CHAPTER XLVII.
THE CHARTERHOUSE.
The Plague of 1348—The Origin of the Charterhouse—Sir Thomas More there—Cromwell's Commissioners—Prior Houghton—The Departure of
the Carthusians from London—A Visit from the Grave—Effect of the Dissolution on the Charterhouse Priory—The Charterhouse and the
Howards—Thomas Sutton—Bishop Hall's Letter and its Effect—Sutton's Death—Baxter's Claim defeated—A Letter from Bacon—Settlement of the Charterhouse: its Constitution—Sutton's Will—His Detractors—Funeral Sermon.
In the year 1348 (Edward III.) a terrible pestilence devastated London. The dirt and crowding
of the old mediæval cities made them at all times
nurseries of infectious disease, and when a great
epidemic did come it mowed down thousands.
The plague of 1348 was so inappeasable that it is
said grave-diggers could hardly be found to bury
the dead, and many thousand bodies were carelessly thrown into mere pits dug in the open fields.
Ralph Stratford, Bishop of London, shocked at
these unsanctified interments, in his zeal to amend
the evil consecrated three acres of waste ground,
called "No Man's Land," outside the walls, between
the lands of the Abbey of Westminster and those
of St. John of Jerusalem, at Clerkenwell. He there
erected a small chapel, where masses were said for
the repose of the dead, and named the place
Pardon Churchyard. The plague still raging, Sir
Walter de Manny, that brave knight whose deeds
are so proudly and prominently blazoned in the
pages of Froissart, purchased of the brethren of St.
Bartholomew Spital a piece of ground contiguous
to Pardon Churchyard, called the Spital Croft, which
the good Bishop Stratford also consecrated. The
two burial-grounds, afterwards united, were known
as New Church Hawe.
Stow, in his "Survey," mentions a stone cross
in this cemetery, recording the burial there during
the pestilence of 50,000 persons. In 1361, Michael
de Northburgh, Bishop Stratford's successor, died,
bequeathing the sum of £2,000, for founding and
building a Carthusian monastery at Pardon Churchyard, which he endowed with all his leases, rents,
and tenements, in perpetuity. He also bequeathed
a silver enamelled vessel for the Host and one for
the holy water, a silver bell, and all his books of
divinity. Sir Walter de Manny, in the year 1371,
founded a Carthusian convent, which he called
"The House of the Salutation of the Mother of
God." This he endowed with the thirteen acres
and one rod of land which Bishop Stratford had
consecrated for burial, and, with the consent of the
general of the order, John Lustote was nominated
first prior. Sir Walter's charter of foundation was
witnessed by the Earls of Pembroke, March, Sarum,
and Hereford, by John de Barnes, Lord Mayor, and
William de Walworth and Robert de Gayton, sheriffs.
The order of Carthusians, we may here remind
our readers, was founded by Bruno, a priest in the
church of St. Cunibert, at Cologne, and Canon of
Rheims, in Champagne, in 1080 (William the Conqueror). Bruno, grieved at the sins of Cologne,
withdrew with six disciples to the Chartreuse, a
desert solitude among the mountains of Dauphine.
A miracle hastened the retirement of Bruno. One
of his friends, supposed to be of unblemished life,
rose from his bier, and exclaimed, "I am arraigned
at the bar of God's justice. My sentence is just
now passed. I am condemned by the just judgment of God." Bruno died in 1101, and miracles
soon after were effected by a spring that broke forth
near his tomb.
"Not content," says "Carthusian," "with the
rigorous rule of St. Benedict, the founder imposed
upon the order precepts so severe as to be almost
intolerable, and a discipline so harsh, that it was
long before the female sex could be induced to
subject themselves to such repugnant laws. One
of their peculiarities was, that they did not live in
cells, but each monk had a separate house, in which
were two chambers, a closet, refectory, and garden.
None went abroad but the prior and procurator,
on the necessary affairs of the house. They were
compelled to fast, at least one day in a week, on
bread, water, and salt; they never ate flesh, at the
peril of their lives, nor even fish, unless it was
given them; they slept on a piece of cork, with a
single blanket to cover them; they rose at midnight to sing their matins, and never spoke to one
another except on festivals and chapter days. On
holy days they are together at the common refectory, and were strictly charged to keep their eyes
on the meat, their hands upon the table, their
attention on the reader, and their hearts fixed
upon God. Their laws professed to limit the
quantity of land they should possess, in order to
prevent the luxury and wealth so prevalent among
the other orders. Their clothing consisted of two
hair-cloths, two cowls, two pair of hose, and a
cloak, all of the coarsest manufacture, contrived
so as almost to disfigure their persons. Their
rigorous laws seem to have prevented the increase
of their order, for in the height of their prosperity
they could not boast of more than 172 houses, of
which five only were of nuns."
The London Charterhouse was the fourth house
of the order founded in England, the first being
at Witham, in Somersetshire, where Hugh, the
holy Bishop of Lincoln, was the first prior. The
grants to the new London monastery of the Carthusians were no doubt numerous, as we find,
among others enumerated in the "Chronicles of
the Charterhouse," 260 marks given by Felicia
de Thymelby, in the reign of Richard II., for the
endowment of a monk "to pray and celebrate
the divine offices for the souls of Thomas Aubrey
and the aforesaid Felicia, his wife;" also a grant
of one acre of land in Conduit-shote Field, near
Trillemyle Brook, in the parish of St. Andrew,
Holborn, lying between the pasture-land of the
Convent of Charterhouse, the pasture of St.
Bartholomew's Priory, and the king's highway
leading from Holborn towards Kentish Town.
The prior of St. John, Clerkenwell, also frequently
exchanged lands, and we find the Prior of Charterhouse granting a trental of masses, to the end that
"the soul of Brother William Hulles, the Prior of
the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem, might the
sooner be conveyed, with God's providence, into
Abraham's bosom."
"About the latter part of the fifteenth century,"
says an historian of the Charterhouse, "we find
our convent the home of a future Lord Chancellor
of England; for we read that Sir Thomas More
'gave himself to devotion and prayer, in the
Charterhouse of London, religiously living there
without vow about four years.'"
The Charterhouse had flourished for nearly
three centuries in prosperity, its brethren retaining
a good character for severe discipline and holy
life, when the storm of the dissolution broke upon
them. Three of Cromwell's cruel commissioners
visited the Charterhouse, and their merciless eyes
soon found cause of complaint. In 1534 John
Houghton, the prior, and Humfry Midylmore, procurator, after being sent to the Tower for a month,
were released on signing a certificate of conditional
conformity. The majority of the brethren refused
to subscribe to Henry's supremacy. The exertions,
however, of the Confessor to the Brigettine Convent, at Sion House, gradually led the refractory
monks to subscribe to the king's supremacy. In
April, 1535, the prior, Houghton, whose adhesion
had been received with distrust, was arraigned on
a vague charge of speaking too freely of the king's
proceedings, and he and two other Carthusians,
one a father of Sion, the other the vicar of Isleworth,
were hung, drawn, and quartered at Tyburn. "As
they were proceeding from the Tower to execution,
Sir Thomas More, who was then confined for a
similar offence, chanced to espy them from the window of his dungeon; and, as one longing in that
journey to have accompanied them, said unto his
daughter, then standing there beside him, 'Lo, dost
thou not see, Megg, that these blessed fathers be
now as cheerfully going to their deaths as bridegrooms to their marriage?' Not long after he
followed their steps on his way to the scaffold."
The three heads were exposed on London
Bridge, and the fragments of Prior Houghton's
body were barbarously spiked over the principal
gate of Charterhouse. The prior's fate, however,
only roused the fanatical zeal of the brotherhood,
and the very next month three more monks were
condemned and executed. From the letter of
Fylott, one of the king's assistant commissioners,
we learn that though the Charterhouse monks
claimed to be solitary, there had been found no
less than twenty-four keys to the cloister doors,
and twenty-two to the buttery. The monks plainly
told the commissioners that they would listen to
no preacher who denounced images and blasphemed saints; and that they would read their
Doctors, and go no further.
The monks had not long to rest. In 1537 the
Charterhouse brothers refused to renounce the
Pope by oath, or acknowledge Henry as supreme
head on earth of the English Church. Some of the
order who had previously yielded now refused to
obey, and were at once hurried to prison. The
monastery was then dissolved, and Prior Trafford
at once resigned. The majority of the monks
consented to the surrender, the prior receiving an
annual pension of £20, and the monks £5 each.
Nine out of ten brothers, cruelly handled in Newgate, were literally starved to death. The survivor,
after four years' misery, was executed in 1541.
"According to Dugdale," says "Carthusian,"
"the annual revenues of this house amounted at
the dissolution to £642 0s. 4d., whilst the united
revenues of the nine houses of Carthusians in England were valued at the sum of £2,947 15s. 4¼d.
"Before the final departure of the convent from
London, sundry miracles are said to have been
wrought, and revelations to have been made, urging
the brothers to abide in the faith, and to bear
witness of the truth of the Christian religion at the
expense of their lives. Unearthly lights were seen
shining on their church. At the burial of one of
their saints, when all things appeared mournful
and solemn, a sudden flash of heavenly flame
kindled all the lamps of their church, which were
only lighted on great days; and a deceased father
of the convent twice visited a living monk who
had attended him in his last illness. The narrative of this last pseudo-miracle is given in the
following letter, written by the favoured monk:—
"Item. The same day, at five of the clock at afternoon,
I being in contemplation in our entry, in our cell, suddenly
he appeared unto me in a monk's habit, and said to me, 'Why
do ye not follow our father?' and I said, 'Wherefore?'
He said, 'For he is entered in heaven, next unto angels;'
and I said, 'Where be all our other fathers, which died as
well?' He answered and said, 'They be well, but not so
well as he?' And then I said to him, 'Father, how do you?'
And he answered and said, 'Well enough.' And I said,
'Father, shall I pray for you?' And he said, 'I am well
enough, but prayer, both from you and others, doeth good;'
and so suddenly vanished away.
"Item. Upon Saturday next after, at five of the clock in
the morning, in the same place, in our entry, he appeared
to me again, with a large white beard, and a white staff in his
hand, lifting it up, whereupon I was afraid; and then,
leaning upon his staff, said to me, 'I am sorry that I lived
not till I had been a martyr.' And I said, 'I think that he,
as well as ye, was a martyr.' And he said, 'Nay, Fox,
my lord of Rochester, and our father, was next unto angels
in heaven.' And then I said, 'Father, what else?' And
then he answered and said, 'The angels of peace did lament
and mourn without measure;' and so vanished away."
