Class ID Ac CO Book ,X^^ g^ THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND LLEWELLYNN JEWITT, F.S.A., Etc., Etc. S. C. HALL, F.S.A. ILLUSTRATED WIIH TWO HUNDRED AND TEN ENGRAVINGS ON WOOD LIBRARY DEC 4 1891 DWDF.1HEIN1HI0B. PHILADELPHIA PORTER AND COATES, 822, CHESTNUT STREET JUN » 1*1/ Jss INTRODUCTION. T?NGLAND is rich — immeasurably richer than any other country under the sun — in its "Homes;" and these homes, whether of the sovereign or of the high nobility, of the country squire or the merchant-prince, of the artisan or the labourer, whether, in fact, they are palace or cottage, or of any intermediate grade, have a character possessed by none other. England, whose " Home ! sweet home ! " has become almost a national anthem — so closely is its sentiment entwined around the hearts of the people of every class — is, indeed, emphatically a Kingdom of Homes ; and these, and their associations and surroundings, and the love which is felt for them, are its main source of true greatness. An Englishman feels, wherever he may be, that " Home is home, however lowly ; " and that, despite the attractions of other countries and the glare and brilliancy of foreign courts and foreign phases of society, after all "There's no place like home" in his own old fatherland. Beautifully has the gifted poet, Mrs. Hemans, sung of English " Homes/' and charmingly has she said — " The Stately Homes of England, How beautiful they stand Amidst their tall ancestral trees O'er all the pleasant land ! " VI INTRODUCTION. and thus given to us a title for our present work. Of these " Stately Homes" of our "pleasant land" we have chosen some few for illus- tration, not for their stateliness alone, hut because the true nobility of their owners allows their beauties, their splendour, their picturesque surroundings, and their treasures of art to be seen and enjoyed by all. Whether "stately" in their proportions or in their style of archi- tecture, in their internal decorations or their outward surroundings, in the halo of historical associations which encircle them, or in the families which have made their greatness, and whose high and noble characters have given them an enduring interest, these " Homes " are indeed a fitting and pleasant subject for pen and pencil. The task of their illustration has been a peculiarly grateful one to us, and we have accomplished it with loving hands, and with a sincere desire to make our work acceptable to a large number of readers. In the first instance, our notices of these " Stately Homes " appeared in the pages of the Art- Journal, for which, indeed, they were specially prepared, with the ultimate intention, now carried out, of issuing them in a collected form. They have, however, now been re-arranged, and have received considerable, and in many instances very important, additions. The present volume may be looked upon as the first of a short series of volumes devoted to this pleasant and fascinating subject ; others of a similar character, embracing many equally beautiful, equally interesting, end equally "stately" Homes will follow. LLEWELLYN N JEWITT. Winster Hall, Derbyshire. CONTENTS. I. — Alton Towers, Staffordshire II. — Cobham Hall, Kent III. — Mount Edgcumbe, Devonshire IY. — Cothele, Cornwall V. — Alnwick Castle, Northumberland YI. — Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire VII. — Arundel Castle, Sussex VIII. — Penshurst, Kent . IX. — Warwick Castle, Warwickshire X. — Haddon Hall, Derbyshire XI.- — Hatfield House, Hertfordshire XII. — Cassiobury, Hertfordshire . XIII. — Chatsworth, Derbyshire PAGE 1 37 54 70 78 116 153 172 192 221 294 308 322 LIST OF ILLUSTBATIONS. Page I.— ALTON TOWERS. Lion Fountain 1 Ruins of Alton Castle 2 Alton Towers, from the Terrace 4 „ from the Lake 6 The Octagon 8 The Conservatories and Alcove 11 The Temple 19 The Conservatories 22 The Pagoda 24 Choragic Temple 27 View from the Lower Terrace 29 The Gothic Temple 31 Part of the Grounds 33 Hospital of St. John 34 II.— COBHAM HALL. Initial Letter 37 Cohham Hall 38 The Three Sisters 43 The Lodge 45 Interior of the Church 48 The College Porch 50 The College 52 III.— MOUNT EDGCUMBE. The Eddystone Lighthouse 54 Plymouth Breakwater 57 Mount Edgcumbe,from Stonehouse Pier 59 The Mansion 61 Lady Emma's Cottage 64 The Gardens 65 The Ruin, the Sound, Drake's Island, &c 68 The Salute Battery 69 Patre IV.-COTHELE. The Mansion 73 The Landing Place 75 V.— ALNWICK CASTLE. Lighting the Beacon 78 Plan of Alnwick Castle 80 Alnwick Castle, from the River Aln . . 81 The Barbican 83 The Prudhoe Tower and Chapel 85 The Keep 87 Norman Gateway in the Keep 89 The Armourer's Tower 91 Figure of Warrior on the Barbican . . 93 The Well in the Keep 94 The Constable's Tower 95 Figure of Warrior on the Barbican . . 96 The East Garret 98 The Garden Gate, or Warder's Tower 99 Bond Gate : " Hotspur's Gate " 103 Alnwick Abbey 105 The Percy Cross 107 Hulne Abbey : The Percy Tower 109 The Church Ill The Brislee Tower 114 VI.— HARDWICK HALL. Ancient Pargetting, and Arms of Cavendish 116 Hardwick Hall, with the Entrance Gateway 118 The West Front 122 The Great Hall 125 The Grand Staircase 127 The Chapel 129 b LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. The Presence Chamber 131 Mary Queen of Scots' Boom 133 The Picture Gallery 135 Ancient Lock, and Arms of Hardwick 137 Hardwick Hall, from the Park 139 The Old Hall at Hardwick 142 Interior of the Old Hall 144 Fac-simile of the Countess of Shrews- bury's Signature 145 Hault Hucknall Church 146 The Grave of Hobbes of Malmesbury in Hault Hucknall Church 148 VII.— ARUNDEL CASTLE. Horned Owls in the Keep 153 The Quadrangle 156 Entrance Gate, from the Interior .... 158 The Keep 160 The Library 163 The Church of the Holy Trinity 169 Tombs of Thomas Fitzalan and Lady Beatrix in Arundel Church 171 VIII.— PEXSHURST. The Bell 172 Penshurst, from the President's Court. . 174 North and West Fronts 177 View from the Garden 170 The Baron's Court 182 The Village and Entrance to Church- yard 185 The Record Tower and the Church, from the Garden 186 The Hall and Minstrels' Gallery 188 IX.— WARWICK CASTLE. The Swan of Avon 192 The Castle, from the Temple Field 191 The Keep, from the Inner Court 196 Earl of Warwick and Humphrey, Duke - of Gloucester 198 Earl of Warwick's Combat before the Emperor Sigismund and the Empress 199 Earl of Warwick Departing on a Pil- grimage to the Holy Land 200 Badge of the Earl of Warwick 201 Caesar's Tower 202 The Castle, from the Bridge 203 Page The Castle, from the Island 205 Guy's Tower 206 The Warder's Horn 207 The Castle, from the Outer Court 209 The Inner Court, from the Keep 211 Guy's and the Clock Tower, from the Keep 212 The Castle, from the banks of the Avon 214 The Beauchamp Chapel ; Monument of the Founder 215 The Confessional 217 The Oratory 218 Warwick : The East Gate 219 X.— HADDON HALL. Dorothy Vernon's Door 221 Haddon, from the Meadows on the Bakewell Road 223 The "Peacock " at Rowsley 22 3 Haddon, from the Rowsley Road .... 226 Arms of Vernon quartering Avenell . . 227 Arms of Lord Vernon 230 Haddon, from the Meadows 234 The Main Entrance 235 Inside of Gateway 236 Ground and Garden Plan of Haddon . . 237 The first Court-yard 239 Gateway under the Eagle Tower .... 210 The Chaplain's Room 241 The Chapel 242 Norman Font in the Chapel 24 4 Wall-paintings in the Chapel 248 Steps to State Apartments 249 Roman Altar, Haddon Hall 250 The Banqueting-Hall : with the Min- strels' Gallery 261 Old Oak-table in the Banqueting-Hall 252 The Hand-lock in the Banqueting-Hall 252 Staircase to Minstrels' Gallery 253 Oriel Window in the Dining-room .... 255 Ante-room to the Earl's Bedroom .... 256 The Ballroom, or Long Gallery 257 Steps to the Ballroom 259 Dorothy Vernon's Door : Interior .... 260 Dorothy Vernon's Door : Exterior 261 The State Bedroom 263 The Archers' Room,, for Stringing Bows, &c 264 The Rack for Stringing the Bows 265 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. XI The Eagle, or Peverel Tower 266 Gallery across Small Yard 267 Room over the Entrance Gateway .... 268 The Terrace 270 The Hall from the Terrace 271 Arms of Family of Manners 272 Arms of the Duke of Rutland 278 The Foot-Bridge 279 Ring found at Haddon Hall 280 Washing-Tally found at Haddon Hall 281 Bakewell Church 283 Monument of Sir John Manners and his Wife, Dorothy Vernon 286 Ancient Cross, Bakewell Churchyard. . 290 XL— HATFIELD HOUSE. Armed Knight 294 The Old Palace at Hatfield 295 The Front View 297 The Garden front of Hatfield House . . 299 The East View 302 The Gallery 304 The Hall 305 XII.— CASSIOBURY. Crest of the Earl of Essex 308 Back View 310 From the Wood Walks 313 From the South-west 315 The Swiss Cottage 317 The Lodge 318 Monument in the Church at Watford. . 320 XIIL— CHATSWORTH. Entrance to the Stahles 322 The Old Hall as it formerly stood 325 Chatsworth from the River Derwent . . 333 The Entrance Gates 335 The Grand Entrance-Lodge at Baslow 340 Edensor Mill Lodge and Beeley Bridge 341 Entrance Gate 342 The Bridge over the River Derwent, in the Park 343 The Great Hall and Staircase 344 Vista of the State Apartments 346 Grinling Gihbons' Masterpiece 348 The Old State Bedroom 349 The State Drawing-room 351 The State Dining-room 352 The Drawing-room 355 The Hebe of Canova 356 The Library 357 Fireplace by Westmacott in the Dining- room 359 The Sculpture Gallery 360 Mater Xapoleonis 361 The Pavilion and Orangery, from the East 363 Carving over one of the Doors of the Chapel 365 Carving over one of the Doors of the Chapel 366 Carvings in the Chapel 367 The Private or West Library 370 The Sculpture Gallery and Orangery. . 372 Bust of the late Duke of Devonshire . . 373 The French Garden 374 The Great Cascade 375 The Alcove 376 Waterworks— The Willow Tree 377 Part of the Rock-work 378 The Great Conservatory 379 Part of the Rock-work — The Rocky Portal 380 The Emperor Fountain 381 The Garden on the West Front 382 West Front from the South 383 The Hunting Tower 384 Mary Queen of Scots' Bower 385 The late Sir Joseph Paxton's House . . 386 The Victoria Regia 388 Edensor Church and Village 389 Monumental Brass to John Beton .... 390 Cavendish Monument, Edensor Church 392 Tomb of the Sixth Duke of Devon- shire 393 The Chatsworth Hotel, Edensor 395 ALTON TOWERS. E commence this series with Alton Towers, one of the most interesting of the many Stately Homes of England that dignify and glorify the Kingdom ; deriving interest not alone from architectural grandeur and tbe picturesque and beautiful scenery by which it is environed, but as a per- petual reminder of a glorious past — its associa- tions being closely allied with the leading heroes and worthies of our country. The Laureate asks, apparently in a tone of reproach — "Why don't these acred sirs Throw up their parks some dozen times a year, And let the people breathe ! " The poet cannot be aware that a very large number of the " parks " of the nobility and gentry of England are "thrown up" not a "dozen times " but a hundred times in every year ; and that, frequently, thousands of " the people " breathe therein — as free to all the enjoyments they supply as the owners themselves. Generally, also, on fixed days, the chief rooms, such as are highly decorated or contain pictures — the State Apartments — are open also ; and all that wealth has procured, as far as the eye is concerned, is as much the property of the humblest artisan as it is of the lord of the soil. And what a boon it is to the sons and daughters of toil — the hard-handed men — with their wives and children — workers at the forge, the wheel, and the B THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. loom, — who thus make holiday, obtain enjoyment, and gain health, under the shadows of " tall ancestral trees " planted centuries ago by men whose names are histories. Indeed a closed park, and a shut-up mansion, are, now, not the rule, but the exception; the noble or wealthy seem eager to share then- acquisitions with the people; and continually, as at Alton Towers, picturesque and comfortable " summer houses " have been erected for the ease, shelter, and Ruins of Alton Castle. refreshment of all comers. Visitors of any rank or grade are permitted to wander where they will, and it is gratifying to add, that very rarely has any evil followed such license. At Alton Towers, a few shillings usually pays the cost consequent upon an inroad of four thousand modern "iconoclasts : " the grounds being frequently visited by so many in one day. The good that hence arises is incalculable : it removes the barriers that ALTON TOWERS. separate the rich from the poor, the peer from the peasant, the magnate from the lahourer ; and contributes to propagate and confirm the true patriotism that arises from holy love of country. Alton, Alveton, Elveton, or Aulton, was held by the Crown at the time of taking the Domesday survey, but, it would appear, afterwards reverted to its original holders ; Rohesia, the only child of the last of whom, brought Alton, by marriage, to Bertram de Verdon, who had been previously married to Maude, daughter of Robert de Ferrars, first Earl of Derby. Alveton thus became the caput baronice of the Verdon family, its members being Wooton, Stanton, Farley, Rarnsor, Coton, Bradley, Spon, Denston, Stramshall, and Whiston. From the Verdons, through the Furnivals and Neviles, Alton passed to the Earls of Shrewsbury, as will be seen from the following notice of the Verdon family. Goclfreye Compte le Verdon, surnamed de Caplif, had a son, Bertram de Verdon, who held Farnham Royal, Bucks, by grand sergeantry, circa 1080. He had three sons, one of whom, Norman de Verdon, Lord of Weobly, co. Hereford, married Lasceline, daughter of Geoffrey de Clinton, and by her had, with other issue, Bertram de Verdon, who was a Crusader, and founded Croxden, or Crokesden, Abbey, near Alton, in the twenty-third year of Henry II., anno 1176. He married twice : his first wife being Maude, daughter of Robert de Ferrars, first Earl of Derby (who died without issue in 1139), and his second being Rohesia, daughter and heiress of a former possessor of Alton, through which marriage he became possessed of that manor, castle, &c. He was Sheriff of the counties of Warwick and Leicester, and, dying at Joppa, was buried at Acre. By his wife Rohesia (who died in 1215) he had issue — William ; Thomas, who married Eustachia, daughter of Gilbert Bassett ; Bertram ; Robert ; Walter, who was Constable of Bruges Castle ; and Nicholas, through whom the line is continued through John de Verdon, who, marrying Marjorie, one of the co-heiresses of Walter de Lacie, Lord Palatine of the county of Meath, had issue by her — Sir Nicholas de Verdon of Ewyas-Lacie Castle ; John de Verdon, Lord of Weobly ; Humphrey ; Thomas ; Agnes ; and Theobald, who was Constable of Ireland, 3rd Edward L, and was in 1306 summoned as Baron Verdon. He died at Alton in 1309, and was buried at Croxden Abbey. His son, Theobald de Verdon, by his first wife, Elizabeth, widow of John de Burgh, Earl of Ulster, and daughter and one of the co-heiresses of Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester, by " Joane de Acres," had a daughter, married to b 2 THE STA TEL Y HOMES OF ENGLAND. Lord Ferrars of Groby ; and, by bis second wife, Maude, daughter of Edmund, first Baron Mortimer of Wigmore, had issue, besides three sons who died during his lifetime, three daughters, who became his co-heiresses. One of these, Margaret (who married three times), had Weobly Castle for her portion ; another, Elizabeth, married to Lord de Burghersh, had Ewyas-Lacie Castle for her portion ; and the other, Joan, had for her portion Alton, with its castle and dependencies. This lady (Joan de Verdon) married, firstly, Alton Towers, from the 'Terrace. William de Montague ; and, secondly, Thomas, second Lord Furnival, who, for marrying her without the king's licence, was fined in the sum of £'200. She had by this marriage two sons, Thomas and William, who were succes- sively third and fourth Barons Furnival, lords of Hallamshire. This William, Lord Furnival, married Thomasin, daughter and heiress of Nicholas, second Baron Dagworth of Dagworth, and had b}' her a sole daughter and heiress, ALTON TOWERS. Joan de Furnival, who, marrying Thomas Neville of Hallamshire, brother to the Earl of Westmoreland, conveyed to him the title and estates, he being summoned in 1383 as fifth Baron Furnival. By her he had issue, two daughters and co-heiresses, the eldest of whom, Maude, " Lady of Hallam- shire," married, in 1408, John Talbot, afterwards first Earl of Shrewsbury and sixth Baron Talbot of Goderich — " he Capitaine Anglais." Tbis nobleman, whose military career was one of the most brilliant recorded in English history, was summoned as Baron Furnival of Sheffield in 1409 ; created Earl of Shrewsbury, 1442; and Earl of Waterford, &c, 1446. He was slain, aged eighty, at Chatillon, in 1453, and was buried at Whitchurch. This Earl of Shrewsbury, who so conspicuously figures in Shakespeare's Henry VI., enjoyed, among his other titles, that of "Lord Verdon of Alton" — a title which continued in the family, the Alton estates having now for nearly five centuries uninterruptedly belonged to them Tbe titles of this great Earl of Shrewsbury are thus set forth by Shakespeare, when Sir William Lucy, seeking the Dauphin's tent, to learn what prisoners have been taken, and to " survey the bodies of the dead," demands — " Where is the great Alcides of the field, Valiant Lord Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury ? Created, for his rare success in arms, Great Earl of Washford, W T aterford, and Valence Lord Talbot of Goodrig and Urchinfield, Lord Strange, of Blackmeie, Lord Verdun of Alton, Lord Cromwell of Wingfield, Lord Eurnival of Sheffield, The thrice victorious Lord of Falconbridge ; Knight of the noble order of Saint George, Worthy Saint Michael, and the Golden Fleece ; Great Mareshal to Henry the Sixth Of all his wars within the realm of France/' To which, it will be remembered, La Pucelle contemptuously replies — " Here is a silly stately style indeed ! The Turk, that two-and-fifty kingdoms hath— Writes not so tedious a style as this — nim that thou magnifiest with all these titles, Stinking and fly-blown, lies here at our feet." From this John, Earl of Shrewsbury, — " the scourge of France," " so much feared abroad tbat with his name the mothers still their babes," — tbe manor and estates of Alton and elsewhere passed to his son, John, second earl, who married Elizabeth Butler, daughter of James, Earl of Ormond, and was suc- ceeded by his son, John, third earl, who married Catherine Stafford, daughter of Humphrey, Duke of Buckingham ; and was in like manner succeeded by his son, George, fourth eai'l, K.G., &c, who was only five years of age at his THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. father's death. He was succeeded, as fifth earl, by his son, Francis ; who, dying in 1560, was succeeded by his son, George, as sixth earl. This noble- man married, first, Gertrude Manners, daughter of Thomas, Earl of Rutland ; and, second, Elizabeth (generally known as " Bess of Hardwick," for an account of whom, see the ai'ticle on Hardwick Hall in the present volume), Alton Towers, from the Lake. daughter of John Hardwick, of Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, and successively widow, first, of Robert Barlow, of Barlow ; second, of Sir William Cavendish, of Chatsworth ; and, third, of Sir William St. Loe. She was the builder of Chatsworth and of Hardwick Hall. To him was confided the care of Mary Queen of Scots. He was succeeded by his son Gilbert, as seventh earl. Tbis young nobleman was married before he was fifteen to Mary, ALTON TOWERS. daughter of Sir William Cavendish of Chatsworth. He left no surviving male issue, and was succeeded by his brother, Edward, as eighth earl, who, having married Jane, daughter of Cuthbert, Lord Ogle, died, without issue, being the last of this descent, in 1617. The title then passed to a distant branch of the family, in the person of George Talbot, of Grafton ; who, being descended from Sir Gilbert Talbot, third son of the second earl, succeeded as ninth earl. From him the title descended in regular lineal succession to Charles, twelfth earl, who was created by George I. Duke of Shrewsbury and Marquis of Alton, and a K.G. At his death, the dukedom and marquisate expired, and from that time, until 1868, the earldom has never passed directly from a father to a son. The thirteenth earl was a Jesuit priest, and he was succeeded by his nephew as fourteenth earl. Charles, fifteenth earl, dying without issue, in 1827, was succeeded by his nephew, John (son of John Joseph Talbot, Esq.), who became sixteenth earl. That nobleman died in 1852, and was succeeded as seventeenth earl, by his cousin, Bertram Arthur Talbot (nephew of Charles, fifteenth earl), who was the only son of Lieut.-Colonel Charles Thomas Talbot. This young nobleman was but twenty years of age when he succeeded to the title and estates, which he enjoyed only four years, dying unmarried at Lisbon, on the 10th of, August, 1856. Earl Bertram, who, like the last few earls his predecessors, was a Roman Catholic, bequeathed the magnificent estates of Alton Towers to the infant son of the Duke of Norfolk, Lord Edward Howard, also a Roman Catholic ; but Earl Talbot (who was opposed in his claim by the Duke of Norfolk, acting for Lord Edward Howard ; by the Princess Doria Pamphili, of Rome, the only surviving child of Earl John ; and by Major Talbot, of Talbot, co. Wexford) claimed the peerage and estates as rightful heir. After a long-protracted trial, Earl Talbot's claim was admitted by the House of Lords, in 1858 ; and after another trial his lordship took formal possession of Alton Towers and the other estates of the family, and thus became eighteenth Earl of Shrewsbury, in addition to his title of third Earl of Talbot. His lordship (the Hon. Henry John Chetwynd Talbot, son of Earl Talbot) was born in 1803. He served in the Royal Navy, and became an admiral on the reserved list. He was also a Knight of the Order of St. Anne of Russia, and of St. Louis of France, a Knight of the Bath, and a Privy Councillor. In 1830, his lordship, then Mr. Talbot, represented Thetford in Parliament ; and in the following year was elected for Armagh and for Dublin ; and from THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. 1837 until 1849, when he entered the Upper House as Earl Talbot, he represented South Staffordshire. In 1852 his lordship was made a Lord in Waiting to the Queen ; in 1858 Captain of the Corps of Gentlemen at Arms ; and was also Hereditary Lord High Steward of Ireland. He married in ■v. Hi iMdkx The Octagon. 1828 Lady Sarah Elizabeth Beresford, eldest daughter of the second Marquis of Waterford, and by her had issue living four sons, viz. — Charles John, present, nineteenth, Earl of Shrewsbury ; the Hon. Walter Cecil Talbot, who, in 1869, assumed, by Royal Sign Manual, the surname of Carpenter in lieu of ALTON TOWERS. that of Talbot, on his succeeding to the Yorkshire estates of the late Countess of Tyrconnell ; the Hon. Reginald Arthur James Talbot, M.P. for Stafford ; and the Hon. Alfred Talbot ; and three daughters, viz. : Lady Constance Harriet Mahunesa, married to the Marquis of Lothian ; Lady Gertrude Frances ; and Lady Adelaide, married at her father's death-bed, June 1st, 1868, to the Earl Brownlow. The eighteenth Earl died in June, 1868, and was succeeded by his son, Charles John, Viscount Ingestre, M.P., as nineteenth earl. The present peer, the noble owner of princely Alton, of Ingestre, and of other mansions, Charles John Talbot, nineteenth Earl of Shrewsbury, fourth Earl of Talbot, of Hemsoll, in the county of Glamorgan, Earl of Waterford, Viscount Ingestre, of Ingestre, in the county of Stafford, and Baron Talbot, of Hemsoll, in the county of Glamorgan, Hereditary Lord High Steward of Ireland, and Premier Earl in the English and Irish peerages, was born in 1830, and was educated at Eton and at Merton College, Oxford. In 1859 he became M.P. for North Staffordshire, and, in 1868, for the borough of Stam- ford. In 1868 he succeeded his father in the titles and estates, and entered the Upper House. He formerly held a commission in the 1st Life Guards. His lordship married, in 1855, Anne Theresa, daughter of Commander Richard Howe Cockerell, R.N., and has issue one son, Charles Henry John, Viscount Ingestre, born in 1860 ; and three daughters, the Hon. Theresa Susey Helen Talbot, born in 1856 ; the Hon. Gwendoline Theresa Talbot, born in 1858 ; and the Hon. Muriel Frances Louisa Talbot, born in 1859. The Earl of Shrewsbury is patron of thirteen livings, eight of which are in Staffordshire, two in Worcestershire, and one each in Oxfordshire, Berkshire, and Shropshire. The arms of the earl are, gules, a lion rampant within a bordure engrailed, or. Crest, on a chapeau, gules, turned up, ermine, a lion statant, with the Tail extended, or. Supporters, two talbots, argent. We have thus given a history of this illustrious family from its founder to the present day, and proceed to describe its principal seat in Staffordshire — the beautiful and " stately home " of Alton Towers. The castle of the De Verdons, which was dismantled by the army of the Parliament, stood on the commanding and truly picturesque eminence now occupied by the unfinished Roman Catholic Hospital of St. John and other conventual buildings, &c. A remarkably interesting view, showing the com- manding site of the castle, and the valley of Churnet, with Alton Church, &c, io THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. is fortunately preserved in an original painting from which our first engraving is made. The site of Alton Towers was originally occupied by a plain house, the dwelling of a steward of the estate. A hundred and forty years ago it was known as " Alveton (or Alton) Lodge," and was evidently a comfortable homestead, with farm buildings adjoining. When Charles, fifteenth Earl of Shrewsbury, succeeded to the titles and estates of his family, in the beginning of the present century, he made a tour of his estates, and on visiting Alton was so much pleased with the natural beauties of the place, and its surrounding neighbourhood, that he determined upon improving the house and laying out the grounds, so as to make it his summer residence." With that view he added considerably to the steward's dwelling, and having, with the aid of architects and landscape gardeners, converted that which was almost wilderness into a place of beauty, he called it " Alton Abbey," — a name to which it had no right or even pretension. To his taste, the conservatories, the temples, the pagoda, the stone circle, the cascades, the fountains, the terraces, and most of the attractive features of the grounds, owe their origin, as do many of the rooms of the present mansion. A pleasant memory of this excellent nobleman is preserved at the entrance to the gardens, where, in a noble cenotaph, is a marble bust, with the literally true inscription — • " He made the desert smile." After his death, in 1827, his successor, Earl John, continued the works at Alton, and, by the noble additions he made to the mansion, rendered it what it now is — one of the most picturesque of English seats. In 1832 his lordship consulted Pugin as to some of the alterations and additions, and this resulted in his designing some new rooms, and decorating and altering the interior of others. Mr. Fradgley and other architects had also previously been employed, and to their skill a great part of the beauty of Alton Towers is attributable. The parts executed by Pugin are the balustrade at the great entrance, the parapet round the south side, the Doria apartments over Lady Shrewsbury's rooms, on the south-east side of the house, called sometimes the " plate-glass drawing-room," the apartments over the west end of the great gallery, and the conservatory, &c. The fittings and decorations of many of * The principal architects employed were Mr. Allason and Mr. Abraham ; Mr. Loudon also had some- thing to do, later on, with the laying- out of the grounds. ALTOX TOWERS. the other rooms and galleries, including the unfinished dining-hall and the chapel, are also his. The entrance lodges near the Alton Station are likewise from Pugin's designs. The principal, or state, entrance to the mansion is on the east side, but the private foot entrance from the park is by the drawbridge, while that from the The Conseii'atories and Alcove. gardens and grounds is by a path leading over the entrance gateway or tower. To reach the state entrance the visitor on leaving the park, passes a noble gateway in an embattled and machicolated tower, with side turrets and embrasures, near to which he will notice the sculptured arms of De Verdon, of Furnival, and of Baby, and on the inner side of the tower, those of Talbot, with the date, 18-18. Passing between embattled walls, the entrance to the THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. right is a majestic tower, bearing sculptured over the doorway the armorial bearings, crest, supporters, with mantling, &c, of the Earl of Shrewsbury. The steps leading to the doorway are flanked on either side by a life-size " talbot," bearing the shield and the family arms, while on the pedestals, &c, are the monogram of Earl John, and the motto " Prest d'accomplir." Passing through the doors the visitor enters the Entrance Tower, a square apartment of extremely lofty proportions. " The doors being closed after him, he will at once notice the most striking feature of this hall to be, that the entrance-doors and the pair of similar folding-doors facing them — each of which is some twenty feet high, and of polished oak — are painted on their full size with the arms, supporters, &c, of the Earl of Shrewsbury. This fine effect, until the place was dismantled a few years since, was considerably heightened by the assemblage of arms, and armour, and of stags' antlers, &c, with which the walls were decorated. In this apartment the old blind Welsh harper, a retainer of the family, with his long dress, covered with medals and silver badges, sat for years and played his native strains on the ancient bardic instrument of his country. " From this apartment one of the immense pairs of heraldic doors opens into ' The Armoury,' a fine Gothic apartment of about 120 feet in length, with • oak roof, the arches of which spring from carved corbels, while from the central bosses hang a series of pendant lanterns. The ' armoury ' is lit on its north side by a series of stained-glass windows, the first of which bears, under a canopy, &c, the portrait and armorial bearings of William the Conqueror; the next those of ' Marescallus pater Gilberti Marescalli Regis Henrici Primi, temp. Will m - Conq r - ; ' the third, those of Donald, King of Scotland, 1093 ; the fourth, those of Raby ; the fifth, those of De Verdun, the founder of the castle of Alton ('Verdun fund: Cast: de Alveton, originalis familise de Verdun, temp. Will. Conq r -') ; and the sixth, of Lacy — ' Summa soror et heres Hugonis de Lacy, fundatoris de Lanthony in Wallia ; Mater Gilberti de Lacy, temp. Will. Conq r - ' In this apartment, from which a doorway leads to the billiard and other rooms, hang a number of funeral and other banners of the house of Talbot, and at one end is the Earl's banner as Lord High Seneschal or Lord High Steward of Ireland — a blue banner bearing the golden harp of ' Old Ireland ' which was borne by the Earl of Shrewsbury at the funeral of King William IV. In the palmy days of Alton this apartment was filled with one of the most magnificent assemblages of arms and armour ever got together, amongst which not the least noticeable feature was a life-size equestrian figure ALTON TOWERS. 13 of ' the great Talbot ' in full armour, and bearing on his head an antique coronet, in his hand a facsimile of the famous sword which he wielded so powerfully while living, bearing the words — ' Ego sum Talboti pro vincere inimicos meos and on his shoulders his magnificent 'Garter' mantle, embroidered with heraldic insignia. The horse was fully armed and caparisoned, the trappings bearing the arms and insignia of its noble owner. The figure was placed on a raised oak platform, richly carved ; and on this, at the horse's feet, lay the fine war helmet of the grand old Earl. At the farther or west end of the armoury, a pair of open screen-work doors of large size, formed of spears and halberds, and surmounted by a portcullis — the whole being designed by a former Countess of Shrewsbury — opens into— " The Picture-Gallery. — This noble gallery, about 150 feet in length, has a fine oak and glass ceiling, supported by a series of arches, which spring from corbels formed of demi-talbots, holding in their paws shields with the Talbot arms, while in each spandrel of the roof are also the same arms. The room is lit with sumptuous chandeliers. In this gallery was formerly a series of tables, containing articles of vertu and a large assemblage of interesting objects, while the walls were literally covered with paintings of every school, including the collection formed by Letitia Buonaparte, which was purchased in Paris by Earl John. It is now entirely denuded of this treasure of art. From the Picture-Gallery a pair of Gothic screen-work oak and glass folding-doors, with side lights to correspond, opens into — "The Octagon (sometimes called the 'Saloon,' or 'Sculpture-Gallery'), an octagonal room designed to some extent from the splendid Chapter House at Wells Cathedral. Like this it has a central pier, or clustered column, of sixteen shafts, from the foliated capital of which the ribs of the vaulted roof radiate. Other radiating ribs spring from shafts at the angles of the room ; and where the radiations meet and cross are sculptured bosses, while a series of geometric cuspings fills in between the intersecting ribs at the points of the arches. Around the base of the central column is an octagonal seat, and stone benches are placed in some parts of the sides. It is lit with pendant Gothic lanterns. " The ' Octagon ' opens on its east side into the ' Picture-Gallery ;' on its west into the 'Talbot Gallery;' and on its north into the 'Conservatory.' On its south is a fine large window of Perpendicular tracery filled with stained i 4 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. glass, while on the other four sides are small windows, diapered in diagonal lines, with the motto, ' Prest d'Accoruplir,' alternating with monograms and heraldic devices of the family. Over the Picture-Gallery doorway the following curious verses — a kind of paraphrase of the family motto, ' Prest d'Accomplir,' which is everywhere inscribed — are painted in old English characters on an illuminated scroll : — " ' The redie minde regardeth never toyle, But still is Prest t' accomplish heartes intent ; Abrode, at home, in every coste or soyle, The dede is done, that inwardly is ineante ; Which makes me saye to every vertuous dede, I am still Prest t' accomplish what's decreede. " ' But byd to goe I redie am to roune, But byd to roune I redie am to ride ; To goe, roune, ride, or what else to bee done. Speke but the word, and sone it shall be tryde ; Tout prest je suis pour accomplix la chose, Par tout labeur qui vous peut mire repose. " ' Prest to accomplish what you shall commande, Prest to accomplish what you shall desyre, Prest to accomplish your desires demande, Prest to accomplish heaven for happy hire ; Thus do I ende, and at your will I reste, As you shall please, in every action Prest.' " Above this, and other parts of the walls, are the emblazoned arms of Talbot, Furnivall, De Verdun, Lacy, Raby, and the other alliances of the family ; while in the large stained-glass window on the south side are splendid full-length figures of six archbishops and bishops of the Talbot family, with their arms and those of the sees over which they presided. Beneath this window are two beautiful models, full size, of ancient tombs of the great Talbots of former days. One of these is the famous tomb, from Whitchurch, of John, first Earl of Shrewsbury, who was killed in battle July 7, 1453. It bears a full-length effigy of the Earl in his Garter robes and armour, and bears on its sides and ends a number of emblazoned shields of the Talbot alliances, and the following inscription : — - " l Orate pro aiiima prcenobilis domini, domini Jultaiiis Talbot, Comitis Salopice, domini Furnival, domini Verdun, domini Strange de Blackmere, et Mareschalli Franciee ; qui obiit, in bello apad Burdeux vii Jitlii mccccliii.' " It is related that when this noble warrior was slain, his herald passing over the battle-field to seek the body, at length found it bleeding and lifeless, ALTON TOWERS '5 when he kissed it, and broke out into these passionate and dutiful expres- sions : — ' Alas ! it is you : I pray God pardon all your misdoings. I have been your officer of arms forty years or more. It is time I should surrender it to you.' And while the tears trickled plentifully down his cheek, he disrobed himself of his coat of arms and flung it over his master's body. This is the knight of whom we read — " 'Which Sir John Talbote, first Lord Fournivall, Was most worthie warrior we read of all. For by his knighthode and his ehivalrye A Knight of the Garter first lie was made ; And of King Henry, first Erie Serovesberye. To which Sir John, his sone succession hade, And his noble successors now therto sade ; God give them goode speede in their progresse, And Heaven at their ende, both more or lesse. The live to report of this foresaid lorde How manly hee was, and full chivalrose ; What deedes that he did I cannot by worde Make rehersal, by meter ne prose ; How manly, how true, and how famose, In Ireland, France, Normandy, Lyon, and Gascone His pere so long renyng I rede of none. Which while he reigned was most knight That was in the realme here many yere, Most dughty of hand and feresest in fight, Most drede of all other with French men of werr In Ireland, France, Gyon ; whose soule God absolve And bring to that blyss that will not dissolve.' " From the north side of the ' Octagon ' a flight of stone steps leads up to a glass doorway, which opens into a glass vestibule, forming a part of the ' Conservatory,' of which I shall speak a little later on. This conservatory leads into the ' Dining-room ' and the suite on the north side, and the view along it from the Octagon is charming in the extreme, not the least striking and sweetly appropriate matter being the motto painted above the flowers and around the cornice of the vestibule : — " ' The speech, of flowers exceeds all flowers of speech.' " On the west side a similar flight of steps and doorway open into " The Talbot Gallery, a magnificent apartment of about the same size and proportions as the ' Picture-Gallery.' It has a fine Gothic ceiling of oak and glass, supported, like that of the Picture-Gallery, on arches springing from demi-talbots bearing shields. The walls, to about two-thirds of their height, are covered with a rich arabesque paper of excellent design, while the upper 1 6 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. part is painted throughout its entire surface in diagonal lines with the Talbot motto ' Prest d'Accomplir,' alternating with the initials T. (Talbot) and S. (Shrewsbury). On this diapered groundwork are painted, at regular intervals, shields of arms, fully blazoned, with tablets beneath them containing the names of their illustrious bearers. The series of arms on the south side shows the descent of the Earl of Shrewsbury from the time of the Conquest, while those on the north side exhibit the armorial bearings of the alliances formed by the females of the House of Talbot. As these series are of great importance, and have only heretofore been given in Mr. Jewitt's work upon Alton Towers, from which the whole of the description of the interior here given is copied, I have carefully noted them for the reader's information. On the south side, commencing at the end next the ' Octagon,' the arms are as follows, the arms being all impaled : — " "William the Conqueror and Matilda of Flanders. King Henry I. and Matilda of Scotland. Geoffrey Plantagenet, Earl of Anjou, and Matilda, daughter of King Henry I. King Henry II. and Eleanor of Aquitaine. King John and Isabella d'Angouleme. King Henry III. and Eleanor of Provence. King Edward I. and Eleanor of Castile. Humphrey Bohun, Earl of Hereford, and Elizabeth, daughter of King Edward I. James Butler, Earl of Ormond, and Eleanor, daughter of the Earl of Hereford. James, Earl of Ormond, and Elizabeth, daughter of the Earl of Kildare. James, Earl of Ormond, and Anne, daughter of Baron Welles. James, Earl of Ormond, and Joane, daugbter of William de Beauchamp. John Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury, and Elizabeth, daughter of the Earl of Ormond. Sir Gilbert Talbot, Knight of the Garter, and Audrey Cotton. Sir John Talbot and Ada Troutbecke. Sir Jobn Talbot and Frances Clifford. John Talbot and Catherine Petre. Jobn Talbot and Eleanor Baskerville. John, Earl of Shrewsbury, and Mary Fortescue. Gilbert Talbot and Jane Flatsbury. George, Earl of Shrewsbury, and Mary Fitzwilliam. Charles Talbot and Mary Mostyn. John Joseph Talbot and Mary Clifton. ' John, now Earl of Shrewsbury, Waterford, and Wexford,' and Maria Talbot. Richard, Baron Talbot, ancestor of the Earl of Shrewsbury, and Elizabeth Cummin. John, father of Elizabeth Cummin, and Joane de Valence. William de Valletort, Earl of Pembroke, and Joane Mountchesney. Hugh, Count de la Marche, and Isabel d'Angouleme. Aymer, Count d'Angouleme, and Alice de Courteney. Peter, fils de France, and the Heiress of Courteney. Louis VI., King of France, father of Peter de Courteney. ALTON TOWERS. 