CHAPTER LIV.
WESTMINSTER ABBEY.—THE CHAPTER HOUSE, CLOISTERS, DEANERY, &c.

THE CHAPEL OF THE PYX.
"There was the Chapter-house, wrought as a church,
Carved and covered and quaintly entayled;
With seemly selure y'set aloft,
As a parliament-house ypainted about."—Piers Ploughman.
A Benedictine Monastery—The Chapter House—Its former uses—Its Restoration—The Chapel of "The Pyx"—Robbing of the Treasury—Littlington Tower—St. Catharine's Chapel—The Little Cloister—The King's Jewel House—The Great Cloister—Burial-place of the
Abbots—Ashburnham House—The Deanery—Jerusalem Chamber—Henry IV.'s Death—Restoration of the Jerusalem Chamber—The Building used as a Chapter House and Convocation House—Biographics of the Principal Deans—Precautions against Fire.
It has been observed by Mr. Spalding, in his work
on "Italy," that "a mediæval monastery with its
courts and cloister, its several buildings announcing
their destination by their position—this of the
superior, that of the dependent; this public and
accessible, that private, with its garden, and its
environing wall—was the successor of the Roman
villa urbana." But such a statement as this would
argue gross ignorance, and a mind incapable of
appreciating the real theory of the monastic life.
It is scarcely necessary to do more than state here
that the "religious life," in some shape or other,
dates from the first century of the Christian faith.
It was only by degrees, however, that it developed
itself in the Church, the hermits and recluses of
the earlier ages abounding in Egypt and the
countries nearest to the Holy Land. St. Benedict,
who founded the noble monastery of Monte Casino
in Italy in A.D. 530–32, is generally regarded as
the founder—though in reality he was only the
re-founder and reformer—of the monastic system
in the Western or Latin Church. His rule was
brought into England by St. Augustine; and if not
before, at all events soon after, the Norman Conquest, the chief and wealthiest abbeys in our
country were those of the Benedictines—Glastonbury, St. Albans, Abingdon, Canterbury, Westminster, &c. In fact, in a certain sense, nearly
all the well-known monasteries followed the rule
of St. Benedict, whether they were Cistercians,
Carthusians, Cluniacs, or whatever the name of
their discipline; it is said that all our cathedral
priories, except Carlisle, were of the Benedictine
order, and that the revenues of the Benedictine
abbeys exceeded those of all the rest of the
religious bodies put together.

THE CHAPTER HOUSE PREVIOUS TO ITS RESTORATION.
"Water, a mill, a garden, an oven, &c.," says
Mr. Wood, in his "Ecclesiastical Antiquities,"
"were provided within the precincts of a Benedictine monastery to prevent necessity arising for
the monks going abroad. When any of the monks
were about to start on a journey, they obtained the
prayers of the community; on their return, the
wayfarers sought pardon for anything of which they
had been guilty on their way, by neglecting the
custody of their eyes, or ears, or by indulging in
idle conversation."
Although most of the buildings appertaining to
the "inner life" of the monastery at Westminster
have disappeared, there is still much left that is
interesting; for, besides the church itself, which is
substantially the same now as it was before the
Reformation, many of the other ancient parts of
the Abbey still remain. For instance, the Chapter
House and the Cloisters are both entire; and the
same may be said of the Jerusalem Chamber.
Leaving the abbey church by a doorway at the
east end of the south aisle, we are led by a descent
of several steps to the north-eastern corner of the
cloisters. Passing along the east walk, a doorway
on the left will be found opening into the outer
vestibule of the Chapter House.
"The chapter house in England," writes the
Rev. Mackenzie Walcott, "was almost essentially
a national peculiarity, unlike the alleys or oblong
rooms which take their place on the Continent,
forming the conventual or capitular Parliament
House, and a distinctive and splendid building.
That of Westminster is of considerable archi
tectural history; firstly, because it replaces the
round Chapter House erected by Edward the
Confessor, and is of a polygonal form, like that of
Worcester, these two being the only exceptions to
the Benedictine rule of building rectangular chapter
houses; and secondly, because it is built (almost
exceptionally) over a crypt, the only other instance
being at Wells, that of St. Paul's having perished
in the Great Fire; and this crypt embodies the
original structure of the Confessor."
Sir G. Gilbert Scott, in writing on the Chapter
House at Westminster, says it "singles itself out
from other beautiful works as a structure perfect in
itself, of a purely English type as to its plan and
outline, and as carrying out the principle of window
tracery in a fuller and grander degree than any
part of the church." It is evident from the actual
building accounts which have been preserved that
the Chapter House was erected in A.D. 1250–53,
so that it formed part and parcel of the original
plan of the church, though a separate structure;
and this date agrees with that of "La Sainte
Chapelle" at Paris, the windows of which are of
a similar style; "thus showing that our English
architecture was running a pretty parallel course
with that of France."
The shape of the previous Chapter House,
which stood on the same spot, cannot be determined. The present building stands over a crypt
which may or may not have belonged to its predecessor. It is approached from the outer cloister
by an outer and an inner vestibule; the former
of limited height, owing to its passing under the
dormitory; the latter lofty, and containing the
flight of steps by which the raised level of the
Chapter House is reached. The outer vestibule
is divided into two walks by small columns of
Purbeck marble, and the arch in the cloister by
which we enter it is exquisitely carved. The
bosses in this vestibule are also elaborate. The
inner vestibule is divided into two unequal bays,
pierced on both sides with windows; those on the
northern side, however, look not into the open air,
but towards the altar of St. Faith in the revestry.