The remnant of the order sought refuge in
Bruges. Returning in 1555, they were reinstated
at Shene, near Richmond, by Cardinal Pole, but
Elizabeth soon expelled them, and they fled to
Nieuport, in Belgium, where they remained till the
suppression of religious orders by Joseph II., in
1783. One of their chief treasures, an illuminated
Bible, given the Shene monastery by Henry V., was
in existence in the Tuileries in 1847.
The dissolution pressed heavily on the Charterhouse Priory, of which almost all that now remains
is part of the south wall of the nave, incorporated
in the present chapel. When the monasteries became lumber-rooms, stables, and heaps of mere
history materials, Charterhouse was tossed (as
Henry threw sops to his dogs) to John Brydges,
yeoman, and Thomas Hale, groom of the king's
"hales" and tents, as a reward for their care of
Henry's nets and pavilions deposited in the old
monastery. They retained the sacred property for
three years, and then surrendered the grant for an
annual pension of £10. The king then cast this
portion of God's land to Sir Thomas Audley,
Speaker of the House of Commons, from whom it
passed to Sir Edward North, one of the king's
serjeants-at-law, and a privy-councillor in high
favour with the royal tyrant.
"But even he," says one historian, "was not free
from Henry's suspicion and distrust, as the following
anecdote will show:—One morning, a messenger
from the king arrived at Charterhouse, commanding
the immediate presence of Sir Edward at court. One
of North's servants, a groom of the bedchamber,
who delivered the message, observed his master to
tremble. Sir Edward made haste to the palace,
taking with him this said servant, and was admitted
to the king's presence. Henry, who was walking
with great earnestness, regarded him with an angry
look, which Sir Edward received with a very still
and sober carriage. At last the king broke out in
these words: 'We are informed you have cheated
us of certain lands in Middlesex.' Receiving a
humble negative from Sir Edward, he replied, 'How
was it then? did we give those lands to you?'
To which Sir Edward responded, 'Yes, sire; your
Majesty was pleased so to do.' The king, after
some little pause, put on a milder countenance, and
calling him to a cupboard, conferred privately with
him for a long time; whereby the servant saw the
king could not spare his master's service yet. From
this period Sir Edward advanced still higher in the
estimation of the king, and at his death received a
legacy of £300, besides being included among the
sixteen guardians appointed during the minority
of his son, Edward VI. North was compelled to
acknowledge Lady Jane Grey's right to the throne,
but subsequently changed his opinions, and was
one of the first to proclaim the Princess Mary
queen. For his flexibility he was soon after reelected to the Privy Council, and elevated to the
peerage, 17th February, 1554, being then summoned to Parliament by the title of Baron North."
Sir Edward North conveyed Charterhouse to
the Duke of Northumberland; but on the execution of the duke the house was granted again to
Sir Edward North. In 1558, on her journey from
Hatfield to London, Queen Elizabeth was met at
Highgate by the Lord Mayor and corporation, and
conducted to Charterhouse, where she stayed many
days. In 1561 Elizabeth made another visit to
Lord North, and remained with him four days.
This visit is supposed to have crippled this nobleman, who lived in privacy the remainder of his
days, but was, in compensation, appointed Lord
Lieutenant of Cambridgeshire and the Isle of Ely.
Lord North died in 1564; and his son Roger
sold Charterhouse in 1565 to the Duke of Norfolk
(without Pardon Chapel and Whitewell Beach) for
£2,500, and for a further £320 eventually surrendered the rest of the estate.
"Here the duke," says the author of the "Chronicles of the Charterhouse," "resided till the year
1569, when he was committed to the Tower for
being implicated in a conspiracy for the restoration
of Mary Queen of Scots, and for engaging in a
design of espousal between himself and fallen
royalty. From the Tower he was released in the
following year, and allowed to return to the Charterhouse; but he resumed his traitorous idea of marriage, and his papers and correspondence being
discovered in concealment, some under the roof of
his house, and others under the door-mat of his
bedchamber, he was attainted of high treason, and
again incarcerated in the Tower, on the 7th of September, 1571. This unfortunate nobleman suffered
on the scaffold in the year 1572, when the Charterhouse, along with his other estates, escheated to the
Crown. His son Philip, Earl of Arundel, was impeached in 1590, for also favouring Mary, and died
in prison in the year 1595, most probably escaping
by disease a more disgraceful and ignominious
death by the hands of the executioner."
On the death of Mary Queen of Scots, that fair
siren who had been so fatal to the House of Norfolk, Elizabeth generously returned the forfeited
estates to the Norfolk family, Lord Thomas
Howard, the duke's second son, receiving Charterhouse. The Howards flourished better under
King James, who remembered they had assisted
his mother, and he visited Charterhouse for
several days, knighted more than eighty gentlemen
there, and soon after made Lord Howard Earl of
Suffolk. Of this earl, Charterhouse—or Howard
House, as it was now called—was purchased by
that remarkable man, Thomas Sutton, the founder
of one of London's greatest and most permanent
charities.
"Of noble and worthy parentage, this gentleman," says the author of the "Chronicles of the
Charterhouse," "descended from one of the most
ancient families of Lincolnshire, was born at Knaith,
in that county, in the year 1531. His father was
Edward Sutton, steward to the courts of the Corporation of Lincoln, son of Thomas Sutton, servant
to Edward IV.; and his mother, Jane, daughter
of Robert Stapleton, Esq., a branch of the noble
family of the Stapletons of Yorkshire, one of whom
was Sir Miles Stapylton, one of the first Knights of
the Garter, and Sir Bryan Stapylton, of Carleton,
tempore Richard II., also a Knight of the Garter:
'ancestors,' as the learned antiquary, Herne, justly
observes, 'not so low, that his descent should be
a shame to his virtues; nor yet so great, but that
his virtue might be an ornament to his birth.' He
was brought up for three years at Eton, under the
tuition of Mr. Cox, afterwards Bishop of Ely, and
two years in St. John's College, Cambridge. In
1553, however, he removed from Cambridge,
without having taken a degree, and became a
student of Lincoln's Inn. But here he did not
remain long; his desire of travel increasing with
his knowledge, and his principles (he being a
member of the Anglican Church) compelling him
to leave London, he determined to visit foreign
parts. He accordingly departed for Spain, and
having stayed there half a year, passed into Italy,
France, and the Netherlands. He is said to have
taken a part in the Italian wars, and was present at
the sacking of Rome, under the Duke of Bourbon.
He returned to England in the year 1561, and
through a recommendation from the Duke of Norfolk, he became secretary to the Earl of Warwick,
who, 'in consideration of trewe and faithful service
to us done by our well-beloved servant, Thomas
Sutton,' appointed him Master of the Ordnance of
Berwick-upon-Tweed, and granted him an annuity
of £3 6s. 8d. for life. When Lord Westmoreland's
rebellion broke out in the North, the Earl of Warwick created Mr. Sutton Master-General of the
Ordnance in that quarter, a post which he himself
had once held; and it appears that Mr. Sutton himself acted as a volunteer, and commanded a battery
at the memorable siege of Edinburgh, when that
city held out for the unfortunate Mary. After a
blockade of five weeks, the castle surrendered on
the 28th May, 1573. On his return from Scotland,
Mr. Sutton obtained a lease of the manors of
Gateshead and Wickham, near Newcastle. This
was the source of his immense wealth, for having
'several rich veins of coal,' which he worked with
great advantage, he had become, in 1585, worth
£50,000. The following year he left Newcastle
for London, and assisted against the Spanish
Armada, by fitting out a ship, named after himself,
Sutton, which captured for him a Spanish vessel,
worth £20,000.

THE CHARTERHOUSE, FROM THE SQUARE. (From a View by Grey, published in 1804.)
"He brought with him to London the reputation
of being a moneyed man, insomuch that it was reported 'that his purse returned from the North
fuller than Queen Elizabeth's Exchequer.' He was
resorted to by citizens, so that in process of time
he became the banker of London, and was made a
freeman, citizen, and girdler of the City.
"Mr. Sutton, being now advanced in years, thought
proper to retire from public life. He relinquished
his patent of Master-General of the Ordnance,
and on the 20th of June following he executed
a will, in which he surrendered all his estates in
Essex to the Lord Chief Justice, Sir John Popham, and others (with power of revocation),
in trust, to found an hospital at Hallingbury
Bouchers, in Essex, which place, as will be seen,
he afterwards changed for London; and, 'as a
proof of his trewe and faitheful heart borne to his
dread sovereign, Queen Elizabeth, he bequeathed
Her Majesty £2,000 in recompense of his oversights, careless dealinge, and. fearfulness in her
service, most humbly beseeching her to stand a
good and gracious lady to his poor wife.'" He also
instituted a great many scholarships at Magdalen
and Jesus Colleges, Cambridge; his generous will,
in fact, being one long schedule of benevolent
legacies.

THE EXTERIOR OF THE HALL, CHARTERHOUSE.
Among other curious bequests in the interminable will of this great philanthropist, are the
following:—£100 to the fishermen of Ostend,
and £26 13s. 4d. for mending the highways
between Islington and Newington, &c.
Sutton, who by many is thought to have been
the original of Ben Jonson's Volpone, the Fox, that
insidious legacy-hunter and voluptuary whom the
old poet has painted in the darkest colours, lived
at this time in a house near Broken Wharf, and
between Trig Stairs and Queenhithe, in Thames
Street, an old City palace which had once belonged
to the Dukes of Norfolk. The death of Sutton's wife
seems to have first led the childless millionaire
to project some great and lasting work of charity.
He was already surrounded by a swarm of carrioncrows, both from town and city, while a jackal
pack of advisers followed untiringly at his heels.
A Dr. Willet urged him to leave his money to the
Controversial College at Chelsea, a ridiculous project encouraged by the king, or to assist James I.
in bringing the water of the river Lea to London,
by underground pipes.
The following passage in a letter from Mr. Hall,
of Waltham, afterwards the celebrated Bishop of
Exeter, served to fix the old man's determination:
"The very basest element yields gold. The savage Indian
gets it, the servile apprentice works it, the very Midianitish
camel may wear it; the miserable worldling admires it, the
covetous Jew swallows it, the unthrifty ruffian spends it.
What are all these the better for it? Only good use gives
praise to earthly possessions. Hearing, therefore, you owe
more to God, that He hath given you an heart to do good,
a will to be as rich in good works as great in riches; to be
a friend to this Mammon is to be an enemy to God; but to
make friends with it is royal and Christian. . . . .
"Whatever, therefore, men either shew or promise, happy
is that man that may be his own auditor, supervisor, executor.