17 Richard Talbot and Eva, daughter of Gerrard de Gournay. Hugh Talbot and Beatrix, daughter of William de Mandeville. Richard Talbot and Maud, daughter of Stephen Buhner. Richard Talbot and Aliva, daughter of Alan Bassett. William Talbot and Gwendiline, daughter of Rhjs ap Griffith, Prince of Wales. Richard Baron Talbot and Elizabeth Cummin. John Cummin, grandfather of Elizabeth, and Margery Baliol. John Baliol and Dorvegillia, Lady of Galloway. David the First, King of Scotland, and the Lady of Galloway. " On the north side, beginning at the west end, the arms of the female alliances are as on the other side — impaled — and are as follows : — " Joane Talbot, married to John Carew. Joane Talbot to John de Dartmouth. Elizabeth Talbot to Waren Archdekene. Katherine Talbot to Sir Roger Chandos. Phillippa Talbot to Sir Matthew Gournay. Jane Talbot to Sir Nicholas Poynings. Anne Talbot to Hugh, Earl of Devon. Mary Talbot to Sir Thomas Greene. Elizabeth Talbot to Sir Thomas Bane, .lane Talbot to Hugh de Cokesay. Elizabeth Talbot to Thomas Gray, Viscount Lisle. Margaret Talbot to Sir George Vere. Anne Talbot to Sir Henry Vernon. Margaret Talbot to Thomas Chaworth. Eleanor Talbot to Thomas, Baron Sudeley. Margaiet Talbot to Henry, Earl of Cumberland. Mary Talbot to Henry, Earl of Northumberland. Elizabeth Talbot to Lord Dacre of Gilsland. Anne Talbot to Peter Compton. Anne Talbot to William, Earl of Pembroke. Anne Talbot to John, Baron Bray. Anne Talbot to Thomas, Lord Wharton. Catherine Talbot to Edward, Earl of Pembroke. Mary Talbot to Sir George Saville. Grace Talbot to Henry Cavendish. Mary Talbot to William, Earl of Pembroke. Elizabeth Talbot to Henry, Earl of Kent. Alatheia Talbot to Thomas, Earl of Arundel. Gertrude Talbot to Robert, Earl of Kingston. Mary Talbot to Thomas Holcroft. Mary Talbot to Sir William Airmine. Margaret Talbot to Robert Dewport. Elizabeth Talbot to Sir John Littleton. Mary Talbot to Thomas Astley. Joane Talbot to Sir Georare Bowes. 1 8 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. Mary Talbot to Mervin, Earl of Castlehaven. Barbara Talbot to James, Lord Aston. Mary Talbot to Charles, Baron Dormer. Mary Alathea Beatrix Talbot to Prince Filippo Doria Panvfili. Gwendaline Catherine Talbot to Prince Marc Antonio Borghesc. " On and over the doorway are the arms and quarterings of the Talbots, and the sculptured stone chimney-pieces are of the most exquisite character, having talbots supporting enamelled banners of arms under Gothic canopies, and shields on the cuspings. At the top also is a shield, supported by two angels. The fire-place is open, and has fire-dogs ; and the tiles are decorated alter- nately with the letter S for Shrewsbury, and I T conjoined, for John Talbot. " At the west end is a splendid stained-glass window, exhibiting the names, armorial bearings, and dates of Earl John and nine of his ancestors, who have been Knights of the Garter — the garter encircling each of the shields. The names are Gilbert, Lord Talbot, 19 Henry VI. ; John, Earl of Shrewsbury, 1460 ; George, 4th Earl of Shrewsbury ; George Talbot ; Francis, 5th Earl of Shrewsbury ; Sir Gilbert Talbot, 1495 ; George, 6th Earl of Shrewsbury ; Gilbert, 7th Earl of Shrewsbury, 1592 ; Charles, Earl of Shrewsbury, 1604 ; and John, Earl of Shrewsbury, 1840. "In the palmy days of Alton Towers, this room, the Talbot Gallery, contained a splendid collection of choice paintings, a fine assemblage of rare china, some exquisite sculpture, and a large number of articles of vertu of every imaginable class and character. From the north side a small door opens into — " The Oak Corridor, a narrow passage leading in a straight line to the North Library, and having doorways opening on its left into both of the state- rooms. The first of these rooms, after passing the ' waiting-room ' or ' ante- room,' is — " The State Boudoir, an octagonal apartment with a magnificent carved, painted, and gilt Gothic ceiling. This, in former days, when it contained some fine old cabinets, a service of regal Sevres china, and some exquisite portraits, and was filled with sumptuous furniture, was one of the most charming rooms imaginable. Next to this is — " The State Bed-room. — The ceiling is panelled, being divided by deep ribs into squares, having the ground painted a pale blue ; rich tracery of oak and gold stretches toward the centre of each compartment, and terminates with a gold leaf; the hollow mouldings of the ribs are crimson, studded with ALTON TOWERS. 10 gold ; below is a deep cornice of vine-leaves and fruit picked out green and gold ; and the vails are hung with paper of an azure ground, relieved with crimson and gold. " The State Bed, which is about 18 feet in height and 9 feet in width, is a sumptuous piece of massive Gothic furniture, all gilt in every part and massively carved. Around the canopy hangs the most costly of bullion fringe, and the hangings, as well as those of the windows and other furniture, are of the richest possible golden Indian silk. This room formerly contained The Tt in pic. a toilet service of gold, and the whole of the furniture and decollations were of the grandest character. The chimney-piece is of white marble, exquisitely carved, and bearing on the spandrels the Talbot arms — a lion rampant within a bordure engrailed. The furniture is all gilt like the bed, with which also the drapery is en suite. The windows, as do also those of the boudoir, look out upon a perfect sea of magnificent rhododendrons. One door opens into the Oak Corridor, and another into — ''The Dining -Room, from which, by a doorway, the Oak Corridor is also c 2 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. entered, and from which, by a light staircase, access to the upper suite of sleeping apartments, including the ' Arragon room ' (and to the lower rooms) is gained. From this ante-room — " The West Library is entered. This apartment, a fine, sombre, quiet- looking room, has a panelled ceiling, at the intersections of the ribs of which are carved heraldic bosses. In the centre is a large and massive dark oak table, and around the sides of the room are ranged fine old carved and inlaid cabinets and presses for books. Over these presses, and in different parts of this room and of the ' North Library,' are a number of well-chosen mottoes, than which for a library nothing could well be more appropriate. Thus, in these mottoes, among others we read — " ' Study wisdom and make thy heart joyful.' " 'The -wise shall inherit glory, but shame shall be the portion of fools.' " 'They that be wise shall shine as the firmament.' " 'Blessed is the man that findeth wisdom, and is rich in prudence.' " 'The heart of the wise shall instruct his mouth and add grace to his lips.' " ' Take hold on instruction ; leave it not ; keep it because it is thy life.' " 'Knowledge is a fountain of life to him that possesseth it.' "From this fine apartment the North Library is entered by two open archways. This room is similar in its appointments to the West Library, and with it forms one magnificent whole. At the north-west corner of this room (in the tower) is a charming apartment, connected with the library by an open archway, called — " The Poet's Bay or ' Poet's Corner,' which is one of the most charming of all imaginable retreats. The bay window overlooks the park and the distant country for miles away, while the side windows overlook parts of the grounds and buildings. The ceiling is of the most elaborate character, covered with minute tracery and exquisite pendents picked out in gold and colours. At the west end of the library is a stained-glass window with full- length figures of ' Gilbert Talbot' and the ' Lady Joan,' with their arms under Gothic canopies. From this room a door on the south side opens into the ' Oak Corridor,' while two open arches at the east end connect it with — " The Music-Rooji, the ceiling of which is an elegant example of flam- boyant tracery, the ground being blue, and the raised tracery white and gold. The chimney-piece of white marble is elaborately sculptured, and from it rises a majestic pier-glass. On either side are portraits of Earl John and his Countess, life-size, surmounted by their coronets. The furniture which ALTON TOWERS. remains is of remarkably fine character, carved and gilt, and the walls are here and there filled in with mirrors, which add much to the effect. On the south side is a large and deeply-recessed bay window, like the.rest, of Gothic design, with stained glass in its upper portion, representing King David playing on the harp, St. Cecilia, and angels with various musical instruments. In front of this window is a beautiful parterre of flowers, the Conservatory being to the left, and the state-rooms to the right. From the ' Music-Room,' glass doors, in a Gothic screen, open into a small library, with Gothic presses and stained-glass window with Talbot arms, &c. From this room another similar door opens into — "The Drawing-Room, a remarkably fine and strikingly grand Gothic apartment, with a ceiling of flamboyant tracery of very similar design to the one already named. To the right, on entering, a central door of Gothic screen-work and glass opens into the Conservatory, which, as I have before said, connects this room and those on the north side with the Octagon and those on the south side. The Conservatory is entirely of glass, both roof and sides, and has a central transept. It is filled with the choicest plants, and in every part, except the vestibule, the sweetly pretty and appropriate text, ' Consider the lilies of the field how they grow ; they toil not, neither do they spin, yet I say unto you, that even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like unto one of these,' is painted around the cornice. In the vestibule, as I have said, the motto is, ' The speech of flowers exceeds all flowers of speech.' Over the Conservatory door, in stained glass, are the arms of Talbot, Verdun, &c. ; the crowned rose and thistle ; and other devices. Opposite to the Conservatory, on the north side, is the ' Saloon.' The furniture of the ' Drawing-room,' the chairs, couches, and seats, are all of the most costly character, some of them draped with the arms, supporters, &c, of the earl in gold and crimson damask. On a table in this room are arranged the various addresses, in cabinets, &c, presented to the late Earl of Shrewsbury on his accession to the earldom and estates after the trial in 1860, and a magnificent ancient casket, the outer glass case of which bears the inscription — ' La casset Talbot presente par Jean, premier Comte de Shreusburie, sur son mariage a Marguerite Beauclerc' On the walls, besides other paintings, is a fine full- length seated figure of Queen Adelaide. The ends of the room are Gotbic screen-work, with doors and mirrors. One of these, at the east end, leads into another small library, and so on \r$ a small gallery, denuded of its objects of interest, to the Chapel Corridor (elaborately groined and panelled in THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. oak), from which the private apartments are gained, and which also leads direct to — " The Chapel, which, although ruthlessly shorn of its relics, its paintings, its altar, its shrines, and all its more interesting objects, is still one of the most gorgeous and beautiful of rooms. It is enough to say that it is one of Pugin's masterpieces, and that the stained glass is perhaps the finest that even The Conse/T'dtor/es. Willement, by whom it was executed, ever produced. It is impossible to conceive anything finer than was the effect of this chapel when it was in perfect order. " With the drawing-room, as I have said, an open archway connects another magnificent apartment, the Saloon, which has a fine oak-groined ceiling, with elegantly carved, gilt, and painted bosses. In the centre of the ALTON TOWERS. 23 west side is a fine stained-glass window, representing Edward, the Black Prince, full length, in armour, and with his garter robes, painted by Muss ; and opposite to this a doorway opens into a corridor leading to the drawing and other rooms. The view from the north end of the saloon, looking down its full length, across the splendid drawiDg-room, down the long vista of the conservatory, and into the octagon at the farthest end, is fine in the extreme, and is indeed matchless. "The Corridoe, of which I have just spoken, is one of the most dainty and minutely beautiful ' bits ' of the whole building. It is of oak, the sides are panelled and gilt, and from small clustered pilasters rises the elaborate oak groining of the ceiling, the groining being what can only be expressed as ' skeleton groining/ the ribs alone being of oak, partly painted and gilt, and the space between them being filled in with a minute geometric pattern in stained glass. From this corridor a door in the north side opens into the — ■ " Small or Family Dining-Room, a fine sombre-looking apartment, about 25 feet square, and furnished with a magnificent central table, and every accompaniment that wealth can desire. The ceiling is of oak, panelled, and has a rich armorial cornice, with arms of Talbot, running around it. The chimney-piece, of dark oak, is a splendid piece of ancient carving. From the corridor another doorway leads to a staircase connecting other private apart- ments above, while at its east end it opens into — " The Geand Dining-Hall, near which are the kitchens. This hall, which was being remodelled and altered by Pugin at the time of the Earl's death, remains to this day in an unfinished state, but shows how truly grand in every way it would have been had it been completed. The roof is one of the finest imaginable, and from its centre rises a majestic louvre, which at once admits a subdued light and acts as a ventilator. It is of truly noble proportions, and the fire-places and carved stone chimney-pieces are grand in the extreme — the latter bearing the arms, crest, supporters, motto, chapeau, &c, of the Earl of Shrewsbury. The sides of the room were intended to be panelled, as was also the minstrels' gallery, with carved oak, and a part of this is already placed. At the north end is a fine large window, the upper part of which is filled with armorial bearings, but the lower part has never been completed, and is filled in with plain quarries. The arms in this window are those of Talbot Earl of Shrewsbury, Clifford, Beauchamp, De Valence, Comyn, Mountchesny, Nevile, Middleham, Clifford, Bohun, Strange of Blackmere, Tailebot, Troutbeke, Claveringe, Buckley, Pembroke, Borghese, Doria, Lovetoft, Mareschal, Strong- H THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. bow, King Donald, Raby, Lacy, De Verdun, Castile and Leon, D'Angouleme, William tbe Conqueror, Bagot, Mexley, Aylrner, and others. " From here a short corridor leads to a small vestibule, from which the other private apartments extend. Of these the principal one is the Boudoir of The Pagoda. the Countess of Shrewsbury — a charming apartment, replete with every luxury and with every appliance which taste and art can dictate. The ' Doria ' and other apartments are reached from near this by a circular staircase. From ALTON TOWERS. 25 the vestibule the private entrance to the Towers is gained, and from it is the private way across the entrance gateway into the grounds ; and also through the small tower and across the drawbridge the park is reached. The drawbridge crosses the moat, and the entrance is fully guarded, and has all the appliances of an old baronial castle."* And now let us speak briefly of the situation of Alton Towers, and of its grounds of matchless charms. Situate almost in the centre of England — in busy Staffordshire, but on the borders of picturesque Derbyshire — Alton Towers is within easy reach of several populous cities and towns, the active and labo- rious denizens of which frequently " breathe " in these always open gardens and grounds the pure and fragrant air. The roads to it are, moreover, full of interest and surpassing beauty ; approached from any side, the traveller passes through a country rich in the picturesque. Those who reach it from thronged and toiling Manchester, from active and energetic Derby, from the potteries of busy Staffordshire, are regaled by Nature on their way, and are refreshed before they drink from the full cup of loveliness with which the mansion and its grounds and gardens supply them. The route from Derby passes by way of Egginton ; Tutbury, whose grand old church and extensive ruins of the castle are seen to the left of the line ; Sudbury, where the seat of Lord Vernon (Sudbury Hall) will be noticed to the right; Marchington, Scropton, and Uttoxeter. Here, at Uttoxeter Junction, the passenger for Alton Towers will alight, and, entering another carriage, pro- ceed on his way, passing the town of Uttoxeter on his left, and Doveridge Hall, the seat of Lord Waterpark, on his right, by way of Rocester (where the branch line for Ashbourne and Dove-Dale joins in), to the Alton Station. Arrived here, he will notice, a short distance to the left, high up on a wooded cliff, the 'unfinished Roman Catholic Hospital of St. John, and on the right, close to the station, the entrance lodge to the Towers. + * " Alton Towers and Dove-Dale." By Llewellynn Jewitt, F.S.A. (Black and Co.) + The Roman Catholic establishment just referred to is close to the pretty little town of Alton, in which the visitor will find an excellent and comfortable inn (the " White Hart "). The intention of the founder, and of the architect, Pugin, in the establishment of the picturesque pile of buildings referred to, was to found an institution, lecture-hall, schools, &c, for the town of Alton ; a large cloistered establish- ment for nuns, a chapel, and a hospital for decayed priests. The chapel alone is finished, and in it service is regularly performed by a resident priest, who lives in one part of the monastic buildings. The schools, too, are in use, and the building erected as a residence for the master is used as a small nunnery. In the chapel, which is elegantly fitted up, are buried John, Earl of Shrewsbury, the founder of the hospital, who died in 1852; his Countess (Maria Theresa \ who died in 1856, to each of whom are splendid monumental THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. From Manchester the visitor proceeds by way of Stockport and Maccles- field to the North Kode Junction, and so on by Leek and Oakanioor, &c, through the beautiful scenery of the Churnet valley, to Alton Station, as before. From the Staffordshire Potteries the visitor, after leaving Stoke-upon-Trent, will pass through Longton, another of the pottery towns, Blythe Bridge, Cress- well, and Leigh, to Uttoxeter, whence he will proceed in the same manner as if travelling from Derby. There are, besides others of less note, two principal entrances to the park and grounds of Alton Towers. One of these, the " Quicksall " Lodge, is on the Uttoxeter Road, about a quarter of a mile from Ellastone. By this the "Earl's Drive" is entered, and it is, for length and beauty, the most charming of the roads to the house. The drive is about three miles in length from the lodge to the house, and passes through some truly charming scenery along the vale and on the heights of the Churnet valley — the river Churnet being visible at intervals through the first part of its route. Within about half a mile of the house, on the right, will be seen the conservatory, ornamented with statues, busts, and vases, and on the left a lake of water. A little farther on is the Gothic temple, close to the roadside. At this point Alton Towers and the intervening gardens burst upon the eye in all their magnificence and beauty. It is a peep into a terrestrial paradise. Proceeding onwards another quarter of a mile through a plantation of pines, the noble mansion stands before us in all the fulness of its splendour. The lake, the lawn, the arcade bridge, the embattled terrace, the towers, and the surrounding foliage come broadly and instantaneously upon the view — a splendid and imposing picture — a place to be gazed on and wondered at. By this drive the Towers are reached by way of the castellated stable-screen, and so on over the bridge and the entrance to the gardens. The other, and usual, lodge, is close by the Alton Station on the Churnet Valley (North Staffordshire) Railway. This lodge, designed by Pugin, and decorated with the sculptured arms of the family, is about a mile from the house, and the carriage-drive up the wood is on the ascent all the way. A brasses of mediteval design; and Bertram, Earl of Shrewsbury— the last Roman Catholic holder of the estate and title, who died in 1856. In the cloisters are brasses, &c, to " Mistress Anne Talbot,'' 1843 ; William Talbot, her husband, 1S49 ; Sister Mary Joseph Healy, 1857 ; and Charles, Earl of Shrewsbury 1827. Adjoining the hospital, which is approached by a wooden bridge over the moat, are the remains of the old castle of the De Verduns, spoken of on a preceding page. ALTON TOWERS. 27 path, called " the steps," for foot passengers, turns off from the lodge, and winds and " zigzags " its way up, arriving at the house opposite to the Clock Tower, and passing on its way some charming bits of rocky and wooded scenery. The gardens are entered from the park by a pair of gates (on either side of which is a superb cedar) in an archway, under the " Earl's Drive " Bridge. The Choragic Temple. Near this spot is the Choragic Temple, designed from the Choragic monument of Lysicrates, at Athens ; it contains a bust of Earl Charles, the founder of the gardens, with the appropriate inscription— " He made the desert smile." From here tbe visitor then proceeds along a winding path with an arcaded 28 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. wall on one side, and the valley, from which come up the music of the stream and the bubbling of the miniature fountains, on the other. This passes between myriads of standard roses on either side, and long continuous beds of "ribbon gardening," or what, from its splendid array of continuous lines of colours, may very appropriately be termed "rainbow gardening," and path- ways winding about in every direction, among roses, hollyhocks, and shrubs and flowers of divers kinds, to a pleasant spot to the left, where is a terrace garden approached by steps with pedestals bearing choice sculptures. In the centre is a sun-dial ; behind this, a fine group of sculpture, and behind this again a fountain, surmounted by a lion. The wall is covered with luxuriant ivy, and headed by innumerable vases of gay-coloured flowers, above which, a little to the back, rises one of the many conservatories that are scattered over this portion of the grounds. Passing onwards, the visitor soon afterwards reaches the Grand Conser- vatories — a splendid pile of buildings on his left. These conservatories are three hundred feet in length, and consist of a central house for palm-trees, and other plants of a similar nature ; two glass-roofed open corridors filled with hardy plants, and decorated with gigantic vases filled with flowers ; and, at one end, a fine orangery, and at the other end a similar house filled with dif- ferent choice plants and trees. In front of the Grand Conservatory the grounds are terraced to the bottom of the valley, and immediately opposite, on the distant heights, is the " Harper's Cottage." At the end of the broad terrace- walk, in front of the conservatory, is The Temple — a semi-open temple, or alcove, of circular form, fitted with seats and central table. From this charm- ing spot, which the visitor will find too tempting to pass by without a rest, a magnificent view of the grounds is obtained. Immediately beneath are the terraces, with their parterres, ponds, arcades, and fountains, receding gently from the view till they are lost in the deep valley, beyond which rise the wooded heights, terrace on terrace, on the other side, and terminated with tall trees and the buildings of the tower. From the temple a broad pathway leads on to the Gothic Temple, and so to the modern Stonehenge — an imitation Druidical circle — and other interesting objects. Retracing his path, the visitor will do well to descend by the steps to a lower terrace, where he will find an open alcove beneath the temple. From here many paths diverge amid beds of the choicest flowers laid out with the most exquisite taste, and of every variety of form, and studded in all directions with vases and statuary. Descending a flight of steps beneath a canopy of ivy, a rosery, arched behind an open ALTON TOWERS. 29 arcade of stone, is reached. This arcade is decorated with gigantic vases and pedestals, and from here, arcade after arcade, terrace after terrace, and flight of steps after flight of steps, lead down to the bottom of the valley, where the "lower lake," filled with water-lilies and other aquatic plants, is found. In Alton Towers, from the Lower Terract this lake stands the Pagoda, or Chinese Temple. Before reaching this, about half-way down the hill-side, will be seen the " upper lake," a charming sheet of water, filled with water-lilies and other plants, and containing, among its other beauties, a number of fish and water-fowl. Over this lake is a prettily 30 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. designed footbridge forming a part of what is called " Jacob's Ladder " — a sloping pathway with innumerable turnings, and twinings, and flights of steps. Arrived at the Pagoda Fountain, the visitor will choose between returning by the same route, or crossing or going round the lake, and pursuing his way up the opposite side, by winding and zigzag pathways and small plateaux, to the top of the heights. The ornamental grounds are, as will have been gathei'ed from this descrip- tion, a deep valley or ravine, which, made lovely in the highest and wildest degree by nature, has been converted by man into a kind of earthly paradise. The house stands at one end or edge of this ravine, and commands a full view of the beauties with wbich it is studded. These garden grounds, although only some fifty or sixty acres in extent, are, by their very character, and by their innumerable winding pathways, and their diversified scenery, made to appear of at least twice that extent. Both sides of the ravine or gorge, are formed into a series of terraces, each of which is famed for some special charm of natural or artificial scenery it contains or commands ; while temples, grottoes, fountains, rockeries, statues, vases, conservatories, refuges, alcoves, steps, and a thousand-and-one other beauties, seem to spring up everywhere and add their attractions to the general scene. Without wearying the visitor by taking him along these devious paths — which he will follow at will — a word or two on some of the main features of the gardens, besides those of which we have already spoken, will suffice. Some of these are : — The Harper's Cottage, in which the Welsh harper — a fine old remnant of the bardic race of his country, and an esteemed retainer of the family — resided, is near the summit of the heights opposite to the " Grand Conservatories." It is in the Swiss style, and commands one of the most gorgeous views of the grounds and their surroundings. It was built from the designs of Mr. Fradgley, who was employed during no less than twenty-two years on works at Alton Towers. The Corkscrew Fountain, standing in the midst of a pool filled with aquatic plants, is a column of unequal thickness of five tiers, each of which is fluted up its surface in a spiral direction, giving it a curious and pleasing effect. The Gothic Temple, at the summit of the heights, on the opposite side from the " Harper's Cottage," and closely adjoining the " Earl's Drive," is a light and picturesque building of four stories in height, with a spiral staircase leading to the top. From it a magnificent view of the grounds, the towers, and the surrounding country, is obtained. ALTON TOWERS. 3' The Refuge is a pretty little retreat — a recessed alcove with inner room in f ac t — which the visitor, if weary with " sight-seeing," or, for a time, satiated with beauty, will find pleasant for a rest. The Pagoda Fountain is built in form of a Chinese pagoda. It is placed in ~^^ The Gothic Temple. the lower lake, and from its top rises a majestic jet of water which falls down into the lake and adds much to the beauty of the place. Stonehenge. — This is an imitation " Druidic Circle " formed of stones, of 32 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. about nine tons in weight each ; it is highly picturesque, and forms a pleasing feature. Near to it is the upper lake. The Flag Tower, near the house, is a prospect-tower of six stories in height. It is a massive square building with circular turrets at its angles. The view from the top is one of the most beautiful and extensive which the country can boast — embracing the house, gardens, grounds, and broad domains of Alton Towers ; the village of Alton with its church and parsonage ; the ruins of the old castle of the De Verduns ; the new monastic buildings — the Hospital of St. John, the Institution, the Nunnery, and the Chapel ; the valley of the Churnet ; Toot Hill ; and the distant country stretching out for miles around. Ina's Rock is one of the many interesting spots in the grounds. It is about three-quarters of a mile from the Towers, on what is called the " Rock Walk." It is said that after a great battle fought near the spot (on a place still called the "battle-field"), between Ceolred and Ina, Kings of Mercia and Wessex, the latter chieftain held a parliament at this rock ; whence it takes its names. We have thus guided the reader through the house and grounds of Alton Towers. The district around Alton Towers is rich in interesting places, and in beau- tiful localities where the visitor may while away many an hour in enjoyment. The monastic buildings, on the site of old Alton Castle, are charmingly situated, and deserve a few words at our hands. These we quote from Mr. Jewitt's "Alton Towers:" — "The monastic buildings, which form such a striking and picturesque object from the railway station, and indeed from many points in the surrounding neighbourhood, were erected from the designs, and under the immediate superintendence, of the late Mr. Pugin, and are, for stern simplicity and picturesque arrangement, perhaps the most successful of all his works. The buildings have never been — and probably never will be — completed, and they remain a sad instance of the mutability of human plans. Commenced at the suggestion, and carried out at the expense, of a Roman Catholic nobleman ; planned and erected by a Roman Catholic architect ; and intended as a permanent establishment for Roman Catholic priests, &c, &c, the buildings rose in great pride and beauty, and were continued with the utmost spirit, until the death of Earl Bertram, when, after the trials I have recounted, the estates passed into Protestant hands, the works were at once discontinued, and the buildings have since been allowed, with the exception of the chapel and the apartments devoted to the residence of a priest (and the ALTON TOWERS. 33 school), to become dilapidated. The castle grounds on which these buildings are erected are situated near the church, the buildings forming three sides of a quadrangle — one being the school and institution, and the others the cloisters, priest's house, chapel, and other buildings. From this the moat is crossed by Part of the Grounds. a wooden bridge to the ruins of the castle and the hospital of St. John. The buildings are beautifully shown on the engraving on the next page. " The erection of these Roman Catholic buildings gave rise to much annoy- ance, and much ill-feeling was engendered in the neighbourhood; and a hoax D 34 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. was played on Pugin, whose susceptibilities were strong and hasty. It was as follows : One day— of all days ' April fool day '—he received the following letter : — " ' Dear Sir — It is with deep sorrow that I venture to inform you of a cir- cumstance which has just come to my knowledge ; and, though an entire stranger, I take the liberty of addressing you, being aware of your zeal for the honour and welfare of the Catholic Church. What, then, will be your grief and indignation (if you have not already heard it) at being told that — fearing the bazaar, in behalf of the Monastery of St. Bernard, may prove unsuc- Alton — Hospital of St. Joint. cessful — it has been thought that more people would be drawn to it were the monks to hold the stalls ! Was there ever such a scandal given to our most holy religion ? It may have been done ignorantly or innocently ; but it is enough to make a Catholic of feeling shudder ! I am not in a situation to have the slightest influence in putting an end to this most dreadful proceeding ; but knowing you to be well acquainted with the head of the English Catholics — the good Earl of Shrewsbury — would you not write to him, and request him to use his influence (which must be great) in stopping the sacrilege, for such it really is ? Think of your Holy Church thus degraded and made a by-word in the mouths of Protestants ! I know how you love and venerate her. Aid her then now, and attempt to rescue her from this calamity ! Pray excuse the freedom with which I have written, and believe me, dear sir, A Sincere ALTON TOWERS. 35 Lover of my Church, but an Enemy to the Protestant Principle of Bazaars.' " Pugin wrote immediately to the earl in an impassioned strain, but, in reference to this trick, when the light had at length dawned upon him, in writing to Lord Shrewsbury, he says — ' I have found out at last that the alarm about the monks at the bazaar was all a hoax ; and rumour mentions some ladies, not far distant from the Towers, as the authors. I must own it was capitally done, and put me into a perfect fever for some days. I only read the letter late in the day, and sent a person all the way to the General Post Office to save the post. I never gave the day of the month a moment's con- sideration. I shall be better prepared for the next 1st of April.' " The school, which was intended also as a literary institution, a hall, and a lecture-room for Alton, will be seen to the right on entering the grounds ; the house, to the left, now occupied as a convent, being intended for a residence of the schoolmaster. In the original design the cloistered part of the estab- lishment was intended to be the convent (the chapel being a nuns' chapel), and the parish church of Alton was intended to be rebuilt in the same style as the splendid church at Cheadle. The hospital was to be for decayed priests. The chapel is a beautiful little building, highly decorated in character, and remark- ably pure and good in proportions. In it, to the north of the altar, are buried Earl John and his Countess, and to the south Earl Bertram. The following are the inscriptions on the brasses to their memory : — " ' Hie jacet corpus Johannis quondam Comitis Salopire XVI. qui nunc Sacellum et hos- pitium construere fecit A.n. MDCCCXLIV. Orate pro anima misserimi peccatoris obiit Neapoli die IX No MDCCCLII JEttitis suae LXI.' " ' In Memoriam Marias Teresiae, Johannis Comitis Salopiae Vidua?, Nataa Wexfordiae XXII Maii MDCCXCV. Parissis obiit IV Junii MDCCCLVI quorum animas Viventium Amor Sanctissimus incor unum confiasse Videbatur corpora eodem sepulcbro deposita mise- ricordiam ejusdem redemptoris expectant. R.I. P.' " ' Orate pro anima Bertrami Artheri Talbot XVII Com : Salop : ob : die : 10° August 1856. Requiescat in pace.' "In the cloisters is another beautiful brass, on which is the following inscription : — " ' Good Christian people of your charity pray for the soul of Mistress Anne Talbot wife of Will m Talbot Esquire of Castle Talbot Wexford who died on the V day of May a.d. MDCCCXLIV. Also for the soul of the above named Will 1 " Talbot Esq re who died the II»d day of Aug* MDCCCXLIX aged LXXXVI years. May they rest in peace.' D 2 LIBRARY 36 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. "Ona slab on the floor : — " ' Of your charity pray for the soul of Sister Mary Joseph Healy of the Order of Mercy. Who died 4th August 1857 in the 31st year of her age, and the 5th of her Religious Profession. R.I. P.' " On a brass : — " ' Orate pro anima Domini Caroli quondam Comitis Salopian qui obiit VI die Aprilis anno domiui MDCCCXXVII iEtatis sua? LXIV.' " * Alton Church is also worthy of a visit, not because of any special archi- tectural features which it contains, but because of its commanding situation and its near proximity to the Castle. It is of Norman foundation. The village itself (visitors to the locality will be glad to learn that it contains a very com- fortable inn, the " Wheatsheaf ") is large and very picturesque, and its immediate neighbourhood abounds in delightful walks and in glorious " bits " of scenery. Demon's Dale — a haunted place concerning which many strange stories are current — is also about a mile from Alton, aud is highly picturesque. Croxden Abbey (or Crokesden Abbey) is a grand old ruin, within an easy walk of Alton. It was founded by Bertram de Verdun, owner of Alton Castle, in 1170. It will be readily understood that the renown of Alton Towers arises prin- cipally from the garden and grounds by which the mansion is environed. But if to nature it is indebted for its hills aud dells, its steep ascents and graceful undulations, art has done much to augment its attractions. It may have been a "desert" when Earl Charles strove, and successfully, to convert it into a paradise ; but the rough material was ready to his hand, and to taste, with judicious expenditure, the task was not difficult to make it what it became, and now is — one of the most exquisitely beautiful demesnes in the British dominions. * Jewitt s "Alton Towers and Dove Dale." C013HAM HALL. HE county of Kent is one of the pleasantest of the English shires ; rich in cultivated and pictorial beauty, it has been aptly and justly called " the garden of England." Patrician trees are found everywhere : for centuries the hand of ruthless and reckless war has never touched them ; its chalky soil is redolent of health ; its pasture lands are proverbially fertile ; its gentle hills are nowhere barren ; in many parts it borders the sea ; and to-day, as it did ages ago,— " It doth advance A haughty brow against the coast of France ; " the men of Kent are, as they ever have been, and by God's blessing ever will be, the " van- guard of liberty." Moreover, it is rich, above all other counties, in traditions and antiquities ; some of its customs have continued unchanged for centuries ; its ecclesiastical pre-eminence is still retained ; while some of the noblest and most perfect of British baronial mansions are to be found in the graciously endowed county that borders the metropolis. Among the most perfect of its stately mansions is that to which we introduce the reader — Cobham Hall, the seat of the Earl of Darnley, Baron Clifton.* Its proximity to the metropolis — from which, if we measure distances by time, it is separated by little more than an hour — would alore * Tarts of this account are borrowed from Mr. 8. C. Hall's description of • lobham, printed in 1848, in the "Baronial Halls." During the summer of lsfiT.Mr. Hall revisited thevenerable mansion, its gardens and park, with the members of the Society of Noviomagus. 