CHAPTER XXVIII.
CHEAPSIDE: CENTRAL.
Grim Chronicles of Cheapside—Cheapside Cross—Puritanical Intolerance—The Old London Conduits—Mediæval Water-carriers—The Church of
St. Mary-le-Bow—"Murder will out"—The "Sound of Bow Bells"—Sir Christopher Wren's Bow Church—Remains of the Old Church—The Seldam—Interesting Houses in Cheapside and their Memories—Goldsmiths' Row—The "Nag's Head" and the Self-consecrated Bishops—Keats' House—Saddler's Hall—A Prince Disguised—Blackmore, the Poet—Alderman Boydell, the Printsellen—His Edition of Shakespeare—"Puck"—The Lottery—Death and Burial.
The Cheapside Standard, opposite Honey Lane,
was also a fountain, and was rebuilt in the reign
of Henry VI. In the year 1293 (Edward I.)
three men had their right hands stricken off here
for rescuing a prisoner arrested by an officer of
the City. In Edward III.'s reign two fishmongers,
for aiding a riot, were beheaded at the Standard.
Here also, in the reign of Richard II., Wat Tyler,
that unfortunate reformer, beheaded Richard Lions,
a rich merchant. When Henry IV. usurped the
throne, very beneficially for the nation, it was at the
Standard in Chepe that he caused Richard II.'s
blank charters to be burned. In the reign of
Henry VI. Jack Cade (a man who seems to have
aimed at removing real evils) beheaded the Lord
Say, as readers of Shakespeare's historical plays
will remember; and in 1461 John Davy had his
offending hand cut off at the Standard for having
struck a man before the judges at Westminster.
Cheapside Cross, one of the nine crosses erected
by Edward I., that soldier king, to mark the restingplaces of the body of his beloved queen, Eleanor
of Castile, on its way from Lincoln to Westminster
Abbey, stood in the middle of the road facing Wood
Street. It was built in 1290 by Master Michael, a
mason, of Canterbury. From an old painting at
Cowdray, in Sussex, representing the procession of
Edward VI. from the Tower to Westminster, an
engraving of which we have given on page 313, we
gather that the cross was both stately and graceful.
It consisted of three octangular compartments, each
supported by eight slender columns. The basement story was probably twenty feet high; the
second, ten; the third, six. In the first niche stood
the effigy of probably a contemporaneous pope;
round the base of the second were four apostles,
each with a nimbus round his head; and above
them sat the Virgin, with the infant Jesus in her
arms. The highest niche was occupied by four
standing figures, while crowning all rose a cross
surmounted by the emblematic dove. The whole
was rich with highly-finished ornament.
Fox, the martyrologist, says the cross was erected
on what was then an open spot of Cheapside.
Some writers assert that a statue of Queen Eleanor
first stood on the spot, but this is very much
doubted. The cross was rebuilt in 1441, and combined with a drinking-fountain. The work was a
long time about, as the full design was not carried
to completion till the first year of Henry VII. This
second erection was, in fact, a sort of a timber-shed
surrounding the old cross, and covered with gilded
load. It was, we are told, re-gilt on the visit of
the Emperor Charles V. On the accession of
Edward VI., that child of promise, the cross was
altered and beautified.
The generations came and went. The 'prentice
who had played round the cross as a newly-girdled
lad sat again on its steps as a rich citizen, in
robes and chain. The shaven priest who stopped
to mutter a prayer to the half-defaced Virgin in the
votive niche gave place to his successor in the
Geneva gown, and still the cross stood, a memory
of death, that spares neither king nor subject.
But in Elizabeth's time, in their horror of imageworship, the Puritans, foaming at the mouth at
every outward and visible sign of the old religion,
took great exception at the idolatrous cross of
Chepe. Violent protest was soon made. In the
night of June 21st, 1581, an attack was made
on the lower tier of images—i.e., the Resurrection, Virgin, Christ, and Edward the Confessor, all
which were miserably mutilated. The Virgin was
"robbed of her son, and the arms broken by which
she stayed him on her knees, her whole body
also haled by ropes and left ready to fall." The
Queen offered a reward, but the offenders were not
discovered. In 1595 the effigy of the Virgin was
repaired, and afterwards "a newe sonne, misshapen (as borne out of time), all naked, was laid
in her arms; the other images continuing broken
as before." Soon an attempt was made to pull
down the woodwork, and substitute a pyramid for
the crucifix; the Virgin was superseded by the goddess Diana—"a woman (for the most part naked),
and water, conveyed from the Thames, filtering
from her naked breasts, but oftentimes dried up."
Elizabeth, always a trimmer in these matters, was
indignant at these fanatical doings; and thinking
a plain cross, a symbol of the faith of our country,
ought not to give scandal, she ordered one to be
placed on the summit, and gilt. The Virgin also
was restored; but twelve nights afterwards she was
again attacked, "her crown being plucked off, and
almost her head, taking away her naked child, and
stabbing her in the breast." Thus dishonoured the
cross was left till the next year, 1600, when it was
rebuilt, and the universities were consulted as to
whether the crucifix should be restored. They
all sanctioned it, with the exception of Dr. Abbot
(afterwards archbishop), but there was to be no
dove. In a sermon of the period the following
passage occurs:—"Oh! this cross is one of the
jewels of the harlot of Rome, and is left and kept
here as a love-token, and gives them hope that
they shall enjoy it and us again." Yet the cross
remained undisturbed for several years. At this
period it was surrounded by a strong iron railing,
and decorated in the most inoffensive manner. It
consisted of only four stones. Superstitious images
were superseded by grave effigies of apostles, kings,
and prelates. The crucifix only of the original
was retained. The cross itself was in bad taste,
being half Grecian, half Gothic; the whole, architecturally, much inferior to the former fabric.
The uneasy zeal of the Puritanical sects soon
revived. On the night of January 24th, 1641, the
cross was again defaced, and a sort of literary contention began. We have "The Resolution of those
Contemners that will no Crosses;" "Articles of
High Treason exhibited against Cheapside Cross;"
"The Chimney-sweepers' Sad Complaint, and
Humble Petition to the City of London for erecting a Neue Cross;" "A Dialogue between the
Cross in Chepe and Charing Cross." Of these
here is a specimen—
Anabaptist. O! idol now,
Down must thou!
Brother Ball,
Be sure it shall.
Brownist. Helpe! Wren,
Or we are undone men.
I shall not fall,
To ruin all.
Cheap Cross. I'm so crossed, I fear my utter destruction
is at hand.
Charing Cross. Sister of Cheap, crosses are incident to
us all, and our children. But what's the greatest cross that
hath befallen you?
Cheap Cross. Nay, sister; if my cross were fallen, I
should live at more heart's ease than I do.