As you love God and yourself, be not afraid of being happy
too soon. I am not worthy to give so bold advice; let the
wise man Syrach speak for me:—' Do good before thou
die, and according to thine ability stretch out thine hand,
and give. Defraud not thyself of thy good day, and let not
the portion of thy good desires pass over thee. Shalt thou
not leave thy travails to another, and thy labours to them
that will divide thy heritage?' Or, let a wiser than he
speak, viz., Solomon:—'Say not, To-morrow I will give, if
thou now have it; for thou knowest not what a day will
bring forth.' It hath been an old rule of liberality, 'He
gives twice who gives quickly;' whereas slow benefits argue
uncheerfulness, and lose their worth. Who lingers his receipts is condemned as unthrifty. He who knoweth both,
saith, 'It is better to give than to receive.' If we are of the
same spirit, why are we hasty in the worst, and slack in the
better? Suffer you yourself, therefore, good sir, for God's sake,
for the Gospel's sake, for the Church's sake, for your soul's
sake, to be stirred up by these poor lines to a resolute and
speedy performing of your worthy intentions. And take
this as a loving invitation sent from heaven by an unworthy
messenger. You cannot deliberate long of fit objects for
your beneficence, except it be more for multitude than want;
the streets, yea, the world is full. How doth Lazarus lie at
every door! How many sons of the prophets, in their
meanly-provided colleges, may say, not 'Mors in ollâ,' but
'Fames!' How many churches may justly plead that which
our Saviour bad his disciples, 'The Lord hath need!'"
This letter fixed the wandering atoms of the old
man's intentions. He at once determined to found
a hospital for the maintenance of aged men past
work, and for the education of the children of poor
parents. He bought Charterhouse of the Howards
for £13,000, and petitioned King James and the
Parliament for leave and licence to endow the present hospital in 1609. This "triple good," as
Bacon calls it—"this masterpiece of Protestant
English charity," as it is called by Fuller, was
also "the greatest gift in England, either in Protestant or Catholic times, ever bestowed by any
individual."
Letters patent for the hospital were issued
in June, 1611. Sutton himself was to be first
master; but "man proposes, and God disposes."
On December 12th of the same year Mr. Sutton
died at his house at Hackney. His body was
embalmed, and was borne to a vault in the
chapel of Christchurch, followed by 6,000 persons. The procession of sable men from Dr.
Law's house, in Paternoster Row, to Christchurch,
lasted six hours. There was a sumptuous funeral
banquet afterwards at Stationers' Hall, which was
strewn with nine dozen bundles of rushes, the doors
being hung with black cloth. Camden, as Clarencieux King of Arms, was on duty on the august
occasion. The sumptuous funeral feast in Stationers' Hall we have already mentioned.
But what greediness, envy, and hatred often
lurk under a mourner's cloak! The first act of
Mr. Thomas Baxter, the chief mourner, at his
cousin's funeral, was, as heir-at-law, to claim the
whole of the property, and to attempt to forcibly
take possession of Charterhouse. The case was at
once tried, Sir Francis Bacon, Mr. Gaulter, and
Mr. Yelverton appearing for the plaintiff, and Mr.
Hubbard, Attorney-General, Mr. Serjeant Hutton,
and Mr. Coventry arguing for the hospital. It
was then adjourned to the Exchequer Chamber,
where it was solemnly argued by all the judges
of the land, except the Lord Chief Justice of the
King's Bench, who was indisposed; and, by Sir
Edward Coke's exertions, a verdict was at last
given for the defendants, the executors of Sutton.
The rascally Baxter (although all impugners of the
will were held by Sutton to forfeit their legacies)
received the manor of Turback, in Lancashire,
valued at £350 a year, a rectory worth £100, and
£300 by will.
But the old man's money had still a greedy mouth
open for it. Bacon, that wise but timid man, that
mean courtier and false friend, was base enough to
use all his eloquence and learning to fritter away,
for alien purposes that would please and benefit
the king, the money so nobly left. Hurt vanity
also induced Bacon to make these exertions; his
name not having been included in Sutton's list of
governors. Bacon's subtle letter opening the
question is a sad instance of perverted talent. It
begins—
"May it please your Majesty,—I find it a positive precept
in the old law that there should be no sacrifice without salt;
the moral whereof (besides the ceremony) may be, that God
is not pleased with the body of a good intention, except it
be seasoned with that spiritual wisdom and judgment as it be
not easily subject to be corrupted and perverted; for salt, in
the Scripture, is both a figure of wisdom and lasting. This
cometh into my mind upon this act of Mr. Sutton, which
seemeth to me as a sacrifice without salt; having the
materials of a good intention, but not powdered with any
such ordinances and institutions as may preserve the same
from turning corrupt, or, at least from becoming unsavoury
and of little use. For though the choice of the feoffees be of
the best, yet neither can they always live; and the very
nature of the work itself, in the vast and unfit proportion
thereof, is apt to provoke a misemployment."
King James, though eager enough to lay his
sprawling hands on the old man's money, which he
had left to the poor of London, hardly dared to go
as far as such a confiscation as Bacon had proposed;
but he dropped a polite hint to the governors that
he would accept £10,000, to repair the bridge of
Berwick-upon-Tweed, and this they reluctantly gave.
In 1614 the officers of the hospital were
appointed, and the Rev. Andrew Perue chosen as
master. Sutton's tomb in the Charterhouse Chapel
being now completed, the corpse was carried there
by torchlight on the shoulders of his pensioners
and re-interred, a funeral oration being pronounced
over the grave.
Malcolm gives the following summary of the
property bequeathed in Mr. Sutton's will:—He left
£12,110 17s. 8d. in legacies, and nearly £4,000
was found in his chest. His gold chain weighed
fifty-four ounces, and was valued at £162. His
damask gown, faced with wrought velvet, and set
with buttons, was appraised at £10; his jewels at
£59; and his plate at £218 6s. 4d. The total expenses of his funeral amounted to £2,228 10s. 3d.,
and his executors received, from the time of his
decease to 1620, £45,163 9s. 9d.
At an assembly of governors in 1627, among
other resolutions passed, it was agreed to have an
annual commemoration of the founder every 12th
of December, with solemn service, a sermon and
"increase of commons," as on festival days. It
was also decided that, except "the present physician, auditor, and receiver," no member of the
foundation or lodger in the house should be a
married man.
But the hospital had still another terrible danger
to encounter. King James (who had no more
motion of real liberty than an African king),
at the instigation of his infamous favourite, Buckingham, demanded the revenues of Charterhouse
to pay his army; but Sir Edward Coke, who had
saved the charity before, stepped to the front, and
boldly repelled the king's aggression. The hospital at last reared its head serene as a harbour
for poverty, an asylum for the vanquished in life's
struggle. As an old writer beautifully says, "The
imitation of things that be evil doth for the most
part exceed the example, but the imitation of good
things doth most commonly come far short of the
precedent; but this work of charity hath exceeded
any foundation that ever was in the Christian world.
Nay, the eye of time itself did never see the like.
The foundation of this hospital is opus sine exemplo."
A great school had arisen in London, as rich
and catholic in its charity as Christ's Hospital
itself.
The governors of Charterhouse are nineteen in
number, inclusive of the master. The Queen and
the archbishops are always in the list. The master
was entitled to fine any poor brother 4s. 4d. or
8s. 8d. for any misdemeanour. He was to accept
no preferment in church or commonwealth which
would draw him from his care of the hospital.
The physician was to receive £20 a year, and
not to exceed £20 a year for physic bills. The
poor brethren were not to exceed four score in
number, and were required to be either poor gentlemen, old soldiers, merchants decayed by piracy
or shipwreck, or household servants of the king or
queen.
Herne, in his "Domus Carthusiana," a small 8vo
volume published in 1677, shows that the world
had not been kind to the founder's memory. Herne,
in his preface, says: "Sir Richard Baker, Dr.
Heylin, Mr. Heylin, and Mr. Fuller say little of
him, and that little very full of mistakes; for they
call him Richard Sutton, and affirm he lived a
bachelor, and so by his single life had an opportunity to lay up a heap of money, whereas his dear
wife is with much honour and respect mentioned
in his will. Others give him bad words, say he
was born of obscure and mean parents, and married
as inconsiderable a wife, and died without an heir;
but then, to give some reason for his wealth (having
no time nor desire to inquire into the means of his
growing rich), to cut short the business, they resolve
all into a romantic adventure. They say it was all
got at a lump by an accidental shipwreck, which
the kind waves drove to shore, and laid at his feet,
whilst the fortunate Sutton was walking pensively
upon the barren sands. They report that in the
hulk coals were found, and under them an inestimable treasure, a great heap of fairy wealth. This
I fancy may go for the fable, and his farming the
coal-mines for the moral."
Percival Burrell, the preacher of Sutton's funeral
sermon thus describes the character of the generous
man:—"He was," said the divine, "a great and
good builder, not so much for his owne private as
for the publicke. His treasures were not lavished in
raysing a towre to his own name, or erecting stately
pallaces for his owne pompe and pleasure, but the
sustaining of living temples, the endowing of colledges, the enriching of corporations, the building
causewayes, and repairing of high-wayes. Above
all, the foundation of King James his Hospitall, at
his sole and proper charge, were the happy monuments of his architecture. Surely this was to be a
Megarensis in the best sense—that is, to build for
ever. He did fulfill the letter of the apostle, in
building gold, silver, and precious stones; for he
commanded plate and jewels to bee sold and
converted into money, for the expediting of our
hospitall.
"I shall not mention thousands conferred upon
friends and servants, but these legacies ensuing
merit a lasting memory:—In the renowned University of Camb., to Jesus Colledge, 500 markes;
to Magdalen, 500 pound; for the redemption of
prisoners in London, 200 pound; for the encouragement of merchants, 1,000, to bee lent
gratis unto ten beginners. Nor was his charity
confined within these seas, but that western Troy,
stout Ostend, shall receive 100 pound, for the relief
of the poore, from his fountain. In all these his
piety was very laudable; for in many of these acts
of bounty, his prime repose was in the conscionable
integrity of the priest, in those places where he
sowed his benefits. Certes, this was to build as
high as heaven."
CHAPTER XLVIII.
THE CHARTERHOUSE—(continued).
Archdeacon Hale on the Antiquities of the Charterhouse—Course of the Water Supply—The "Aye"—John Houghton's Initials—The Entrances
—The Master's Lodge—Portraits—Sheldon—Burnet—Mann and his Epitaph—The Chapel—The Founder's Tomb—The Remains of
Norfolk House—The Great Hall and Kitchens—Ancient Monogram—The Cloisters—The School—Removal to Godalming—Experiences
of Life at Charterhouse—Thackeray's Bed—The Poor Brothers—A Scene from "The Newcomes"—Famous Poor Brothers—The
Charterhouse Plays—Famous Carthusians.
In a monograph on the Charterhouse, Archdeacon
Hale, so long holding the post of master, entered
deeply into its antiquities. "The monastery," said
the archdeacon, in the Transactions of the London
and Middlesex Archœological Society for October,
1869, "originally consisted of a number of cells,
which, with the chapel, chapter-house, sacristan's
cell, and little cloister, formed a quadrangle, to
which some other irregular buildings were attached.
