally as
-a refuge, and as a means of defence from sea pirates, was standing
-long before the rest of the church was built. The Town Hall, although
-erected in recent times, is of some historic interest, the front having
-been partly built of stones taken from the old Mercers’ Hall in London,
-pulled down for street alterations; and this edifice itself is said to
-have been mainly composed of material taken from one of Wren’s early
-churches, destroyed in the great fire of London in 1666. So, after many
-vicissitudes, these weather-worn stones have found a resting-place very
-near to the source from whence they were originally taken.
-
-Immediately at the rear of the Town Hall is a curious little structure
-of solid masonry, with an iron-studded oak door, resembling a powder
-magazine. This formerly stood close to the south door of the parish
-church within the graveyard, and was used as a lock-up. Over the door
-is the following inscription:—“Erected for the prevention of vice and
-immorality, by the friends of religion and good order. A.D. 1803.” A
-small hole may be observed in the oak door, and it is said that through
-this aperture the boon companions of the incarcerated man were in the
-habit of inserting the stem of a long clay pipe, which they used as a
-means of supplying him with strong drink, and the bowl of which they
-also at times filled with tobacco, in order that he might find some
-solace for his weary hours in smoking.
-
-About a mile and a half from Swanage, in the direction of Corfe Castle,
-is the manor of Godlingstone, with its interesting old house. This
-estate is said to have been part of the hide of land given by William
-I. to Durandus the Carpenter, in exchange for certain repairs to be
-executed at Corfe Castle. The round tower at the western extremity of
-the house is believed to be of Saxon origin, and was probably built as
-a place of refuge from the ruthless Danes, who so frequently harried
-this part of the coast. Sir Charles Robinson mentions Godlingstone
-as having belonged successively to the families of Talbot, Rempston,
-Chaunterell, Carent, Pole, Wells, and Frampton.
-
-The manor-house at Whitecliff on the slope of Ballard Down is another
-fine old building, and is sometimes credited with having been one of
-King John’s hunting lodges; but no trace of so early a building now
-remains, unless it be the massive garden walls, with the protecting
-tower.
-
-Forming one of the horns of Swanage Bay is Peveril Point, with its
-coastguard signalling station, from which extends, in a south-easterly
-direction for a considerable distance, a ledge of rocks composed of
-Purbeck marble. These rocks follow the general dip of the formation
-observable for some distance along the coast—viz., from the south,
-sloping down towards the north; but at the extremity of Peveril Point
-one observes that the strata to the north of the ledge slope in exactly
-the opposite direction.
-
-The beautiful and deeply indented bay of Swanage forms a harbour with
-good anchorage, sheltered from all but easterly gales. The northern arm
-of the bay, known as Ballard Head, is formed of lofty chalk cliffs,
-rising nearly sheer from the sea. The convulsions of nature have
-played some curious pranks in this locality, for side by side with the
-natural horizontal stratification one may see the layers of chalk and
-flints standing vertically. This has enabled geologists to estimate
-the probable thickness of these chalk beds, which, according to some
-authorities, was nearly a thousand feet. The human mind is staggered by
-the contemplation of the ages necessary to accumulate this stupendous
-deposit of microscopic foraminifera, of which the chalk is composed,
-before it was upheaved from the bed of the sea. The upper greensand,
-which is exposed at the western boundary of the chalk, contains many
-interesting fossils. The cliffs of Ballard Head terminate at Handfast
-Point with several chalk pinnacles and curiously formed caverns. Of the
-former, “Old Harry and his Wife” are well known, but, unfortunately,
-the upper half of “Old Harry’s Wife” was washed away some years ago,
-leaving little more than the base remaining.
-
-The old-world village of Studland, at the foot of the northern slope
-of Ballard Down, still retains much of its primitive and picturesque
-beauty, and the old manor-house and the little Norman church dedicated
-to St. Nicholas are of great interest. This church, like many others,
-no doubt took the place of an earlier building, for there are still
-traces of Saxon work to be seen in the north wall.
-
-A mile or so to the north-west of Studland, across the swampy
-heathland, we come to a conical hill some eighty or ninety feet high,
-surmounted by an irregularly shaped mass of sandstone, formed from the
-neighbouring Bagshot beds, which, having been cemented together by some
-ferruginous substance, has withstood the disintegrating action of the
-elements better than its surroundings. It is known as the Agglestone
-Rock. Sir Charles Robinson, in his _Rambles in the Isle of Purbeck_,
-estimates the weight of this rock at four hundred tons, and gives the
-probable derivation of the name from the Anglo-Saxon “hagge” (witch or
-hag), or “heilig,” meaning holy, and “stan” (stone).
-
-This barren heathland, spreading over the Bagshot sands, extends for
-many a mile, and stretches out to the deeply indented coast-line of
-Poole Harbour, forming the northern limit of the Isle of Purbeck. The
-wild beauty of this low-lying district can only be enjoyed by those who
-are prepared to explore it on foot, for carriage-roads there are none,
-and the cart-tracks are not always passable.
-
-The important deposit of china-clay found in this neighbourhood, which
-is exported in considerable quantities to many parts of the kingdom,
-and even to foreign countries, is chiefly shipped from the little quay
-at Ower, which is on an arm of Poole Harbour. Hutchins says that Ower
-was once the chief port in the Isle of Purbeck for the export of stone
-and marble, and for the importation of timber from the New Forest; but
-in 1710 Swanage seems to have superseded it.
-
-The little village of Arne, near to which is Russell Quay, where clay
-and peat are shipped by small trading vessels, is merely a cluster of
-a few cottages and a plain-looking thirteenth century church, which,
-however, contains an object of interest in its stone altar with the
-five consecration crosses.
-
-In the woods near Arne is one of the few heronries to be met with on
-the south coast; and in the solitude of this remote spot the birds have
-bred undisturbed probably for centuries.
-
-From Arne to Wareham, a distance of some four miles, there is a rough
-road, by following which we complete our circuit of this interesting
-district—the Isle of Purbeck.
-
-
-
-
-CORFE CASTLE
-
-BY ALBERT BANKES
-
-
-There is reason to believe that a castle existed at Corfe in the reign
-of King Alfred, but in his time this structure, which afterwards became
-so large as to vie with the noblest royal habitations in the kingdom,
-consisted probably of only a single strong tower on the summit of the
-hill constituting one of the defences of Wareham, which in Saxon times
-was a very important town and port.
-
-In 875 Wareham Castle, then the strongest place in all Wessex, was
-surprised and taken by a Danish general, and it was not until 877, two
-years later, that King Alfred succeeded in driving his Danish foes
-out of Wareham. To prevent the return of the enemy was the object of
-building a fortress at Corfe (“Corfes-geat,” as it was then called), a
-break or pass in the lofty range of the Purbeck hills. To quote from
-Hutchins’ _History of Dorset_:
-
- Whatever may have been the size or construction of the castle in the
- days of King Alfred, it was greatly extended and embellished in the
- century next following under the direction of the magnificent King
- Edgar.
-
-With Elfrida, the infamous Queen of King Edgar, commences what is
-important in the history of this castle. King Edgar, who died in the
-thirty-third year of his age, bequeathed this Castle of Corfe to her
-as a dowry mansion, and in this princely residence, which her royal
-husband had with so much cost and care prepared for her, she plotted
-and accomplished the murder of his son. On the death of Edgar
-(975) there was a contest between two parties in the state, the one
-supporting the claim to the throne of Edward, son of the late King by
-his first wife, the other seeking to place the crown on the head of
-Ethelred, the son of Elfrida. Edward’s cause, which was supported by
-Dunstan, succeeded; but he only reigned, as we shall presently see,
-four years.
-
-[Illustration: CORFE CASTLE.]
-
-King Edgar was twice married. By his first wife he had issue, Edward,
-who at a very early age became his successor, and who is known in
-history as King Edward the Martyr.
-
-The second wife of Edgar was Elfrida, daughter of Ordgar, Earl of
-Devonshire. It is related that the fame of her transcendent beauty
-having reached the King’s ears, he sent one of his earls, named
-Athelwold, to visit her father and ascertain privately whether her
-charms were as great as they had been represented. Athelwold saw
-her, and, immediately becoming enamoured, made a false report to his
-sovereign, and won her for himself. Rumours, however, that he had been
-deceived, soon reached the King, and he determined to ascertain the
-truth with his own eyes. Alarmed at the impending danger, Athelwold
-entreated his wife to adopt some means of disguising her charms;
-but Elfrida had now an opportunity of gratifying her ambition. She
-exerted all her powers to increase her natural beauty, and succeeded
-in attracting the attention of the King. To get rid of Athelwold was
-in those days the simplest of transactions, and King Edgar, having
-caused Athelwold to be assassinated in a wood, Elfrida became his
-Queen. So great was the King’s love for Elfrida that he is said to have
-granted the whole county of Dorset for her dowry. But Elfrida had not
-yet reached the height of her ambition. It was not sufficient for her
-to have become a queen through assassination, for she scrupled not,
-after her husband’s death, also by means of assassination, to make a
-king of her own son. In the month of March (978) Edward the Martyr,
-as he is now called, was hunting in a large wood near Wareham. Towards
-evening he resolved to pay a visit to his brother, who resided at the
-Castle with their royal mother. The attendants of the King had been
-dispersed in the chase; he was alone, and Elfrida, having notice of
-this favourable opportunity, came forth in a most affable and friendly
-manner, inviting him to alight from his horse. This he declined to do,
-and remained at the gate, expressing his desire to see his brother.
-The Queen then called for wine, which he had scarce put to his lips
-when one of her attendants, who had given the King the kiss of peace,
-stabbed him in the back. Some of the ancient chroniclers affirm that
-Elfrida herself gave him both the kiss and the mortal wound whilst he
-was drinking. In any case, finding himself wounded, the King rode away;
-but, fainting from loss of blood, he fell from his horse, and, his foot
-being entangled in the stirrup, he was dragged a considerable distance,
-until the horse stopped of its own accord at a bridge which crosses
-the small river that flows at the foot of the hill on which the Castle
-stands. A servant, sent by Elfrida to ascertain the result of her
-treachery, found the murdered Prince dead, and terribly defaced by the
-flints over which he had been dragged. The Queen, to conceal the fact,
-ordered his body to be lodged in a house near where it was, and covered
-with such mean clothes as were at hand.
-
-Of course, there are plenty of miraculous stories attached to this true
-history, of which we in this twentieth century may believe as much
-or as little as we like. It is said, for instance, that in the house
-where King Edward’s body lay lived a woman who was born blind, but at
-midnight she found her sight restored, and, to her great terror, her
-house was full of light. In the morning, the Queen, being informed of
-these circumstances, and fearing a discovery, ordered the body to be
-thrown into a well. She then retired to a mansion called Bere, ten
-miles distant. Her own son, Ethelred, on expressing his grief at his
-mother’s inhuman act, received a severe beating from her with some
-large wax tapers, they being the first weapons which the royal mother
-could lay her hands on wherewith to chastise her son.
-
-In the year following, a second miracle is said to have taken place—a
-pillar of fire descended from above and illuminated the place where the
-body was hidden. Some devout people of Wareham brought it to the church
-of St. Mary in that town, and buried it in a plain manner.
-
-As for the once beautiful but now guilty Elfrida, it is related that
-she became extremely penitent, and, abdicating her regal state, retired
-to the Abbey of Wherwell, in Hampshire, which she had founded, and
-there, having clothed her body in hair-cloth, for many years slept at
-night on the ground without a pillow, and mortified her flesh with
-every kind of penance.
-
-We meet with few incidents of an important character connected with
-Corfe Castle during the first six reigns after the Norman Conquest.
-
-During the eventful reign of the tyrannical John (1199-1216) Corfe
-Castle became again a royal residence. The King deposited within
-its walls his treasure and regalia, using the Castle also for the
-confinement of State prisoners, the objects of his jealousy and
-revenge. In the year 1202 King John took prisoners at the Castle of
-Mirabel in Poitou, in France, the youthful Prince Arthur, Duke of
-Brittany, his nephew, together with his sister, the Princess Eleanor.
-It must be remembered that this Prince Arthur, being the only son
-of John’s elder brother, Geoffrey, was the real heir to the throne
-after the death of Richard Cœur de Lion. Prince Arthur is supposed to
-have been murdered at Rouen by order of King John; but the Princess
-(sometimes called the “Damsel of Bretagne,” and sometimes from her
-personal attractions, the “Beauty of Brittany”), having inherited her
-brother’s legal right to the throne, was brought to England and kept
-a close prisoner for the rest of her life. For some time she was a
-prisoner in Corfe Castle, where she remained at the decease of her
-uncle, King John. Two other princesses shared the captivity of the
-beautiful and high-spirited Eleanor during her residence at Corfe,
-and were her companions there. These were Margery and Isabel, the two
-daughters of William, King of Scotland. Some curious and interesting
-details have come down to us respecting articles supplied for the use
-of the royal ladies whilst they remained at Corfe Castle, which show
-that they enjoyed many indulgences. For instance, on June 29th, 1213,
-the Mayor and Reeves of Winchester were commanded to supply to the
-Queen, the King’s niece, and the two daughters of the King of Scotland
-who were at Corfe Castle, such robes and caps and all other things
-necessary for the vestment as should be demanded (the cost to be repaid
-out of the King’s Exchequer). There is another interesting entry on
-July 6th, 1213: The Mayor of Winchester was commanded to send in haste
-to the King, for the use of his niece, Eleanor, and the two daughters
-of the King of Scotland, robes of dark green, namely, tunics and
-super-tunics, with capes of cambric and fur of Minever and twenty-three
-yards of good linen cloth; also, for the King’s niece, one good cap
-of dark brown, furred with Minever, and one hood for rainy weather,
-for the use of the same; besides robes of bright green, for the use
-of their three waiting-maids; also tunics and super-tunics and cloaks
-with capes of Minever or rabbit-skins and furs of lamb-skins, and thin
-shoes, for the use of the daughters of the King of Scotland, the King’s
-niece, and her three waiting-maids; also, for the use of the King’s
-niece, one saddle, with gilded reins; and the Mayor is to come himself
-with all the above articles to Corfe, there to receive the money for
-the cost of the same. A little later on, another cap for rainy weather,
-a riding saddle, shoes, and sixty yards of linen cloth, are ordered to
-be supplied from Winchester.
-
-The prices paid give us an insight into the value of money at that
-period:—
-
- £ s. d.
- A silken couch 1 10 1
- 2 coverlets of fine linen 2 2 1
- 6½ yards of scarlet for coverlets 1 3 0
- 1 fur of lamb-skin 0 4 0
-
-Ten shillings a day were allowed to the Sheriff for the Princesses’
-maintenance.
-
-To return to Prince Arthur and his wicked uncle. King John captured at
-the same time as Prince Arthur many barons and more than two hundred
-knights of Poitou and Guienne, who were in arms with Prince Arthur.
-These were all loaded with irons and sent to different prisons in
-Normandy and England. Many of these poor prisoners perished in their
-prisons, and no fewer than twenty-two of the noblest and bravest of
-them were starved to death in Corfe Castle.
-
-From the reign of King John to that of Queen Elizabeth allusion is
-frequently made in history to Corfe Castle.
-
-It was in 1587, in the days of Queen Elizabeth, that Corfe Castle
-ceased to be a royal residence, she having sold it to Sir Christopher
-Hatton for £4,761 18s. 7½d. Sir Christopher repaired and decorated
-the Castle at vast expense.
-
-During the “Invincible Armada” scare, Corfe Castle once more became a
-fortress. Cannons were for the first time mounted on its walls, and
-Queen Elizabeth for encouragement gave a charter to the inhabitants of
-the Castle and borough, which conferred upon them all the same rights
-and privileges as those enjoyed by the inhabitants of the Cinque Ports,
-including the right of returning two members to Parliament. The Spanish
-fleet did, in fact, pass within a short distance of the Dorset coast;
-but, as the so-called Invincible Armada came utterly to grief, it gave
-no further trouble.
-
-As Sir Christopher Hatton died a bachelor, Corfe Castle passed to his
-nephew Sir William Hatton, who, dying without children, left the Castle
-to his widow, the Lady Elizabeth Hatton, who married Lord Chief Justice
-Coke.
-
-On the death of Sir Edward Coke, his widow and daughter found
-themselves at liberty to dispose of a mansion whose gloomy grandeur and
-position, remote from the busier scenes of life, did not well accord
-with their tastes and habits; so that on Sir John Bankes making an
-offer for the purchase of the Castle, the ladies were doubtless only
-too glad to conclude the bargain.
-
-Sir John Bankes was descended from a good Cumberland family living in
-Keswick, where he was born in 1589. At the age of fifteen he went to
-Oxford University, and in due course became a barrister in Gray’s Inn.
-His extraordinary diligence in his profession recommended him early to
-his sovereign, Charles I., and in 1640 he was made Chief Justice of the
-Common Pleas. His wife, the brave Lady Bankes, was a daughter of the
-very ancient family of the Hawtreys, of Rislip, in Middlesex.
-
-To enter the Castle an ancient stone bridge, consisting of four
-semi-circular arches, must be traversed. There is probably no bridge of
-greater antiquity in the West of England.
-
-The first ward forms an irregular triangle, containing eight towers,
-at unequal distances, of amazing strength and durability. The gateway
-leading to the second ward has provision for a portcullis of vast size
-similar to that which is found in the grand staircase. Just within
-the gateway, on the right hand, was a flight of steps which led up to
-the Great or King’s Tower on the exterior summit of a very high hill.
-Tradition says, and apparently with truth, that just at the entrance of
-this second ward, under the archway, Edward the Martyr received his
-death-blow from the hand of the assassin. The dungeon, an octagonal
-tower, is said to have been the place of imprisonment for criminals
-and captives of inferior rank. Near this tower a stone is visible,
-projecting from the wall, with a deep notch cut into it, which is said
-to have been the place of execution. The third and principal ward is
-situate on the highest part of the hill, and on the west part, on the
-very top of the hill, stood the Great, or King’s Tower, 72 ft. by 60
-ft., and about 80 ft. high, with a wall 12 ft. thick. This seems to
-have been the State prison, as the windows that remain are such a
-height above the floors that they must have been thus arranged in order
-to prevent the prisoners escaping. The fourth ward is the least of all
-the wards; in it was a small garden at the east end, near which was the
-Sally Port, where the enemy entered when the Castle was surprised; and
-near it is a well, now stopped up, into which (tradition says) Lady
-Bankes threw a considerable quantity of money and plate.
-
-King Charles I. was a victim to circumstances. The Civil War was the
-result of the reaction of the popular mind in favour of liberty from
-its slavish submission to the tyranny of the Tudor Kings. It was
-hastened by King Charles’ folly in enforcing subsidies to pay off
-his father’s debts and to carry on his Continental wars, without the
-consent of the people; also by his resolution to rule the kingdom
-without a parliament.
-
-King Charles came to the throne in 1625, but it was not until 1642
-that the unhappy differences between the King and the two Houses of
-Parliament grew so great that nothing but the sword could decide the
-controversy. Poor Sir John Bankes found himself in a very unfortunate
-position. He was upon the summer circuit, and when presiding at the
-assizes at Salisbury he had, in his charge to the Grand Jury, denounced
-the Earl of Essex, Lord Manchester, and others, as guilty of high
-treason for continuing in arms against the King. Another serious
-subject of offence consisted in the fact of his having subscribed
-liberally to the necessities of the King—an acknowledgment of which,
-in King Charles’ own hand-writing, is still preserved at Kingston
-Lacy. These and various other causes were quite sufficient to induce a
-furious assault upon Corfe Castle.
-
-Prior to this, Lady Bankes, who is described as being a prudent lady,
-resolved with her children and family to retire to Corfe Castle,
-to shelter themselves from the storm which she saw was coming. She
-remained undisturbed all the winter and a great part of the spring,
-until May, 1643, when the rebels, under the command of Sir Walter Erle
-and Sir Thomas Trenchard, of Wolfeton House, and others, had gained
-possession of Dorchester, Lyme Regis, Melcombe, Weymouth, Wareham, and
-Poole. Portland Castle being treacherously delivered to the rebels,
-only Corfe Castle remained in obedience to the King. But the rebels,
-wanting to add this castle to their other garrisons, and preferring to
-try and gain it by treachery, resolved to lay hold of an opportunity
-that they knew was just about to offer. To quote the language of the
-old chronicler:
-
- It seems that by an ancient usage the Mayor and the Barons (as his
- Town Councillors were called) of Corfe Castle, accompanied by the
- gentry of the Island of Purbeck, had permission from the Lord of the
- Castle on May Day to course a stag, which every year was performed
- with much solemnity and great concourse of people.
-
-On May Day, 1642, some troops of horse from Dorchester and other places
-came into the island under pretence of hunting the stag; but really
-their intention was suddenly to surprise the gentlemen whilst hunting
-and to take Corfe Castle. But the news of their coming reached the
-Castle before them. The hunters dispersed, and Lady Bankes ordered the
-great gates of the Castle to be closed against all comers. The troopers
-accordingly found themselves cheated of their prey, whereupon the
-common soldiers used threatening language; but the officers, who knew
-better how to conceal their resolution, utterly disavowed any such
-thought, denying that they had any orders to attack the Castle. Lady
-Bankes was not deceived by the officers’ civil speeches; and, to quote
-once more from the old chronicler:
-
- She very wisely, and like herself, hence took occasion to call in a
- guard to assist her, not knowing how soon she might have occasion to
- make use of them, it being now more than probable that the rebels had
- a design upon the Castle.
-
-No one, of course, knows to what straits the poor lady and her few
-faithful attendants were put; but provisions must have been at a
-low ebb or Lady Bankes would never have delivered up the four small
-cannons, the biggest carrying not above a 3-lb. shot. The result of
-this compromise was that, having delivered up the four cannons, the
-rebels agreed to permit her to enjoy the Castle in peace and quietness.
-Having gained the four cannons, the rebels retired, and, growing weary
-of watching the Castle gates, they grew negligent as to what was
-brought in, nor did they take care, as before, to intercept supplies
-which might enable the Castle people to hold out against a siege. Lady
-Bankes, making use of this carelessness, furnished the Castle with
-provisions of every description. A supply, too, of ammunition was
-brought in; and, hearing that the King’s forces, under Prince Maurice
-and the Marquis of Hertford, were advancing towards Blandford, Lady
-Bankes sent a private messenger begging that some officers might be
-sent to take charge of the Castle: whereupon Captain Laurence, son of
-Sir Edward Laurence, a gentleman of the Isle of Purbeck, was sent.
-There was likewise in the Castle one Captain Bond, an old soldier,
-“whom,” says the chronicler, “I should deprive of his due honour not to
-mention him as having shared in the honour of this resistance.”
-
-On June 23rd, 1643, commenced a six weeks’ strict siege of Corfe
-Castle, between 200 and 300 horse and foot, with two cannons; the
-rebels faced the Castle, and from the hills surrounding played on the
-fortress. At the same time they set on fire four houses in the town
-of Corfe, and then summoned the Castle to surrender; but, receiving
-a refusal, for that time they left it—but only for a time, as Sir
-Walter Erle, accompanied by Captain Sydenham, Captain Henry Jervis, and
-Captain Skuts, of Poole, with a body of between five and six hundred
-men, came and took possession of the town of Corfe, taking advantage
-of a misty morning, so as to find no resistance from the Castle. With
-a small cannon, a culverin, and their muskets, they played on the
-fortress. To bind the soldiers by tie of conscience, they administered
-an oath to them, mutually binding themselves to most unchristian
-resolutions—that if they found the defendants obstinate, they would not
-yield; that they would maintain the siege to victory and deny quarter
-unto all, killing without mercy men, women, and children. And to bring
-on their own soldiers they deceived them with falsehoods, saying that
-the Castle stood on a level, with good advantages of approach; also,
-that there were only forty men within the fortress, of whom twenty
-were ready to turn traitors. They also did their best to corrupt the
-defenders of the Castle to betray it into their hands; but when all
-these arts took no effect, the rebel commanders fell to stratagems and
-engines. One of these machines they called a “sow,” and the other a
-“boar”; they were made with boards lined with wool to deaden the shot.
-The “sow” was a class of engine used as a protection for soldiers
-attacking a fortress; it was constructed of strong timber, bound
-together by hoop-iron, and roofed with hides and sheepskins to render
-it proof against such musket-shot or other missiles as were then in
-use. In front there were doors and windows, which were kept closed till
-the walls were reached; but behind it was open for the admission or
-retreat of the besiegers. Mounted on wheels, it was moved forward by
-the occupants by means of levers.
-
-The rebels used Corfe Church as their principal battery and
-headquarters, and they seem to have desecrated the interior of the
-sacred building in every possible way. Of the surplices they made
-shirts for the soldiers; the organ pipes were torn down to serve as
-cases for their powder and shot; and, not being furnished with musket
-bullets, they cut off the lead of the church, and, rolling it up, they
-shot it without ever casting it in a mould.
-
-Sir Walter Erle and the other rebel commanders were earnest to press
-forward the soldiers; but as prodigal as they were of the blood of
-their men, they were sparing enough of their own. It was a general
-observation, says the chronicler, sarcastically, that valiant Sir
-Walter never willingly exposed himself to any hazard; and to the
-eternal honour of this knight’s valour, be it recorded that, for fear
-of musket-shot, he was seen to creep on all-fours on the side of Corfe
-Castle hill to keep himself from danger.
-
-This base cowardice of the assailants added courage and resolution to
-the defenders; therefore, not compelled by want, but rather to brave
-the rebels, they sallied out of the Castle, and brought eight cows and
-a bull into the fortress without a single man being even wounded.
-
-The rebels, having spent much time and ammunition, and some men, were
-now as far from taking the Castle as on the first day they began. At
-last the Earl of Warwick sent them 150 sailors, with several cart-loads
-of ammunition and scaling ladders, to take the Castle by assault.
-Rewards were offered to those who first should scale the walls: twenty
-pounds to the first, and smaller sums to those who should follow; but
-all this could not avail with these poor wretches, who were brought
-hither like sheep to the slaughter. Some of the rebel party had
-actually exchanged certain death by the rope for that of a chance death
-by bullets, as some of them were actually condemned criminals let out
-of prison.
-
-On finding that money rewards and persuasion could not prevail with
-such abject, low-spirited men, the rebel commanders resolved to give
-their men strong drink, knowing that drunkenness makes some men fight
-like lions, who when sober are as cowardly as hares. The only man who
-was not the worse for drink, says the chronicler, with biting sarcasm,
-was the commander of the party, Sir Walter Erle, who kept himself sober
-lest he should become valiant against his will.
-
-Being now possessed with a borrowed courage, the rebels divided
-their forces into two parties, whereof one assaulted the middle
-ward, defended by valiant Captain Laurence and the greater part of
-the soldiers; while the other assaulted the upper ward, which Lady
-Bankes—“to her eternal honour be it spoken,” says the chronicler—with
-her daughter, women-servants, and five soldiers, undertook to defend
-against the rebels. And what she undertook she bravely performed, for
-by heaving over stones and hot embers, they repelled the rebels and
-kept them from climbing the ladders. Thus repulsed, and having lost
-one hundred men, Sir Walter Erle, on hearing that the King’s forces
-were advancing, ran away, leaving Sydenham as commander-in-chief,
-who, afraid to appear, kept sanctuary in Corfe Church till nightfall,
-meaning to sup and run away by starlight; but, supper being ready
-and set on the table, an alarm was given that the King’s forces were
-coming. This news took away Sydenham’s appetite; so, leaving artillery,
-ammunition, and last, but not least, his good supper, the rebels all
-ran away to take boat for Poole, leaving on the shore about one hundred
-horses, which proved a valuable prize next day to the soldiers of the
-Castle.
-
-Thus, after six weeks’ strict siege, Corfe Castle, the desire of the
-enemy, by the loyalty and brave resolution of Lady Bankes, the valour
-of Captain Laurence and some eighty soldiers, was delivered from the
-bloody intentions of these merciless rebels on August 4th, 1643.
-
-Few portions of the kingdom were now undisturbed, and civil war shook
-the domestic happiness of both the highest and the lowest of the land.
-
-Poor Sir John Bankes, on his return home from circuit, found his wife
-ready to welcome him within the battered walls of his castle. His
-wife had become a heroine during his long absence from home, and his
-children had endless stories to relate of their invincible prowess
-in the days of danger. He found his castle safe and his property
-preserved; but Corfe Church had been desecrated and unroofed, the shops
-in the little town had been plundered, and all that would burn of the
-stone-built cottages around had been destroyed by conflagration.