The building is an octagon, the diagonals of
which measure sixty feet; in other words, it is an
octagon, inscribed in a circle of that diameter; it
is loftier than most other buildings of the same
kind. The central pillar is of Purbeck marble,
consisting of a column surrounded by eight detached
shafts: it is lofty and light, and the groining which
shot up from it has been restored according to the
original pattern by Sir G. G. Scott. Each side of
the building is occupied by a spacious window,
which fills nearly the whole width between the
corner shafts. These windows are generally of
four lights; the mullions are of Purbeck marble,
and the heads filled with large circles and quatrefoils. The spaces beneath the windows are
arcaded, with five arches in each, of a trefoil form
and richly moulded. The five arches against the
eastern wall are much richer and more deeply set
than the others. They probably formed the seats
of the five greater dignitaries of the Abbey—namely, the abbot in the centre; the prior and subprior, and the third and fourth priors. The seats
all round are of stone, and on the backs of these
is a series of paintings of religious subjects in a
sadly mutilated condition, but as they are fully
described by Sir Charles Eastlake in his work on
oil paintings we need not pause on them in detail.
The entire building, although loftier than the
Chapter House at Salisbury Cathedral, is less rich
in ornament, and probably a little earlier in date
of erection; the two, however, are so like that no
doubt the one suggested the general plan of the
other. There is an excellent description of the
building in a volume of papers read by Sir G. G.
Scott at the London Congress of the Archæological
Institute in July, 1866, and published by Mr. John
Murray under the title of "Old London." In that
paper the general architect expressed his doubt as
to the possibility of "any approach being made to
the correct restoration of the Chapter House."
But since that date all difficulties have been surmounted; and although the rich painted glass
which once threw its tints upon the tessellated
pavement below has not been replaced as yet, still
the groining of the lofty roof has been renewed,
and the exterior has been freed from the wooden
and stone encumbrances which for so long a period
of vandalism and ignorance observed the beauty of
its Gothic details, and mutilated its fair proportions.
The crypt below is comparatively plain, and of no
great height; and there can be little doubt that it
was formerly used as a chapel.
The chapter-house, as is well known, was the
place where the monks and other dignitaries of
monastic buildings met to transact the general
business of their order; but that at Westminster
has its political as well as its religious associations.
Here, by consent of the then abbot, in 1377, the
Commons of England first held their meetings, as
part of the King's Parliament; and here they continued to hold their sittings until 1547, when
Edward VI. granted them instead the use of St.
Stephen's Chapel.
It appears that in the reign of James I., if not
sooner, the records of the King's Bench and the
Common Pleas were deposited in this place, and
from that time down to the close of the year
1859 the records continued to increase. It is said
that much damage was done to the Chapter House
in the time of the Civil Wars. The old groined
roof was standing in 1740. Remonstrances had
been made to the Government, who were the
custodians of the place, in consequence of its
dangerous condition, some time before. At the
above date certain surveyors reported that it was
necessary to pull the structure down, and put up a
new one. This report was, fortunately, not acted
upon; and in the year 1744 upwards of £600
were expended on those repairs, which destroyed
in a great measure the ancient appearance of the
building. In 1862 the Dean and Chapter of
Westminster called a meeting to take into consideration the steps which were desirable in order
to call public attention to the ruinous condition of
the Chapter House, with a view to its restoration;
nothing, however, seems to have resulted from this
meeting, and in 1865 another meeting for the
same object was convened by the Society of
Antiquaries. Dean Stanley, who was voted to the
chair, having related the early history of the
Chapter House, and alluded to the fact that it
was the place of meeting of the first House of
Commons, said: "I shall not go through the
history of the House of Commons, during the 300
years that it sat in this Chapter House, but still
it is impossible not for a moment to recall the
extraordinary interest of the Chapter House in
that connection, and to remember that almost all
the struggles for liberty against the Crown must
have taken place within these walls. There is one
instance in which they met in the refectory to
impeach Piers Gaveston, in the time of Edward II.,
but as a general rule we may feel satisfied that
here took place those early struggles; and as the
Commons sat here down to the time of Henry
VIII., one may also figure to oneself that here
also took place all the memorable acts of the first
epoch of the Reformation. It is perhaps worthy of
note that the last occasion on which the Commons
sat in this house was the last day of the life of
Henry VIII., and that their last act here was the
attainder of the Duke of Norfolk. In 1547 the
Commons moved to the Chapel of St. Stephen,
within the walls of Westminster Palace, which had
become vacant by the suppression of the Collegiate
Chapel of St. Stephen's, Westminster. During the
previous 300 years the Abbey must have exercised
a kind of divided control over the Chapter House,
for no doubt the chapter of the monks met here
when the House of Commons was not sitting.
But in 1547 the jurisdiction passed entirely away
from the Chapter, and came exclusively into the
possession of the Crown. In 1540, when the
Abbey was dissolved, the Chapter House became
absolute public and national property, and the
Dean and Chapter that were created on their
present footing by Queen Elizabeth never could
have entered this Chapter House by right for the
performance of any of their business. I believe,"
continued the Dean, "it is not quite clear where
they held their chapter meetings from their first
foundation, but it was probably in the Jerusalem
Chamber, which is called in legal documents 'our
Chapter House.' In 1547, therefore, we enter
upon the third stage of its history. In the reign
of Edward VI., or of Elizabeth—it is not quite
clear which—the building was appropriated for the
public records. Then commenced a course of
ruin and dilapidation for which the Government
must be considered responsible, and which it is
the object of this meeting to press them to repair.