The laundry was in the principal court; and near
to it was the sacristan's washing-place, for washing
the sacred utensils and vestments. The waterpipes entered under the cells on the north side of
the quadrangle, and the water was received in an
octangular building, and which is called the 'Aye,'
the use and derivation of which word has not been
discovered." The water was supplied by pipes
running at the back of the cells, and the "lavoirs"
were probably washing-places. The brewhouse is
not shown in the old plan; its water-supply is only
marked, and "the buttery-cock is shown without
any building attached to it, whilst the water is
described as passing on in two courses to the fleshkitchen, one through the cloister, another through
the gateway from the cistern at the kitchen-door,
with a branch to a place or house called Elmys
and the Hartes-Horne. We thus find two kitchens
mentioned; the first denoted by the kitchendoor, and the remains of the second kitchen are
to be found in the wall next the present gateway
of the Charterhouse, formed of squares of flint
and stone. The gateway of the old plan appears
disconnected with the rest of the buildings, but it
still exists." We have also the interesting fact, discovered by the diligence of Mr. Burtt, of the
Record Office, that the Abbot of Westminster
granted to the Prior and Convent of the Charterhouse three acres of land ("No Man's Land")
"probably a small piece by the wayside, the consideration for it being only the rendering of a red
rose and the saying a mass annually for the sacred
King and Confessor Edward."
The course by which the water was brought
from Islington, across the fields, for the supply of
the Charterhouse is shown in old vellum rolls, on
which the course passes the windmill, of which
the "Windmill" Inn, in St. John Street, was a
remnant and a remembrance. The neighbouring
Hospital of St. John was, in 1381, burnt by the
Essex and Kent rebels, when the fire lasted seven
days. The hospital does not appear to have been
rebuilt before the end of the fifteenth century, and
possibly the ruins of St. John's supplied some
materials. Amongst other interesting fragments
was the head of an Indian or Egyptian idol, which
was found imbedded in the mortar amidst the
rubble. The connection of the brethren of St.
John of Jerusalem with the East suggests the idea
that this little figure might have found its way to
the Charterhouse from St. John's.
From a rough sketch accompanying Archdeacon
Hale's paper, exhibiting the course of the conduit as it existed in 1624, it appears that "the
'Aye' in the centre of the quadrangle occupied
by the monks had disappeared, and that, the
water was brought to a reservoir still existing
but now supplied from the New River instead of
from the conduit. No record can be found of the
time when this exchange took place. The drawing
exhibits in a rude manner traces of buildings which
still exist, as well as of those which were taken
down for the erection of the new rooms for the
pensioners some forty years since. Three sides
of a small quadrangle, an early addition to if not
coeval with the building of the monastery, still
remain; the windows and doorways give evidence:
of great variety of structure and of date, and the
joints of the brickwork proofs of many alterations.
There are letters on the west external wall, 'J. H.,'
which we would willingly assume to be the initials
of John Houghton, the last prior but one, and the
wall itself as of his building. The cells of the
monks, which were in the quadrangle, in the centre
of which the conduit stood, have been all destroyed,
with the exception of some few doorways still
remaining. The buildings of the monastery now
existing are on the south side of that quadrangle:
they include the chapel, the small quadrangle above
mentioned, and the courts of Howard House, including the Great Hall and the court called the
Master's Court. At what time these buildings
were erected between the ancient flesh-kitchen,
the small quadrangle to the west, and the prior's
lodgings on the north, has not been discovered.
They were doubtless for the accommodation of
strangers who resorted to and were received at
the monastery. It has been said that much information respecting the temper and feelings of
the people was obtained by Henry VII. from the
knowledge which the Carthusian monks acquired
through intercourse thus kept up with various
classes."
Charterhouse Square has three entrances—Carthusian Street, Charterhouse Lane, and Charterhouse Street. The two first had originally each a
gatehouse, and in Charterhouse Lane, where it stood
there is a gate of iron surmounted by the arms of
the hospital—arms that have never been blazoned
with blood, but have been ever irradiated with a
halo of beneficence and charity. Charterhouse
Square is supposed to have been part of the
ground first consecrated by Bishop Stratford, as a
place of charitable burial. A town house belonging
to the Earls of Rutland once adorned it, and in
this mansion Sir William Davenant, wishing to win
the gloom-struck Londoners from their Puritan
severities, opened a sort of opera-house in 1656.
Rutland Place, a court at the north-east corner of the
square, still marks the spot, at the sight of which
Cavaliers grew gayer, and Puritans sourer and more
morose. A pleasant avenue of light-leaved limes
traverses the square, for Charterhouse masters to
pace under and archæologists to ponder beneath.
As we enter Charterhouse Square from Carthusian Street, the entrance to the old hospital is
on the north side. The gateway is the original
entrance of the monastery, and has been rubbed
by many a monk's gown. This interesting relic is
a Tudor arch, with a drip-stone, terminating in plain
corbels. Above is a shelf, supported by two lions,
grotesquely carved, and probably dating back to
the early part of the sixteenth century. On the
right stands the porter's lodge, on the left the house
of the resident medical officer.
From the entrance court are two exits. The
road straight from the entrance leads to the quadrangles, the schoolmaster's house, "the Gown Boys,"
and the preacher's residences; the left road points
to the master's lodge, the hall, and the chapel. In
the latter, turning under an archway leading to the
head-master's court, is the entrance to the master's
lodge. The fine hall of the lodge is adorned by
a good portrait of the maligned but beneficent
Sutton. In the noble upper rooms are some excellent portraits of illustrious past governors—men
of all sects and of various fortunes. Prominent
among these we note the following:—Black-browed,
saturnine Charles II., and his restless favourite,
George Villiers, second Duke of Buckingham; the
Earl of Shaftesbury, their dangerous Whig rival,
and Charles Talbot, first Earl and afterwards Duke
of Shrewsbury—a florid full-length, in robes of the
Garter (the white rod the earl carries was delivered to him in 1714, by Queen Anne, with her
dying hand); the ill-starred Duke of Monmouth,
swarthy, like his father, in a long black wig, and in
the robes of the Garter, and the charitable Sheldon,
Archbishop of Canterbury, who is said to have
expended more than £66,000 in public and private
almsgiving, in relieving the sufferers by the Great
Plague, and in redeeming Christian slaves from the
Moors. The theatre Sheldon built at Oxford was a
mark of his respect to the university, and a grateful remembrance of his time studiously spent as
warden of the college of All Souls. There is also
in an upper room a fine three-quarter length of
the clever and learned but somewhat Darwinian
divine, Dr. Thomas Burnet, who was elected
Master of Charterhouse in 1685; he was the author
of the "Sacred Theory of the Earth," a daring
philosophical romance, which barred the rash
writer's further preferment. As master, Burnet
boldly resisted the intrusion of Andrew Popham, a
Roman Catholic, into the house, by meddling James
I. "Soon after Burnet's election," says Mr. Timbs,
"James II. addressed a letter to the governors,
ordering them to admit one Andrew Popham as
pensioner into the hospital, upon the first vacancy,
without tendering to him any oath, or requiring
of him any subscription or recognition in conformity with Church of England doctrine, the
king dispensing with any statute or order of the
hospital to the contrary. Burnet, as junior governor,
was called upon to vote first, when he maintained
that, by express Act of Parliament, 3 Car. I., no
officer could be admitted into that hospital without
taking the oaths of allegiance and supremacy. An
attempt was made, but without effect, to overrule
this opinion. The Duke of Ormond supported
Burnet, and, on the vote being put, Popham was
rejected; and, notwithstanding the threats of the
king and the Popish party, no member of the communion was ever admitted into the Charterhouse."
This eccentric man—no relation of the great Whig
friend of William of Orange—died in 1715. He
appears here as a well-favoured man, in a black
gown, and with short hair.

CHARTERHOUSE—THE QUADRANGLE. (From a View taken in 1805.)
An arched passage on the left of the master's
court leads to Washhouse Court. A porch, surmounted by the royal arms, brings you to the great
hall and kitchen, and a passage on the right conducts you to Chapel Court, which is surrounded by
buildings to the south and west, by a piazza on the
north, and by the chapel on the east. The chapel
cloister consists of six Italian semi-classic arches,
dull, clumsy, and exactly unsuited to the purpose
of the place. Among the gravestones are those
of a past organist, Richard John Samuel Stevens
(1757), and Samuel Berdmore, master (1802). A
door at the east end, leading to the ante-chapel,
has over it a small tablet to Nicholas Mann,
"Olim magister, nunc remistus pulvere," which in
English means, "Here lies one who formerly
dusted boys' jackets, and is now dust himself."
In the small square ante-chapel is a modern screen,
surmounted by the royal arms and those of the
founder, Sutton. This ante-chapel is vaulted and
groined; the bosses that bind the ribs being ornamented with roses, foliage, and shields, charged
with the instruments of the Passion. The font is
modern, and of the most Pagan period, contrasting
painfully with the perpendicular of the ante-chapel,
which bears the date 1512. The equilateral arch
at the east end, leading to the main chapel, is conjectured by the best authorities to have been the
nave-arch of the original monastic church. It is
filled up with a carved wooden screen, consisting
of a series of pointed cinque-foiled arches.
The chapel is a thorough Jacobean structure,
with the founder's tomb conspicuous in a proud
position at the north-west corner, the rows of seats
where the Charterhouse boys once sat with ill-concealed restlessness, and the pews of the old brotherhood arranged gravely by themselves. The present
chancel, say the antiquarians, is part of the original
nave. It is square, divided in the centre by two
Tuscan pillars. An aisle (or, rather, recess) was
added to the north side in 1826, and there is a
tower at the east end parallel with the ante-chapel.
"The south wall alone is part of the original
church; and it is supposed that the choir extended
some way to the east beyond the present chapel."
Behind a panel in the east wall the visitor is shown
an aumbrye (cupboard), with some crumbling stonework round it. "The pillars which divide the
chapel in the centre support three semicircular
arches, the keystones of which are embellished with
the Charterhouse arms. The roof is flat, ceiled, and
decorated after the style of the time of James I. At
the west end, under the tower, is an open screen of
wood, carved in a style corresponding with the
date of the rest of the chapel. This supports a
gallery containing the organ. Its principal ornaments are grotesque, puffy-faced cherubim, helmets
and swords, drums, and instruments of music; and
in the centre is a shield, tied up with a thick cable
charged with the arms of the hospital. The altar
is of wood, and on each side in the corner of the
chancel is a sort of stall, the one on the right
being appropriated to the head-master, and that on
the left to the second-master of the school."