-
-There was much, however, at the moment to render this a joyful meeting
-at Corfe Castle, for it seemed as if the sun of the King’s fortune was
-about to ascend again. But in 1644 the tide of royal success, which
-had flowed so steadily through the western counties in the preceding
-year, was now ebbing fast in the county of Dorset. On June 16th, 1644,
-Weymouth surrendered to the Earl of Essex, and three days afterwards
-Dorchester followed suit. On August 10th, 1644, Colonel Sydenham and
-Sir Anthony Ashley Cooper arrived with their troops before the town of
-Wareham, and began to storm the outworks, whereupon the town agreed to
-surrender.
-
-Corfe Castle was now almost the only place of strength between Exeter
-and London which still held out for the royal cause, and the constant
-valour of Lady Bankes, who defended it, is to be estimated not so much
-by her active enterprise and resistance in the hours of excitement and
-attack as by her long endurance through tedious weeks and months of
-anxiety, encompassed as she was by threats and dangers on every side.
-She had now a second winter to look forward to. All the neighbouring
-towns had become hostile, and the only encouragement and aid she could
-expect (her husband being absent, and her sons quite young) was that of
-a garrison to consist of soldiers brought from a distance, under the
-command of officers who were little, if at all, known to her.
-
-Early in the winter the misfortune which she had least reason to
-anticipate befell her, for on December 28th, 1644, her husband, the
-Chief Justice, died at Oxford. On October 28th, 1645, more effective
-operations were taken against Corfe Castle. Colonel Bingham, Governor
-of Poole, had two regiments placed at his disposal for this purpose,
-and on December 16th further reinforcements were sent by General
-Fairfax.
-
-During the whole course of the Civil War no expedition more gallant had
-occurred than that of January 29th by a young officer named Cromwell:
-whether this young Cromwell was related to the Protector is uncertain.
-Hearing of the distressed condition of a widowed lady shut up with her
-daughters in a closely-besieged castle, Cromwell was resolved to make
-an effort for their relief. Accompanied by a troop numbering 120 men,
-who shared the gallantry of their commander, he set out, probably from
-Oxford, and, marching with a degree of rapidity which anticipated all
-intelligence of his design, he passed through the quarters of Colonel
-Cooke undiscovered, and came to Wareham.
-
-Colonel Butler, the Governor of Wareham, aware that no troops were
-expected, took the alarm, barricaded his lodgings, firing from thence
-upon his assailant; but the royalist troop had no time to bestow
-on this attack. They therefore set fire to a house in the vicinity
-which stood near the powder magazine, and the Governor, thoroughly
-frightened, consented to yield himself a prisoner. He was carried,
-together with others, mounted behind some of the triumphant troopers,
-to the foot of Corfe Castle.
-
-Here a large rebel force was drawn up to oppose their further progress;
-but the brave bearing of this little troop, together with the shouts of
-welcome from the besieged on the walls, induced the besiegers to give
-way. The gallant band, having accomplished their purpose, tendered
-their services to the lady, and presented also for her acceptance the
-prisoners they had so bravely captured.
-
-The object of this chivalrous action was probably an offer of escape to
-the ladies from the Castle, which, however, was not accepted. And on
-their return Colonel Cromwell, with some of his troopers, were taken
-prisoners.
-
-The course of events now shifted rapidly, and though Lady Bankes was
-still as intrepid as at first, it was not so with all who were around
-her; for the captive Governor of Wareham, Colonel Butler, prevailed
-on Colonel Laurence (hitherto so trustworthy) not only to connive at,
-but to accompany him in his flight. And there was within the walls
-another traitor, Lieutenant-Colonel Pitman, whose conduct was still
-more base, his treachery far more fatal in its consequences. This
-officer in the Castle garrison, being weary of the King’s service, let
-the enemy know that if he might have a protection he would deliver
-Corfe Castle to the Parliament. This treacherous offer was accepted,
-and a protection order was sent to him from London. On this, Pitman
-proposed to Colonel Anketil, the Governor of the Castle, to fetch one
-hundred men out of Somerset to add to the Corfe Castle garrison. This
-proposal being approved, he formed a design with the rebel, Colonel
-Bingham, who commanded the siege, that under this pretence he should
-convey more than one hundred men into the Castle, and as soon as they
-were entered the besiegers should make an attack. On this a hundred men
-were drawn out of Weymouth garrison and marched to Lulworth Castle,
-where they were joined by some thirty or forty more soldiers. Pitman
-led them in the night to the port agreed upon for their entrance, where
-Colonel Anketil was ready to receive them. Some of these men already
-knew every part of the interior of the Castle; but when fifty of these
-new soldiers had entered, Colonel Anketil, seeing more in the rear,
-ordered the Sally Port to be closed, saying that there were as many as
-he could dispose of. The crafty Pitman expostulated on his causing him
-to bring these men so far and then to expose them to the cold and to
-the enemy.
-
-Those of the fresh soldiers who entered took possession of the King’s
-and Queen’s towers and the two platforms, awaiting the time when
-the besiegers would make an assault, it being then two hours after
-midnight. The besieged, as soon as the fraud was discovered, fired and
-threw down great stones upon these intruders, who, however, maintained
-their posts. There were, in fact, only six men of the garrison in
-the upper part of the Castle, for that was considered impregnable.
-The remainder of the defending force was placed in the lower ward,
-which had hitherto been the post of danger. The besieging forces, as
-soon as they saw their friends on the towers and platforms, began to
-advance; and it was then clear to the inmates of the Castle that they
-had been most villainously betrayed. A parley was demanded, and an
-agreement made that all lives should be spared, and those who belonged
-to the town of Corfe should return quietly to their houses; and the
-circumstance of a Parliamentary officer being there with others of
-that party, prisoners in the Castle, induced the besiegers to offer
-conditions, which were accepted. But the truce was broken almost at
-once, for two of the besiegers, anxious for spoil, came over the wall
-by means of a ladder, whereupon some of the Castle garrison fired on
-them, and the risk of a free fight and general slaughter throughout the
-Castle now began.
-
-Colonel Bingham was a descendant of a family long known and highly
-respected in the county of Dorset, and naturally could not but admire
-the courage of the lady who was his foe, and he at once set about
-preserving the lives of the 140 persons then within the Castle.
-
-This last siege is said, in Sprigg’s _Table of Battles and Sieges_,
-to have lasted forty-eight days, during which eleven men were slain
-and five cannons taken. The exact date of the fall of Corfe Castle
-is uncertain, but it was probably in the last week of the month of
-February, 1646. Thus, after a resistance of nearly three years’
-duration, brave Lady Bankes was dispossessed of the fortress, which she
-continued to defend so long as a chance remained for the preservation
-of the Crown.
-
-On March 5th, 1646, a vote passed the House of Commons to demolish
-Corfe Castle. The decree was ruthlessly carried into effect, and far
-more was, unfortunately, done than was sufficient to render the Castle
-utterly untenable for the future. Most of the towers were undermined,
-whilst others had the soil removed from the foundation preparatory to
-a similar process. Some were blown up with gunpowder, whilst others,
-perhaps, sank down by their own weight into the mines without the aid
-of gunpowder.
-
-The work of plunder throughout the Castle was soon accomplished; and
-there are not a few of the fair mansions in Dorset which have been
-constructed in large measure of the stone and timber carried away
-from Corfe Castle. The rebels not only plundered the Castle, dividing
-amongst them its sumptuous furniture (some of which was traced by Sir
-Ralph Bankes, after the Restoration, to the houses of county gentlemen,
-and some to dealers in London), but even timber and stone were found to
-have been appropriated by some gentlemen of the county who supported
-the cause of Parliament. Most of the lead was sold to a plumber of
-Poole.
-
-The halls, galleries, and other chambers throughout the building were
-nobly decorated with rich tapestry and carpeting and furniture, most of
-which had probably remained since the splendid days of Sir Christopher
-Hatton. And as to furniture and tapestry which existed in the Castle,
-it is not a mere matter of conjecture, as several of the things taken
-away are still extant. A _Perticular_ (_sic_) of the goods viewed at
-Colonel Bingham’s house gives a long list of beautiful tapestry, silk
-quilts, and carpets, _e.g._—
-
- One piece of fine Tapestry to hang behind my Lady’s bed.
- A rich ebony Cabinet with gilded Fixtures &c.
-
-It is but fair to add that though Colonel Bingham carried off this
-furniture from Corfe Castle to his own private residence, he was by Act
-of Parliament of 1644 not only ordered to confiscate property, but was
-threatened with confiscation of his own if he failed or refused to act
-as sequestrator.
-
-Lady Bankes’ death, as recorded on a monument of white marble at
-Rislip, took place on April 11th, 1661. So little was her death
-expected, that her eldest son was married on the morning of the day on
-which she died.
-
-The following letters, in their quaint spelling, as to the missing
-furniture from Corfe Castle, are characteristic:
-
- For my noble friend Sir Ralph Bankes at Chettle.
-
- From John Bingham Esq^{r}. Bingham’s Melcombe.
-
- Nobel sir,
-
- My being in phisicke made me not to send an answer to your servant’s
- letter last Sunday. I beseech you let it plead my excuse.
-
- Sir, I have a large bed, a single velvet red chair and a suite of fine
- damask; had not the horse plague swept away my horses I would have
- sent these to you. I beg that you’ll please to command one of your
- servants to come to Blandford next Friday morning by 10 o’clock there
- these things shall be ready for him at the Crowne Hotel.
-
- That yet a continual gale of happinefs may ever blow on you here below
- the stars and that you may yet enjoy heaven hereafter is the real wish
- of
-
- Sir
- Your very hearty servant
- John Byngham.
-
- Sir I humbly entreat the tender of my humbel service to my Ladey
- Bankes.
-
-One other letter, having the same address, appears to have been written
-within a few days of the date of the former letter:—
-
- Nobel Sir,
-
- I have sent to Blandford to be delivered your servant one large bed,
- 2 blankets; the bed for 12 years since was opened by a wench at my
- then house at Byngham’s Melcombe when I was in the Isle of Guernsey
- and feathers stolne out and divers other such tricks done by her in my
- being out of the land.
-
- I take the boldness to hint this trick to you likewise I have sent
- to Blandford a full sute (that is as many as ever I had) of old fine
- damask table cupboard cloths and napkins in particular two long table
- cloths a large cupboard cloth, 2 towels long, a red velvet chaire.
-
- Sir, had I more as I promised yourself I would have sent it.
-
- Sir, the Linnen was but once used by me, but whited once in 2 years.
-
- Your humble servant
- John Byngham.
-
-One large bed, minus the feathers, and one red velvet chair, appear to
-constitute the amount of furniture recovered by Sir Ralph Bankes from
-the hands of the sequestrators; and Sir Ralph ought to have considered
-himself very fortunate inasmuch as these sequestrators had not made
-away with the estates themselves.
-
-Sir Ralph Bankes did not live to witness another revolution, or to see
-the final expulsion of the royal race in whose cause his family had
-suffered so severely: he completed the mansion at Kingston Lacy, and
-died when his son was under age.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The original MS. of the old Corfe Castle legend of the Christmas Pie
-is still said to be in existence in the Muniment Room at Kingston Lacy
-amongst the other Corfe Castle documents.
-
-Lady Bankes’ grandmother, Mrs. Hawtrey, was happy in the birth of many
-daughters, who were well instructed in all the maidenly duties of that
-good and pious time. Of the use of the needle, and the Greek and Latin
-tongues, none could surpass them; and as to playing on the virginals
-and clavycorde, it was wonderful to listen to them. But Mistress
-Hawtrey did most insist on every young maiden knowing the cookcraft
-(for so did she style it) of the kitchen.
-
- Beauty fadeth like a flower.
- Music can little delight the husband
- When he becometh hard of hearing,
-
-she would say; and then solemnly add:
-
- The best cook doth always secure the best husband.
-
-Now, to preserve the early lessons so taught to her daughters, from the
-day when they could first rest their little chins upon the dresser, she
-did have them fully instructed in this art of cooking. And then did
-she require of them all a promise, strictly to be observed, that on
-every Christmas Day in every year these her daughters should themselves
-prepare and set forth upon her table a number of mince-pies equalling
-exactly in the sum of them the number of years since the day of her so
-happy marriage; and so it was that when she had been married fifty-nine
-years complete there did appear upon her table fifty-nine mince-pies.
-But in the following year her daughters conspired how, for the yet
-greater satisfaction and surprised pleasure of this their beloved
-parent, they did, with great labour and curiosity of art, continue
-one great and noble pie a born baby might rest therein; and this they
-filled with those many and rare refections suitable to the great work
-they had in hand: to complete the whole did they upraise on the crown
-of the crust the letters L X—two letters large and noble—clearly
-denoting thereby the three-score returns of that fertile marriage-day
-from whence themselves were so happily sprung. The knowledge of this
-rare structure is withheld from the good old dame until the hall is
-decked with Christmas garnishings. The pie is placed upon the table,
-and the old lady entereth and is seated, but the beholding of this pie
-hath an effect on this good old lady far differing from that which then
-her beloved offspring intended. Alas! she cannot touch a morsel. A
-novelty so strange she cannot realise, nor can she digest the ancient
-promise broken. Mayhap she did apprehend whether an ape should leap
-forth, or a dwarf, or a Denmark owl, for such conceits had been known
-at the banquets of persons of high condition. Be this as it may, the
-old lady is carried to her chamber in a swoon; her daughters like
-demented beings hurry to and fro—nothing is left unendeavoured on their
-parts. The medicine chest is unclosed. Scores of healthful medicaments
-are brought forth. They give to her of them all: yet did the good old
-lady die, and was laid straight and quiet in her coffin, before the
-mince-pie had sufficient time to cool.
-
-
-
-
-POOLE
-
-BY W. K. GILL
-
-
-Some, even of those who know a little of Poole, may wonder at the
-idea that a town so modern to all appearance should have anything of
-antiquity about it. To the motorist, bound westward from Bournemouth,
-Poole is a place with an irritating railway crossing at one end, and
-an equally provoking bridge at the other. And even to a visitor it
-will appear but as a commonplace business town—a town of tramcars and
-electric lights, with a big gasworks on the most approved principles,
-with wharves piled with timber and quays black with coal, where
-the colliers come in and out through a fleet of red-sailed barges
-and big white timber-ships; a town whose very Church and Guildhall
-are modern, and to whose past only a neglected and mutilated stone
-building on the Quay bears the slightest witness. But could we open
-the jealously-guarded charter-chest, and unroll one ancient document
-after another; could we summon the shadowy file of noble and royal
-benefactors, from the famous Crusader, the Gordon of his age, who
-granted the first charter, to that Queen of famous memory, who gave us
-the last—then, indeed, we should have a pageant fit to compare with
-that of any town in Dorset. But Poole’s true pageant would be on the
-water, where, too, the harbour would give her an antiquity not her own.
-Roman bireme and Saxon keel, Danish longship and Norman galley, quaint
-craft of Plantagenet and Tudor, strong-stemmed Newfoundlander, and
-raking privateer of the great French War—the shipping that has sailed
-in that harbour would bring us down from the Roman period to the long
-black destroyers of our own day which sometimes lie in main channel
-from Stakes to Saltern’s Pier. The memories of Poole are not in her
-ruins, but in her records; for the swift keel leaves no mark, and there
-is no more trace of the destroyers that lay there last year than of
-Knut’s long ships that lay there nine hundred years ago.
-
-[Illustration: THE TOWN CELLARS, POOLE.]
-
-But let us stroll slowly through the town from the railway station,
-not by the High Street, but by way of the Guildhall and the Church of
-St. James the Apostle, down to the Quay, noting, as we go, the signs
-and vestiges of past days. A few paces from the station is the old
-town boundary, denoted by a boundstone let into the wall, and this is
-all that remains to mark the position of the embattled gate erected
-by charter from Henry VI., and destroyed by order of Charles II.—the
-embattled gate recorded by Leland that turned back Prince Maurice in
-the great Civil War. It is amusing to note how Clarendon “veils his
-wrath in scornful word” as he tells how “in Dorsetshire the enemy
-had only two little fisher towns, Poole and Lyme.” Here was the main
-entrance from the north through the fortified gate that gave the name
-of Towngate Street. (The southern entrance was by ferry, and this way
-came Leland, the great Tudor antiquary.) There was a sharp fight at
-this point during the Civil War, mementos of which in the shape of
-three small cannon-balls were dug up last year, and are now in the
-local Museum. The story may be summarised thus: Poole as a seaport
-was of great importance, and the King’s party were most anxious
-to get hold of it. Attempts were made to corrupt a dashing young
-partisan leader, Captain Francis Sydenham, of Wynford Eagle (brother
-of the famous doctor, also a soldier then), who was constantly out on
-raiding expeditions. Sydenham pretended to yield, but arranged with
-the Governor, Captain John Bingham, of Bingham’s Melcombe, to have a
-little surprise for the cavaliers. Accordingly, when Lord Crawford with
-horse and foot came by night to the outworks that guarded the causeway
-over the fosse, he was admitted within the half-moon, but found the
-gates fast, while the cannon and musketry opened on him from the wall.
-The darkness favoured him, however, and he escaped, but with some loss
-of men, and more of horses. The small cannon-balls above mentioned
-were in all probability some of those fired at the Royalists from the
-wall. This wall, as has been said, was razed by order of Charles II., a
-retaliation, possibly, for the part Poole had played in the destruction
-of Corfe Castle. The fosse long remained, and, having been deepened
-in fear of Prince Charlie as late as 1745, some portion was traceable
-within the memory of living persons.
-
-A few years after, the King had an opportunity of seeing how his order
-had been carried out—for, the Court being at Salisbury, to avoid
-the Plague in 1665, he and some of the courtiers went touring about
-East Dorset, and one day was spent at Poole. So on September 15th a
-brilliant company rode into the town by the old causeway. There was the
-King himself, harsh-featured indeed, but easy and gracious in bearing;
-Lauderdale, with his coarse features and lolling tongue; Ashley, with
-his hollow cheeks and keen eyes; Arlington, another of the afterwards
-infamous Cabal; and, among the rest, but the centre of all attraction,
-the handsome, boyish face of Monmouth. Ashley was well known in Poole,
-and many a grim Puritan soldier must have muttered Scriptural curses on
-his old commander, who had turned courtier for the nonce, but who could
-not foresee the day when the flags in the port should be half-mast for
-him, and when his body should be brought from his place of exile in
-Holland, and the hearse should pass along the very road he had just
-ridden so gallantly to the old church of Wimborne St. Giles. Still
-less could young Monmouth foresee the day when, twenty years later,
-turning and doubling like a hunted hare, he should cross that road in
-his desperate and vain effort to reach the shelter of the great Forest.
-And little did his father think that Antony Etricke, “learned in the
-laws of England,” whom he appointed Recorder of Poole, should be the
-man before whom his favourite son would be brought for identification.
-Down the street rode the gay cavalcade—plumed hats, curled wigs,
-velvets and laces, gallant horses and all—over the open ground that
-extended halfway down the town, till they came to the house of Peter
-Hiley, which then stood about opposite where now is the National and
-Provincial Bank. The house has long since gone, but there they were
-entertained by Peter Hall, the Mayor; and afterwards the King went on
-the water to Brownsea, “and took an exact view of the said island,
-castle, bay, and this harbour, to his great contentment.” For many a
-day this visit was remembered, and the cause of the hapless Monmouth
-was popular in Poole, so that before his final attempt to reach the
-Forest he had entertained the idea of escaping to Poole, and there
-taking ship for Holland. A ghastly little note from the Deputy-Mayor of
-Poole, instructing the tything-men of Higher Lytchett to take delivery
-of certain heads and quarters of rebels executed in Poole, and to set
-them up at the cross-roads, is still in existence, and testifies to the
-executions of the Bloody Assize.
-
-Further down the street comes a cluster of houses that belong to a
-widely different period, both in the history of the town and of the
-country. The almshouses, dated 1812, with Nile and Trafalgar Rows on
-one side, and Wellington Row, 1814, a little way below on the other,
-recall the great French War, when the open ground at this end of
-Poole, still called The Parade, though now built over, was the place
-of exercise for the troops constantly quartered here. In 1796, the
-33rd, then Colonel Wellesley’s, regiment was here, and the Colonel’s
-quarters were over the water at the old manor-house at Hamworthy.
-But the almshouses, built by a famous Newfoundland merchant, George
-Garland, bring back quite a different set of memories. Curiously
-enough, the well-known trade with Newfoundland was at its zenith
-during the later years of the great war. The English fleet had swept
-the foreign flag off the seas, and the trade had fallen to the Union
-Jack. But the trade dated from the time of Queen Elizabeth, and lasted
-till the middle of the Victorian age. At first the little ships went
-out year by year, in the season, and returned with their cargoes of
-oil and fish and skins, without making any stay on the island—little
-ships of forty to fifty tons, but manned by daring seamen, who faced
-the Atlantic storms and the Turkish pirates, as well as French or
-Spanish enemies, year in, year out, with no record save now and then
-an incidental mention, as when the Mayor of Poole complains to the
-Privy Council in 1625 of the danger that the fishing fleets ran from
-the Turkish pirates, Sallee rovers, and the like. In after years
-settlements were made, and the Poole merchants had their establishments
-on the island, from which they supplied the fishermen; but the truck
-system was the only one in vogue, and the oils and fish and seal-pelts
-were paid for in goods only, the value of which was fixed by the
-merchant, who thus got his cargoes at his own price, and, buying his
-supplies wholesale in England, made, naturally, very large profits.
-
-For many years Poole and Newfoundland were intimately connected,
-but the trade gradually fell off as other countries entered into
-competition, and the carelessness, bred by monopoly, made the Poole
-merchants far too independent and unenterprising.
-
-Not far down the street lived a merchant of another sort. Sir Peter
-Thompson, born in Poole, but for the greater part of his life residing
-in London, where he carried on a large trade with Hamburg, built for
-his retirement the fine old Georgian house long used as a hospital.
-The carved doorway, with its crest and motto, “_Nil conscire sibi_”
-(not, by-the-bye, the one usually assigned to Sir Peter, which is
-“_Nulla retrorsum_”); the arms and crest displayed above the doorway,
-and the height and proportion of the street front, give an air of
-dignity to the building strangely in contrast with the neat little
-villas recently put up opposite. The house dates from the time
-of Prince Charlie, who, indirectly, was the cause of Sir Peter’s
-knighthood. As High Sheriff of Surrey, the fine old Whig presented
-a loyal address to George II. when the throne was in danger after
-Prestonpans, and received the honour of knighthood as a mark of the
-King’s appreciation. It was in the next year, the year of Culloden,
-that Sir Peter began the house in which he meant to spend the close
-of an honourable life in the company of early friends, and in the
-collection of rare manuscripts and objects of interest, scientific and
-antiquarian, for he was both an F.R.S. and an F.A.S.; he also aided
-Hutchins in his monumental _History of Dorset_. Respected for his
-talents and loved for his kindness, he lived there for some years in
-dignified ease, and died in 1770.
-
-As yet it will be observed that we have had comparatively modern
-memories of Poole; but as we go nearer to the Quay, which is the most
-important element in Poole past and present, we come to older and
-older buildings, or rather parts of buildings, for it is a feature in
-the town that the constant, active life of the place has renewed, and
-so covered up, the old buildings, unlike places whose vigour has long
-ebbed away and left them with their antiquities unaltered to sleep away
-the remainder of their allotted time,
-
- And keep the flame from wasting by repose.
-
-And so we pass the modern Guildhall—the old Guildhall was very
-suitably placed in Fish Street, on the other side of the town, with
-the gaol, in which John Wesley’s grandfather was imprisoned, under
-it—and down the market till we pause before the oldest almshouses,
-where the authorities have put up an inscription which tells all
-that is certainly known of the buildings, viz., that they were first
-erected about the time of Henry IV., were the property of one of the
-mediæval religious guilds, the Guild of St. George, and were seized
-by the Crown in the time of Edward VI., and afterwards sold to the
-Corporation. The lower portion and the old wall at the back—in fact,
-the stonework—may be as old as the days of Joan of Arc, but there has,
-of course, been a great deal of alteration and rebuilding. Speaking of
-Joan of Arc, it may be mentioned that John, Duke of Bedford, Regent
-of France, under whose rule she was burned, was Lord of Canford and
-of Poole, and a few years ago his seal was dug up in cleaning out a
-ditch on the Hamworthy-Lytchett road. St. James’ Church is, of course,
-new, though built on the site of the old church, a print of which,
-with its “handsome tower, covered with a cupola of tin, quite round,
-in the fashion of a cup,” is given in Sydenham’s _History of Poole_,
-a work of special merit, written by a competent antiquary, and full
-of information. Some of the old monumental inscriptions are preserved
-in the church, notably one to Captain Peter Joliffe. This worthy
-representative of the old Poole seamen distinguished himself in a
-sea-fight off Purbeck as follows:—Cruising with only two men in a small
-vessel, the “Sea Adventurer,” he saw a French privateer make prey of
-a Weymouth fishing-boat. Though the Frenchman was vastly superior in
-strength, he boldly attacked him, drove him off, recovered the prize,
-and then, following up his first success, manœuvred so skilfully as
-to drive him ashore near Lulworth, where the vessel was broken to
-pieces and the crew made prisoners. King William III., hearing of this
-brave deed, sent Captain Peter a gold medal and chain, with a special
-inscription. This was not his only exploit, and in later years George
-I. made him military commander of the town. His great-grandson, the
-Rev. Peter Joliffe, of Sterte, is still remembered as the pattern of a
-good rector.
-
-Old Poole, as we have noted, clustered round St. James’ Church and
-the old Guildhall, and, as the remains testify, was mainly of stone,
-with the stone-flag roofs, that remind one of their Purbeck home.
-Very near to the church, in the yard of the St. Clement’s Inn, is a
-small battlemented gateway, supposed to have been a water-gate, a view
-which has been lately confirmed by the traces of seaweed revealed
-in digging. This is very probably the piece of wall of which Leland
-speaks as having been built by Richard III., who “promised large
-things to the town of Poole.” Hence, when “Richmond was on the seas,”
-and his storm-driven ship appeared off Sandbanks, an attempt was made
-to inveigle him on shore; but a warier man than Henry Tudor did not
-breathe, and, to the disappointment of the authorities, “he weighed
-up his anchor, halsed up his sails, and having a prosperous and
-streeinable wind, and a fresh gale sent even by God to deliver him from
-that peril, arrived safe in Normandy.”
-
- Older than the piece of wall, older than the
- almshouses, and older, indeed, than anything else in
- Poole, is that much-battered, much-altered building
- now known as the Town Cellars. The Great Cellar, or
- King’s Hall, or Woolhouse, to give it the various
- names it was once known by, was in all probability,
- as the names import, a place in which goods were
- stored. It was always manor property, rented by the
- Corporation in later years, but more likely originally
- a place used by the lords of the manor of Canford to
- store the dues levied in kind, to which they were
- entitled by the charter of Longespée. On the inner
- side stood a small prison called the Salisbury, also
- belonging to the manor, and by this were the stocks,
- still remembered by old people. Modern conjecture,
- catching at the ecclesiastical appearance of the
- pointed doorways and cusped windows, and ignoring
- the fact that such features were common to sacred and
- secular buildings alike, has imagined a monastery
- here, but the utter absence of evidence, the absolute
- silence of all records, the fact, too, that Leland,
- who visited Poole, and mentions all of importance from
- the antiquary’s point of view, has nothing to say of
- any such institution, and, finally, the authority of
- Abbot Gasquet, whose note on the subject may be given
- in full—“Poole, ‘A Friary,’ _No friary: the grant 3
- Edward VI. seems to have been of gild property_”—seem
- to be conclusive against the theory. The place has
- been cut right through by the street from St. James’
- Church to the Quay, and is so shown on the revised
- Ordnance Map, while the original block is entire in
- a plan of Poole dated 1768. It must have been very
- narrow in proportion to its width, and parts of the
- work are very roughly executed. Possibly this is the
- “fair town house of stone on the Kay” of which Leland
- speaks, unmutilated in his day. Old and battered
- as it is, no inhabitant of the town should view it
- without reverence, for it is part of the long past.