No doubt these frightful cupboards are nothing but
deformities; but, nevertheless, they once contained
everything most interesting in English history.
Up to the present day there is a board in Poets'
Corner, outside the building, bearing this inscription—'All parcels and letters addressed to Sir
Francis Palgrave at the Chapter House are to be
forwarded to the Rolls' Court.' And here I may
relate a story which Sir Francis himself told me.
On the night of the great fire at the Houses of
Parliament he and Dean Ireland were standing on
the roof of the Chapter House, looking at the
flames, when a sudden gust of wind seemed to
bring the flames in that direction. Sir Francis
implored the Dean to allow him to carry 'Domesday Book' and other valuable records into the
Abbey, but the Dean answered that he could not
think of doing so without first applying to Lord
Melbourne. And this leads me to the fourth
period. Three or four years ago the records were
finally removed to the Rolls Court, and from that
time the Chapter House has been left in the state
in which you behold it. It is national property,
but it has not been put to any national use. Now,
it is obvious that before anything can be done with
it it must be restored, not by the Dean and
Chapter, for it never belonged to us, though if the
Government will undertake to give it to us we will
endeavour to preserve it as best we can. But, in
the first instance, it must be restored to its original
magnificence, and to the nation. That is the
request we have to urge, and I now appear before
you not as claiming anything for ourselves, but as
demanding, in the name of the Dean and Chapter
of Westminster and of the people of England, that
the Chapter House should be restored to the state
in which it was during the period when the House
of Commons occupied it, and that it should be
freed from the incumbrances no longer necessary
now that the records have been deposited elsewhere.
This, the 800th anniversary of the foundation of
the Chapter House, and the 600th of the foundation of the House of Commons, is the very time
to make the request, and the Government, I hope
and believe, are not indisposed to lend a willing
hand to a request coming from so venerable and
important a body as the Society of Antiquaries.
Mr. Gilbert Scott is willing to set before you the
manner in which the restoration of the building is
to be accomplished; so, with all these convergences
of times, persons, and dispositions, I trust this
meeting will not have been held in vain."
That this meeting was more successful than its
predecessor will be at once inferred, when we state
that early in the following year the sum of £7,000
was voted by Parliament for the restoration of the
Chapter House; the work was placed in the hands
of Mr. (now Sir) G. Gilbert Scott, who had devoted
much of his time to the acquisition of a knowledge
of the details of the Abbey in every part; and the
result of his labours, it need hardly be added, has
fully justified the appointment.
For many years prior to 1859, the Chapter
House was used as a repository for the Public
Records, among which was the original "Domesday Book," so familiar to every child who has read
the history of our Saxon and Norman kings.
"Though above seven hundred years old," wrote
Pennant in 1790, "it is still in as fine preservation
as if it was the work of yesterday."
This great work, together with the other public
records that encumbered the place, was removed
in the year 1859 to the new Record Office in
Chancery Lane. For many years this portion of
Westminster Abbey had been allowed to fall into
decay; it was filled from the floor to the ceiling
with presses and galleries in which the deeds and
other documents were stowed away. The old
encaustic pavement was boarded over, and to this
cause we are, perhaps, indebted for its preservation.
The central pillar, from which sprung the groined
roof, remained; but in other parts of this octagonal
building terrible mischief had been done. The
original windows, the same in size and general
arrangement as they now appear, had been in some
instances removed, and the space filled up with
brickwork.
Close by the Chapter House is the Chapel of
"the Pyx," an ancient vaulted chamber, formerly
the depository of the regalia of the Scottish kings,
including the Holy Cross of Holyrood. Dean
Stanley thus writes concerning it: "In the eastern
cloister is an ancient double door, which can never
be opened, except by the officers of the Government or their representatives, bearing seven keys,
some of them of large dimensions, that alone could
admit to the chamber within. That chamber,
which belongs to the Norman substructions beneath
the dormitory, is no less than the Treasury of
England. Hither were brought the most cherished
possessions of the State." (fn. 1)
This chamber, as Mr. J. Timbs tells us in his
"Romance of London," was once "the scene of a
glorious haul by way of the robbery of about two
millions of our money by certain folks, amongst
whom the abbot and forty of his monks fell under
suspicion, and were sent to the Tower. This money
(£100,000) had been laid up for the Scotch wars
by Edward I."
At he time of the Commonwealth, the Pyx
Chamber seems to have been in the occupation of
the Dean and Chapter, and upon their refusing to
deliver up the keys to the officers of the House
of Commons, the doors were forced open, and an
inventory of the regalia was made. These were
afterwards sold, and though subsequently recovered
by the Crown, they were never restored to the
custody of the Abbey, but at the time of the
Restoration they were transferred to the Tower.
The Pyx Chamber still remains in the exclusive
occupation of the Crown. In this chamber is a
stone altar that seems to have escaped destruction
by the fanatics at the time of the Reformation and
the great Civil War. The groined roof is supported
by Romanesque or semi-circular arches, and thick,
short, round shafts. The keys of its double doors
are now deposited with seven distinct officers of the
Exchequer.
