CHAPTER X.
THE NEIGHBOURHOOD OF THE TOWER.
Tower Hill—Some of its Ghastly Associations—A Great Whig Downfall—Perambulating the "Bounds" of the Tower Liberties—Famous Residents on Tower Hill—Lady Raleigh—William Penn—Otway and the Story of his Death—Felton's Knife—Old Houses—Spenser—Great
Tower Street and Peter the Great—Bakers' Hall—Thomson the Poet—A Strange Corruption of a Name—Seething Lane—The Old Navy
Office.
Of Tower Hill, that historical and blood-stained
ground to the north-west of the Tower, old Stow
says:—"Tower Hill, sometime a large plot of
ground, now greatly straitened by encroachments
(unlawfully made and suffered) for gardens and
houses. Upon this hill is always readily prepared,
at the charges of the City, a large scaffold and
gallows of timber, for the execution of such
traitors or transgressors as are delivered out of the
Tower, or otherwise, to the Sheriffs of London,
by writ, there to be executed."
Hatton, in 1708 (Queen Anne) mentions Tower
Hill as "a spacious place extending round the west
and north parts of the Tower, where there are many
good new buildings, mostly inhabited by gentry and
merchants." The tide of fashion and wealth had not
yet set in strongly westward. An old plan of the
Tower in 1563 shows us the posts of the scaffold
for state criminals, a good deal north of Tower
Street and a little northward of Legge Mount,
the great north-west corner of the Tower fortifications. In the reign of Edward IV. the scaffold
was erected at the charge of the king's officers, and
many controversies arose at various times, about
the respective boundaries, between the City and
the Lieutenant of the Tower.
On the Tower Hill scaffold perished nearly all
the prisoners whose wrongs and sorrows and
crimes we have glanced at in a previous chapter;
the great Sir Thomas More, the wise servant of a
corrupt king; the unhappy old Countess of Salisbury, who was chopped down here as she ran
bleeding round the scaffold; Bishop Fisher, a
staunch adherent to the old faith; that great subverter of the monks, Cromwell, Earl of Essex; and
the poet Earl of Surrey—all victims of the same
bad monarch.
Then in the reigns of Edward VI. and Mary, in
ghastly procession after the masked headsman,
paced Lord Seymour; in due course followed the
brother who put him to death, the proud Protector Somerset; then that poor weak young noble,
Lady Jane Grey's husband, Lord Guildford Dudley;
and Sir Thomas Wyat, the rash objector to a
Spanish marriage.
The victims of Charles's folly followed in due
time—the dark and arrogant Strafford, who came
like a crowned conqueror to his death; then his
sworn ally, the narrow-browed, fanatical Laud.
The Restoration Cavaliers took their vengeance
next, and to Tower Hill passed those true patriots,
Stafford, insisting on his innocence to the very
last, and Algernon Sydney. The unlucky Duke
of Monmouth was the next to lay his misguided
head on the block.
Blood ceased to flow on Tower Hill after this
execution till the Pretender's fruitless rebellions of
1715 and 1745 brought Derwentwater, "the pride
of the North," Kilmarnock, Balmerino, and wily
old Lovat to the same ghastly bourne. In 1746
Mr. Radcliffe (Lord Derwentwater's brother) was
executed here. He had been a prisoner in the
Tower for his share in the rebellion of 1715, but
succeeded in escaping. He was identified by the
barber, who thirty-one years before had shaved him
when in prison.
Chamberlain Clarke, who died in 1831, aged
ninety-two (a worthy old City authority, who has
been mentioned by us in a previous chapter), well
remembered (says Mr. Timbs), as a child, seeing the
executioner's axe flash in the sunshine as it fell
upon the neck of Mr. Radcliffe. At the last execution which took place on Tower Hill, that of Lord
Lovat, April 9, 1747, a scaffolding, built near
Barking Alley, fell, with nearly 1,000 persons on
it, and twelve of them were killed. Lovat, in
spite of his awful situation, seemed to enjoy the
downfall of so many Whigs.
There is a passage in Henry VIII.—a play considered by many persons to be not Shakespeare's
writing at all, and by some others only partly his
work—that has much puzzled those wise persons,
the commentators. The author of the play, which
is certainly not quite in the best Shakespearian
manner, makes a door-porter say, talking of a
mob, "These are the youths that thunder at a
play-house and fight for bitten apples: that no
audience but the tribulation of Tower Hill or the
limbs of Limehouse are able to endure." This
passage seems to imply that there were low theatres
in Shakespeare's time near Tower Hill and Limehouse, or did he refer to the crowd at a Tower
Hill execution, and to the mob of sailors at the
second locality?