- Built about the end of Edward the Third’s reign, it
- must have played its part in stirring times. Poole,
- during the Hundred Years’ War, was a place of much
- importance, and shared in the ups and downs of that
- long war—now helping to take Calais, and again
- destroyed in the great raid of John de Vienne, who
- paid with fire and sword in the declining years of
- Edward the score run up at Cressy and Calais and
- Poitiers. The old building was the centre of a fierce
- struggle about five hundred years ago. At that time
- the port of Poole was a thorn in the side of Frenchman
- and Spaniard, and its leader, Henry Paye, was the
- dread of the Channel and of the shores of the Bay of
- Biscay. The Drake of his age, half admiral and half
- pirate, he was commander of the King’s ships one
- year and raiding the Spanish coast the next. It is a
- Spanish chronicle that lifts the veil for a moment and
- shows us the Poole of the Plantagenets clustering
- round the Church of St. James and along the Quay,
- its inhabitants ready at a moment’s notice for war;
- archers and men-at-arms mustering to the warcry; the
- very doors so constructed that they could be used as
- “pavaisses,” or large shields, against the murderous
- cross-bow bolts—everything betokening a population
- living in a state of war, and revealing a lively
- picture of the coast towns when there was no regular
- fleet, and self-help was the order of the day. We owe
- this glimpse to the Spanish _Cronica del Conde D. Pero
- Niño_, the substance of which, as far as it affects
- Poole, is given by Southey in his _Naval History of
- England_. The attack on Poole was a revenge raid in
- consequence of Henry Paye’s doings on the Spanish
- coast. Early in the morning the joint Spanish and
- French fleet entered the harbour, and the Spaniards
- landed. Taken by surprise, with their leader away, the
- men of Poole proved their mettle. A large building
- (which we, without hesitation, identify with the Town
- Cellars), full of arms and sea-stores, was fiercely
- defended, and when this had been carried by assault
- and set on fire, the fighting was continued in the
- streets. So terrible was the hail of shafts that the
- Spaniards recoiled, and only the landing of fresh men
- enabled them at last to drive back the English. Henry
- Paye’s brother led the townsmen with great gallantry,
- but was killed on the spot, and then, apparently, his
- men drew off. The Spaniards and their French allies,
- who at first held aloof, but came bravely to help when
- the first repulse took place, then returned to their
- ships with a few prisoners; and the curtain again
- falls.
-
-And so we leave the old town while yet the smoke broods sullenly over
-the Town Cellars, and the warcry of Spain yet echoes among the narrow
-stone streets of the East Quay.
-
-
-
-
-BRIDPORT
-
-BY THE REV. R. GROSVENOR BARTELOT, M.A.
-
-
-In the days when vikings, pirates, and roving sea-dogs ruled the waves
-it was a decided advantage for the shipping merchant to reside in a
-port which lay a mile or so up a river-mouth rather than on the coast
-itself. Fourteenth century Weymouth folk knew this to their cost.
-Dwellers they were in a growing hamlet on the sea-coast, with no church
-of their own, so they had to walk over the hill to Mass at Wyke Regis.
-Whilst thus employed in pious worship, down swooped the French ships on
-their defenceless abodes, and when they returned to their Sunday dinner
-their homesteads were a smouldering ash-heap. After that, they decided
-to build a chapel of their own on high ground, whence the eye of the
-watchman could sweep the horizon in search of strange craft.
-
-Such a sudden surprise as this could never have occurred at Bridport.
-Following Wareham’s good example, the builders of this ancient town had
-an eye to communication by land and sea. They hugged the Roman Road,
-and at the same time they lay snug up a river-mouth. The Brit, which
-rises in the upland slopes of Axnoller Hill, amidst some of the finest
-Wessex scenery, after a short course through Beaminster Town, past the
-beautiful Tudor mansion of Parnham and the villages of Netherbury and
-Melplash, unites with the Symene and the Asker streams at Bridport
-Town, and thence flows into West Bay, a mile further on, at Bridport
-Harbour.
-
-Whether in Roman times this place had any importance cannot now
-be definitely determined. If, however, the name of the station,
-_Londinis_, on the Icen Way from Dorchester to Exeter, be but a
-Latinised form of _Lyndaen_—_i.e._, “Broad Pool”—then there is reason
-to believe that Bridport High Street, which runs along the edge of
-Bradpole parish, is on the old Roman Road. That Bradpole was only a
-hamlet of Bridport is shown by the fact that not until the year 1527
-had the former parish any right to bury its parishioners anywhere
-except in the churchyard of the latter place. The evidence of the name
-of the town certainly favours Roman occupation; “port” in this case is
-not derived from a personal source; this is the “door, or gate, of the
-Brit.”
-
-We have more clear evidence of its growing importance in the Saxon
-period. The name of its western suburb, “Allington,” is always in
-mediæval days written “Athelington,” “the town of the nobles.” Hence
-the fashion in modern London of the aristocracy flocking to the “West
-End,” is, after all, only an imitation of an example set by Bridport
-long years ago. In Edward the Confessor’s reign one hundred and twenty
-houses stood in this Dorset town, which, in comparison with the other
-towns of the county, came next to Dorchester and Wareham. Bridport,
-too, had a mint of its own, and its mint-master paid well for the
-privilege of coining.
-
-The Norman Conquest does not appear to have been an unmixed blessing
-in these parts. In _Domesday Survey_ the town is shown to have gone
-back considerably. Twenty houses are stated to be desolate, and the
-people impoverished. All these bad times, however, had passed away
-before the reign of King John, when Bridport was already famous for
-its manufacture of rope, sailcloth, and nets, and these have been its
-staple industries down to modern days. As early as the year 1211 the
-Sheriff of Dorset paid the goodly sum of £48 9s. 7d. for 1,000 yards
-“of cloth by the warp to make sails of ships, and for 3,000 weights of
-hempen thread according _to Bridport weight_ for making ships’ cables,
-and 39 shillings for the expenses of Robert the Fisher whilst he stayed
-at Bridport to procure his nets.” Let us hope “Bridport weight” was, as
-it is now, specially good for the price.
-
-Residents in the town in these days are almost tired of the threadbare
-witticism about the “Bridport dagger,” but, for the sake of the
-uninitiated, it must be repeated here. When anyone wished to speak
-tenderly of some person who died at the hangman’s hand, he described
-him as being “stabbed with a Bridport dagger.” John Leland, the
-itinerant chronicler of the days of Henry VIII., came here and heard
-the joke, but it never penetrated his prosaic skull, so he gravely
-recorded in his note-book: “At Bridporth be made good daggers.” Suffice
-it to say that Newgate was duly supplied in those days (as the old
-Morality play, _Hycke Scorner_, tells us) with:
-
- Ones a yere some taw halters of Burporte.
-
-Whilst an Act of Parliament of 1528 says that “time out of mind they
-had used to make within the town for the most part all the great
-cables, ropes, hawsers, and all other tackling for the Royal Navy.”
-This industry has left its mark upon the architecture of the place.
-The streets are broad, to allow every house its “rope walk.” Some fine
-examples of mediæval domestic architecture are extant, notably the one
-now used as the Conservative Club on the east side of South Street,
-evidently a merchant’s house of Tudor days.
-
-Few country towns were so rich in ecclesiastical foundations as was
-Bridport in the Middle Ages. It possessed the present Parish Church of
-St. Mary, which then had seven altars and numerous chantries; after
-much restoration (during which the tomb of a great-grandson of Edward
-I. perished), it is even now a noble example of the piety of prosperous
-merchants. There were, besides, the churches of St. Andrew, where now
-the Town Hall stands, and St. Swithun, in Allington. Other religious
-foundations included the Priory, now the rope factory; the double
-chantry chapel of St. Michael, where now is extant only the lane of
-that name; the Hospital of St. John, at the East Bridge; the Mawdelyn
-Leper House, in Allington; and the Chapel of St. James, in Wyke’s Court
-Lane. One can well imagine that clerical interests might sometimes
-clash amidst such a galaxy of places for worship. In fact, in the reign
-of Henry VIII. Sir John Strangwayes, Steward of the Borough, lodged
-a complaint with the Chancellor of the Diocese “against the disorder
-of certain chantry priests residing at Bridport.” This was evidently
-a harbinger of the coming dissolution of monastic foundations, which
-confined the worship of the town to two churches under one rector.
-
-By far the greatest interest of old Bridport is centred in its
-immensely valuable Borough Records. These include a vast collection of
-old deeds of Plantagenet times more or less connected with the history
-of the whole county, whilst the copies of sixty-five mediæval wills,
-ranging from 1268 to 1460, are of unique interest and importance,
-dating, as so many of them do, before 1383, when the Records of the
-Prerogative Wills of Canterbury commence. In addition to these, a very
-complete series of borough charters is preserved amongst these records.
-Bridport was a self-governing town, with the privileges of a Royal
-Borough, long before 1252, when its first charter was granted by King
-Henry III. This was probably soon lost, for the same King, on May 5th,
-1270, affixed his seal to another, which recites its predecessor thus:
-
- The King, having inspected the rolls of his Chancery, finds that at
- the time when Peter de Chacepoler was keeper of his wardrobe, the men
- of Bridport paid thirty marks, and in return received a charter, etc.
-
-From that time onward each Sovereign seems to have extorted a nice
-little donation for renewing the charter, each document growing in
-size and verbosity compared with the one which it supplanted, right
-down to the reign of James II.
-
-Amongst the books possessed by the Corporation, the most ancient
-carries us back to old Bridport from a legal point of vision. It is
-the law-book of Richard Laurence, M.P., who lived from about 1300 to
-1361. In it he has recorded copies of all the Acts of Parliament which
-would be likely to come in useful to him in his legal profession.
-Beginning from Magna Charta itself, he could turn to this volume, and
-at a glance see what punishments were enacted against coin-clippers,
-false measurers, brewers of too mild ale, or even against bigamists.
-Many are the entries referring to nautical affairs, showing how often
-he must have been consulted by busy Dorset mariners. How many a six
-and eightpence this worthy lawyer of six centuries ago made out of
-this book! On one page he records a matter less prosaic—his daughter’s
-birthday. There were no parish registers then, so he writes:
-
- Laurentia, the second daughter of Richard and Petronel Laurencz, was
- born on the vigil of Saint Petronilla, being Whitsun Eve, in the 12th
- year of King Edward III. (1338).
-
-He who so often made other people’s wills at last made his own on July
-26th, 1361, which is duly preserved amongst the muniments.
-
-Another volume—the old dome-book of the borough—contains amidst solemn
-minutes of meetings of the Corporation back in the days of the Edwards,
-many quaint little quibbles. The writer evidently jotted down on a
-fly-leaf the following as being a very good witticism which, in the
-relaxation following a heavy session, some worthy Bridport alderman of
-old told to beguile away the weariness of his fellow civic fathers:
-“I will cause you to make a cross, and, without any interference, you
-will be unable to leave the house without breaking that cross.” This
-is how it was to be done: “Clasp a post fixed in the house, and make
-a cross with your extended arms, and then how can you go out without
-breaking that cross.” Here is another, after the “blind beggar’s
-brother” pattern: “A pear tree bore all the fruit that a pear tree
-ought to bear, and yet it did not bear pears. What is the answer?”
-“Well, it only bore one pear.” Somewhat childish, certainly, but such
-little “catches” as these delighted the mediæval conversationalist;
-and do they not show that human nature has ever been the same? An
-interesting sidelight is thrown upon the clock trade of those days by
-a document dated 1425, whereby Sir John Stalbrygge, priest, was paid
-three shillings and fourpence for “keeping the clock on St. Andrew’s
-Church.” Matters horological in the Middle Ages were almost entirely in
-the hands of the church. The clergy and monks were the clock-makers and
-menders; witness the Glastonbury Clock in Wells Cathedral, the Wimborne
-Clock, and others. Was not Pope Sylvester himself, when a priest, the
-inventor of an improved timepiece? Hence it appears that for nearly six
-centuries the townsmen have turned their eyes towards that same spot
-where still the town clock chimes out the fleeting hours.
-
-A word about the Bridport Harbour and its vicissitudes. In early days
-there were numerous contentions between the citizens and the monks of
-Caen, who owned the manor of Burton; at other times they were disputing
-with the Abbot of Cerne or the Prior of Frampton, who apparently
-wished to debar them from salving their own ships when wrecked outside
-the harbour. Vessels were small enough to be beached in those days;
-when ships were increased in size, the Haven was built, in the year
-1385, but it proved not such a success as was anticipated. Apparently
-during most of the next century every county in the south of England
-was canvassed for subscriptions towards Bridport Harbour; all sorts
-of expedients were devised to raise money. In 1446 was drawn up a
-portentous document, still extant, known as an indulgence, granting
-pardons to all those who should contribute to this object. It was
-signed by one archbishop, two cardinals, and twelve bishops. Armed with
-this deed, John Greve, Proctor for the town, started round collecting.
-He writes a pitiful letter on May Day, 1448, from Dartford, in Kent,
-detailing how his sub-collector, John Banbury, “sumtime bellman of
-Lodres,” had decamped with six weeks’ collections, besides stealing his
-“new chimere of grey black russet, and a crucifix with a beryl stone
-set therein.” Nor could he find the rogue, for he says, “He took his
-leave on St. George’s Day, and so bid me farewell, and I have ridden
-and gone far to seek him—more than forty miles about—and I cannot hear
-of him.”
-
-A few interesting survivals of old Bridport have come down to modern
-times in the shape of place-names. “Bucky Doo” passage, between the
-Town Hall and the “Greyhound,” is suggestive of the rustic rabbit or
-the rural roebuck; but it is simply the old name, “Bocardo,” originally
-a syllogism in logic, which was here, as at Oxford, applied to the
-prison because, just as a Bocardo syllogism always ended in a final
-negative, so did a compulsory visit to the Bocardo lock-up generally
-mean a closer acquaintance with the disciplinary use of “the Bridport
-dagger,” and a final negative to the drama of life. Stake Lane has
-been altered to Barrack Street in modern times. Gyrtoppe’s House, in
-Allington, carries us back to the year 1360, when Sir Nicholas Gyrtoppe
-was Chantry Priest of St. Michael’s, Bridport. It may be mentioned that
-a pretty but utterly groundless story of the origin of this name has
-been told, viz., that King Charles II., when a fugitive from Worcester
-fight, had to “girth up” Miss Juliana Coningsby’s saddle trappings at
-this spot in 1652: hence the term “girth up.”
-
-Much could be written of the Civil War days concerning this place. How
-the Roundheads voted £10 (November 29th, 1642) to fortify (!) the town.
-How the Corporation met, and voted as follows:—
-
- 1642, 14th December.—It is agreed that the inhabitants that have
- muskets shall watch at night in turn; that a watch house shall be
- erected at each bridge; that eight of the Commoners shall watch at
- night and eight by day, two at each of the three bridges, one in Stake
- Lane, and one in Weak’s Lane.
-
-On June 10th, 1643, Lieutenant Lee garrisoned the place for the
-Parliament; on March 16th following, Captain Pyne, with a party from
-Lyme, captured the town and took 140 horse. Waller was here six months
-later (September 24th) raising the posse with 2,000 horse and 1,500
-dragoons. Suffice it to say that Bridport preferred to keep as clear as
-possible from civil turmoil.
-
-As for the romantic story of the escape of Charles II. after the battle
-of Worcester, and how he was nearly captured here, the reader is
-referred to Chapter I. for the full account.
-
-The Duke of Monmouth’s rebellion brings us to the end of our interest
-in Old Bridport. It was on Sunday morning, June 13th, 1685, that the
-whole place was thrown into a ferment by a surprise attack on the town
-delivered by three hundred of Monmouth’s rebels from Lyme Regis. Lord
-Grey commanded them, and after a night march and on arrival at dawn
-having at the first volley routed the Dorset militia of 1,200 foot
-with 100 horse, they started making prisoners of the officers who were
-lodging at the “Bull” hotel. In this latter work, two Dorset men of
-good family fell victims—Edward Coker and Wadham Strangwayes—being
-slain by the rebels, who, after the first flush of victory, disregarded
-ordinary precautions, and when the King’s troops rallied they had
-to beat an ignominious retreat to Lyme. Judge Jeffreys finished
-the work by ordering twelve of the condemned rebels to be executed
-at Bridport. To any student of that period of history the unique
-collection of autographs, broadsides, songs, and portraits, including
-the pre-Sedgemoor letter from Lord Dumblane to his father, the Duke
-of Leeds—all which are contained in the library of Mr. Broadley, of
-Bridport—are absolutely indispensable.
-
-
-
-
-SHAFTESBURY
-
-BY THE REV. THOMAS PERKINS, M.A.
-
-
- Shaston, the ancient British Palladour, was, and is, in itself the
- city of a dream. Vague imaginings of its castle, its three mints, its
- magnificent apsidal abbey, the chief glory of South Wessex, its twelve
- churches, its shrines, chantries, hospitals, its gabled free-stone
- mansions—all now ruthlessly swept away—throw the visitor, even against
- his will, into a pensive melancholy, which the stimulating atmosphere
- and limitless landscape around him can scarcely dispel. The spot
- was the burial-place of a king and a queen, of abbots and abbesses,
- saints and bishops, knights and squires. The bones of King Edward “the
- Martyr,” carefully removed thither for holy preservation, brought
- Shaston a renown which made it the resort of pilgrims from every part
- of Europe, and enabled it to maintain a reputation extending far
- beyond English shores. To this fair creation of the great Middle-Ages
- the Dissolution was, as historians tell us, the death-knell. With
- the destruction of the enormous abbey the whole place collapsed in a
- general ruin; the martyr’s bones met with the fate of the sacred pile
- that held them, and not a stone is now left to tell where they lie.
-
-So does Thomas Hardy describe the ancient town of Shaftesbury.[55]
-Truly, it is a town that appears to have seen its best days. Its
-market-place is almost deserted, save on market-days, and when
-some travelling wild beast show visits the town. On fair days the
-round-abouts with galloping horses do a lively business, and their
-steam-driven organs emit energetic music that may be heard far and
-wide; and when a good circus pitches its tent on Castle Hill,
-vehicles of every description stream in by hundreds from all the
-surrounding villages, for there is nothing that the country folk
-love better than a circus. But at other times Shaftesbury would be
-considered by a stranger passing through it, fresh from city life,
-as a quiet if not sleepy town. It has little to boast of save its
-splendid site, its pure health-giving breezes, and the magnificent
-views of the surrounding hills and downs and valleys that may be
-obtained from several points of vantage. Of its four remaining
-churches one only is of mediæval date; the three others are all
-quite modern, entirely destitute of architectural interest, and with
-little beauty to recommend them. All the others which once stood
-here have disappeared, leaving nothing to remind us of their former
-existence save, in some few cases, the name of a street or lane. Of
-the glorious Abbey, probably the wealthiest nunnery that ever existed
-in the kingdom, nothing but the walls that once enclosed the precincts
-on the south-east, and the foundations of the church, long entirely
-hidden from sight by surface soil, now happily opened out by recent
-excavations, remain.
-
-[Illustration: SHAFTESBURY.]
-
-Left high and dry upon its hill-top it can watch the trailing steam
-of the locomotives in the deep valley to the north as they hurry by,
-taking no heed of the once royal burgh, the chief mint of Dorset in the
-days of the West Saxon Kings, the burial-place of murdered Eadward, and
-of Eadmund’s wife, Ealdgyth or Elgefu, the site of the nunnery founded
-by Ælfred, and ruled at first by his “midmost daughter” Æthelgede or
-Æthelgeofu. And yet this town has a real history that can be traced
-back for more than 1,000 years, and a legendary one that carries us
-back well-nigh to the days of King Solomon, for we read in a British
-Brut or chronicle: “After Lleon came Rhun of the Stout Spear, his son,
-and he built the Castle of Mount Paladr, which is now called Caer
-Sefton, and there while he was building this stronghold there was
-an Eryr that gave some prophecies about this island.” In Powell’s
-_History of Cambria_ it is said:
-
- ... Concerning the word of Eryr at the building of Caer Septon on Mt.
- Paladour in the year after the creation of the world 3048 some think
- that an eagle did then speak and prophesie; others are of opinion
- that it was a Brytaine named Aquila (Eryr in British) that prophesied
- of these things and of the recoverie of the whole ile again by the
- Brytaines.[56]
-
-The Brut quoted was evidently written after Dorset was occupied by the
-Saxons, because it says that the town was called Septon (a form of
-Shafton), and implies that it was not so called when Rhun built it. It
-is pretty certain that Caer Paladr was the Celtic name, and that the
-Saxon name Sceaftesbyrig is a translation of it, the modern form of
-which is Shaftesbury. If it was called after the name of the King who
-built it, it was after part of his surname Baladr or Paladr (spear),
-Bras (stout). Others think the spear or shaft was suggested by the long
-straight hill on the point of which the town was built. At a later
-date the name was contracted into Shaston, but this has become nearly
-obsolete, save in municipal and other formal documents, where the
-various parishes are called Shaston St. Peter’s, Shaston St. James’,
-etc. The name also appears on the milestones, and the inhabitants of
-the town are called Shastonians. No doubt the Romans captured this
-Celtic hill-stronghold, and as proof of this, the finding of some Roman
-coins has been alleged; but no written record of this period has come
-down to us. The real history begins in Saxon times. Ælfred came to the
-West Saxon throne in 871, and in 888 he founded a Benedictine Nunnery
-at Shaftesbury, setting over it his “medemesta-dehter” as first Abbess.
-This we learn from Asser, Ælfred’s friend, who tells us that he built
-the Abbey near the eastern gate of the town. This shows that by this
-time Shaftesbury was a walled town. An inscription on a stone in the
-Abbey Chapterhouse, so William of Malmesbury tells us, recorded the
-fact that the town was built by Ælfred in 880, by which he probably
-means rebuilt after its partial or complete destruction by the Danes.
-
-Shaftesbury was counted as one of the four royal boroughs of Dorset
-(Wareham, Dorchester, and Bridport being the other three), and at the
-time of the Norman Conquest it was the largest of the four. Æthelstan
-granted the town the right of coining, and several scores of pennies
-struck here in his reign were found in excavating a mediæval house
-near the Forum in 1884-5. In the reign of Eadward the Confessor three
-coiners lived in the town, each paying 13s. 4d. annually to the Crown,
-and a fine of £1 on the introduction of a new coinage. The names, Gold
-Hill and Coppice (that is, Copper) Street Lane, still speak of the old
-mints of Shaftesbury.
-
-On March 18th, 978, as everyone knows, King Eadward was treacherously
-slain at the house of, and by the order of, his stepmother. The body
-of the murdered King was dragged some distance by his horse, and when
-found was buried without any kingly honour at Wareham. On February
-20th, 980, Ælfere, Eadward’s ealdorman, removed the body with all due
-state from Wareham to Shaftesbury, and here it was buried, somewhere in
-the Abbey Church. Doubtless the reason why Shaftesbury was chosen as
-the place of his burial was because he was of Ælfred’s kin, and this
-religious house had been founded by Ælfred.
-
-Miracles soon began to be worked at his tomb. He appeared, so it was
-said, to a lame woman who lived at some distant spot, and bade her go
-to his grave at Shaftesbury, promising that if she went she should be
-healed of her infirmity. She obeyed his injunction, and received the
-due reward for her faith. The grave in which the King was laid did not,
-however, please him as a permanent resting-place. First he indicated
-his dissatisfaction by raising the tomb bodily, and then when this
-did not lead to an immediate translation of his relics, he appeared in
-visions and intimated his desire to have a fresh grave. This was about
-twenty-one years after his burial in the Abbey. The grave was opened,
-and, as was usual in such cases, a sweet fragrance from it pervaded the
-church. His body was then laid in the new tomb in a chapel specially
-dedicated to him. Possibly this chapel stood over the crypt on the
-north side of the north choir aisle. The day of his death, March 18th,
-and the days of the two translations of his relics, February 20th and
-June 20th, were kept in honour of the King, who, for what reason we
-cannot tell, was regarded as a saint and martyr. His fame spread far
-and wide, and brought many pilgrims and no small gain to the Abbey. At
-one time the town was in danger of losing its old name, Shaftesbury,
-and being called Eadwardstowe, but in course of time the new name
-died out and the old name was revived. Pilgrims were numerous, and
-possibly sometimes passed the whole night in the church. In order to
-make a thorough cleansing of the floor after their visits more easy, a
-slight slope towards the west was given to the choir pavement, so that
-it might be well swilled. A similar arrangement may be seen in other
-churches.
-
-At Shaftesbury, too, was Eadmund Ironside’s wife buried; and on
-November 12th, 1035, Knut the Dane died at Shaftesbury, but was not
-buried in the Abbey, his body being carried to the royal city of
-Winchester and laid to rest within the Cathedral Church there. Up to
-the time of the Conquest the Abbesses bore English names; after that
-time the names of their successors show that Shaftesbury Abbey formed
-no exception to the rule that all the most valuable church preferments
-were bestowed on those of Norman and French birth. Through every change
-of dynasty the Abbey of Shaftesbury continued to flourish, growing
-continually richer, and adding field to field, until it was said that
-if the Abbot of Somerset Glaston could marry the Abbess of Dorset
-Shaston they would together own more land than the King himself. The
-Abbess held a barony, and ranked with the mitred Abbots, who had the
-privilege of sitting in Parliament, and it was said that her rank
-rendered her subject to be summoned by the King, but that she was
-excused from serving on account of her sex. At last the time came for
-the Abbey to be dissolved. More prudent than Whiting, the last Abbot of
-Glastonbury—who refused to surrender and was hanged on St. Michael’s
-Hill, overlooking his wide domains—Elizabeth Zouche, the last Abbess
-of Shaftesbury, gave up to Henry VIII., on March 23rd, 1539, the Abbey
-with all its property, valued at £1,329 per annum, and received in lieu
-thereof the handsome pension of £133 a year for her own use. At this
-time there were fifty-four nuns within its walls, each of whom received
-a pension varying from £7 down to £3 6s. 8d.; the total amount given in
-pensions was £431.
-
-From the day of the Dissolution the glory of Shaftesbury began to pass
-away. In an incredibly short space of time the Abbey was demolished,
-and when Leland visited the place a few years later the church had
-entirely disappeared. There was much litigation between the town and
-those to whom the Abbey lands had been granted—the Earl of Southampton
-and Sir Thomas Arundel—and this dispute continued for fifty years,
-greatly impoverishing the town.
-
-Shaftesbury received its first municipal charter in the second year
-of James I.; a second charter was granted in 1666 by Charles II. From
-that time Shaftesbury led an uneventful life, broken at times by
-the excitement of contested elections, which were fought with great
-bitterness, and the consumption of much beer and the giving of much
-gold. The town was originally represented by two members; the two first
-of these sat in the Parliament of the twenty-fifth year of Edward
-I. At the time of the Reform Bill of 1832 it lost one member, and
-in 1885 it ceased to be a Parliamentary Borough, and was merged in
-the Northern Division of Dorset. At the election of 1880 a singular
-incident took place, which will show how high party feeling ran in the
-ancient borough. The candidate who had represented the constituency in
-the previous Parliament was defeated, and after the declaration of the
-poll, about nine o’clock in the evening, his disappointed partizans
-indulged in such violent and riotous conduct that the successful
-candidate and his friends could not leave the room in the Town Hall
-where the votes had been counted. Stones were thrown at the windows,
-some of the police were injured, but the besieged barricaded the doors
-of the building, closed the shutters, and waited with patience, while
-the angry mob outside, for the space of four or five hours, yelled
-like wild beasts disappointed of their prey. At last, finding that
-they could not effect an entrance and make a fresh vacancy in the
-constituency by killing the new member, the crowd began to drop off one
-by one, and by two o’clock in the morning the siege was practically
-raised, and the imprisoned member and his friends were able to get out
-and reach their hotel unmolested. Some of the rioters were tried, but
-evidence sufficiently clear to identify the men who had wounded the
-police was not to be obtained, and the accused were acquitted. This was
-the last time Shaftesbury was called on to elect a member; and as the
-town stands quite on the borders of the new district of North Dorset,
-the poll is not now declared from the Town Hall window at Shaftesbury,
-but at Sturminster Newton, a town more centrally situated.
-
-At one time there were twelve churches or chapels in Shaftesbury—St.
-Peter’s, St. Martin’s, St. Andrew’s, Holy Trinity, St. Lawrence’s, St.
-Michael’s, St. James’, All Saints’, St. John the Baptist’s, St. Mary’s,
-St. Edward’s, and last, but not least, the Abbey Church of St. Mary
-and St. Edward. Beyond the borough boundary was the Church of St.