The gloomy-looking passage which extends southward by the door of the Pyx Chamber is known
as the "dark cloisters," and leads to a small
enclosure called the "Little Cloister." Here is
the Littlington Tower, which was built by Abbot
Littlington, and originally the bell-tower of the
church. In it were four bells, which were rung
when great meetings or prayers took place in
St. Catherine's Chapel; a small flag being at the
same time hoisted on the summit of the tower, as
appears in Hollar's view. A writer of the fourteenth
century says:—"At the Abbey of St. Peter's, Westminster, are two bells, which over all the bells in
the world obtain the precedence in wonderful size
and tone." We also read that "in the monasterye
of Westminster ther was a fayr yong man which
was blynde, whom the monks hadde ordeyned to
rynge the bellys." St. Catharine's Chapel was
in part pulled down in the year 1571; the bells
(one dated as early as 1430) were taken down,
and, with two new bells, were hung in one of the
western towers of the Abbey Church. In Littlington
Tower lived the noted Emma Lady Hamilton,
when servant to Mr. Dare. The building, we are
told by Mr. Timbs, "was restored by its tenant,
Mr. R. Clark, one of the choir, who also erected
in its front the original Gothic entrance to the Star
Chamber Court, and its ancient bell-pull."
The Little Cloister is a square enclosure, having
a fountain in the centre, surrounded by an arcade
supported by plain semi-circular arches. At the
south-eastern corner are the remains of St. Catharine's Chapel. It now serves as the entrance-hall
to one of the canon's residences; and part of
the north end has been partitioned off so as to
form a passage to the residence on the east side.
According to Dean Stanley, St. Catharine's Chapel
was several times before the Reformation used for
episcopal consecrations, and also as the meetingplace of the principal Councils of Westminster.
Not far from this interesting remnant of the old
monastery, and near the south-eastern corner of
the Abbey precincts, is an ancient square tower,
which, as we learn from Dean Stanley's "Historical
Memorials," is supposed to have served the purposes of a monastic prison, but which was sold
by the Abbey to the Crown in the last year of
Edward III. It bears in its architecture a striking
resemblance to those parts of the Abbey which
are known to have been built by Abbot Littlington.
It was first devoted to the purposes, and for many
years bore the name, of the King's Jewel House.
It then became the Parliament Office, and was
used as a depository for Acts of Parliament. In
1864 these Acts were removed to the Victoria
Tower, in the new Houses of Parliament; but the
grey fortress still remains, and, "with the Treasury
and the Chapter House," as the Dean tells us,
"forms the triple link of the English State and
Church with the venerable past." This tower is
now used as the depository of the standards of
weights and measures, both old and new, in connection with the "Trial of the Pyx" (see Vol. I.,
page 357).
The Great Cloister is immediately contiguous to
the south side of the nave of the Abbey Church.
The northern and western sides of the cloisters
were built by Abbot Littlington, who died in 1386.
He also built the granary, which afterwards became
the dormitory of the King's Scholars. By the
Benedictine rule the monks were required to spend
much of their time in the seclusion of the cloisters;
and there the day of the month was proclaimed
every morning after "prime" by the boys attached
to the monastery. The old grey cloisters, with
groined arches of the fourteenth century, surround
a grassy area—"monastic solitude in contrast with
the scene on the opposite side of the church."
The north walk of the cloisters is spanned by
the buttresses of the nave, and at either end are
entrances to the church. In the south walk are
the remains of a lavatory, and towards the east end
of this walk are the graves of some of the early
abbots, but the memorials of only four are visible,
namely, Vitalis, who died in 1082; Gilbert Crispin
(1114); Lawrence, said to have been the first who
obtained from the Pope the privilege of using the
mitre, ring, and glove, and who died in 1175; the
fourth slab is of black marble, called Long Meg,
from its extraordinary length of eleven feet, and
covers the ashes of Gervase de Blois, a natural son
of King Stephen, who was appointed abbot in
1140 and deposed in 1159. In 1349, twenty-six of
the monks of this abbey fell victims to a plague
which was then raging, and they are reported by
old Fuller to have been buried all in one grave in
the south cloister, under the slab above alluded
to. The humbler brethren of the monastery were
mostly buried under the central plot of grass in
the cloisters.
A small wooden door in the south walk leads
to Ashburnham House, one of Inigo Jones's few
remaining works. Close by the entrance to Ashburnham House is a monument to Peter Francis
Courayer, a Roman Catholic clergyman, librarian
and canon of the Abbey of St. Genevieve, at Paris.
He translated and published several very valuable
works on the validity of English orders; but his
writings not being favourably received by members of his own Church, he took refuge in England
in 1727, and was warmly received by the University
of Oxford, who conferred upon him the degree of
D.D. He died in 1776, at the age of ninety-five.
There is in the east walk a monument to Sir
Edmundbury Godfrey, who was murdered in the
reign of Charles II., and a tablet to LieutenantGeneral Withers, with an epitaph said to be by
Pope. In the north walk lie buried Dr. Markham,
Archbishop of York, who died in 1807 and also a
former Bishop of St. David's; and there are here
a few memorial tablets of no particular interest,
unless perhaps we select one dated in 1621, remarkable for its quaintness, and inscribed to the
memory of William Laurence, in these lines—
"With diligence and truth most exemplary,
Did William Laurence serve a Prebendary;
And for his pains, now past, before not lost,
Gain'd this remembrance at his master's cost.
Oh! read these lines again!—you seldom find
A servant faithful, and a master kind.
Short-hand he wrote, his flower in prime did fade,
And hasty Death short-hand of him bath made.
Well couth he numbers, and well measur'd land;
Thus doth he now that ground whereon you stand,
Wherein he lies so geometrical;
Art maketh some, but thus will Nature all."

THE WESTERN TOWERS AND CLOISTERS OF WESTMINSTER ABBEY.