CHARTERHOUSE SQUARE. (From a View taken for Stow's "Survey.")
The east window of five lights, filled with painted
glass (the subject the Divine Passion), is the gift
of the Venerable Archdeacon Hale, when master
of the house. Another east window, representing the Bearing of the Cross, was the result of a
subscription among the boys themselves. In a
southern window are some fragments of glass representing the Charterhouse arms. "The pulpit and
reading-desk," says the chronicler of the Charterhouse, "are against the south wall, as also are the
master's and preacher's pews; the latter have small
canopies over the seats allotted to them. The seats
for the pensioners are open, and have at the side
poppy-heads in the shape of greyhounds' heads,
couped, ermine, collared gules, garnished and ringed,
or, on the collar three annulets of the last, the
crest of the hospital." The scholars formerly sat
in the recess to the north.
"The founder's tomb on the north side of the
chancel is a most superb specimen of the monumental taste in the reign of James I. It is
composed of the most valuable marbles, highly
carved and gilt, and contains a great number of
quaint figures, of which the founder is the principal.
His painted figure, in a gown, lies recumbent on
the tomb. On each side is a man in armour,
standing upright, supporting a tablet containing the
inscription, and above is a preacher addressing a
full congregation. The arms of the hospital are to
be seen still higher, and above all a statue of
Charity. It is also enriched with statues of Faith
and Hope, Labour and Rest, and Plenty and Want,
and is surrounded by painted iron railings. The
inscription is as follows:—
"Sacred to the glory of God, in grateful memory of Thomas
Sutton, Esquire. Here lieth buried the body of Thomas
Sutton, late of Castle-Camps, in the county of Cambridge,
Esquire, at whose only costs and charges this hospital was
founded and endowed with large possessions for the relief
of poor men and children. He was a gentleman, born at
Knaythe, in the county of Lincoln, of worthie and honest
parentage. He lived to the age of seventy-nine years, and
deceased the 12th of December, 1611."
This sumptuous tomb, still so perfect, cost
£366 15s.
"In the return of the wall, opposite the founder's
tomb, is a small monument to the memory of
Francis Beaumont, Esq., formerly master of the
hospital. He is represented kneeling before a
desk, his hand resting on the Holy Scriptures, and
habited in the costume of the period.
"The other monuments in the chapel are for
the most part tasteless and inelegant; there are,
however, a few exceptions. On the south wall is a
full-sized figure of Edward, Lord Ellenborough, by
Chantrey. He is represented sitting, in his robes
as Chief Justice, with the following legend:—
"In the Founder's vault are deposited the remains of
Edward Law, Lord Ellenborough, son of Edmund Law,
Lord Bishop of Carlisle, Chief Justice of the Court of King's
Bench from April, 1802, to November, 1818, and a Governor
of the Charterhouse. He died December 13th, 1818, in the
sixty-ninth year of his age; and, in grateful remembrance of
the advantages he had derived through life from his education
upon the Foundation of the Charterhouse, desired to be
buried in this church."
The chapel contains monuments to Matthew
Raine, one of the most eminent of the Charterhouse masters; John Law, one of the founder's
executors; Dr. Patrick, preacher to the house,
who died in 1695; Andrew Tooke, master 1731;
Thomas Walker, 1728; Dr. H. Levett, physician
to the hospital in 1725; John Christopher Pepusch,
organist to the house, and friend of Handel. In
the Evidence Room behind the organ, in which the
hospital records are kept, there are three doors, the
three keys being kept by the master, the registrar,
and one of the governors. A small door on the
right of the cloisters communicates with a spiral
staircase leading to the roof of the tower.
"The tower," says Carthusian, "is square, and
is surmounted by a heavy Italian parapet, with a
thing in the shape of a pinnacle at each angle.
The whole is crowned with a wooden dome resting
on pillars supporting semicircular arches. The
dome carries on its top a vane representing the
Charterhouse arms. Under this cupola is a bell,
which bears the following legend:—
"T. S. Bartlet for the Charterhouse made this bell, 1631."
In a vault beneath the chapel is the leaden coffin
of Sutton, an Egyptian shaped case, with the date,
1611, in large letters on the breast, the face of the
dead man being modelled with a square beard-case.
A small paved hall leading from the cloister is
the approach to the great oak staircase of old
Norfolk House, richly carved with shallow Elizabethan trophies and ornaments, the Sutton crest,
a greyhound's head, showing conspicuously on the
posts, probably additions to the original staircase,
which is six feet wide, and consists of twenty-one
steps. A large window midway looks into the
master's court. The apartments of the reader are
at the top of the staircase, on the right, and on
the left an ante-chamber conducts to the terrace—
a grand walk, eighty yards long, which commands
a view of the green. Beyond this terrace, to the
north, rises the great window of the chapel of the
new Merchant Taylors' School. The library, near
the terrace, is a grave-looking room, containing a
selection of divinity and old Jesuit books of travel,
&c., given by Daniel Wray, Esq., whose portrait
hangs over the fireplace.
The governors' room, part of old Norfolk House,
which is next the library, is remarkable for its
Elizabethan decorations, which are of the most
magnificent description. "The ceiling," says Carthusian, "is flat, and is adorned with the armorial distinctions (three white lions) of Thomas,
Duke of Norfolk, brilliantly painted and gilt. His
motto, 'Sola virtus invicta,' is inscribed on ornamental scrolls, tastefully arranged alternately with
the date of the year (1838) in which this remnant
of Elizabethan splendour was rescued from ruin.
Previous to that time the emblazoned shields,
which now glitter so brightly in gold and silver,
were well-nigh obliterated with whitewash. The
figures in the tapestry then presented a motley
mixture of indistinguishable objects; half of the
beautifully-carved cornice which now supports the
ceiling had vanished. The paintings of the ceiling
consist of the following:—In the intercolumniations
of the four pillars which form the basement are
arabesque shields, containing paintings of Mars
and Minerva, and over the space for the stove,
representations of Faith, Hope, and Charity.
Above this is a shield, charged with Mr. Sutton's
arms, with his initials, T. S., one on each side. A
large oval, containing the royal arms, supports
this, with the emblems of the four evangelists in
the spandrils formed by the square panel, of which
it is the centre. On each side is an arch, supported by Ionic pillars, upon which are ovals, in
which are portraits of the twelve apostles. The
colours used are black, red, and gold. In this room
there are four square-headed windows, of five, four,
and two lights, transomed.
"The tapestry on the walls consist of six
pieces—three of large dimensions, the subjects of
which are not known, though many conjectures
have been hazarded. The largest piece represents
a king, sitting enthroned, crowned, and sceptred;
behind him is a woman in plain attire, whilst at his
feet kneels a queen, who is followed by a retinue,
consisting of two black men, carrying a cushion,
upon which rests a model of a fortress, another
bearing the key of this citadel, and other attendants.
This has been taken for the siege of Calais, and
also the siege of Troy. The last supposition is, that
it is a representation of the visit of the Queen of
Sheba to Solomon. A second piece has been supposed to represent David, armed by Saul, in the
act of sallying forth to meet 'the uncircumcised
Philistine.' Two armies are seen in the background. Another appears to be a mixture of
Scriptural subjects. A scene in the foreground
does not much differ from the account of Deborah
with Sisera's head, whilst the death of Abimelech is
depicted behind. Three other pieces, containing
figures of men, some of which are crowned, all
which bear a striking resemblance the one to the
other, seem intended for the judges and kings of
Israel. Similar illustrations are not unfrequently
found in ancient Bibles."
Descending the great staircase we enter the
great hall, the most ancient of the buildings dating
subsequent to the Reformation, the west wall being
part of the old convent. This wall, the local antiquaries think, was rebuilt by Sir Edward North.
The unfortunate Duke of Norfolk, it is supposed,
lifted the roof of the hall higher, to make room for
a new music-gallery. Its date, 1571, marks the
time when he was released from the Tower on a
kind of furlough, and employed himself here on
such improvements as this. The carving is executed with extreme care and finish. A small sidegallery leads to the great staircase. The room is
lighted by three large windows with some stained
glass, and there is a lantern in the roof.
"In the windows are some curious fragments of
stained glass. One pane contains the arms of the
Lord Protector, Duke of Somerset, encircled by
the garter; another contains a collection of pieces,
the subject of which is rather ambiguous, the chief
objects being a woman walking over a bridge, two
horsemen galloping through the water underneath,
a ship, the crown of Spain, the arms of Castile and
Arragon, and the date, 1670. A third pane displays the arms of the founder, Sutton.
"The chimney-piece was an addition by Mr.
Sutton, and is of later date than any other part
of the building. It is carved in stone, but is of
grotesque design, consisting of imaginary scrolls in
the style of the Rénaissance school. The arms
of the founder, surmounted by helmet, mantlings,
and crest, complete, are well executed; as also are
two small pieces of ordnance on each side, which
are boldly yet accurately wrought. Beneath these,
and in the centre above the space allotted to the
stove, is an oval, upon which is carved a dragon,
or some fabulous monster. It is now," adds Carthusian (1847), "very much mutilated.
"One thing yet remains to be spoken of, and that
is the noble portrait of Mr. Sutton at the upper end
of the hall. He is represented dressed in a black
gown, sitting in an antique high-backed chair, and
holding in his right hand the ground-plan of the
Charterhouse. . . . . The room is now used
as a dining-hall for the pensioners, and the banquet is held here on the ever-memorable 12th of
December."
A door on the right opens into the upper hall, a
small, low room, adorned by a carved stone chimneypiece, with the founder's arms sculptured above.
The windows are square-headed. It is traditionally supposed to be the former refectory of the lay
brothers of the monastery. It was latterly used as
a dining-hall for the foundation scholars. A massive
door at one corner opens into the cloister.
A door in the Great Hall, under the music-gallery,
opens into a stone passage, on the right of which
were the apartments of the manciple. On the left
there is an opening into the Master's Court, and in
the centre are three doorways with depressed squareheaded Tudor arches, the spandrils being filled
with roses, foliage, and angels bearing shields.
The great kitchen boasts a fireplace, at which
fifteen sirloins could be roasted at the same time.
In one of the stones of the pavement there are
brass rivets remaining, which once fastened down
the monumental brass of some Carthusian.
Returning through the Master's Court and the entrance court, on our way to the "Gown Boys" and
the green, we pass a gateway, older than the outer
one already described. It has a four-centred arch,
but no mouldings or drip-stone. The wall built
over it for some height terminates in a horizontal
parapet, supported by a plain corbel table. The
rough unhewn stone of a wall to the right proves
it, according to antiquaries, to have been part of
the old monastic building. "The letters 'I. H.,'
says Carthusian (1847), "with a cross of Calvary,
which are worked into the wall, prove the ecclesiastical character of its former inmates. The
letters 'I. H.,' worked out in red brick on the
wall, have been a matter of some discussion.