-Rumbold,[57] now generally spoken of as Cann Church. Why Shaftesbury,
-which was never a large town, should have needed so many churches has
-always been a mystery. The late William Barnes suggested a theory which
-may partially account for it. He says that some of these churches may
-have been old British ones, and that the Saxon Christians could not,
-or would not, enter into communion with the British Christians, but
-built churches of their own. This is probably true, although it still
-fails to account for the number of churches which, on this supposition,
-the Saxons must have built. It must be remembered, as explained in the
-Introduction, that Dorset remained much longer free from the dominion
-of the West Saxon Kings than Hampshire, and that when it was finally
-conquered by the West Saxons, these men had already become Christians,
-so that the conquest was not one of expulsion or extermination. The
-Celtic inhabitants were allowed to remain in the old homes, though
-in an inferior position. The laws of Ine, 688, clearly show this. In
-Exeter there is a church dedicated to St. Petroc, who was a Cornish,
-and therefore Celtic, saint. Mr. Barnes thinks that the Shaftesbury
-churches dedicated to St. Michael, St. Martin, St. Lawrence, and the
-smaller one dedicated to St. Mary, may have been Celtic. St. Martin
-was a Gaulish saint, St. Lawrence may have been a dedication due to
-the early missionaries, while the two hills in Cornwall and Brittany
-dedicated to St. Michael show that he was a saint held in honour by the
-Celts. The British Church differed in certain points of observance from
-the Church founded by the missionaries from Rome under St. Augustine,
-notably as to the date of keeping Easter. Bæda says that when he was
-Abbot of Malmesbury he wrote, by order of the Synod of his own Church,
-a book against the errors of the British Church, and that by it he
-persuaded many of the Celts, who were subjects of the West Saxon King,
-to adopt the Roman date for the celebration of the Resurrection. But
-even if we assume that there were four Celtic churches, why should
-no less than eight fresh ones have been built by the West Saxons? No
-explanation has been offered. Possibly, however, some of the churches
-may have been only small chapels or chantries.
-
-[Illustration: GOLD HILL, SHAFTESBURY.]
-
-Soon after the dissolution of the Abbey, as has been said previously,
-all the walls above the surface were pulled down, except the one that
-skirts the steep lane known as Gold Hill. This wall stands, strongly
-buttressed by gigantic masses of masonry on the outside (some of
-them contemporaneous with the walls, others added afterwards), for
-it has to bear up the earth of what was formerly the Abbey garden.
-The foundations of the Abbey Church, either purposely or naturally,
-in the course of time were covered with soil, and so remained until
-1861, when some excavations took place and sundry relics were found,
-among them a stone coffin containing a skeleton and an abbot’s staff
-and ring. The foundations were then once more covered in, but recently
-the Corporation obtained a twenty-one years’ lease of the ground
-for the purpose of more thorough investigation. All the foundations
-that remain will be uncovered, the ground laid out as an ornamental
-garden and thrown open to the public. Considerable progress has been
-made with this work; all except the extreme west end of the nave has
-been excavated to the level of the floor, and some very interesting
-discoveries have been made. Many fragments of delicately-carved
-stonework, some of them bearing the original colour with which they
-were decorated, were unearthed, and are preserved in the Town Hall.
-The excavation began at the eastern end of the church, and proceeded
-westward. It was found that the east end of the choir was apsidal, the
-form usual in Norman times, but abandoned by English builders in
-the thirteenth century, when many of the larger churches were extended
-further to the east, though in France the apsidal termination is almost
-universal. The form shows that the Abbey Church was rebuilt during the
-Norman period of architecture, and that the choir was not afterwards
-extended eastward, for in earlier days, as well as in the thirteenth
-century and later, the rectangular east end was common. The north choir
-aisle was apsidal internally and square-ended externally; the south
-aisle was much wider than the north, and was evidently extended in the
-fifteenth century. The foundations of the high altar are complete,
-and on the north side of it is a grave formed of faced stone, which
-probably contained the body of the founder of the Norman Church. The
-crypt lies outside of the north aisle, and this has been completely
-cleared out; its floor is sixteen feet below the level of the ground.
-On this floor was found a twisted Byzantine column, which probably
-supported a similar column in the chapel above the crypt. This is
-the chapel which is believed to have been the shrine of King Eadward
-the Martyr. A most curious discovery was made in the crypt—namely, a
-number of dolicho-cephalous skulls. The question arises: How did they
-get there? For the shape of these skulls indicates that their owners
-were men of the Neolithic Age! In various graves sundry ornaments
-and articles of dress have been found—a gold ring in which a stone
-had once been set, a leaden bulla bearing the name of Pope Martin V.
-(1417-1431), and a number of bronze pins, probably used to fasten
-the garment in which the body was buried. The clay used for puddling
-the bottom of the graves acted much in the manner of quicklime and
-destroyed the bodies. Several pieces of the pavement, formed of
-heraldic and other tiles, remain _in situ_. It is supposed by some
-that the Abbey Church once possessed a central tower and a tall spire,
-though it is doubtful if the _spire_ ever existed; if it did, the
-church standing on its lofty isolated hill about 700 feet above the
-sea-level must have been a conspicuous object from all the wide Vale
-of Blackmore and its surrounding hills, as well as from the Vale of
-Wardours to the north, along which the railway now runs.
-
-St. Peter’s Church is the oldest building in the town, but it is
-late Perpendicular in style. It is noteworthy that it has not, and
-apparently never had, a chancel properly called so; no doubt a ritual
-chancel may have been formed by a wooden screen. A holy-water stoup is
-to be seen on the left hand as one goes into the entrance porch at the
-west side of the tower. The richly-carved pierced parapet of the north
-aisle bears the Tudor rose and the portcullis, and so shows that this
-part of the church was built early in the sixteenth century.
-
-Many of the houses in the town are old, but not of great antiquity.
-Thatched cottages abound in the side lanes, and even the long main
-street, which runs from east to west, has a picturesque irregularity
-on the sky-line. The most interesting house is one in Bimport, marked
-in a map dated 1615 as Mr. Groves’ house. It stands near the gasworks
-and the chief entrance to Castle Hill. It is a good example of a town
-house of the early sixteenth century, and contains some well-carved
-mantelpieces of somewhat later date. This house has served various
-purposes—at one time it was an inn, and some years ago narrowly escaped
-destruction. It, however, did escape with only the removal of its
-old stone-slabbed roof, in place of which one of red tiling has been
-substituted. An additional interest has been given to this old building
-by its introduction into _Jude the Obscure_ as the dwelling-place of
-the schoolmaster Phillotson, from a window of which his wife Sue once
-jumped into the street. Beyond this house is one known as St. John’s,
-standing as it does on St. John’s Hill, more of which hereafter.
-It was, in great measure, built of material bought at the sale of
-Beckford’s strange and whimsical erection known as Fonthill Abbey,
-of which the story is told in the _Memorials of Old Wiltshire_. In
-the garden of St. John’s Cottage is a curious cross, in which are two
-carved alabaster panels, covered with glass to preserve them from frost
-and rain.
-
-Shaftesbury owes what distinction it possesses to its position, and
-this is due to its geological formation. A long promontory[58] of
-Upper Greensand runs from the east, and ends in a sharp point where
-the steep escarpments facing the north-west and south meet. On the
-triangle formed by these two the town is built. Looking out from the
-end of this high ground we may see a conical, wooded hill known as
-Duncliffe; this is an outlier of the same greensand formation; all the
-rest of the greensand, which once occupied the space between, has been
-gradually washed away, and the surface of the lower ground consists
-of various members of the Jurassic series. Under the greensand lies a
-bed of Gault, a blue-coloured clay impervious to water; and, as the
-greensand rock is porous, the gault holds up the water that percolates
-through the greensand, with the result that a thickness of about
-twenty-five feet of the lowest bed of the greensand is full of water,
-while the upper layers are dry. Hence, to get water to supply the town,
-wells would have to be sunk to the depth of 150 feet. Some such wells
-were, indeed, sunk in mediæval times, but were not satisfactory. It is
-only in recent times that regular water-works, with pumping-engines,
-reservoir, and mains, have been constructed, and Shaftesbury had to
-depend for water until that time on a supply obtained from springs at
-Enmore Green, a village situated under the hill and to the north of
-the town. This gave rise to a quaint and curious custom. On the Sunday
-next after the Festival of the Invention of the Cross, May 3rd (the
-day was changed in 1663 to the Monday before Ascension Day), the Mayor
-and burgesses of Shaftesbury went down to the springs at Enmore Green
-with mirth and minstrelsy, and, chief of all, with a staff or bezant
-adorned with feathers, pieces of gold, rings and jewels, and sundry
-dues—to wit, a pair of gloves, a calf’s head, a gallon of ale, and two
-penny loaves of fine wheaten bread: these were presented to the bailiff
-of the manor of Gillingham, in which the village of Enmore Green was
-situated. Moreover, the Mayor and burgesses, for one whole hour by
-the clock, had to dance round the village green hand in hand. Should
-the dues not be presented, or the dance fail, the penalty was that
-the water should no longer be supplied to inhabitants of the borough
-of Shaftesbury. The decoration of the bezant was a costly matter;
-the original one, of gilded wood in the form of a palm-tree, was in
-the possession of Lady Theodora Guest, and has been presented by her
-ladyship to the Corporation of Shaftesbury. The water was brought up
-in carts drawn by horses, and strong ones they must have been, for the
-hill they had to climb is one of the steepest in the neighbourhood. The
-fixed price for a bucketful of water was a farthing. From the scanty
-supply of drinking-water it came to pass that a saying got abroad that
-Shaftesbury was a town where “there was more beer than water”; to which
-was added two lines describing other noteworthy characteristics of the
-place—namely, that “here there was a churchyard above the steeple,”
-and that the town contained “more rogues than honest people.” Once
-during the writer’s fifteen years’ sojourn in the town some accident
-happened to the pumping apparatus at the water-works, and for several
-weeks the inhabitants were thrown back upon the old source of water
-supply. Day after day water-carts might be seen slowly passing along
-the streets, while servants or housewives came out from every doorway
-with empty pails or buckets, though they were not called upon to pay
-their farthings for the filling of them, as the expense was borne by
-the owners of the water-works.
-
-In the old coaching days Shaftesbury was a livelier place than now,
-since the London and Exeter coaches, with their splendid teams and
-cheerful horns, passed through it daily, changing their horses at the
-chief hostelry. When the Salisbury and Yeovil Railway (afterwards
-absorbed by the London and South-Western) was planned it was intended
-to bring the line, not indeed through the town, but within a half-mile
-or so of it, with a station under the hill; but the bill was here,
-as in many another place, opposed by the landowners, with the result
-that the line was not allowed to come within about three miles
-of Shaftesbury, and was carried through the neighbouring town of
-Gillingham, which from that time began to increase, while Shaftesbury
-decreased. Periodically there has been an agitation for a branch line
-or a loop or a light railway running from Tisbury and passing near
-Shaftesbury, and joining, somewhere in the neighbourhood of Wareham,
-the line to Weymouth. But all the agitation has ended in nothing
-practical.
-
-The beauty of its scenery and the clearness of its air have raised
-a hope in the minds of some of its inhabitants that Shaftesbury may
-become a summer health resort; but as long as the town is so difficult
-of access these hopes do not seem likely to be fulfilled to any great
-extent.
-
-There are scarcely any historical events connected with Shaftesbury
-besides those already mentioned; but it is worthy of notice that once
-for a short time two royal ladies were held prisoners at the Abbey.
-Robert the Bruce, when on one occasion things were not going well with
-him, entrusted his second wife, Elizabeth, and her step-daughter,
-Marjory (the only child of his first wife, Isabella of Mar), to the
-care of his younger brother, Nigel Bruce, who was holding the strong
-Castle of Kildrummie, near the source of the Don, in Aberdeenshire.
-The castle was besieged by the English, under the Earls of Lancaster
-and Hereford, but when the magazine was treacherously burnt the
-garrison had to surrender. Nigel Bruce was taken to Berwick, tried,
-condemned, and executed. Elizabeth and Marjory were carried off across
-the border, and, with a view of placing them far beyond all chance of
-rescue, were ultimately handed over to the Abbess of Shaftesbury in
-1313. King Edward II. allowed them twenty shillings a week for their
-maintenance, a sum of much greater value in those days than now. After
-the battle of Bannockburn (June, 1314), the Earl of Hereford, who had
-been taken prisoner by Bruce, was given up in exchange for the Queen,
-who during all her married life, with the exception of two years, had
-been in the hands of the English, for she had been married in 1304, and
-had been taken prisoner in 1306.
-
-It is needful, before finishing this chapter, to explain the old
-saying about the churchyard being higher than the steeple. There was
-once a church dedicated to St. John the Baptist that stood at the
-south-west point of the hill on which Shaftesbury is built; this has
-long ago passed away, but its graveyard still remains. Its parish
-was amalgamated with that of St. James, whose church stands below
-the hill, and for some time the old churchyard of St. John’s served
-as the burial-ground for the united parishes. Hence arose the saying
-quoted. Speaking of St. James leads us to notice the interesting fact
-that part of this parish lies outside the municipal boundaries, and is
-situated in the Liberty of Alcester,[59] so called because this land
-belonged to a monastery at the town of Alcester, in Warwickshire, and
-was free from the payment of local tithes. Some have supposed that
-the word Alcester was the name of a Roman town, on the ruins of which
-Shaftesbury was built; but this is not the case.
-
-In the early part of the eighteenth century a free school was founded
-by one William Lush, merchant, of Shaftesbury, for the education of
-a small number of boys and girls. A new scheme was drawn up about
-thirty years ago by the Charity Commissioners: new buildings were
-erected to the east of the town close to Cann Church, but within the
-boundaries of the parish of Shaston St. Peter, and in 1879 Shaftesbury
-Grammar School, as it is always called, was opened, the writer of this
-chapter holding the office then, and for fifteen years afterwards, of
-headmaster of the re-organised school, which, though never likely to be
-a large one, has already done, and is still doing, useful work in its
-own quiet and unobtrusive way.
-
-Despite the fact that strangers may call Shaftesbury a sleepy place,
-and far behind the times in enterprise; despite the fact that it has
-fallen from its former importance, and may by some be looked on as a
-mere derelict—yet those who have known it and dwelt upon “The Rock”
-cannot but keep a tender spot in their memories for this quaint Dorset
-town.
-
-Beautiful it is under many atmospheric conditions. One who has risen,
-and stood in the neighbourhood of the Grammar School, before the dawn
-of a summer day, and has looked eastward at the long ridge of the
-downs silhouetted against the sunlit sky, and then a little later has
-turned to the south-west to look at the line of the houses that run
-along the crest of the Rock, ending in the two towers of St. Peter’s
-and Holy Trinity, flushed with the rose of morning, while the soft
-blue shade holds the valleys below, has seen a sight of surpassing
-loveliness. Sometimes the hollows are brimmed with thick, white mist,
-from which the tops of the surrounding hills rise like islets from the
-sea. Again, the view is splendid when, at noon on a wild, gusty day,
-heavy masses of clouds are blown across the sky, and their shadows and
-glints of sunshine chase each other over vale and down. But possibly
-the most lovely view of all may be obtained by going to Castle Hill on
-a summer evening when the sun is sinking behind the Somerset hills to
-the north-west, for the sunsets are “mostly beautiful here,” as Mr.
-Hardy makes Phillotson say, “owing to the rays crossing the mist of the
-vale.”[60] But there are other aspects of nature that may sometimes
-be observed in the hill town and around it—grand and wild when the
-north-east blast roars over the hill-top, driving before it frozen
-snow, sweeping up what has already fallen on the fields, and filling
-the roads up to the level of the hedge-tops, cutting the town off
-from all communication with the outer world, until gangs of labourers
-succeed in cutting a narrow passage through the drifts, along which a
-man may walk or ride on horseback, with the walls of snow rising far
-above his head on the right-hand and on the left, and nothing to be
-seen save the white gleam of the sunlight on the snow, the tender grey
-of the shadows on it, and the bright blue of the sky above—if, indeed,
-the snow has ceased to fall and the winds to blow, and the marvellous
-calm of a winter frost beneath a cloudless sky has fallen on the earth.
-Many may think that such aspects of nature could never be met with in
-the sunny southern county of Dorset; but the writer speaks of what
-he has seen on several occasions, when snow has been piled up to the
-cottage eaves, when the morning letters have not reached the town till
-after sunset, when even a wagon and its team have been buried for hours
-in a snow-drift, and the horses rescued with difficulty.
-
-
-
-
-PIDDLETOWN AND ATHELHAMPTON
-
-BY MISS WOOD HOMER
-
-
-The parish of Piddletown, or Puddletown, is said by Hutchins to take
-its name from the river Piddle, which flows to the north of the
-village, though it is supposed to have been formerly called Pydeletown
-after the Pydele family, at one time owners of much property in the
-neighbourhood.
-
-It was once a large parish, and the capital of the hundred; but it
-now numbers only about nine hundred inhabitants, having fallen from
-fourteen hundred during the last forty years. About the year 1860 the
-village contained as many as twenty boot-makers, twelve blacksmiths,
-twenty carpenters and wheelwrights, five pairs of sawyers, two coopers,
-and some cabinet-makers. Gloves and gaiters were tanned and made there,
-as were many of the articles in common use. Beer was brewed in the
-public-houses; and there were three malt-houses, about one of which we
-read in Thomas Hardy’s _Far from the Madding Crowd_. Naturally, these
-trades employed much labour, and a great decrease in the population
-resulted when they were given up, after the introduction of the railway
-at Dorchester, about the year 1848. Two business fairs were formerly
-held in the village—one on Easter Tuesday, the other on October
-29th—when cattle, materials, hats, etc., were sold. The October fair
-still exists, but it has dwindled to a small pleasure fair only, though
-pigs were sold as late as 1896.
-
-Piddletown possesses a very fine church, dedicated to St. Mary. It is
-a large and ancient building, consisting of a nave and a north aisle
-of the same length, covered with leaden roofs, and a small south
-aisle, called the Athelhampton aisle, the burial-place of the Martyns
-of Athelhampton. This aisle is under the control of the vestry of
-Athelhampton Church. The chancel has a tiled roof; it was built in
-1576. The embattled tower contains six bells.
-
-The chief features of this church are the monuments in the south aisle,
-with some very fine brasses; the Norman font (some authorities on fonts
-consider it to be of Saxon work); and the beautiful roof of carved
-chestnut wood. This latter has been many times supported and restored,
-and it will, indeed, be a loss to the antiquary when it is found
-impossible any longer to keep it in repair.
-
-The monuments are all much defaced. One of them, of the fifteenth
-century, consists of a knight and lady in alabaster on an altar-tomb,
-probably Sir Richard Martyn and Joan his wife; this has traces of much
-gilding and painting, but no inscription. To the west of this there
-is the figure of a knight, probably placed there about 1400. West of
-this again, an unknown “crusader” and lady lie on the floor under
-an altar-tomb, with a canopy upon four pillars, which was erected
-to the memory of Nicholas Martyn; under the canopy there is a fine
-brass, representing Nicholas Martyn, his wife, three sons, and seven
-daughters, dated 1595, and bearing an inscription. There is also
-a smaller brass, on which is a monkey holding a mirror—the Martyn
-crest—while above the whole are three sculptured martins or monkeys.
-To the north of the aisle there is a figure of a knight in alabaster,
-his feet resting on a chained monkey, the whole supported on an
-altar-tomb of Purbeck marble. On the west wall there is a large tablet
-to the memory of the Brunes, who owned Athelhampton in the seventeenth
-century.
-
-[Illustration: PIDDLETOWN CHURCH.]
-
-On the east of the aisle there is a brass to the memory of Christopher
-Martyn, with the following inscription:—
-
- Here lyethe the body of Xpofer Martyn Esquyer
- Sone and heyre unto Syr Willym Martyn knyght
- Pray for there Soules with harty desyre
- That they bothe may be sure of Eternall lyght
- Callyng to Remembraunce that every wyght
- Most nedys dye, & therefor lett us pray
- As other for us may do Another day.
-
- Qui quidem Xpoferus obiit XXII^{o} die mens’ M’cii an^{o} D’ni
- millmo quingentesimo vicesimo quarto.
-
-Above this there is the kneeling figure of a man in armour, and a
-partial representation of the Trinity. The figure is holding a scroll,
-on which the following inscription is much abbreviated: “_Averte faciem
-tuam a peccatis meis et omnes iniquitates meas dele_”; while before
-and behind the effigies are the Martyn arms. And on the floor of the
-church, north of the pulpit, there is a brass to the memory of Roger
-Cheverell.
-
-A short staircase of thirteen steps opens out of the south aisle; this
-formerly led to a rood loft.
-
-A musicians’ gallery of the seventeenth century runs across the west
-of the church, and there are porches on the north and south. The south
-door has a ring attached to the outside, which is popularly supposed
-to have been a sanctuary ring, though probably this tradition has no
-foundation.
-
-It is an interesting fact that the church clock, which was in the tower
-till about 1865, was made by a village blacksmith, Lawrence Boyce by
-name, about 1710. This clock had a three-cornered wooden face on the
-north side of the tower, stone weights and one (hour) hand. It struck
-the hours and quarters and chimed at 8, 12, and 4, except on Sundays,
-when the chimes were silenced, so that they might not disturb the
-worshippers. A clock made by the same man, for Bere Regis Church, is
-now in the Dorchester Museum; but, unfortunately, the Piddletown
-clock was not preserved, though it was in good going order when it was
-removed to make room for the present one.
-
-In 1820, and probably for long before, it was the custom of the members
-of the choir to write their own music; some was actually composed by
-them, while some was borrowed from other villages, although the rivalry
-which often existed between village choirs not infrequently prevented
-the exchange of tunes. In two vellum-covered volumes, the property of
-Mr. W. Gover, of Piddletown, dated 1823, the music and words of the
-Psalms are most beautifully written. The books were given by a certain
-Mrs. Price to the choir. The larger book belonged to J. Holland, a
-clarionet player; the smaller to W. Besant. In the latter may be
-found music headed, “John Besant’s Magnificat,” which was probably
-composed by one of his ancestors. At this time the choir consisted of
-two clarionets, two bass viols, a flute, and a bassoon; while before
-this a “serpent” was used, and the music is written apparently for
-all these instruments. The violin was prohibited by most clergymen as
-being “Devil’s music,” on account of its being played in public-houses
-and for dancing. The instruments were given up about 1845 on the
-introduction of a barrel-organ. At this time the village also possessed
-a band, which had been in existence for nearly two hundred years, and
-of which the inhabitants were justly proud.
-
-Piddletown is perhaps better known as the “Weatherbury” of Thomas
-Hardy’s _Far from the Madding Crowd_. On the south-west of the church
-is the gargoyle (the head of some beast, with the legs of a child
-projecting from its mouth), which destroyed Sergeant Troy’s work at
-Fanny’s grave. The old malthouse mentioned in the same book stood in
-what are now the gardens of Ilsington House, while Bathsheba’s house
-stood on the site of Ilsington Lodge, although it is sketched from the
-house at Waterson. The latter is a fine old building about two miles
-from Piddletown, and was the residence of the Martyns before they went
-to Athelhampton, and remained their property for long after. It was
-much damaged by fire in 1863, but was carefully restored by the owner,
-Lord Ilchester, to whose family it still belongs. It is interesting
-to note that a certain Mr. Bainger, who lived at Ilsington Lodge, was
-the moving spirit in causing the lowering of Yellowham Hill, between
-Piddletown and Dorchester, about 1830.
-
-The Vicarage possesses a very fine staircase and an oak-beamed study,
-while an old farmhouse, now used as a cottage, in “Style Lane,”
-formerly contained a fine carved mantelpiece. In the churchyard is the
-headstone of Peter Standley, King of the Gipsies, with the following
-inscription:—
-
- In memory of Peter Standley, who died 23rd November, 1802, aged 70
- years.
-
- Farewell my dear & faithful wife
- My sons & daughters too
- Tho’ never in this mortal life
- Again you must me view
- Close in our Saviour’s footsteps tread
- Of Love divine possessed
- And when you’re numbered with the dead
- Your souls will be at rest.
-
-He is said to have died of smallpox in Style Lane, and to have been
-buried by night. Gipsies still visit the grave.
-
-The old coaching road from London to Dorchester runs to the west of
-the village, and “Judge’s Bridge,” near Ilsington Lodge, is said to
-have taken its name from being the meeting-place of the judge and the
-“javelin men” on the occasion of the Dorchester Assizes.
-
-The Court Leet House, wherein was transacted all the local business,
-and which was also used as a school, formerly stood in the “Square”;
-the stocks, the old village pound, and pump were near. The house
-now occupied by Mr. W. Gover was the residence of the Boswells, who
-owned land in the parish, and introduced the system of irrigating the
-meadows.
-
-Athelhampton Hall is a fine old building east of Piddletown. There is a
-tradition that it took its name from some of the Saxon Kings, and was
-originally called Athelhamstan; but Hutchins thinks it more probable
-that it derived its name from Æthelhelm, one of the Saxon Earls in
-Dorset, who was killed in an engagement with the Danes A.D. 837.
-
-The first owners of Athelhampton of whom there is any record were the
-de Loundres and Pideles. From them it came by marriage to the Martyns,
-who held it till 1595. At the death of Nicholas Martyn it was divided
-between his four daughters, who married respectively Henry Brune, Henry
-Tichborne, Thomas White, and Anthony Floyer. Gradually the shares of
-the Whites and Tichbornes came into the hands of the Brunes, and were
-sold by them in 1665 to Sir Robert Long. It then came by marriage to
-the Hon. William Wellesley Pole (afterwards Earl of Mornington), whose
-son sold it in 1848 to Mr. George James Wood, from whom it came to
-his nephew, Mr. G. Wood Homer. It is now the property of Mr. A. C. de
-Lafontaine, who purchased it in 1890. The Floyer share of the house
-remained in their possession till an exchange was effected by Mr. Wood,
-when the whole came into his hands.
-
-The house itself consists of two sides of a quadrangle facing south
-and west, and was in a very bad state when bought by Mr. Wood, having,
-it is said, been used as a farmhouse, and the fine old oak-roofed
-stone-floored hall as a cattle-shed. Mr. Wood entirely renovated the
-oak roof, taking great trouble to preserve the original style. He
-re-floored the large drawing-room, and made various other extensive
-repairs. He removed the gatehouse, which darkened the house, and partly
-re-erected it in the form of a summer-house. This has, however, been
-again removed by the present owner, who has made many alterations.
-The house is built of Ham Hill stone. The east wing is said to be the
-oldest part of the present building, and was probably erected by Sir
-William Martyn, who died in 1503; while the north wing is thought to
-have been built by Nicholas Martyn later in the sixteenth century.
-
-[Illustration: ATHELHAMPTON HALL.]
-
-A small chapel stood on the lawn when Mr. Wood bought the property, but
-as this and Burlestone Church were both out of repair, he pulled them
-down and built the present church, to a great extent at his own cost.
-The chancel of old Burlestone Church is still standing in its overgrown
-churchyard, the tombs having all fallen into decay. No churchyard
-belonged to the Athelhampton Chapel, Piddletown having always been the
-burying-place of the owners.
-
-In a field about a quarter of a mile from Athelhampton, on the land
-of Mr. G. Wood Homer, are the grass-grown mounds—the remains of the
-hamlet of Bardolfeston, the seat of Drogo de Bardolf, from whom it
-came hereditarily to the Martyns. It consisted of a manor, hamlet,
-and church; the latter stood at a little distance from the cottages
-and manor on what is now known as Church Knap or Knoll. The field in
-which the hamlet stood is now known as “Dunditch,” and there is a local
-couplet which runs:
-
- Dunditch was a thriving town
- When London was a vuzzy down.
-
-It is probable that Bardolfeston extended irregularly to Piddletown,
-as it is known that cottages and a mill existed between the two, and
-Bardolfeston was part of the Piddle Hundred, being sometimes called
-Piddle Bardolf.
-
-
-
-
-WOLFETON HOUSE
-
-BY ALBERT BANKES
-
-
-The present Wolfeton House, in the parish of Charminster, in the county
-of Dorset, is known to have been built by John, father of Sir Thomas
-Trenchard, during the reign of Henry VII.; but as the property was
-acquired by the Trenchard family (through marriage) from the Jurdains,
-and previously the Jurdains had obtained the house and land (also
-through marriage) from the Mohun family, it is quite clear that a house
-of some description must have existed on the same site as that of the
-present residence.
-
-Some archæologists consider that the gatehouse is decidedly of the
-Norman period; so, should that be the case, probably the house
-inhabited by the Jurdains, before them by the Mohuns, was built soon
-after Norman Conquest.
-
-A date is still to be seen on the north side of the north tower, but
-whether that refers to the actual building of the towers, or only to
-some portion that had been rebuilt or restored, is not known.
