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the fields, and I will grant you all you ask." The populace, overawed by the presence of majesty, and by the gallant bearing of the young King, followed him implicitly to St. George's Fields, where he was still holding a parley with them when a body of men, which had been collected by the wealthier and more influential citizens, and who were joined by Sir Robert Knolles with a force of well-armed veterans, suddenly made their appearance. At the sight of this unexpected force a panic seized on the rebels, who, throwing down their arms, fled in all directions.

Stow has pointed out the exact spot in Smithfield on which Richard stood. "The King," he writes, "stood towards the east, near St. Bartholomew's Priory, and the Commons towards the west, in front of battle."

THE PRIORY AND CHURCH OF ST.

BARTHOLOMEW.

ST. BARTHOLOMEW'S PRIORY AND CHURCH-WHEN BUILT-ITS PRESENT APPEARANCE-REFECTORY, CRYPT, AND SUBTERRANEAN PASSAGE.—BARTHOLOMEW CLOSE.-MONUMENTS IN THE CHURCH.-STORY OF RAHERE, FOUNDER OF THE PRIORY.-FRACAS IN THE PRIORY.-ST. BARTHOLOMEW'S HOSPITAL. -CANONBURY.-CANONBURY TOWER.-GOLDSMITH'S RESIDENCE.— PRIOR BOLTON'S RESIDENCE.-BARTHOLOMEW FAIR.

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N the south-eastern side of Smithfield stand the remains of the beautiful church and once vast and wealthy Priory of St. Bartholomew, founded by Rahere, the first Prior, in the reign of Henry the First.* At the time of the suppression of the religious houses in the reign of Henry the Eighth, it was distinguished by its vast extent of building, its beautiful and shady gardens, its exquisite cloisters, its grand refectory, its fish-ponds, and by all the appurtenances of a great monastic establishment. Its mulberry-garden, planted by Prior Bolton, was famous. Passing under a gateway rich with carved roses and zigzag ornaments, we enter the fine old church of St. Bartholomew. As we gaze on the solidity of its massive pillars, its graceful arches, and the beauty of its architectural details, we are at once impressed with that sense of grandeur and solemnity which only such a scene can inspire. The remains of the old church are in the Norman style of architecture,

* The priory was founded about the year 1102, and was “again new built" in the year 1410.-Stow, p. 140.

and are apparently of the same date as the earlier portions of Winchester Cathedral. Some notion of its former magnificence may be conceived, when we mention that the present church is merely the chancel of the ancient edifice.

Surrounded by mean hovels and by a population of the lowest description, the exterior of the ancient Priory, though degraded to strange purposes, is notwithstanding scarcely less interesting than the interior. Beauty and decay meet us at every step. In order to view the noble arches of the ancient cloisters, we must dive into a timber-yard; while the old refectory, formerly one of the noblest halls in London, has long been converted into a manufactory. The fine oaken roof still remains. The exterior of the building has been sadly modernized, and the interior has been subdivided by intermediate roofs and ceilings, but still sufficient remains to recall vividly to our imaginations the days when this noble apartment was the scene of ecclesiastical hospitality, and brilliant with all the splendid paraphernalia of the Church of Rome.

The refectory stands on the south side of the church, near the end of the south transept, and is immediately connected with the beautiful eastern cloister, which, with its clustered columns and carved bosses, is now the only one which remains. Beneath the refectory is the ancient crypt, which, notwithstanding the beauty of its architecture, and its rare state of preservation, is but seldom visited and but little known. It is of great length, with a double row of finelyproportioned aisles. At the extremity of this gloomy and vaulted crypt is a door, which, according to tradition, opens into a subterranean passage extending to Canonbury, formerly a rural appendage of the Priors of St. Bartholomew, at Islington. Similar idle stories are not unfrequently attached to old monastic ruins, as in the cases of Malmesbury, Netley,

and Glastonbury. That the door in question, however, was formerly used as a means of escape in the hour of danger, there is reason to believe. Till very recently it opened into a cellar which extended beneath a chapel known as St. Bartholomew's Chapel, which was destroyed by fire in 1830. This chapel is known to have been secretly used by the Reformers of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries; the passage we have referred to having afforded them a ready means of escape in the event of their being disturbed by the officers of the law.

Consequent on the accumulation of the dust of centuries, the ground which encompasses the church of St. Bartholomew has gradually risen three or four feet, and the foundations of the nave and the entrances to the edifice are now considerably below the soil of the churchyard. As regards the eastern cloister, to such a height has the soil accumulated, that the spring of the arches is now level with the ground.

At the south side of the church was the great Close of the old priory, the site of which is now occupied by modern buildings, but which still bears the name of Bartholomew Close. The lesser Close, in which stood the Prior's stables, the kitchens, and offices, was situated at the east end of the church, and also still preserves its designation of the Little Close. The former is especially interesting from its connection with the fortunes of Milton. At the Restoration of Charles the Second, the prominent part which the great poet had acted under the Protectorate had rendered him a proscribed man, and accordingly we find him seeking a refuge in the house of a friend in Bartholomew Close, where he remained concealed till he found himself included in the general amnesty. Dr. Johnson thinks, and with some reason, that his escape was secretly

favoured by the Government. That he was in the custody of the Sergeant-at-Arms, at least for a short time, is proved by the following curious entries in the books of the House of Commons:-"Saturday, December 15th, 1660, ordered that Mr. Milton, now in custody of the Sergeant-at-Arms attending this House, be forthwith released on paying his fees." And again, on Monday the 17th,-" A complaint made that the Sergeant-at-Arms had demanded excessive fees for the imprisonment of Mr. Milton: ordered that it be referred to the Committee for Privileges to examine this business, and to call Mr. Milton and the Sergeant before them, and to determine what is fit to be given the Sergeant for his fees in this case." After his liberation, Milton took up his abode in Holborn, near Red Lion Fields.

In Bartholomew Close resided that classical artist, Hubert le Sœur, to whom we owe the beautiful statue of Charles the First at Charing Cross. He had a son, Isaac, who was buried on the 29th of November, 1630, in the neighbouring church of St. Bartholomew. Here, too, Benjamin Franklin carried on his vocation of a journeyman printer for nearly

a year.

The most interesting monument in St. Bartholomew's Church is that of the founder of the Priory, Rahere. This fine specimen of the pointed style of architecture represents the effigy of the founder in his prior's dress, recumbent beneath a canopy, with an angel kneeling at his feet, and monks praying by his side. The monument is inscribed,—

Hic jacet Raherus,

Primus Canonicus, et primus Prior hujus Ecclesiæ.

It bears no date, but from its style of architecture it must have been erected many years after the death of the founder.

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