About the year 1630, Dean Williams, afterwards
Archbishop of York, spent a considerable sum in
repairing the most decayed parts of the church;
he also, says Dugdale, converted a room in the
east part of the cloisters, which had been the
monks' parlour, into a library which he furnished
with books.
In the west walk is a monument to George
Vertue, the antiquary and engraver, and also one,
by Banks, to Woollett, another eminent engraver
of the last century.
It does not appear that the nave and cloisters,
though the last resting-places of so many eminent
persons, were treated with due respect in the reign
of Queen Anne. At all events the following occurs
in the Acts of the Dean and Chapter, under date
May 6th, 1710: "Whereas several butchers and
other persons have of late, especially on market
days, carried meat and other burdens through the
church, and that in time of Divine service, to the
great scandal and offence of all sober persons;
and whereas divers disorderly beggars are daily
walking and begging in the Abbey and cloisters;
and do fill the same with nastiness, whereby great
offence is caused to all people going through the
church and cloisters; and whereas many idle boys
come into the cloisters daily, and there play at
cards and other plays for money, and are often
heard to curse and swear: Charles Baldwell is
appointed beadel to restrain this, and to complain
of offenders, if necessary, to a justice of the peace.
And it is further ordered that if any boys that go to
the grammar school, or are choristers of the church,
do play there, the beadel do forthwith give in the
names of such boys to one of the masters, that they
may be punished according to their fault."

THE DEANERY.
Ashburnham House, in Little Dean's Yard, as
stated above, was built by Inigo Jones. Its chief
beauty is a magnificent staircase. In this house was
deposited the Cottonian Library (now in the British
Museum), which had a narrow escape of being
destroyed by fire here in 1731. One of the most
important works in this library was the Customs
Book of the Abbey, written by Abbot Ware in the
thirteenth century. This volume has always been
said to have been destroyed in the fire above
alluded to, but its parched and shrivelled leaves
have been preserved in the British Museum, and
a few years ago underwent a restoring process by
means of which the whole has become legible.
Dean Stanley has had a copy made, which is
deposited in the Abbey Library.
In the garden is an alcove, also attributed to
Inigo Jones, in imitation of part of a small Roman
temple. In the coal-cellar are some remains of
the vaults of the old conventual buildings, and in
one of the walls may be seen a capital of the
Early Norman period. The house, however, contains nothing else striking or important, and is
chiefly memorable as having been at different times
inhabited by Dean Milman and Dean Ireland.
The garden between the house and the cloister
occupies the site of what once was a hall or
refectory or dormitory, as is shown by the deeplysplayed windows which are still to be seen in the
wall rising far above the spring of the arches of
the cloister roof. The house is now occupied by
the Sub-Dean, Lord John Thynne.
The present Deanery, a substantial building of
stone, occupies part of the site, and, indeed, is
formed partly out of the ancient abbot's house,
which enclosed a small court or garden lying to
the west of the cloisters. It is one of the most
curious buildings in the Abbey precincts. Over
the doorway is a stone shield carved with the arms
of the Deanery, namely—Azure, a cross patonce
between five martlets, four in the cantons of the
cross, and one in base, or; on a chief of the last, a
pale quarterly of France and England, between two
roses, gules. Dart, in his "Lives of the Abbots of
Westminster," says that Abbot Islip built the
Dean's House and offices to the monastery; Dean
Stanley, however, in his "Historical Memorials
of Westminster," ascribes its erection to Abbot
Littlington, with a slight addition by Abbot Islip.
The doorway is close by the entrance to the
cloisters from Dean's Yard. It stands round a
small court, into which for the most part its
windows look. Only from the grand dining-hall
and its parlour there were originally windows into
the open space before the Sanctuary. It was
commonly called "Cheyney Gate Manor," from
the conspicuous chain which was drawn across the
entrance of the cloisters. Skirting the west side
of the cloister are a suite of modern apartments
and the dining-room. On the south side was the
Abbot's long chamber, now the Dean's library;
this is immediately above the entrance to the
cloisters. The kitchen occupied the south-west
corner, and extending thence to the Jerusalem
Chamber was the abbot's refectory, now the
college hall. Till Dean Buckland introduced a
modern stove, this noble apartment was warmed
by a huge brazier, of which the smoke escaped
through a "louvre" in the roof.
The Jerusalem Chamber, to which we now
make our way, was built by Abbot Littlington,
towards the latter end of the fourteenth century;
and it is supposed to have been either the
"Guesten hall" or the abbot's withdrawing-room.
It is known to every reader of English history
and of Shakespeare, that in this chamber died
King Henry IV., soon after an attack of illness
which seized him whilst paying his devotions at
the shrine of Edward the Confessor. It is scarcely
necessary to repeat here the well-known lines of
Shakespeare, and yet their omission would be
unpardonable:—
"Henry. Doth any name particular belong
Unto the lodging where I first did swoon?
Warwick. 'Tis call'd Jerusalem, my noble lord.
Henry. Laud be to God! ev'n there my life must end.
It hath been prophesied me many a year
I shall not die but in Jerusalem;
Which vainly I suppos'd the Holy Land.
But bear me to that chamber: there I'll lie;
In that Jerusalem shall Harry die."
With reference to the death of Henry IV. in
this chamber, Pennant remarks, on the authority of
Brown's "Fasciculus," that "the devil is said to
have practised such a delusion on Pope Silvester II.,
having assured his Holiness that he should 'die
in Jerusalem,' and kept his word, by taking him
off in 1003, as he was saying mass in a church of
that name in Rome."