Charing Cross. I believe it is the cross upon your head
that hath brought you into this trouble, is it not?
These disputes were the precursors of its final
destruction. In May, 1643, the Parliament deputed Robert Harlow to the work, who went with
a troop of horse and two companies of foot, and
executed his orders most completely. The official
account says rejoicingly:—
"On the 2nd of May, 1643, the cross in Cheapside
was pulled down. At the fall of the top cross
drums beat, trumpets blew, and multitudes of caps
were thrown into the air, and a great shout of
people with joy. The 2nd of May, the almanack
says, was the invention of the cross, and the same
day at night were the leaden popes burnt (they
were not popes, but eminent English prelates) in
the place where it stood, with ringing of bells and
great acclamation, and no hurt at all done in these
actions."
The 10th of the same month, the "Book of
Sports" (a collection of ordinances allowing games
on the Sabbath, put forth by James I.) was burnt
by the hangman, where the Cross used to stand,
and at the Exchange.
"Aleph" gives us the title of a curious tract,
published the very day the Cross was destroyed:—"The Downfall of Dagon; or, the Taking Down
of Cheapside Crosse; wherein is contained these
principles: 1. The Crosse Sicke at Heart. 2. His
Death and Funerall. 3. His Will, Legacies, Inventory, and Epitaph. 4. Why it was removed.
5. The Money it will bring. 6. Noteworthy, that
it was cast down on that day when it was first
invented and set up."
It may be worth giving an extract or two:—"I am called the 'Citie Idoll;' the Brownists spit
at me, and throw stones at me; others hide their
eyes with their fingers; the Anabaptists wish me
knockt in pieces, as I am like to be this day;
the sisters of the fraternity will not come near me,
but go about by Watling Street, and come in again
by Soaper Lane, to buy their provisions of the
market folks. . . . I feele the pangs of death,
and shall never see the end of the merry month of
May; my breath stops; my life is gone; I feel
myself a dying downwards."
Here are some of the bequests:—"I give my
iron-work to those people which make good swords,
at Hounslow; for I am all Spanish iron and steele
to the back.
"I give my body and stones to those masons
that cannot telle how to frame the like againe, to
keepe by them for a patterne; for in time there
will be more crosses in London than ever there
was yet.
"I give my ground whereon I stood to be a free
market-place.
"JASPER CROSSE, HIS EPITAPH.
'I look for no praise when I am dead,
For, going the right way, I never did tread;
I was harde as an alderman's doore,
That's shut and stony-hearted to the poore.
I never gave alms, nor did anything
Was good, nor e'er said, God save the King.
I stood like a stock that was made of wood,
And yet the people would not say I was good;
And if I tell them plaine, they're like to mee—
Like stone to all goodnesse. But now, reader, see
Me in the dust, for crosses must not stand,
There is too much cross tricks within the land;
And, having so done never any good,
I leave my prayse for to be understood;
For many women, after this my losse,
Will remember me, and still will be crosse—
Crosse tricks, crosse ways, and crosse vanities,
Believe the Crosse speaks truth, for here he lyes.
"I was built of lead, iron, and stone. Some say
that divers of the crowns and sceptres are of silver,
besides the rich gold that I was gilded with, which
might have been filed and saved, yielding a good
value. Some have offered four hundred, some
five hundred; but they that bid most offer one
thousand for it. I am to be taken down this very
Tuesday; and I pray, good reader, take notice by
the almanack, for the sign falls just at this time,
to be in the feete, to showe that the crosse must
be laide equall with the grounde, for our feete to
tread on, and what day it was demolished; that is,
on the day when crosses were first invented and
set up; and so I leave the rest to your consideration."
Howell, the letter writer, lamenting the demolition of so ancient and visible a monument, says
trumpets were blown all the while the crowbars and
pickaxes were working. Archbishop Laud in his
"Diary" notes that on May 1st the fanatical mob
broke the stained-glass windows of his Lambeth
chapel, and tore up the steps of his communion
table.
"On Tuesday," this fanatic of another sort
writes, "the cross in Cheapside was taken down
to cleanse that great street of superstition." The
amiable Evelyn notes in his "Diary" that he himself saw "the furious and zelous people demolish
that stately crosse in Cheapside." In July, 1645,
two years afterwards, and in the middle of the
Civil War, Whitelock (afterwards Oliver Cromwell's
trimming minister) mentions a burning on the site
of the Cheapside cross of crucifixes, Popish pictures,
and books. Soon after the demolition of the cross
(says Howell) a high square stone rest was "popped
up in Cheapside, hard by the Standard," according
to the legacy of Russell, a good-hearted porter.
This "rest and be thankful" bore the following
simple distich:—
"God bless thee, porter, who great pains doth take;
Rest here, and welcome, when thy back doth ache."
There are four views of the old Cheapside cross
extant—one at Cowdray, one at the Pepysian library,
Cambridge. A third, engraved by Wilkinson,
represents the procession of Mary de Medicis, on
her way through Cheapside; and another, which
we give on page 331, shows the demolition of the
cross.
The old London conduits were pleasant gathering places for 'prentices, serving-men, and servant
girls—open-air parliaments of chatter, scandal,
love-making, and trade talk. Here all day repaired
the professional water-carriers, rough, sturdy fellows—like Ben Jonson's Cob—who were hired to supply
the houses of the rich goldsmiths of Chepe, and
who, before Sir Hugh Middleton brought the New
River to London, were indispensable to the citizen's
very existence.
The Great Conduit of Cheapside stood in the
middle of the east end of the street near its junction
with the Poultry, while the Little Conduit was at
the west end, facing Foster Lane and Old Change.
Stow, that indefatigable stitcher together of old
history, describes the larger conduit curtly as
bringing sweet water "by pipes of lead underground from Tyburn (Paddington) for the service
of the City." It was castellated with stone and
cisterned in lead about the year 1285 (Edward I.),
and again new built and enlarged by Thomas
Ham, a sheriff in 1479 (Edward IV.). Ned Ward
(1700), in his lively ribald way describes Cheapside
conduit (he does not say which) palisaded with
chimney-sweepers' brooms and surrounded by
sweeps, probably waiting to be hired, so that "a
countryman, seeing so many black attendants
waiting at a stone hovel, took it to be one of Old
Nick's tenements."
In the reign of Edward III. the supply of water
for the City seems to have been derived chiefly from
the river, the local conduits being probably insufficient. The carters, called "water-leders" (24th
Edward III.), were ordered by the City to charge
three-halfpence for taking a cart from Dowgate or
Castle Baynard to Chepe, and five farthings if
they stopped short of Chepe, while a sand-cart from
Aldgate to Chepe Conduit was to charge three-pence.