LORD LOVAT. (From Hogarth's Portrait.)
A curious old custom is still perpetuated in this
neighbourhood. The "bounds" of the Tower
Liberties are perambulated triennially, when, after
service in the church of St. Peter, a procession is
formed upon the parade, including a headsman
bearing the axe of execution; a painter, to mark
the bounds; yeomen, warders, with halberds; the
Deputy Lieutenant and other officers of the Tower,
&c. The boundary-stations are painted with a
red "broad arrow" upon a white ground, while
the chaplain of St. Peter's repeats, "Cursed be he
who removeth his neighbour's landmark." Another
old custom of lighting a bonfire on Tower Hill, on
the 5th of November, was suppressed in the year
1854.
The traditions of Tower Hill, apart from the
crimson block and the glittering axe, are few, but
what there are, are interesting. Poor suffering Lady
Raleigh, when driven from the side of her
imprisoned husband, as James began to drive him
faster towards death, lodged on Tower Hill with
her son who had been born in the Tower.
William Penn, the founder of Pennsylvania, was
born on Tower Hill, October 14, 1644. The house
of his father, the Admiral, was "on the east side,
within a court adjoining to London Wall." Penn,
in one of his works, states that "the Lord first
appeared to him about the twelfth year of his age,
and that between that and the fifteenth the Lord
visited him and gave him divine impressions of
himself." It was when he was at school at Chigwell, in Essex, that one day, alone in his chamber, he
was suddenly "surprised with an inward comfort,
and surrounded by a visible external glory, that convinced the youth's excited imagination that he had
obtained the seal of immortality. He had, however, already been deeply impressed by the preaching of a Quaker. In old age this good and wise
man fell into difficultied, and acually had to mortgage the province of Pennsylvania for £6,600. He
died at Beaconsfield, in Buckinghamshire, in 1718.

AN OLD HOUSE ON LITTLE TOWER HILL. (From a Drawing by Smith made in 1792.)
That tender-hearted poet, Thomas Otway, the
friend of Shadwell—whose poverty and wretchedness Rochester cruelly sneered at in his "Session of
the Poets," and whose nature and pathos Dryden
praised, though somewhat reluctantly—died, as it
is generally thought, of starvation, at the "Bull"
public-house on Tower Hill. He was only thirtyfour when he died. The stories of his untimely
death differ. Dr. Johnson's version is that, being
naked and in a rage of hunger, he went to a neighbouring coffee-house, and asked a gentleman for a
shilling. The gentleman generously gave the
starving poet a guinea, on which Otway rushed
into the nearest baker's, bought a roll, and, eating
with ravenous haste, was choked with the first
mouthful. But Spence was told by Dennis, the
well-known critic, and the great enemy of Pope,
that an intimate friend of Otway's, being shot by
an assassin, who escaped to Dover, en route for
France, Otway pursued him. In the excitement
he drank cold water, and brought on a fever,
which carried him off. Goldsmith, in the "Bee,"
tells a story of Otway having about him when he
died a copy of a tragedy which he had sold to
Bentley the bookseller for a mere trifle. It was
never recovered, but in 1719 a spurious forgery of
it appeared.
It was at a cutler's shop on Tower Hill that
Felton, that grim fanatic, who believed himself an
instrument of Heaven, bought the broad, sharp, tenpenny hunting-knife with which he gave the heavy
and sure blow at Portsmouth, that ended the
ambition and plots of the first Duke of Buckingham, the mischievous favourite of Charles I.
That admirable antiquarian artist, Smith, has
engraved a view of a curious old house on Tower
Hill, enriched with medallions evidently of the
time of Henry VIII. (probably terra cotta), like
those, says Peter Cunningham, at old Whitehall and
Hampton Court. It was not unusual, when coins
were found upon a particular spot whereon a house
was to be erected, to cause such coins to be represented in plaster on the house. A reproduction
of this engraving will be found on the previous
page.