38 THE STA TEL Y HOMES OF ENGLAND. supply a sufficient motive for its selection into this series. It is situated about four miles south-east of Gravesend, nearly midway between that town and Rochester, but a mile or so out of the direct road. The narrow coach- paths which lead to it are shaded by pleasant hedgerows, and run between lines of hop-gardens — the comely vineyards of England. The mansion stands in the midst of scenery of surpassing loveliness, alternating hill and valley, rich in "patrician frees " and "plebeian under- Cobham Hall. wood," dotted with pretty cottages, and interspersed with primitive villages : while here and there are scattered " old houses " of red brick, with their carved wooden gables and tall twisted chimneys ; and glimpses are caught occasionally of the all-glorious Thames. A visit to Cobham Hall, therefore, furnishes a most refreshing and invigorating luxury to dwellers in the metropolis ; and the liberality of its noble owner adds to the rich banquet of Nature as rare a treat as can be supplied by Art. The Hall, independent of COBHAM HALL. 39 the interest it derives from its quaint architecture, its fine, although not unmixed, remains of the Tudor style, contains a gallery of pictures, by the best masters of the most famous schools, large in number and of rare value. Before we commence our description of the Hall, the demesne, the Church, the College, and the village of Cobham,* it is necessary that we supply some information concerning the several families under whose guardian- ship they have flourished. Cobham Hall has not descended from sire to son through many genera- tions. Its present lord is in no way, or at least but remotely, connected with the ancient family who for centuries governed the "men of Kent," and who, at one period, possessed power second only to that of the sovereign. That race of bold barons has been long extinct, the last of them dying in miserable poverty ; and if their proud blood is still to be found within their once princely barony, it runs, probably, through the veins of some tiller of the soil. The Cobhams had been famous from the earliest recorded times. In Philipot's "Survey of Kent" — 1659 — it is said that "Cobham afforded a seat and a surname to that noble and splendid family ; and certainly," adds the quaint old writer, " this place was the cradle or seminary of persons who, in elder ages, were invested in places of as signall and principal a trust or eminence, as they could move in, in the narrow orbe of a particular county." In the reign of King John, Henry de Cobham gave 1,000 marks to the king for his favour. He left three sons, viz., John, who was Sheriff of Kent, Justice of Common Pleas, and Judge Itinerant ; Keginald, also Sheriff of Kent, Constable of Dover Castle, and Warden of the Cinque Ports ; and William, also' Justice Itinerant. The eldest, John de Cobham, was succeeded by his son John, who in turn became Sheriff' of Kent, one of the Justices of King's Bench and Common Pleas, and Baron of the Exchequer. His son Henry de Cobham was Governor of Guernsey and Jersey, Constable of Dover Castle, and Warden of the Cinque Ports ; so was also, again, his son Henry, who likewise was Governor of Tunbridge Castle, and was summoned to Parliament G to 9 Edward III. He was succeeded by his son John de Cobham, Admiral of the Fleet, Justice of Oyer and Terminer, and Ambassador to France, who in "10 Richard II. was one of the thirteen appointed by the predominant * "Cobham, anciently Coptham ; that is, the head of a village, from the Saxon copt, a head."— PmLrpoT, Survey of Kent. 40 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. lords to govern the realm, but was after impeached for treason, and had judgment pronounced against him, but obtained pardon, being sent prisoner to the island of Jersey." Dying in the ninth year of Henry IV., he left his granddaughter, Joan, his heiress. This lady married for her third husband Sir John Oldcastle, who assumed the title of Lord Cobham. Reginald de Cobham, half brother to John, was Justice of King's Bench, an Admiral, an Ambassador to the Pope, and commander of the van of the army at Crecy. He was succeeded by his son, Reginald de Cobham, who likewise was suc- ceeded by his son Reginald ; he left an only daughter as heir. No less than four Kentish gentlemen of the name embarked with the first Edward in his "victorious and triumphant expedition into Scotland," and were knighted for services rendered to that prince in his " successful and auspicious siege of Caerlaverock." With Reginald de Cobham, as has been shown, the male line determined. Joan, his daughter, is said to have had five husbands, by only one of whom, Sir Reginald Braybrooke, she left issue, Joan, who being married to Sir Thomas Broke, of the county of Somerset, Knight, " knitt Cobham, and a large income beside, to her husband's patrimony." * Their eldest son. Sir Edward Broke, was summoned to parliament, as Baron Cobham, in the 23rd Henry VI. In 1559 Sir William Broke enter- tained Queen Elizabeth at Cobham Hall, in the first year of her reign, " with a noble welcome as she took her progress through the county of Kent." His son and successor, Henry, Lord Cobham, was Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports ; but " being too deeply concerned in the design of Sir Walter Raleigh," he was deprived of his estates, though not his life.f His younger brother, George, was executed ; but Cobham " lived manj r years after in great misery and poverty," dying in January, 1G19 ; and sharing the humble grave of some lowly peasant, apart from the magnificent tombs which cover the remains of his great and gallant ancestors. He is said, by Weldon, to have been reduced to such extreme necessity, that " he * Sir Thomas Broke and Joan de Cobham, his wife, had ten sons and four daughters. It is their tomb which occupies so prominent a position in the chancel of Cobham Church. + Under a most iniquitous sentence, Raleigh was executed fifteen years after it was pronounced ; and Cobham (by whose treachery the brave knight was chiefly convicted) had been a houseless wanderer mean- while, perishing unpitied and unwept. Of their intimacy there is no doubt ; and it is more than probable, that the old Hall we are describing was often the home of Sir Walter Raleigh when conspicuous ms " the noble and valorous knight." It is grievous to think that so great a " worthy" should have bi'cn sacrificed to the pitiful cowardice of so " poor a soul" as the last of the Cobhams — the degenerate scion of a muni- ficent and valorous race. COBHAM HALL. 4i bad starved, but for a trencber-scraper, some time bis servant at court, wbo relieved bim witb scraps." A sister of Lord Cobham's was married to Secretary Sir Robert Cecil : tbis estimable and greatly beloved lady died in January, 159G-7. She was also a kinswoman of Sir Walter Raleigh, and in one of his letters to Cecil he says : — " It is trew that you have lost a good and vertuous wife and my sealf an honorable frinde and kinswoman. Butt ther was a tyme when shee was unknowne to you, for whom you then lamented not. Shee is now no more your's, nor of your acquayntance, butt immortall, and not needinge nor knowynge your love or sorrow. Therfor you shall but greve for that which now is as it was, when not your's ; only bettered by the difl'erance in this, that shee hath past the weresome jurney of tbis darke worlde, and bath pos- session of her inheritance. Shee hath left behind her the frute of her love, for whos sakes you ought to take care for your sealf, that j'ou leve them not without a gwyde, and not by grevinge to repine att His will that gave them yow, or by sorrowing to dry upp your own tymes that ought to establish them." This lady was sister to two of the unhappy conspirators of 1603 and kinswoman to the third, as well as being wife of the chief officer of state by whom these conspiracies had to be brought to light. Well therefore was it, for her, that her pure spirit had taken its flight before the time of attainder of her brothers, Henry, Lord Cobbam, and George Broke, and their baseness by falsity and otherwise in leading the much-injured Raleigh to the scaffold. " Whatever mysteries," says Mr. Edwards, " may yet hang over the plots and counterplots of 1G03, it is certain that George Broke proved in the issue to have been the instrument of the ruin alike of his brother Cobbam and of Raleigh. It is also certain that mere ' credulity of the practices of malice and envy ' could never have ripened, save in a very congenial soil, into the consummate baseness displayed both in the examina- tions and in some of the letters of George Broke after his arrest. In certain particulars his baseness exceeded his brother Cobham's, and that is saying not a little as to its depth." His estates, at the time of their confiscation, are estimated to have been worth .£7,000 per annum ; and he possessed £30,000 in goods and chattels. His nephew was restored in blood ; but not to the title or property. Tbese were transferred—" the manor and seat of Cobham Hall, and the rest of Lord Cobham's lands" — by James I. to one of his kinsmen, Ludovick Stuart, Duke of Lennox, whose male line became extinct in 1672. 42 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. The Lady Katherine, sister of the last Duke of Kichmond and Lennox, married into the princely family of the O'Briens of Thomond ; hut the Duke " dying greatly in debt " the estates were sold. Cobham Hall was purchased by the second husband of the Lady Katherine, Sir Joseph Williamson, who resided there for some time." In 1701 he died, bequeathing two-thirds of his property to his widow. This proportion descended, on her demise, to Edward Lord Clifton and Cornbury, afterwards Lord Clarendon, who had married the sole child of this Lady Katherine, by her first husband, Henry Lord O'Brien ; \ and on Lord Clarendon's death without issue, in 1713, his sister, Lady Theodosia Hyde, inherited ; she married John Bligh, of the kingdom of Ireland, Esq. ; created, in 1721, an Irish peer by the title of Lord Clifton of Rathmore, and, in 1725, Earl of Darnley in that kingdom. For some years the Cobham estate was in Chancery. After a tedious suit it was purchased by Lord Darnley for the sum of £51,000, to the third part of which a Mrs. Hornby became entitled, as relict of the gentleman to whom Sir Joseph Williamson had devised one third part. | The Blighs are an ancient family, connected with Devonshire and other parts of the West of England as well as with Ireland. One of them, a merchant of Plymouth, an ancestor of the present peer, married Catherine Fuller, sister to William Fuller, Bishop of Limerick and Lincoln (1067 — 1675). In 1721 John Bligh of Rathmore, in the kingdom of Ireland, Esquire, who had married the Lady Theodosia Hyde, sister to Edward, Earl of Clarendon (whose wife Catherine, daughter of Katherine Lady Thomond, who had successfully claimed the barony of Clifton of Leighton Bromswold, in the peerage of the United Kingdom, as being descended from the first Lord Clifton, inherited the said barony from her mother), from whom he inherited the title and the estates, was created Baron Clifton of Rathmore, in the kingdom of Ireland, in 1721. In 1723 he was created Viscount * Sir Joseph Williamson was the son of a clergyman of Cumberland. He held various appointments under the Crown, was President of the Royal Society, and was buried in Westminster Abbey. t " Lady Katherine O'Brien died in November following ; upon which her two-thirds of this manor and seat, which, with the rest of the estates of the late Duke of Richmond, purchased by Sir Joseph Williamson, descended to Edward, Lord Clifton and Cornbury (son of Edward, Lord Cornbury, afterwards Earl of Clarendon, and Catherine his wife, the only daughter and heir of the said Lady Katherine, by her first husband, Henry Lord O'Brien), and on his death, without issue, in 1713, to his only surviving sister and heir, the Lady Theodosia Hyde." — Hasted's Kent. i In 1718 Sir Richard Temple, Bart., was created Baron and Viscount Cobham (the Temples, it appears, being in the female line connected with the Brokes), and this title is still held and enjoyed by his descendant the present Duke of Buckingham, K.G., whose titles are Baron Cobham, of Cobham in Kent ; Viscount Cobham of the same place; Earl Nugent (in the peerage of Ireland) : Earl Temple ; Marquis of Chandos, Marquis of Buckingham, and Duke of Buckingham. COBHAM HALL. 43 Darnley of Athboy, and in 1725 Earl of Darnley, both in the peerage of Ireland. He also succeeded to the title of Baron Clifton of Leighton Broms- wold, in the peerage of the United Kingdom, by which title he and his successors sit in the House of Lords. His lordship was succeeded, as second Earl of Darnley, by his son, who was again, on his death, succeeded by his son John, as third earl. This nobleman, who was born in 1719, married in 1766 Mary, daughter and heiress of John Stoyt, of Street, co. Westmeath, and by her, who died in 1803, had issue John, afterwards fourth The Three Sisters. earl ; Lady Mary, married to Sir Lawrence Palk, Bart. ; the Hon. Edward Bligh, a general in the army ; Lady Theodosia, mairied to her cousin, Thomas Cherbourgh Bligh ; Lady Catherine, married to Hon. Charles William Stewart, afterwards Marquis of Londonderry ; and the Hon. William, a colonel in the army. The Earl died in 1781, and was succeeded by his son John, as fourth earl. He married, in 1791, Elizabeth, daughter of the Right Hon. William Brownlow of Lurgan, and by her had issue 44 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. Edward, fifth earl ; Lady Mary, married to Charles Brownlow, Esq. ; Hon. John Duncan Bligh, Secretary of Legation at St. Petersburgh ; and the Lady Elizabeth, married to the Rev. J. Brownlow. His lordship died in 1831, and was succeeded by his son Edward, fifth earl, who (born in 1795), married in 1825 Emma Jane, third daughter of Sir Henry Brooke Parnell, Bart., M.P., — who, having held office as Secretary at War, Paymaster-General of the Forces, and Treasurer of the Navy and Ordnance, was created Baron Congleton in 1841, — and sister to the present Lord Congleton. By this lady, who is still living, his lordship bad issue, John Stuart Bligh, sixth and present earl of Darnley ; the Hon. and Rev. Edward Vesey Bligh ; the Hon. and Rev. Henry Bligh ; the Lady Elizabeth Caroline, and the Lady Emma Bess, both of whom are married and bear the name of Cust — the first being the wife of Reginald Cust, Esq., and the latter the wife of the Rev. Arthur Perceval Purey-Cust. His lordship died in 1835, and was succeeded by his eldest son, John Stuart Bligh, as sixth earl. The present peer, John Stuart Bligh, sixth Earl of Darnley, Viscount Darnley of Athboy, Baron Clifton of Leighton Bromswold, and Baron Clifton of Rathmore, was born in 1827, and was educated at Eton and Christ Church, Oxford, being B.A. in 1848, and M.A. in 1851. He married in 1850 the Lady Harriet Mary Pelham, eldest daughter of the third Earl of Chichester, and has by her issue, living, the Hon. Edward Henry Stuart Bligh, Lord Clifton, who was born in 1851 ; the Hon. Ivo Francis Walter Bligh, born 1859 ; the Hon. Arthur Frederick Pelham Bligh, born 1865 ; the Lady Edith Louisa Mary, born 1853 ; the Lady Kathleen Susan Emma, born 1854 ; the Lady Alice Isabella Harriet, born 1860 ; the Lady Mary Rose Florence, born 1868 ; and the Lady Constance Violet Lucy, born in 1869. His lordship is a Deputy Lieutenant of the county of Kent ; Hereditary High Steward of Gravesend with Milton ; and Lieutenant- Colonel Commandant of the West Kent Yeomanry Cavalry. He is patron of the living of Cobham. He has, besides Cobham Hall, a seat in Ireland, Clifton Lodge, Athboy, co. Meath, and a town residence. The arms of the Earl of Darnley are: — Azure, a griffin segreant, or, between three crescents, anient. Crest: — A griffin's head, erased, or. Supporters : — Two griffins, wings elevated, or, ducally collared and chained, azure. Motto : — " Finem Respice." Such is a brief history of the several noble families through whom the mansion, demesne, and estates of Cobham have passed. COBHAM HA LI.. 45 The Hall is backed by a noble park, amply stocked with deer, and containing trees of great variety and immense size, some of them measuring above thirty feet in circumference. It comprises 1,800 acres, and encloses an area of about seven miles. The old approach, long disused, was through an avenue of lime trees, consisting of four rows, and extending more than half a mile in length from the dependent village. The present entrance is through a red-brick, turreted gateway, adjacent to which is the " Lodge." Ike Lodge. On Hearing the house, the eye encounters a cedar of magnificent growth, and to the left are the gardens, into which there are two terrace-walks — one from the great gate, and another, at a considerable elevation, from the suite of apartments which constitute the first floor. The view we have given is the more ancient portion of the venerable edifice— the north wing, with which the south wing mainly corresponds. They are, however, connected by a centre, built by Inigo Jones ; and this centre, which consists of a 46 THE STATELY HOMES OE ENGLAND. facade with Corinthian pilasters, is out of keeping with the quaint gables, octagonal turrets, ornamental doorways, carved cornices, projecting niullioned windows, and elaborated chimneys, which distinguish the earlier dwelling of the Cobhams. The structure thus assumes the form of a half H, the wings being terminated by octagonal towers ; a sunken wall in front encloses a quadrangular lawn, ornamented with vases and statues. The wings exhibit the dates 1582 and 1594, and retain all the characteristics of the later Tudor style ; although, as we have intimated, it has been materially corrupted by the several alterations to which, from time to time, the mansion has been subjected. The ordinary entrance is through a vaulted passage, " built in the form of a Gothic cloister by James Wyatt," which contains the arms of the Cobhams, with the date 1587. This passage leads to the grand staircase, and the several apartments on the ground-floor. The first to which strangers are conducted is the dining-hall, which contains an elaborately carved black-and-white marble chimney-piece, having quaint and curious figures and buildings, and a series of portraits of rare excellence. The Music -room, one of the suite added to the ancient building, affords a brilliant contrast to the sombre and solid character of the dining-room. It contains but one picture — full-length portraits of the Lords John and Bernard Stuart, sons of the Duke of Lennox — a chef-d'oeuvre of Vandyke. The chimney-piece is formed of the purest white marble, sculptured in bas- relief after Guido's " Aurora," by the elder Westmacott, with fauns life- size, as supporters. The ceiling was designed by Inigo Jones ; it is divided into several square and circular compartments, with a deep oval in the centre, " superbly gilt and enriched by appropriate ornaments, among which are twelve pendant coronets." The apartment is in length 50 feet, in breadth 36 feet, and height 32 feet ! and although superbly ornamented and richly gilt — the pillars of the Composite order, being of white marble, and the lining of scagliola — the whole is in fine harmony with the grace and chaste- ness of the design. There are two galleries, one of which contains an organ. The vestibule is a small chamber, decorated with valuable vases of verd-antique. The Library contains a series of portraits of eminent literary men — Bolingbroke, Sidney, Shakespere, Swift, and others ; none of them, however, advance strong claims to originality. On the walls of the Great Staircase are hung several large pictures, which may bear examination before the gallery is entered. The grand staircase conducts, first to the Portrait Gallery, and next to COBHAM HALL. 47 the Picture Gallery. The walls of the former are hung with portraits, amon» which are many of exceeding interest, including those of heroes, statesmen, kings and queens, church reformers, and poets, mingled without regard to date or order. At the end of this gallery are, branching to the right and left, the private apartments of the family ; and in a room opening out of the west end of the Picture Gallery, Queen Elizabeth is reported to have slept when she honoured the Lord Cobham with a visit during her progress through Kent. In the centre of the ancient ceiling are still preserved her arms, with the date, 1599. The Picture Gallery is the great " show-room " of the house. It is a noble apartment, the walls of which are covered with works of Art, of rare value and unsurpassed excellence, the productions of nearly all the great masters of Italy — including admirable examples of Guido, Titian, Salvator Rosa, Rubens, Raphael, Spagnoletto, P. Veronese, Giorgione, N. Poussin, and Guercino. Every part of the venerable edifice contains, indeed, some object of interest. The rooms, and halls, and galleries are thronged with rare and beautiful works of Art ; a series of perfect vases from Herculaneum lie on the tables of the Picture Gallery ; several antique busts and statues line the hall ; a magnificent bath, of red Egyptian granite, is placed in the entrance passage ; and the furniture and interior decorations are all of corresponding excellence and beauty. Although necessarily limited in our description of Cobham Hall, we have sufficiently shown the rare treat a visit to it will afford those who, "in populous city pent," desire to convert occasional holidays into contributions to intellectual enjoyment. The Hall and its contents will amply repay examination ; and the noble park is full of natural treasures' — thronged with deer, singularly abundant in singing birds, and containing trees unsurpassed in magnificent size and graceful proportions. A group of these trees, known as " the Three Sisters " (why we cannot say), we have engraved. One of the walks conducts to a hillock, from the summit of which there is a splendid prospect of the adjacent country, commanding views of the Thames and Medway, and taking in the venerable castle, cathedral, and town of Rochester, the dockyards at Sheerness, and the whole course of the great English river to its mouth at the Nore. The pedestrian, pursuiug this route, will pass the Mausoleum, an elegant structure, built conformably with the will of the third Earl of Darnley, and designed for the sepulture of his family. It was never consecrated. THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. But Cobham has other objects of interest : the venerable Church, and no less venerable " College." The " Church," dedicated to St. Mary Magdalen, stands upon elevated ground at the entrance of the village. It consists of a nave, aisles, and chancel, with an embattled tower, entered by an antique porch. The tower is obviously of a more recent date than the chancel ; the former is very ancient. As in many of tbe Kentish churches, the walls were formerly painted in fresco, of which evidence may be easily obtained by those Interior of the Church. who examine them narrowly ; the steps of the altar are paved with encaustic tiles, of about the period of Edward III., of various patterns, but most of them containing the fleur-de-lis. The whole aspect of the place indeed supplies indubitable proof of very remote antiquity. It has been recently restored, but with sound judgment and skill, by the accomplished architect, Sir Gilbert Scott, K.A. The roof of huge oak rafters, the Gothic arches, the brasses, broken and COBHAM HALL. 49 entire, which cover the floor, the quaint monuments let into the walls, the delicately-sculptured piscina, the sedilia of carved stone, the singular font, the rude vestry-room with its massive oak chest, the Scripture passages painted on the walls, all bespeak the antiquity of the building. " Nearly in the centre is the still beautiful tomb of Sir Thomas Broke, the Lady Joan, and their ten sons and four daughters. It is of white marble, over which, upon a black slab, lie the effigies of the knight and dame. On either side are those of five of their sons, kneeling, and wearing tabards, with their swords girded on. The figures of the four daughters are carved on the east and west ends of the superb monument. It bears the date 1561, under the arms of the Brokes quartered with those of the Cobhams. " On the floor of the chancel are the famous 'Cobham Brasses,' the most perfect and most numerous assemblage now existing in the kingdom. The series consists of thirteen, recording the memory of the Cobhams and Brokes, ' lords and barons of this manor of Cobham, with many of their kindred, who for many descents did flourish in honourable reputation.' Of the thirteen, eight are in honour of the knights, and five are memorials, of the dames. These brasses, one and all, deserve the most careful examination and notice. The earliest is to the memory of John de Cobham, the first Knight Banneret, and Constable of Rochester ; he is dressed in a shirt of mail : round his waist is a rich girdle, sustaining a long sword. Eight lines of Norman French are inscribed .round the verge of the slab. The others are to Maude, Lady Cobham (1370), probably wife of Baron Cobham, who was Warden of the Cinque Ports in the time of Edward III., who is represented with a dog at her feet. Over her head are the words ' Icy gist dame Maude de Cobham.' Maude, Lady Cobham (c. 1385) supposed to have been the wife of Thomas de Cobham. She has a flouni.0 of fur at the bottom of her dress. There are the remains of a mutilated canopy over her, and a fragment of inscription says, ' Icy gist dame Maude de Cobehm qe ' Margaret, Lady Cobham (1385), wife of John de Cobham, the founder of Cobham College. This is a remarkably beautiful canopied brass ; the finial of the canopy bearing a figure of the Virgin and Child. Around the brass is the inscription, ' Isy gist dame Margarete de Cobeham, iadiis fille a noble en le Comte de Deueniscbire ; feme le sire de Cobeham, foundour de morust le secounde in dimoys D'agust Ian de grace, mccclxxxv., lalme de qy deux eut mercy. Amen.' Joan, Lady Cobham (c. 1320), who was daughter E 5° THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. of John, Lord Beauchamp of Stoke-under -Harnden, and first wife of Sir John de Cobharn. The inscription, in Longobardic capitals, is : — " ' Dame Jone de Kobeham gist isi Pens de sa alme eit merci Kike pur le Alme Priera Quaraunte jours de pardoim avera.' Reginald de Cobham (c. 1420), an ecclesiastic, under a triple canopy, the shaft and some other portions being lost. Sir Thomas de Cobham, a knight The College Porch. in mixed armour, 1367. Ralph de Cobham, 1405, a semi-effigy in armour, holding in his hands a tablet, bearing the inscription in old English characters. John de Cobham, the founder of the College, bearing in his hands the model of a church. John Broke and Ladij Margaret his wife, under a rich canopy with pendants and other ornaments, with triangular compartments, containing circles with shields, one of which bears the crown of thorns, and the other the five wounds ; between the pinnacles, in the centre, is a curious representa- COBHAM HALL. 5' tion of the Trinity, in which the Deity is delineated with a triple crown, and the Holy Spirit has a human face. The figure of the knight is gone, but that of his lady remains ; and beneath are groups of eight sons and ten daughters. Sir Reginald Brayhroke, the second husband of Joan, Lady Cobham. Sir Nicholas Hauberk, her third husband. Juan de Cobham : she died, as appears from the inscription, ' on the day of St. Hilary the Bishop, a.d. 1433.' At her feet are six sons and four daughters ; and surrounding her, are six escutcheons of the Cobham arms and alliances. Sir Thomas Broke and one of his three wives. Below them are seven sons and five daughters. Sir Thomas died 1529." " The College of Cobham " is now only a collection of almshouses, to which presentations are made — of old people, without restriction to either sex — as vacancies occur, by the parish and ten other parishes adjacent. It lies immediately south of the church, and is entered by a small Gothic gateway. Its occupants are twenty aged men and women, who have each a little dwelling, with a neat garden and an allowance monthly, sufficient to secure the necessaries of life. It is a quadrangular building, of stone, measuring about 60 feet by 50 ; and contains a large hall, with painted windows, a roof of blackened rafters, an old oak screen, and a fireplace of cut stone. The history of the college is curious and interesting. A college or chantry was originally founded here, about the year 1362, by John de Cobham, thence called " the founder," in the reign of Edward III. In the Church is a brass to the memory of William Tanner, Master of the College, who died in 1418. The brass consists of a half-length of the master, in clerical costume, with the inscription in black letter: — "Hie jacet Willmus Tannere qui prim obiit magister istuis Collegii xxii. die mensis Junii Anno Dni. m cccc°xviii. cujus anime propicietur deus Amen." Towards the end of the reign of Elizabeth it was rebuilt, as appears by a record — " finished in September 1598" — inscribed over the south portal, under the arms and alliances of the Brokes, Lords Cobham. The endowments of the old founda- tion were ample, and were, with the college itself, bestowed by Henry VIII., at the dissolution, upon George, Lord Cobham, who had the "king's roiall assent and licence by hys grace's word, with any manner of letters patent or other writings, to purchase and receyve to his heires for ever, of the late master and brethren, of the college or chauntry of Cobham, in the countie of Kent, now being utterly dissolved, the scite of the same colledge or chauntry, and al and singular their heridamerrts and possessions, as well e 2 52 THE STA TEL Y HOMES OF ENGLAND. temporal] as ecclesiastical!, wheresoever they lay, or were, within the realm of England." The walls of the ancient college may be clearly traced, and a small portion still endures, comparatively uninjured. It is a gateway, surmounted by the 'arms of the Cobhams, luxuriantly overgrown with ivy, forming a fine example of picturesque antiquity. The present structure was erected pursuant to the will of Sir William Broke, Lord Cobham, who devised " all those edifices, ruined buildings, soil and ground, with the The College. appurtenances which some time belonged to the late suppressed college for the use of the ' new ' college." By an act of the 39th of Elizabeth, the wardens of Rochester Bridge for the time being were made a body corporate, and declared perpetual presidents of the new college, the government of which they retain to this day. The dependent village of Cobham is one of the neatest and most pleasant C0BHA3I HALL. 53 of the fair villages of Kent. There are, no doubt, many nobler and more perfect examples of the domestic architecture of "old" England than is supplied by Cobham Hall, but it would be difficult to direct attention to any that affords so rich a recompense at so small a cost ; taking into account its genuine remains of antiquity, the magnificent works of Art that decorate its walls, its easy access from the metropolis, and the primitive character and sur- passing beauty of the locality in which it is situated. MOUNT EDGCUMBE. E cannot say in what month these details will be read, but they are written on a morning of May, in one of the loveliest spots of the fairest of our English shires : a mild and genial day of mid- spring — "The soote season that bud and blome forth brings;" when the apple orchards — prides of Devon — are in full blossom ; the hawthorns have donned their snow-white draperies ; the gorse its garment of gold ; and every hedgerow is rich in the hundred hues of flowers that herald summer : while all the hill-slopes and meadows, " in verdure clad," seem rejoicing over the prospective abundance that Nature promises to healthy toil. We have passed through the fifty- three miles that separate Exeter from Plymouth. It would be hard to find in any part of the world, in equal space, a road so lavishly endowed with gifts of the fertile and the beautiful. Part of the way by the open sea, then by estuaries, then by the banks of broad rivers, then by narrow and rapid streams, then under the shadows of tree-clad hills, green from base to summit, with frequent views of prosperous towns and happy villages, with venerable churches continually showing their tall spires above the tree-tops — in thoroughly rural England, far from the tall chimneys and dense atmosphere that betoken manufactures and their results — the railway runs through many scenes of surpassing loveliness, any one of which might tempt the traveller who is in search of either health or pleasure, with assurance of an ample supply of both. MOUNT EDGCUMBE. 55 The Gkeat Western conveys us from Paddington to Exeter. We leave Exeter by the South Devon Railway (proverbially well managed, in all respects) : it may take us to Penzance ; but its great station is midway, at Plymouth, where has been recently erected for the especial accommodation of railway travellers and tourists, an admirable hotel (the Duke of Cornwall — there is none more comfortable in the kingdom).* Here we arrest the tourist, in order to visit the promontory of Mount Edgcumbe, that occupies one side of the famous harbour. First, however, let us glance at the several points of interest that claim our attention en route. Leaving Exeter and its many attractions other than its renowned Cathedral, we first reach the marine village of Starcross, opposite to which are old Topsham (full of memories of our own boyhood, when " a stranger yet to pain"), and young Exmouth ; stately villas and pretty cottages occupy slopes of the hill range. Then, at Dawlish, a graceful village, we front the sea, and pass some singular rocks of red sandstone, that stand like sentinels along the shore — and here, it may be well to note, some extraordinary inroads upon the sea-wall of the railway have lately been made by the ocean — Teign- mouth and Shaldon come next, towns on both sides of the river Teign, con- nected by a narrow wooden bridge more than a quarter of a mile in length. We next arrive at Newton Junction, where a railway branch conducts to Torquay and Dartmouth ; soon afterwards Totnes is reached, an old town on the Dart, one of the most beautiful of all the rivers in Devonshire, whence a steamboat issues daily to visit Dartmouth. Here we have left the sea, and have only in view rich pasture land — ever green, the hills tree-clad to their topmost heights. Passing Brent and Kingsbridge Stations, Ivy Bridge next comes in sight, a deep dell, over which a viaduct passes : a dell of singular beauty, one of the finest in all Devonshire. Soon we pass Cornwood and Plynrpton,— the latter famous as the birthplace of Sir Joshua Reynolds,— and, skirting the Plym, enter Plymouth. * The architect is C F. Hayward, F.S.A. It is a handsome building-, immediately fronting the Terminus, of a style which maybe described as a free treatment of Gothic architecture, without any of the special characteristics which refer to one particular date- in fact, it is a modern design, well adapted to its purposes and position, and of substantial build, being of granite and limestone— combined with lightness and even elegance in certain details of terra-cotta work, from the well-known manufactory of Blashfield of Stamford. From the lantern tower of the hotel, rising far above the buildings near, and also from some of the windows in the upper floor, is to be obtained a magnificent view of the Sound, with the near Breakwater, and the Eddystone Lighthouse, "far out at sea;" while the grassy slopes of lovely Mount Edgcumbe and its tree-capped heights are seen to rise in front, over-hanging the land-locked harbour, called Hamoaze. 56 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. The eye is at once arrested by a sylvan spot, running out into the sea, beyond the docks, and their manifold adjuncts ; a mass of greenery, unbroken except by trees of varied foliage, that rise continually in groups, from all parts of the pi'omontory that, thus seen, seems an island. The admiral of the " Invincible" Armada had taste, at least, in fixing upon Mount Edgcumbe as his dwelling-place, when settled in the country he was "about" to conquer. God's providence gave the invader a different locality; and the beautiful domain continues to be, as it was then, the home of the family of the Edgcumbes, now earls of " that ilk." Mount Edgcumbe is in Cornwall ; but until recently it was a part of Devon- shire ; the Act of Parliament that removed it from one county to the other dating no further back than 1854. But Acts of Parliament have done other wonders in this district, for it was only in 1824 that an act was passed giving to the town of "Plymouth Dock," — -or, as it was then generally called, " Dock," — the new and more pretentious name which it now holds of Devon- port. The "Mount" is about half a mile across the bay which divides it from the now " united" towns of Devonport, Stonehouse, and Plymouth, which, together, contain a population of 150,000 " souls." From any of the adjacent heights, especially the Hoe at Plymouth, we obtain a glorious view of the road- stead — fortified everywhere. In mid-distance is seen the Breakwater, one of the marvels of engineering art ; and far off, yet within view, the famous light- house — the Eddystone, some fourteen miles from the nearest sbore. Between these objects and the port are, at all times, many ships of the navy : they rule the waves of ocean in the seas that encircle earth ; and Plymouth will be especially glorified when the triumphs of British sailors, from the admiral to the able seaman, supply subjects of discourse. The Breakwater, one of the most gigantic works in the kingdom, lies in Plymouth Sound, where it forms a line between Bovisand Bay on the east, and Cawsand Bay on the west. It is about three miles from Plymouth, and is a mile in length. In form it is a straight line, with a kant or arm at each end, branching off towards the shore. At its eastern end a clear passage between it and the Bovisand shore of about a mile in width is left for ships, while at the western end the passage is about a mile and a half in width. The idea of the Breakwater originated with Earl St. Vincent in 1806, and Mr. Rennie and Mr. Whidbey surveyed the Sound for the purpose. In 1811 the plan was decided upon. The first stone was deposited on the birthday of the Prince Regent (afterwards George IV.), 1812. In 1817, and again in 1824, much damage MOUNT EDGCUMBE. 57 was done to the progressing work. The quantity of stone used in its formation is estimated at about four millions of tons, exclusive of about two millions and a half of tons of granite and other stones used for paving, facings, &c. At the east end is a beacon, and at the west end a lighthouse 60 feet high. The spirited engraving of this gigantic undertaking, which we here give, is taken from Mr. Jewitt's recently published " History of Plymouth," where it forms one of many illustrations. The view, as will be seen, is a kind of bird's-eye, Plymouth Breakwater. and shows the form of the Breakwater, with its new central fort and its light- house and beacon. The Eddystone Lighthouse, in the English Channel, is fourteen miles from Plymouth, from which town its light is distinctly visible under favourable atmospheric circumstances. It is erected on one of the Eddystone rocks, pro- bably so called from the eddies, or whirls, which surround them. The rocks themselves are completely covered at high tide. The first attempt to erect a lighthouse on these rocks was made by Mr. Winstanley in 1696. This was completed in about four years, but was washed away in a hurricane. In 1706 a new lighthouse, for which an Act of Parliament had been passed, was begun to be erected by Mr. John Rudyerd, silk mercer, of London, who was of the famous family of Rudyerd, of Rudyerd, in the county of Stafford, and a man of considerable engineering and architectural skill. He, wishing to profit by 5 8 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. experience, determined that as the former lighthouse had been angular, his should be round, and that as it was mainly of stone his should be of wood. In 1709 Rudyerd's lighthouse was completed, and gave promise of being a great success. Years passed on, storms rose, the waves dashed over and around it wildly, but it remained firm and unshaken even through the dreadful tempest of 1744. What wind and water could not do, was, however, soon after fearfully accomplished by fire — the lighthouse being burned down in 1755. Immediately after this Mr. Smeaton undertook the task of erecting a new lighthouse of stone. This, the present Eddy stone Lighthouse, was com- menced in 1756 and completed in 1759. In construction it is the most com- plete example of architectural and engineering skill. The lower part is solid throughout, being literally as firm as the rock itself, on which it is immovably and permanently fixed. The stones are all dovetailed together, so that, in reality, it becomes but one stone throughout. In the upper portion, which is equally strong, the rooms and staircase take up the hollow centre. The lantern is octagonal. This building, which has given to the name of Smeaton an imperishable fame, bears on its granite cornice the truly appropriate; inscription: — "Except the Lord build the house, they labour in vain that build it. Psalm exxvii. 1 ; " and over the lantern, " 24th August, 1759. Laus Deo." Of this we give an engraving on our initial letter on page 54. But we have a theme that demands all the space we can give— Mount Edg- cumbe, and that other seat of the ancient family, Cothele. For Mount Edgcumbe art has done little ; but it was here unnecessary for art to do much : like some women, whose charms of expression and perfect " loveliness " do not seem to require beauty, this delicious peninsula has been so richly gifted by Nature, that, perhaps, efforts to enhance its attractions might have lessened instead of augmenting them. Hill and dell, heights and hollows, pasture slopes and rugged hillocks, succeed each other with a delicious harmony we have rarely seen elsewhere. On one side of the bay are the three busy towns, active with energetic life ; on another are the cultivated hill-sides of productive Devon ; on another is the open sea, with the two objects we have noted — the Breakwater and the marvellous Eddystone. Everywhere Nature has had its own sweet will ; even the laurel hedges have risen thirty feet in height ; the lime trees grow as if they had never been trimmed ; while the slopes, from the hill-heights to the sea-rocks, appear as sheen as if the scythe had been perpetually smoothing them. Here and there, pretty and MOUNT EDGCUMBE. 