The Church of St. Mary-le-Bow, the sound of
whose mellow bells is supposed to be so dear to
cockney ears, is the glory and crown of modern
Cheapside. The music it casts forth into the
troubled London air has a special magic of its
own, and has a power to waken memories of
the past. This chef-d'œuvre of Sir Christopher
Wren, whose steeple—as graceful as it is stately—rises like a lighthouse above the roar and jostle of
the human deluge below, stands on an ecclesiastical
site of great antiquity. The old tradition is that
here, as at St. Paul's and Westminster, was a
Roman temple, but of that there is no proof whatever. The first Bow Church seems, however, to
have been one of the earliest churches built by
the conquerors of Harold; and here, no doubt, the
sullen Saxons came to sneer at the masse chanted
with a French accent. The first church was racked
by storm and fire, was for a time turned into a
fortress, was afterwards the scene of a murder, and
last of all became one of our earliest ecclesiastical
courts. Stow, usually very clear and unconfused,
rather contradicts himself for once about the
origin of the name of the church—"St. Mary de
Arcubus or Bow." In one place he says it was so
called because it was the first London church built
on arches; and elsewhere, when out of sight of this
assertion, he says that it took its name from certain
stone arches supporting a lantern on the top of the
tower. The first is more probably the true derivation, for St. Paul's could also boast its Saxon
crypt. Bow Church is first mentioned in the reign
of William the Conqueror, and it was probably
built at that period.
There seems to have been nothing to specially
disturb the fair building and its ministering priests
till 1090 (William Rufus), when, in a tremendous
storm that sent the monks to their knees, and
shook the very saints from their niches over portal
and arch, the roof of Bow Church was, by one
great wrench of the wind, lifted off, and wafted
down like a mere dead leaf into the street. It does
not say much for the state of the highway that four
of the huge rafters, twenty-six feet long, were driven
(so the chroniclers say) twenty-two feet into the
ground.
In 1270 part of the steeple fell, and caused the
death of several persons; so that the work of
mediæval builders does not seem to have been
always irreproachable.
It was in 1284 (Edward I.) that blood was shed,
and the right of sanctuary violated, in Bow Church.
One Duckett, a goldsmith, having in that warlike
age wounded in some fray a person named Ralph
Crepin, took refuge in this church, and slept in the
steeple. While there, certain friends of Crepin
entered during the night, and violating the sanctuary, first slew Duckett, and then so placed the
body as to induce the belief that he had committed
suicide. A verdict to this effect was accordingly
returned at the inquisition, and the body was interred with the customary indignities. The real circumstances, however, being afterwards discovered,
through the evidence of a boy, who, it appears, was
with Duckett in his voluntary confinement, and had
hid himself during the struggle, the murderers,
among whom was a woman, were apprehended and
executed. After this occurrence the church was
interdicted for a time, and the doors and windows
stopped with brambles.

OLD MAP OF THE WARD OF CHEAP—ABOUT 1750.
The first we hear of the nightly ringing of Bow
bell at nine o'clock—a reminiscence, probably, of
the tyrannical Norman curfew, or signal for extinguishing the lights at eight p.m.—is in 1315
(Edward II.). It was the go-to-bed bell of those
early days; and two old couplets still exist, supposed
to be the complaint of the sleepy 'prentices of
Chepe and the obsequious reply of the Bow Church
clerk. In the reign of Henry VI. the steeple was
completed, and the ringing of the bell was, perhaps,
the revival of an old and favourite usage. The
rhymes are—
"Clarke of the Bow bell, with the yellow lockes,
For thy late ringing, thy head shall have knockes."
To this the clerk replies—
"Children of Chepe, hold you all still,
For you shall have Bow bell rung at your will."
In 1315 (Edward II.) William Copeland, churchwarden of Bow, gave a new bell to the church, or
had the old one re-cast.
In 1512 (Henry VIII.) the upper part of the
steeple was repaired, and the lanthorn and the
stone arches forming the open coronet of the tower
were finished with Caen stone. It was then proposed to glaze the five corner lanthorns and the
top lanthorn, and light them up with torches or
cressets at night, to serve as beacons for travellers
on the northern roads to London; but the idea
was never carried out.
By the Great Fire of 1666, the old church was
destroyed; and in 1671 the present edifice was commenced by Sir C. Wren. After it was erected the
parish was united to two others, Allhallows, Honey
Lane, and St. Pancras,
Soper Lane. As the
right of presentation
to the latter of them
is also vested in the
Archbishop of Canterbury, and that of the
former in the Grocers'
Company, the Archbishop nominates
twice consecutively,
and the Grocers' Company once. We learn
from the "Parentalia,"
that the former church
had been mean and
low. On digging out
the ground, a foundation was discovered
sufficiently firm for
the intended fabric,
which, on further examination, the account
states, appeared to be
the walls and pavement of a temple, or
church, of Roman
workmanship, entirely
buried under the level
of the present street.
In reality, however (unless other remains were found
below those since seen, which is not probable), this
was nothing more than the crypt of the ancient
Norman church, and it may still be examined in the
vaults of the present building; for, as the account
informs us, upon these walls was commenced the
new church. The former building stood about
forty feet backwards from Cheapside; and in order
to bring the new steeple forward to the line of the
street, the site of a house not yet rebuilt was purchased, and on it the excavations were commenced
for the foundation of the tower. Here a Roman
causeway was found, supposed to be the once
northern boundary of the colony. The church was
completed (chiefly at the expense of subscribers)
in 1680. A certain Dame Dyonis Williamson, of
Hale's Hall, in the county of Norfolk, gave £2,000
towards the rebuilding. Of the monuments in the
church, that to the memory of Dr. Newton, Bishop
of Bristol, and twenty-five years rector of Bow
Church, is the most noticeable. In 1820 the spire
was repaired by George Gwilt, architect, and the
upper part of it taken down and rebuilt. There
used to be a large building, called the Crown-sild,
or shed, on the north side of the old church (now
the site of houses in
Cheapside), which was
erected by Edward
III., as a place from
which the Royal
Family might view
tournaments and other
entertainments thereafter occurring in
Cheapside. Originally
the King had nothing
but a temporary
wooden shed for the
purpose, but this falling down, as already
described (page 316),
led to the erection of
the Crown-sild.

THE SEAL OF BOW CHURCH. (See page 338.)