In 1719 the body of Joseph Addison lay in
state in the Jerusalem Chamber, before its burial
in Henry VII.'s Chapel, as pictured in Tickell's
elegy:—
"Can I forget the dismal night that gave
My soul's best part for ever to the grave?
How silent did his old companions tread,
By midnight lamps, the mansions of the dead:
Through breathing statues, then unheeded things;
Through rows of warriors, and through walks of kings."
Here, too, Congreve lay in state, before his
pompous funeral, at which noblemen bore the pall;
and here, also, a similar honour was paid to the
body of Matthew Prior, for we are told in the
Daily Post of September 24, 1721, that "the same
evening the remains of Matthew Prior, Esquire,
were carried to the Jerusalem Chamber, and splendidly interred in Westminster Abbey.
The portrait of Richard II., now in the chancel
of the Abbey Church, hung for some time on the
walls of this chamber, as already mentioned in a
preceding chapter.
The exterior of the Jerusalem Chamber is not
particularly attractive, and with its dwarf proportions it seems a sort of excrescence on the west
front of the Abbey, from which it leads in a southward direction towards the Deanery. Between the
years 1871 and 1874 the interior underwent a
thorough restoration. Its walls are covered with
ancient tapestry, and with cedar panelling; the
fireplace is fitted with an antique grate, and the
surrounding surface is covered with very handsome
tiles, ornamented with a pattern combining roses
and lilies, with the briars and the stems of each
respectively, while around, in mediæval characters,
are the three texts: "O pray for the peace of
Jerusalem," "Build thou the walls of Jerusalem,"
and "Jerusalem which is above is free." The old
Jacobean carving on the wall over the fireplace
is retained; at the top is an admirably executed
painting of the death of Henry IV. in this very
chamber, with the line from the above quotation,
"In that Jerusalem shall Harry die."
The Jerusalem Chamber has been used as the
Chapter House, probably, ever since the Abbey
gave up its proper Chapter House to the Crown.
Here, then, it may not be out of place to make
some mention of the "staff" of the Abbey—or,
rather, cathedral—for, as we have shown in a previous chapter, its duties are performed in all
respects similar to any other cathedral body. The
deanery is in the gift of the Crown; the Dean,
whose power is absolute in these walls, has a
salary of £2,000 per annum; he is also Dean
of the Order of the Bath. There are six canons,
one of whom is also sub-dean, and eight minor
canons, a chapter clerk, organist, besides vergers
and choristers. The patronage which is vested in
the Dean and Chapter of Westminster embraces
the minor canonries, and extends over twentyfour benefices. Under the charge of the Dean and
Chapter of the Abbey, and forming part of their
especial charge, is Westminster School, or, to speak
technically, "the College of St. Peter." As a
school for the young was always a leading feature
in every monastery, and especially in those of the
Benedictine order, there can be no doubt that there
was a school attached to the Abbey of Westminster in the old Saxon times. It was re-founded
by Queen Elizabeth, who contrived, through the
fulsome adulation of her courtiers, to get herself
regarded as its founder, and it dates its precedence among the public schools of England for
1560. This school, however, will form the subject
of our next chapter.
Besides being the place for the transaction of
business by the Dean and Chapter, the Jerusalem
Chamber is the place of meeting for the members
of the Convocation of the Province of Canterbury.
In theory, the Church of England is governed by
means of its Convocation of Bishops and Clergy;
but, practically, Convocation is at present little
more than a merely deliberative body. Still its
moral influence is great, and no wise minister
would venture to disregard its deliberately expressed opinion. There is a House of Convocation for each province, Canterbury and York.
That of Canterbury consists of two Houses: the
upper is confined to the bishops; the lower is
composed of the deans of every cathedral, the
archdeacons, with proctors elected from every
cathedral chapter, and two more elected by the
clergy of every diocese. In York there are two
Houses, but the bishops, deans, archdeacons, and
proctors sit together. A fresh election of proctors
is made with every new Parliament.
The Jerusalem Chamber is also to be remembered as the scene of the labours of the committee
appointed by Convocation in 1870 to revise the
"authorised version" of the English Bible—labours which have occupied four years.
On the suppression of the bishopric of Westminster, in the year 1550, the diocese was reunited to the see of London. "The lands of this
bishopric," says Widmore, "were several of them
exchanged with Ridley, just then made Bishop
of London, for some belonging to that bishopric.
Ridley had also the convicts' prison, a house
between the west end of the Abbey and the gatehouse; the bishop's palace, formerly the abbot's
house, was given to the Lord Wentworth; a small
parcel of lands was sold to Bishop Thirleby; several
granted to one Sir Thomas Wroth, and others, said
to be applied to the repair of St. Paul's, and to
occasion the saying of 'robbing Peter to pay Paul.'"
Bishop Thirleby is reported to have impoverished
his bishopric very much by granting long leases
of the estates. He was, immediately after his surrender, translated to Norwich, and thence, some
years afterwards, to Ely.
We may add here, with reference to the suppression of the bishopric, that, under date of 1550,
Strype, in his "Ecclesiastical Memorials," says
that "the Church of Westminster, nearer to the
King's house than any other, was not yet freed
from its superstitions, both in apparel and books,
which were still preserved there, which occasioned
a letter, dated in February, from the King and his
Council to the members of that church, 'that, in
the presence of Mr. Vice-Chamberlain and Sir
Anthony Aucher, all manner of garnishments and
apparel of silver and gold, such as altar-cloths,
copes, &c., should be taken away, and delivered
to the said Sir Anthony; and to deface and carry
out of the library at Westminster all books of superstition, such as missals, breviaries, processionals,
&c.'" Widmore, too, informs us that "in May,
1553, the commissioners for gathering ecclesiastical goods carried away from hence all the plate
and furniture of the church, except a silver pot,
two gilt cups with covers, three herse cloths, twelve
cushions, one carpet, eight stall cloths for the
choir, three pulpit cloths, a little carpet for the
dean's stall, and two table cloths."