Some have supposed them to be the two first
letters of our Saviour's monogram, but, upon
close examination, it will be found that there are
no traces of the final S. The arch beneath, over
which is the cross of Calvary, must have had its
meaning. It has been suggested that it is the
entrance to a burial crypt, and that the letters
'I. H.' are the initials of the unfortunate Prior
Houghton, interred in the vault beneath. A doorway on the right opens into the Abbot's Court.
This was called, at the period when Charterhouse
was known as Howard House, by the name of the
Kitchen Court. Subsequently it obtained the name
of the Washhouse Court, and this was changed,
some time since, for Poplar Court, on account of
some poplar-trees which formerly grew there, but
which so inconvenienced the buildings that they
were removed a few years since. The name disappeared with them, and the court is now called
by its former incorrect cognomen." This is the
most solitary and the most ancient of all the
Charterhouse courts. In one corner half an arch
can be distinguished, and the square-headed windows are older than they seem.
The Preacher's Court, with its castellated and
turreted modern buildings, was built in 1825, after
the designs of Edward Blore, Esq. The preacher's
residence was on the east side. One of the octangular turrets over the northern gateway of this court
holds the bell, which rings regularly a quarter of an
hour before the pensioners' meals, to call home the
loiterers. Some of the poor brethren lodge on the
west side. On the south and east sides runs a
paved cloister, and at the south-east angle is the
large west window of the governor's room, above
which five shields are carved in stone. The
northern gateway is a depressed Tudor arch, with
spandrils filled with the Charterhouse arms.
The Pensioner's Court, also built in 1825, has
three gateways, but no cloister or octangular tower.
The one gateway opens into the stable-yard and
servants' quarter, the second into the burial-ground,
the third into the Scholars' Court. In this last, at
the north-east angle, the head-master used to
reside, while the matron favoured a house to the
north, and the gown boys' butler sheltered himself
cozily at the south-east corner lodge. The stones
round the semicircular arch, on the east side, are
thickly engraved with the names of scholars once
on the foundation, and the date of their departure.
The foundation boys' school-rooms were, for
some exquisite reason, called "Gown Boys," and
consisted of a hall and a writing-school. The hall
boasts an Elizabethan stone chimney-piece, and the
ceiling is adorned with arabesque shields and
scrolls. The scholars used to have all their meals
but dinners here, and it was also a sitting-room
for the "Uppers." The writing-school opposite is
a square room, and part of the old school. The
roof is upheld by four massive wooden pillars, and
is ornamented with nine shields, and charged with
the armorial bearings of the founder, the former
governors, and benefactors.
Part of the cloister of the old monastery, which
led to the fives-court of the Duke of Norfolk's
palace, runs along the west side of the green, and
above it is a terrace of old Norfolk House. This
cloister formerly adjoined the monks' cells, as an
ancient doorway still proves. The brick wall to
the east bears the date 1571, the date of the musicgallery in the Great Hall, and the date of the
duke's final imprisonment. The present cloister windows are mere square openings, and there seems
to have formerly been a false flat roof. In the
centre of the cloisters is an octagonal abutment,
which has for generations been called by the boys
"Middle Briars." The cloisters used to be the
great resort of the football and hockey players,
especially in bad weather. The Upper Green is
three acres of fine grass-plot, formerly the special
property of the "Unders," and bounded on the
north by Wilderness Row, on the east by Goswell
Street, on the south by the school and Upper
Green, and on the west by the master's garden,
where there was a fountain, in a stone basin, in
the centre of the lawn, which was divided by iron
railings from the burial-ground of the poor brethren.
Dr. Hulme, physician to Charterhouse, who
died from a fall down-stairs, in 1808, was interred
here.
The School is a large brick building, on a
small hill, which separates the two greens, and is
supposed to have been built over the northern
side of the old cloisters. It was built from designs
by Mr. Pilkington, in 1803. The large door in
the centre is surrounded, like that of the old
school, with the names of bygone Carthusians.
The head-master used to preside, at prayers, on a
large seat, elevated on three steps, and regally surmounted by a canopy. There were five lesser
thrones for the ushers and assistant-masters, with
horseshoe seats before each, capable of seating
sixteen boys. Six large windows, and a central
octagonal lantern lit the room. At the east and
west ends there were small retiring-rooms—little
tusculums for masters and their classes. Behind
the head-master's desk was another room. On the
outer keystone of the arch the names of several
of the head-masters were engraved—Crusins, 1719;
Hotchkis, 1720; Berdmore, 1755; Raine, 1778;
Russell, 1803; Saunders, 1819.
On ground given by the governors of Charterhouse St. Thomas's Church and Schools were built,
some years ago. The entrance to the school is in
Goswell Street.
The Upper Green was the cricket-ground of the
"Uppers." The gravel walk to the left was the
site of the eastern cloisters. Two doorways of
ancient cells still remain. Near one of them are
two flat square stones, which tradition reports to
have formed the foot of the coffin of the former
inhabitant of the cell.
A door from the cloister on the right opens into
a room called Brooke Hall, "named," says the
author of "Chronicles of the Charterhouse," "after
Mr. Robert Brooke, fourth master of the school,
who was ejected for not taking the Solemn League
and Covenant, but to whom, on the Restoration,
this apartment belonged. Over the fireplace is an
ancient portrait of a man reading, with the following
motto inscribed on the sides:—
"And gladly would he learn, and gladly teach. 1626."
"This has occasioned many surmises and suppositions. Some suppose it to be a likeness of
Brooke, while others assert that neither the date
nor the apparent age of the figure by any means
agrees with the account received of that gentleman, who, it appears, was but a young man when
admitted usher, in 1626. The last conjecture is
that the portrait was either that of Nicholas
Grey, the first schoolmaster, who resigned his
place in 1624, or of his brother, Robert Grey,
who ceased to be master in 1626. This room
was used as a dining-room for the officers of the
house."
On the eastern wall of what was called the
Upper Green, between two doorways, is, in white
paint, a large figure of a crown, with the word
"Crown" under it. It is the spot where the
"Crown" Inn formerly stood, says Carthusian.
Tradition states that this was painted by the first
Lord Ellenborough, when he was a boy in the
school, as a sign-post for the boys to halt at when
they played at coaches; and finding it there perfect
when he visited the place as a man, he expressed
a wish that it might be kept renewed. In the
south-west corner of the green was an old tree, cut
down about thirty years ago, which was called
"Hoop Tree," from the custom the boys had of
throwing their hoops into the branches when they
broke up for the holidays. Hoop-bowling was a
great game at Charterhouse, up to about 1825 or
1830; and some boys attained such proficiency,
that they could trundle five or six hoops, or even
more, at one time. At the north-east corner of
the Under Green, now built over, was the "Coach
Tree," so called from the boys climbing into it
at certain times of the day, to see the coaches
pass up Goswell Street, between Islington and St.
Martin's-le-Grand. The site of St. Thomas's
Church, Charterhouse, was the ground where boys
who quarrelled were accustomed to give each other
pugilistic satisfaction.

THOMAS SUTTON. (From an Engraving by Virtue of the Charterhouse Portrait.)
In the south-east corner of the green was the
"Tennis Court," really the "Fives-Court."
The school, which moved to Godalming, for
sanitary and other reasons, in May, 1872, was
divided into seven forms, inclusive of the "shell," or
transition state between the third and fourth forms.
The very young boys were called "Petties." The
present number of boys is 320, of which 55 are
scholars on the foundation. An extra half-holiday
is given at Charterhouse when a Carthusian obtains distinction at either of the universities. The
gown-boys were prohibited going out during Lent.
The chapel-bell rings at eight or nine at night, to
warn the pensioners. When one of the old men
dies, his comrades are informed of his departure
by one stroke less being given than on the preceding evening. The number of strokes usually
given is eighty, corresponding to the number of the
old gentlemen in the black cloaks.
The following description of Charterhouse discipline and customs, from 1842 to 1847, was
kindly communicated to us by Arthur Locker,
Esq.:—
"I was," says Mr. Locker, "at the Charterhouse
from 1842 to 1847. At that time Dr. A. P.
Saunders was head-master (now Dean of Peterborough); Rev. Oliver Walford was second-master
(since dead); Rev. H. W. Phillott and Rev. F.
Poynder were assistant-masters; Rev. C. N.
Dicken, the reader, read the daily prayers in
the chapel, and also taught in the school. While
I was there the numbers of the school varied
from about 150 to 180. Of these 44 (and, at one
time, by a special privilege, 45) were foundationers,
or gown-boys, who were fed, educated, and partially
clothed, by the institution. Each governor (the
governors were the leading men of the country,
cabinet ministers, archbishops, &c.) selected a boy
in turn, as a vacancy occurred, and the eligible age
was from ten till fourteen. Most of the gown-boys
were either aristocratically connected, or possessed
interest with the higher class. The remainder of
the boys, whose parents paid for their education,
lived respectively in the three boarding-houses of
Messrs. Saunders, Walford, and Dicken, and were
called Sanderites, Verrites, and Dickenites. There
were also about twenty day-scholars. The upper
school consisted of the sixth and fifth forms, which
had the privilege of fagging; then came the fourth
form, a sort of neutral class, neither allowed to
fag or be fagged, and very often, in consequence,
great bullies. The lower school (all subject to
fagging) were the shell, the third, second, first forms,
and the petties. In our house we had four monitors,
who exercised some of the duties of masters. They
could cane boys for breach of rules, and could put
their names down in the black book (three insertions during one week in that volume involved
a flogging; and the floggings, administered with
long apple-twigs, were very severe). These monitors, and some others of the big boys, had little
slips of rooms for their own use, called 'studies,'
and each proprietor of a study had a study-fag,
who, besides keeping his books free from dust
and in good order, made his coffee, toasted his
roll, washed his hair-brushes, &c. Boys rather liked
this special service, as it saved them from the
indiscriminate fagging inflicted by strangers. The
cricket-fagging was the worst. I have been kept
stopping balls behind a wicket for a fellow practising for five hours at a stretch, and beaten on the
back with a bat if I missed a ball. Fagging produced laziness and tyranny among the big boys,
and lying and deception among the little ones.
The monitors, by the way, had a special set of
fags called 'basinites,' whose business it was to take
care that the basins were filled, towels dried, and
soap ready in the monitors' bedroom, for they washed
up-stairs. We washed in a public room, fitted up
with basins.' The dietary arrangements at Charterhouse were under the management of a jolly old redfaced gentleman named Tucker, who had formerly
been in the army. He was called the 'Manciple.'