-
-[Illustration: WOLFETON HOUSE.]
-
-In a note attached to the pedigree of Trenchard it is stated that the
-first Sir Thomas Trenchard rebuilt the house at Wolfeton as it now
-stands, except some addition made by Sir George Trenchard; and there
-seems no reason to doubt this statement, for a study of the existing
-house shows very clearly two distinct dates of building. There are
-evidences, also, that Sir Thomas Trenchard’s rebuilding incorporated
-many portions of a still older edifice.
-
-Mr. Hamilton Rogers, in his _Sepulchral Effigies of Devon_, says:
-
- Their last heiress, Christian, daughter and heir of John de Mohun by
- Joan his wife, daughter of John Jurdain, of Wolveton, Charminster,
- married Henry Trenchard (_obit_ 1477), of Hordull, Hants, and
- subsequently of Wolveton.
-
-His descendant, Sir Thomas Trenchard (_ob._ 1505), rebuilt this fine
-old mansion, and carved on escutcheons over the gateway; and first
-among the noble series of genealogical shields in the hall windows were
-the arms of Trenchard. Traces of the great Devonshire family of the
-Mohuns are not infrequently found in Dorset.
-
-The elevation of the south front of Wolfeton House remains very much as
-originally erected, and is of two distinct styles of architecture—the
-portion of the building to the east being in the Tudor-Gothic, probably
-of the time of Henry VII., and the west portion in the Elizabethan,
-or, more probably, Jacobean style. The latter portion is a picturesque
-example of this pseudo-classical style of architecture and nothing
-more. The older part of the building, however, possesses features which
-are worthy of notice, as the rich labels over the windows are composed
-of hollow mouldings filled with rolls of sculptured fruit and foliage,
-and terminating in quaint corbels carved with great spirit.
-
-Hutchins says:
-
- The ancient seat of the Trenchards here is a noble building, and at
- the time when it was built perhaps the best in the country; it is a
- large fabric, its principal fronts to the east and south. On the north
- it is sheltered by a grove of trees.
-
- One enters on the east into what formerly was a small court, and
- on both sides of the gate is a round tower. In this front are many
- windows, almost all of them different from each other, as if the
- architect had studied irregularity. This seems to have been the humour
- of that age, for Dugdale remarks that:
-
- At Tixall, co. Stafford, the seat of the Lord Aston, there is a
- fine piece of masonry, built in the reign of Henry VIII.: though
- the windows are numerous, scarce two of them are alike, and there
- is the same variety of fretwork of the chimneys; so that the beauty
- of the structure in that age did not, as in the present, consist in
- uniformity, but in the greatest variety the artist could give.
-
- On the north side of Wolfeton House there was a small cloister leading
- to what was the chapel, in which some of the family were married
- (within memory), but it has since been pulled down. To the west of the
- chapel there was a little court.
-
-From Powel’s _Topographical Collections in Devon and Dorset_ (A.D.
-1820) we learn that a great deal of the back of the house had been
-destroyed, and the whole of the fine glass (with the exception of five
-or six shields) was taken down, amounting to 100 lbs., and sent to Mr.
-Trenchard’s other house at Lytchett; but it was so badly packed that
-when the case was opened almost the whole of the glass was pounded or
-broken to pieces, so that very little was preserved.
-
-The only remaining portion of the eastern front is the old gateway, the
-most distinctive feature of the house. The entrance gate is flanked by
-large circular towers capped by conical stone roofs. That on the south
-side is somewhat larger than its fellow, as well as standing a little
-further eastwards. The arch of the entrance gateway has continuous
-mouldings east and west, with a label over. The eastern label contains
-a shield bearing the following arms:—Quarterly, 1 and 4, Trenchard; 2,
-Mohun; 3, Jurdain; and an inescutcheon, Quarterly 1 and 4, 3 lozenges;
-2..., 3.... The western label terminates in figures holding shields on
-which are two T’s combined with T. E. united by a tasselled cord. Above
-the apex of the arch similar initials appear interlaced, and over all
-T. T. combined.
-
-Over the door within the gateway are three escutcheons on stone: (1)
-An angel holding a T [transcriber; fractur script], and at the points
-T. E. (2) The arms of Trenchard. A little to the south of the gateway
-is a building, on which is this inscription: “_Hoc opus constructum
-fuit An’ Dni._—MCCCCCXXVIII.” The tower, together with the series
-of rooms connecting the gatehouse westwards to the main house, are
-comparatively modern, as also is the entrance porch. These buildings
-form the present north front of the house, and over the porch are
-sculptured the arms of Weston.
-
-The chapel mentioned by Hutchins as having formerly stood on the
-north side of the house has long since vanished, but traces of its
-foundations were discovered during some excavations made about fifty
-years ago.
-
-Turning to the inside of the house, we find much to interest both the
-antiquary and the architect.
-
-Before the hall was destroyed and replaced by the present dining-room,
-over the large chimney-piece there were carved representations of
-fourteen Kings of England, which, says Hutchins, “are said to resemble
-the figures in the first edition of Rastell’s _History of England_,
-ending with Charles I.” Aubrey, in his _Miscellanies_, states that on
-November 3rd, 1640 (the day on which the Long Parliament began to sit),
-the sceptre fell from the figure of Charles I. while the family and
-a large company were at dinner—an ill omen, the full import of which
-could not have been realised at the time. Opposite to these sculptured
-monarchs were the figures of an abbot, a soldier, and some esquires. On
-the screen were the arms and quarterings of the Trenchard family.
-
-From the hall a large stone staircase led to the dining-room, a noble
-apartment, adorned, says Hutchins, “with a noble bay window, in which
-stood an octagon marble table on four wooden lions.”
-
-The interior of the western portion of the house—_i.e._, of the part
-built by Sir George Trenchard, is composed of two storeys, of which
-the lower seems originally to have constituted a single apartment.
-Both storeys were very richly decorated; the flat ceiling of the first
-storey is covered with an arabesque of plaster, embracing foliage and
-various devices, finishing with large central pendants.
-
-The upper floor had a lofty vaulted ceiling, corresponding with the
-high pitch of the roof of a similar character. Unfortunately, this
-ceiling has been utterly destroyed—a dreadful piece of vandalism, as
-the tracery of the pendants and ceiling must have equalled, or even
-surpassed, that of the lower rooms. This upper apartment now forms a
-series of bedrooms, in the centre of which is the original sculptured
-stone chimney-piece, having under the cornice a large panel, whereon is
-depicted a figure reclining on a couch surrounded by dancers.
-
-The magnificent carved oak doorway and chimney-piece in the east
-drawing-room were sent to Sir Thomas Trenchard by Philip and Joanna at
-the same time that they presented him with their portraits and a china
-bowl. The following description of the chimney-pieces in the east and
-west drawing-rooms is given by the county historian:—
-
- Chimney-piece No. 1, in the east drawing-room, the height of the room,
- consists of an arrangement of entablatures one within the other, the
- upper and outer cornice being supported by lofty Corinthian pillars
- with rich capitals; immediately beneath this are two large sunken
- panels, respectively containing figures of Hope and Justice, separated
- by male caryatides, which by their different costumes are intended
- perhaps to typify a citizen, knight, and esquire.
-
- Within the innermost cornice, and immediately surrounding the
- fireplace, is a series of panels of great interest, displaying
- rural and hunting scenes, trades, satyrs, heads, etc., quaintly but
- faithfully carved.
-
- Chimney-piece No. 2, in the west drawing-room, is similar in its
- general character; the principal subject amongst its decorations
- represents the contest of the goddesses in the garden of the
- Hesperides.
-
-One of the most beautiful examples of carving is an inner door-case in
-the east drawing-room, the arch over which has a richly moulded soffit,
-and carved heads in the spandrils; over the door, rich Corinthian
-pillars, flanked by sculptured figures of a king in armour and a queen,
-support a cornice surmounting a large sunken panel.
-
-In the front of the cornice is a shield bearing the following
-arms: _Quarterly_—1 and 4, _Trenchard_; 2, _Mohun_; 3, Semée of
-cross-crosslets, a lion rampant, _Jurdain_.
-
-[Illustration: THE EAST DRAWING-ROOM, WOLFETON HOUSE.]
-
-There is, of course, much else to interest the antiquary in the way of
-old furniture and objects of art, and any visitor will be “charmed with
-the admirable manner in which the art of the modern furniture has been
-adapted to the character of the old house, lending its aid to heighten
-rather than to detract from the beauty of the antique carvings and of
-the interior.”
-
-A curious legend in connection with the dining-room is that of the
-ghost of Lady Trenchard having made its appearance immediately _before_
-her death. Anyone, of course, can believe as much or as little as he
-likes about the ghost part of the story, but of the fact of the lady’s
-suicide there is no doubt. During the ownership of Sir Thomas Trenchard
-one of the Judges of Assize came to Wolfeton House to dine; but no
-sooner had the company sat down than his lordship, greatly to the
-surprise of everyone, ordered his carriage and abruptly left the house.
-On their way back to Dorchester he told his marshal that he had seen
-standing behind Lady Trenchard’s chair a figure of her ladyship with
-her throat cut and her head under her arm. Before the carriage reached
-the town a messenger overtook it on horseback with the news that Lady
-Trenchard had just committed suicide.
-
-As to the dining-room as it now stands, it may be mentioned that
-Wolfeton, like many other old houses of the same period, suffered
-greatly at the hands of those who in the last century were wont to pull
-down one-half of their houses to repair the other half. This appears
-to have happened to Wolfeton House, as, judging from an old engraving
-of the house, the dining-hall must have been quite twice, or more than
-twice, the size of the present room.
-
-Of the historical anecdotes connected with Wolfeton House, the visit of
-the King and Queen of Castile is, perhaps, of the greatest interest.
-
-In the early part of the sixteenth century, Philip, Archduke of
-Austria and King of Castile, set forth with a great armada, with
-the intention of surprising the King of Aragon, but he had scarcely
-left the coast of Flanders when, encountering a violent storm, he
-was compelled to put into Weymouth in distress. King Philip and his
-Queen were invited to Wolfeton House by Sir Thomas Trenchard, then
-High Sheriff, and were hospitably entertained. And with this visit
-the origin of the Duke of Bedford’s family is curiously mixed up;
-for on the arrival of the King and Queen, Sir Thomas Trenchard,
-being unacquainted with the Spanish language, found a difficulty in
-conversing with his guests. In his dilemma he had recourse to his
-cousin, John Russell, of Kingston Russell, who, being a good linguist,
-became a favourite with the King, and was recommended by him to Henry
-VII., who appointed him to an office in the royal household. In the
-succeeding reign Russell was also popular, and the confiscation of
-Church property during this period rendered it possible for Henry VIII.
-to bestow upon him extensive lands. And thus was founded the great
-Bedford family.
-
-In acknowledgment of his hospitality Sir Thomas Trenchard was presented
-by the King and Queen of Castile with some very valuable china vases,
-together with their portraits, all of which are now at Bloxworth House,
-near Wareham. They also presented to him the carved chimney-piece and
-doorway still standing in the drawing-room at Wolfeton House, as before
-described.
-
-Engraved copies of the oil-paintings of the King and Queen of Castile
-hang on the left-hand side of the staircase, alongside of which is a
-Spanish engraving of the poor Queen Joan, when sorrow at the death
-of her husband had sent her mad. On their way to the Royal Mausoleum
-the funeral _cortège_ had to pass a night at a nunnery. In the middle
-of the night the poor mad Queen suddenly asked where they were. “In
-a nunnery,” was the reply. “I will not have my husband surrounded by
-all these women,” exclaimed the Queen; so the _cortège_ immediately
-removed, and spent the remainder of the night, until daylight, in the
-open country.
-
-In the ancient gatehouse of Wolfeton the winding staircase of forty-one
-oaken steps appears to be quite unique: there are nine stone steps at
-the base, twenty-four of oak to the first floor level, and seventeen
-leading to the garret above. For years (some think one hundred) this
-staircase must have been a complete ruin, as is easily seen by the
-decayed state of those steps opposite to the two windows, the wind and
-the rain having beaten in on them for many years.
-
-In addition to the King and Queen of Castile, other royal visitors have
-from time to time honoured Wolfeton House with their presence, and
-during the residence of George III. at Weymouth the King and Queen paid
-it frequent visits. On one occasion, when George III. admired a marble
-table that used to stand in the drawing-room, the Trenchard of that day
-immediately presented it to His Majesty, and the table is now in the
-royal dairy at Frogmore, Windsor.
-
-No account of Wolfeton House would be complete without some allusion to
-the story of the Roman Catholic priest. In the time of Queen Elizabeth,
-when it was the object of the then Government to stamp out in every way
-the Papal influence in England, the Weld family had a Roman Catholic
-priest concealed at their house at Chideock, in Dorset. Sir Thomas
-Trenchard, who then resided at Wolfeton House, and was a personal
-friend of Mr. Weld, of Chideock, happened to be High Sheriff of the
-county of Dorset for that year, and received orders to go over and
-search for the priest therein concealed. On account of his friendship
-with Mr. Weld, Sir Thomas, on reaching Chideock, made a most cursory
-search, and left with the intention of reporting to the authorities
-that he could find no signs of the priest; but, unfortunately, as he
-was leaving, the villagers, whose sympathies were Roman, not aware of
-his benign intentions, began hooting and calling the High Sheriff and
-his constables a pack of blind owls for not being able to find the
-concealed priest. “If that’s what you want,” exclaimed Sir Thomas,
-losing his temper, “I’ll soon show you I am not so blind as you think!”
-and, surrounding the mansion with his constables, a real search was
-made, and the poor priest was soon discovered and brought over to
-Wolfeton House as a prisoner. The priest, a highly-educated French
-gentleman, made himself so agreeable that Sir Thomas Trenchard did all
-in his power, by writing to the authorities, to save his life; but the
-Government of that day was so desirous of making an example, that all
-entreaties were in vain—the poor priest was executed, and, it is said,
-was also drawn and quartered in the High Street of Dorchester.
-
-
-
-
-THE LITERARY ASSOCIATIONS OF DORSET
-
-BY MISS M. JOURDAIN
-
-
-“Dorset has continued Dorset alone from time immemorial,” and its
-special character has been more carefully preserved and fixed than that
-of any other English county in the work of two Dorset poets, William
-Barnes and Thomas Hardy, one of whom has succeeded, like Mistral in
-France, in making its native language a literary medium known beyond
-its spoken limits.
-
-Dorset’s earlier poets,[61] however, have not been “local”; and it
-is characteristic of Matthew Prior that, in the account drawn up by
-himself for Jacobs’ _Lives of the Poets_, he describes his father as a
-“citizen of London,” and that though the first entry against his name
-on his admission as pensioner at St. John’s College, Cambridge, is
-_Dorcestr_, it has been altered by a later hand into _Middlesexiensis_.
-In spite of conflicting entries, it is now generally admitted that
-Prior, _perennis et fragrans_—the motto upon the modern brass to his
-memory in Wimborne Minster[62]—was born at or near Wimborne, in East
-Dorset, the son of George Prior, who is said to have been a joiner.
-
-“With regard to the family of Prior, the tradition of Wimborne says
-that his father was a carpenter, and one house he lived in is pointed
-out: it is close to the present Post Office, and is called the house
-in which the poet was born. The other was pulled down, but its site is
-known.”[63]
-
-Local tradition makes Prior a pupil at the free Grammar School; and of
-the unusually large library of chained books in the old church, one was
-said to be a standing testimony to his carelessness—a chained folio
-copy of Ralegh’s _History of the World_, in which a hole is said to
-have been burned by the boy when dozing over the book by the light of a
-smuggled taper. Unfortunately for the floating tradition, it has been
-stated that this particular defacement is the work, not of a candle,
-but of a red-hot poker. Still more unfortunately, it has been proved
-that the _History_, with other books, was placed in the library[64] at
-a much later date than Prior’s boyhood.[65]
-
-Almost a century later a poetic “Court” was held at Eastbury, in North
-Dorset, by George Bubb Dodington, Lord Melcombe, who is not interesting
-as a poet[66] himself, but as the cause of poetry in others, the last
-of the patrons, a curious, gorgeous, tawdry figure, fit to be seen
-through the coloured glass of Macaulay’s ridicule. He was the easy
-mark for dedications and compliments from many of the best-known
-writers of the day—poets utterly discrowned, and those on whose brows
-the laurel grows very thin and brittle; Edward Young, Thomson, and
-Fielding mention him; while his Great House at Eastbury is celebrated
-by Thomson, Young, and Christopher Pitt,[67] who writes, somewhat
-oddly, of this “new Eden in the Wild.” The pleasures of this “Eden”
-appear, from an epistle of Pitt, to have been smoking and drinking,
-with conversational intervals. Dr. Young (of the _Night Thoughts_) sits
-with “his Dodington,”
-
- Charm’d with his flowing Burgundy and wit,
- By turns relieving with the circling draught
- Each pause of chat and interval of thought;
- Or, through the well-glazed tube, from business freed,
- Draw the rich spirit of the Indian weed.
-
-Thomson’s “Eastbury”—
-
- Seat serene and plain
- Where simple Nature reigns,
-
-is as bad, in its way, as Pitt’s “Eden”—serenity, plainness, and simple
-nature being the most unlikely characteristics of Dodington,[68] whose
-heavy figure was arrayed in gorgeous brocades; and whose equally
-magnificent State bed was “garded and re-garded” with gold and silver
-embroideries showing by the remains of pocket-holes, button-holes and
-loops that they came from old coats and breeches. This great house,
-after Dodington’s death, was taken down all but one wing and sold
-piecemeal by Earl Temple, his heir.
-
-Henry Fielding, one of the Eastbury circle—he dedicated to Dodington an
-epistle on “True Greatness”—was brought up as a boy in the manor-house
-at East Stower,[69] where he was taught by the Reverend Mr. Oliver,
-curate of the neighbouring village of Motcombe, said to have been
-the original of Trulliber, a portrait drawn “in resentment of some
-punishment inflicted on him,” according to Hutchins.[70] Fielding was
-fortunate in another portrait, for it is generally admitted that the
-prototype of Parson Abraham Adams was William Young, Incumbent of
-West Stower, who had many of Adams’ eccentricities. As an instance of
-Young’s absence of mind, it is said that when chaplain to a regiment
-in Flanders he “wandered in a reverie into the enemy’s camp, and was
-only aroused from his error by his arrest. The commanding officer,
-perceiving the good man’s simplicity, allowed him to return to his
-friends.”
-
-At East Stower, too, Fielding lived for a time with his first wife.
-
-William Crowe, though like Fielding only a short time resident in
-Dorset, is admitted on the strength of his topographical poem,
-_Lewesdon Hill_, of which Rogers thought so much that when travelling
-in Italy he made two authors his constant study for versification,
-Milton and Crowe.[71] Crowe’s _Lewesdon Hill_ is a perfect example
-of an eighteenth century didactic and descriptive poem, with all the
-heaviness due to the requirements of an age which, like Horace Walpole,
-called for “edification” in its art. As in Goldsmith’s _Traveller_ the
-person who speaks the verses sits pensively on an Alpine height, so
-Crowe in his poem is supposed to be walking on the top of the hill on
-a May morning—a hill, it has been suggested, that Fuller[72] may have
-climbed before him, and where the wide prospect, “standing where Moses
-stood when the Lord showed him all the land,” may have prompted the
-title of his book, _A Pisgah Sight of Palestine_, which he wrote when
-at Broadwindsor. Upon this hill, where
-
- The lonely thorn
- Bends from the rude south-east with top cut sheer,
-
-Crowe surveys the outspread map of the county—Shipton Hill, Burton
-Cliff, Eggardon Hill, the rich Marshwood Vale—in winter
-
- Cold, vapourish, miry, wet,
-
-to the “rampire” of Pillesdon, even the “nameless rivulet” (the
-minutest trickle of a stream at the foot of Lewesdon Hill), which, he
-rejoices,
-
- Yet flows along
- Untainted with the commerce of the world.
-
-William Lisle Bowles, author of faint and forgotten verses, is
-remembered by Coleridge’s early admiration for his sonnets. His father,
-the Rev. W. Bowles (rector of Uphill), planted and improved Barton Hill
-House, in Dorset, which the poet sold. On leaving it the poet wrote
-verses full of regret for
-
- These woods, that whispering wave
- My father rear’d and _nurst_.
-
-An author unknown outside his county is John Fitzgerald Pennie (buried
-July 17th, 1848). He was born at East Lulworth, March 25th, 1782, and
-is known as a dramatic writer. He published _Scenes in Palestine,
-or Dramatic Sketches from the Bible_, 1825; _Ethelwolf_, a tragedy,
-1821, etc. He followed in his early years the profession of an actor,
-but after a chequered and unsuccessful career, settled in his native
-village and devoted himself to literary pursuits. He published his
-autobiography in 1827, _The Tale of a Modern Genius, or the Miseries of
-Parnassus_. In 1810 he married Cordelia Elizabeth, daughter of Jerome
-Whitfield, a London attorney. He and his wife died within a few days of
-each other, and were buried in the same grave.
-
-Wordsworth’s connection with Dorset is of short duration, but is of
-interest as occurring at a critical period in his career. On his
-receiving Raisley Calvert’s legacy, he was able to live with his sister
-Dorothy at a farmhouse at Racedown,[73] which he was allowed to occupy
-rent free on condition that the owner might spend a few weeks there
-from time to time. It was in the autumn of 1795 that he settled there.
-His house is set upon the north-west slope of the “rampire” Pillesdon,
-in a hollow among hills cultivated to their summits, or patched with
-gorse and broom, which open here and there to allow glimpses of the
-sea. The Dorset peasants in Wordsworth’s time were wretchedly poor,
-their shapeless cottages “not at all beyond what might be expected in
-savage life,” as Dorothy Wordsworth wrote. Very little trace of the
-peculiar quality of the place is to be found in Wordsworth’s poems, but
-it was here he wrote the first of his poems of country life, modelled
-with an experience so personal as to keep every sentence vividly
-accurate.
-
-It was here that he watched[74] the “unquiet widowhood” of Margaret,
-drawing out the hemp which she had wound round her waist like a belt,
-and spinning, as she walked backwards before her cottage door. Here, no
-doubt, he saw her ruined cottage—there are many crumbling shells and
-ruined cottages in the district to-day—with the red stains and tufts of
-wool in the corner-stone of the porch where the sheep were permitted to
-come and “couch unheeded.” The garden, run wild, too, is to be met with
-to-day:
-
- Its matted weeds
- Marked with the steps of those, whom, as they passed,
- The gooseberry trees that shot in long, lank slips,
- Or currants, hanging from their leafless stems
- In scanty strings, had tempted to o’erleap
- The broken wall. I looked around, and there,
- Where two tall hedge-rows of thick alder-boughs
- Joined in a cold damp nook, espied a well,
- Shrouded with willow-flowers and plumy fern.
-
-Here, too, was Goody Blake’s cabin:—
-
- On a hill’s northern side...
- Where from sea-blasts the hawthorns lean
- And hoary dews are slow to melt.
-
-“The muffled clamour of the outside world only reached the secluded
-farmhouse at Racedown after long delay”—in other words, letters
-were delivered there but once a week; and on one occasion at least
-Wordsworth asks to have a book franked, otherwise he will “not be able
-to release it from the post-office.” A part of this time was given to
-gardening, and, no doubt from motives of economy, almost all the meals
-consisted of vegetables. “I have been lately living,” he writes, “upon
-air and the essence of carrots, cabbages, turnips, and other esculent
-vegetables, not excluding parsley.”[75] At another time he sets forth
-to warm himself, like Goody Blake, by gathering sticks strewn upon
-the road by the gale; and his habit was to take a two hours’ stroll
-every morning, and now and then a long expedition on foot. He and his
-sister, as the Cumberland peasants said, were “a deal upo’ the road,”
-and many times they must have walked more than forty miles in the day.
-There is a story still current in the neighbourhood that Wordsworth
-once borrowed a horse to ride into Lyme Regis, and returned on foot,
-having _forgotten_ the horse! With all its hardships and frugalities,
-Dorothy Wordsworth loved Racedown. It was “the place dearest to (her)
-recollections upon the whole surface of the island,” and she speaks
-warmly of the scenery on Pillesdon, Lewesdon, and the view of the sea
-from Lambert’s Castle—which is said by some to be _the_ view of the
-county.
-
-Landor’s thought, that “when a language grows up all into stalk, and
-its flowers begin to lose somewhat of their character, we must go forth
-into the open fields, through the dingles, or among the mountains, for
-fresh seed,” would have been endorsed by both Wordsworth and Barnes
-alike, but with very different ideas as to what was considered fresh
-seed. Barnes’ innovation was an innovation of the letter rather than
-the spirit, the literary use of the local dialect which he heard in
-his boyhood, and which, he said, was spoken in the greatest purity in
-villages and hamlets of the secluded Vale of Blackmore, a valley so
-secluded that its life was practically the life of the seventeenth
-and eighteenth centuries until the nineteenth was far advanced. He
-attributes his poems’ freedom from “slang and vice” to this seclusion;
-but it is as much due to his personal[76] preference of light to
-darkness. His rustics are, as a rule, happy people.
-
-[Illustration: WILLIAM BARNES.]
-
-At Rushay, William Barnes spent his early days, and he was educated at
-the day school at Sturminster Newton. Somewhere along the road from
-Bagber to Sturminster was a haunted house, about the exact locality
-of which he gave no information beyond that a “dark, gloomy lane led
-to it.” He once pointed out the lane to grand-children as the place
-their “great-grandfather was riding down, when all at once he saw the
-ghost in the form of a fleece of wool, which rolled along mysteriously
-by itself till it got under the legs of his horse, and the horse went
-lame from that hour, and for ever after.” Barnes was of pure Dorset[77]
-stock. His long life was lived almost entirely in Dorset; and when at
-Mere, in Wiltshire, a stone’s throw from his own county, he “always
-yearned for Dorset and Dorchester.” Latterly he lived near Dorchester,
-where, until 1882, “few figures were more familiar to the eye in the
-county town of Dorset on a market day than an aged clergyman, quaintly
-attired in caped cloak, knee-breeches and buckled shoes, with a leather
-satchel slung over his shoulders and a stout staff in his hand. He
-seemed usually to prefer the middle of the street to the pavement, and
-to be thinking of matters which had nothing to do with the scene before
-him. He plodded along with a broad, firm tread, notwithstanding the
-slight stoop occasioned by years. Every Saturday morning he might have
-been seen thus trudging up the narrow South Street, his shoes coated
-with mud according to the state of the roads between his rural home and
-Dorchester, and a little grey dog at his heels, till he reached the
-four crossways in the centre of the town. Halting there, opposite the
-public clock, he would pull his old-fashioned watch from its deep fob
-and set it with great precision to London time.”
-
-An unusual union of scholar and poet, his little Dutch pictures are
-free from the dull undertone of the conventional manner that Burns
-occasionally fell into. Indeed, he has more affinity with the Provençal
-poet and lexicographer, Mistral, than with Burns or Béranger, with
-whom he is usually compared. He is perhaps mistaken in his belief that
-the Dorset dialect is “altogether as fit a vehicle of rustic feeling
-and thought as the Doric as found in the Idyllics of Theocritus.” But,
-after making this exception about the “fitness” of his Doric, there
-remains in his clear, untroubled poems of still life, in his unaffected
-eclogues, no small affinity with Theocritus. There is a charm in his
-limitations; he belongs not to England, but to Dorset; not to Dorset,
-but to the Vale of Blackmore, where the slow, green river, his “cloty”
-Stour, with its deep pools whence leaps the may-fly undisturbed by
-anglers, is the stream dearest to his memory.
-
-Barnes was Mr. Hardy’s near neighbour and personal friend—Mr. Hardy’s
-house is less than a mile from the Rectory of Winterborne Came—and both
-have been interpreters of the life—especially of the vanished life—and
-character of their pastoral county. In every other respect they are as
-different as is “Egdon” Heath from Blackmore Vale.
-
-It is difficult to say in what form of topography Mr. Hardy is at his
-best within his “kingdom”—his patient and precise creation of a town
-such as “Casterbridge” (Dorchester), the architectural individuality of
-his great houses, or his knowledge of “those sequestered spots outside
-the gates of the world,” and of woodlands and wildernesses. He has the
-knowledge with which he credits Angel Clare of “the seasons in their
-moods, morning and evening, night and noon, in their temperaments;
-winds in their several dispositions; trees, waters, and clouds, shades
-and silence, _ignes fatui_; constellations and the voices of inanimate
-things.” In most cases, the birthplace of a novelist has no particular
-significance in relation to his work. Very often a writer’s county is
-like Matthew Prior’s, exchanged for Middlesex. But in the case of Mr.