59 pleasant shelters have been, provided for visitors who throng hither for health and relaxation ; * " look out " seats are provided on many of the hill-tops ; and the deer and the rabbits have free pasturage in the noble Park that occupies a space of many hundred acres between the harbour and the sea. Nor may we forget the " defences " of the peninsula : the battery that would here, as else- where, "keep the foreigner from fooling us," and that battery called "the Salute," in which the huge "Armstrongs" are hidden, but where may be Mount Edgcutnbe, from Stonehouse Pier. seen, by all on-lookers, twenty-one mounted cannon — "prizes" from ships of " the enemy" taken during the war with France. All, therefore, is not left to Nature. Nor must we forget the gardens : prettily laid out ; enriched by rare trees, with vases and statues judiciously * The grounds are on Mondays freely open to all comers; but on any day visitors will be admitted to them by application at the Manor Office, Stonehouse, near to the ferry by which passengers are conveyed across. There is. however, a road for carriages ; but that implies a drive of twelve miles there and twelve miles back, besides the drive of five or six miles round the Park. 60 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. intermixed ; and, especially, a grove of orange trees, with several summer- houses in pleasant nooks, where cedai'S, magnolias, cork trees, and other trees, supply shade and shelter from rain and sun. Art has here been aiding Nature, but its influence is felt rather than seen; those to whom the "grounds " owe much seem to have been ever mindful that their profuse and natural luxuriance needed few checks of the pruner and trainer. The name of one of these bene- factors is recorded — a votive urn contains a tablet to the memory of that countess "whose taste embellished these retreats, herself their brightest orna- ment" — Countess Sophia, who could not have found on earth a home more lovely than that which, in 1806, she was called to leave for one still more perfect and more beautiful. The great charm of Mount Edgcumbe, however, consists in the five-mile drive through the Park, along a road that everywhere skirts the harbour or the sea. It is perpetual hill and dell ; a mimic ruin, intended as a view tower, and answering its purpose well, is the only object remarkable on the higher grounds, if we except the church — Maker Church — neither venerable nor pic- turesque, but containing many interesting memorials of the Edgcumbe family ;* but down in the dales (in nearly all of them) are the pretty "lodges," where the keepers and gardeners reside, and where simple "refreshments" of milk and hot water are provided for the crowds who are weekly visitors to the domain. One of these we have pictured on page 64. Lady Emma's cottage — Lady Emma being the first Countess of Mount Edgcumbe, wife of George, first Baron and Earl of that title — is charmingly situated in one of the most lovely of the dells of this domain, surrounded by soft grassy turf, and overhung by lofty trees ; the cottage itself is completely embosomed in creeping plants, and has a rustic verandah exquisitely decorated with fir-cones and other natural productions, so disposed as to give consider- able richness to the effect of the building. The little valley in which it stands, hollowed out with great regularity by Nature, and sloping gently down towards the sea, is one of the sweetest spots on the whole estate. The footway winds round the upper part of the valley, and at the head of the dell is a spacious alcove composed of Gothic fragments, called the " Ruined Chapel," from which a glorious view is obtained. In the grounds the most famous points for the attraction of visitox - s are * The date of the erection of Maker Church is not known. It was originally dedicated to St. Julian, and there is a well near the church still designated St. Julian's well. MOUNT EDGCUMBE. 6 1 " Thomson's Seat; " the " Temple of Milton;" a recess called the "Amphi- theatre ; " a charming alcove, the " White Seat," which commands a splendid prospect; "the Arch," which overlooks the Sound; and the " zig-zag walks," which lead down along the cliffs and through the woods, and are the favourite resorts of visitors. The gardens are three in number, and called respectively the " Italian," the "French," and the "English" gardens, in each of which the special The Mansion. characteristics of planting and arrangement of those countries are carried out — the conservatories, fountains, orangeries, terraces, &c, being, in each instance, built in accordance with the tastes of the tbree kingdoms. Indeed, it is difficult to convey an idea of the grandeur, beauty, and interest of tbe views from every portion of the Park ; they are perpetually varied as the eye turns from sea to shore, and from shore to sea ; each one of them enhanced by ships at anchor or in full sail ; while boats of all forms and sizes are continually passing to and fro. One of the most prominent objects 62 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. from the park is Drake's Island ; an island in mid-channel between Plymouth and Mount Edgcumbe ; it appears on the map, however, as St. Nicholas Island, its original name, but it has, in later times, been occasionally called Drake's Island, after the great admiral, Sir Francis Drake — one of the many sea-heroes of whom Plymouth is justly proud. This island is connected with the shore at Mount Edgcumbe by a submarine ridge of rocks, called the " Bridge," which renders the passage, on that side, dangerous to ships of even moderate burthen. On the island was formerly an ancient chapel, dedicated to St. Michael, which was converted in the fifteenth century into a bulwark. The island contains about three acres of land, and is strongly fortified. We turn our backs on the Breakwater and distant Eddystone, to mark the steamer passing under the most remarkable effort of engineering skill in England — one of the legacies of Brunei— the " Albert Bridge " that crosses the Tamar from Devonshire into Cornwall ; and long to visit (which we may easily do, for steamboats run daily up it in summer) the beautiful river Tamar and its grand tributary, the Tavy. A drive of a mile, and before us is a continuation of the promontory, still charming ; and a little farther on, but across the river Lynher — and adjacent to the ancient borough of St. Germans, with its venerable church, once the cathedral of the See of Cornwall — is Port Eliot, the residence of the noble family of Eliot, Earls of St. Germans. In a word, a hundred points of deep and exciting interest, picturesquely beautiful and historically interesting, may be seen and " taken note of," from the several points to which u drive through the Park conducts. We give an engraving of the mansion. Parts of it are as old as the reign of Henry VIII., but its outward signs of remote age are few; it seems built for comfort ; it is thoroughly a domestic house ; the rooms are neither large, lofty, nor stately ; but all of them are made to live in — so many parts of a home. We may except the Great Hall, however; that is "grand." There is a minstrels' gallery, and it is often used for music. The house is square in general form, and originally had a circular tower at each angle ; these, however, have been rebuilt of an octagonal form, and additions have been carried in different directions. The front faces down a grassy slope to the sea at Cremill, and thus a charming prospect is always before its windows ; the rooms are full of family and historic portraits : some of them by the great old masters, many by Sir Joshua Reynolds, "dear Knight of Plymp- ton," while ten or twelve Yanderveldes grace the several apartments. Of these some are stated to have been painted by the artist, Yandervelde MOUNT EDGCUMBE. 63 himself, at Mount Edgcumbe. Of one, which formed the subject of corres- pondence between Sir Richard Edgcumbe and the artist, the original and amended sketches hang beside the picture. The portraits by Sir Joshua Reynolds are of individuals of three generations, and those by Lely are in his best style. Among the national pictures are full-length and other portraits of Charles I., Charles II., James II., Prince Rupert, William III., the Duke of Monmouth, and others. It is needless to add that delicious views are obtained from the windows of all the leading chambers, not only on the upper but on the ground floors, as well as from the several terraces by which the dwelling is, on all sides, environed — occupying as it does an elevation on the side of one of the hill slopes. Before we visit Cothele — the other mansion of the Mount-Edgcumbes — we give some account of the ancient and long-honoured family, who have been their lords for many hundred years. The family of Edgcumbe, or Edgcomb, is one of the most ancient and venerable in the county of Devon, the name being derived from their original possession of Eggescomb, Egecomb, or Edgcombe (now called Lower Edgcumbe), in the parish of Milton Abbots, in that county. From this family and this place, the noble family of the Earls of Mount Edgcumbe is descended as a younger branch. In 1292 Richard Edgcumbe was Lord of Edgcumbe, in Milton Abbots, and he was direct ancestor, both of the present representative of the main line, who is twentieth in direct lineal descent, and of the present ennobled family, as well as of the branches settled in Kent and elsewhere. In the reign of Edward III., William de Eggescombe, or Edgcombe, second son of the House of Edgcumbe, having married Hilaria, sole daughter and heiress of William de Cothele, of Cothele, or Coteel, in the parish of Calstock, in Cornwall, a fine old Cornish family, became possessed of Cothele and the other estates, and removed into Cornwall. Here, at Cothele, he and his descendants resided for several generations. Richard Edgcumbe, great grandson of William de Edgcumbe and Hilaria de Cothele, is said to have built the greater part of the grand old residence of Cothele as it remains at the present day : of this singular mansion we shall furnish some details. At Bosworth Richard Edgcumbe received the honour of knighthood from his victorious leader, Henry VII., was made comptroller of his household, and one of his Privy Council, and had the castle and lordship 6 4 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. of Totues, in Devonshire — forfeited to the crown on the attainder of John Lord Zouch for high treason — conferred upon hhn hy that monarch, with many other honours and dignities, and large extents of land, including those of Sir Henry Bodrugan, who had likewise been attainted for high treason. He also held, as he had previously done, the offices of Eecorder, and Constable of the castle of Launceston, and Constable of Hertford, &c. In 1488 Sir Richard was sent into Ireland, as Lord Deputy, by his royal master, to take the oaths Lady Emmas Cottage. of allegiance of the Irish people, embarking at Mounts Bay in the Anne of Foicey, and attended by other ships, and a retinue of five hundred men. He died in 1489, at Morlaix, while holding the appointment of ambassador to France. He married Joan, daughter of Thomas Tremaine of Collacombe, by whom he had issue. Of Sir Richard Edgcumbe, Fuller tells a romantic story. He says he was " memorable in his generation for being zealous in the cause of Henry, Earl of Richmond, afterwards King Henry VII. He was, in the time of Richard III., JIOUXT EDGCUMBE. 65 so hotly pursued, and narrowly searched for, that he was forced to hide himself in his wood, at his house, in Cuttail, in Cornwall. Here extremity taught him a suddain policy, to put a stone in his capp and tumhle the same into the water, whilst these rangers were fast at his heels, who, looking down after the noise, and seeing the cap swimming therein, supposed that hee had desperately drowned himself, and deluded by this honest fraud, gave over their further pursuit, leaviug him at liberty to shift over into Brittany. Nor In the Gardens. was his gratitude less than his ingenuity, who, in remembranse of his delivery, after his return built a chappel (which still remains) in the plase where he lurked, and lived in great repute with prince and people." After thus cleverly misleading his pursuers, Richard Edgcumbe crossed the Channel in a small ship, to the Earl of Richmond, in Brittany, with whom he afterwards returned to England, and was engaged in the battle of Bosworth Field, in TA'icestershire, where King Richard was killed. F 66 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. His son, Piers Edgcumbe, was Sheriff of the county of Devon, 9th, 10th, and 13th Henry VII. and 2nd Henry VIII. " At the creation of Prince Arthur he was one of the twenty individuals who were made Knights of the Cross of St. Andrew." He, with others, was " appointed to review and array all men at arms, archers, and others, who were to accompany Sir Thomas D'Arcy in his expedition against the Moors and infidels." He was one of the expedition into France, 5th Henry VIII., and for his distinguished gallantry at the sieges of Tournay and Thurovenne, and at the battle of Spurs, he was created a knight-banneret. Sir Piers Edgcumbe was married twice : first to the daughter and heiress of Stephen Durnford, by his wife the heiress of Rame ; and, second, to Katherine, daughter of Sir John St. John, and widow of Sir Griffith Ap Rys, by whom he had no issue. By the first of these marriages, Sir Piers Edgcumbe acquired the manors and estates of the Durnfords, including that of West Stonehouse (now Mount Edgcumbe). He had issue by her, three sons, Richard, John, and James, and three daughters, Elizabeth, Jane, and Agnes (or Anne). Sir Piers Edgcumbe died in 1539, and was succeeded as heir by his eldest son, Richard Edgcumbe, who was knighted in 1536. This Sir Richard Edgcumbe built the present family mansion, on a part of the estate which his father had acquired by marriage with the heiress of the Durnfords (who had inherited it from the ancient family of Stonehouse or Stenhouse), and gave to it the name of " Mount Edgcumbe." He was Sheiiff of Devon 35th Henry VIII. and 1st Queen Mary. He married first a daughter of Sir John Arundel, by whom he had no issue ; and, second, Winifred Essex, and by her had, besides other issue, a son, Piers, or Peter, who succeeded him. Sir Richard Edgcumbe, who kept up a fine establishment, and at one time entertained at Mount Edgcumbe the English, Spanish, and Netherlands admirals, died in 1561. Piers (or Peter) Edgcumbe, who was member of Parliament, and was also Sheriff of Devon 9th Elizabeth, married Margaret, daughter of Sir Andrew Lutterell, by whom he had five sons and four daughters, and was succeeded by his eldest son, Richard. Piers Edgcumbe died in 1607, and on his tomb his honours are thus set forth :— " Lief Tenant to my Queen long Time And often for my Shire and Knighte ; My merit did to Creddit clime, Still bidinge in my Callinge righte ; By Loyalty my faith was tryede, Peacefull I liv'd, hopeful I diede.' ' MOUNT EDGCUMBE. 67 His son, Sir Richard Edgcumbe, knighted by James I., was member of Par- liament for Totnes, for Grampound, and for Bossiney ; he married Mary, daughter and heiress of Sir Richard Coteele, or Cottle, of London, and by her, who died eighteen years before him, had issue, two sons, Piers and Richard, by the eldest of whom, Piers Edgcumbe, he was succeeded. This gentleman distinguished himself by his devotion to the royal cause ; he " was a master of languages and sciences, a lover of the king and church, which he endeavoured to support in the time of the civil wars to the utmost of his power and fortune." Sir Alexander Carew and Major Scawen, for holding connection with Piers Edgcumbe, who held a colonel's commission in the king's army, were beheaded. He married Mary, daughter of Sir John Glanvil, and died in 1660, being suc- ceeded by his eldest son, Sir Richard Edgcumbe, who had been knighted during his father's lifetime. He was also a member of Parliament. He married Anne Montague, daughter of Edward, Earl of Sandwich, by whom he had issue two sons, Piers, who died young and unmarried, and Richard ; and six daughters. He died in 1688. To this time, for several generations, it will have been noticed, the inheritors of the estate alternated, in name, between Piers (or Peter) and Richard. This succession of name was now broken by the death of Piers, the eldest son. Richard Edgcumbe, soon after coming of age, was chosen M.P. for Corn- wall, and continued to sit for various places until 1742. In 1716 and 1720 he was one of the Lords Commissioners of the Treasury, and in 1724 was Vice-Treasurer, and Paymaster of the Taxes, &c. In 1742 he was created Baron Edgcumbe of Mount Edgcumbe, and was afterwards made Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, one of the Privy Council, and Lord-Lieutenant of Cornwall. His lordship, by his wife Matilda, daughter of Sir Henry Furnese, had issue, three sons, Richard, Henry (who died an infant), and George ; he died in 1758, and was succeeded in his title and estates by his eldest son, Richard, second Baron Edgcumbe, member of Parliament for various places, one of the Lords of the Admiralty, and afterwards appointed Comp- troller of his Majesty's Household. He was a man of great talent, and is thus spoken of by Horace Walpole in his " Royal and Noble Authors : " — " His lord- ship's skill as a draughtsman is said to have been such as might entitle him to a place in the ' Anecdotes of English Painting,' ' while the ease and harmony of his poetic compositions give him an authorised introduction here.' . . . ' a man of fine parts, great knowledge, and original wit, who possessed a light f 2 68 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. and easy vein of poetry ; who was calculated by nature to serve the public, and to charm, society ; but who unhappily was a man of pleasure, and left his gay associates a most affecting example how health, fame, ambition, and every- thing that may be laudable in principle or practice, are drawn into and absorbed by that most destructive of all whirlpools — gaming.' " His lordship, dying unmarried in 1761, was succeeded by his brother George as third baron. This nobleman, who had sat in several parliaments, and held various public The Ruin, the Sound, Drake s Island, &c. offices (among them the Lord-Lieutenancy of Cornwall), and was Vice-Admiral of the Blue, married Emma, only daughter and heiress of John Gilbert, Archbishop of York, by whom he had issue an only son, who succeeded him. His lord- ship was, on the 17th February, 1781, created in addition to his title of Baron Edgcumbe 5 Viscount Mount Edgcumbe and Valletort; and in 1789 he was further advanced to the dignity of an earl, by the title of Earl of Mount Edg- cumbe. Lying in 1795, he was succeeded by his only son, Richard, as second earl. MOUNT ED G CUM BE. 69 This nobleman', who also held the office of Lord-Lieutenant of Cornwall, married Lady Sophia Hobart, daughter of John, second Earl of Bucking- hamshire, and by her had issue, two sons, Ernest Augustus, and George, and two daughters. His lordship died in 1839, and was succeeded by his eldest son, Ernest Augustus, as third earl, who (born in 1797) was Aide-de-Camp to the Queen and Colonel of the Cornwall militia. He married, in 1831, Caroline Augusta, daughter of Rear-Admiral diaries Feilding, who still survives him, The Salute Battery, and is an extra Lady of the Bedchamber to the Queen. By her his lordship had issue two sons : viz., William Henry and Charles Ernest, and two daughters, of whom Ernestine Emma Horatia is still living. The earl died in 1861, and was succeeded by his eldest son as fourth earl. The present nobleman, William Henry Edgcumbe, fourth Earl of Mount Edgcumbe, Viscount Mount Edgcumbe and Valletort, and Baron Edgcumbe of Mount Edgcumbe, the noble owner of Mount Edgcumbe and of the large ?o THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. estates concentrated in the family, was born in 1832. He was educated at Harrow, and at Christ Church, Oxford, where he became B.A. in 1856, and sat as M.P. for the borough of Plymouth from 1859 to 1861, when, by the death of his father, he entered the Upper House. His lordship is an extra Lord of the Bedchamber to H.R.H. the Prince of Wales ; is Lieutenant-Colonel of the 2nd battalion and Captain Commandant of the 16th corps of Devon Rifle Volunteers ; is a Special Deputy Warden of the Stannaries, &c, &c. He married in 1858 the Lady Katherine Elizabeth Hamilton, fourth daughter of the first Duke of Abercorn, and has by her issue one son, Piers Alexander Hamilton Edgcumbe Viscount Valletort (born 1865), and three daughters, Victoria Frederica Caroline, bora 1859, Albertha Louisa Florence, born 1861, and Edith Hilaria, born 1862. His lordship is patron of five livings ; viz., Dittisham and Beer Ferrers, in Devonshire ; and Landrake, Rame, and Mill- brook, in Cornwall. The arms of the Earl of Mount Edgcumbe are — gules, on a bend ermines, cottised, or, three boars' heads, argent. Crest — a boar, statant, argent, gorged with a leaf of oak, vert, fructed, or. Supporters — two grey- hounds, argent, gutte de poix, and gorged with a collar, dove-tailed, gules. From the ancient mansion at Mount Edgcumbe we proceed to that wbich is still older and more venerable — Cothele. — It is difficult to imagine ahouse continuing — and but little changed — to be inhabited by the same family, or, indeed, inhabited at all, during a period approaching three centuries ; yet that is the case with Cothele, pride of the beautiful river Tamar, and one of the " gems " of Cornwall ; : ' : its gigantic oaks, and chestnuts are obviously so old ; but it is requisite to examine the exterior, and especially the interior, to obtain conviction that the mansion dates from the reign of the seventh Henry ; while its present lord is the lineal representative of the knight who built it — Sir Richard Edgcumbe — whose house it is we see, nearly as he left it :f but, also, we may examine the armour he wore, for it still hangs in this hall ; the table at which he feasted (the worm of time only has * The name of Cothele is conjectured to Le hence derived : ceil being a wood in ancient Cornish, and h"l a river : the wood by the river, or, in a mixture of British and Old English, the hall in the wood, healle being a hall or manor-house. The name occurs in many very anc'ent records, temp. Henry III., " William Cothele engages to defend by his body, in duel, the right of Roger de Wanton and Katerine, his wife, to lands in Somerset against William de Deveneys." + It is now the residence of the Dowager Countess Mount- Edgcumbe, who, we rejoice to know, cherishes every portion of the venerable mansion, with its decorations and contents. It is made thoroughly comfortable, yet without in the slightest degree impairing its "natural" character; scarcely, indeed, displacing a single relic of antiquity, of which every room contains some singular, interesting, and often beautiful, examples. The people are admitted freely to the woods and grounds ; and parties visit there nearly every day— a steamboat running daily, in summer, up the Tamar, from Plymouth. MOUNT EDGCUMBE. touched it) ; the chairs on which he and his dame sat, the very bed on which they slept, while the tapestry, woven by fair hands that have been dust for three centuries, still cover the old walls. Charles I. certainly slept in one of these rooms, and it demands no great stretch of imagination to believe that the illustrious Sir Walter Raleigh was often its honoured guest. We may have been seated in the very chair in which the great knight recounted his adven- turous exploits against the hated Spaniards under his cousin's roof-tree. ^Memories haunt every room ; every hole and corner, so to speak, has a tale to tell of the long past. The house is one of the finest remaining examples of the period to which it belongs, and, with Haddon Hall, in Derbyshire, which it closely resembles in general plan and in some of its details, is one of the best existing specimens of mediaeval domestic architecture in England. Although, doubtless, the greater part of the building was erected by Sir Richard Edgcumbe, it is evident that the whole was not built by him, but that he added to, and enlarged the then family residence of the Cotheles, many portions of which exist at the present time.* The buildings surround two courtyards, or quadrangles, the entrance being surmounted by an embattled tower ; the main buildings and large tower are also embattled. The banqueting-hall is a noble apartment, 42 feet' long by 22 feet wide. It has a remarkably fine timber roof, with intersecting arches in its compart- ments. At the upper end, to the left, the lord's table stood beneath the bayed window, and opposite to it a doorway leads to the principal staircase. At the bottom of the hall are three doorways, one of which led to the great kitchen, and the other two to the buttery and the cellar. On the walls are suits of armour, helmets, breastplates, warders' horns, gauntlets, matchlocks, cross- bows, shields, battle-axes, halberts, pikes, swords, pistols, gisarmes, petronels, and two-handed swords and spears that may have been " Bathed in gore On the plains of Azincourt.'' In the windows are the royal arms, the arms and impalements of Edgcumbe, Cothele, Holland, Tremaine, Trenchard, Durnford, Rame, Cotterell, Raleigh (for Sir Walter Raleigh's grandmother was Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Richard * Carew describes the building as " auncient, large, strong, and faire ;" he was born in 1555, and wrote before 1600 ; and would scarcely have described a building as " auncient," which had been erected only a century before his time. He describes also the chapel as "richly furnished by the devotion of times past." 72 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. Edgcumbe of Cothele), Trevanion (Sir William Trevanion married another daughter of Sir Richard Edgcumbe, and fought by his side at Bosworth Field, and accompanied him in his pursuit of the mutual enemy, Sir Henry Bodrugan), Carew, of Anthony (of the family of Carew the historian), St.- Maur, Courtenay, Bigbury, Fitzwalter, &c. The dining-room is a charming tapestried apartment, with mullioned windows and a fine old fire-place. The tapestry is highly interesting, one of the subjects being the story of Eurydice, another Diana and Apollo, and the others rural scenes, equestrian figures, &c. Adjoining the dining-room is an anteroom of surpassing interest. " The tapestry in this room represents the Sciences, and might be called the school of Athens, from the similarity of the subject to the celebrated picture of Raphael." In this room, as in others, has been collected together a fine assemblage of old earthenware and other interesting matters relating to the life of the inmates in times of old. The chapel, which is in the corner of the courtyard, contains a pretty- open-work oak screen, and an arched roof at the intersections of which are carved bosses. The bowl of the original font is preserved. In the east window, in stained glass, are considerable portions of full-length figures, probably of saints, but the names do not appear, while in the upper light is represented the Annunciation. The angel is red with green wings, and on a label, in black letter, the words " Ave Maria gracia plena, Dns tecum." The Virgin is on the other side, near a building resembling a church, with a label also, on which once was " Ecce ancilla Dili ; fiat mi scdm vcrbu-tuu." In the lower compartment of the window will be noticed three shields of arms : the first being Edgcumbe, quartering Tremaine (or Trenchard); the second, first, and fourth Edgcumbe, second Holland, third Tremaine, impaling first and fourth Durnford, second Fitzwalter, and third, now blank but probably originally containing Bigbury ; and the third which contained Edgcumbe and several quarterings, much injured. In the south window are two female saints, St. Ann and St. Katherine. "An ancient altar-piece has the date 1589, and in the centre the adoration of the Magi; while on one door is the portrait of a man with ' ret suas 38,' and on the other of a female, with ' set sua? 28,' and on each door a shield with or, an arrow, sable." 1 The chapel is entered from the dining-room as well as from the courtyard and domestic offices. It has a small bell turret. The bedrooms — " the white room," the " red room," the " best room." MOUNT EDGCUMBE. 73 " King Charles's room," and "Queen Anne's room" — are all hung with fine tapestry, and furnished in a style strictly in keeping with the place itself. The ceiling of the first of these is of geometric design. The carved furniture in these rooms is of the most interesting character, and among the decorations are many shields of arms of the Edgcumbes and their alliances. The tapestry is of the finest character, the furniture grand as old furniture well can be, the hangings rich in material and hoary with age, and the ornaments of the most The Mansion. veritable vertu character — each room in this grand old mansion offers subject matter enough for a separate volume. The drawing-room is also a fine tapestried apartment, furnished with massive ebony chairs, ebony sofa, and ebony carved cabinet, and all the appliances en suite. The kitchen and the other domestic offices are each and all of the most interesting character, and convey to the mind a vivid picture of the life of the inmates in days gone by. It is impossible, indeed, to conceive 74 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. anything better than Cothele as an illustration of the home-life of our mediaeval ancestors ; for the building, the furniture, and the appliances, as they are to-day, so were they three hundred years ago. As it was in the days of Henry VII., so it is in those of Queen Victoria; and so, thanks to the preserving spirit of the Edgcumbes, it is likely to remain for centuries to come. On some of the previous pages mention is made of Sir Richard Edg- cumbe's escape from his pursuers, and of his founding a chapel on the spot of his deliverance. This little chapel still stands to mark the spot, and to bring back to the mind the circumstances of his escape, and of the discomfiture of his pursuers. The chapel is built on the edge of the rock overlooking the water, and from the east window the view is wonderfully grand. In this east window is a figure of St. George in the centre, with the Annunciation and the Crucifixion on either side. It also bears the arms of Edgcumbe and Tremaine. In the other windows are also figures in stained glass, and on the altar is a triptych. Among otber interesting features in this chapel — and they are many — is a fac-siinile of the ancient tomb of Sir Richard Edgcumbe, at Morlaix. The grounds are charmingly wild, yet graceful. Nature is in a great degree left to bave her own way ; the trees are of magnificent size (one of them indeed measures 28 feet in girth), ferns and wild flowers grow in rich luxuriance : every now and then glimpses are obtained of the beautiful river, and, on the opposite side, of 1he hill-steeps and thick woods of Devonshire. A pretty landing-place for boats is among the most picturesque points in tbe landscape ; a lesser river here flows into the Tamar ; a waterfall adds to the interest of the scene ; and a neat little inn, close to the bank, gives refreshment to the wayfarer ; above all its attractions is to be counted this — it is distant a dozen miles from a railway, and the shrill whistle never breaks the harmony of the song-birds, who " cannot help but sing" in every bush, brake, and tree of the demesne. The scenery on the river in the neighbourhood of Cothele is extremely beautiful, and in many places thickly overhung by skirting woods. Danescombe, a deep hollow in the woods, is a charming spot, as are the Morwell rocks, and many other places. We bave directed attention to but one of a hundred attractions in Devon- shire and Cornwall : Devonsbire is rich in the picturesque at all seasons ; and the wild grandeur of the Cornish coast has for centuries been a theme of special laudation. Here and there, no doubt, other countries may supply us with finer examples of the sublime and beautiful in scenery ; but they are to MOUNT EDGCUMBE. 75 be reached only by sacrifices, such as the Home Toukist is not called upon to make : our own Islands have been gifted by God with so much that is refresh- ing as well as exciting to the eye and mind, that he or she must be fastidious indeed who fails to be content with the beauties that Nature presents so " near at hand " — accessible at comparatively easy cost of time, toil, and money. The Landing Place. Between Exeter and Plymouth there may be a tour for every day of a month. Junong the more delightful trips, where all is so beautiful, and where it is impossible to turn in any direction without finding some delightful place or some interesting object, may be named as especially within the reach of visitors, those to Ivy Bridge, with its abundant charms of hill, dell, wood, and river ; to Saltram, the seat of the Earl of Morley, on the banks of the Laira ; ;6 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. to the Beacon and moors of Brent ; to the picturesque and pleasant dingles and combs of Cornwood ; to Plympton, with its historic sites and its pleasant associations ; to Bickleigh and its poetical vale ; to Dartmoor, with its gloomy waste, its wild and romantic "breaks" of scenery, and its endless anti- quities ; and to scores of other delicious spots. The trip up the river Tamar to the Weir-head is one which ought to be taken by every visitor, embracing, as it does, besides hundreds of other points of. interest, the dockyards, gun- wharf, Keyham steam-yard, Mount Edgcumbe, Torpoint, Thanckes, Gravesend House, the mouth of the sweet river Lynher, by which St. Germans is reached ; Saltash, whose women are proverbial for then- dexterity and strength in aquatic exercises, and who often carry off regatta prizes ; St. Budeaux, with its conspicuous church ; the junction of the Tavy with the Tamar ; War- leigh, Beer Ferris, and Maristow; Cargreen and Landulph, in whose church- yard Theodore Palseologus, the last male descendant of the Christian emperors of Greece, rests in peace ; Pentillie Castle, with its romantic love stories and tales of change of fortune ; Cothele, of which we have spoken ; Calstock, with its fine old church situated on a promontory ; Harewood House, the seat of the Trelawneys, and the scene, in Mason's Elfrida, of the love of Ethelwold and of the misfortunes consequent on his marriage with the daughter of Ordgar ; and the sublime and beautiful Morwell Rock. Staddon Heights, Mount Batten, Penlee Point, Hooe, and many other places, are within short distances of the Hoe, at Plymouth, and can be easily reached. Trematon Castle and St. John's are also near at hand, and pleasure trips are frequently made in steam-boats round the Eddystone. For those who make a longer stay in South Devon, visits may well be made to Tavistock, to Totnes, to Berry Pomeroy Castle, to Torquay, with a long et cetera.''' Besides the trip up the Tamar, there are other rivers in South Devon whose charms are of a totally different, but perhaps even more exqui- sitely beautiful character. Thus the Dart, the Lynher, the Plym, the Yealm, the Ernie, and the Tavy, all present attractions to the tourist. It cannot fail to augment the enjoyment of those who visit this beautiful county — the fairest, the brightest, and the " greenest " of all our English shires — to recall the many <; worthies " to whom Devonshire and Cornwall have * At Watcombc, a pretty village two miles from Torquay, there has recently been established a manufactory of works in terra-cotta. They originated in the discovery of clay of remarkable fineness and delicacy, and beauty of colour. The productions issued by the works are of great excellence in design and execution : they are deservedly popular. MOUNT EDGCUMBE. given birth ; men renowned in art, in science, and in letters : and the gallant men, the " adventurers," who carried the flag of England into every country of the world, braving the battle and the breeze in all the seas that surround earth in the four quarters of the globe. It is a long list — the names of Drake, of Raleigh, and of Davy ; of Reynolds, Northcote, Haydon, and Eastlake ; of Carew, of Hawkins, and of Gilbert ; of Kitto, of Bryant, and of Hawker, being not a tithe of the eminent men to which this district has given birth — of whom the western shires are rightly and justly proud. Sbame be to those who seek in other lands the enjoyment they may find so abundantly at home — who talk freely of the graces and grandeurs of far-off countries, and do not blush to acknowledge entire ignorance of those that bless and beautify their own. England, Ireland, Scotland, and Wales, are, each and all, rich in " the picturesque;" to the artist and art-lover they present attractions second to none tbey will find in any country of the Continent : that is the truest '• patriotism," which inculcates, as a first duty, a full appreciation of " Our own, our native land ! " ALNWICK CASTLE.* iTH the single exception of Royal Windsor, Alnwick Castle is second to none of the mediaeval British strongholds which, in our own times, combine the characteristics of the early fortress and the modern palace. With its magnificent architectural features, all of them deeply impressed with the attributes of a baronial castl-3 of the olden time, and placed in the midst of that famous scene of long-continued strife, of daring deeds, and of summary retribution, the Northern Border, Alnwick may truly be said to be an historical monument, standing upon historic ground. The names of the great barons, in like manner, who have successively been lords of Alnwick, have been enrolled by English chroniclers among the foremost ranks of their countrymen, so that their own lies, interwoven with the history of their renowned castle, are written in the annals of England. Then, on the other hand, while in an extraordinary degree rich as well in relics as in memories of the past, Alnwick still maintains the unclouded splendour of its ancient dignity in its present capacity as the residence of an existing ducal family. Thus, from whatever point of view it may be regarded, Alnwick Castle must be esteemed as one of the finest and most interesting of our national edifices, and it also always will establish its claim to a foremost place among " the stately homes of England." * For several of the engraving's that are introduced into the following papers upon Alnwick Castle wo desire to tender our best thanks to his Grace the Duke of Northumberland ; they were originally printed in a history of the illustrious family of the Percies, of which a few copies were presented to private friends. ALNWICK CASTLE. 70 When Nature declined to provide any one of her own emphatic boundary- lines, such as a mountain-chain or a broad and deep river, to determine the frontier which should divide England from Scotland, she left a very delicate and difficult international question to be adjusted by the rulers of the two adjacent realms, so long as this single island of Britain should be divided into two distinct, and by no means necessarily friendly, kingdoms. An artificial line of demarcation, accordingly, had to be drawn, and was drawn, which was supposed to be accepted and recognised both to the north and to the south of it. Here and there, as if to show in the clearest manner possible the unsatisfactory character of a frontier such as this, to a tract of country the ominous name of " Debateable Land" was assigned by common consent. On either side of the frontier-line, again, and including all the "Debateable Land," the "Border" stretched far away to both the north and the south; and, throughout its whole extent, it formed a decidedly exceptional territory, in which there prevailed a system of wild laws that were administered after a still wilder fashion : hence, whatever may have been the state of things between England and Scotland, and between the two sovereigns and the two nations, along the Border there flourished a chronic local warfare, duly distinguished by gallant exploits, desperate enterprises, and barbarous devasta- tion, with the occasional variety of an expedition of sufficient magnitude almost to constitute a regular campaign, or the formal investment, and perhaps the storm and sack, of some important fortified castle.* The Borderers appear to have become so accustomed to this kind of life, that they looked upon it as their proper lot, and after a manner even regarded it with a kind of grim approval. Among them, doubtless, there were but too many who were thoroughly in earnest in their devotion to what may be styled the Border system — men "Stout of lr art and steady of hand," who, living in the constant expectation of some sudden assault, were both "good at need," and ready and resolute at all times to take advantage to the utmost of every promising opportunity for successfully and profitably assault- ing their hostile neighbours. In order to keep a check upon this predatory warfare, and to maintain something more than the semblance of a supreme ' Thus writes one of the Lords Wardens, temp. Eliz. : " God blessed ine so well in all my designs as I never made journey in vain, but did what I went for ;" i.e., " hanging or heading.'' 