The food was very good; and on Fridays (perhaps
as a protest against Roman Catholicism) we fared
especially well. Friday was styled 'Consolation
Day,' and we had roast lamb and currant tart, or
roast pork and apple tart, according to the season
of the year. We said our lessons in a large building called the New School, in the centre of the two
greens; but we learnt our lessons, and had for an
in-door playing-place a writing-school of our own.
Here, from eight till nine o'clock every evening,
one of the masters kept 'banco'—that is to say,
everybody was bound to be quiet for one hour,
though they might read story-books, or do what
they pleased. We were locked up in our bedrooms at night, the windows of which were further
secured by iron bars. The doors were unfastened
at seven o'clock, and school began at eight. Cricket
was the chief game in the summer quarter; during
the rest of the year we had football and hockey.
Fives was also played in one of the courts, but tops
and marbles were discountenanced, as savouring
(heaven save the mark!) of private schools. As a
rule, boys are very conventional and narrow-minded.
We were kept quite apart from the eighty old pensioners, or 'codds,' as they were called, and only saw
them on Sundays and saints' days in chapel. I
remember two in whom we felt an interest—Mr.
Moncrieff, the dramatist; and a Mr. Bayzand (or
some such name), who had been a harlequin, but who
at fourscore had grown a very decrepit, unwieldy
man. The upper form boys were allowed the privilege
of going out from Saturday afternoon till Sunday
evening, at nine p.m., provided they received an
invitation from parents or friends, which invitation
had to be submitted for approval to the headmaster. The lower forms were allowed the same
privilege every alternate Saturday. At all other
times we were strictly confined to our own part of
the premises; and many a time have we, imprisoned
behind those gloomy walls, longed for the liberty
of Goswell Street, the houses of which overlooked
our under green.

STREET FRONT OF THE FLEET PRISON.
"The great festival of the year was the 12th December, held in memory of our benefactor, Thomas
Sutton, when, after a service in the chapel, a Latin
oration was delivered by the head gown-boy, then
going to college, and a collection put into the
trencher-cap by the visitors who came to hear him.
A hundred pounds, or more, was often thus collected.
After this the old Carthusians dined together, and
spent the rest of the evening at the house of the
master (Archdeacon Hale). The master was
supreme over the whole establishment, both boys
and pensioners: he must not at all be confounded
with the school-master. When a boy left school,
his name was engraved on the stone wall which
faced the school buildings, with the date of the
year of his departure."
"In former times," says Mr. Howard Staunton,
"there was a curious custom in this school, termed
'pulling-in,' by which the lower boys manifested
their opinion of the seniors in a rough but very
intelligible fashion. One day in the year the fags,
like the slaves in Rome, had freedom, and held a
kind of saturnalia. On this privileged occasion
they used to seize the upper boys, one by one,
and drag them from the playground into the schoolroom, and, accordingly as the victim was popular
or the reverse, he was either cheered and mildly
treated, or was hooted, groaned at, and sometimes soundly cuffed. The day selected was Good
Friday, and, although the practice was nominally
forbidden, the officials, for many years, took no
measures to prevent it. One ill-omened day, however, when the sport was at the best, the doctor
was espied approaching the scene of battle. A
general sauve qui peut ensued, and, in the hurry
of flight, a meek and quiet lad (the Hon. Mr.
Howard), who happened to be seated on some
steps, was crushed so dreadfully that, to the grief
of the whole school, he shortly after died. 'Pullingin' was thenceforth sternly interdicted."
On the resignation, in 1832, of Dr. Russell (who
was appointed to the living of Bishopsgate, the
number of the school fell off from about 600 boys
to something about 100 or 80, consequently many
of the junior masters were dismissed.
The poor brothers of the Charterhouse (a very
interesting feature of Sutton's rather perverted
charity) are now eighty in number. They receive
£36 a year, have comfortable rooms rent free, and
are required to wear, when in bounds, a long black
cloak. They attend chapel twice a day, at halfpast nine and six, and dine together in the Duke
of Norfolk's fine old hall. The only special restriction over the old brothers is the necessity of
being in every night at eleven, and they are fined
a shilling for every non-attendance at chapel—a rule
that secures, as might have been expected, the most
Pharisaic punctuality at such ceremonials. This
respectable brotherhood used to contain a good
many of Wellington's old Peninsular officers, now and
then a bankrupt country squire, and now and then
—much out of place—came the old butler of one
of the governors.
Thackeray has immortalised his old school,
about which he writes so fondly, and with that
air of thoughtful regret, that so marks his sadder
passages: "Mention," says the great novelist, in
"The Newcomes," "has been made once or twice,
in the course of this history, of the Grey Friars'
School—where the colonel, and Clive, and I had
been brought up—an ancient foundation of the
time of James I., still subsisting in the heart of
London city. The death-day of the founder of
the place is still kept solemnly by the Cistercians.
In their chapel, where assemble the boys of the
school, and the fourscore old men of the hospital,
the founder's tomb stands—a huge edifice, emblazoned with heraldic decorations and clumsy
carved allegories. There is an old hall, a beautiful
specimen of the architecture of James's time. An
old hall? Many old halls, old staircases, old passages, old chambers decorated with old portraits,
walking in the midst of which we walk, as it were,
in the early seventeenth century. To others than
Cistercians, Grey Friars is a dreary place, possibly.
Nevertheless, the pupils educated there love to
revisit it, and the oldest of us grow young again
for an hour or two as we come back into those
scenes of childhood.
"The custom of the school is, that on the 12th
of December, the Founder's Day, the head gownboy shall recite a Latin oration, in praise Fundatoris
Nostri, and upon other subjects, and a goodly
company of old Cistercians is generally brought
together to attend this oration; after which we go
to chapel, and hear a sermon; after which we
adjourn to a great dinner, where old condisciples
meet, old toasts are given, and speeches are made.
Before marching from the oration-hall to chapel,
the stewards of the day's dinner, according to oldfashioned rite, have wands put into their hands,
walk to church at the head of the procession, and
sit there in places of honour. The boys are already
in their seats, with smug fresh faces, and shining
white collars; the old black-gowned pensioners
are on their benches, the chapel is lighted, and
founder's tomb, with its grotesque carvings, monsters, heraldries, darkles and shines with the most
wonderful shadows and lights. There he lies,
Foundator Noster, in his ruff and gown, awaiting
the Great Examination Day. We oldsters, be we
ever so old, become boys again as we look at that
familiar old tomb, and think how the seats are
altered since we were here, and how the doctor—
not the present doctor, the doctor of our time—
used to sit yonder, and his awful eye used to
frighten us shuddering boys, on whom it lighted;
and how the boy next us would kick our shins
during service-time, and how the monitor would
cane us afterwards because our shins were kicked.
Yonder sit forty cherry-cheeked boys, thinking
about home and holidays to-morrow. Yonder sit
some threescore old gentlemen-pensioners of the
hospital, listening to the prayers and the psalms.
You hear them coughing feebly in the twilight—the
old reverend blackgowns. Is Codd Ajax alive?
you wonder. The Cistercian lads called these
old gentlemen 'codds,' I know not wherefore—I
know not wherefore—but is old Codd Ajax alive?
I wonder; or Codd Soldier, or kind old Codd
Gentleman, or has the grave closed over them? A
plenty of candles light up this chapel, and this
scene of age and youth, and early memories, and
pompous death. How solemn the well-remembered
prayers are, here uttered again in the place where
in childhood we used to hear them! How beautiful and decorous the rite! How noble the ancient
words of the supplications which the priest utters,
and to which generations of fresh children, and
troops of bygone seniors, have cried 'Amen' under
those arches! The service for Founder's Day is
a special one, one of the Psalms selected being
the thirty-seventh, and we hear—' 23. The steps
of a good man are ordered by the Lord: and he
delighteth in his way. 24. Though he fall, he shall
not be utterly cast down: for the Lord upholdeth
him with his hand. 25. I have been young, and
now am old: yet have I not seen the righteous
forsaken, nor his seed begging bread.' As we
came to this verse I chanced to look up from my
book towards the swarm of black-coated pensioners, and amongst them—amongst them—sat
Thomas Newcome.
"His dear old head was bent down over his
prayer-book; there was no mistaking him. He
wore the black gown of the pensioners of the Hospital of Grey Friars. His order of the Bath was
on his breast. He stood there amongst the poor
brethren, uttering the responses to the psalm. The
steps of this good man had been ordered hither by
Heaven's decree: to this almshouse! Here it was
ordained that a life all love, and kindness, and
honour should end! I heard no more of prayers,
and psalms, and sermon after that." * * * *
And who can forget the solemn picture of the
colonel's death? "One afternoon," says Thackeray,
"he asked for his little gown-boy, and the child
was brought to him and sate by the bed with a very
awe-stricken face; and then gathered courage, and
tried to amuse him by telling him how it was a
half-holiday, and they were having a cricket match
with the St. Peter's boys in the green, and Grey
Friars were in and winning. . . . At the usual
evening hour, the chapel bell began to toll, and
Thomas Newcome's hands, outside the bed, feebly
beat time; and just as the last bell struck, a
peculiar sweet smile shone over his face, and he
lifted up his head a little, and quickly said, 'Adsum,'
and fell back. It was the word we used at school
when names were called, and lo! he, whose heart
was as that of a little child, had answered to his
name, and stood in the presence of the Master."
At the Poor Brothers' celebration was formerly
sung the old Carthusian melody, with this quaint
chorus:—
"Then blessed be the memory
Of good old Thomas Sutton,
Who gave us lodging—learning,
And he gave us beef and mutton."
Among the poor brothers of the Charterhouse
who have here found a refuge the rough outer world
denied, the most justly celebrated was Stephen
Gray, Copley medallist of the Royal Society, and a
humble and patient resident here in the early part
of the eighteenth century. This remarkable and
now almost forgotten discoverer formed the subject
of a lecture lately delivered at Charterhouse by Dr.
Benjamin Ward Richardson, F.R.S., from which we
derive the following facts:—The first time that Mr.