Between the abolition of Westminster as a
cathedral city by Henry VIII. and its return to
monastic rule by order of Queen Mary—that is,
from 1550 to 1556—no less than three deans were
appointed; and from the restoration of the deanery
in 1560, down to the present time, there have been
upwards of twenty. Of these, some have held
high preferment in the Church, or have had their
names handed down to posterity through the share
they have taken in political events or other matters
of history. Space does not permit of our speaking
of more than a few of the most important.
Lancelot Andrews, who held the deanery of
Westminster when James I. came to the throne,
was appointed to the bishopric of Chester in 1605,
and afterwards translated to the see of Ely. In
1618 he was advanced to the bishopric of Winchester, and made Dean of the Chapel Royal. He
was the author of several literary works; but that
by which he is best known is his "Manual of
Private Devotions and Meditations for Every Day
in the Week," and a "Manual of Directions for the
Visitation of the Sick." Bishop Andrews has the
reputation of having been the most learned of his
English contemporaries, excepting Usher, in the
Fathers, ecclesiastical antiquities, and canon law.
He was also celebrated for his talent at repartee,
of which an instance is told in page 29, Vol. II., of
this work. The good bishop is buried in St.
Saviour's Church, Southwark.
Thomas Sprat, who became Dean of Westminster in 1683, was one of the original Fellows
of the Royal Society, and in 1667 published its
history. In 1684 he was consecrated Bishop of
Rochester, and in return for the royal favours
which had been conferred upon him he published
a history of the Rye House Plot, entitled "A True
Account and Declaration of the Horrid Conspiracy
against the late King, his present Majesty, and the
present Government." After the abdication of
James II. an attempt was made to implicate
the bishop in a pretended plot for restoring him,
his signature having been fraudulently obtained;
but he succeeded in establishing his innocence,
after which he lived in retirement at Bromley, in
Kent, till his death in 1713. Dr. Sprat was the
author of a few short poems, and some other works
of no great merit.
Francis Atterbury, who succeeded Dr. Sprat in
the deanery, and also in the bishopric of Rochester,
was a great controversialist in the reigns of Queen
Anne and George I. He was a native of Milton,
near Newport Pagnell, in Buckinghamshire, and
was educated at Westminster School, and Christ
Church, Oxford. Having taken orders, he was
elected lecturer of St. Bride's, and soon afterwards
nominated minister of Bridewell, where his pulpit
eloquence attracted general attention. In the year
1700 he became engaged in a long controversy
with Dr. Wake, afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury, and others, concerning the rights, powers,
and privileges of Convocation, Atterbury denying
the authority of the civil power over ecclesiastical
synods; and the zeal with which he upheld his
views secured for him the thanks of the Lower
House of Convocation, and the degree of Doctor
in Divinity from the University of Oxford. In 1704
he was appointed to the deanery of Carlisle, and
shortly afterwards transferred to a canonry in Exeter
Cathedral. In 1712 he was made Dean of Christ
Church, Oxford, and in the following year was
advanced to the bishopric of Rochester and the
deanery of Westminster. On the death of Queen
Anne Dr. Atterbury assumed a position of hostility
to the House of Hanover, and all his energies
were directed to bring about the restoration of the
Stuart dynasty. This, perhaps, is the one great
blot on his character, and it was the one which
led to his downfall. On the breaking out of the
rebellion in 1715 the other prelates published a
declaration of abhorrence to it, but Atterbury
refused his signature, and not long afterwards he
incurred the suspicion of being deeply concerned
in a succession of plots for the restoration of the
ejected family. He was charged by a committee
of the House of Commons with a treasonable
correspondence, and the evidence against him being
considered conclusive, he was committed to the
Tower. The bill of pains and penalties which was
passed against him by both the Upper and the
Lower House "condemned him to deprivation from
all his ecclesiastical preferments, incapacitated him
from performing any spiritual functions, or holding
any civil appointment, and sentenced him to perpetual exile." He accordingly quitted England for
France in June, 1723, and after several changes of
residence eventually died at Paris in 1732, in the
seventieth year of his age. He was buried privately in Westminster Abbey, and no monument
has been erected to his memory.
Samuel Horsley, who was installed in the
deanery in 1793, was a distinguished prelate of the
English Church, successively Bishop of St. David's,
Rochester, and St. Asaph. He was a powerful
theological controversialist, and the person against
whom he chiefly directed his attack was Dr. Joseph
Priestley. His published writings are very numerous, and a complete list of them is given in
Nichol's "Literary Anecdotes of the Eighteenth
Century." His "Seventeen Letters to Dr. Priestley" was regarded by the friends of the Church as
"a masterly defence of the orthodox faith, and as
the secure foundation of a high and lasting theological reputation." Soon after the publication of
this work, Lord Thurlow, who was then chancellor,
presented him with a prebendal stall in Gloucester
Cathedral, his lordship, it is said, at the same time
observing, that "those who defended the Church
ought to be supported by the Church." Bishop
Horsley vacated the deanery of Westminster in
the year 1802, on his translation to the bishopric
of St. Asaph.