"Without the north
side of this church
of St. Mary Bow,"
says Stow, "towards
West Chepe, standeth
one fair building of
stone, called in record
Seldam, a shed which
greatly darkeneth the
said church; for by
means thereof all the
windows and doors
on that side are stopped up. King Edward
caused this sild or shed to be made, and to be
strongly built of stone, for himself, the queen, and
other estates to stand in, there to behold the
joustings and other shows at their pleasure. And
this house for a long time after served for that use—viz., in the reigns of Edward III. and Richard II.;
but in the year 1410 Henry IV. confirmed the said
shed or building to Stephen Spilman, William
Marchfield, and John Whateley, mercers, by the
name of one New Seldam, shed, or building,
with shops, cellars, and edifices whatsoever appertaining, called Crownside or Tamersilde, situate in
the Mercery in West Chepe, and in the parish of
St. Mary de Arcubus, in London, &c. Notwithstanding which grant the kings of England and
other great estates, as well of foreign countries
repairing to this realm, as inhabitants of the same,
have usually repaired to this place, therein to
behold the shows of this city passing through
West Chepe—viz., the great watches accustomed
in the night, on the even of St. John the Baptist
and St. Peter at Midsummer, the example whereof
were over long to recite, wherefore let it suffice
briefly to touch one. In the year 1510, on St.
John's even at night, King Henry VIII. came to
this place, then called the King's Head in Chepe,
in the livery of a yeoman of the guard, with a
halbert on his shoulder, and there beholding the
watch, departed privily when the watch was done,
and was not known to any but whom it pleased
him; but on St. Peter's night next following he and
the queen came royally riding to the said place,
and there with their nobles beheld the watch of the
city, and returned in the morning."
The Builder, of 1845, gives a full account of the
discovery of architectural remains beneath some
houses in Bow Churchyard:—
"They are," says the Builder, "of a much later
date than the celebrated Norman crypt at present
existing under the church. Beneath the house
No. 5 is a square vaulted chamber, twelve feet by
seven feet three inches high, with a slightly pointed
arch of ribbed masonry, similar to some of those
of the Old London Bridge. There had been in
the centre of the floor an excavation, which might
have been formerly used as a bath, but which was
now arched over and converted into a cesspool.
Proceeding towards Cheapside, there appears to be
a continuation of the vaulting beneath the houses
Nos. 4 and 3. The arch of the vault here is plain
and more pointed. The masonry appears, from an
aperture near to the warehouse above, to be of
considerable thickness. This crypt or vault is
seven feet in height, from the floor to the crown of
the arch, and is nine feet in width, and eighteen
feet long. Beneath the house No. 4 is an outer
vault. The entrance to both these vaults is by a
depressed Tudor arch, with plain spandrils, six feet
high, the thickness of the walls about four feet. In
the thickness of the eastern wall of one of the
vaults are cut triangular-headed niches, similar to
those in which, in ancient ecclesiastical edifices, the
basins containing the holy water, and sometimes
lamps, were placed. These vaultings appear originally to have extended to Cheapside; for beneath
a house there, in a direct line with these buildings
and close to the street, is a massive stone wall.
The arches of this crypt are of the low pointed
form, which came into use in the sixteenth century.
There are no records of any monastery having
existed on this spot, and it is difficult to conjecture
what the building originally was. Mr. Chaffers
thought it might be the remains of the Crown-sild,
or shed, where our sovereigns resorted to view the
joustings, shows, and great marching matches on
the eves of great festivals."
The ancient silver parish seal of St. Mary-leBow, of which we give an engraving on page
337, representing the tower of the church as it
existed before the Great Fire of 1666, is still in
existence. It represents the old coronetted tower
with great exactitude.
The first recorded rector of Bow Church was
William D. Cilecester (1287, Edward I.), and the
earliest known monument in the church was in
memory of Sir John Coventry, Lord Mayor in
1425 (Henry VI.). The advowson of St. Mary-leBow belongs to the Archbishop of Canterbury, and
is the chief of his thirteen peculiars, or insulated
livings.
Lovers of figures may like to know that the
height of Bow steeple is 221 feet 8½ inches. The
church altogether cost £7,388 8s. 7d.
It was in Bow parish, Maitland thinks, that John
Hare, the rich mercer, lived, at the sign of the
"Crown," in the reign of Henry VIII. He was a
Suffolk man, made a large fortune, and left a considerable sum in charity—to poor prisoners, to the
hospitals, the lazar-houses, and the alms-men of
Whittington College—and thirty-five heavy gold
mourning rings to special friends.
Edward IV., the same day he was proclaimed,
dined at the palace at Paul's (that is, Bayhard's
Castle, near St. Paul's), in the City, and continued
there till his army was ready to march in pursuit
of King Henry; during which stay in the City he
caused Walter Walker, an eminent grocer in Cheapside, to be apprehended and tried for a few harmless
words innocently spoken by him—viz., that he
would make his son heir to the Crown, inoffensively
meaning his own house, which had the crown for
its sign; for which imaginary crime he was beheaded in Smithfield, on the eighth day of this
king's reign. This "Crown" was probably Hare's
house.
The house No. 108, Cheapside, opposite Bow
Church, was rebuilt after the Great Fire upon the
sites of three ancient houses, called respectively
the "Black Bull," leased to Daniel Waldo; the
"Cardinalle Hat," leased to Ann Stephens; and
the "Black Boy," leased to William Carpenter, by
the Mercers' Company. In the library of the City
of London there are MSS. from the Surveys of
Wills, &c., after the Fire of London, giving a
description of the property, as well as the names
of the respective owners. It was subsequently
leased to David Barclay, linendraper; and has been
visited by six reigning sovereigns, from Charles II.
to George III., on civic festivities, and for witnessing the Lord Mayor's show. In this house
Sir Edward Waldo was knighted by Charles II.,
and the Lord Mayor, in 1714, was created a baronet
by George I. When the house was taken down
in 1861, the fine old oak-panelled dining-room,
with its elaborate carvings, was purchased entire,
and removed to Wales. The purchaser has
written an interesting description (privately printed)
of the panelling, the royal visits, the Barclay
family, and other interesting matters.
In 1861 there was sold, says Mr. Timbs, amongst
the old materials of No. 108, the "fine old oak-panelling of a large dining-room, with chimneypiece and cornice to correspond, elaborately carved
in fruit and foliage, in capital preservation, 750
fee superficial. "These panels were purchased
by Mr. Morris Charles Jones, of Gunrog, near
Welshpool, in North Wales, for £72 10s. 3d.,
including commission and expenses of removal,
being about is. 8d. per foot superficial. It has
been conveyed from Cheapside to Gunrog. This
room was the principal apartment of the house of
Sir Edward Waldo, and stated, in a pamphlet by
Mr. Jones, "to have been visited by six reigning
sovereigns, from Charles II. to George III., on
the occasion of civic festivities and for the purpose
of witnessing the Lord Mayor's show." (See Mr.