Gray was known anything about was in the year
1692, when he was, perhaps, about the age of
forty, and was living at Canterbury, pursuing astronomical studies. In that year he was known to
have made astronomical inquiries as to certain
mock suns which he saw. He then, in 1696,
turned his attention to microscopes, and made one
by melting a rod of glass, which, when the end
was in a molten state, dropped off and formed a
round solid globe, which acted as a powerful magnifier. That, however, was not sufficiently powerful,
so he made a more powerful one by having a
hollow globe of glass filled with water, and with
this he was enabled to discover animalculæ in
the water. The same year witnessed a great improvement of his in the barometer. It had been
invented some years before, but Mr. Gray hit upon
an ingenious method of taking an accurate reading
of the instrument. In 1699 the same gentleman
observed again mock suns in the heavens, and a
halo round the true sun, but did nothing more than
record the fact. His next step in science was
to obtain a meridian line, after which, in about a
couple of years, spots in the sun attracted his
attention: Mr. Gray was one of the first observers of that phenomenon, and in 1706 he recorded an eclipse of the sun. From that time
to 1720, not much was heard of either him or
his discoveries, but in the latter year a letter was
sent by Prince George to the Charterhouse, requesting that he might be admitted. After his
admission to the charity he remained without doing
much for some time, but at length he recommenced
his labour by sending a paper to the Royal Society,
denominated "Some New Electrical Experiments,"
and some little time after that he became known
to Dr. Gilbert, a man of great research. Dr. Gilbert made several experiments with the magnet, as
to its power of attraction; he also discovered that
amber when rubbed would lead a balance-needle,
and in prosecuting his inquiries further, found out
that sealing wax, resin, and glass possessed the
same qualities, but that they were different from
the magnet in many other respects. He therefore
named them after the Greek word for amber
(electron), thus bringing into use the word electricity. That was one of the men who took notice
of Mr. Gray and his experiments. About this
period some experiments were made with reference
to repulsion and attraction by Mr. Gray, which
were followed up by Sir Isaac Newton, during
which the great philosopher discovered that small
pieces of gold leaf and paper placed in a box with
a glass lid would fly up to the lid when it was
briskly rubbed. Mr. Gray then discovered if
parchment, goldbeaters' skin, and brown paper
were heated, they would all attract feathers towards
them. A fir rod, with an ivory ball attached to it
and placed in a cork, and the tube in a charged
glass rod, would also produce the same result.
That showed to the ingenious mind of Mr. Gray
that electricity could be transmitted from one substance to another. Mr. Gray having discovered
that electricity could be so transmitted, was led to
try packthread as a conductor. Packthread was
accordingly employed, and found to act very well
as such a medium when used in a vertical position,
but when in a horizontal one it would not carry any
spark at all. This discovery was made in a barn
by Mr. Granville Wheeler, at Atterden House, near
Faversham. The cause of the failure was owing to
the fact that the current passed off up to the ceiling. The line was then suspended at distances
by means of pieces of silk thread, and when
that was done the current passed through to the
end of the line. As silk thread was easily broken
copper wire was employed, but with no better result,
and by that means the discovery was arrived at
that there were some bodies which carried off the
electric current, and others which concentrated it.
After this later discovery the first electric line in
the world was made on Mr. Wheeler's ground, and
a message through a packthread, and attached to
a charged glass rod, was sent a distance of 870
yards from the grounds of Mr. Wheeler up to his
garret window. Mr. Gray having thus made one
of the grandest discoveries in the world, followed
up his researches, and found out that it was not
necessary to have contact to pass an electrical
current. That was called induction, and some
short time afterwards, in 1732, the Royal Society
awarded their gold medal; and in the same year
the recipient of the gold medal further contributed
to science by discovering that water could be made
a conductor, and also that resin could be made
to act as a good insulator—a grand discovery, for
without insulators we could not make much use of
the electric current. In 1735 Mr. Gray also succeeded in obtaining the electric spark, which he
did by means of a charged glass rod brought into
contact with an iron bar resting upon bands of
silk. After this period nothing much was heard of
him, and his time was fast drawing to a close.
Before that time, however, he invented a machine
which he called his planetarium. It was a round
box filled with resin, and a metal ball in its centre,
over this was suspended a pith pellet, and if the
pellet gyrated in a circle the ball was in the centre,
but if it were not it would move in an elliptic.
By such a means as that he thought he could show
a complete planetary system. He was, however,
mistaken, for the twirling of the pith pellet round
the globe of metal was no doubt caused by the
pulsation of the blood through the fingers. As a
further proof of Mr. Gray's intellect, when he
obtained the first spark of electricity, he prophesied
that electricity generated by a machine would become as powerful as the same force in nature.
That, no doubt, will soon be the case, for sheep
and other large animals have been instantaneously
killed by a machine weighing fifteen hundredweight.
With all the vices that superstition and laziness
could engender, there can never be a doubt among
tolerant men that learning owes a deep debt to the
much-abused tenants of monasteries. Many great
Biblical works and ponderous dictionaries were
the products of the indomitable patience of those
ascetic workers. The Carthusian order had, at
least, its share of these sturdy toilers, whose life's
silent but faithful labour was often summed up in
an old brown folio. Among the more celebrated
of these patient men we find Theobald English
(beginning of the fourteenth century), who wrote
the lives of all holy men, from the Creation to his
own time; Dr. Adam (about 1340), whose works
are now in the Bodleian, wrote the "Life of Saint
Hugh, Bishop of Lincoln," treatises and works on
Tribulation and on the Eucharist; John Olvey
(1350) wrote a book on the miracles of the Virgin;
Prior Rock, who died in 1470, left dialogues,
epigrams, and poems behind him, in MS.; Thomas
Spencer (1529) produced commentaries on St.
Paul's Epistles; John Batmore, or Batmanson,
prior in the sixteenth century, wrote against Luther
and Erasmus; Prior Chauncey, of Bruges, who
succeeded Houghton, wrote a "History of the
Emigration of the Carthusians," and "Passio Octodecim Cartusianorum."
The allowance to each pensioner was originally
£26 12S., paid in quarterly instalments. The
scholars of the foundation were not to exceed forty.
The schoolmaster and usher were not allowed to
take in their houses more than sixty other scholars,
"unless they entertained another under-usher out
of their own means, to be dieted and lodged in the
hospital." At the annual examination in Easter
a gold medal is now awarded for the best Latin
hexameter. There are also two silver medals for
Greek iambics and Latin prose. On the Foundation Day a Latin oration is delivered in the great
hall by the senior gown-boy; and at the banquet
which follows the orator's trencher goes round like
the purse at Westminster, which contributes to the
orator's outfit for Oxford.
"It was anciently the custom of the Charterhouse scholars to perform a dramatic piece on
"Founder's Day." It appears, however, that there
were other epochs set apart for conviviality and
merriment, such as the 5th of November, the
anniversary of the deliverance of the kingdom from
the Popish plot. A play is still extant, entitled
"A Dramatic Piece, by the Charterhouse Scholars,
in memory of the Powder Plot, performed at the
Charterhouse, Nov. 6th, 1732." The scene is
the Vatican, and the characters represented are the
Pope, the devil (in the character of a pilgrim), and
two Jesuits. The plot is by no means uninteresting, and some passages evince considerable tact
and experience." An attempt has been made to
connect this play with a dramatist, Elkanah Settle
by name, who died a pensioner of Charterhouse in
1724.
"Dr. Young," says the author of the "Chronicles
of the Charterhouse," "in his epistle to Mr. Pope,
refers to Settle's last days in the following lines:—
'Poor Elkanah, all other changes past,
For bread in Smithfield dragons hissed at last;
Spit streams of fire to make the butchers gape,
And found his manners suited to his shape.'"
"Mr. Settle finally obtained admission into
Charterhouse, and there, resting from his literary
labours, died in obscurity in the year 1724.
The similarity of sentiment which appears between Mr. Settle's works and the play performed
by the Charterhouse scholars, gives rise to a
supposition that the latter was the work of Settle
himself. The active part which Mr. Settle took
in the famous ceremony of Pope-burning in the
year 1680, agrees strictly with the ridicule which
is laid upon his Holiness, when made to 'run away
in a fright' in the said play, and the date of his
death was only a few years anterior to the said
performance; there can be but little or no doubt
that it is a composition of the fallen bard, who, it
is said, 'had a numerous poetical issue, but shared
the misfortune of several other gentlemen, to survive them all.'"

COURTYARD IN THE FLEET PRISON.
"The register of Charterhouse," says Mr.
Staunton, in his "Great Schools of England,"
1869, contains the names of numerous pupils
afterwards illustrious in various departments of
public life. Among these may be noted Richard
Crashaw, the poet; Richard Lovelace; Dr. Isaac
Barrow; Dr. John Davies, Master of Queen's College, Cambridge; Dr. Mark Hildersley, Bishop of
Sodor and Man, who completed the arduous task,
commenced by Bishop Wilson, of translating the
Scriptures into the Manx language; Joseph Addison; Richard Steele; John Wesley, the founder of
Wesleyan Methodism; Sir William Blackstone; Dr.
John Jortin; Dr. Martin Benson, formerly Bishop
of Gloucester; Monk, late Bishop of Gloucester,
one of our best Greek scholars; Sir Simon Le
Blanc, one of the late Judges of the King's Bench.
There was a time when this school could claim as
her sons the then Primate of England, Dr. Manners
Sutton; the Prime Minister of England, the Earl
of Liverpool; and the Chief Justice of England,
Lord Ellenborough. The Lord Chancellor of Ireland, Lord Manners; Basil Montagu; Baron
Alderson; Sir Astley P. Cooper; Sir Cresswell
Cresswell, and General Havelock; Lord Justice
Turner, and the late Sir Henry Russell, Chief
Justice of the Supreme Court of Indian Judicature; Sir C. Eastlake, P. R. A.; William Makepeace Thackeray, the great novelist, and John
Leech, the well-known artist, are proud names for
Charterhouse. Other famous Carthusians"—but
it will be seen that death has already played havoc
with this list—"are Bishop Thirlwall, of St.
David's, the historian of Greece, and his eminent
rival, George Grote; Dr. Waddington, Dean of
Durham, and his brother Horatio Waddington,
Secretary for the Home Department; the Earl of
Dalhousie; the Right Hon. T. Milner Gibson,
M.P.; Sir J. D. Harding, late Queen's Advocate;
the Archdeacon Churton; the Dean of Peterborough; the Dean of Christchurch; Sir Erskine
Perry; Sir Joseph Arnould, Judge of the Supreme
Court of Bombay, and the Rev. Thomas Mozeley;
W. G. Palgrave and F. T. Palgrave; Sir H. Storks;
Sir Charles Trevelyan; Sir G. Bowen, and others.

INTERIOR OF THE FLEET PRISON-THE RACKET-COURT.
"In the head-monitor's room," says Mr. Timbs,
"is preserved the iron bedstead on which died
W. M. Thackeray, and outside the chapel are
memorial tablets to Thackeray, Leech, and Havelock, erected by fellow Carthusians."
The collection of pictures in the Charterhouse,
besides those already noticed, includes a portrait
of William, Earl of Craven, who fought bravely
beside Gustavus Adolphus. The earl is supposed
to have married James's daughter, the widowed
Queen of Bohemia; he gave a name to Craven
Street, Strand, and lived on the site of the Olympic
Theatre. The picture is a full-length, in armour.
The old soldier wields a general's truncheon, and
behind him spreads a camp. There are also
portraits of Bishops Robinson, Gibson, Morley,
and others.