-Hardy it is different. The fact that he was born in a “mere germ of a
-village” near Dorchester, and within sound of a heath; that his life
-has been spent, for the most part, in Dorset; that he now lives on the
-outskirts of Dorchester, and that he comes of a Dorset stock—tracing
-his descent, however, from John le Hardy (son of Clement, Governor of
-Jersey in 1488), who settled in the West of England before the end of
-the fourteenth century—are significant points in his biography.[78] By
-the circumstances of birth and lifelong residence the background of his
-novels, _Wessex_, has become mainly limited to Dorset (South Wessex),
-and especially to the neighbourhood of Dorchester.
-
-The interest of Mr. Hardy’s backgrounds is twofold. There is their
-purely artistic interest as intensifying action and character; there is
-also their topographical interest. Mr. Hardy’s imaginary kingdom was
-so unlike the photographer’s “studio backgrounds” of other novelists
-that long before sketch-maps of Wessex were prepared and published in
-the uniform edition of his works the identity of many of his scenes
-afforded no manner of doubt to Dorset readers. The precision with
-which he describes a building or a neighbourhood, notes position,
-distance, proportion, has been a clue and a perpetual interest to those
-who follow the intricacies of Wessex geography, in spite of Mr. Hardy’s
-half-discouragement of those who sought to localise the horizons and
-landscapes of his “merely realistic dream country.”
-
-His “illuminative surnames” have been spoken of by some writers. His
-place-names are no less illuminative, and his quaint or sonorous
-substitutes might be transferred to the map of Dorset with little loss.
-In some cases an older name is revived, such as Shaston, Middleton
-Abbey, and Kingsbere. Sometimes he has made a slight modification of
-the real name, or received a suggestion from it, as in Sherton Abbas,
-Emminster, Port Bredy, Chaseborough, Casterbridge. Other names are
-downright inventions, often a _précis_ of the natural features of the
-town, such as Aldbrickham for Reading; or made with a fine ear for
-local probability.[79]
-
-[Illustration: MR. THOMAS HARDY.]
-
-The county town of Dorset, with its core of old houses, and too many
-that are new, is the centre of the Hardy district, as it is the “pole,
-focus, or nerve-knot,” of the surrounding country. Its memories of
-Rome are preserved in Mr. Hardy’s name for it, “Casterbridge”; and
-its outward appearance in the days when Dorchester had no suburbs,
-and was “compact as a box of dominoes” behind its stockade of limes
-and chestnuts. A description of the old-fashioned place, in the mouth
-of one of Mr. Hardy’s characters, always quoted in the guide-books to
-Dorchester, is that “it is huddled all together, and it is shut in by a
-square wall of trees like a plot of garden-ground by a box edging”; and
-the unusual way the country came up to the town and met in one line
-is best described in his words:—
-
- The farmer’s boy could sit under his barley mow and pitch a stone into
- the office window of the town clerk; reapers at work among the sheaves
- nodded to acquaintances standing on the pavement corner; the red-robed
- judge, when he condemned a sheep-stealer, pronounced sentence to the
- tune of Baa, that floated in at the window from the remainder of the
- flock browsing hard by; and at executions the waiting crowd stood in
- a meadow immediately before the drop, out of which the cows had been
- temporarily driven to give the spectators room.
-
-It has been said that the Dorchester in the Wessex novels had no
-suburbs; the North Street ended abruptly in a mill by the river; the
-South Street came to an end in a cornfield—but these bounds have been
-leaped over in several places, and to-day the east, or Fordington side
-of the town (Mr. Hardy’s Durnover) alone remains unchanged; and here
-the flat water-meadows stretch up to the garden-hedges and the actual
-walls of the houses. In spite of changes without the escarpments, the
-curfew still sounds at the stroke of eight from St. Peter’s with its
-“peremptory clang,” the signal for shop-shutting throughout the town.
-The brick bridge over the Frome, and the stone bridge over a branch of
-the same stream in the meads, have their well-defined peculiarities
-in Dorchester as in “Casterbridge.” The neighbourhood of “Mixen”
-Lane (Mill Lane), the “mildewed leaf” in the sturdy and flourishing
-Casterbridge plant, is recognisable at the east end of the town, near
-the town bridges.
-
-Lucetta’s house, “High Place Hall,” at the corner of Durngate Street,
-has a modern shop-front inserted; while the most significant feature
-of her house is to be found at Colyton House, where, in the centre
-of the wall flanking the garden, is an archway, now bricked up,
-surmounted by a battered mask in which the open-mouthed, comic leer can
-hardly be discerned to-day. Without the town, on the Weymouth Road,
-is the immense Roman “Ring”—“Maumbury Ring, melancholy, lonely, yet
-accessible from every part of the town”—which was to Dorchester what
-the ruined Colosseum is to modern Rome.
-
-“Some old people said that at certain moments in the summer time, in
-broad daylight, persons sitting with a book, or dozing in the arena,
-had, on lifting their eyes, beheld the slopes lined with a gazing
-legion of Hadrian’s soldiery as if watching the gladiatorial combat,
-and had heard the roar of their excited voices; that the scene would
-remain but a moment, like a lightning flash, and then disappear.” The
-ancient square earthwork where Henchard planned his entertainment is
-Poundbury Camp, where the annual sheep-fair is held—“Square Pommerie”
-of the poems.
-
-Dorchester is interesting from the fact that it is the only full-length
-portrait of a town drawn in the Wessex novels, and is the almost
-unshifting scene of one, the _Mayor of Casterbridge_, where the
-dramatic unity of place is preserved. In other novels the characters
-are wanderers and the scenes shifted; or the towns and villages are
-sketched in half-lengths or in small thumbnail sketches. Of these,
-certainly the most important historically is Shaftesbury, the Shaston
-of the novels, which seems to be set upon “a dominant cape or a
-far-venturing headland.” It is a town of shrunken importance, “familiar
-with forgotten years,” the ancient British Palladour, “which was, and
-is, in itself, the city of a dream.”
-
-The houses now composing Shaftesbury are held high up above the Vale
-of Blackmore by the height, or cliff, upon which it is built; and
-Barnes, no less than Mr. Hardy, was alive to the vision of the old city
-on watch, straining her eyes to Blackmore’s “blue-hilled plain,” or
-shining “so bright” to those down miles below in the Vale.
-
-Another ancient, shrunken town is Wareham, which reminds one to a
-certain extent of Dorchester, for it is square, ramparted, and defended
-by water on one side; but these are the only points of resemblance. The
-little diminished town “where only the presence of the river and the
-shallow barges on its bosom suggest the ocean,” goes by the name of
-“Anglebury”[80] in the Wessex novels, for it was a noted town in the
-Saxon age, when it was a place of strength. Sherborne, the “Sherton
-Abbas” of the novels, takes its fictitious name, like many other Wessex
-towns, from its most prominent feature, the Abbey. Cerne Abbas—called
-“Abbot’s Cernel” in the novels, one of its old names being Cernel—is a
-village “still loitering in a mediæval atmosphere”; while Bere Regis,
-which appears in the novels under the older form, “Kingsbere,” is
-another of the diminished places that Mr. Hardy delights to honour, a
-“blinking little one-eyed place” of thatched cottages, the measure of
-whose earlier magnificence is the fine church of St. John the Baptist
-that holds the dust of the Turbervilles. “Kingsbere-sub-Greenhill,” to
-give it its full Wessex title, owes the last limb of that compound name
-to Woodbury Hill (Greenhill)—a green hill partly covered with trees
-that overlooks Bere. Its ancient fair, now much decayed, is described
-rather as it was than as it is, as the “Nijni-Novgorod of South
-Wessex.” The fair is, however, still held in September, beginning on
-the eighteenth of the month. “Marlott,” really Marnhull, also connected
-with _Tess of the D’Urbervilles_, lies embedded in Blackmore Vale,
-“where the fields are never brown and the springs never dry,” between
-Sturminster and Shaftesbury.
-
-Some six miles distant from Mr. Hardy’s home is the village of
-Piddletown, known by the name of Weatherbury in _Far from the Madding
-Crowd_. The church described there remains, but, as the novelist
-expressly warns us, “Warren’s Malthouse” disappeared years ago, with
-some of the village’s characteristic peculiarities.
-
-Stinsford, a parish of which the Bockhamptons are hamlets, the original
-of “Mellstock,” is so carefully described by Mr. Hardy that each
-cottage might well be a literary landmark, while Sutton Poyntz, the
-“Overcombe” of _The Trumpet-Major_, like Piddletown, has lost one of
-Mr. Hardy’s landmarks, for the mill is demolished, but the colossal
-figure of George III. upon the chalk downs, which in the novel was
-being cut, is still to be seen.
-
-Mr. Hardy’s special quality of precision that comes of knowledge is
-nowhere more closely shown than in his pictures of great houses, or,
-indeed, of buildings of any kind. They are all drawn from the real,
-from their cellars and foundations to their leads and chimney-pots.
-The only liberty he takes with the originals is to remove them, in
-one or two cases, to another position. For instance, Lower Waterstone
-Farm, the original of Bathsheba Everdene’s house in _Far from the
-Madding Crowd_—“a hoary building of the Jacobean stage of classic
-Renaissance”—is nearly two miles from “Weatherbury” (Piddletown).
-Again, Poxwell Hall, the “Oxwell Hall” of _The Trumpet-Major_, is
-really three miles from “Overcombe” (Sutton Poyntz), and, therefore,
-not the close neighbour of the Lovedays it is made to be. The original
-of “Welland House” is Charborough; but the “Tower,” as Mr. Hardy
-writes, “had two or three originals—Horton, Charborough, etc.”
-
-Wool Manor-house, or “Well Bridge,” as Mr. Hardy, reverting to the
-older name, calls it, once a possession of the Turbervilles, is set on
-the bank of the rush-grown Frome, near the great Elizabethan bridge
-that gives the place half its name. The paintings of two women are
-actually, as in the novel, on the walls of the staircase, but they
-are now rapidly fading away, and can only with difficulty be made out
-to-day by the light of a candle.
-
-“Enkworth Court” (Encombe), deep in the Glen of Encombe, approached by
-a long road gradually dropping into the cup-like crater by the only
-expedient of winding round it, is a “house in which Pugin would have
-torn his hair.” “Great Hintock House,” however, another house in a
-hole, has no original, though it has somewhat hastily been identified
-with Turnworth House, near Blandford. The situation is similar, but
-Turnworth House is largely a modern building, while the “Great Hintock
-House” of _The Woodlanders_ had a front which was an “ordinary manorial
-presentation of Elizabethan windows, mullioned and hooded, worked in
-rich snuff-coloured free-stone from local quarries.”
-
-The sea-coast towns of Dorset, southern outposts of Wessex, make
-an occasional appearance in the novels and tales. The original of
-“Knollsea” is Swanage, which would scarcely now be described as the
-sea-side village “lying snug within its two headlands as between a
-finger and thumb.” With Bridport (“Port Bredy”) and its neighbour,
-West Bay, Mr. Hardy takes one of his rare liberties in altering
-the configuration of the country; for one story opens with the
-statement that “the shepherd on the east hill could shout out lambing
-intelligence to the shepherd on the west hill,” over the intervening
-chimneys. The cleft, however, in which the town is sunk is not so
-exiguous.
-
-Georgian Weymouth is peculiarly the scene of _The Trumpet-Major_; while
-Portland, “the Isle of Slingers”—
-
- The Isle of the Race
- Many-caverned, bald, wrinkled of face,
-
-—is especially the district of _The Well Beloved_. It is a “wild,
-herbless, weather-worn promontory,” sour and treeless, with its
-beak-like point stretching out like the head of a bird into the English
-Channel. On the east side is an unexpected wooded dell, narrow and full
-of shade, on the summit of which rises Pennsylvania Castle—“Sylvania
-Castle” of the novel—a modern castellated house, built in 1800 for John
-Penn, Governor of the Island, who planted the trees around it.
-
-Perhaps Mr. Hardy’s most inalienable possession is not the town but
-the wild, the “obscure, obsolete, superseded country,” a “tract in
-pain,” which, with one form but many names, stretches from Poole in
-the east to almost within sight of Dorchester on the west, from near
-Bere Regis in the north to Winfrith in the south, where it joins the
-heathland of the Isle of Purbeck. Though “Egdon” Heath is broken up
-into many tracts, into Morden and Bere, and Wool and Duddle and other
-heaths, it has an essential unity, and the attempts at cultivation have
-met with desperate and, as it were, voluntary resistance, so that the
-breaks into green strips of cornfield slip the memory on a back-look
-at that lonely land. It is a place inviolate and “unaltered as the
-stars,” a sweep of moorland, a tract of land covered with heather and
-bracken and furze, practically unbroken, where, “with the exception
-of an aged highway, and a still more aged barrow, themselves almost
-crystallized to natural products by long continuance, even the trifling
-irregularities were not caused by pick-axe, plough, or spade, but
-remained as the very finger-touches of the last geological change.” In
-appearance its colours are by distance blended into the purple brown
-called, in _The Return of the Native_, “swart”—its “antique brown
-dress.” The swart, abrupt slopes appear to be “now rising into natural
-hillocks masquerading solemnly as sepulchral tumuli, now dipping into
-hollows, where the rain-water collects in marshy pools and keeps green
-the croziers and fully-opened fronds of the bracken much longer than
-the parched growths at the crests of these rises, and again spreading
-out into little scrubby plains.”[81]
-
-Its quality is “prodigious, and so as to frighten one to be in it all
-alone at night,” as Pepys said of another solitary place—the great
-earthwork of Old Sarum. In Mr. Hardy’s words, “the face of the heath
-by its mere complexion adds half an hour to evening: it can, in like
-manner, retard the dawn, sadden noon, anticipate the frowning of storms
-scarcely generated, and intensify the opacity of a moonless midnight
-to a cause of shaking and dread.” It is an agent among agents, and
-what Wordsworth finds that nature becomes seen by man’s intellect,
-“an ebbing and a flowing mind.” Its lonely face, and the face of all
-solitary heath-lands, are interpreted for ever in _The Return of the
-Native_.
-
-[Illustration: CAME RECTORY.
-_The home of William Barnes._]
-
-
-
-
-SOME DORSET SUPERSTITIONS
-
-BY HERMANN LEA
-
-
-In employing the term superstition, it is in the sense defined by Franz
-v. Schonthan:—
-
- Zwar nicht wissen—aber glauben
- Heisst ganz richtig—Aberglauben.
-
-(Not to know, but to believe; what else is it, strictly speaking, but
-superstition?)
-
-It is natural, no doubt, that superstition should decrease in the same
-ratio as education and enlightenment advance, but its total extinction
-need not be anticipated for a long time to come. True, its death-knell
-was sounded by the first invented printing press, a contrivance
-which, nevertheless, tends to some extent to foster its growth,
-since “believers” read in history facts that give support to their
-own beliefs. And although this survival may not exactly please the
-practically minded, to the antiquary or the psychologist its extinction
-would be certainly regretable.
-
-It must not be rashly concluded that superstition goes hand in hand
-with foolishness or absence of commonsense, nor must it be looked on
-as a symbol of weak-mindedness. Did not Augustus Cæsar hold strong
-views regarding putting the left shoe on the right foot, maintaining
-that such procedure betokened some dire calamity? And again, did he
-not deem the skin of a sea-calf to be a certain preservative against
-lightning? Yet he was not generally regarded as a particularly foolish
-or weak-minded man.
-
-Of the various forms of superstition current at the present time, none
-hold such sway as the credence in witchcraft. The date of its origin is
-lost in the dim past, but we may safely surmise that it arose early in
-the mind of man. Moses denounced witches in no measured terms. “Thou
-shalt not suffer a witch to live,” he said, and this decree survived
-until a comparatively recent date. In mediæval times the law of Moses
-certainly held good; it mattered nothing what position in the social
-standard the accused held. In the year 1537 Lady Janet Douglas was
-burned in Edinburgh on the charge of being a witch. John Knox was once
-accused of being a wizard because “nothing but sorcery,” so it was
-said, “could account for Lord Ochiltree’s daughter”—“ane damosil of
-nobil blude”—falling in love with him—“ane old, decrepid creature of
-most base degree of ony that could be found in the countrey.” Although
-the days are past when witches were publicly tormented or executed,
-even at the present time such a reputation is not without danger to the
-supposed witch. To effect a cure from the spell cast, it used to be
-considered almost essential that her blood be drawn, and within quite
-recent years I have known of cases where reputed witches have been shot
-at with “silver bullets,” or struck at with hay-forks or other sharp
-instruments.
-
-Having its birth in so remote a past, it is, perhaps, not to be
-wondered at that witchcraft has persisted so long, that its demise is
-so protracted. Until a few years ago, when the law stepped in to punish
-those who made a livelihood by “conjuring”—_i.e._, pointing out witches
-and producing spells to confound them—witchcraft formed an everyday
-topic of conversation, and little secrecy was deemed necessary;
-but now, though as staunchly believed in as ever, the subject is
-alluded to in bated breath, and it is no easy matter to discover the
-whereabouts of a “conjurer” or “witch-doctor.”
-
-In the more remote corners of the county may still be heard fragments
-of the old Dorset speech, and in these same out-of-the-way spots one
-may chance on the strangest of superstitions and customs. Witchcraft
-holds a place in the minds of the illiterate, the semi-educated, and
-even the better educated, from which no amount of argument can expel
-it. Thomas Hardy and William Barnes have both used the theme as a
-groundwork for prose and poem. It may be interesting to note here that
-Conjurer Trendle, in the former’s story entitled “The Withered Arm,”
-was no fictitious personage, but had a veritable existence. He is still
-well remembered (under his real name, of course) by some of the older
-people who dwelt near, and the house in which he lived, in the central
-portion of “Egdon Heath,” may still be traced in a heap of decayed
-walls and rotten timbers.
-
-The reason for this strong and enduring belief is not difficult to
-find; thought-transference, mental telepathy, hypnotism, are all
-scientifically admitted; that our ancestors observed the effects of
-these “sciences,” attributing the causes to some easily explainable or
-at least plausible reasons, is more than probable.
-
-When attempting to trace to their origin some of the stories current,
-one cannot help feeling that in many cases the so-called witch stood
-more in need of pity than condemnation, for it required only very
-scanty evidence for her to be thus branded. Gilfillan speaks of a
-witch as “a borderer between earth and hell”—a view which was probably
-shared by the majority of people. Goldsmith, on the contrary, was for
-giving the accused the benefit of the doubt. “If we enquire,” he says
-in sarcastic strain, “what are the common marks and symptoms by which
-witches are discovered to be such, we shall see how reasonably and
-mercifully those poor creatures were burned and hanged who unhappily
-fell under that name.”
-
-If I were required to define a witch of the present day I should
-state it as being the second-hand evidence of numbers of people who
-have been “overlooked,” or bewitched, and who have given me detailed
-descriptions. A witch, then, is an individual, male or female—usually
-the latter—who by reason of certain gifts or powers is able to exert
-an influence over another. She generally includes in her dress some
-red token—perhaps a red hat, red shawl, or red cloak. She is able to
-transform herself into the likeness of almost any animal, chiefly that
-of a cat or hare, and is also able to become invisible; when assuming
-the guise of an animal, she in no way hides her identity from those
-who are conversant with the ways of witches, a witch-hare or witch-cat
-differing in many particulars, both in appearance and gait, from the
-ordinary hare or cat. It has been said that two animals only she cannot
-simulate—lambs and donkeys; the usual Scriptural reasons being adduced.
-Her power is nearly always inherited, and I have heard it argued that a
-certain woman of my acquaintance, who was perfectly inoffensive, must
-necessarily be a witch because her mother was one. This power may be
-used either for good or ill, and may be directed against an animal or
-a human being. I have been informed, in strict confidence, of certain
-signs by which a witch may be recognised, and to test the accuracy of
-my informant, I have many times asked people whom I knew but slightly
-whether so-and-so was not a person credited with superhuman powers,
-and, nine times out of ten, have been answered in the affirmative.
-Hence it would seem that these tokens are well known and generally
-admitted.
-
-The immediate effect on a person who has been “overlooked,”
-“ill-wished,” or “hagrod” (Dorset for “hag-ridden”), as it is variously
-called, consists as a rule of some sort of indisposition. This
-gradually increases to severe sickness, and finally death supervenes.
-The disease is usually of an extremely subtle nature, defying accurate
-diagnosis, and is often termed by the medical man mental or hysterical.
-Sometimes the stricken individual will merely pine away gradually,
-refuse food, complain of nothing definite, yet preserve an entire
-reticence as to any supposable cause. On the other hand, it does
-happen occasionally that the effect of the “overlooking” is extremely
-sudden—perhaps a fatal accident from an apparently natural cause.
-Again, the ill-wishing may take the form of a comparatively harmless
-nuisance—the butter may fail to “come” in the churning, the fowls may
-suddenly cease laying, the cows may refuse to “give down” their milk,
-or the pig, intended for an early fattening, may object to partake of
-the most savoury mixture prepared with consummate care. Perhaps the
-horses will refuse to pull fairly at their loads, or may stop entirely
-when encountering a small hill.
-
-A “conjurer” or “white witch” is an individual who, possessed of
-certain gifts (to some considerable extent hereditary), is able to
-point out to those who consult him (or her—for either sex may have the
-qualifications) the person who is causing the mischief. One necessary
-attribute is that he be a “seventh of a seventh,” _i.e._, a seventh
-child of a parent who, in his turn, was a seventh child. It does not
-follow that this peculiarity in itself is sufficient to produce a
-conjurer, but without it he cannot be one. One point, however, is
-shared by such-born people, and that is, entire immunity from the
-effects of ill-wishing, and a capability of identifying any other
-person gifted with the powers of ill-wishing others.
-
-There are, or rather were, conjurers _and_ conjurers. Some took a
-delight in frustrating the efforts of a witch, whether paid for
-their services or not; whilst others used their knowledge merely as
-a means of livelihood, and drained their patients of every copper
-or possession of value. I knew of a family that, having consulted a
-person of this latter class, parted with all their savings, then
-with their convertible possessions, and, lastly, with their stock of
-winter provender (garden produce, potatoes, and the like), until left
-in a perfectly destitute condition, dependent on the parish for actual
-necessaries. A conjurer, having listened to the complaint brought
-him, will, as a rule, ask his client to what extent he would wish the
-punishment to fail. Very often he would surprise his visitor by saying
-at the start that he knew the reason why they came to consult him,
-and would actually cite the case as it stood. If desired, he would
-inform his questioner who their ill-wisher was, generally by showing
-them the face of their enemy reflected in a crystal, or on the surface
-of a bucket of water. Then would follow the prescription—and it was
-here that he as a rule gave way to a love of effect, and suggested
-material cures for a psychic malady. I am inclined to think that this
-materialistic display was the chief reason for his being held up
-to ridicule by the unbeliever or sceptic; had he contented himself
-with less rude emblematical display he would have at least had more
-sympathy from the general public. Some of the conditions laid down as
-being essential to the withdrawal of the spell were, to say the least,
-unnecessarily disgusting. Many I know of, which, although interesting
-enough to the searcher, would certainly not bear putting into bald
-print. Most were ingenious, and possessed colourable excuse for their
-suggestion. I will give a few examples to illustrate this. A simple
-remedy was suggested to a dairyman who complained of sickness in his
-pig-yard. He was advised to place a birch-broom (“Bezom,” in Dorset)
-across the doorway of the dairyhouse, it being said that any innocent
-person could step over it, a witch never. This was tried, with the
-result that in the morning a great outcry was heard, and a neighbour
-was discovered standing outside the door protesting that “something
-hurt her,” and she felt unable to cross the threshold. In a very
-similar case where this was tried and failed to produce any result,
-a further visit to the conjurer suggested sleeping with a prayer-book
-under the pillow and fixing a horseshoe on the door—a shoe that had
-of itself fallen from the left hind foot of a horse—and in both these
-cases the nuisance was put a stop to almost immediately.
-
-In a case where the horses were dying from some obscure complaint, the
-victim was told to cut out the heart of the next animal that died and
-boil it in water containing sage, peppermint, and onions; when cold, it
-was to be stuck full of new pins on the one side, and on the other with
-“maiden” thorns—_i.e._, thorns of the present year’s growth—picked by a
-maiden—woman or girl—and inserted by her. This done, it was to be hung
-up on a nail in the chimney of a neighbour—the one accused of being the
-witch. Another charm of a simple character was for the bewitched person
-to take a dish of water and carry it over three bridges at midnight.
-Yet another was to take a bottle, place in it some sprigs of hyssop,
-fill it up with a certain liquid, insert some new pins in the cork, and
-bury it in a manure heap. In the majority of instances that have come
-under my notice, the charm has been emblematical of bodily ill to the
-witch; either pins or something similar capable of drawing blood, or
-else some perishable material such as the horse’s heart, which would
-naturally decay slowly, or a waxen effigy which, placed near a fire,
-would gradually melt; and I have been given to understand that the
-slower the melting, the more protracted would be the witch’s suffering
-and death.
-
-I believe it very rarely happens that the same person is “overlooked”
-more than once; at any rate, all those who have spoken to me on
-the subject have told me that since they suffered in this way they
-have taken most elaborate precautions to avoid a repetition of the
-occurrence. I know one man who utterly refuses to meet or pass a woman
-who is a stranger to him should she be wearing anything of a red
-colour; in fact, he would go a mile or more out of his way to avoid
-her, or enter a field and hide until she had passed on her way. Another
-man of my acquaintance, one who confided to me several distinguishing
-marks by which a witch might be recognised, advised me never to go near
-a cat or hare if they exhibited any of these signs. A woman, well-to-do
-in her walk in life, has warned me solemnly never to pick yellow
-ragwort, lest I should thereby render myself liable to be bewitched.
-The seriousness with which these and many others have tendered advice
-is sufficient proof—to me—of the genuineness of their beliefs.
-
-Let me now briefly cite a few particulars of cases that have either
-come under my own observation, or have been related to me by people in
-whose veracity I have the strongest confidence. A question which may be
-asked is, do I myself believe that these things happened and are still
-happening? It is not easy to find an answer. Because I cannot explain
-any certain occurrence it in no way proves that it is false; moreover,
-I have personally met with experiences of a strange, subtle character
-which, although I may not be able to explain satisfactorily to others,
-are irrefutable as far as I myself am concerned. Probably many, if not
-most, of my readers have likewise had “experiences,” but the scientific
-scepticism of the age prevents one from recording them only to be
-sneered at by the unbelieving.
-
-One of the strangest cases that has ever come to my notice was that
-of a young baker. It appeared that in some way or other he had given
-offence to a reputed witch who lived in the same village, and who
-openly vowed she would “pay him out.” Nothing untoward happened,
-however, until after his marriage a few months later, when, going into
-the stable one morning to feed his horse, he found the animal covered
-with sweat; it was trembling, and refused all food. The next morning
-the same thing occurred; so thinking to frustrate some practical joker,
-he bought a strong, expensive lock for the door, and prided himself on
-the fact that he had now outwitted the culprit. But the next morning
-the horse had disappeared, and only after considerable search was it
-at length discovered shut up in the pound. The stable was locked, and
-there was no evidence to show that the lock had been tampered with.
-The only information he gained was from a neighbour, who stated that
-he heard a horse galloping down the road about midnight, and that,
-looking out of his window, he had seen—not a horse, but a hare. For
-some weeks afterwards all went on quietly; then his wife was taken ill.
-The doctor who attended her could make nothing of her case, and at
-length, taking the advice of a friend, he went to consult a conjurer.