John Ireland, who was appointed to the deanery
in 1816, sprang from very humble parentage, and
was born at Ashburton, in Devonshire, in the
neighbourhood of which place he held his first
curacy. He was afterwards vicar of Croydon, and
promoted to a prebendal stall in Westminster
Abbey. On his advancement to the deanery he
was also nominated to the rectory of Islip, Oxon,
which, however, he resigned some years before his
death, which took place in 1842. Dr. Ireland was
always distinguished by his warm patronage of
learning. The University of Oxford is indebted
to him for the scholarships bearing his name—four
in number, of £30 per annum each, founded in
1825; and to be elected on his foundation is one
of the greatest classical honours which the University can confer.
Dr. Samuel Wilberforce was next in succession
to Dr. Ireland. He was the third son of the celebrated philanthropist, William Wilberforce, and
was born in 1805. He was ordained as curate of
Checkendon, in Oxfordshire, and his subsequent
preferments were the rectory of Brightstone, archdeaconry of Surrey, the rectory of Alverstoke, a
canonry of Winchester, a chaplaincy to the late
Prince Consort, the Deanery of Westminster, and
the post of Lord High Almoner. He was consecrated Bishop of Oxford in 1845, and translated
to Winchester in 1869. Bishop Wilberforce took
a prominent part in the debates in the House of
Lords, and also in the Upper House of Convocation; and he was also well known as a most
eloquent speaker at public meetings of a religious
character. Bishop Wilberforce was accidentally
killed, on the 19th of July, 1873, by being thrown
from his horse.
William Buckland was nominated by Sir Robert
Peel to the deanery, on the elevation of Dr. Wilberforce to the bishopric of Oxford, in 1845. In
early life Dr. Buckland exhibited a marked tendency for the study of natural and physical science,
and in 1813 we find him appointed to the Readership of Mineralogy, and in 1818 to the Readership
of Geology, in the University of Oxford. His contributions to the "Proceedings" of the Geological
Society were very numerous, and in the first volume
of the "Bibliographia Geologiæ et Zoologiæ," published by the Ray Society, in 1848, there are
references to no less than sixty-one distinct works
and memoirs. In the year 1825 Dr. Buckland
accepted the living of Stoke Charity, in Hampshire,
and was promoted to a canonry in the Cathedral of
Christ Church, Oxford. He twice filled the presidential chair of the Geological Society, and he
also took a lively interest in the foundation of
the British Association for the Advancement of
Science. In 1847 he was appointed a trustee of
the British Museum, and took an active part in the
development of that department more especially
devoted to geology and palæontology. Dr. Buckland seems not to have devoted himself to questions of technical theology. His views on this
subject are chiefly contained in his "Bridgewater
Treatise" and the "Vindiciæ." Amongst the list
of his published works will be found but one
sermon, and that devoted to the subject of death;
it was published at Oxford in 1839.
Richard Chenevix Trench, who succeeded to
the deanery on the death of Dr. Buckland, in
1856, is a nephew of the first Lord Ashtown, in
the Irish peerage, and was born in Dublin in
1807. He graduated at Trinity College, Cambridge, and was soon afterwards ordained, and
engaged upon a country curacy. It was not, however, as a scholar or a divine, but as a poet, that
his name first became known. He is also the
author of a large number of essays and treatises.
In 1845 and 1846 he was Hulsean Lecturer at
Cambridge, and for a short time one of the Select
Preachers. About the year 1847 he became Theological Professor and Examiner at King's College,
London, and continued to hold that appointment
till his promotion to the Deanery of Westminster.
He was consecrated Archbishop of Dublin in 1864,
on the death of Dr. Whately.
Arthur Penrhyn Stanley, D.D., who, in 1864,
succeeded Archbishop Trench in the Deanery of
Westminster, is the son of the late Right Rev.
Edward Stanley, Bishop of Norwich. Educated
under Dr. Arnold at Rugby, and having passed a
very distinguished university career, he was for
many years tutor of his college, and secretary of
the Oxford University Commission. He was canon
of Canterbury from 1851 to 1858; Regius Professor
of Ecclesiastical History at Oxford, and canon of
Christ Church; and also chaplain to the Bishop
of London from 1858 to 1864. Dean Stanley first
became known to the literary world by his admirable "Life of Dr. Arnold," published in 1844;
among his most popular works since that date have
been his "Historical Memorials of Canterbury,"
"Sinai and Palestine," and his "Memorials of
Westminster Abbey," a work to which we have
to acknowledge our obligations.
We may add here that every precaution is taken
to ensure the protection of the Abbey from fire, the
Dean and Chapter having caused to be erected in
the south-west tower, at an altitude of 160 feet
from the ground, a huge tank, capable of containing 6,000 gallons of water, which is always kept
charged; from this tank pipes are conveyed to all
parts of the edifice, with hydrants and hose always
attached at every point of vantage, so that at the
first alarm of fire one man would be able unaided
to turn on the water to any point of danger. The
entire cost of these works amounted to £2,000.
It is not generally known that soon after the
Reformation the Abbey very nearly shared the fate
of Tintern, Glastonbury, Reading, Kirkstall, and
Malmesbury. Pennant writes, "When the Protector, Somerset, ruled in the fulness of power,
this sacred pile narrowly escaped a total demolition. It was his design to have pulled it down
to the ground, and to have applied the materials
towards the palace which he was then erecting
in the Strand, known by the name of Somerset
House. He was diverted from his design by a
bribe of not fewer than fourteen manors!"

THE JERUSALEM CHAMBER.