8o THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. constituted authority, certain warlike barons, intrusted with high powers as Lords Wardens, were established in fortified castles of great strength along the line of the Border, and in those northern districts of England which adjoined it. Of these early strongholds one of the proudest and the sternest was the Castle of Alnwick. Distant from London, north by west, 313 miles (by railway), Alnwick, the county-town of Northumberland, is pleasantly situated on high ground, rising about 200 feet above the sea-level, on the south bank of the river Aln. From the name of this river, with the addition of icick, a place of human habitation, QZfcVesef /ISO mrjticj 1X9 -isis mZ'Rrcj /350 tni"Dvks.imti'l]BO l]SC mi Tivke ISSt /S6t Plan of Alnwick Castle. Alnwick, always pronounced by its native inhabitants " Annick," is evidently derived.* Still remaining but little changed from what it was in times long * The name of Alnwick has been variously spelt at different periods. Thus, among other ways, it has been spelt Alnawic, Alnewyke, Alnewye, Alnewick, Annwik, Annewic, Annewyke, Anwik, Anwick, &c. Formerly it appears to have been pronounced with the Scotch twang, An-ne-wiek, as though spelt in three syllables. It is now by all natives of the place called Annick. Aln (the name of the river), like the names of our rivers, hills, and mountains, is Celtic, or ancient British, and was given by one of the earliest tribes settling in Britain; for in Hiberno-C'eltic we have Alain, signifying white, bright, or clear. Alnwick [wicft being a Btreet, village, oi dwelling-place), therefore, is the town on the bright clear livei. ALNWICK CASTLE. 8l passed away, while from the humhlest of origins other towns have grown up and increased until they have attained to great magnitude and wealth and importance, Alnwick derives its interest from its early association with our national history — an association blended with the connection of the- town with its castle, and with the great barons, the lords of that castle. The site of the castle and town of Alnwick is of a character which necessarily leads to the conclusion, that it must have been occupied both by a settlement and by some Alnwick Castle, from the River Aln. stronghold from a very remote period ; and this opinion is confirmed by the presence of numerous relics in the immediate neighbourhood, that may be assigned without hesitation to ages anterior to the Roman settlement in Britain : the authentic history of Alnwick, however, cannot be carried back further than the era of the Norman Conquest, and even then for awhile more than a little of uncertainty overshadows the earliest pages of the chronicle. 82 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. • There exists no evidence to show that in the year 1066 any castle was standing at Alnwick ; nor have we any knowledge of what lords may have held the high ground on the southern bank of the Aln during the Anglo-Saxon rule. On Alnwick Moor, and in many places in the neighbourhood, are some remarkably interesting camps and other earth- works, and also some barrows, in which various relics have been discovered. In one of these was found a stone cist, containing a skeleton in the usual contracted position of Celtic interments ; and in another, in a similar cist, was found a fine food-vessel, ornamented with a lozenge pattern. In other barrows Celtic remains, including cinerary urns, drinking-cups, food-vessels, flints, celts, and other implements of stone, bronze daggers, &c, have been found, and prove incon- testably the early occupation of the site of Alnwick. In the neighbourhood, too, occur many of those curious remains of antiquity, sculptured stones, bearing circles and other rude and singular characters, which are supposed to be inscriptions. It may be accepted as probable that the first Norman by whom this barony was held was Gilbert Tyson, standard-bearer of the Conqueror, the kind of personage who very naturally would be intrusted with the charge of a remote and turbulent northern district. His descendants continued to hold some estates under the lords of Alnwick in the reign of Edward III., but there is no foundation for the legend that the barony of Alnwick passed to Yvo de Vesci by his marriage with Alda, a grand-daughter of Gilbert Tyson. Still, by whatever means he may have acquired possession, Yvo de Yesci was lord of Alnwick about the year 1096 ; and he also is the first Norman baron of this barony whose history, scanty as it is, rises above doubt and speculation. He died about the year 1134, leaving, without any male issue, an only daughter, Beatrix, his sole heiress. Before we pass on to trace the fortunes of the descendants of Yvo de Yesci, a brief notice must be taken of a memorable incident which took place in the immediate neighbourhood of Alnwick before Yvo himself had become its lord. After the Norman Conquest many of the Anglo-Saxon nobles found a sympa- thizing refuge to the north of the Border, under the protection of Malcolm Caenmore, or " great head," King of Scotland, whose queen was an Anglo- Saxon princess, being sister to Edgar Atheling. Malcolm, in his zeal for the fallen Anglo-Saxon dynasty, five times made incursions into Northumberland, laid waste the country far and wide with fire and sword, and carried away almost the entire adult population as slaves into Scotland. This devastating ALNWICK CASTLE. 83 warfare was suspended in consequence of a treaty, during the concluding years of the reign of the Conqueror ; but it broke out afresh after the succession of Eufus, and Malcolm, accompanied by Prince "William, his eldest son, in person led an expedition as far south as Alnwick ; and there, on the 13th of November, 1093, the king himself fell in an ambuscade, his son at the same time was mortally wounded, and the Scottish army was dispersed by Earl Robert de Mowbray, the governor of Bamborough Castle. The body of Malcolm, having rested about thirty years at Tynemouth, was removed and The Barbican. re-interred at Dunfermline by his son Alexander. There still remain two fragments of a rude memorial cross, which, from an early period, has marked the spot assigned by tradition to the scene of Malcolm's discomfiture and death ; and, in 1774, one of his descendants, Elizabeth, Duchess of North- umberland, erected on the same spot another cross, designed in accordance with the debased architectural taste of that period. The one circumstance connected with the career of Yvo de Vesci that has come down to us is the fact that he began to build the earliest parts of the g2 84 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. existing castle of Alnwick. With the barony, the castle of Alnwick passed to Eustace Fitz-John by his marriage with Beatrix, the heiress of Yvo de Vesci. In the hands of this able baron, Alnwick Castle was " most strongly fortified : " he also founded the monastery of Alnwick, and in 1157 was succeeded by his eldest son, William, who, in honour of his mother, assumed the name of De Vesci. In the time of this baron, another King of Scotland found that the neighbourhood of Alnwick Castle was no place of safety. In the year 1174 William the Lion, while besieging the fortress of the De Vescis, was taken prisoner, and the large army under his command was completely routed, De Vesci himself taking an active part in the fierce struggle. His descendant, John De Vesci, who died in 1288, leaving no issue, founded and endowed Hulne Abbey ; and he was the first baron of his house who was summoned by the king to the parliament by writ, his predecessors having been barons by tenure. William De Vesci III., one of the claimants of the Scottish crown, was born in 1215, and succeeded to the barony of Alnwick on the death of his brother. The last baron of Alnwick of his race, he died in 1297, without legitimate issue, having infeoffed the celebrated Authony Bee, Bishop of Dur- ham, with all his lands and his castle of Alnwick, to hold them in trust for an illegitimate son. But in 1309 the bishop sold the castle and barony of Alnwick to Henry de Percy ; and this conveyance was confirmed by Edward II. in 1310. Deriving, as it would seem, their memorable name from that district in Normandy in which from an early period, long before the Norman Conquest of England, their family had been established, the Percies were represented in the ranks of the Conqueror at Hastings by William de Percy, who assumed the additional name of Le Gernons, or Algernon, as a personal epithet denoting the mass of hair which he wore about his face. About 1166, or almost an exact century after the battle of Hastings, the wealth, dignities, and power of the Percies centred in an heiress who, perhaps in 1168, married Josceline de Louvain, second son of the Duke of Brabant, and half-brother to the second queen of Henry I. of England. A legend has bean preserved, which relates that on her marriage with Josceline, Agnes de Percy stipulated that her hus- band, at his own option, should assume either the arms or the name of Percy ; and it is added that the bridegroom elected to retain his own arms, the blue lion rampant of Brabant, while he assumed the paternal surname of his bride. This legend, however, must be regarded as the poetic offspring of a later age, since at the time of the marriage of Agnes de Percy armorial insignia had ALNWICK CASTLE. s 5 neither assumed any definite character, nor had any such insignia become hereditary. There is nothing to show that Josceline de Louvain ever bore the name of Percy ; but it is certain that the surname of his mother was assumed and borne by the second son of Josceline's marriage with the Percy heiress, Henry de Percy ; and by his descendants and successors the same name was regularly borne. It was Sir Henry de Percy, third of the name, who in 1309, the second year of Edward II., when already he was possessed of vast wealth, The Prudhoe Tower and Chapel. and great power, became the first Lord of Alnwick of the House of Percy, by purchase from Bishop Anthony Bee. Having taken an active part in the wars with Scotland and otherwise distinguished himself among the foremost men of his time, Henry, first Baron Percy of Alnwick, died in 1315, and was buried at Fountains Abbey, to which institution he had been a munificent bene- factor. One of the powerful barons who signed the memorable letter to Pope THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. Boniface VIII., in which the peers of England refused to recognise or allow the interference of Papal authority with the independent sovereignty of this realm, he married Eleanor Fitz-Alan, daughter of Richard, Earl of Arundel, by whom he had two sons, and of these the elder, another Henry de Percy, succeeded his father as second Baron Percy of Alnwick, to whom was granted by Edward III. the castle and manor of Warkworth "for service in peace and war," as appears from the original grant now in the Duke of Northumberland's possession. This Lord Percy was interred at Alnwick Abbey, the only head of the family buried in Northumberland. The history of the lords of Alnwick from this period becomes so closely interwoven with the history of England, that it would be superfluous in such a sketch as the present to attempt to introduce even a slight outline of the career of each of those renowned barons ; and, indeed, if it were desirable, it would not be possible here to find space for the very slightest outline of so comprehensive a subject. Accordingly, we now are content to give but little more than the succession of the Percies after they became lords of Alnwick. Henry de Percy, eldest son of the first baron, succeeded his father as second Baron Percy of Alnwick ; he died in 1352, leaving, by his wife Idonea de Clifford (whose magnificent monument, with its rich and splendid archi- tectural canopy, unsurpassed in England, and also without a rival in its remarkable condition of preservation, is the pride of Beverley Minster), four sons, of whom the eldest, Henry, succeeded as third Baron Percy of Alnwick. This baron died in 1368 ; his eldest son, by Mary of Lancaster, Henry de Percy, sixth of his name and fourth baron, was created Earl of Northumber- land by Richard II., and High Constable of England. This great noble fell a victim to the tyranny of Henry IV., at Bramham Moor, in 1409. He was thrice married : first to Elizabeth, heiress to the Earl of Angus, by whom he acquired the barony of Prudhoe ; secondly to Margaret de Neville ; and thirdly to Maud de Lucy, sister and heiress of Lord Lucy, widow of Gilbert de Umfraville, and mother of her second husband's first wife : and by these alliances the barony of Prudhoe, with the estates of the Lucys and the castle and honour of Cockermouth, became annexed to the Percy earldom. Sir Henry de Percy, known by his surname of Hotspur as well in song as in history, — " Who was sweet Fortune's minion and her pride," the earl's eldest son, was killed near Shrewsbury in 1403. At Trotton, in ALNWICK CASTLE. Sussex, a line monumental brass commemorates Elizabeth de Mortimer, wife of Hotspur, and afterwards of Lord Camoys. After several years the fortified honours and estates of the Percies were restored to Henry, the son of Hotspur, who thus became the second Earl of Northumberland. This great earl was killed, fighting under the red-rose banner, at St. Albans, in 1455 ; and was succeeded by his fourth surviving son, by his marriage with Eleanor de Neville, another Henry, who, with one of his brothers, fell at the disastrous rout of Towton, in 1461. Two other The Keep. brothers of this earl died in arms in the Lancastrian cause ; one of them, Sir Ralph de Percy, a few days before the final catastrophe at Hexham in 1464, was killed fighting bravely on Hedgeley Moor, where a cross was erected as a memorial of his valour and his fall : of this cross the shaft, adorned with the heraldic insignia of Percy and Lucy, is still standing. Under the third earl, who, by his marriage with Eleanor de Poynings, acquired the baronies of Poynings, Fitzpayne, and Bryan, the estates attached to the earldom reached their greatest territorial extent, and constituted a vast principality. THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. In 1469 the attainder of the third earl having been reversed, his only son, Henry, became the fourth earl ; he was killed in a popular tumult in 1489, when his eldest son, by his marriage with Maud de Herbert, Henry Algernon, succeeded as fifth earl. Remarkable rather for an almost regal state and magnificence than for the warlike qualities that before his time had been here- ditary in bis house, he was the first Earl of Northumberland who did not fall in battle or otherwise suffer a violent death. He died in 1527, having married Catherine Spense, or Spencer. The Household Book of this earl, which has been published by Bishop Percy, is one of the most remarkable and charac- teristic documents that illustrate the personal history of the greatest English nobles in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. His son, the sixth earl, a second Henry Algernon de Percy, the lover of Anne Boleyn in her earlier and really happier days, married Mary Talbot, daughter of the Earl of Shrewsbury, but in 1537 died without issue, when the grand Percy earldom became extinct. Twenty years later, "in consideration of his noble descent, constancy, virtue, and valour in deeds of arms, and other shining qualifications," of which last recommendations to royal favour tbe fact that he was a zealous Roman Catholic certainly was not the least influential, Thomas de Percy, eldest son of the second son of the fifth earl (Sir Thomas Percy), was created by Queen Mary, Baron Percy, and also restored to the earldom of Northumberland ; but the tenure by which the restored earl was to hold his dignities and lands restricted the succession absolutely to the heirs male of his own body, and to those of his brother. This the seventh earl was executed, as a traitor, at York, in 1572, leaving no surviving son. Accordingly, his brother, Henry de Percy, became the eighth earl : he died in 1585, having been shot (it was said, but most doubtfully, by his own hand) while a prisoner in the Tower. The eldest son of this earl, by Catherine de Neville, Henry, succeeded as ninth earl : he was a learned, eccentric personage, commonly known as " the Wizard," and died, after an imprisonment of fifteen years in the Tower, in 1632. He married Dorothy Devereux, and was succeeded by bis eldest son, Algernon, one of the noblest of his race. This great earl died in 1668, having married, first, Anne Cecil, and, secondly, Elizabeth Howard. His successor, his only son (by his second marriage), Josceline de Percy, the eleventh and last earl of Northumberland of the direct lineage of the Percies, died in 1670, leaving, by his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas, Earl of Southampton, an only child, a daughter, Elizabeth de Percy, four years old at the time of her father's death. ALNWICK CASTLE. Here we pause, before we trace onwards the fortunes of the later lords of Alnwick, that we may direct our attention to the history of their grandest northern fortress-home, Alnwick Castle. The plan of the castle, as it exists at the present time, is shown in our engraving ; and it will be seen that five distinct periods in the architectural history are indicated by varieties of shading introduced into the outlines. The extreme extent of the walls from east to west slightly exceeds 1,000 feet ; Norman Gateway in the Lveep, while that from north to south is somewhat less than 600 feet. The varied outline of the space enclosed within the walls, which in a great measure has been determined by the nature of the ground, in an infinite degree enhances the equally noble and picturesque aspect of the edifice. The figures in the plan refer to the various parts of the castle in the manner following : — 1, is the Barbican ; 2, the Gateway to the second Baly ; 3, the Octagonal Towers ; 9 o THE STA TEL Y HOMES OF ENGLAND. 4, the Norman Gateway; 5, the Grand Staircase ; 6, the Guard Chamber; 7, the Principal Ante-Room ; 8, the Library ; 9, the Saloon ; 10, the Drawing- Room ; 11, the Dining Hall; 12, the Chapel; 13 and 14, State Bed-Rooms; 15, Boudoir of the Duchess; 16, Kitchen; 17, Estate Offices; 18, Laundry; 19, Guest-Hall; 20, Stables; 21, Riding-School; 22, West Garret; 23, Abbot's Tower ; 24, Falconer's Tower ; 25, Postern Tower ; 26, Constable's Tower; 27, Ravine Tower; 28, East Garret; 29, Warder's Tower; 30, Auditor's Tower; 31, Clock Tower; and 32, the Avener's Tower. Thus, the open ground within the circumvallation, as will be seen by the plan, is divided into two irregular spaces, the outer and the inner Baly, the outer being toward the west. Occupying a central position is the Keep, a grand cluster of towers and curtain- walls, enclosing an open court-yard : of these towers, the new Prudhoe Tower, within which is the Library (No. 8), with its lofty banner-turret, is tbe most conspicuous. Running south, commencing with No. 13 and extending to No. 2, a new range of buildings connects the Keep with the early Percy gateway between the balies, and with the main southern curtain. In this direction, all the buildings, from No. 29 to No. 17, and from thence (with the exception of No. 31, which is one of the flanking towers of the main curtain) to No. 19 southward, and to No. 21 westward, are new, and they have been erected beyond and without the limits of the proper fortifica- tion. In like manner, the whole line of curtain-wall, from No. 24 to No. 25, is new. To the north of tbe Keep the ground falls somewhat rapidly in the direction of the river ; from the bridge which here crosses the Aln, the view of The Castle, as its groups of towers and its far-extending walls rise proudly above the encircling woods, is particularly fine and impressive. The principal approach and entrance to the castle are from the west. Here, to the westward of the original outer face of the fosse, stands the Barbican ; an embattled outwork of equal strength and dignity, the work of the first of the Percies, about a.d. 1310. The rounded arch of the entrance gateway here is an example of a usage not very uncommon at the period which has just been specified, and always present in the works of Lord Henry de Perci. The Barbican, which covers an area of 55 feet in length by 32 feet in width, is a perfect example of the style of fortification that was held to be essential for defence against assault in medieval warfare. One remarkable feature, which is repeated again and again in various parts of the castle. cannot fail at once to attract attention when approaching the Barbican ; this is the array of tall figures representing armed warders of the fourteenth century, ALNWICK CASTLE. 91 sculptured iu stoue, which surmount the parapet, and stand upon the merlons of the embattling, casting their long shadows upon the grey masonry. Having entered the Barbican, passed under the sculptured Percy lion which keeps guard over the archway, and traversed the entrance tower, we The Armourer's Tower. find ourselves within the enclosure of the first or outer baly ; here, turning to the left, we commence our survey of the castle within the lines of circumval- lation. The curtain-wall, extending from the entrance northwards at a right angle to the Abbot's Tower, and having midway a garret or wall-tower (No. 22 in plan) built upon it, is part of the old Norman work of the De Vescis, with 9 2 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. evident tokens of important reparation a little before the middle of the fifteenth century, by the father of Hotspur, the sixth lord of Alnwick. The Armourer's Tower (No. 23 in plan), which occupies the N.W. angle of the enceinte, is a noble piece of Edwardian architecture ; it consists of a vaulted basement, with two stories above it, connected by a turret-stair : and its external massive effectiveness is greatly enhanced by the square turret at the N.W. angle of the tower, which rises boldly above the embattled parapet, having its own merlons crowned with weather-beaten sculptured warders. Now facing eastwards, and soon making a slight inclination towards the east, again we follow the line of the Norman curtain-walls, until we reach the new Falconer's Tower (No. 24 in plan), which has been built on the site of the razed early Armourer's and Falconer's Towers ; the original curtain apparently extended in a direct line from No. 24 to the Keep. Passing onwards along the new curtain-wall due east from No. 24, we follow the line of this wall as it turns towards the south, and at No. 25 in the plan brings us to the Postern Tower, another massive relic of the first Lord Percy, placed at the base of the emi- nence upon which the Keep stands ; this tower protects a postern or sally- port, and it has a curious staircase in the thickness of its walls : it is now used as a museum for Roman and British antiquities. Advancing still further eastwards, but with an inclination to the north, and again following the course of De Vesci's curtain, we reach the Constable's Tower (No. 26 in plan), of Edwardian architecture, to which there are three external entrances, one in each floor : one chamber in this tower is used as an armoury. Again, as we follow the guidance of the curtain-wall towards the S.E., we have before us the Norman masonry, with traces of Edwardian, or first Percy, reparation. Here, about midway between Nos. 26 and 27 of the plan, an embattled projection from the line of the wall has been entitled "Hotspur's Chair," and to the east of this projection a gap in the curtain is filled up with eighteenth- century masonry ; this gap a not very well-supported tradition assigns to a fierce assault by some Scots, who are said to have been so far successful as to beat down this portion of the castle-wall, after which exploit the tradition adds that the assailants were cut off to a man by the garrison. This tower, which is called both the Ravine Tower and the Record Tower (No. 27 of plan), stands at the easternmost extremity of the castle ; with Edwardian remains in its walls, it was for the most part rebuilt in the last century : on the ground- floor is the muniment-room, in which the records are kept. From this point our course inclines in a south-westerly direction, the curtain being eighteenth- ALNWICK CASTLE. 93 century work, until again, at No. 28 in the plan, we welcome traces of the early masonry : here another garret occurs, with the junction of the Norman and modern masonry ; then yet another succeeds, as once more we follow an eighteenth-century wall until we reach the new Lion or Garden Gate-house, No. 29 in the plan, through which a road leads to Barneyside, where are situated the extensive and beautiful gardens of the castle. From within this gateway, which is flanked by two octagonal towers, one of them — the Warder's Tower — larger and loftier than the other, the curtain-wall of the first Lord Percy's work leads in a direct line nearly due west ; we follow the course of this wall, we pass through the middle gate-house, erected by the first of the Percies, which both separates and connects the inner and the outer baly ; again, on our left, we have early Norman masonry in the curtain, and then we reach the Auditor's Tower (No. 30 in plan), another relic of the first Lord Percy : here was held the court of the lord of the barony ; here now is the private Library of the Duke ; and here also is the Museum of Egyptian Antiquities, collected by Duke Algernon, the last munificent restorer of Alnwick. Still following the line of the curtain, we reach the Clock Tower. From this tower, the curtain, built in the last century, leads in a northerly direction to the |g|^ entrance gateway connected with the Barbican, to which, thus completing our entire circuit, we now return, having passed, since leaving the Clock Tower, the Avener's Tower or Garner (No. 32 of plan), like the adjoining curtain, a modern work. During our progress from the garden gate (No. 29 in plan) westward and northward to the Barbican, we have passed the long ranges of new buildings that either adjoin or actually abut upon the outer face of the curtain-walls (Xos. 16 to 21 in plan), by no means unimportant parts of the latest restoration, which comprise all the domestic offices and the whole stable department of the castle. These buildings, which have been planned and constructed with the highest architectural and engineering skill, are on a scale of princely magnitude ; and of them it may truly be said that they leave nothing to be desired. Of On the Barbican. 94 THE STA TEL Y HOMES OF ENGLAND. one only of these new edifices is it necessary tbat we should make particular mention ; this is No. 19 on the plan, a noble apartment, covered witb an open timber hammer-beam roof. In consequence of there being in the restored castle no such baronial hall as invariably formed the principal feature in a great mediaeval stronghold, Duke Algernon built this Guest Hall in its stead, which might enable himself and bis successors to assemble his and their The Well in the Keep. tenantry and friends to partake of the always splendid hospitality of the Percies. This hall has also been used for concerts and various other purposes. From the Barbican we retrace our steps so far as to traverse the roadway that leads to the inner Gate-House (No. 2 in plan), that we may explore the magnificent Keep : this, however, is a duty we postpone ; pausing for a while, and resting beneath the tree that grows beside the Barbican. Presently, we ALNWICK CASTLE. 95 shall resume our biographical sketch, and observe by what means an only daughter once again became the ancestress of a noble lineage, and through them brought to the house and castle of the Percies a still more exalted dignity and a still higher honour than ever before had been attained by them. And we rejoice to know that the noble line of the Percies was not destined finally to fail with a failure of a direct heir male ; it also is a subject for rejoicing that over the towers of Alnwick there still should wave a banner, charged The Constable's 'lower. with the same quarterings that in the olden time were so well known to the breezes of Northumberland. As it has been well said, Alnwick Castle has ever been esteemed as the old head- quarters of border chivalry; and, in truth, it is a subject for national pride to feel it has that same aspect still. No one assuredly can " look upon this very ' gudlye howsse,' as King Harry's com- missioners called it, or upon its grassy courts fringed with ' faire towres,' its stately keep with its « marveylouse fare vaulte ' ' and tryme ladgings,' " as 9 6 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. they are described about the middle of the sixteenth century, in the survey made by Clarkson for the seventh earl, " without feeling that he had seen the martial, social, and most knightly centre of mediaeval life in Northumberland." And so also, in like manner, no one now can visit Alnwick Castle, and not feel deeply impressed with the conviction that the England, of which the past history possesses monumental records and still living witnesses such as this, is a land rich as well in the most precious elements of present strength as in the most glorious of memories ; and so, when her true sons look forward to the future of England, they may do so in the spirit of the fine old motto of the Percies— ESPERANCE. The annals of the truly noble family of the Percies, as we have seen, down to the death of Josceline, the eleventh earl, in 1670, extend over five centuries, during three hundred and sixty-one years of which period, almost without interruption, the family was intimately connected with A'nwick. By the limitation of the patent of 1557, the youthful daughter of Earl Josceline was incapable of inheriting her father's honours, and thus, at last, the Percies' earldom again became extinct, when no inconsider- f£fp~T*i- able part of their immense possessions lapsed to the ^&yjM?- erown : the great northern earldom, however, was ^sU| not permitted in this manner to pass away without more than one fruitless effort on the part of collateral descendants to establish a claim to the succession. Notwithstanding the alienation of some of the estates consequent upon the extinction of the Earl- dom of Northumberland, Elizabeth Percy, the daughter of the last earl, was the most wealthy heiress in the realm ; and, accordingly, it was considered to be a matter of the greatest importance that a suitable alliance should be arranged for her with the least possible delay. When but little more than a child, in 1679, she was married to Henry Cavendish, Earl of Ogle, and heir to the Duke of Newcastle, who died in the following year. Before another year had expired, the youthful widow was again married to Thomas Thynn of Longleat ; but once more the heiress became a widow very shortly after her marriage. Her second husband was murdered early in 1682, as ALNWICK CASTLE. 97 he was passing in his coach along Pall Mall. While she was still not more than fifteen years of age, within three months after the tragedy in Pall Mall, Elizabeth Percy became the wife of Charles Seymour, sixth Duke of Somerset, by whom only she had issue : she died in 1722, leaving, besides three daughters, one only surviving son, Algernon, who in 1748 succeeded his father as seventh Duke of Somerset. In 1749 this duke was created Baron of Warkworth and Earl of Northumberland, with remainder of those dignities to the heirs male of his daughter, his only surviving child, by her marriage with Sir Hugh Smithson. The duke died in 1750, when the Seymour dignities reverted to the male descendants of the Protector Somerset by his first marriage. Thus, once more, an only daughter, now bearing the paternal name of Seymour, was the heiress and representative of the Percy lords of Alnwick : and thus, by reason of his alliance with this lady, Sir Hugh Smithson became jure uxons, by special Act of Parliament, Earl of Northumberland ; and he himself, his countess, and their descendants, were empowered and authorised to take and use the surname "of Percy alone, and to bear and quarter all the armorial insignia of that noble house. The fortunate husband of this last heiress of the Percies, on the death of his grandfather, Sir Hugh Smithson, in the year 1729, succeeded to the baronetcy, which had been conferred by Charles II. in 1663 on that grand- father's grandfather, also a Hugh Smithson. A remarkably handsome man, with a refined taste, and in many other respects well qualified for the distin- guished destiny which awaited him, Sir Hugh Smithson is said to have been in no slight degree indebted for his eventual splendid matrimonial success to a previous failure. He had attracted the attention of Lady Percy, who, on hearing that some other lady had rejected the suit of Sir Hugh Smithson, expressed her surprise that any lady should have refused to accept such a man. The words of the fair and noble heiress reached the ears of the dis- consolate baronet, and they promptly wrought a marvellous change in his views and aspirations. Upon the hint so given Sir Hugh spoke, and — his words were not in vain. In nearly all the "Peerages," borrowed one from another, it is stated that this Sir Hugh Smithson early in life went to London, where he established himself in business as an apothecary. Although no slur would thus have been cast on the illustrious race, it is simply untrue. The following statement, extracted from a " Baronetage " published in 1727, may be accepted in proof: — "The present Sir Hugh Smithson married a sister of the late Lord H THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. Langdale, and had two sons, who lived to man's estate. Hugh, the eldest, died unmarried before his father) ; Langdale Smithson, the second son, married Miss Revely, by whom he left only one son, Hugh — now a minor, and a most hopeful young gentleman — so that there now remain only two heirs to the title and estate — this young gentleman, Sir Hugh's grandson, and Hugh Smithson, of Tottenham, Esq., cousin of Sir Hugh." The "young gentleman" in question succeeded his grandfather as Sir The Edit Garret. Hugh Smithson, of Stanwick. There was no trace in any documents or papers of his ever having been in any position but that of the acknowledged heir to a considerable estate and to a baronetage, granted to his ancestor for ALNWICK CASTLE. 99 his loyalty and sacrifices in the royal cause during the civil wars of Charles I.* He married Lady Percy on the 16th of July, 1740, when he became Earl of Northumberland with all the territorial greatness attendant on that earldom. In 1766 the earl was created Duke of Northumberland and Earl Percy, with succession to his heirs male ; and, finally, in 1784, the barony of Lovaine was added to the duke's accumulated dignities, with remainder to the younger of his two sons. The duchess died in 1776, but the duke survived till 1786: The Garden Gate., or Warder's Tower. they had one daughter, who died unmarried, and two sons, Hugh and Algernon, of whom the elder succeeded his father as second Duke of Northum- berland, a distinguished general officer in the first American War. The second * The first Sir Hugh Smithson died in 1670 : he had a nephew who was a physician in Sussex, and spent almost all his fortune also in the royal cause. His son again was a physician, and practised in London, and married a daughter of Sir Edward Walpole, of Lincolnshire. The fact of these two collaterals being medical men, probably gave rise to the story of Sir Hugh having been brought up to be an apothecary. H 2 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. duke married, first, a daughter of the then Earl of Bute ; and, secondly, Frances Julia, third daughter of Peter Burrell, Esquire, a Commissioner of the Excise, by whom he had a numerous family : the duke died in 1817, and was succeeded by Hugh, his eldest son, who thus became the third Duke of Northumberland, the princely representative of George IV. at the coronation of Charles X. of France. This third duke died, without issue, in 1847, having married Lady Charlotte Florentia Clive, youngest daughter of Earl Powis : and thus the dukedom passed to the third duke's brother, the younger son of the second duke, who at the time of his brother's death bore the title of Baron Prudhoe — an independent peerage to which he himself had been elevated in 1816, in consideration of his services as an officer in the navy. Algernon Percy, fourth Duke of Northumberland, was born in 1792 ; in 1842 he married the Lady Eleanor Grosvenor, daughter of the Marquis of Westminster ; in 1847 he succeeded to the honours and possessions of his family ; he was created a K.G. in 1852, when he also held the office of First Lord of the Admiralty; and on February 12th, 1865, he died at Alnwick Castle, and, as his brother and predecessor had died, without any issue. Like the great soldier, with whose memory the dukedom of Wellington must ever be directly associated, Sir Algernon Percy will long be remembered with affectionate and grateful admiration as The Duke of Northumberland. A true English sailor, a princely English Nobleman, an elegant scholar and an accom- plished gentleman, large of heart too and open of hand, with his commanding presence Duke Algernon looked every inch a Percy ; and, in very deed, in his person were centred the brightest of the brilliant qualities of his fore- fathers, in happy combination with those admirable endowments that were peculiarly his own. The two sons of the first duke (as we have seen) bore the same names as the two sons of his successor the second duke — Hugh and Algernon Percy. The two brothers, the sons of the first duke, married two sisters, daughters of Mr. Burrell.