In Postern Row, the site of the old postern gate
at the south-eastern end of the City wall, used,
says Timbs, to be the old rendezvous for enlisting
soldiers and sailors, and for arranging the iniquitous
press-gangs to scour Wapping and Ratcliff Highway. The shops here are hung with waterproof
coats, sou'-westers, and other articles of dress; and
the windows are full of revolvers, quadrants, compasses, ship's biscuits, &c., to attract sailors.
At the south-west corner of Tower Hill is Tower
Docks, where luckless Sir Walter Raleigh, in disguise, after his escape from the Tower in 1618,
took boat for Tilbury. That most poetical of all
our poets, Edmund Spenser, was born near Tower
Hill, in 1552. Very little is known of his parentage,
but though poor, it must have been respectable, as
he was sent at sixteen to Pembroke College, Cambridge, as a humble student or sizar. He dedicated
one of his early poems to Sir Philip Sidney, that
star of Elizabethan knighthood, and began his
career by going to Ireland (a country whose wild
people he often sketches in his "Fairy Queen"),
as secretary to Lord Grey of Wilton, the viceroy.
He is said to have there commenced his "Fairy
Queen," urged on by Sir Walter Raleigh. He seems
to have spent about seventeen years in that Patmos,
and returned to London poor and heart-broken,
having had his castle burnt down, and his infant
child destroyed in the fire. He was buried in
Westminster Abbey, at the expense of the Earl of
Essex. The poems of Spenser furnished many
suggestions to Shakespeare, who probably derived
from them the story of King Lear, and some of
the most beautiful of his heroine's names. Spenser
himself drew his inspiration from the Italian poets.
The second Duke of Buckingham used often to
visit in disguise, in his days of political intrigue, a
poor astrologer, who drew horoscopes, near Tower
Hill. Science was then making great advances,
thanks to the inductive system introduced by Bacon;
but even Newton practised alchemy, and witches
were still burnt to death.
The parishes and liberties now called the Tower
Hamlets, and since 1832 returning two members to
the House of Commons, included Hackney, Norton
Folgate, Shoreditch, Spitalfields, Whitechapel, East
Smithfield, St. Katherine's, Wapping, Ratcliff, Shadwell, Limehouse, Poplar, Blackwall, Bromley, Old
Ford, Mile End, Bethnal Green, &c. An alteration
was effected by the Reform Bill of 1867, when
Hackney was made a separate electoral district,
returning two members to Parliament.
Great Tower Street has not many traditions to
boast of, though sailors and Tower warders have
haunted it for centuries. Its two main antiquarian
heroes are the Earl of Rochester and that noble
savage, Peter the Great. One of this mad earl's
maddest freaks brought him to Tower Street.
While in disgrace at court, we believe for his bitter
satire on Charles II., called the "History of the
Insipids," he robed and bearded himself as an
Italian quack or mountebank physician, and under
the name of Alexander Bendo, set up at a goldsmith's house, next door to the "Black Swan," in
Tower Street, where he advertised that he was
sure to be seen "from three of the clock in the
afternoon till eight at night." His biographer,
Bishop Burnet, mentions this; and it is said that
the earl surprised his patients by the knowledge of
court secrets he displayed.
The second story of Great Tower Street relates
to the true founder of the Russian Empire. This
extraordinary man, whose strong shoulder helped
his country out of the slough of ignorance and
obscurity, was born in 1672, and visited Holland
in 1698, to learn the art of shipbuilding, having
resolved to establish a Russian navy. Having
worked among the Dutch as a common labourer,
he finally came to England for four months, to visit
our dockyards and perfect himself in ship-building.
While in England he lived alternately in Buckingham Street, Strand (bottom house on the left-hand
side), and Evelyn's house at Deptford. After a
hard day's work with adze and saw, the young
Czar, who drank like a boatswain, used to resort to
a public-house in Great Tower Street, and smoke
and drink ale and brandy, almost enough to float
the vessel he had been helping to construct. "The
landlord," says Barrow, Peter's biographer, "had
the Czar of Muscovy's head painted and put up
for his sign, which continued till the year 1808,
when a person of the name of Waxel took a fancy
to the old sign, and offered the then occupier of
the house to paint him a new one for it. A copy
was accordingly made from the original, which
maintains its station to the present day as the sign
of the 'Czar of Muscovy.' The house has since
been rebuilt, and the sign removed, but the
name remains. Peter was recalled from his pitchpots and adzes by the news of an insurrection in
Russia, headed by his sister. A year after, he
declared war on that 'madman of the North,'
Charles XII. of Sweden."