Jones's pamphlet, privately printed, 1864.) A contemporary (the Builder) doubts whether this carving
can be the work of Gibbons; "if so, it is a rare
treasure, cheaply gained. But, except in St. Paul's,
a Crown and ecclesiastical structure, be it remembered, not a corporate one, there is not a single
example of Gibbons' art to be seen in the City of
London proper."
Goldsmiths' Row, in Cheapside, between Old
Change and Bucklersbury, was originally built by
Thomas Wood, goldsmith and sheriff, in 1491
(Henry VII.). Stow, speaking of it, says: "It is
a most beautiful frame of houses and shops, consisting of tenne faire dwellings, uniformly builded
foure stories high, beautified towards the street with
the Goldsmiths' arms, and likeness of Woodmen, in
memorie of his name, riding on monstrous beasts,
all richly painted and gilt." Maitland assures us
"it was beautiful to behold the glorious appearance
of goldsmith's shops, in the south row of Cheapside, which reached from the Old Change to Bucklersbury, exclusive of four shops."
The sign in stone of a nag's head upon the front
of the old house, No. 39, indicates, it is supposed,
the tavern at the corner of Friday Street, where,
according to Roman Catholic scandal, the Protestant bishops, on Elizabeth's accession, consecrated each other in a very irregular manner.
Pennant thus relates the scandalous story:—"It
was pretended by the adversaries of our religion,
that a certain number of ecclesiastics, in their hurry
to take possession of the vacant sees, assembled
here, where they were to undergo the ceremony
from Anthony Kitchen, alias Dunstan, Bishop of
Llandaff, a sort of occasional conformist, who had
taken the oaths of supremacy to Queen Elizabeth.
Bonner, Bishop of London, then confined in prison,
hearing of it, sent his chaplain to Kitchen, threatening him with excommunication in case he proceeded. The prelate, therefore, refused to perform
the ceremony; on which, say the Roman Catholics,
Parker and the other candidates, rather than defer
possession of their dioceses, determined to consecrate one another, which, says the story, they
did without any sort of scruple, and Story began
with Parker, who instantly rose Archbishop of
Canterbury. The simple refutation of this lying
story may be read in Strype's 'Life of Archbishop
Parker.'" The "Nag's Head Tavern" is shown
in La Serre's print, "Entrée de la Reyne Mère
du Roy," 1638, of which we gave a copy on
page 307 of this work.
"The confirmation," says Strype, "was performed
three days after the Queen's letters commissional
above-said; that is, on the 9th day of December,
in the Church of St. Mary de Arcubus (i.e. Maryle-Bow, in Cheapside), regularly, and according to
the usual custom; and then after this manner:—First, John Incent, public notary, appeared personally, and presented to the Right Reverend the
Commissaries, appointed by the Queen, her said
letters to them directed in that behalf; humbly
praying them to take upon them the execution of
the said letters, and to proceed according to the
contents thereof, in the said business of confirmation. And the said notary public publicly read
the Queen's commissional letters. Then, out of
the reverence and honour those bishops present
(who were Barlow, Story, Coverdale, and the
suffragan of Bedford), bore to her Majesty, they
took upon them the commission, and accordingly
resolved to proceed according to the form, power,
and effect of the said letters. Next, the notary
exhibited his proxy for the Dean and Chapter of
the Metropolitan Church, and made himself a party
for them; and, in the procuratorial name of the
said Dean and Chapter, presented the venerable Mr.
Nicolas Bullingham, LL.D., and placed him before
the said commissioners; who then exhibited his
proxy for the said elect of Canterbury, and made
himself a party for him. Then the said notary
exhibited the original citatory mandate, together
with the certificate on the back side, concerning
the execution of the same; and then required all
and singular persons cited, to be publicly called.
And consequently a threefold proclamation was
made, of all and singular opposers, at the door
of the parochial church aforesaid; and so as is
customary in these cases.
"Then, at the desire of the said notary to go on
in this business of confirmation, they, the commissioners, decreed so to do, as was more fully contained in a schedule read by Bishop Barlow, with
the consent of his colleagues. It is too long to
relate distinctly every formal proceeding in this
business; only it may be necessary to add some
few of the most material passages.
"Then followed the deposition of witnesses concerning the life and actions, learning and abilities
of the said elect; his freedom, his legitimacy, his
priesthood, and such like. One of the witnesses
was John Baker, of thirty-nine years old, gent., who
is said to sojourn for the present with the venerable
Dr. Parker, and to be born in the parish of St.
Clement's, in Norwich. He, among other things,
witnessed, 'That the same reverend father was and
is a prudent man, commended for his knowledge of
sacred Scripture, and for his life and manners.
That he was a freeman, and born in lawful matrimony; that he was in lawful age, and in priest's
orders, and a faithful subject to the Queen;' and
the said Baker, in giving the reason of his knowledge in this behalf, said, 'That he was the natural
brother of the Lord Elect, and that they were born
ex unis parentibus' (or rather, surely, ex una parente,
i.e., of one mother). William Tolwyn, M.A., aged
seventy years, and rector of St. Anthony, London,
was another witness, who had known the said
elect thirty years, and knew his mother, and that
he was still very well acquainted with him, and
of his certain knowledge could testify all above
said.
"The notary exhibited the process of the election
by the Dean and Chapter; which the commissioners
did take a diligent view of, and at last, in the conclusion of this affair, the commissioners decreed
the said most reverend lord elected and presently
confirmed, should receive his consecration; and
committed to him the care, rule, and administration, both of the temporals and spirituals of the
said archbishopric; and decreed him to be inducted
into the real, actual, and corporal possession of the
same archbishopric.
"After many years the old story is ventured
again into the world, in a book printed at Douay,
anno 1654, wherein they thus tell their tale. 'I
know they (i.e., the Protestants) have tried many
ways, and feigned an old record (meaning the
authentic register of Archbishop Parker) to prove
their ordination from Catholic bishops. But it
was false, as I have received from two certain
witnesses. The former of them was Dr. Darbyshire, then Dean of St. Paul's (canon there, perhaps,
but never dean), and nephew to Dr. Boner, Bishop
of London; who almost sixty years since lived at
Meux Port, then a holy, religious man (a Jesuit),
very aged, but perfect in sense and memory, who,
speaking what he knew, affirmed to myself and
another with me, that like good fellows they made
themselves bishops at an inn, because they could get no
true bishops to consecrate them. My other witness
was a gentleman of honour, worth, and credit,
dead not many years since, whose father, a chief
judge of this kingdom, visiting Archbishop Heath,
saw a letter, sent from Bishop Boner out of
the Marshalsea, by one of his chaplains, to the
archbishop, read, while they sat at dinner together;
wherein he merrily related the manner how these
new bishops (because he had dissuaded Ogelthorp,
Bishop of Carlisle, from doing it in his diocese)
ordained one another at an inn, where they met
together. And while others laughed at this new
manner of consecrating bishops, the archbishop
himself, gravely, and not without tears, expressed
his grief to see such a ragged company of men
come poor out of foreign parts, and appointed to
succeed the old clergy.'