* With Duke Algernon the line of Hugh, the elder of the sons of the first duke, became extinct ; and, consequently, the succession to the dukedom passed to the descendants of that other Algernon who was the * Mr. Burrell had four daughters, of whom the eldest married Captain Bennett, R.N. ; the second married Lord Algernon Percy, second son of the first duke, and was grandmother of the present Duke of Northumberland ; the third sister was the second Duchess of Northumberland ; and the youngest sister married, first, the Duke of Hamilton, and, secondly, the Marquess of Exeter. Mr. Burrell's only son married a peeress in her own right, and was himself created Baron Gwydyr. ALNWICK CASTLE. younger son of the first duke. This Algernon, who on the death of his father became Baron Lovaine, in 1798 was created Earl of Beverley : he died in 1830. Geoi'ge Percy, his son, then succeeded as Earl of Beverley ; and subsequently, in 1865, at that time being in the 87th year of his age, this venerable nobleman became the fifth Duke of Northumberland. He died August 21, 1867; and was succeeded by his eldest surviving son (by his marriage with Louisa, daughter of the Hon. A. Stuart Wortley). The present peer, Algernon George Percy, sixth Duke and eighteenth Earl of Northumber- land, Earl Percy, Earl of Beverley, Baron Warkworth, Baron Lovaine of Alnwick, and a baronet, was born May 2nd, 1810, and was educated at Eton. He entered the army in 1827, and retired in 1836. In 1858 he was a Lord of the Admiralty, in 1859 Vice-President of the Board of Trade, and from 1831 to 1865 sat in Parliament, first for Beeralston and afterwards for North Northumberland. He is Colonel of the Northumberland Militia, Hon. Colonel of the Percy Northumberland Volunteer Artillery, and President of the National Lifeboat Institution. In 1845 his grace married Louisa, daughter of the late Henry Drummond, Esq., M.P., of Abury Park, Surrey, by whom he has issue living two sons, viz., Henry George Percy, Earl of Percy, married, in 1868, to Lady Edith Campbell, eldest daughter of the Duke of Argyll, by whom he has issue ; and Lord Algernon Malcolm Arthur Percy. His grace is patron of twenty-two livings, nineteen of which are in Northumber- land and one each in Yorkshire, Dorsetshire, and Surrey. The arms of the Duke of Northumberland are : Quarterly, 1st and 4th Lovaine and Lucy quarterly (viz., 1st and 4th, or, a lion rampant, azure, for Lovaine, 2nd and 3rd, gules, three luces or pikes, hauriant, for Lucy), 2nd aud 3rd, azure, five lozenges conjoined in fesse, or, for Percy. Crest : On a chapeau, gules, turned up, ermine, a lion statant, tail extended, azure. Supporters : Dexter, a lion, azure : sinister, a lion, guardant, or, gorged with a collar compony, argent and azure. His grace's other seats are, Keilder, Prudhoe, and Warkworth castles, in Northumberland ; Sion House, Middlesex ; Stanwick Park, Yorkshu-e ; Albury Park ; and Northumberland House, Charing Cross. Thus having brought down our sketch of the lords of Alnwick, from the early days in English history that immediately followed the Norman Conquest to the times now present, we return to their noble castle on the banks of the Aln. Within a few years of the Conquest, the Normans erected in various parts of England important edifices, both military and ecclesiastical, in truly THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. astonishing numbers : and of these, in addition to the cathedrals and the greater churches, there still exist many noble castellated relics, some of them in a proximate degree retaining the leading features of their original arrange- ment, form, and appearance. At the same time, even in the case of the most perfect of the existing castles, many changes of grave importance have been introduced as century has succeeded to century ; so that now, whenever any one early castle is examined with a view to trace out and to determine both what it was at the first, and in what order and with what motives certain palpable alterations and innovations have followed one another, it always is highly satisfactory to feel that an unquestionable general uniformity of plan and arrangement in all the early castles enables each one of them that is still in being, in some degree at any rate, to illustrate and explain every other. As a matter of course, whenever the architectural features in any old castle are original, the great art of the architect is able, unaided and beyond all controversy, to tell its own historical tale : but, genuine original architectural features are not always available to give their conclusive evidence ; and, but too frequently, without some external aid, it is not possible to follow the career of the two terrible adversaries of early edifices (and particularly those of the noblest rank), demolition and restoration — demolition, either wilful or the result of accident and chance ; and restoration, which always is wilful, though happily not always equally destructive. As it now stands, in every quality of high merit Alnwick Castle certainly yields to no other restored edifice of a similar rank. Of the castle of to-day it may truthfully be affirmed that, with a close approach to an exact fidelity, in its prevailing external arrangements and its general features it represents the grand old fortress of times long passed away. Time had dealt somewhat hardly with the Percy stronghold, and injudicious attempts to make good the ravages of the destroyer had aggravated the evil, when the recent great work of restoration was taken in hand. Then every vestige of the old structure was diligently and carefully examined, and every available early document was critically studied ; the remains also of other castles then were investigated, and all that they could suggest was applied by the restorers of Alnwick to the furtherance of their great project. Hence the plan of Alnwick, as we now have it, while it can scarcely claim to be absolutely identical with the original plan, may be accepted as not greatly differing from it in any essential particulars. Whether Yvo de Vesci, the undoubted founder of the castle, was enabled fully to carry out his own original plans, we are not able at the ALNWICK CASTLE. 103 present time accurately to determine ; but, still it may be assumed tbat tbe plans of De Vesci, to whatever degree they may have been realised by him- self, both in extent and in general configuration closely resembled those which were worked out by the Percies, when they had become lords Alnwick, as these, in their turn, were afterwards followed as their guides by the recent restorers who were employed by Duke Algernon. The great epochs in the architectural history of Alnwick Castle may be thus distinguished. Bond Gate: "HotsJ>urs Gate." I. De Vesci, about a.d. 1150 : the original founding of the castle, and its erection as an Anglo-Norman stronghold. II. First Peecy, from 1309 to 1315 : the second founding and great reparation of the castle, with either the complete rebuilding or the original erection of many of its most important parts. At this period were erected the Barbican, the Gate-House, the Western Garret ; the Abbot's, Falconer's, Armourer's, Constable's, and Auditor's Towers ; also the Postern and the i<>4 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. Ravine Towers, the Gateway between the first and second baly, with the adjoining curtain- walls both east and west, a great portion of the east side of the Keep, the Well, and the grand Baronial Hall. III. Second Percy, from 1315 to 1352 ; the completion of portions of the works of the preceding period, and the erection of the two flanking towers (No. 3 in plan) in advance of the Norman entrance to the Keep : these towers are represented in our engraving. IV. Third Percy, ending in 1455 : various important reparations and additions, most of the latter having been removed by the first duke in the next period. V. First Duke of Northumberland, from 1750 to 1786 : general repara- tion, after a long period of neglect and ruin, including a material transformation of the greater part of the castle. The Keep was almost entirely demolished, and rebuilt after the manner that was called (and, in one sense of that term, really was) " Gothic " in the eighteenth century in England ; and the towers and curtain of the circumvallation suffered in like manner. VI. Fourth Duke of Northumberland, from 1854 to 1865 : complete restoration of the entire castle. The important works erected by Duke Algernon along the lines of the circumvallation, and to the south and the south-Avest of these lines, have already been described ; in addition to these, the duke rebuilt the range of apartments extending from the Keep southwards to the Edwardian Gateway from the first to the second baly ; and he built the noble Prudhoe Tower, with the chapel adjoining it, the Ante-Room, the Guard Chamber, the present Dining-Hall, and the completion of the Keep. The governing idea of this restoration was really to restore, in all their leading and most characteristic features, the mediaeval arrangements and aspect of Alnwick Castle so far as its exterior was concerned ; while, at the same time, the whole of the interior of the restored edifice was to be planned, fitted, and adorned, in the most sumptuous style, after the manner of a cinque- cento Roman palace, and with all the luxurious splendour and the various skilful contrivances required and suggested by the taste and the usages of the present day. The only important deviation from the former part of the duke's plan, was the removal of the Edwardian Towers, and the adjoining curtain-wall between the Abbot's Tower and the Postern Tower, in order to open the view from the windows of the new Prudhoe Tower towards the north : but the Italian portion of the scheme was accomplished in its integrity. The whole of the architectural restoration and rebuilding was carried out with ALNWICK CASTLE. 105 the most perfect success, under the direction of Mr. Salvin, an architect eminently distinguished for his practical knowledge of the Early Gothic of England in its military aspect, as also for both the conscientious fidelity of his restorations and the judicious consistency of his original designs. We can easily understand with what satisfaction Mr. Salvin must have removed the Alnwick Abbey. Strawberry Hill pseudo-Gothic of the first duke, as well as the far higher gratification which must have attended the progressive realisation of his own truly admirable compositions. The project for causing the thoroughly English mediaeval military- Gothic casket of Mr. Salvin to enclose contents that should be in every respect the very reverse of what is either English or mediaeval or military or Gothic, was discussed and finally adopted at a congress held in the castle under the 106 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. presidency of Algernon, Duke of Northumberland, and attended by the English professors of classic architecture, Cockerell and Donaldson ; the Roman anti- quary, the Commendatore Canina ; and the Italian architect, Signor Montiroli. It is to be regretted that such masters of Gothic Art as Scott, Water- house, Street, and Burges had not also been present, who might have saved the Border Castle of the Percies from the magnificent anomaly of being externally English and internally Roman. The execution of the whole of the interior can be described only in terms of the highest commendation ; and it is especially satisfactory to know that the profusion of carved work in an Italian style which was required for the various purposes of decoration, and which has been pronounced to be "a marvel of delicacy and finish," was produced under the direction of Signor Bulletti of Florence, by a staff of English and Scottish carvers, who worked for several years in a studio established for that particular purpose in the castle. There also was a second studio, in which the more important of the decorations in plaster were modelled and cast. It is scarcely necessary to add that in all the minor details of furnishing, the grand original plan has been fully and faithfully carried into effect. While we cordially recognise as well the enlarged views and the princely munificence of the duke himself, as the skill, the taste, and the ability of every individual who took part in his great work of restoration, it is impossible not to regret that so glorious an opportunity for vindicating the versatile and comprehensive powers of true Gothic art should have been permitted to pass away. There can be no question as to the capacity of the same great style to have rendered the interior of Alnwick Castle a type of splendid, and yet agreeable, magnificence, which on the exterior has displayed its structural resources in a manner at once so noble and so consistent. But, as this was not to be, we rejoice in knowing that what has been done within the Percy walls has been done so well ; and our gratification is the more sincere and the more hearty, because at every point the Percy walls themselves, true to their grand traditions, wear such an aspect as Hotspur might have recognised with an approving smile, and the old Earls of Northum- berland would have been proud to accept as becoming their northern home.* * Minute and most faithful descriptions of the restorations at Alnwick Castle are given by Mr. George Tate, F.G.S., of Alnwick, in his copious and excellent "History of the Borough, Castle, and Barony of Alnwick," a work which does honour to the literature, not of the north only, but of England, and will always be highly esteemed as a valuable contribution to that important department of the national literature which comprehends our topographical histories. AI.XU'ICK CASTLE. And here we resume our survey of the castle, setting forth towards the Keep from within the Gate-House, which is itself situated within the Barbican. We proceed eastwards to the gateway (No. 2 in plan), which admits us to the second or inner baly. From this we approach the The Percy Cross. entrance to the Keep, and pass between the Edwardian flanking towers with their octagonal fronts (No. 3 in the plan) : thus we reach the grand old Norman arch, De Vesci's work, massive and deeply recessed, rich with zig- 108 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. zags and bands of sharp indentations, which forms the main entrance to the innermost court or ward of the Keep itself. Immediately adjoining the Norman archway is the draw-well constructed by the first Percy. Now we have before us the new Corridor, carried round a part of the court on piers and corbels. We pass the inner porches, and the entrance-halls, and reach the Grand Staircase (No. 5 in plan), worthily so called, and we find that we have entered such a palace as might overlook, not the Aln, but the Tiber. At the head of the noble flight of' steps, each one of them a single block of white Rothbury stone, twelve feet in length, is the Guard-Chamber, with its floor of rich Venetian mosaic, its panelled ceiling, and the deep frieze reflecting the memories of Chevy Cbase. Corridors lead to both the right hand and the left from the Guard-Room ; and it also gives access to a gorgeous Ante-Room, placed between the great Library, 54 feet long, which occupies the entire range of the Prudhoe Tower, and follows its contour ; and the Saloon, another magnificent apartment, in length 42 feet with a bay formed by a circular tower. Next succeeds the State Drawing-Room, of irregular form, its largest measurements being 46 by 34 feet. Then we enter the grand Dining-Hall, 60 feet long, and in both width and height 24 feet, "which covers the site of the old baronial hall of the early Percies. The Breakfast-Room adjoins this most princely hall, and, passing it, the Corridor leads us in succession to the State Bed-Rooms and Dressing-Rooms, and to the private apartments of the duke and duchess, together with other staircases. Thus, on the principal floor there are two staircases besides the grand staircase, and eighteen chambers, exclusive of the chapel. The Chapel (No. 12 in plan), of which we give a view from the outer baly, is a building of great beauty and interest, having a stone-vaulted ceiling within a roof of a high pitch, a semi-octagonal apsidal end towards the south-west, and lancet windows : its total length is 46 feet, and in the interior it is enriched with Italian mosaic, after the manner of the Henry III. work in the Confessor's Chapel in Westminster Abbey. We must be content, in a single brief sentence (the space at our disposal restricts us absolutely to one such sentence), to state concerning every apartment in the grand range of the entire circuit of the Keep, and also in the southern wing, which extends to the Percy gateway, that the most gorgeous Art of the Italian Renaissance, with all its manifold resources, has been taxed to the utmost in order to produce a palace of the highest rank, pervaded throughout with harmonious, yet ever- varied, magnificence. ALNWICK CASTLE. 109 On the »round-floor, which is on the same level with the entrance -hall, are the various apartments, consistently grouped and classified, required by the principal domestics of the household, together with the wine-cellars, pantries, and such other chambers and appliances as would be necessary to complete this department of the ducal establishment. Once more we return to the Prudhoe Tower, and ascend above its two upper floors of bed and dressing-rooms, to the Banner-turret, which rises to the height of two Hulne Abbey : The Percy Tower. additional floors ; and here, having gained the leads, standing beneath the proud insignia of the Percies, heavily blazoned upon their broad silken banner, we lean over the embattled parapet, and look down upon the Keep, and around upon the cordon of towers and walls, and the fair domains and the silvery river beyond, and so we bid farewell to the lordly castle of Alnwick. Until the middle of the fifteenth century was near at hand the town of Alnwick remained unprotected by a wall, and open consequently to all perils THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. incidental to its position on the Border. About the year 1433, however, the good town was fortified with walls, and the four entrances were defended each by its own strong tower-guarded gateway. One only of these early gateways still remains in a fair condition of preservation ; this, the Bond Gate, sometimes (but without any other reason than a lingering delight to associate any fine old relic at Alnwick with that name) is called " Hotspur's Gate." It bears a badge of the second Percy lord of Alnwick, and in all probability was erected by him ; its outer face is represented in the engraving. The other gateways have disappeared ; * and from the time that border- strife passed into the domain of history, the walls of Alnwick gradually ceased to exist, until now traces only of their former existence, and of these " few and far between," remain to attest the record of their having ever existed. Devoutly it is to be hoped that the one relic of the town of the olden time, the Bond Gate, will be cherished, simply because it is such a relic — because it links the town to the castle, and the castle to the town, with the strong tie of historical association. Again space, or rather the want of it, constrains us to leave unnoticed the fine church of St. Michael, the church of St. Paul, founded and erected by Duke Hugh, and the other public buildings in Alnwick ; and, with them, the privileges, usages, and the entire local history of the town. | Of the remains of the early edifices, both ecclesiastical and castellated, which are closely associated with Alnwick Castle, all of them of great interest, and all of them also no less worthy of detailed description than of careful examination, we must be content briefly to notice two — Alnwick Abbey, and Hulne, or Holn, Priory. Built to the north of the Aln, at an easy distance from the castle, upon a rich soil and in a scene of sequestered beauty, Alnwick Abbey, founded in 1147 by Eustace de Vesci for Premonstratensian Canons, was richly endowed by the founder and also by his successor. The Percies, in like manner, were in every respect as munificent as the earlier benefactors of the abbey, so that it long occupied an honourable position among the religious establishments of the country. The canons of Alnwick, however, did not rise to distinction * There is, however, one of comparatively recent date, built on the site of the ancient gate : it is still called the Potter Gate. + The fine five-light east window of St. Paul's Church is filled with some of the most remarkable stained glass in England ; it was executed by Max Ainmiiller at Munich, in 1856, from cartoons designed and drawn by Mr. Dyce, E.A., and is a memorial window erected by public subscription to commemorate the noble founder of the church. ALNWICK CASTLE. in consequence of any eminent attainments ; but, on the other hand, while in earlier times they were somewhat notorious for a turbulent spirit, the report on their abbey made to Henry VIII. contains a truly deplorable record of the degrading superstitions by means of which, in common with but too many of their brethren, the monks imposed on the people, and some- times even succeeded in deceiving themselves. Of the buildings of the Hulne Abbey : The Church. abbey, which, without doubt, were worthy to take rank with those of the castle, the sole relic that is still in existence is a turreted and embattled gateway, a structure not earlier than the middle of the fifteenth century. The eastern face of this gateway displays the quartered arms of Percy and Lucy ; on the other faces are the insignia of De Vesci. The other buildings have altogether disappeared, except here and there some sculptured stones THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. which have found their way into the walls of houses constructed by modern masons. The site of the abbey, with the Northumberland estates once annexed to it, after various vicissitudes, has become the property of the Dukes of Northumberland. Distant from Alnwick Abbey about two miles along the northern bank of the Aln, and like the abbey placed in the midst of the most lovely scenery, the Priory of Hulne, or Holn, has so far been more fortunate than its more dignified neighbour, that it yet possesses considerable remains of its original buildings in a condition of picturesque ruin. A lofty wall still encircles the entire area of the priory — a feature sufficiently significant of the lawless character of early Border-life, and of the stern necessity which constrained even a religious community to rely for security upon the strength of its fortifications. In our engraving we show the present aspect of the tower, built, as will be seen, with massive solidity, by Henry de Percy, fourth Earl of Northumberland, in the year 1488 ; and in another engraving, we give a general view of the ruins of the church, as they are seen from the north- east. It is pleasant to be able to add that the remains of Hulne Priory are carefully preserved and freely shown. The brethren, who for more than three centuries found a secure dwelling-place surrounded with the most beautiful scenery, were Carmelite or White Friars ; and a romantic story (of which several versions are in existence) is told concerning their order in connection with the foundation of this priory. The site of the priory was given by the second William de Vesci about 1240 ; but the chief endowment came, between 1252 and 1289, from John de Vesci ; the house itself, however, appears to have been erected by lialph Fulborne, a wealthy land- holder of Northumberland, who lived in the stirring times when the lords of broad and fertile acres went armed to fight in tbe Holy Land against the infidels.* In after times the Percies confirmed the grants of the earlier benefactors of Hulne, and made to tbem some slight additions. The Carmelites of Hulne were men who, according to the light of their times, cultivated learning ; this is shown by the still existing catalogue of the numerous manuscripts that once formed their library. There has also been * While serving in the Crusade under Richard, Earl of Cornwall, Ralph Fulborne visited the friars ■who were then established upon Mount Carmel ; and attracted, it is said, by their piety and holy lives, he brought back with him to his Northumbrian home some of the Carmelite brethren, and built them a house in his own land, which might serve in some degree to remind them of their Syrian Carmel : for at Hulne they found a hiU, with a river flowing at the foot of it, and around was a forest, just as a forest had surrounded them when far away in the East. ALNWICK CASTLE. 113 preserved another equally curious and interesting document, formerly the property of these Carmelite brethren ; it is an inventory of their vestments and of the fittings of their church, which must have been very costly as well as numerous and splendid. Inventories and catalogues such as these possess a peculiar value, as illustrations of the intellectual pursuits and character of the monastic age, and also in consequence of the light they throw upon the sentiments and usages that then were prevalent in our country. Descending from the secluded hill-side where the ruins of Hume Priory nestle amidst the thick woods, and crossing both the vale below, and the river beyond it, a roadway leads to the beautiful pleasure-grounds of Hulne Park. Here on one of the highest of the many elevated points, and rising above the surrounding trees, is the Tower on the Hill, or Brislee Tower, erected by the first duke in 1781. This structure is a characteristic specimen of the Gothesque architecture, of which so much was happily removed during the recent restorations, from Alnwick Castle. From the upper balcony of this tower, at a height of about 70 feet from the ground, the view is singularly fine, and in its extent truly extraordinary. At different points of the compass, and at varying distances, this panoramic view comprehends the vale of Whittingham and the windings of the Aln ; the range of the Cheviots, with a glimpse of the hills of Teviotdale forty miles away ; the memorable high land of Flodden may also be distinguished ; and, towards the sea, are the castles of Warkworth, Bambro', and Dunstanburgh ; and beyond them, in a fringe -like line, lies the sea itself. It is needless to say that the hospitality for which the lords of Alnwick have been renowned since the first stone of the castle was laid is still maintained within its princely walls ; its list of " visitors " during many centuries past has contained the names of those who were not only the loftiest in rank but the most eminent in Art, Science, and Letters. Its park and grounds are among the most perfect in the kingdom ;* successive lords have laboured to make them beautiful, and Nature had given auspicious ground on which to work — hill and dell alternate ; a lovely and * The park and grounds are always freely open to " the people," and, on stated occasions, parts of the castle. This is a boon of magnitude, not only to the inhabitants of the town and district, but to many who come from far distances to obtain free air and healthful recreation from Xature where her aspect is most cheering and her influence most invigorating. On the 29th of August, 1868, on arriving at the Alnwick Station, we met upwards of 2,000 men, women, and children, who had been enjoying a day in the Park. It was the annual pic-nic of persons employed by the Jarrow Chemical Works (Newcastle-on-Tyne), they were accompanied, not only by the overseers, but the partners of the firm. A more orderly crowd it would have been impossible to have met anywhere. H4 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. rapid, though narrow, river runs through them ; on either side are green banks, in many places overhung by the rich foliage of varied trees ; here and there views are obtained of the distant hills — the Cheviots — with their thousand traditions of times happily gone by, but which excite interest by The Brislee Tower. their associations with heroic deeds — and not unfrequently their " opposites " — of which every spot is fertile on the border that separates Scotland from England. Happily, there is now no sensation of jealousy or envy, nothing that can ALNWICK CASTLE. "5 either humiliate or exasperate, when the Scottishman boasts of triumphs over his southern neighbours ; nor when he admits that, often, before the bold men of Northumberland he shrunk back in mortal dread. The glories of the one have long ceased to be the degradations of the other ; and the spirit of rivalry is only that which has for its aim and object the supremacy of the country of both. Will the happy time ever arrive when the three kingdoms shall be as essentially one as the two have been for centuries past ? i 2 HARDWICK HALL. jjARDWICK HALL may take rank among the yl more stately of the " homes of England." Stately in its outer aspect, stately in its antique furniture and its interior fittings and ap- pointments, and truly stately in its associations, it is one of the most historically interesting, and one of the most singular and picturesque, of the many "homes" whose countless stores of natural beauties and acquired treasures are, through the kindness and liberality of their owners, made acces- sible alike to peer and peasant ; while it is one of the fullest in its historical associations, and in its power of carrying the mind of the visitor back through a long vista of years to those stirring times when " Good Queen Bess," the strong-minded and strong-headed " master" of its noble owner, sate on the throne of England. Hardwick and its surroundings belong essentially to those times, and to the people who moved prominently in them : the very furniture we to-day pertains to that eventful era — for not only is the building self of the period to which we refer, but so are even the "fittings ; " the beds — for here is the very bed used by Mary, Queen of Scots, and covered with needlework, the work of her own fair hands ; the tables around and at which sate " Bess of Hardwick " with her historic family and brilliant friends ; the tapestry is that which then hung around them, and on which the eyes of royalty and nobility have rested and " feasted with admiration; " the screens, the chairs, the couches, — nay, almost all the objects HARDWICK HALL. 117 that meet the eye are of those stirring times, and have about them an historic air which seems irresistibly to subdue the mind and to expand the thoughts of the visitor. Even a glance at the graces and beauties of Derbyshire would demand far greater space than we can accord to them : for it is the shire of all the English shires in which natural beauties are most happily combined with cultivated graces ; hill and dale alternate at every mile ; rich valleys, through which run fertilising rivers, shut in by mountain rocks, tree-clad from base to summit ; singular peaks, that seem as if not formed by Nature, but the work of giant hands ; delicious dells, where rivulets sing perpetually, and myriad birds rejoice in spring or summer. Other counties may be more sublimely grand, and others more abundantly fertile, but there is none so truly rich in the picturesque ; whether of distant views or of by-paths up hill-sides, or through lanes clothed in perpetual verdure. And then its history, a page of which may be read at every turn — the Celt, the Roman, the Saxon, the Dane, the Norman, all the " peoples and nations " that have made Britain their home, have left in this shire enduring evidence of possession and progress ; and many of its customs remain unchanged, not only since the beacons were lit on Blakelow or on Bruncliffe, but since the Baal fires were burning on Axe-Edge or Chelmorton. Proofs of a milder occupancy, too, are to be found in abundance. Nowhere are peaceful "Halls" more numerous — remains of prosperous epochs : Haddon, of an early date ; Wingfield and Hardwick, of a later period ; Chatsworth, of a time comparatively recent ; and Kedleston, of an age scarce removed from living memory, — are but a few of the many that glorify this beautiful shire. No wonder, therefore, that it is the county of all others to which the tourist is most frequently attracted. Surrounded on all sides by charming scenery, and the richest and most abundant land, Hardwick stands in all its majesty and grace, and forms — both in the distance, when a first glimpse of its bold outline is gained from Bracken- field or other heights, or when viewed from nearer points — a striking feature in the landscape. When approached from one of the great centres for Derby- shire tourists, Matlock, the drive is of peculiar interest, and may be, with profit to the future visitor, briefly described. Leaving Matlock by way of Matlock Bridge, the road passes through what is called Matlock Town, whose pic- turesque church is seen overtopping the rocks to the right, where the graceful bend of the river Derwent adds its beauties to the scene ; thence passing along n8 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. the roadway, Riber — an immense and very steep hill — rises to the right, and will be noticed as surmounted by the massive modern erection of Riber Castle, the residence of Mr. Smedley, the hydropathist. The road continues by Tansley, with its church, its mills, and its pretty dales ; Tansley, or Dethick, Moor, a wild unreclaimed tract of moorland, purple with heather and un- trammelled with fences ; Washington, with its village-green, its stocks, and its duck-ponds ; Higham, a picturesque village with an ancient cross ; Shirland, with its fine monuments, some of which are of remarkable character and full of Hardwick Hall, with the Entrance Gateway. interest ; Morton, with its pretty church and charming cottages ; for a short distance the coal district, with their pits and shafts and ever-creaking engines ; Pilsley and its pleasant lanes ; Hardstoft and Deeplane, to the lower entrance to the Park : through these and other places of deep and varied interest we go, until we reach the Hardwick Inn— a pretty house of entertainment close to the entrance to the Park, from which a winding ascent of less than a mile leads to the Hall. By this route some curious transitions from the lead-mining district to that of coal, and from the limestone to the sandstone, with their varied II A R D I! 'ICK HALL. 1 1 q scenery and their diversified aspects, will be noticed ; and Derbyshire, rich both in minerals beneath the surface and in arable, meadow, and pasture land on its face, as well as in rock, and tree, and wood, and hill, will be seen to great advantage. From Chesterfield, too, the road is beautiful ; and the visitor may make a delightful " day's round " by driving direct to Hardwick by way of Temple Normanton ; Heath, with its truly picturesque and interesting church and parsonage ; Ault Hucknall, in the church of which are many monuments of the Cavendish family, and where lies buried that sometime " world's wonder," " Hobbes of Malmesbury ; " thence through the lodge-gates and down the fine old deer-park to the Hall, and then returning by way of Bolsover Castle, a magnificent old building, the former residence of the Cavendishes, Earls and Dukes of Newcastle, and rendered famous in the Duke of Newcastle's work on horsemanship, 1658, and now for many years the resi- dence of Mrs. Hamilton Gray, the authoress of " Etruria." But from what- ever side Hardwick is approached, the land is full of beauty, and rich in the picturesque. Hardwick Hall is one of the many princely seats — Chatsworth, Bolton Abbey, Lismore Castle, Holker Hall, Compton Place, Eastbourne, and Devon- shire House, London, being among the others — of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire, in which resides the duke's eldest son and heir, the Marquis of Hartington, M.P., at this time Her Majesty's Secretary of State for Ireland. It is distant from London about 140 miles, from Derby 20 miles, from Chester- field 9, and from Matlock 15 miles, and these are perhaps the more general routes by which visitors will proceed. Whatever road is taken, they will find natural beauties in abundance greeting the eye at every mile of a delicious journey. Before we describe the venerable Hall, we give a brief history of the noble family to which it now belongs, reserving that of its predecessors for a later page. The family of Cavendish, of which his Grace the present Duke of Devon- shire, K.G., Lord Lieutenant of the county of Derby, is the representative, traces back to the Conquest, when Robert de Gernon came over with the Conqueror, and so distinguished himself in arms that he was rewarded with considerable grants of land in Hertfordshire, Gloucestershire, &c. His descendants held considerable land in Derbyshire; and Sir William Gernon, who was one of the witnesses to a confirmation charter of Henry III. to Basingdale Priory, obtained a grant of a fair at Bakewell, in that county. He THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. had two sons, Sir Ralph cle Gernon, lord of Bakewell, and Geoffrey de Gernon, of Moor Hall, near Bakewell. From the second of these, Geoffrey de Gernon, the Cavendishes are descended. His son, Roger de Gernon (who died 1334), married the heiress of John Potton, or Potkins, Lord of the Manor of Cavendish, in Suffolk, and by her had issue, four sons, who all assumed the name of Cavendish from their mother's manor. These were Sir John Cavendish, Chief Justice of the King's Bench, in the time of Edward III., Chancellor of Cambridge, 4th of Richard II. ; he was beheaded by the insurgents of Suffolk in that reign ; Roger Cavendish, from whom descended the celebrated navi- gator, Sir Thomas Cavendish ; Stephen Cavendish, Lord Mayor, member of Parliament, and Sheriff of London ; and Richard Cavendish. Sir John married Alice, daughter of Sir John Odyngseles, Chief Justice of the King's Bench, who brought to her husband the manor of Cavendish Overhall, and by her, who died before him, had issue, two sons, Andrew and John, and a daughter, Alice, married to William Nell. Sir Andrew Cavendish, the eldest son, was Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk. By his wife, Rose, he left issue, one son, William, from whom the estates passed to his cousin. Sir Andrew was succeeded by his brother, Sir John Cavendish, Esquire of the Body to Richard II. and Henry V., who, for his gallant conduct in killing the rebel, Wat Tyler, in his conflict with Sir William Walworth, was knighted by Richard II. in Smithfield, and an annuity of £40 per annum granted to him and his sons for ever. He was also made broiderer of the wardrobe to the king. He married Joan, daughter of Sir William Clopton, of Clopton, in Suffolk ; and by her had issue, three sons, William, his successor; Robert, Serjeant-at-Law ; and Walter. William Cavendish, who was a citizen and mercer of London, and of Cavendish Overhall, married Joan Staventon, by whom he had two sons, Thomas and William. This Thomas Cavendish, who was of Cavendish and Pollingford, in Suffolk, married Katherine Scudamore, and left by her, as son and heir, Sir Thomas Cavendish, who, having studied the law, was employed by Thomas, Earl of Surrey, Treasurer of the King's Exchequer. He was also Clerk of the Pipe in the Exchequer to Henry VIII. — the office of the Clerk of the Pipe being to make out leases of Crown lands, accounts of the sheriffs, &c. He married twice, and left, by his first wife, Alice, daughter and co-heir of John Smith, of Podbrooke Hall, besides other issue, three sons, George Cavendish, Sir William Cavendish, and Sir Thomas Cavendish. George Cavendish, the eldest of these three sons, was of Glemsford, and Cavendish Overhall, and is said to have been the author of " Cavendish's Life HARD WICK HALL. of Wolsey," although the authorship of that work is also attributed to his brother Sir William Cavendish. He received a liberal education, and was endowed by his father with considerable landed property in Suffolk. His character and learning seem to have recommended him to the special notice of Cardinal Wolsey, who " took him to be about his own person, as gentleman usher of his chamber, and placed a special confidence in him." George Cavendish was succeeded by his son William ; the latter was succeeded by his son William, who passed away the manor of Cavendish Overhall to William Downes. Sir Thomas Cavendish was one of the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem, and died unmarried. Sir William Cavendish, the second son of the first Sir Thomas, became the founder of several noble families. He was married three times : first to a daughter of Edward Bostock, of Whatcross in Cheshire ; secondly, to a daughter of Sir Thomas Conyngsby, and widow of William Paris ; and thirdly, to Elizabeth, daughter of John Hardwick, of Hardwick, and widow of Robert Barley, of Barley. He was " a man of learning and business," and was much employed in important affairs by his sovereigns ; filling the posts of Treasurer of the Chamber and Privy Councillor to Henry VIII., Edward VI., and Mary. At the suppression of the religious houses under Henry VIII., he was " ap- pointed one of the Commissioners for visiting them, and afterwards was made one of the auditors of the Court of Augmentation," which was instituted for the purpose of augmenting the revenues by the suppression of the monasteries ; for his services he received three valuable manors in Hertfordshire which, later on, he exchanged for other lands, in Derbyshire and other counties. He was also knighted by Henry VIII. By his first wife he had issue, one son and two daughters who died young, and two other daughters, one of whom, Catherine, married Sir Thomas Brooke, son of Lord Cobham, and Anne, who married Sir Henry Baynton. By his second wife he had three daughters, who all died young, and she herself died in child-birth. By his third marriage, with " Bess of Hardwick," he had a numerous family, viz. : — Henry Cavendish, of Tutbury, Member of Parliament for Derbyshire, wbo married Grace, daughter of George, Earl of Shrewsbury, but died without lawful issue ; Sir William Cavendish, created Earl of Devonshire, of whom hereafter ; Sir Charles Cavendish, of Bolsover Castle and of Welbeck Abbey (whose son, William Cavendisb, by his first wife, was created Duke, Marquis, and Earl of Newcastle, Baron Ogle, Baron Cavendish, of Bolsover, Viscount Mansfield, K.G., Commander-in- THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. Chief, &c, &c, and was the author of the splendid work on Horsemanship, &c, and whose life was charmingly written by his wife, Margaret Lucas, Maid of Honour to Queen Henrietta), ancestor of the Dukes of Newcastle, Portland, &c. ; Frances, married to Sir Henry Pierrepoint, ancestor to the Dukes of Kingston ; Elizabeth, married to Charles Stuart, Duke of Lennox (younger brother of Lord Darnley, the husband of Mary, Queen of Scots, and father of King James I.), the issue of which marriage was the sadly unfortunate lady, Arabella Stuart ; and Mary, married to Gilbert, Earl of Shrewsbury. The West Front. Sir William Cavendish was created Baron Cavendish, of Hardwick, and Earl of Devonshire, by King James I., " at which time of his creation, his majesty stood under a cloth of state in the ball at Greenwich, accompanied with the princes, his children, the Duke of Holstein, the Duke of Lennox, and the greatest part of the nobility, both of England and Scotland." His lordship was one of the first adventurers who settled a colony and plantation in Virginia, and on the discovery of the Bermuda Islands, he and others had a grant of them from the king, one of the cantons being called after him. He HARD WICK HALL. r2 3 married twice — his first wife being Anne, daughter of Henry Kighley, of Kighley, by whom he had issue, besides William, his successor, Gilbert, who died without issue ; Frances, wife of Lord Maynard ; and three others, who died in infancy : by his second wife, Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Edward Boughton, and widow of Sir Richard Wortley, he had a son, Sir John Cavendish. His lordship's successor was his second son, Sir William (who had been under the tuition of Thomas Hobbes, of whom more will be said on subsequent pages); he married Christian, only