-As he arrived at the conjurer’s door, the latter came out, and, without
-any preamble, asked him how his wife was. Now the men lived twenty
-miles apart, yet the conjurer was conversant with every particular
-of the case, including details which the baker declared he had never
-mentioned to a soul. To him the conjurer handed a charm, telling him
-to preserve entire secrecy on the matter, and to place it with his
-own hands under his wife’s pillow. The result was an almost immediate
-improvement in the wife’s condition; but in a day or two information
-reached him of the illness of the supposed witch. As his wife improved,
-so the other woman became worse. Then, one evening when she had so
-far recovered as to come downstairs, a neighbour ran into his house
-declaring that he had just come from the direction of widow G.’s,
-that her house was entirely luminous, the walls semi-transparent, and
-the whole neighbourhood reeked strongly of sulphur. Nor was this all,
-for as he breathlessly told his tale, another man entered, confirming
-what the first had said, and adding that a sound similar to that made
-by a hare in a trap proceeded from the widow’s cottage. Joined by
-others, including the village policeman, they hastened to the spot. As
-they neared it, the baker, too, smelled the same odour, and saw the
-luminous effect. Arrived at the gate they stood spellbound, for on the
-doorstep was a figure. To me he described it as a “_thing_, coal-black,
-with fire darting from its eyes and mouth; cloven hoofs, and a forked
-tail”—in short, a fair description of a popular conception of the
-devil! For some minutes they all stood still, too much frightened
-to advance or retreat. Then, suddenly, an eerie cry rang out, and
-the whole house was plunged in darkness. When at last they pulled
-themselves together and entered in a body, they met coming down the
-stairs from the bedroom a woman who had acted as nurse to the stricken
-widow. She stated that she had been sitting by the bedside when she was
-suddenly overcome by a strong sulphurous smell, which had rendered her
-unconscious. Coming to herself at last, she glanced at the bed, to find
-it empty. Together they all ascended the stairs; the fumes still hung
-about, but the bed had no occupant; they searched the house through and
-through, but could find no trace of the owner.
-
-I may mention here that it is by no means an uncommon belief that a
-witch has sold herself to the devil, and that “he” will very often come
-to fetch his “disciple” at the moment of her death.
-
-The case of Charles —— was not without interest, seeing that the
-narrator was a man of considerable experience and intelligence, an
-engineer between thirty and forty, in a good situation. As a boy he
-had lived in a “haunted” house, in which strange and unaccountable
-noises were continually heard, sufficiently loud to awaken the whole
-household. He shared a small room with a younger brother, and more
-than once they were awakened in the night by the sound of a sheep
-bleating close to them, apparently by the bedside. On one occasion he
-and his brother, accompanied by their dog, started from home before
-daybreak to drive a flock of sheep to a farm some ten miles away. It
-was winter, the days were short; and having duly delivered the sheep,
-they started on their return walk as dusk began to gather. Their way
-led past a large pond, and as they neared this spot they both stopped
-suddenly, hearing the loud bleat of a sheep close to them. Peering
-ahead, they soon perceived the form of a sheep just in front of them.
-The dog bounded forward, but returned immediately with his tail
-between his legs, and howling dolefully he ran behind his master as
-if for protection. The dog was no coward naturally, and the lads were
-accordingly somewhat alarmed. They stood still, debating what to do,
-while the sheep drew gradually nearer, uttering “ba-a” after “ba-a,”
-until it stopped within a few feet, when they distinctly saw that the
-animal had no head. Petrified, they stood a moment, clutching hold of
-one another, till the elder, recovering his presence of mind, raised
-his stick to strike the animal; but his arm was powerless—he could
-only raise the stick a few inches. Meanwhile, the animal advanced, and
-rubbed its neck against their legs. Suddenly it turned, and dashing to
-the edge of the pond, sprang in and disappeared from view. The lads
-remained gazing after it, spellbound, and then took to their heels and
-ran home.
-
-I am inclined to the belief that originally the term “hagrod” was
-chiefly applied to the case of horses that had become mysteriously
-affected. An old carter once told me that he had the charge of some
-horses at a certain farm, and unconsciously chanced to give offence to
-a reputed witch who lived near by. Her revenge took the form of petty
-annoyances. It was no uncommon thing for him to enter his stables in
-the morning to find his horses bathed in sweat, and panting as though
-they had been ridden far and fast—this, too, when the door was found
-locked as he had left it on the previous night. On such occasions the
-horses were fit for no work that day, and he had considerable trouble
-to get work out of them. Sometimes he would find them with their tails
-and manes tightly plaited up with straw. Such occurrences used to be
-comparatively common. One day I chanced to mention to his master what
-the man had told me; his master smiled, and said what he thought might
-be an explanation, but in no way denied the man’s story. Then he told
-me a case that had come under his own observation. In the stable was
-a valuable young horse, and one morning it was found with one hind
-leg perfectly stiff, so stiff that it could not put it to the ground.
-Three men tried their utmost to bend it, but without avail. At last
-they led the animal out of the stable, limping on three legs, and when
-outside it gradually got back the use of the limb. This happened many
-times, and at length the carter declared it was “hagrod,” that an old
-woman living near by had “overlooked it,” that every time she passed
-the stable—a thing which she did occasionally to get butter from the
-dairy—the horse was invariably stricken. Out of curiosity the farmer
-took note of what the carter said, and, to his astonishment, he found
-that the man was right—that is to say, in so far as that the horse’s
-stiffness coincided with the time of this woman’s approach. She left
-the neighbourhood a short time afterwards, and from that date there was
-no recurrence of the horse’s strange attacks.
-
-In a case with the details of which I am very familiar, and the truth
-of which I can vouch for, the ill-wish found vent firstly on animals,
-the property of the “overlooked.” What actually led up to the matter
-I never quite knew, possibly the narrator had offended her neighbour;
-anyhow, the facts are indisputable. The first effects showed themselves
-in the pigs refusing all food, and then dying one after the other,
-in what looked like some form of fit. A veterinary surgeon who was
-called in declared his inability to give a name to the disease, and
-a subsequent post-mortem examination threw no light on the matter.
-Then, one by one, all the fowls sickened and died; and, lastly, the
-woman’s daughter became seriously ill, but of what disease the doctor
-was unable to say. It was at this juncture that her mother, who had
-hitherto scoffed at the notion, took it into her head that the girl was
-bewitched, with the result that she paid a visit to a “wise-woman”
-(with whom I was also well acquainted), and sought her advice. The
-“conjuress” listened to her story, told her the name of the person who
-was ill-wishing her, and gave her a charm, with instructions to sew it,
-unknown to her daughter, inside her corsets, in such a position that
-she should not suspect its presence. These directions were faithfully
-carried out, with the result that in a short time her daughter regained
-her normal health. Meanwhile, a neighbour (the supposed ill-wisher)
-sickened, growing worse as the girl improved, and finally left the
-neighbourhood; her subsequent history was never known. The charm,
-which, by the way, the mother was directed to burn directly her
-daughter was out of danger, was preserved for some time. It consisted
-of a small lump of wax, roughly modelled into the form of a woman, the
-face bearing a distinct likeness to the accused witch!
-
-I will conclude with one more instance, which, although free from
-complications, is interesting as having happened quite recently. The
-supposed witch lived within a few hundred yards of the house that I
-was then inhabiting; the bewitched was a man who was for some years my
-gardener. The road from his cottage to the nearest village led past
-the house occupied by the witch, and, from some quite inexplicable
-cause, he was never able to pass her house in the ordinary way. When he
-attempted to do so he fell down; his only alternatives being either to
-turn round and walk backwards, or else to crawl by on hands and knees.
-Naturally, all the neighbours were aware of the fact, but they had
-grown so familiar with it that they ceased to comment on it. About two
-years ago the woman died, and afterwards, the spell presumably expiring
-with her, the old man was able to pursue his way in normal fashion. In
-front of the witch’s house stood a fine apple tree, and one day during
-the autumn following her death, the old man asked me, with a twinkle
-in his eye, whether I had noticed what a fine crop of apples this tree
-bore. “I’ve a-knowed thic tree,” he said, “ever since he wer’ planted;
-but he haven’t never had n’ar a opple on to en avore. Now, sir, can’ee
-tell I how ’tis he do bear s’well t’year?” Knowing what was expected of
-me, I said: “Let me see, John, is it not about a year ago since Mrs.
-X—, who lived there, died?” His retort, though scarcely a reply to my
-query, was nevertheless suggestive of the fact that I had answered his
-former question to me. He deliberately winked, then said, “Ther, sir,
-now you’ve a-said it,” and strode off to attend to his work.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Abbey, Bindon, 189, 190
-
- —— Cerne, 8, 9, 96
-
- —— Church of Sherborne, 79
-
- —— Foundations of Shaftesbury, 248
-
- Abbotsbury Abbey, 102, 104
-
- —— taken, 10
-
- Adeliza, daughter of Baldwin de Brioniis, 131
-
- Agger-Dun, Round Barrows at, 22, 25
-
- Agglestone Rock, 198
-
- Agricola, 29
-
- Albert, Prince, 152
-
- Alfred, 119, 146, 200, 241, 242
-
- —— Boyhood of King, 76
-
- —— Victories of, 7
-
- Allington, 233
-
- All Saints’, Dorchester, 147, 153
-
- Almshouse, Sherborne, 81
-
- Amphitheatre at Dorchester, 42
-
- Anketil, Colonel, 215
-
- Anne, “Good” Queen, 183
-
- Archer, Abbot Walter, 95
-
- Armada, Fight off Portland, 182
-
- —— Scare, 205
-
- —— Vessels sent from Weymouth against the, 163
-
- Arne, Village of, 198
-
- Aryans, Invading, 3
-
- Asser, 242
-
- Athelhampton, 257
-
- —— Hall, 262
-
- Athelstan, 94, 98, 102-104, 111, 146, 158, 243
-
- Athelwold, Assassination of, 201
-
-
- Bacon, Francis (Lord Verulam), 176
-
- Badbury, 5, 18, 34, 35, 36, 145
-
- —— Roman occupation of, 31
-
- Ballard Head, 197
-
- Band, Piddletown Church, 260
-
-
- Bankes, Sir John and Lady, 206-209, 212, 213, 215, 217, 218
-
- Bardolfeston, 263
-
- Bankes, Sir Ralph, 217-219
-
- Barnes, William, Dorset Poet, 18, 153, 156, 247, 273, 280, 294
-
- Barrows, Long, 19, 20
-
- —— Round, 3-19, 20, 21
-
- Beach, Thomas, 113
-
- Beaminster, 232
-
- Beaufort Family, 124
-
- Bedford Family, 270
-
- —— John, Duke of, 228
-
- Bentham, Jeremy, 143
-
- Bere Regis, 9, 287, 290
-
- —— Long Barrow near, 20
-
- —— Round Barrow at, 22
-
- —— Church, Timber Roof, 60
-
- Bindon Abbey, 189, 190
-
- Bindun Camp, 30
-
- Bingham, Colonel, Governor of Poole, 214-216, 218, 223
-
- Bingham’s Melcombe, Headquarters of Parliamentary Forces at, 165
-
- —— —— Relics of the Armada at, 164
-
- Blackmore Vale, 2, 250, 282, 286
-
- Blandford, 209
-
- —— Round Barrows near, 22
-
- Bloody Assize, 15
-
- Bloxworth Church, Hour-glass in, 56
-
- —— House, 270
-
- Bond, Captain, 209
-
- Borough Dome-book of Bridport, 236
-
- —— Records of Bridport, 234
-
- Bow and Arrow (or Rufus) Castle, 180
-
-
- Bowles, William Lisle, 277
-
- Bradley, John, last Abbot of Milton, 96
-
- Bradpole, 233
-
- Branwalader, St., 102
-
- “Bretagne, Damsel of,” 203
-
- Bridport, 13, 15, 232, 243, 289
-
- “Bridport Dagger,” 234
-
- British Camps, 30
-
- British Villages, Remains of, 20
-
- Broadley, A. M., 113
-
- —— Library of, 239
-
- Broadwinsor, 14
-
- Bronze Age, 19, 26
-
- —— Cremation in the, 22
-
- —— Pottery, 24
-
- Brownsea, 225
-
- Buckman, Professor, 39
-
- Bulbarrow, Round Barrows at, 22
-
- Burlestone Church, Chancel of, 263
-
- Burney, Miss Fanny (Mme. d’Arblay), 150
-
- Butler, Colonel, Governor of Wareham, 214, 215
-
-
- Caen, Roger of, Bishop of Sarum and Abbot of Sherborne, 79
-
- Came, 155, 281
-
- —— Church, Recumbent Figures in, 59
-
- —— Down, 24
-
- Canford, 9
-
- Cast-lead Font, St. Mary’s, Wareham, 55
-
- Castle, Bow and Arrow (or Rufus), 180
-
- —— Corfe, 10, 193, 195
-
- —— Sherborne Old, 10, 90, 92
-
- —— Royal visitors at Lulworth, 190
-
- —— Pennsylvania, 180
-
- Catherine of Alexandria, Chapels dedicated to St., 61, 103, 104, 108
-
- Celtic Earthworks, 4
-
- Celts, Civilisation of, 4
-
- Centwine, 6
-
- Cenwealh, first Christian King of West Saxons, 5
-
- Cerne Abbas, 287
-
- —— Round Barrows at, 22
-
- —— Abbey, 8, 9, 96
-
- —— Abbot of, 237
-
- Characteristics of Shaftesbury, 252
-
- Charborough, 288
-
-
- Chard, Abbot, 133, 134, 139
-
- Charles I., 92, 207, 267
-
- —— II., 169, 224, 239, 245;
- at Lulworth Castle, 190;
- Defeat of, 11;
- Flight of, 12
-
- Charlotte, Queen, at Lulworth Castle, 190
-
- Charminster, 264
-
- —— Canopied Tombs at, 59
-
- Chesil Beach, 2, 4, 165
-
- Chesilborne, 107
-
- Chideock, 271
-
- —— Chapel, Knight in plate armour in, 59
-
- China-clay, Important deposit of, 198
-
- Christ Church, Dorchester, 153
-
- Christmas Pie Legend, Corfe Castle, 219
-
- Churches of Bridport, 234
-
- —— of Shaftesbury, 246
-
- Church, Piddletown, 258
-
- —— St. Ealdhelm’s, 79
-
- —— St. James’, Milton, 115
-
- —— Spires—
- Iwerne Minster, 46
- Trent, 46, 54
- Winterborne Steepleton, 46, 53
-
- —— Towers—
- Beaminster, 53
- Bradford Abbas, 53
- Cerne, 53
- Charminster, 53
- Dorchester, St. Peter’s, 53
- Fordington St. George, 53
- Marnhull, 53
- Milton Abbey, 53
- Piddletrenthide, 53
- Steepleton, 53
- Trent, 54
-
- Civil War, 10, 165, 207
-
- Civil War Days at Bridport, 238
-
- Civil War, Sharp fight in Poole during, 223
-
- —— —— Sherborne Castle besieged during, 92
-
- Clandon Barrow, 24
-
- Clavinio (or Jordan Hill), 35, 40
-
- “Clubmen,” 10
-
- Cnut, 8, 244
-
- Coal Money, Kimmeridge, 191
-
- Coke, Lord Chief Justice, 206
-
- Company of Marblers, 195
-
- Conig’s Castle, 30
-
- Conjurer or Witch-Doctor, 294
-
- Cooper, Sir Anthony Ashley, 213
-
- Corfe, 9
-
- —— Castle, 165, 187, 193, 195, 200-21, 224;
- Ruins of, 50
-
- —— Church, 211-213
-
- Corton Chapel, Stone Altar at, 56
-
- Court Leet House, Piddletown, 261
-
- Cranborne, 9
-
- —— Long Barrow near, 20
-
- Credence in Witchcraft, 293
-
- Creech, Ancient Manor of, 189
-
- Cromwell, 92
-
- —— at Portland, 183
-
- —— Letter from, 11
-
- —— Colonel, 214, 215
-
- Cross-legged Effigies in—
- Bridport, 57
- Dorchester, St. Peter’s, 58, 59
- Frampton, 58
- Horton, 57
- Mappowder, 58
- Piddletown, 57
- Stock Gaylard, 57
- Trent, 57, 58
- Wareham, 57
- Wimborne Minster, 57
- —— St. Giles, 57
-
- Crowe, William, 276
-
- Culliford Tree, 24
-
- Cunnington, Edward, 40
-
- Curious Inscription, St. Mary’s, Melcombe Regis, 174
-
- Cuthberga, Sister of Ine, 117, 118
-
- Cwenberga, St., 118
-
- Cynewearde (Kynewardus), 94
-
-
- Damer, Anne Seymour, 110
-
- “Damsel of Bretagne,” 203
-
- Danes, Destruction of Shaftesbury by, 243
-
- Danes in Wessex, 6, 7
-
- Decorated Architecture—
- Dorchester, St. Peter’s, 51
- Gussage, St. Michael’s, 51
- Milton Abbey Church, 51
- Tarrant Rushton, 51
- Wimborne Minster, 51
- Wooton Glanville, 51
-
- Denzil, Lord Holles, Monument in St. Peter’s, Dorchester, of, 59
-
- Destruction of Shaftesbury by Danes, 243
-
- Deverel Barrow, 24
-
- Dialect of Dorset, 17
-
-
- Digby, John, first Earl of Bristol, 78
-
- Dissolution of Monasteries, 10, 44, 245
-
- Dodington, Bubb, first Lord Melcombe, 173, 176, 275
-
- _Domesday Survey_, 233
-
- Dorchester, 9, 34, 145-56, 170, 208, 213, 233, 243, 281, 283, 284, 290
-
- —— Amphitheatre at, 42
-
- —— Beaker at, 23
-
- —— Discovery of MSS. in Auction Room at, 15
-
- —— Execution of Catholic Priest at, 272
-
- —— Persons presented at, 16
-
- —— Round Barrows near, 22
-
- —— Walls demolished, 8
-
- Dorset County Museum, 154
-
- —— —— —— Specimens in, 23-25 39, 40, 43
-
- —— Superstitions, 292
-
- Duke of Monmouth’s Rebellion, 14
-
- Dunstan, Archbishop of Canterbury, 94, 159
-
- Durlston Bay, 194;
- Head, 193
-
- Durnovaria, Station at, 35, 36
-
- Durotriges, 4-6, 29, 31, 37
-
- Durweston Church, Carving in, 60
-
-
- Eadward, Murder of, 7
-
- —— the Unconquered, 118
-
- Ealdgyth, or Elgefu, 241
-
- Ealdhelm, St., Abbot of Malmesbury, 7;
- first Bishop of Western Wessex, 75-87
-
- Ealdhelm’s Head, St., 192, 193
-
- _Ealdhelm, Life of St._, Wildman’s, 5
-
- Ealhstan, Bishop, 77
-
- Earl of Richmond, 9
-
- Early English Architecture—
- Corfe Mullen, 51
- Cranborne, 51
- Knighton, 51
- Portesham, 51
- Wimborne Minster, 51
- Worth, 51
-
- Eastbury, 275
-
- East Lulworth, 278
-
- East Stower, 276
-
- Ecgberht, King, 77
-
- Edgar, King, 94, 200, 201
-
- Edward I., 245
-
- Edward II., 254
-
- —— III., 9
-
- —— IV. at Tewkesbury, 9
-
- —— VI., 87
-
- —— the Confessor, 146, 159, 181, 233, 243
-
- —— the Martyr, 201, 202, 207, 240, 249
-
- Egdon Heath, 2, 290, 294
-
- Eggardun, 30, 34
-
- Elfrida, or Ælfthryth, Queen, 7, 200-202
-
- Elizabeth, Queen, 91, 170, 205, 271
-
- Emma, Queen, 159
-
- Encombe, Glen of, 288
-
- Erle, Sir Walter, 208, 210-212
-
- Æthelbald, King, 76, 77
-
- Æthelberht, King, 76, 77
-
- Æthelgede, or Æthelgeofu, 241
-
- Æthelhelm, Duke, 181
-
- Æthelred I., 117
-
- —— II., 7, 158
-
- Æthelwold, the Ætheling, 117, 118
-
- Æthelwulf, King, 77
-
- Etricke of Holt, Anthony, 15, 225
-
- —— Anthony, Sarcophagus of, 127
-
- Evans, Miss, 143
-
-
- Farnham, Stone over Altar in, 59
-
- Fielding, Henry, 275, 276
-
- FitzHerbert, Mrs., at Lulworth Castle, 190
-
- Flowers, or Florus, Bury Camp, 30
-
- Font, Cast-lead, at St. Mary’s, Wareham, 55
-
- Fonts, Saxon, at Toller Fratrum, 48;
- Martinstown, 48
-
- Ford Abbey, 131
-
- —— —— Chapel, 132
-
- —— —— Seal, 140
-
- —— —— Tapestries of, 144
-
- —— —— The Cloister, 134
-
- —— —— The Dissolution of, 139
-
- —— —— The Guest Chamber, 137
-
- —— —— “The Monks’ Walk,” 133
-
- —— —— The Surrender of, 138
-
- Fordington, 151
-
- —— Church, St. George’s, 154
-
- —— Field, 25
-
- Frampton, Stone Pulpit at, 56
-
- Fraunceis, John, 143
-
- Fuller, Thomas, 277
-
- Funeral, Portland Island, 186
-
-
- Garrison at Wareham, 9
-
- Gasquet, Abbot, 230
-
- Gaunt, John of, 124
-
- Gay, John, 150
-
- Geology of Dorset, 1
-
- George III., 157, 170, 271, 288
-
- —— —— at Lulworth Castle, 190
-
- Gillingham, 9, 281, 284
-
- —— Manor of, 252, 253
-
- Gipsies, Headstone of Peter Standley, King of the, 261
-
- Glen of Encombe, 288
-
- Godwin, Earl, 181
-
- Godlingstone, Manor of, 196
-
- Goidelic Celts, 3, 19
-
- Grammar School, Milton, 113
-
- —— —— Shaftesbury, 255
-
- Gravestone of Benjamin Jesty, 192
-
- Great Tyneham, Ancient Manor House at, 189
-
- Guest, Lady Theodora, 252
-
- Gussage Down, 36
-
- —— Long Barrow near, 20
-
- Gwyn, Francis, 143
-
- —— John Francis, 143
-
-
- Hambledon, Celtic Camp of, 10
-
- —— Roman Occupation of, 31
-
- Hambro, Baron, 97, 100
-
- —— Everard, 106
-
- Hamworthy, Old Manor House at, 226
-
- Handfast Point, 197
-
- Handley Down, 34
-
- Harbour, Bridport, 237
-
- Hardy, Thomas, 2, 17, 18, 47, 70, 109, 114, 156, 190, 240, 256, 257,
- 260, 273, 282, 294
-
- —— Thomas Masterman, 113
-
- —— Wm., 194
-
- Harold, Death of, 8
-
- Harper, Hugo Daniel, 78
-
- Hatton, Sir Christopher, 205, 217
-
- Hawtrey, Mrs., 219
-
- Henry III., 9, 235
-
- —— V., 9
-
- —— VI., 9, 92
-
- —— VII., 144
-
- —— VIII., 85, 96, 166, 178, 234, 245
-
- Henry VIII., Inscription at Portland Castle to, 182
-
- —— —— Letter from, 162
-
- Herman, last Bishop of Sherborne, 7
-
- Higher Bockhampton, birthplace of Thos. Hardy, 283
-
- Hilton Church, Mediæval Panel Paintings in, 57
-
- Hinton Parva, Carving in, 60
-
- Hod Hill, 31
-
- Holt, 120
-
- Holworth, Burning Cliff at, 108, 190
-
- —— Chapel to St. Catherine of Alexandria at, 104, 108
-
- Homer, G. Wood, 262, 263
-
- Horsey, Sir John, 85
-
- Horton, Finding Monmouth at, 15
-
- Hour-glass in Bloxworth Church, 56
-
- Howard, Catherine, 182
-
- Hundred Years’ War, 230
-
- Hutchins, John, the Dorset historian, 114, 227, 257, 262, 265, 267,
- 274, 276
-
- Hut Circles, 20
-
-
- Iberians, 3
-
- Ibernium, Station at, 36
-
- Ilchester, Lord, 261
-
- Ilsington House, 261
-
- Imprisonment of Margery and Isabel, daughters of William, King of
- Scotland, 204
-
- Ine, King of West Saxons, 7, 117, 118
-
-
- Jacobean Screen at West Stafford, 57
-
- James I., 245, 273
-
- —— at Lulworth Castle, 190
-
- Jeffreys, Judge, 16, 148, 170, 239
-
- Jesty, Gravestone of Benjamin, 192
-
- John, King, 92, 146, 203, 233
-
- —— Houses in Dorset of King, 9
-
- Jones, Inigo, 142
-
- Joliffe, Monumental Inscription to Captain Peter, 228
-
- Jordan Hill (Clavinio), 35, 40
-
- Jurdain Family, 264
-
-
- Kimmeridge Clay, 2
-
- —— Coal Money, 191
-
- —— Ledge, 190
-
- —— Shale, 43
-
- —— Shell Objects, 25
-
- King of the Gipsies, Headstone of Peter Standley, 261
-
- Kingston Down, Discovery on, 36
-
- —— Lacy, 208, 219
-
- —— Russell, Long Barrow near, 20
-
- —— —— Round Barrows, 22
-
- Knut the Dane, 8, 244
-
-
- Lady Margaret, Son of, 9
-
- de Lafontaine, A. C., 262
-
- Langton Church, 194
-
- Laurence, Captain, 209, 212, 215
-
- —— M.P., Law-book of Richard, 236
-
- Legend of the Christmas Pie, Corfe Castle, 219
-
- Leland, Record of _Bridport Dagger_, by, 234
-
- —— Visit to Poole of, 230
-
- _Life of St. Ealdhelm_, Wildman’s, 5
-
- Limbrey, Stephen, 12
-
- Liscombe Chapel, 107
-
- Lulworth, 30, 187
-
- —— Castle, 190, 215
-
- —— Cove, 2, 189
-
- —— Royal Visitors at, 190
-
- —— Village of East, 190
-
- Lyme Regis, 1, 10, 12, 14, 15, 30, 35, 143, 164, 166, 208, 239
-
- —— Duke of Monmouth’s landing at, 169, 182
-
- Lynchets, Series of Terraces known as, 193
-
- Lytchett, 266
-
-
- Macaulay, 275
-
- Mai-dun (Maiden Castle), 30, 32, 34, 155
-
- Malmesbury, William of, 91
-
- Manor House at Trent, 11
-
- Marblers, Company of, 195
-
- March, Dr. Colley, 193
-
- Margaret, Lady, foundress of Christ’s and St. John’s Colleges, 123,
- 124
-
- —— Wife of Henry VI., 9
-
- Marnhull, 287
-
- —— Church, Monument in, 59
-
- Martinstown, 23, 25
-
- Martyn Family, 258
-
- Maud, Wars of Stephen and, 8
-
- Maumbury Ring, 148, 285
-
- Maurice, Prince, 10
-
- Mayo’s Barrow, 24
-
- Melbury Sampford, 12
-
- —— —— Effigy of William Brounyng, 59
-
- Melcombe Regis, 208
-
- —— —— Priory, 173
-
- Melplash, 232
-
- Memorial Brasses, Description of—
- Beaminster, Bere Regis, Bryanston, Bridport, 64
- Caundle Purse, Compton Valence, Chesilborne, Corfe Mullen,
- Crichel Moor, Crichel Long, Cranborne, Dorchester St. Peter,
- Evershot, Fleet Old Church, 65
- Holme Priory, Knowle, Litton Cheney, Lytchett Matravers, Langton,
- Melbury Sampford, 66
- Milton Abbey, Milborne St. Andrew, Moreton, Owermoigne,
- Piddlehinton, Piddletown, Pimperne, Puncknowle, 67
- Rampisham, Shaftesbury St. Peter, Shapwick, Sturminster Marshall,
- Swanage, _als._ Swanwich, 68
- Swyre, Tincleton, Tarrant Crawford, Thorncombe, Upwey,
- West Stafford, Wimborne Minster, 69
- Woolland, Yetminster, 70
- Bere Regis, 70
- Caundle Purse, 70
- Edward the Martyr, King, 68
- Evershot, 71
- Fleet, 71
- Joan de St. Omar, 63
- Litton Cheney, retroscript brass, 63
- Milton Abbey, Sir John Tregonwell, 67, 71
- Moreton, unusual inscription, 72
- Oke Brass at Shapwick, 63
- Piddletown, 72
- St. Peter’s Church, Dorchester, 63
- Strangwayes, Sir Gyles, 66
- Stratton, 63
- Thorncombe, 73
- Wimborne Minster, King Ethelred effigy, 69, 73
- Wraxall, 74
- Yetminster, 74
-
- Middleton, Abbot William de, 96, 98, 101, 102
-
- Miles, G.F. W., 143
-
- Milton Abbey, 44, 57, 94, 158
-
- —— Grammar School, 113
-
- —— Market Cross, 111