"Which forgery, when once invented, was so
acceptable to the Romanists, that it was most
confidently repeated again in an English book,
printed at Antwerp, 1658, permissione superiorum,
being a second edition, licensed by Gulielmo
Bolognimo, where the author sets down his story
in these words:—'The heretics who were named
to succeed in the other bishops' sees, could not
prevail with Llandaff (whom he calls a little before
an old simple man) to consecrate them at the "Nag's
Head," in Cheapside, where they appointed to
meet him. And therefore they made use of Story,
who was never ordained bishop, though he bore
the name in King Edward's reign. Kneeling
before him, he laid the Bible upon their heads or
shoulders, and bid them rise up and preach the
word of God sincerely. 'This is,' added he, 'so
evident a truth, that for the space of fifty years no
Protestant durst contradict it.'"
"The form adopted at the confirmation of Archbishop Parker," says Dr. Pusey in a letter dated
1865, quoted by Mr. Timbs, "was carefully framed
on the old form used in the confirmations by
Archbishop Chichele (which was the point for
which I examined the registers in the Lambeth
library). The words used in the consecration of
the bishops confirmed by Chichele do not occur
in the registers. The words used by the consecrators of Parker, 'Accipe Spiritum sanctum,' were
read in the later pontificals, as in that of Exeter,
Lacy's (Maskell's 'Monumenta Ritualia,' iii. 258).
Roman Catholic writers admit that only is essential to consecration which the English service-book
retained—prayer during the service, which should
have reference to the office of bishop, and the
imposition of hands. And, in fact, Cardinal Pole
engaged to retain in their orders those who had
been so ordained under Edward VI., and his act
was confirmed by Paul IV." (Sanders, De Schism.
Angl., 1. iii. 350.)
The house No. 73, Cheapside, shown in our
illustration on page 343, was erected, from the
design of Sir Christopher Wren, for Sir William
Turner, Knight, who served the office of Lord
Mayor in the year 1668–9, and here he kept his
mayoralty.
At the "Queen's Arms Tavern," No. 71, Cheapside, the poet Keats once lived. The second floor
of the house which stretches over the passage
leading to this tavern was his lodging. Here,
says Cunningham, he wrote his magnificent sonnet
on Chapman's "Homer," and all the poems in his
first little volume. Keats, the son of a liverystable keeper in Moorfields, was born in 1795, and
died of consumption at Rome in 1821. He published his "Endymion" (the inspiration suggested
from Lempriere alone) in 1818. We annex the
glorious sonnet written within sound of Bow
bells:—
ON FIRST LOOKING INTO CHAPMAN'S "HOMER."
"Much have I travell'd in the realms of gold,
And many goodly states and kingdoms seen;
Round many western islands have I been,
Which bards, in fealty to Apollo, hold.
Oft of one wide expanse had I been told
That deep-brow'd Homer ruled as his demesne;
Yet did I never breathe its pure serene
Till I heard Chapman speak out loud and bold;
Then felt I like some watcher of the skies
When a new planet swims into his ken;
Or like stout Cortez when with eagle eyes
He stared at the Pacific—and all his men
Look'd at each other with a wild sunrise—
Silent, upon a peak in Darien."
Behnes' poor bald statue of Sir Robert Peel, in
the Paternoster Row end of Cheapside, was uncovered July 21st, 1855. The Builder at the time
justly lamented that so much good metal was
wasted. The statue is without thought—the head
is set on the neck awkwardly, the pedestal is senseless, and the two double lamps at the side are
mean and paltry.
Saddlers' Hall is close to Foster Lane, Cheapside.
"Near unto this lane," says Strype, "but in Cheapside, is Saddlers' Hall—a pretty good building,
seated at the upper end of a handsome alley, near
to which is Half Moon Alley, which is but small,
at the upper end of which is a tavern, which gives
a passage into Foster Lane, and another into
Gutter Lane."
"This appears," says Maitland, "to be a fraternity
of great antiquity, by a convention agreed upon
between them and the Dean and Chapter of St.
Martin's-le-Grand, about the reign of Richard I.,
at which time I imagine it to have been an Adulterine Guild, seeing it was only incorporated by
letters patent of Edward I., by the appellation of
'The Wardens, or Keepers and Commonalty of
the Mystery or Art of Sadlers, London.' This
company is governed by a prime and three other
wardens, and eighteen assistants, with a livery of
seventy members, whose fine of admission is ten
pounds. (fn. 1) At the entrance is an ornamental doorcase, and an iron gate, and it is a very complete
building for the use of such a company. It is
adorned with fret-work and wainscot, and the Company's arms are carved in stone over the gate next
the street."
In 1736, Prince Frederick of Wales, that hopeless creature, being desirous of seeing the Lord
Mayor's show privately, visited the City in disguise. At that time it was the custom for several
of the City companies, particularly for those who
had no barges, to have stands erected in the
streets through which the Lord Mayor passed on
his return from Westminster, in which the freemen
of companies were accustomed to assemble. It
happened that his Royal Highness was discovered
by some of the Saddlers' Company, in consequence
of which he was invited to their stand, which
invitation he accepted, and the parties were so well
pleased with each other that his Royal Highness
was soon after chosen Master of the Company, a
compliment which he also accepted. The City on
that occasion formed a resolution to compliment
his Royal Highness with the freedom of London,
pursuant to which the Court of Lord Mayor and
Aldermen attended the prince, on the 17th of
December, with the said freedom, of which the
following is a copy:—
"The most high, most potent, and most illustrious Prince Frederick Lewis, Prince of Great
Britain, Electoral Prince of Brunswick-Lunenburg,
Prince of Wales, Duke of Cornwall, Duke of
Rothsay, Duke of Edinburgh, Marquis of the Isle
of Ely, Earl of Eltham, Earl of Chester, Viscount
Launceston, Baron of Renfrew, Baron of Snowdon,
Lord of the Isles, Steward of Scotland, Knight of
the most noble Order of the Garter, and one of his
Majesty's most honourable Privy Council, of his
mere grace and princely favour, did the most
august City of London the honour to accept the
freedom thereof, and was admitted of the Company
of the Saddlers, in the time of the Right Honourable
Sir John Thompson, Knight, Lord Mayor, and
John Bosworth, Esq., Chamberlain of the said
City." In his "Industry and Idleness," Hogarth
shows us the prince and princess on the balcony
of Saddler's Hall.

BOW CHURCH, CHEAPSIDE. (From a view taken about 1750.)