daughter of Edward, Lord Bruce, of Kinloss, a kinswoman of the king, " who gave her, with his own hand, and made her fortune ten thousand pounds." By her he had three sons and one daughter, viz. : — William, his successor ; Charles, who was Lieutenant-General of Horse to his cousin the Earl of Newcastle, and was slain at Gainsborough ; Henry, who died young ; and Anne, wife of Lord Rich, eldest son of the Earl of Warwick. William Cavendish, third Earl of Devonshire, was only ten years of age when his father died, and he was placed, as we have just said, under the care of Hobbes, who travelled and remained with him, and was, for the rest of his life, supported by the earl's family. The earl married Elizabeth Cecil, daughter of the Earl of Salisbury, by whom he had two sons, William (who succeeded him), Charles, and one daughter. William, fourth Earl of Devonshire, before succeeding to the title, sat in the Long Parliament for Derbyshire, and, as a youth, he was one of the train-bearers to the king at his coronation. He was among the principal persons who brought about the " Glorious Revolution " of 1688, and the placing of William III. on the throne. He married Mary, daughter of the Duke of Ormonde, and had issue by her, William, his successor ; Henry, James, and Elizabeth. His lordship was the rebuilder of Chatsworth, and was by William III. advanced to the dignity of Marquis of Hartington and Duke of Devonshire. He was succeeded in his titles and estates by his son. His Grace died in 1707, and his funeral sermon, preached by White Kennett, Bishop of Peterborougb, has been many times printed, and is attached to the memoirs of the family of Cavendish by that prelate. William Cavendish, second Duke and fifth Earl of Devonshire, was Captain of the Yeomen of the Guard, and succeeded to all his father's appointments, among which were Lord Steward of the Household, Privy Councillor, Lord Wai'den and Chief Justice in Eyre of all places north of the Trent, Lord- Lieutenant, K.G. ; he was also constituted one of the regents of the kingdom. He married Rachel, daughter of William Lord Russell, and by her had issue, 124 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. with several others, his successor, William, who became third Duke of Devon- shire, and married Catherine, heiress of John Hoskins, by whom he had a numerous family. His Grace held many important posts in the State ; among which were those of Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, Lord Lieutenant of Derby- shire, Lord Keeper of the Privy Seal, Lord Steward of the Household, and Lord Justiceship for the administration of Government during his Majesty's absence. He was succeeded by his son — William, fourth Duke of Devonshire, who was, during his father's lifetime, called to the Upper House by his title, hitherto of courtesy, of Marquis of Hartington. He was appointed Master of the Horse and a Privy Councillor. In 1754 he was one of the Lords of the Regency, and Governor of the County of Cork ; in the following year he was Lord High Treasurer of Ireland ; and in 1756 was Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, and First Commissioner of the Treasury. In 1757 he was Chamberlain of the Household to the king, and held, besides, many other offices. His Grace married Charlotte, daughter, and ultimately heiress, of Richard Boyle, Earl of Burlington and Cork, by which union — the lady being Baroness Clifford in her own right — the Barony of Clifford came into the Cavendish family. By this issue he had three sons and one daughter, viz. : — William, who succeeded him ; Richard, who died un- married ; George Augustus Henry, created Earl of Burlington, from whom the present noble representative of the House of Cavendish, the seventh Duke of Devonshire, is descended ; and Dorothy, married to the Duke of Portland. William, fifth Duke of Devonshire, the eldest son of the last named peer, was married twice : first, to the Lady Georgiana, daughter of Earl Spencer, one of the most accomplished and elegant women of the time, and who is perhaps better known as " The Beautiful Duchess " than by any other name ; and, secondly, to Lady Elizabeth Foster, daughter of the Earl of Bristol, and widow of John Thomas Foster, Esq. By the " Beautiful Duchess " his grace had issue, one son, William Spencer Cavendish, who succeeded him, and two daughters : Georgiana, married to the Earl of Carlisle; and Harriet Elizabeth, married to Earl Granville. On his death, in 1811, the title and estates passed to his only son — William Spencer Cavendish, sixth Duke and ninth Earl of Devonshire, one of the most liberal-minded of men and one of the most genuine patrons of Art and Literature. His Grace, whose career earned for him the proud title of " The good Duke " — a title which, with all his others, has descended to his successor — was born in Paris in 1790, and besides holding office as Lord High HARDWICK HALL. Chamberlain, &c, went in a style of more than princely splendour on an embassy to Kussia from the British Court, and so conducted that important mission as to gain exceeding distinction and general applause. His Grace, who never married, died in 1858, and was succeeded in his titles and estates — with the exception of the Barony of Clifford, which fell in abeyance between his sisters — by his second cousin, the present noble peer, who, as we have said, was grandson to the first Earl of Burlington, brother to the fifth duke. The present peer, William Cavendish, Duke of Devonshire, Marquis of The Great Hall. Hartington, Earl of Devonshire, Earl of Burlington, Baron Cavendish of Hard- wick, Baron Cavendish of Keighley, &c, &c, K.G., LL.D., F.R.S., Lord Lieutenant and Custos Rotulorum of the County of Derby, Chancellor of the University of Cambridge, Steward of the Borough of Derby, &c, &c, was born in 1808, and was educated at Eton, and at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he graduated as M.A., and was Second Wrangler, Senior Smith's Prizeman, and in the first class of the Classical Tripos, 1829. In the same year he became M.P. for the University of Cambridge, which he held until 1831, when 126 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. he was returned for Mai ton, and afterwards for North Derbyshire, for which constituency he sat until he succeeded his father as Earl of Burlington, in 1834. In 1856 he was made Lord Lieutenant of Lancashire, a post he held until 1858, when, on attaining to the Dukedom of Devonshire, he was appointed Lord Lieutenant of Derbyshire. From 1836 to 1856 he was Chancellor of the University of London, and he has held, and still holds, several other important offices. In 1829 his Grace, then Mr. Cavendish, married his cousin, the Lady Blanche Georgiana Howard, fourth daughter of George, sixth Earl of Carlisle, by the Lady Georgiana Dorothy Cavendish, daughter of the fifth Duke of Devonshire. By this truly estimable lady, who died in 1840, his Grace had surviving issue, three sons and one daughter, viz. : — Spencer Compton Cavendish, Marquis of Hartington ; Lord Frederick Charles Cavendish, M.P. for the West Riding of Yorkshire, Private Secretary to the Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone, married to the Hon. Lucy Caroline, daughter of Baron Lyttelton ; Lord Edward Cavendish, late M.P. for East Sussex, married to Emma, daughter of the late Hon. William Lascelles ; and the Lady Louisa Cavendish, married to Rear-Admiral the Hon. Francis Egerton, M.P. for East Derbyshire, brother to the late, and uncle to the present, Earl of Ellesmere. The Marquis of Hartington, the heir to the titles and estates, was born in 1833, and was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he graduated as B.A. in 1852, M.A. in 1854, and LL.D. in 1862. He is a Privy Councillor, and was Lord of the Admiralty in 1863, Under Secretary of State for War from 1863 to 1866 ; Secretary of State for War in 1866 ; and Postmaster-General from 1868 to 1871. He was attached to Lord Granville's special mission to Russia in 1856, and has filled many important posts. His lordship, who is unmarried, is M.P. for Radnor, and is now Secretary of State for Ireland. Lord George Henry Cavendish, brother to the Duke of Devonshire, is M.P. for North Derbyshire, which constituency he has represented since the year 1834. He married in 1835 the Lady Louisa, daughter of the Earl of Harewood. Lord Richard Cavendish, another brother of the duke, is unmarried. His Grace is patron of thirty-nine livings, and in Derbyshire alone is Lord of the Manor of forty-six places. The arms of the duke are — Sable, three harts' heads, caboshed, argent, attired or. Crest, a serpent, noued, proper. Supporters, two bucks, proper, each wreathed round the neck with a chaplet of roses, alternately argent and azure. HARDU'ICK HALL. 127 We now, for the present, leave the genealogical part of our story to turn to the attractions of the interior of the Hall. Of the exterior and interior of the old hall and their surroundings we shall speak later on. Passing through the entrance gateway, shown in one of our illustrations, the visitor to Hardwick will see before him, across the quadrangular space laid out in magnificent flower-beds in the pure Elizabethan style — the most striking feature of which are two immense beds, one on either side the central pathway, The Grand Staircase. formed in the shape of the letters E and S, the initials of Elizabeth, Countess of Shrewsbury — in all its grandeur, the principal front of the Hall, which bears out to the full the truth of the common saying — " Hardwick Hall, More glass than wall." The house is in reality " all windows," and has a peculiarity of appearance possessed by no other existing mansion. Passing under the colonnade, seen 128 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. in the centre of the building in our illustration on page 122, the visitor arrives at the entrance door, and will, before entering, do well to glance at an inscrip- tion, now nearly defaced, on one of the pillars : — " Hie locus est quern si verbis audaeia detur Haud rueuni magni dixisse palatia coeli," which may be thus freely rendered : — " Could any adventurous muse these portals sing, No more to Heaven's gate her flight she'd wing." The Great Hall, which is first entered, is of considerable magnitude, and very lofty, taking in the whole height of two stories of the noble building. Its lower part is wainscoted ; its upper, hung with fine Gobelins tapestry. Along one side stands an enormous and massive oak table, and carved chairs and seats in abundance are ranged around the room. Over the entrance end a spacious gallery, supported on pillars, leads from the dining-room to the drawing-room, on the first floor ; and at the opposite end is a charming piece of sculpture, a full-length statue of Mary, Queen of Scots, by Westmacott, with the in- scription — " Maria Scotorum Regina Nata 1542 A suis in exilium acta 1568 Ab hospita neci data 1587." On the wall over this is a large and very curious cartoon full-length figure of Henry VIII. On the wainscot and in different parts of the hall are some fine antlers, a series of helmets and breastplates, and other relics ; while over the fire-place, which is of great size and beauty, and has its original brass fire-dogs, are the arms of the foundress of the house, Elizabeth (Hardwick), Countess of Shrewsbury, of gigantic size, in raised plaster- work. Some remarks here seem requisite concerning the heraldry of the place. The arms represented in the great hall, and shown in our engraving of that splendid apartment, are argent, a saltire, engrailed, azure ; on a chief of the second three cinquefoils of the field. These, which are in a lozenge-shaped shield, are surmounted by an earl's coronet, and have for supporters, two stags, proper, each gorged with a chaplet of roses, argent, between two bars azure. The arms are those of Hardwick of Hardwick, the maiden name of the Countess ; the supporters, HARD WICK HALL. 129 which she had no right to assume, the family of Hardwick not being entitled to any, were assumed from the crest of that family, which, with a slight variation, formed those granted to her son, the first Baron Cavendish, of Hard- wick, and Earl of Devonshire. The coronet is, of course, hers as Countess of Shrewsbury, the hall being built during the latter part of the life of her fourth husband, the Earl of Shrewsbury, and in the first nine years of her fourth. widowhood. From the Great Hall a wide passage to the right leads to the grand staircase, the muniment-room, the sitting and other rooms, on the The Chapel. ground-floor, and, to the left, to the kitchens and offices, and to another stair- case. Ascending these massive stone stairs hung with framed pieces of needle- work and with curious old paintings, some of which are dated 1576, and were principally brought from the old hall, an open oak screen-work on the landing opens into The Chapel. In this truly interesting little room, the walls are notable for being partly hung with painted tapestry of extremely good character, and the only examples in the house. On the ceiling is a fine piece of tapestry, K I 130 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. representing our Lord, with two of His disciples, blessing the bread. The pulpit is dressed with some of the earliest embroidery — portions of a cope, &c. ; and on the rails haugs a very rich and curious altar-cloth, 30 feet long, with figures of saints under canopies, wrought in very rich and early needlework. The chapel is shown in one of Our illustrations. On the landing hangs a remarkably curious lantern. Opposite to the chapel, a doorway opens into the Dining-room, a noble apartment, the lower part of the walls being wainscoted, and the upper hung with a number of family portraits, amongst which are an interesting painting of " Bess of Hardwick," with this inscription upon it : — " Elizabeth Hardwick, daughter and co-heir of John Hardwick, of Hardwick, in the county of Derby. To her second husband, Sir William Cavendish, of Chatsworth, in the same county. She settled her third son, Sir Charles Cavendish, at Welbeck, in the county of Nottingham." Other portraits are those of her husband, Sir William Cavendish, at the age of forty-four; "the Beautiful Duchess," Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire ; the late Duke of Devonshire ; Lord George Cavendish, second son of the third duke, known as " Truth and Daylight," &c, &c. Over the fire-place is a fine specimen of parget-work, a kind of plaster-stone, with figures, kr., and in the centre the inscription, " The conclusion of all things is to feare God and keepe his Commaundementes," and the conjoined initials E.S. with the date 1597. The large recess of this room is converted into a billiard-room. The Cut- Velvet Room, leading from the dining-room, is a noble apartment, hung with tapestry, and containing a stately bed with plumes. Over the fire- place, in parget-work, as in other rooms, is a series of armorial bearings, among which again occur the arms of Hardwick, with supporters and coronet. Adjoining this is a charming dressing-room, hung with the most exquisite needlework in silk. Passing down the minstrels' gallery from the dining-room to the drawing-room, some fine specimens of needlework, by the Countess of Shrewsbury, and by Mary, Queen of Scots, are carefully preserved in frames. The Drawing-room is a large well-proportioned apartment, the lower part of the walls wainscoted, and the upper hung with fine old tapestry, representing the story of Esther and Ahasuerus. Over the fire-place are the arms of Hard- wick, with quarterings, in a lozenge shield, supporters, and coronet. Among the paintings will be specially noticed a fine portrait of Arabella Stuart, several portraits by Holbein, and others of Henry VII. and VIII. , Edward VI., &c, &c. There are, also, some curious pieces of needlework, framed. HARD Tl'IC A' J/ A LI. '3 [ From the drawing-room the Duke's Bed Room, and other apartments, are reached. This room, so called because it is- the room occupied by the late Duke of Devonshire, and in which he died, is a splendid apartment, hung with tapestry representing scriptural subjects. Over the lire-place, which has large carved figures in stone on either side, is a fine piece *of parget- work surrounding a painting. On the bed a curious needle- work counterpane invites attention. The dressing-room adjoining is one of the most interesting in the house. It is hung with silk needlework tapestry of the finest and most choice character, I'/ie Presence Chamber. one piece of which bears the date of 1574. There are also paintings of the entombment of our Saviour, and of the Annunciation, with the arms, in tapestry, of the Cavendishes, Talbots, and others. Near this room is the bed- room occupied, on his occasional visits to Hardwick, by the present duke, on the tapestry of which cupids are represented playing at mall — the progenitor, apparently, of our modern croquet. Near this, too, is the Marquis of Harting- ton's room, in which are several interesting coats of arms in parget-work, in- cluding the bearings of Hardwick, Cavendish, Talbot, and others. Returning k 2 iy2 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. through the drawing-room, the visitor next passes out to the Grand Staircase, of which we give an engraving. Near the drawing-room door will be noticed a fine old chest, said to have belonged to the Earl of Shrewsbury. The staircase is hung with some of the finest tapestry which any house can boast. One portion represents a classical story ; the boar-hunts and similar subjects are fine, and powerful in the extreme. On the second landing is an interesting inlaid table with the arms of Hardwick impaling Talbot, and on the wall by it hangs some of the oldest tapestry in the house. Continuing up the staircase, with tapestry on either side, the state-rooms are approached. The entrance is by a doorway surmounted by the Hardwick arms, over which is the most gor- geously fine piece of tapestry, representing Juno. On the door a marvellously beautiful lock is still preserved. It, with the arms of Hardwick, forms one of our initial letters. This door opens into the Presence-Chamber, State-Room, or Audience-Room, as it is variously called. This splendid apartment, which is 65 feet long, 33 feet wide, and 26 feet in height, is one of the finest proportioned and most imposing in appearance even in this perfect house. The upper portion of the walls of this magnificent chamber is covered with parget-work in high coloured-relief, representing hunting scenes, Orpheus, and the court of Diana. Below this, for full 15 feet in height, the walls are hung with tapestry of the finest character. Over the fire-place of this room are the arms and supporters of Queen Elizabeth, in coloured relief parget- work. The furniture is remarkably fine, as will be seen from our engraving of this room. At the north end is a majestic canopy, decorated in minute needlework with figures of the cardinal virtues, " Verecundia," " Prudentia," " Sobrietas," &c, alternating with monograms and arms of the family. Under the canopy is a state-chair ; and in front, one of the most curious and interesting tables in existence. It is of large size, and elaborately inlaid over the entire surface of its top with musical instruments of various kinds, backgammon and chess boards, cards, and various games, foliage and other devices. In its centre is a tablet with the quaint in- scription : — THE REDOLENT SMLE OF xEGLENTYNE WE STAGGES EXAVLT TO THE DEVEYNE. The " stagges " being, no doubt, the stags of the Hardwick arms. On each side of the tablet are the arms of Hardwick and Talbot impaled, &c. From HARD WICK HALL. '33 this room a doorway in the tapestry opens into the picture-gallery, and another at the north end leads into the Library, over the chimney-piece of which is a splendid piece of sculpture, Apollo and the Muses ; over the figures on one side are the arms of Queen Elizabeth, and on the other her initials, E. R., in a knot, and crowned. This fine group, found not many years ago in a case in one of the servants' rooms at Chatsworth, is supposed to have been presented to the countess by Queen Elizabeth, and it has, therefore, been most appro- priately brought and placed in its present position. In this room, among other Mary Queen of Scots' R<. interesting pictures, is a portrait of James V. of Scotland, when very young. It belonged to Queen Mary, and was taken with her from place to place. Passing through the library and the Green Bed-Room, where the majestic state- bed and the tapestry are sure to excite attention, one of the most interesting little rooms in the whole building is gained : — Mary Queen of Scots' Room — a room which, it appears to us, the Countess of Shrewsbury prepared expressly for the reception of the furniture used by the truly unfortunate captive who had for so many years been a prisoner in charge of her and her husband, and in which, when finished, she placed her 134 THE STATELY HOMES OE ENGLAND. bed and other furniture, so as to preserve them as precious relics. On the panels of the wainscoting of the room are the initials of the countess, E.S., with the coronet and the date 1599 ; and on the door the same date twice occurs. The woodwork is "tricked" in arabesque patterns ; over the door, on the interior side, are carved the royal arms of Scotland, with the order of St. Andrew, supporters, crown, &c, and the letters M S., and the motto, in • my • de • fens. Around the whole is the inscription, marie ■ stewart ■ par ■ la • GRACE • DE • DIEV ' ROYNE ' DE • SCOSSE ' DOVARIERE ' DE ' FRANCE. Over the fire-place, in parget-work, are the arms of Hardwick in lozenge, with coronet and supporters ; the arms of Hardwick impaling Leake ; and those of Cavendish, with a crescent for difference, impaling anient a fesse gules. The bed — the very one in which the poor queen lay during a part of her captivity — is adorned with the work of her own bauds, bearing her monogram. The counterpane, too, is an elaborate piece of needlework, said to be her own work ; and some of the furniture is of the same period. We have engraved this historically interesting room as one of our illustrations. Near this is the Blue Bed-Room, hung with tapestry, and containing a noble bed, hung with blue, to which needlework by Christian Bruce, Countess of Devonshire, has been transferred with much judgment and care. Over the chimney-piece is the " Marriage of Tobias." Other bed-rooms adjoin, which it is not necessary to notice. The Picture-Gallery, the "great glory" of Hardwick, occupies the entire length of the building from north to south, on the upper floor of its eastern front. Its length is 170 feet, and its width 40 feet, including the recessed windows ; its height being 26 feet. The walls of this superb gallery are hung with the finest tapestry, almost hidden, however, by the magnificent assemblage of portraits with which it is, as will be seen from our engraving, literally covered. The tapestry here is, as has been said, remarkably fine, and is very early, some of it bearing the date of 1-178. It was brought from the old mansion and from Chatsworth. The gallery is lit by eighteen enormous windows, each 20 feet in height, on its eastern side, which is deeply recessed. In the centre of this side is a gorgeous canopy over the state seat, bearing the monogram of W.D., with a coronet; and on the western side are two gigantic chimney-pieces, reaching from the floor to the cornice, composed of Derbyshire black marble, alabaster, and other marbles, one bearing in the centre of its upper height a finely sculptured figure of Pity, and the other that of Justice. They are said to be the work of " Stephens, a Flemish sculptor, or of Valerio II A RDU ~ICK HA L L . '35 Vicentino." The ceiling is of geometric design, in raised plaster-work ; it gives that finish to the room which is wanting in other of the apartments. The upper portion of the walls, above the wainscoting and arras, is worked in panels and festoons. The furniture is of the most costly and curious character, and in perfect preservation. Much of it, indeed, belongs to the time, or to a time not much later, when tbe house was constructed, and indicates the artistic feeling and The Picture-Gallery . manual dexterity of the foundress. Here are beds of state, with their curtains of black and silver ; Venetian velvets and damascenes ; " cloth of Raynes to slepe on softe," and hangings " raied with gold;" hard cushions of blue baudekyn ; high-seated chairs, covered with samit and powdered with flowers, yet most uncomfortable for use ; screens of crimson velvet, covered with patterns worked in silver wires ; couches, every portion of which is thickly overlaid with threads of silver and of gold ; tables with legs twisted and turned about in the most picturesque manner ; fire-dogs of gorgeous description ; and a magnificent giant-glass, with the arms of Devonshire impaling Ormonde — LIBRARY DEC 4 1891 136 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. these are among the beauties which greet the eye at every turn in its progress through Hard wick. As we said at the commencement of this chapter, there is no place so likely as Hardwick to carry the mind back to those times which we have indicated and to which it belongs. One is unresistingly and forcibly carried by the imagination back to the time of Elizabeth, and while pacing along through these rooms, Ave are led, " in the mind's eye," to people them with the forms of those who lived and moved and had their being within its walls. To the paintings in the picture-gallery and those scattered through the several rooms, the dining-room more especially, we can but make slight reference. They count some hundreds of the finest and most historically interesting portraits of which any mansion can boast. To enumerate them would occupy a dozen of our pages : we must, therefore, be content to say that among them are original portraits of Queen Elizabeth ; of Mary, Queen of Scots ; of Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia ; of Arabella Stuart ; of the foundress of the building, " Bess of Hardwick," afterwards Countess of Shrewsbury ; of Kings Henry VII. and Henry VIII. ; of Georgiana, the " Beautiful Duchess " of Devonshire ; of Robert Boyle, the philosopher ; of the seventh and un- fortunate Earl of Derby ; of Lord Treasurer Burleigh ; of Queen Mary ; of Sir William St. Loe, third husband of " Bess of Hardwick ; " of George, sixth Earl of Shrewsbury; of Henry VJI. and Henry VIII., cartoons by Holbein ; of James V. of Scotland, and his queen ; of Gilbert, Earl of Shrewsbury ; of Mary, Countess of Shrewsbury ; of Lady Grace Talbot ; of several distin- guished members of the Clifford family ; of Queen Catherine of Arragon ; of Christian, Countess of Devonshire ; of Lady Jane Seymour ; of Elizabeth, Countess of Devonshire ; of the first Duke of Ormond ; of Rachel, Duchess of Devonshire ; of Edward Russell, Duke of Bedford ; of John, first Duke of Rutland ; of Henry Fitzalan, Earl of Arundel ; of William, Lord Russell ; of the Marchioness of Hartington ; of Queen Anne ; of Frederick, Prince of Wales ; of King William III. ; of King George III. ; of King James I. ; of Sir Robert Walpole ; of Francis Bacon, Lord Verulam ; of the Princess of Orange ; and of most of the noted men of the time ; of numerous celebrities of the Cavendish family and their alliances ; and of Thomas Hobbes — " Leviathan Hobbes," or " Hobbes of Malmesbury," as he is called. From the leads of Hardwick Hall, which are gained by a spacious staircase, the upper rooms of the towers are reached, and a magnificent view of the surrounding country is obtained. HARDU'ICh' HALL. Having described Hardwick Hall as it now exists, and given a brief history of the noble family of Cavendish to whom it belongs, we resume the subject, to speak of the older mansion, now in ruins ; of the Hardwicks to whom it belonged ; of the marvellous daughter of that house, " Bess of Hardwick," and her alliances ; and of Ault Hucknall, the parish church, and its many monuments, among which is tbat to the great philosopher, " Hobbes of Malmesbury," who lived and died at Hardwick. And, first, as to the family. The family of Hardwick is one of considerable puity in the county of Derby, although now extinct, and was for several generations settled at Hardwick, from which place, indeed, it is probable the name was assumed. In 1203 the manor of Hardwick was granted by King John to Andrew de Beauchamp, but in 1288 it was held of John le Savage — who owned the neighbouring manor of Steynsby, and was probably of the same family as the later Savages, of Castleton and other places — by William de Steynsby, by the annual render of three pounds of cinnamon and one pound of pepper. The grandson of William de Steynsby, John Steynsby, died seized of the manor in 1330. It afterwards passed into the hands of the Hardwicks, and was held by them until it passed to the Cavendishes by the marriage of the heiress to Sir William Cavendish. The first of the Hardwick family known was William, who married the daughter of Goushill, of Barlborough (which family of Goushill, in the time of Henry III., married the heiress of Hathersage, and whose heiress, in the sixteenth century, married Wingfield), and by her had two sons, Roger and William, the latter of whom was living in the thirty-second year of Henry VI. Roger Hardwick, of Hardwick, married the daughter of Robert Barley, of Barley, and had issue by her, John, who succeeded him. John Hardwick, of Hardwick, married Elizabeth, daughter of Henry Bakewell, of Bakewell, one of the co-heiresses of which family married Linacre before the year 1400. By her he had issue, a son, John Hardwick, who, marrying Elizabeth, daughter of — Pinchbeck, of Pinchbeck, was, in turn, succeeded by his son, John Hardwick, who married Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Leake, of Hasland, a younger branch of the 138 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. Leakes, Earls of Scarsdale. By this lady John Hardwick, who died January 24, 1527, had issue, one son and four daughters, viz., John, Mary, Elizabeth, Alice, and Jane. John Hardwick, the last male representative of the family, who was only three years old at his father's death, married Elizabeth, daughter of Philip Draycott, of Paynsley, but died without issue, leaving his sisters his co-heiresses. Of these, Mary married, first, Wingfield, and, second, one of the Pollards, of Devonshire, who was Gentleman Usher to the Queen ; Alice married Francis Leech, of Chatsworth, and died without issue ; Jane married Godfrey Bosville, of Gunthwaite ; and Elizabeth ("Bess of Hardwick") married, first, Robert Barley, of Barley ; second, Sir William Cavendish ; third, Sir William St. Loe ; and fourth, Gilbert, Earl of Shrewsbury. The Francis Leech just named, who married " Bess's " sister Alice, was the last of his family. He sold Chatsworth to Agard, who resold it to the second husband of " Bess," Sir William Cavendish, by whom it was rebuilt in almost regal magnificence. Elizabeth Hardwick was, it will have been seen, one of the co-heiresses of her father, and ultimately heiress to her brother, from whom she inherited Hardwick and other estates. She was a most remarkable, clever, and ac- complished woman, and one of the most successful, in her many marriages, in her acquisition of property, in the alliances of her family, and in the erection of magnificent mansions ; and no account of Hardwick would be complete without, at all events, a brief notice of her extraordinary and brilliant career. When very young — indeed, it is said, when scarcely fourteen years of age — Elizabeth Hardwick became the wife of Robert Barley, of Barley (or Barlow), in the county of Derby, son of Arthur Barley, of Barley-by-Dronfield, by his wife, Elizabeth Chaworth. This young gentleman, who was devotedly at- tached to his young and charming wife, died within a few months after their marriage, leaving his possessions to her. By this short marriage there was no issue. Remaining a young, indeed childlike, widow for some twelve years or thereabouts, she then married Sir William Cavendish, as detailed in our former chapter, and so brought to him the possessions of the Hardwicks, which she had inherited from her father and brother, as well as those of the Barleys, acquired by her first marriage. By Sir William Cavendish she had a family of three sons and three daughters, viz., Henry Cavendish, of Tutbury, ancestor of the Barons Waterpark ; Sir William Cavendish, of Chatsworth, created Baron Cavendish of Hardwick, and Earl of Devonshire, and ancestor of the present Ducal house of Devonshire ; Sir Charles Cavendish, of Bolsover Castle, HARD WICK HALL. no ancestor of the Barons Cavendish, Viscounts Mansfield, Earls, Marquises, and Dukes of Newcastle ; Frances, wife of the Duke of Kingston ; Elizabeth, wife of Charles Stuart, Duke of Lennox, and mother by him of Arabella Stuart ; and Mary, wife of Gilbert, seventh Earl of Shrewsbury. Sir William Cavendish died in 1557, and his lady was thus a second time left a widow. A few years later she married her third husband, Sir William St. Loe, Captain of the Guard to Queen Elizabeth, " owner of a great estate, which," as Bishop Kennett says, " in articles of marriage she took care should be settled on her and her own IBiPlRWSltfi Hardwick Hall, from the Park. heirs, in default of issue ; and, accordingly, having no child by him, she liv'd to enjoy his whole estate, excluding his former daughters and brothers ;" thus adding his property to the already immense possessions she had acquired in her own right and by her two former marriages. The death of Sir William left her for the third time a widow ; but she was soon after wooed and won by George, sixth Earl of Shrewsbury, who had not long before lost his countess, Gertrude Manners, daughter of the Earl of Butland. Before she would con- sent, however, to be united to the first peer of the realm, she stipulated that 140 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. he should give his daughter to her eldest son, and that Gilbert Talbot, his second son (the eldest being already married) should espouse her youngest daughter. These family nuptials were solemnised at Sheffield on the 9th of February, 1567-8 ; her daughter being at the time not quite twelve years old, and her husband being under fifteen. Gilbert Talbot became seventh Earl of Shrewsbury. The history of the events of her life while Countess of Shrewsbury is that of the kingdom at large ; for it was during this time, from 1568 to 1584, that Mary, Queen of Scots, was confided to the care of the earl and his lady, and by them was kept a close prisoner. Into these annals — known by every student of English history — it is not our province now to enter. Suffice it to say, that the wearisome task, imposed by a rigorous and arbitrary sovereign, was executed with a zeal and with a diligence tbat were worthy a far better cause. In 1568 the earl received from his royal mistress tbe intimation of the trust she was about to confide to him, and on the 20th of the following January, 1569, the order for removing Mary from Bolton to Tutbury was made. Here the poor captive was received by the Earl and Countess of Shrewsbury ; and here, kept a close prisoner, sbe remained for several months, passing her time as best she might in needlework. " I asked hir grace," says White, " sence the wether did cutt of all exercises abrode, howe passed the tyme within ? She sayd that all the day she wrought with hir nydill, and that the diversitie of the colours made the worke seme lease tedious, and contynued so long at it till veray payn made hir to give over ; and with that layd hir hand upon hir left syde and complayned of an old grief newely increased there." In June the earl removed her to Wingfield Manor, in Derbyshire, now, like Tutbury itself, a splendid ruin ; and later on in the same year back again to Tutbury. In 1570 Mary was removed to Chatsworth, and from thence to Sheffield, also now a ruin. Here she remained, occasionally staying at Chatsworth for some length of time. In 1584 she was again removed to Wingfield, in 1585 to Tutbury, and in the following j^ear to Chartley, to Fotheringhay, and that fatal block, which will ever remain a dark blot on the escutcheon of "good Queen Bess." It is a somewhat remarkable circum- stance, touching the captivity of Mary under the constableship of the Earl of Shrewsbury, that the places belonging to him where she was confined, Sheffield Castle and Manor, Tutbury Castle, Wingfield Manor, and Chartley (as well as Fotheringhay, where she was executed), have all fallen to ruin, while Chats- worth and other places which belonged to the countess still flourish. HARDWICK HALL. 141 It is not certain, although there is every probability that such was the case, that Mary was ever at Hardwick. There can be but little doubt she spent, at all events, a few days there ; but this would, of course, be at the old Hall, as will be shown later on. The Earl of Shrewsbury, about whom strange rumours regarding his conduct and intentions towards his captive at the time of his discharge from his trust were afloat, and over whom a female domestic, Eleanor Britton, had gained an injurious ascendency, afterwards, in consequence, living a not very happy life with his second countess, died in 1590; and thus "Bess of Hard- wick " became, for the fourth time, a widow. " A change of conditions," says Bishop Kennett, " that, perhaps, never fell to the lot of one woman, to be four times a creditable and happy wife, to rise by every husband into greater wealth and higher honours, to have a numerous issue by one husband only ; to have all those children live, and all, by her advice, be creditably disposed of in her lifetime ; and, after all, to live seventeen years a widow in absolute power and plenty." The countess, besides being one of the most beautiful, accomplished, and captivating women of her day, was, without exception, the most energetic, business-like, and able of her sex. In architecture her conceptions were grand ; while in all matters pertaining to the Arts, and to comforts and elegancies of life, she was unsurpassed. To the old Hall of her fathers, where she was born and resided, she made vast additions — indeed, so much so as almost to amount to a re-creation of the place ; and she entirely planned and built three of the most gorgeous edifices of the time — Hardwick Hall, Chats- worth, and Oldcotes — the first two of which were transmitted entire to the first Duke of Devonshire. " At Hardwick she left the ancient seat of her family standing, and at a small distance, still adjoining to her new fabric, as if she had a mind to preserve her Cradle, and set it by her Bed oj State," as Kennett so poetically expresses it. Her " Bed of State " — the present Hall, erected by her — we have already described. Her " Cradle " — the old Hall, wherein she was born and nursed, but which is now in ruins — we shall describe presently. The latter part of her long and busy life she occupied almost entirely in building, and it is marvellous what an amount of real work — hard figures and 'dry details — she got through; for it is a fact, abundantly evidenced by the original accounts, remaining to this day, that not a penny was expended on her buildings, and not a detail added or taken away, without her special attention J 4 2 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. and personal supervision. Building was a passion with her, and she indulged it wisely and well, sparing neither time, nor trouble, nor outlay, to secure everything being done in the roost admirable manner. It is said, and it is so recorded by Walpole, that the countess had once been told by a gipsy fortune- teller that she would never die so long as she continued building, and she so implicitly believed this, that she never ceased planning and contriving and adding to her erections ; and it is said that at last she died in a hard frost, which totally prevented the workmen from continuing their labours, and so fc IIP mmm The Old Hall at Hard-wick, caused an unavoidable suspension of her works. Surely the fortune-teller here was a "wise woman" in more senses than one; for it was wise and cunning in her to instil such a belief into the countess's mind, and thus insure a con- tinuance of the works by which so many workmen and their families gained a livelihood, and by which later generations would also benefit. Besides Hardwick, Chatsworth (for which a good part of the old Hall at Hardwick was, at a later period, removed), Oldcotes, and other places, the countess founded and built the Devonshire Almshouses at Derby, and did many HARD WICK HALL. 143 other good and noble works. She died, full of years and full of honours and riches, on the 23rd of February, 1607, and was buried in All Saints' Church, Derby, under a stately tomb which she had erected during her lifetime, and on which a long Latin inscription is to be seen. Of the countess — the "Bess of Hardwick," who was one of the greatest of the subjects of that other "Bess" who sat on the throne of England- - portraits are still preserved at Hardwick, and show that she must have been, as Dugdale says of