Bakers' Hall hides itself with humility in Harp
Lane, Great Tower Street. The "neat, plain
building," as Mr. Peter Cunningham calls it, repaired by Mr. James Elmes, the author of the
"Life of Wren," was (says Stow) some time the
dwelling-house of Alderman Chichley, Chamberlain
of London, who was descended from the celebrated
Chichley, Archbishop of Canterbury, ambassador
from Henry IV. to the Pope. He accompanied
Henry V. to the French war. His life was spent
in a two-handed warfare—against the Pope and
against the Wickliffites. This generous prelate
improved Canterbury Cathedral and Lambeth
Palace, and founded All Souls' College at Oxford.
The London bakers were originally divided into
"white" and "brown" bakers. The chief supply
of bread (says Strype) came from Stratford-le-Bow.
By a somewhat tyrannical edict of the City, the
Stratford loaves were required to be heavier in
weight than the London loaves.
In the uncongenial atmosphere of Little Tower
Street, that fat, lazy, and good-natured poet, James
Thomson, wrote his fine poem of "Summer,"
published in 1727. In a letter to Aaron Hill,
dated May 24, 1726, he says, "I go on Saturday
next to reside at Mr. Watts's academy, in Little
Tower Street, in quality of tutor to a young gentleman there." Thomson was the son of a Roxburghshire clergyman, and was educated for the Church—a profession which, however, he never entered.
He came to London in 1725, and published his
"Winter," a poem whose broadly-painted landscapes remind us of those of Wilson and contemporaneous painters, just as Byron's poems remind
us of Turner. In 1730 Thomson went abroad, as
travelling tutor with the son of Lord Chancellor
Talbot. There was no return to dingy Little
Tower Street for the epicurean poet, who soon
after obtained some Government sinecures, among
others the post of Surveyor-General to the Leeward
Islands, and became patronised by the Prince of
Wales. Thomson's poem of the "Seasons" did
much to foster our national love of Nature, but
the poet's chef-d'œuvre is, after all, his "Castle of
Indolence," a poem full of the poet's idiosyncrasy.
One of the strangest corruptions of the names of
London streets occurs in the Tower precincts. A
place once called "Hangman's Gains," as if built
with the fees of some Tower executioner, should
really have been "Ham and Guienne," for here
(says Strype) poor refugees from "Hammes and
Guynes" were allowed to lodge in Queen Mary's
reign, after Calais and its vicinity had been recovered
from our strong grip by the French.
Seething Lane, Tower Street, running northward
to Crutched Friars, was originally (says Stow)
called Sidon Lane, and in his time there were fair
and large houses there. The old chronicler of
London mentions among the distinguished residents the wily Sir Francis Walsingham, Elizabeth's
principal secretary. This great counter-plotter
against the Jesuits in Spain died April 5, 1590,
and the next night, at ten o'clock, was quietly
buried in Paul's Church. Walsingham's name
occurs perpetually in Elizabethan annals, and no
one by darker or more secret means fought better
for Elizabeth against the dangerous artifices of Mary
Queen of Scots, whose ways were dark indeed.
The garrulous, gallant, and inimitable Pepys was
living in this lane, to be near his work at the Navy
Office adjoining, the very year the Great Fire broke
out. He describes putting his head out of window
at the first alarm, and going quietly to sleep again,
on the 6th of September, about two of the morning,
when his handsome wife called him up and told
him of new cries of fire, it being come to Barking
Church (Allhallows, Barking), "which is at the
bottom of our lane." In Strype's time Seething
Lane had become "a place of no great account,"
but there were still merchants living there.
The old Navy Office in Seething or Sidon
Lane had the chief entrance in Crutched Friars,
and the smaller one in the lane. It stood (says
Cunningham) on the site of a chapel and college
attached to the church of Allhallows, Barking,
which had been suppressed and pulled down in
the year 1548 (Edward VI.). The consecrated
ground remained a garden-plot during the troubles
of Edward's reign, the rebellions of Mary's reign,
and the glorious days of Elizabeth, till at length Sir
William Winter, surveyor of Elizabeth's ships, built
on it a great timber and brick storehouse for
merchants' goods, which grew into a Navy Office.
Cunningham found among the Audit Office enrolments an entry that in July, 1788, the purchase
money of the old Navy Office, £11,500, was
handed over to Sir William Chambers, the architect
of the Government offices in the new Somerset
House.