That dull poet, worthy Sir Richard Blackmore,
whom Locke and Addison praised and Dryden
ridiculed, lived either at Saddlers' Hall or just
opposite. It was on this weariful Tupper of his
day that Garth wrote these verses:—
"Unwieldy pedant, let thy awkward muse,
With censures praise, with flatteries abuse.
To lash, and not be felt, in thee's an art;
Thou ne'er mad'st any but thy schoolboys smart.
Then be advis'd, and scribble not agen;
Thou'rt fashioned for a flail, and not a pen.
If B—l's immortal wit thou wouldst descry,
Pretend 'tis he that writ thy poetry.
Thy feeble satire ne'er can do him wrong;
Thy poems and thy patients live not long."
And some other satirical verses on Sir Richard
began:—
"'Twas kindly done of the good-natured cits,
To place before thy door a brace of tits."
Blackmore, who had been brought up as an attorney's clerk and schoolmaster, wrote most of his
verses in his carriage, as he drove to visit his
patients, a feat to which Dryden alludes when he
talks of Blackmore writing to the "rumbling of his
carriage-wheels."
At No. 90, Cheapside lived Alderman Boydell,
engraver and printseller, a man who in his time
did more for English art than all the English
monarchs from the Conquest downwards. He was
apprenticed, when more than twenty years old,
to Mr. Tomson, engraver, and soon felt a desire
to popularise and extend the art. His first funds
he derived from the sale of a book of 152 humble
prints, engraved by himself. With the profits he
was enabled to pay the best engravers liberally, to
make copies of the works of our best masters.

NO. 73, CHEAPSIDE (see page 341). (From an old View.)
"The alderman assured me," says "Rainy Day
Smith," "that when he commenced publishing, he
etched small plates of landscapes, which he produced in plates of six, and sold for sixpence; and
that as there were very few print-shops at that
time in London, he prevailed upon the sellers of
children's toys to allow his little books to be put in
their windows. These shops he regularly visited
every Saturday, to see if any had been sold, and
to leave more. His most successful shop was the
sign of the 'Cricket Bat,' in Duke's Court, St.
Martin's Lane, where he found he had sold as
many as came to five shillings and sixpence. With
this success he was so pleased, that, wishing to
invite the shopkeeper to continue in his interest,
he laid out the money in a silver pencil-case;
which article, after he had related the above anecdote, he took out of his pocket and assured me he
never would part with. He then favoured me with
the following history of Woollett's plate of the
'Niobe,' and, as it is interesting, I shall endeavour
to relate it in Mr. Boydell's own words:—
"'When I got a little forward in the world,'
said the venerable alderman, 'I took a whole shop,
for at my commencement I kept only half a one.
In the course of one year I imported numerous
impressions of Vernet's celebrated "Storm," so
admirably engraved by Lerpinière, for which I was
obliged to pay in hard cash, as the French took
none of our prints in return. Upon Mr. Woollett's expressing himself highly delighted with the
"Storm," I was induced, knowing his ability as an
engraver, to ask him if he thought he could produce a print of the same size which I could send
over, so that in future I could avoid payment in
money, and prove to the French nation that an
Englishman could produce a print of equal merit;
upon which he immediately declared that he should
like much to try.
"'At this time the principal conversation among
artists was upon Mr. Wilson's grand picture of
"Niobe," which had just arrived from Rome. I
therefore immediately applied to his Royal Highness the Duke of Gloucester, its owner, and procured permission for Woollett to engrave it. But
before he ventured upon the task, I requested to
know what idea he had as to the expense, and after
some consideration, he said he thought he could
engrave it for one hundred guineas. This sum,
small as it may now appear, was to me,' observed
the alderman, 'an unheard-of price, being considerably more than I had given for any copper-plate. However, serious as the sum was, I bade
him get to work, and he proceeded with all cheerfulness, for as he went on I advanced him money;
and though he lost no time, I found that he had
received nearly the whole amount before he had
half finished his task. I frequently called upon
him, and found him struggling with serious difficulties, with his wife and family, in an upper
lodging in Green's Court, Castle Street, Leicester
Square, for there he lived before he went into
Green Street. However, I encouraged him by
allowing him to draw on me to the extent of
twenty-five pounds more; and at length that sum
was paid, and I was unavoidably under the necessity of saying, "Mr. Woollett, I find we have
made too close a bargain with each other. You
have exerted yourself, and I fear I have gone
beyond my strength, or, indeed, what I ought to
have risked, as we neither of us can be aware of
the success of the speculation. However, I am
determined, whatever the event may be, to enable
you to finish it to your wish—at least, to allow
you to work upon it as long as another twentyfive pounds can extend, but there we must positively stop." The plate was finished; and, after
taking very few proofs, I published the print at
five shillings, and it succeeded so much beyond
my expectations, that I immediately employed Mr.
Woollett upon another engraving, from another
picture by Wilson; and I am now thoroughly convinced that had I continued publishing subjects of
this description, my fortune would have been increased tenfold.'"
"In the year 1786," says Knowles, in his "Life
of Fuseli," "Mr. Alderman Boydell, at the suggestion of Mr. George Nicol, began to form his
splendid collection of modern historical pictures,
the subjects being from Shakespeare's plays, and
which was called 'The Shakespeare Gallery.' This
liberal and well-timed speculation gave great energy
to this branch of the art, as well as employment to
many of our best artists and engravers, and among
the former to Fuseli, who executed eight large and
one small picture for the gallery. The following
were the subjects: 'Prospero,' 'Miranda,' 'Caliban,'
and 'Ariel,' from the Tempest; 'Titania in raptures
with Bottom, who wears the ass's head, attendant
fairies, &c.;' 'Titania awaking, discovers Oberon
at her side, Puck is removing the ass's head from
Bottom' (Midsummer Night's Dream); 'Henry V.
with the Conspirators' (King Henry V.); 'Lear
dismissing Cordelia from his Court' (King Lear);
'Ghost of Hamlet's Father' (Hamlet); 'Falstaff
and Doll' (King Henry IV., Second Part); 'Macbeth meeting the Witches on the Heath' (Macbeth);
'Robin Goodfellow' (Midsummer Night's Dream).
This gallery gave the public an opportunity of
judging of Fuseli's versatile powers.
"The stately majesty of the 'Ghost of Hamlet's
Father' contrasted with the expressive energy of
his son, and the sublimity brought about by the
light, shadow, and general tone, strike the mind
with awe. In the picture of 'Lear' is admirably
portrayed the stubborn rashness of the father, the
filial piety of the discarded daughter, and the
wicked determination of Regan and Goneril. The
fairy scenes in Midsummer Night's Dream amuse
the fancy, and show the vast inventive powers of
the painter; and 'Falstaff with Doll' is exquisitely
ludicrous.