-
- —— Old Town of, 109, 110
-
- —— Town of, in America, 116
-
- —— John, 100
-
- —— Lord, 100, 109, 112-115
-
- Mohun Family, 264
-
- Monasteries, Dissolution of the, 10
-
- Monastic Barns—
- Liscombe, 45
- Tarrant Crawford, 45
-
- Monastic Ruins at—
- Abbotsbury, 44
- Bindon, 44
- Cerne, 44
- Shaftesbury, 44
-
- Money, Kimmeridge Coal, 191
-
- Monkton-up-Wimborne, 117
-
- Monmouth, Duke of, 143, 148, 224, 225
-
- —— —— at Lulworth Castle, 190
-
- —— —— Landing at Lyme Regis of, 169
-
- —— —— Rebellion, 239
-
- Monmouth’s Close, field near Horton called, 15
-
- —— Declaration, 14
-
- Monumental Effigies, 57-60
-
- Monuments in Piddletown Church, 258
-
- Mons Badonicus, 5
-
- Morton, Cardinal, 60
-
- Motcombe, Village of, 276
-
- Moule, Henry, 26, 37, 63
-
-
- Napoleon’s Invasion, 17
-
- Neolithic Age, 3, 19
-
- Netherbury, 232
-
- —— Mutilated Figure in, 59
-
- Newland, Borough of, 75
-
- Newfoundland, Intimate connection between Poole and, 226
-
- Norman Architecture at—
- Abbotsbury, 50
- Bere Regis, 51
- Corfe Castle, 50
- Studland, 49
- Worth Matravers, 49
-
- Norman Conquest, 233
-
-
- Oaken Pulpits at—
- Abbotsbury, 56
- Beaminster, 56
- Charminster, 56
- Iwerne Minster, 56
- Netherbury, 56
-
- “Old Harry and his wife,” 187, 197
-
- Owermoigne Church, 109
-
- Owners of Athelhampton, First, 262
-
-
- Palæolithic Man, Traces of, 3
-
- Parnham, 232
-
- Parr, Catherine, 182
-
- Paulinus Suetonius, 29, 30
-
- Paye, Henry, 230
-
- Peacock, Thomas Love, 175
-
- Pennie, John Fitzgerald, 278
-
- Pennsylvania Castle, 180, 289
-
- Perpendicular Architecture, 52
-
- Peveril Point, 194, 197
-
- Philip and Joanna, King and Queen of Castile, 268, 269
-
- Piddle, or Trent, river with two names, 117
-
- Piddletown, 257, 287
-
- —— Church, 55
-
- Pimperne, Long Barrow near, 20
-
- Pitman, Treachery of Lieut.-Col., 215, 216
-
- Pitt, Christopher, 275
-
- Pitt-Rivers, General, 21, 22, 26, 29
-
- Place-names of Bridport, 238
-
- Pole, Cardinal, 120
-
- Pollard, Richard, 139, 141
-
- Poole, 12, 14, 15, 35, 110, 164, 170, 208, 222-231, 290
-
- —— Harbour, 2, 4, 7, 29, 50, 187
-
- —— Quay, 222
-
- Pope, Alfred, 113
-
- Portesham Church, Window in, 56
-
- Portland, 4, 30, 160, 165, 168, 177
-
- —— Island, Funeral, description of, 186
-
- —— “The Isle of Slingers,” 289
-
- —— Beds, 2
-
- —— Bill, 179
-
- —— Castle, 178
-
- —— Roads, 109
-
- —— Superstitions, 186
-
- —— Wedding, Description of, 185
-
- Pottery, 20, 21, 23, 26
-
- —— Bronze Age, 24
-
- —— Sepulchral, 22
-
- Poulett, Sir Amias, 141
-
- Poundbury Camp, 31, 32, 286
-
- Poxwell Hall, 288
-
- Preston, Remains of Roman Villa at, 158
-
- —— Roman Arch at, 40
-
- Prideaux, Edmund, 141, 142
-
- Prior, Matthew, the poet, 129, 273
-
- Priory, Melcombe Regis, 173
-
- Purbeck, Isle of, 187-199, 208, 290
-
- —— Beds, 2
-
- Punfield Beds, 2
-
- Pylsdun, 30
-
-
- Racedown, Wordsworth at, 278
-
- Radipole, Roman Remains at, 158
-
- Ralegh, Sir Walter, 78, 91, 273
-
- Rebellion, Duke of Monmouth’s, 14
-
- Recorder of Poole, Anthony Etricke, of Holt, 15
-
- Relics of the Armada at Weymouth, 164
-
- Richmond, Earl of, 9
-
- Ridgeway, Round Barrows on the, 21, 25, 30
-
- Robert the Bruce, 253
-
- Robinson, Sir Charles, 193, 195, 196, 198
-
- Rock, Agglestone, 198
-
- Rocks, Old Harry, 187
-
- Roman Camps, 30
-
- Romans established, 4, 29, 242
-
- Roman Occupation, 28-43
-
- —— Road, 5, 34
-
- —— Villas, Sites of, 37
-
- Roper, Mrs. Freeman, 143
-
- Roses, Wars of the, 9
-
- Rosewall, William, 141
-
- —— Sir Henry, 141
-
- Rupert, Prince, 92
-
-
- St. Mary’s Church, Melcombe Regis, 174
-
- St. Nicholas’ Chapel, Weymouth, 172
-
- St. Peter’s, Dorchester, 146, 153
-
- Sampson of Dol, St., 102, 111
-
- Sandford Orcas Church, Curious Monument in, 58
-
- Sandsfoot Castle, 166, 178
-
- Saxon Architecture—
- Ealdhelm, Chapels of St., 48-50
- Corfe Castle, 48
- Martinstown, 48
- Tarrant Rushton, 48, 49
- Toller Fratrum, 48
- Wareham, 47, 48
- Worth Matravers, 48
-
- Saxon Fonts at—
- Martinstown, 48
- Toller Fratrum, 48
-
- Saxon Invaders, 5
-
- Scott, Sir Gilbert, 96
-
- Screen at West Stafford, Jacobean, 57
-
- Sepulchral Pottery, 22
-
- Seymour, Jane, 182
-
- Shaftesbury, 2, 10, 11, 240, 286
-
- Sherborne, 7, 287
-
- Sherborne Abbey, 44, 79, 94, 102
-
- —— Abbots of—
- Barnstaple, John, last Abbot, 85
- Bradford, William, 77, 81, 83
- Brunyng, John, 81
- Mere, 77
- Ramsam, Peter, 77, 81
- Roger of Caen, 79
-
- Sherborne Almshouse, 81, 92
-
- Sherborne, Bishops of—
- Alfwold, St., 77
- Asser, the Biographer, 77
- Ealdhelm, St., first Bishop of Western Wessex, 75, 87
- Ealhstan, Bishop, 77
- Heahmund, St., 77
- Werstan, 77
- Wulfsy, St., 77
-
- —— Castle, 40, 90, 92
-
- —— Parish Church, All Hallows, 79, 81, 82, 84, 85
-
- —— School, 86, 87
-
- Smuggling at Purbeck Isle, 194
-
- Solomon, King, 241
-
- Somerset, Protector, 78
-
- Southey’s _Naval History of England_, 231
-
- Stalbridge, 85
-
- —— Church, Monument in, 59
-
- Standley, Headstone of Peter, 261
-
- Steepleton Down, 25
-
- Stephen and Maud, Wars of, 8
-
- Stinsford, 155, 287
-
- de Stokes, Abbot William, 99
-
- Stone Altar at Corton Chapel, 56
-
- Stone Circles, 20
-
- Stone Pulpit at Frampton, 56
-
- Stone, Rev. William, 128
-
- Stour Valley, 3
-
- Stower, East and West, 276
-
- Strangways, Sir John, 12
-
- Stratton, 35
-
- Studland, Old-world Village of, 197
-
- Sturminster Newton, 246, 281, 283
-
- Superstitions, Dorset, 292
-
- —— Portland, 186
-
- Sutton Poyntz, 288
-
- Swanage Bay, 2, 7, 29, 30, 289
-
- —— —— Round Barrows at, 22
-
- —— Description of, 195
-
- —— Path known as Priestway to, 192, 193
-
- Swegen, or Sweyn, King, 8, 76, 146
-
- Sydenham, Captain, 210, 212, 213, 223
-
- Sydenham’s _History of Poole_, 228
-
- de Sydelinge, Abbot Walter, 99
-
- Sydling, Round Barrows at, 22
-
-
- Tarrant Rushton Church, Restoration of, 57
-
- Tesselated Floors—
- Creech, 38
- Dorchester, 38, 39, 42
- Fifehead Neville, 38, 41, 42
- Frampton, 38, 40
- Halstock, 38
- Hemsworth, 38
- Lenthay Green, 38, 40
- Maiden Castle, 38, 40
- Preston, 38, 39
- Rampisham, 38
- Thornford, 38
-
- —— Pavements, Description of, 38
-
- Teutonic Invaders, 5
-
- Thompson, Sir Peter, 226
-
- Thorncombe, 131, 144
-
- Thornhill, Sir James, 174
-
- Timber Roof, Bere Regis, 60
-
- Tokens, Weymouth Tradesmen’s, 169
-
- Town Cellars at Poole, 229
-
- Tradesmen’s Tokens, Weymouth, 169
-
- Tregonwell, Sir John, 96, 100
-
- Trenchard Family, 264, 265, 267, 269
-
- —— Sir Thomas, 208, 271
-
- Trent Manor House, 11, 14
-
- Treves, Sir Frederick, 109
-
- Trinity Church, Dorchester, 147
-
- Turberville, George, 273
-
- Turnworth House, 289
-
-
- Vale of Blackmore, 2, 250, 282, 286
-
- Var, or Frome, river bearing two names, 117
-
- Vespasian, 29, 30
-
- Via Principalis, 34
-
- Village of East Lulworth, 190
-
- Vindogladia, Station at, 35, 36
-
-
- Walburga, or Walpurgis, St., 119
-
- Walpole, Horace, 277
-
- Wareham, 7-10, 188, 202, 203, 208, 213, 214, 232, 233, 243, 286, 287
-
- —— Castle, 200
-
- —— Cast-lead Font at St. Mary’s, 55
-
- —— Lady St. Mary’s Church, 188
-
- Warne, Charles, 20, 24, 25, 27, 29, 30-32, 35, 36, 108
-
- Wars of the Roses, 9
-
- —— of Stephen and Maud, 8
-
- Waterson, 260, 288
-
- Warwick, King-maker, 9
-
- Wedding, Description of old-time Portland, 185
-
- Weld Family, 271
-
- Wesley, Bartholomew, 13
-
- West Bay, 232, 289
-
- West Chelborough, Curious Monument at, 58
-
- —— Stafford, Jacobean Screen at, 57
-
- —— Stower, 276
-
- Weymouth, 2, 12, 30, 110, 157, 208, 213, 215, 232, 270, 271, 289
-
- —— Bay, 2, 109
-
- —— Margaret, wife of Henry VI., at, 9
-
- Whitchurch Canonicorum, Tombstone at, 168
-
- Whitcombe, 108, 281
-
- White, Rev. John, 147
-
- Whitecliff, Manor House of, 196
-
- Wildman, W. B., 5
-
- William III., 92
-
- Wim, or Allen, river with two names, 117
-
- Wimborne, 7, 274
-
- —— Minster, 36, 44, 94, 117, 120
-
- —— —— Effigy in, 57
-
- —— Round Barrows near, 22
-
- —— St. Giles, 117
-
- Winfrith, 290
-
- Winterborne Whitchurch, 273
-
- Witchcraft, Credence in, 293
-
- Witch-doctor, Conjurer or, 294
-
- Wolfeton House, 155, 264
-
- Wolsey, Cardinal, 81
-
- Woodbury, Roman Occupation of, 31
-
- —— Hill, 287
-
- Woodyates, 5, 34
-
- Woolland, 108
-
- Wool Manor House, 288
-
- Wor Barrow, 21
-
- Worth “Club walking day,” 51
-
- Worth Matravers Church, 192, 193
-
- Wordsworth at Racedown, 278, 291
-
- Wren, Sir Christopher, 176
-
- Wyke Regis, 160, 181, 232
-
- Wyndham, Colonel Francis, 11
-
-
- Young, Edward, 275
-
-
- Zouche, Elizabeth, last Abbess of Shaftesbury, 245
-
-
-Bemrose & Sons Limited, Derby and London
-
-
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-
-Selected from the Catalogue of BEMROSE & SONS Ltd.
-
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-_Memorials of the Counties of England._
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-MEMORIALS OF OLD OXFORDSHIRE.
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- “This beautiful book contains an exhaustive history of ‘the wondrous
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-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] One of these was the Rev. Mr. Bravel, Rector of Compton Abbas.
-
-[2] _Proceedings of the Dorset Nat. Hist. and Antiquarian Field Club_,
-vol. v., p. 99.
-
-[3] _The Dynasts_, part i., p. 179.
-
-[4] _Excavations in Cranborne Chase_, by Lieut.-General Pitt-Rivers,
-F.R.S., vol. ii., p. 62.
-
-[5] _Excavations in Cranborne Chase_, by Lieut.-General Pitt-Rivers,
-vol. iv., pp. 62-100.
-
-[6] _Excavations in Cranborne Chase_, by Lieut.-General Pitt-Rivers,
-vol. iv., p. 144.
-
-[7] _Jour. of the Anthropolog. Inst._, vol. xxxii., p. 373.
-
-[8] _Guide to Antiquities of Bronze Age in Brit. Mus._, by C. H. Read,
-F.S.A., p. 45.
-
-[9] _Proceedings Dorset Nat. Hist. and Antiquarian Field Club_, vol.
-xxvi., p. 18.
-
-[10] _British Barrows_, by Greenwell and Rolleston, p. 81.
-
-[11] _Celtic Tumuli of Dorset_, by Charles Warne, F.S.A., p. 37.
-
-[12] _Ibid._, p. 18.
-
-[13] _Proceedings of Dorset Nat. Hist. and Antiquarian Field Club_,
-vol. xxvi., p. 15.
-
-[14] _Ibid._, p. 10.
-
-[15] Pronounced U-ern or You-ern.
-
-[16] “The Levelled Churchyard,” in _Poems of the Past and Present_.
-
-[17] The heads of religious houses, being landowners, suffered
-financially, as other landowners did, from the great increase in wages
-that farm labourers were able to demand, because so many labourers
-having died, the supply fell far short of the demand.
-
-[18] Showing the horned head dress and gown, the whole almost identical
-in outline and size with the Alyanora Pollard effigy, 1430, at Bishop’s
-Nympton, Devon.
-
-[19] Extract from the Stratton Churchwardens’ Account, 1753, April
-26th—“Two brasses not wey’d at 7d. p. pound sopos’d to wey 12 pound
-they wey’d but 9 lbs. 0.5.3.” There are no brasses at Stratton now.
-
-[20] According to tradition, a Knight of Malta.
-
-[21] This James Russell was the father of John Russell of Berwick,
-K.G., created Baron Russell of Cheneys, 1538-9, and Earl of Bedford,
-1550.
-
-[22] A coffin chalice and paten have, within recent years, been
-discovered at Milton Abbey and Abbotsbury.
-
-[23] One of these Norman fragments was sent in 1904, as a relic, to the
-parish church of Milton, near Boston, Massachusetts. The American town
-of Milton, incorporated in 1662, was named after Milton, in Dorset, and
-the crest on its corporate seal is a reproduction of the west front of
-Milton Abbey (see illustration at the end of this chapter).
-
-[24] It is curious that the first Abbot and the last Abbot of Milton
-should have become bishops, while none of the intervening abbots were
-raised to the episcopate. It is true that in 1261 William de Taunton,
-Abbot of Milton, was elected to the bishopric of Winchester, but he
-desisted from his right. A Milton monk, however, in 1292, filled the
-See of Salisbury (Nicholas Longspée); and Thomas Jan, a native of
-Milton, became Bishop of Norwich in 1499.
-
-[25] In the thirteenth century seal of the Abbey “the Church of
-Midelton” is also represented with three spires.
-
-[26] See Dorset Nat. Hist. and Antiquarian Field Club’s _Proceedings_,
-vol. xxvi., 201 ff.
-
-[27] This inscription is discussed in the Dorset Nat. Hist. and
-Antiquarian Field Club’s _Proceedings_, vol. xxv., 191 ff. It announces
-an indulgence to those passers-by who pray for the soul of the deceased
-abbot (possibly William de Stokes, who died in 1256).
-
-[28] A full description of these brasses appeared in _The Antiquary_
-for March, 1904.
-
-[29] A full account of this incident and of the bequest appears in
-Heath and Prideaux’s _Some Dorset Manor Houses_, pp. 199, 200.
-
-[30] In connection with the glass in the windows of Milton Abbey, it
-may be of interest to add the tradition that John Milton “planned” his
-_Il Penseroso_ at Milton, and that the following lines in the poem are
-supposed to have been suggested to him by the Abbey Church:
-
- But let my due feet never fail
- To walk the studious cloister’s pale,
- And love the high embowèd roof
- With antic pillars massy proof,
- And storied windows richly dight
- Casting a dim religious light;
- There let the pealing organ blow,
- To the full voicèd quire below,
- In service high and anthems clear
- As may with sweetness, through mine ear,
- Dissolve me into ecstasies,
- And bring all heav’n before mine eyes.
-
-
-[31] A full description of this glass (_temp._ Henry VII.) appeared in
-_The Antiquary_ for May, 1907.
-
-[32] A full description of these burial relics appeared in _The
-Antiquary_ for July, 1905.
-
-[33] It is possible that Athelstan found a Celtic sanctuary at Milton
-dedicated to these two Celtic bishops, and retained the dedications
-for his new minster in order to conciliate the vanquished race. Such a
-graceful act would be quite in keeping with the King’s imperial maxim:
-“_Gloriosus regem facere quam regem esse_.”
-
-[34] This thirteenth century inscription is discussed in the Dorset
-Nat. Hist. and Antiquarian Field Club’s _Proceedings_, vol. xxv., 187
-ff. One wonders if this indulgence was granted by Robert Kilwarby,
-Archbishop of Canterbury, on the occasion of his visit to Milton Abbey
-in 1277. The indulgence was offered, presumably, to those who would
-contribute to the fabric fund of the chapel.
-
-[35] A full account of Liscombe appeared in the Dorset Nat. Hist. and
-Antiquarian Field Club’s _Proceedings_, vol. xxvi., 1 ff.
-
-[36] The loneliness of Holworth has also been remarked upon by Thomas
-Hardy in his smuggling story, “The Distracted Preacher” (_Wessex
-Tales_). Such a lonely spot, with its under-cliff sheltered by “White
-Nose”—the great white promontory jutting like an enormous Wellington
-nose into the sea—naturally attracted smugglers, who, as tradition
-says, hid their goods in the tower of the neighbouring parish church
-of Owermoigne. In this church there is an interesting inscription
-recording the will of “Adam Jones of Holworth, in the parish of
-Abbotsmilton” (_sic_), 1653.
-
-[37] See Mary Craven’s _Famous Beauties of Two Reigns_, pp. 141-151.
-
-[38] See _Old Milton_, and Dorset Nat. Hist. and Antiquarian Field
-Club’s _Proceedings_, vol. xxv., 1 ff.
-
-[39] Zanchy Harvyn, grocer, of “Abby Milton,” was the second tradesman
-in Dorset to issue a “token” (1651).
-
-[40] See _Milton Abbey Marriage Registers_, in Phillimore’s “Dorset”
-series. But during the years 1657-8 the banns of some of the more
-zealous church-people were published in the church.
-
-[41] See Alfred Pope’s _The Old Stone Crosses of Dorset_, pp. 69-71.
-
-[42] See _Milton Abbey and its School_, chap. ii.
-
-[43] See Broadley and Bartelot’s _The Three Dorset Captains at
-Trafalgar_, p. 124.
-
-[44] During Hutchins’ residence at Milton, the Lord of the Manor (Mr.
-Jacob Bancks, M.P.) employed him to make some antiquarian researches
-concerning Sir John Tregonwell; and while making these researches
-Hutchins conceived the idea of writing a book on the antiquities of
-Dorset. He began to collect materials, and at Milton laid the plan
-of his monumental history. His wife, Ann Stephens, is described in
-the Melcombe Bingham marriage registers as belonging to the parish of
-Milton.
-
-[45] This fight between squire and people recalls Thomas Hardy’s
-allusion, in _The Woodlanders_, to “Middleton Abbey” as being a place
-where one might gain strength, “particularly strength of mind.”
-
-[46] A full account of these “ruins” appeared in the Dorset Nat. Hist.
-and Antiquarian Field Club’s _Proceedings_, vol. xxvi., 195 ff.
-
-[47] “The Abbot at incredible expense is now restoring the monastery
-most gloriously.”
-
-[48] Engraved in Oliver’s _Monasticon Diocesis Exoniensis_.
-
-[49] The writer has used, among other books, the _Guides_ of Savage and
-Young, Mrs. Frampton’s _Journal_, and his brother Mr. H. J. Moule’s
-_Old Dorset_ and _Dorchester Antiquities_.
-
-[50] One part of that house is the oldest piece of inhabited building
-in the borough.
-
-[51] Spring, 1907.
-
-[52] On the site of this chapel Mr. Ellis dug up some beautiful pieces
-of fourteenth-century Gothic work.
-
-[53] This bridge was finished in 1824, at a cost of £20,000.
-
-[54] “The Problem of Lynchets,” Dorset Nat. Hist. and Antiquarian Field
-Club’s _Proceedings_, vol. xxiv.
-
-[55] _Jude the Obscure_, p. 249.
-
-[56] This prophecy is thought to have been fulfilled when the son of
-Edmund Tudor, a Welshman, ascended the throne as Henry VII.
-
-[57] This dedication is curious. St. Rumbold was the son of a
-Northumbrian King, and of a daughter of Penda, King of Mercia, born
-at Sutton, in Northamptonshire; he died when three days old, but not
-before he had repeated the Lord’s Prayer and the Apostles’ Creed in
-Latin. This fact gained canonization for him.
-
-[58] This has given the colloquial name of “the Rock” to Shaftesbury.
-Those who live in the town are spoken of as coming from the Rock; those
-who dwell in the villages below it are spoken of as “Side off” the Rock.
-
-[59] The Abbey of Alcester was founded in 1140 by Ralf Boteler, and a
-document exists by which one William le Boteler, of Wem, grants to the
-Abbey 100 shillings per annum, derived from land in the parish of St.
-James, Shaftesbury, to pay for masses for his own soul and that of the
-King (7th year of Henry IV.). This is only a confirmation of a previous
-gift.
-
-[60] _Jude the Obscure_, p. 313.
-
-[61] Of the poet “George Turberville, gentleman,” not much is known.
-He was born at Winterborne Whitchurch, probably before 1530, and died
-after 1594. Besides a book on falconry and numerous translations, he
-wrote a good many occasional poems, though none of great length.
-
-Sir Walter Ralegh, a Devonshire man, was connected with Sherborne, for
-it was here that he and his wife, Elizabeth Throgmorton, settled, and
-in January, 1591-2, had obtained a ninety-nine years’ lease of the
-castle and park. Here he busied himself with building and “repairing
-the castle, erecting a magnificent mansion close at hand, and laying
-out the grounds with the greatest refinement and taste.” The castle now
-occupied by the Digby family is in part the lodge built by Sir Walter,
-and over the central doorway appear his arms, and the date, 1594.
-Before his conviction he settled his estate on his son, but by a flaw
-in the deed James I. took it from him, and granted it to his favourite,
-Carr, Earl of Somerset. It is said that Lady Ralegh asked the King on
-her knees to spare her son’s heritage, but that the King’s only answer
-was, “I maun hae the lond; I maun hae it for Carr.” On Sir Walter’s
-journey to the Tower, he passed in full view of Sherborne, and said,
-motioning with his hands towards the woodlands and the castle, “All
-this was once mine, but has passed away.”
-
-[62] About 1727 one Prior, of Godmanston, a labouring man, declared to
-a company, in the presence of Mr. Hutchins, that he was Mr. Prior’s
-cousin, and remembered going to Wimborne to visit him, and afterwards
-heard that he became a great man.—Hutchins’ _Dorset_.
-
-[63] _Longman’s Magazine_, October, 1884.
-
-[64] The collection of books to which the _History of the World_
-belongs was given to the town in 1686, many years after Prior had left
-Wimborne. See the _Contemporary Review_, May, 1890.
-
-[65] It is probable that Prior’s parents were Nonconformists. We are
-told that before a dissenting chapel was built in the town the people
-met for worship in a barn in the neighbouring hamlet of Cowgrove. To
-this Prior seems to allude in his epistle to Fleetwood Shepherd:
-
- At pure Barn of loud Non-con
- Where with my granam I have gone.
-
-
-[66] He wrote occasional verse, and when Young addressed his third
-satire to Dodington, he received verses from Dodington in return.
-
-[67] Christopher Pitt (d. 1748) was rector of Pimperne, not far from
-Eastbury. He translated the _Æneid_.
-
-[68] At Eastbury he slept on a bed encanopied with peacocks’ feathers,
-“in the style of Mrs. Montague.”—Cumberland’s _Memoirs_.
-
-[69] This was pulled down in 1835, and rebuilt.
-
-[70] Hutchins writes that “the house where Oliver lived seemed to
-accord with Fielding’s description,” and an old woman who remembered
-Oliver said “that he dearly loved a bit of good victuals and a drop of
-drink.”—_History of Dorset._
-
-[71] William Crowe (1745-1829). In 1782, on the presentation of New
-College, he was admitted to the rectory of Stoke Abbot, in Dorset,
-which he exchanged for Alton Barnes, in Wiltshire, in 1787. Lewesdon
-Hill lies near his Dorset benefice. The first edition of _Lewesdon
-Hill_ was published anonymously in 1788.
-
-[72] Thomas Fuller was presented to the rectory of Broadwindsor by his
-uncle, Bishop Davenant. He was ousted at the Rebellion; but he returned
-to it at the Restoration, and held the living until his death in 1661.
-
-[73] At Racedown, Wordsworth finished _Guilt and Sorrow_, composed
-the tragedy called _The Borderers_, and some personal satires which
-he never published. Lastly, he wrote _The Ruined Cottage_, now
-incorporated in the first book of _The Excursion_.
-
-[74] In Wordsworth’s own account, “Towards the close of the first book
-stand the lines that were first written, beginning, ‘Nine tedious
-years,’ and ending, ‘Last human tenant of these ruined walls.’ These
-were composed in 1795 at Racedown; and for several passages describing
-the employment and demeanour of Margaret during her affliction, I
-am indebted to observations made in Dorsetshire, and afterwards at
-Alfoxden, in Somersetshire.”
-
-[75] From an unpublished letter to Wrangham, _The Athenæum_, 8th
-December, 1894, quoted in _The Early Life of Wordsworth_ (1770-1798),
-by Emile Legouis.
-
-[76] It was noteworthy how he would eschew all the evil in newspapers;
-no theft or murder could ever be read to him.—_Life of William Barnes_,
-Leader Scott.
-
-[77] William Barnes (1801-1886) was born at Rushay, in the hamlet
-of Bagber. He was the grandson of John Barnes, yeoman farmer, of
-Gillingham, and the son of John Barnes, tenant farmer, in the Vale
-of Blackmore. (A direct ancestor, John Barnes, was head-borough of
-Gillingham in 1604.) In 1835 he settled at Dorchester, and kept a
-school. In 1847 he was ordained, and lived at Whitcombe, Dorset. In
-1862 he became Rector of Came, where he died.
-
-[78] Thomas Hardy was born at Higher Bockhampton, near Dorchester, on
-June 2nd, 1840. In his seventeenth year he was articled to a Mr. Hicks,
-an ecclesiastical architect of Dorchester, to whom the restoration
-of many of the old South Dorset churches was entrusted. In 1862 he
-went to London, and became an assistant to Sir Arthur Blomfield, R.A.
-In 1874 he married Miss Emma Lavinia Gifford, niece of Dr. Gifford,
-Archdeacon of London, and formerly headmaster of King Edward’s School,
-Birmingham. Before taking up their residence at Dorchester, Mr. and
-Mrs. Hardy lived at Riverside, Sturminster Newton—the “Stourcastle” of
-the novels—and then at Wimborne, and finally settled at “Max Gate,”
-Dorchester, in 1885.
-
-[79] It is noteworthy that sometimes the name of a village or town
-appears in the name of some character living in it, as, for instance,
-Jude Fawley lives in “Marygreen,” which we may identify with the
-village of Fawley, in Hants.; and the name of the schoolmaster of
-“Leddenton” (really the Dorset town of Gillingham) is Gillingham.
-
-[80] Wareham is called Southerton in the earlier editions of _The
-Return of the Native_.
-
-[81] C. G. Harper’s _The Hardy Country_.
-
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