"The example set by Boydell was a stimulus to
other speculators of a similar nature, and within a
few years appeared the Macklin and Woodmason
galleries; and it may be said with great truth that
Fuseli's pictures were among the most striking, if
not the best, in either collection."
"A.D. 1787," says Northcote, in his "Life of
Reynolds," "when Alderman Boydell projected the
scheme of his magnificent edition of the plays of
Shakespeare, accompanied with large prints from
pictures to be executed by English painters, it was
deemed to be absolutely necessary that something
of Sir Joshua's painting should be procured to grace
the collection; but, unexpectedly, Sir Joshua appeared to be rather shy in the business, as if he
thought it degrading himself to paint for a printseller, and he would not at first consent to be
employed in the work. George Stevens, the editor
of Shakespeare, now undertook to persuade him to
comply, and, taking a bank-bill of five hundred
pounds in his hand, he had an interview with Sir
Joshua, when, using all his eloquence in argument,
he, in the meantime, slipped the bank-bill into his
hand; he then soon found that his mode of reasoning
was not to be resisted, and a picture was promised.
Sir Joshua immediately commenced his studies,
and no less than three paintings were exhibited at
the Shakespeare Gallery, or at least taken from that
poet, the only ones, as has been very correctly said,
which Sir Joshua ever executed for his illustration,
with the exception of a head of 'King Lear' (done
indeed in 1783), and now in possession of the Marchioness of Thomond, and a portrait of the Hon.
Mrs. Tollemache, in the character of 'Miranda,' in
The Tempest, in which 'Prospero' and 'Caliban' are
introduced.
"One of these paintings for the Gallery was
'Puck,' or 'Robin Goodfellow,' as it has been
called, which, in point of expression and animation,
is unparalleled, and one of the happiest efforts of Sir
Joshua's pencil, though it has been said by some
cold critics not to be perfectly characteristic of the
merry wanderer of Shakespeare. 'Macbeth,' with
the witches and the caldron, was another, and for
this last Mr. Boydell paid him 1,000 guineas; but
who is now the possessor of it I know not.
"'Puck' was painted in 1789. Walpole depreciates
it as 'an ugly little imp (but with some character)
sitting on a mushroom half as big as a mile-stone.'
Mr. Nicholls, of the British Institution, related to Mr.
Cotton that the alderman and his grandfather were
with Sir Joshua when painting the death of Cardinal
Beaufort. Boydell was much taken with the portrait
of a naked child, and wished it could be brought
into the Shakspeare. Sir Joshua said it was painted
from a little child he found sitting on his steps in
Leicester Square. Nicholls' grandfather then said,
'Well, Mr. Alderman, it can very easily come into
the Shakspeare if Sir Joshua will kindly place him
upon a mushroom, give him fawn's ears, and make
a Puck of him.' Sir Joshua liked the notion, and
painted the picture accordingly.
"The morning of the day on which Sir Joshua's
'Puck' was to be sold, Lord Farnborough and
Davies, the painter, breakfasted with Mr. Rogers,
and went to the sale together. When the picture
was put up there was a general clapping of hands,
and yet it was knocked down to Mr. Rogers for
105 guineas. As he walked home from the sale,
a man carried 'Puck' before him, and so well was
the picture known that more than one person,
as they were going along the street, called out,
'There it is!' At Mr. Rogers' sale, in 1856, it
was purchased by Earl Fitzwilliam for 980 guineas.
The grown-up person of the sitter for 'Puck' was
in Messrs. Christie and Manson's room during
the sale, and stood next to Lord Fitzwilliam, who
is also a survivor of the sitters to Sir Joshua.
The merry boy, whom Sir Joshua found upon his
door-step, subsequently became a porter at Elliot's
brewery, in Pimlico."
In 1804, Alderman Boydell applied through his
friend, Sir John W. Anderson, to the House of
Commons, for leave to dispose of his paintings and
drawings by lottery. In his petition he described
himself, with modesty and pathos, as an old man of
eighty-five, anxious to free himself from debts which
now oppressed him, although he, with his brethren,
had expended upwards of £350,000 in promoting
the fine arts. Sixty years before he had begun to
benefit engraving by establishing a school of English
engravers. At that time the whole print commerce
of England consisted in importing a few foreign
prints (chiefly French) "to supply the cabinets of
the curious." In time he effected a total change in
this branch of commerce, "very few prints being now
imported, while the foreign market is principally
supplied with prints from England." By degrees,
the large sums received from the Continent for
English plates encouraged him to attempt also an
English school of pictorial painting, the want of
such a school having been long a source of opprobrium among foreign writers on England. The
Shakespeare Gallery was sufficient to convince the
world that English genius only needed encouragement to obtain a facility, versatility, and independence of thought unknown to the Italian, Flemish, or
French schools. That Gallery he had long hoped to
have left to a generous public, but the recent Vandalic revolution in France had cut up his revenue
by the roots, Flanders, Holland, and Germany being
his chief marts. At the same time he acknowledged
he had not been provident, his natural enthusiasm
for promoting the fine arts having led him after each
success to fly at once to some new artist with the
whole gains of his former undertaking. He had too
late seen his error, having increased his stock of
copper-plates to such a heap that all the print-sellers
in Europe (especially in these unfavourable times)
could not purchase them. He therefore prayed for
permission to create a lottery, the House having
the assurance of the even tenor of a long life "that
it would be fairly and honourably conducted."
The worthy man obtained leave for his lottery,
and died December 11, a few days after the last
tickets were sold. He was buried with civic state
in the Church of St. Olave, Jewry, the Lord Mayor,
aldermen, and several artists attending. Boydell
was very generous and charitable. He gave
pictures to adorn the City Council Chamber, the
Court Room of the Stationers' Company, and the
dining-room of the Sessions House. He was also
a generous benefactor to the Humane Society and
the Literary Fund, and was for many years the
President of both Societies. The Shakespeare
Gallery finally fell by lottery to Mr. Tassie, the
well-known medallist, who thrived to a good old
age upon the profits of poor Boydell's too generous
expenditure. This enterprising man was elected
Alderman of Cheap Ward in 1782, Sheriff in
1785, and Lord Mayor in 1790. His death was
occasioned by a cold, caught at the Old Bailey
Sessions. His nephew, Josiah Boydell, engraved
for him for forty years.
It was the regular custom of Mr. Alderman
Boydell (says "Rainy Day" Smith), who was a
very early riser, to repair at five o'clock immediately to the pump in Ironmonger Lane. There,
after placing his wig upon the ball at the top,
he used to sluice his head with its water. This
well known and highly respected character was
one of the last men who wore a three-cornered
hat, commonly called the "Egham, Staines, and
Windsor."