her, " faire and beautiful." Whatever faults of temper or of disposition she had — and she is said to have had plenty of both — she had good qualities which, perhaps, outbalanced them ; and she, at all events, founded one of the most brilliant houses — that of Cavendish — which this nation has ever produced. The old Hall at Hardwick, of the ruins of which we give an engraving, was, in its palmy days, a place of considerable extent and beauty, and from its charming situation — being built on the edge of a rocky eminence overlooking an immense tract of country — must have been a most desirable residence. In it a long line of the ancestors of the countess were born, and lived, and died ; and in it she too was born and lived, as maiden, as four times wife, and four times widow. In it, if Mary, Queen of Scots, was ever at Hardwick, she must have been received, and in it the larger part of the great works of its remarkable owner must have been planned. It was her "home," and her favourite residence ; and it is said that when she began to build the new Hall — which, as we have said, closely adjoins the old one — she still intended making the older building her abode, and keeping the new one for state receptions and purposes of hospitality. This plan, however, if ever laid down, was ultimately discarded, and the old mansion, after all the improvements which had been made in it, was in great measure stripped and dismantled for the requirements of the new Hall, and of Chatsworth. A tolerably good idea of the extent of the ruins of the old Hall will be gained from our engraving, which shows, perhaps, its most imposing side, with the green sward in front. In its interior, several rooms, in a more or less state of dilapidation, still remain, and can be seen by the visitor. The kitchens, with their wide chimneys, and the domestic offices on the ground-floor, amply testify to the almost regal hospitality which must at one time have characterized the place ; while the chambers, the state-rooms, and the other apartments for the family, testify to the magnificence of its appointments. The principal remaining apartment — and of this we give an illustration — is 144 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. at the top of that portion of the building which overlooks the valley. It is called the " Giants' Chamber," taking its name from the two colossal figures in Roman armour, which they term Gog and Magog, in raised plaster- work over the fire-place. This pargetting is bold in the extreme, and in very high relief, and the two figures, between which is a remarkably free and artistic winged figure with a bow, must have had a wondrous effect as they frowned down upon the gay throng assembled in olden times on the rush-strewn floors. The room, which has been wainscoted, is 55 feet inches in length, 30 feet 6 Interior of the Old Hall. inches in width, and 24 feet 6 inches in height ; and of it Bishop Kennett thus speaks : " That old house has one room in it of such exact proportion, and such convenient lights, that it has been thought fit for a pattern of measure and contrivance to the most noble Blenheim." In other apartments, pargetting of the same general character as dis- tinguishes the rooms in Hardwick Hall itself is to be seen over the fire-places. In one place a figure or two ; in another, animals of the chase ; in a third, a moated and fortified building ; in another, armorial bearings ; and in yet HARDJVICK HALL. *45 another, the same motto — now from the dangerous state of the walls and floors not discernible — which occurs on the fine old table described in our last — " The redolent smell of eglantyne We stagges exault to the devyne " — will be noticed, and all of the highest order of workmanship. Of the moated and fortified building just alluded to, we give an engraving on our initial letter, and beneath it, we have added the arms of the present noble house of Cavendish. We have, on a previous page, spoken of the marvellous aptitude for business, and the careful attention to even the minutest details of expenditure, &c, evinced by the Countess of Shrewsbury, and we purpose now to make this a little more evident by giving some particulars of the erection of Hardwick Hall built by her. The Hall, as it now stands — for it is, in every essential part, just as the countess left it — was, it is thought, commenced about the year 1576, and finished in 1599. The book of accounts of the wages paid is very curious and interesting, and gives the names of all the various wallers, ditchers, stone breakers, labourers, &c, with the gardeners, thatchers, moss-getters, &c, employed by the countess between January, 1576, and December, 1580. The accounts are made up every fortnight during that time, and all the items are carefully ticked off with a cross by the countess, and each fortnight's accounts signed by her. Of one of the signatures we have engraved a fac-simile : it reads — " thre ponde hyght pence. E. Shrouesbury." wtlz kroi^/kj^ Of the items of which this fortnight's accounts, amounting only to £3 0s. 8d. are composed, we copy the following : — L 146 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. " This fortnight work hegane one Munday beinge the xxjth of January, viz. : — George Hickete xj days vs. v']d. his mane xj days iijs. viijrf. and his hoy xj days iijs. viijrf. Robert bucknall vj days ijs. his mane vj days x viijf/.' ' In the park are some remarkably fine old oak and other forest trees, round which almost countless herds of deer may be seen browsing. Some of these trees are of gigantic size, of considerable girth, and of great beauty. Hault Hucknall Church. Our engraving on page 189 gives a distant view of the Hall, with some of these fine trees in the foreground. Hault Hucknall (Haute Hucknall, as it is called in the early registers, and Ault Hucknall, as it is now not unfrequently spelt) is the parish in which Hardwick Hall stands ; and it is therefore necessary, especially as the two places are intimately connected in more ways than one, to say a few words about its church and monuments. The church, which is dedicated to St. John the Baptist, formerly belonged to the Abbey of Beauchief, but was, with the HARD WICK HALL. 147 impropriate rectory, granted in 1544 to Francis Leake, from whom it passed to the Cavendishes, and now belongs to the Marquis of Hartington. The church contains some interesting remains of Norman and of Early English work, among which are the aisle under the tower, the window in the west end of the north aisle, and the old plain font, — the font now in use having been brought here from Bamford Church in the same county. In the south wall of the chancel is a pretty little piscina, and there are aumbries in the north aisle and in the Hardwick Chapel. At these places it is supposed altars formerly stood, and one of the altar- stones, with the five crosses emblematic of the five wounds of our Saviour, may be seen forming one of the paving-stones of the floor near the altar-rails. The porch has a vaulted stone-roof, and in the nave are remains of wall-paintings. Some portions of an elegant carved-oak screen which formerly separated the Hardwick Chapel from the south aisle are still preserved, as are also several of the original massive oak benches. In the east window of the Hardwick Chapel, as shown in our engraving, the stained glass represents our Saviour on the cross, with the figures of the Virgin Mary and of St. John, &c. There are also some kneeling figures, and the arms of Hardwick and of Savage. Among the mouuments in this interesting church are some deserving especial attention. In the floor of the chancel is a monumental brass, the figure belonging to which is unfortunately lost, commemorative of Richard Pawson, 1536, sometime vicar of the parish, bearing the following inscription in black letter : — " Orate pro aia domini Ricardi Pawson Vicarii Istius qui obiit die qua Voeavit eu diis post anm dni millesimum quingentesimu tricesimu sextum cujus aie ppioietur deus. A." At the east end of the Hardwick Chapel, beneath the window, as shown in the engraving on the next page, is an elegant tomb, of Derbyshire marble, to the memory of Anne, daughter and co-heiress of Henry Kighley, of Kighley, in Yorkshire, and first wife of the second Sir William Cavendish, created, after her death, Baron Cavendish of Hardwick, and Earl of Devonshire. She was the mother of William, second Earl of Devonshire, and Gilbert Cavendish, author of " Horae Subsecivae," Frances, wife of Lord Maynard, and James, Mary, and Elizabeth, who all died young. Tbe most interesting tomb, however, in this pretty church, is that of l 2 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGL AX D. Thomas Hobbes, who is best known as " Hobbes, of Malrnesbury," or as " Leviathan Hobbes." The monument to this great " philosopher " and free- The Grave of Hobbes of Malrnesbury in Hault Hucknall Church. thinker is a plain slab of stone in the Hard wick Chapel — the raised slab shown on the floor in this engraving — which bears the following inscription : — COXDITA HIC SUNT OSS A THOMiE HOBBE S, MALMESBURIEN8I8, QVI PER MULTOS ANNOS SERVIVIT DUOBUS DEVONIiE COM1TIBUS PATRI ET FILIO YIR PROBUS, ET FAMA ERUDITIONI8 DOMI FORISQl'E BENE COGNITUS OMIT ANN DOMINI 1679, MENBIS DECEMBRIS DIE 4° -ETATIS SU-2E 91. HARD WICK HALL. i 4 q Before speaking of Hobbes and bis connection witb Hardwick, wbere he died, it will be well to note that the parish registers of Hault Hucknall com- mence in the year 1662, and that tbe entry regarding the burial of Hobbes, for the copy of which we have to express our thanks to the Rev. Henry Cottingham, the respected vicar of the parish, is as follows : — ■ " Anno Regni \ Law. Waine, ( James Hardwick, Caroli Sucund \ Vicar. \ Thomas "Whitehead, Anno dom. 1679. Churchwardens. "Hardwick | Thomas Hottbs Magnus Philosophus, Sepul. fuit, et affidavit in Lana Sepoliendo exhibit. Decern. 6" (or 8). Thomas Hobbes * was born at Malmesbury on Good Friday, 1588, in the year of "the Spanish Armada," and it is said that his birth was hastened by his mother's terror of the enemy's fleet, and that a timidity with which through life be was afflicted was thus induced. He and fear, he was wont to say, " were born together." His being born on (rood Friday has also been turned to account in the way of accounting for his wonderful precocity as a child, and his subsequent intellectual progress. At the age of fifteen he was sent to Oxford, and there made such progress that before he was twenty years old he was taken into the service of Sir William Cavendish, who had a few years before been created Baron Cavendish of Hardwick, as tutor to his sons, Gilbert, who died before attaining his majority, and William, who became second Earl of Devonshire. With the latter young nobleman, who married, as already narrated, Christian, daughter of Lord Bruce, of Kinloss, Hobbes travelled through France and Italy. At his death he left, besides other issue, William, Lord Cavendish, who succeeded him as Earl of Devon- shire, and who, at that time, was only in the tenth year of his age. This Lord Hardwick was, as his father had been before him, placed under the tuition of Hobbes, " who instructed him in the family for three years, and then, about 1634, travelled with him as his governor into France and Italy, with the longest stay in Paris for all the politer parts of breeding. He returned in 1637, and, when he soon after came of age, his mother (Christian, Countess of Devonshire), delivered up to him his great houses in Derbyshire all ready furnished." • A further notice of Hobbes and his works wiU be found in our account of Chatsworth, on a subsequent page. ISO THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. With this nobleman (who married Elizabeth, daughter of the Earl of Salisbury, and was succeeded by his son, afterwards created Duke of Devon- shire) Thomas Hobbes remained for the rest of his life. "The earl for his whole life entertained Mr. Hobbes in his family as his old tutor rather than as his friend or confidant ; he let him live under his roof in ease and plenty and his own way, without making use of him in any publick or so much as domestick affairs. He would often express an abhorrence of some of his principles in policy and religion ; and both he and his lady would frequently put off the mention of his name and say ' He was an humourist, and that nobody could account for him.' " Of Hobbes's works — of his " De Cive," his "Leviathan," his " Elemens Philosophiques de Citoyen," his "Behemoth," or his hundred other writings — it is, of course, not here our province to speak ; but one of his smaller pro- ductions, because of its connection with the family of his noble patron, his " De Mirabilibus Pecci," may claim a passing word. This is a Latin poem descriptive of the " Wonders of the Peak, in Derbyshire " — the same subject which Charles Cotton, later on, wrote upon in his " Wonders of the Peak " — wherein Hobbes describes a tour which he, with a friend, took on horseback, starting from Chatsworth, where he was residing, and visiting Pilsley, Hassop, Hope, Castleton, Peak Forest, Eldon Hole, the Ebbing and Flowing Well, Buxton, Poole's Hole, Chelmorton, Sheldon, Ashford, and so back to Chats- worth, quaintly describing all he saw on his journey. If the earl was attached to Hobbes, he was at least amply repaid by the devotion and fondness his old tutor showed to him and to his family. Indeed, 60 intimate was the old man with the family of his patron, that whenever the earl removed from one of his houses to another, Hobbes accompanied them, even to the last of his long life. " There is a tradition in the family," said Bishop Kennett, in 1707, " of the manners and customs of Mr. Hobbes some- what observable. His professed rule of health was to dedicate the morning to his health and the afternoon to his studies. And therefore at his first rising he walk'd out and climb'd any hill within his reach ; or, if the weather was not dry, he fatigued himself within doors by some exercise or other to be in a sweat ; recommending that practice upon this opinion, that an old man had more moisture than heat, and therefore by such motion heat was to be acquired and moisture expelled. After this he took a comfortable breakfast, and then went round the lodgings to wait upon the earl, the countess, and the children, and any considerable strangers, paying some short address to all of HARD WICK HALL. them." ..." Towards the end of his life be had very few books, and those he read but very little, thinking he was now only to digest what formerly he had fed upon. If company came to visit him, he would be free in discourse till he was pressed or contradicted, and then he had the infirmities of being short and peevish, and referring to his writings for better satisfaction. His friends, -who had the liberty of introducing strangers to him, made these terms with them before their admission— that they should not dispute with the old man, nor contradict him." Thus lived Hobbes, whether at Hardwick or at Chatsworth, and thus were all his foibles kindly looked upon and administered to, and his life made happy by allowing him in everything — even his attendance on worship in the private chapel, and his leaving before the sermon — to have, literally, "his own way." In December, 1679, the earl and countess went from Chatsworth to Hardwick Hall, probably with the intention of keeping up their Christmas festivities there, and even at that time the old man — for he was ninety-one years of age — would accompany them. " He could not endure to be left in an empty house, and whenever the earl removed he would go along with him, even to his last stage from Chatsworth to Hardwick ; when in a very weak condition he dared not be left behind, but made his way upon a feather bed in a coach, though he survived the journey but a few days. He could not bear any discourse of death, and seemed to cast off all thoughts of it. He delighted to reckon upon long life. The winter before he died he had made a warmer coat, which he said must last him three years, and then he would have such another. In his last sickness his frequent questions were whether his disease was curable ; and when intima- tions were given that he might have ease, but no remedy, he used this expression : — ' I shall be glad then to find a hole to creep out of the world at ; ' which are reported to have been his last sensible words, and his lying some days following in a silent stupefaction did seem owing to his mind more than to his body. The only thought of death that he appeared to entertain in time of health was to take care of some inscription on his grave. He would suffer some friends to dictate an epitaph, among which he was best pleased with this honour, ' This is the true philosopher s stone ; ' which, indeed," adds the bishop, " would have had as much religion in it as that which now remains," and of which we have just given a copy. As we have already remarked, it is not our business to discuss the political or philosophical principles which Hobbes expressed in his writings: these, 1 52 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. both in and after his time, were the subject of much controversy. We may, however, remark that it was well for those who were committed to his tutelage and close companionship, that their minds do not seem to have been corrupted by his avowed rejection, not only of the Christian faith, but apparently of any faith at all in the existence of a Deity. Nowhere — and he had abundance of opportunity in some, at least, of his voluminous writings — does he show any glimmering even of religious belief; and the history of his latest years, and the last expression which proceeded from his mouth, testify to his fear of death, and his dislike to have the subject mentioned in his hearing. A mere materialist would not thus have been " subject to bondage," inasmuch as the conviction of utter annihilation must remove all ground of apprehension regarding the " something after death." Hobbes closed his eyes a resolute doubter, if not an actual disbeliever ; and no ray of comfort or of hope came to brighten his last moments as he passed into the world of spirits to exchange uncertainty for certainty, the mortal for the immortal. The late Sir William Molesworth endeavoured to rekindle some interest in Hobbes's writings by republishing an edition of his works : happily, the attempt was a failure, so far, we believe, as to any extensive sale of the poison contained in them. Externally, Hault Hucknall Church, although highly picturesque and venerable in appearance, presents not many striking features. The tower, which stands between nave and chancel, was probably terminated by a spire — the upper remaining part being of much later date than the lower. We have thus described the seat, next in importance to that of Chatsworth, of the long-descended and long-ennobled family of Cavendish. Their principal residence, Chatsworth, we describe and illustrate in another part of this volume. AKUXDEL CASTLE. RUNDEL CASTLE takes high rank among the "Stately Homes of England." Some of its more prominent features we present to our readers. Of very remote antiquity — for it traces back to a period long anterior to the Conquest ; deeply inte- resting in its historical associations — for it has played a leading part in the principal events of the kingdom ; and of great importance in its family connections — for a long line of noble and illustrious names, from the reign of Alfred the Great to our own time, are associated with its history — Arundel stands, a proud monument of England's greatness, and of the beauty of England's fair domains. The manor of Arundel was, it is stated, given in the will of Alfred the Great (" ^Ethelme mines brotber suna thone ham set Ealdingburnam, & set Cumtune, & set Crundellan, & set Beadingum, & ast Beadingahamme, & set Burn- ham, & set Thunresfelda, & set .Escenguin") to his nephew, .Ethelm, the son of his brother. To Earl Godwine, and to King Harold, it is also stated successively to have passed. At the time of the Norman Conquest the possessions and the earldoms of Arundel, Chichester, and Shrewsbury, were given to Roger de Montgomery, a relative of the Conqueror, and " one of the council which formed the invasion of England, leading the centre of the army in that famous battle of Battle Abbey, wherein the crown accrued to the Norman." He commanded the centre army of archers and light infantry in the decisive battle ; and to his i 5 4 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. superior skill in military tactics was principally owing the successful issue. To requite him for his valuable services, and place him in a position of advantage, the Conqueror established him at Arundel in all the magnificence of the age. Of his immense possessions, those by which he was immediately surrounded constituted three lordships, ten hundreds and their courts and suits of service, eighteen parks, and seventy-seven manors. He took a prominent part in affairs of state, both in the reign of the Conqueror and in that of William Rufus, and at last entered the monastery at Shrewsbury, which he had founded, and where he died. He was succeeded in his posses- sions in Normandy by his eldest son, Robert, Comte de Belesme, and in his English earldoms and possessions by his youngest son, Hugh, who led a turbulent life, and met with a premature death at Anglesea, in repulsing the descent made by Magnus, King of Norway, on that island ; he was shot from his horse by an arrow, which pierced through his brain. On the death of Hugh, his elder brother, Robert, came over from Normandy to claim the earldoms and inheritance, to which, on paying a heavy fine, he succeeded. " He was a cruel, crafty, and subtle man, but powerful in arms, and eloquent in speech, and for fifteen years seldom out of rebellion ; till at length peace being made between the king and his competitor, he was called to account for all his actions, but shifted away and fortified his castles, which the king (Henry I.) besieged, and forced him to sue for clemency, which was granted ; but all his possessions were seized, and himself banished." He ultimately died in Warwick Castle — the earldoms reverting to the crown. Before tracing the descent to a later time, a word on the derivation of the name Arundel may not be out of place. It has been conjectured to be derived from various sources. Thus, Hirundelle, from Hirundo, a swallow ; from the name of a famous horse, Hirondclle, which was the favourite of its owner, one Sir Bevis, wbo is said to have been warder or constable of the castle ; from Arundo, a reed, which grows in the river; from Portus Adurni; and from Arun, the name of the river, and dell, from the valley along which it flows ; as well as from arqf and del, and other sources. * The estates and earldom having reverted to the crown under Henry I., were settled upon that monarch's second wife, Adeliza, daughter of the Duke * In Domesday it is stated that in the time of King Edward the Confessor the Castle of Arundel yielded 40*. for a mill, 20s. for three feasts, and 2f>s. for a pasture. This is of itself sufficient evidence of the high antiquity— going back to Saxon times — of the Castle of Arundel. ARUNDEL CASTLE. ' 155 of Lorraine, who married, for her second husband, William de Albini (son of William de Albini, surnamed Pincerna, who came over with the Conqueror), who is said to have been called " William of the Stronghand," because, when cast into a lion's den — so the story goes, in consequence of his refusal to marry the Queen of France — he seized the lion, thrust his hand into its mouth, and down his throat, and tore out its heart ! He was Lord of Bucken- ham, and one of the most powerful of the barons. In the troublous reign of Stephen, Albini and his royal wife lived at Arundel Castle, and here received the Empress Matilda, daughter of Henry I. by his first wife, and mother of Henry II., who, with her half-brother, Robert of Gloucester, and a retinue of knights and retainers, remained there for some time. Stephen, on news reaching him of the presence of his rival, the Empress, drew his forces to Arundel, and laid close siege to the castle. Albini, however, not only pre- served his royal guest from violence, but by good generalship or caution, secured for her a safe conduct to Bristol, from which she took ship, and returned to the Continent. Albini was, subsequently, the meditator between Stephen and the son of Queen Matilda, Henry, afterwards Henry II., by which the crown was secured to that prinee and his heirs, and so brought about a happy peace. For his loyalty and good services he was, by Henry II., confirmed in the estates and titles he had enjoyed through his wife Queen Adeliza, and was, in addition to the earldoms of Arundel and Chichester, created Earl of Sussex. Besides taking a very prominent part in most affairs of the nation, Albini was one of the deputation to the Pope in the matter of the king's dispute with A'Beckett ; was sent to conduct the daughter of Matilda into Germany on her marriage with the Duke of Saxony ; was one of the king's trustees to the treaty of the marriage of Prince John to the daughter of the Count of Savoy ; and commanded the royal forces against the rebellious princes, taking prisoners the Earl of Leicester, and his countess, and all the retinue of knights. He and his wife founded the Priory of Calceto, near Arundel ; built the Abbey of Buckenham ; endowed prebends in Win- chester ; founded the Priory of Pynham, near Arundel ; and the Chapel of St. Thomas at Wymondham. This earl having, in conjunction with his wife, founded the Priory of Calceto, near Arundel, granted its priors many privileges : among which were an annual allowance of timber for the repairs of the bridge, and a right of pasturage for cattle in common with the burgesses of Arundel. At the dissolution of the monasteries, the office of bridge-warden, previously held by the friars, devolved on the Mayor of Arundel, who still continues the '56 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. office. The meadows were retained in the possession of the burgesses, and are still held by them. He died in 1176, and was succeeded by his eldest son (or grandson), William de Albini, who married Maud, widow of the Earl of Clare, by whom he had issue, two sons, William and Hugh, and six daughters. He was succeeded by his eldest son, William, who, dying without issue, was succeeded by his brother, Hugh de Albini, the youngest son, who married Isabel, daughter to the Earl of Warren and Surrey, but died with- out issue. The estates then passed to his sisters and co-heiresses ; that of Arundel descending to John Fitzalan, son of the second sister of Hugh de Albini, by her husband, John Fitzalan, Baron of Clun and Oswestry. Tlie Quadrangle, Arundel Castle. He was succeeded in the earldom and estates by his son, John, who dying two years afterwards, was succeeded by his son, Eichard, then only five years of age. That nobleman greatly improved the Castle of Arundel, and is thus described in " the Siege of Caerlaverock : " — " Eichard. the Earl of Arundel, A well-beloved and handsome knight, In crimson surcoat marked, and well With gold and rampant lion dight." ARUNDEL CASTLE. 157 In 1302 King Edward I. was the guest of the earl, at Arundel, and at that time created Arundel a borough, and granted the earl certain privileges, of taxes, &c, for the purpose of fortifying it. He was succeeded by his son, Edmund Fitzalan, who, being taken prisoner by Mortimer, was beheaded at Hereford. He was succeeded by his son, Richard Fitzalan, to whom Arundel Castle, which had, on the execution of the last earl, been giving to the Earl of Kent, was restored, as were also the baronies of Fitzalan, Clun, and Oswestry. He led an active and useful life, and distinguished himself at Crescy, Vannes, Thouars, and other places, and founded a chantry of six priests at Arundel. He was succeeded by his son, Richard, in his titles and estates ; he died on the scaffold, in Cheapside, in 1397, the king, Richard II., being present at the execution. Ten days afterwards, " it being bruited abroad for a miracle that his head should be grown to his bodye againe," the king sent, secretly, by night, " certaine nobilitye to see his bodie taken up, that he might be certified of the truth, which done, and perceiving that it was a fable," he had the grave closed up again. Through this attainder Arundel reverted to the crown, and was given to the Duke of Exeter. The earl was succeeded by his son, Thomas Fitzalan, who was, by Henry IV., restored both in blood and in all his possessions and titles. He held, among other important offices, those of Warden of the Cinque Ports, Con- stable of Dover Castle, and Lord High Treasurer of England. He married, in the presence of the king and queen, Beatrix, daughter of John, King of Portugal, but died without issue, when the Arundel estate passed, by entail, to his cousin, Sir John Fitzalan (or Arundel, as he called himself), Lord Maltravers. His son, John, succeeded him as Baron Maltravers and Earl of Arundel, and was created Duke of Touraine, but being wounded before Beavois, was carried prisoner to tbat place, where he died, and was suc- ceeded by his son, Humphrey, who died a minor. The title and estates then passed to the brother of Earl John, William Fitzalan, who, in his turn, was succeeded by his son, Thomas, who again was succeeded by his son, William, who died in 1543. This nobleman was succeeded in his titles and estates by his son, Henry Fitzalan, who in the four reigns of Henry VIII., Edward VI., Mary, and Elizabeth, led a most eventful life, holding many important offices, and acquitted himself nobly in all. He left issue, two daughters (his only son having died a minor in his father's lifetime), Joan, married to Lord Luinley, and Mary, married to Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk. But the latter lady having died after giving birth to a son, Philip Howard, and the other, Lady i 5 8 THE STA TEL Y HOMES OF ENGLAND. Lumley, having been married twenty years without issue, the earl entailed the estates, &c, on Lord and Lady Lumley for their lives, and then to Philip Howard, the son of his sister Mary. Thus ended the Fitzalan family, and from that time the titles and estates have belonged to the ducal family of Howard. Philip Howard, so christened after Philip I., of Spain, one of his godfathers, was only son by his first wife, Mary, daughter of the Earl of Arundel, of Entrance Gate— from the Interior. Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk, who was beheaded for high treason in 1572. The title of Duke of Norfolk being lost by his attainder, Philip Howard did not enjoy it, but was Earl of Arundel and Surrey. Ho was also unjustly attainted, was tried for high treason, sentenced for execution, but ultimately died, during his imprisonment, in the Tower. This ill-fated young nobleman had married Anne, daughter and heiress of Lord Dacres of Gilles- land, by whom he had an only child, born after he was cast into prison, and who succeeded him. This was Thomas Howard, the celebrated Earl of ARUNDEL CASTLE. "59 Arundel and Surrey (and afterwards Earl of Norfolk), whose brilliant career and high attainments are matters of history. His lordship, who is so well known as the founder of the collection of marbles, &c, married the Lady Alatbea Talbot, daughter and one of the co-heiresses of Gilbert Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury, by whom he had issue, Henry Frederick, Lord Mowbray and Maltravers (who succeeded him), Sir William Howard, ancestor of the Earls of Stafford, and James, Thomas, Gilbert, and Charles, wbo all died unmarried. Henry Frederick, the eldest son, who, during his father's lifetime, bad been called to the Upper House by the title of Baron Mowbray and Maltravers, married the Lady Elizabeth Stuart, eldest daughter of the Duke of Lennox, of the blood royal, for which, for a time, he incurred the displeasure of his Majesty, and, with his lady, was placed in confinement. He had issue, ten sons and three daughters. These sons were, Thomas, who succeeded him ; Henry ; Pbilip, who became a cardinal, and was variously styled Cardinal of Norfolk and Cardinal of England ; Charles, who married Mary Tattershall and founded the Greystocke line ; Talbot, Edward, and Francis, who died unmarried ; Bernard, who married Catherine Tattershall ; and two others. Tbomas Howard, who succeeded his father as Earl of Arundel, Surrey, and Norfolk, &c, had restored to him, and to the heirs male of himself and his father, the dukedom of Norfolk and all the honours belonging to that title. He thus became fifth Duke of Norfolk, a title which has continued without further interruption till the present time. He died unmarried in 1677, when the title and estates passed to his brother Henry, sixth Duke of Norfolk, who had been previously created a peer by the title of Baron Howard of Castle Rising, Earl of Norwich, and Earl Marshal of England. He married, first, Lady Anne Somerset, daughter of the Marquis of Worcester, and by her had issue, two sons and three daughters ; and secondly, Grace Bickerton, by whom he had three sons and three daughters. Dying in 1684, he was succeeded by his eldest son, Henry Howard (who had been summoned to Parliament in his father's lifetime as Baron Mowbray), as seventh Duke of Norfolk, who was one of the supporters of the Prince of Orange. He married the Lady Mary Mordaunt, daughter of the Earl of Peterborough, from whom he was divorced in 1700, but died without issue in 1701, when the title and estates passed to his nephew — Thomas, eighth Duke of Norfolk, who married Mary, daughter of Sir Nicholas Sherburn, by whom he had no issue ; and dying in 1732, was suc- ceeded, as ninth Duke of Norfolk, by his brother Edward, who married, in i6o THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. 1727, Mary Blount, but died without issue in 1777, at the age of ninety-one. The titles and estates then passed to a distant member of the family, his third cousin, Charles Howard, of the Greystocke family, who thus became tenth Duke of Norfolk. He married Catherine, daughter of John Brocholes, Esq., and by her had issue, besides a daughter who died young, one son, Charles, who succeeded him, as eleventh Duke of Norfolk, in 1786. This nobleman, who was the restorer, or rebuilder, of Arundel Castle — a man of considerable literary and scientific attainments — married, first, Mary Tin- Keep. Anne Copinger, and second, Frances Scudamore, but had no issue by either. He was succeeded by his relative, Bernard Edward Howard, as twelfth Duke of Norfolk, who, marrying the Lady Elizabeth Belasyse, daughter of Earl Faulconberg (from whom he was divorced), had an only son, Henry Charles, who succeeded him in 1842. Henry Charles, thirteenth duke, who was born in 1791, married, in 1814, the Lady Charlotte Leveson Gower, daughter of the Duke of Sutherland (she ARUNDEL CASTLE. 161 is still living), by whom he had issue, Henry Granville, Earl of Surrey, who succeeded him ; Lord Edward George Fitzalan Howard, of Glossop Hall, Derbyshire, created, 1869, "Baron Howard, of Glossop;" Lord Bernard Thomas ; and the Ladies Mary Charlotte and Adeliza Matilda. His Grace died in 1856, and was succeeded as fourteenth duke by his eldest son, Henry Granville Fitzalan-Howard (who had assumed, by royal sign-manual, in 1842, the surname of Fitzalan before that of Howard). He married, in 1839, Augusta Mary Minna Catherine, daughter of the first Baron Lyons (she still survives), by whom he had issue, two sons, viz., Henry Fitzalan-Howard, the present Duke of Norfolk, and Lord Edward Bernard Fitzalan-Howard ; and seven daughters, viz., the Lady Victoria Alexandrina, born 1840, and married in 1861 to James Robert Hope-Scott, Esq., Q.C. ; the Lady Minna Charlotte, born 1843 ; the Lady Mary Adeliza, born 1845 ; the Lady Ethelreda, born 1849 ; the Lady Philippa, born 1852 ; the Lady Anne, born 1857 ; and the Lady Margaret, born 1860. During the life of this nobleman, who was universally beloved and respected, her Majesty Queen Victoria and the Prince Consort paid a visit of three days to Arundel Castle, where the reception was kept up with regal magnificence. His Grace died in 1860, and was succeeded by his eldest son, then in his thirteenth year. The present peer, his Grace Henry Fitzalan-Howard, fifteenth Duke of Norfolk, Earl of Arundel, Earl of Surrey, Earl of Norfolk, Baron Maltravers, Baron Fitzalan, Baron Clun, Baron Oswestry, Premier Duke and Earl next to the blood royal, Hereditary Earl Marshal, and Chief Butler of England, was born on the 27th of December, 1847, and attained his majority in 1868. His grace is unmarried. He is the patron of seven livings ; but, " being a Roman Catholic, cannot present." The arms of the Duke of Norfolk are — Quarterly : first, gules, on a bend between six cross-crosslets, fitchee, argent, an escutcheon, or, charged with a demi-lion rampant, pierced through the mouth with an arrow, within a double tressure, flory counter-flory, all gules, for Howard ; second, the arms of England (gules, three lions passant guardant, or), charged with a label of three points, argent, for difference, for Plantagenet ; third, chequy, or and azure, for Warren ; fourth, gules, a lion rampant, argent, for Mowbray. Crest, on a chapeau gules, turned up, ermine, a lion statant-guardant, or ducally gorged, argent. Behind the arms two marshal's staves in saltire, or, enamelled at each end, sable. Supporters :— on the dexter side a lion, argent, and on the H 1 62 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. sinister, a horse of the same, holding in his mouth a slip of oak, fructed, proper. The motto is " Sola Virtus Invicta." Thus having briefly traced the history of the house of Howard, so far as the main line connected with Arundel Castle is concerned, we turn our attention to some of the many beauties and attractions of the domain of Arundel. In situation, as a fortress, few sites were so well chosen as that of Arundel Castle. At the southern extremity of the elevated platform on which it stands a strong wall enclosed the inner court, containing upwards of five acres ; on the north-east and south-east a precipitous dip of the hill to ninety feet, rendered tbe castle inaccessible. On the remaining sides a deep fosse, protected on the north by a double vallation, and cutting off all external com- munication in that direction, secured the garrison from any sudden incursion or surprise. In the centre rose the Donjon, or Keep, circular in form, enormous in strength, crowning a lofty artificial mound, and commanding a wide and uninterrupted view of all the neighbouring approaches. "The walls, from eight to ten feet in thickness, enclosed a nearly circular space of more than sixty feet in diameter, and of great height — the apartments being all lit from the central well-staircase, and there being no loop-holes in the walls. This Keep — which still stands in all its venerable and hoary age — is supposed to have been built by Alfred the Great, and to have been recased in Norman times, when the present doorway was made. To the same period belongs a portion of the tower near it, and which is connected with the Keep by a covered passage carried across the moat. The Barbican, or Bevis's Tower, occupying the north-west side of the ditch surrounding the Keep, has also some good Norman features, and it, as well as the Keep covered with luxuriant ivy, and the old entrance, built by Fitzalan, form the most interesting and picturesque portions of the venerable place." The entrance to the castle at the present time is at the top of High Street. The approach is enclosed by embattled walls with turrets, and the entrance gateway, surmounted by a portcullis and the arms of Howard, is between two massive embattled towers : of this gateway we give an engraving, taken from the interior. Following the carriage-way, the visitor arrives at the entrance to the grand quadrangle, a massive and lofty arched gateway flanked by two towers. Passing through this gateway the appearance of the castle is grand and imposing. On the right of the gateway is the Chapel, and adjoining it is the Baron's Hall, or Banqueting Chamber ; on the south side is the grand, ARUXDEL CASTLE. 163 or state entrance ; and in the north-east wing is the Library, &c. None of these buildings, however, are of ancient times. One of the first objects that will be noticed by the visitor is a bas-relief, which occupies a large space in the front wall of the Alfred Saloon, next to the Great Library. It represents Alfred the Great instituting, or founding, trial by jury — the king himself standing in the centre surrounded by his nobles and people, and delivering a scroll, which he holds in his hand, bearing the words, in Saxon characters, " That man fioebbe gemot on oelcum Wapen- tace " (That man, in every hundred (Wapentake), shall find twelve jury). It was designed by Eossi, a sculptor of modern time. The castle is entered from this quadrangle or court-yard, by the grand entrance, or state entrance, as it is called. This is a fine modern doorway, of Norman design, in a machicolated central tower of three stories in height. Over the doorway is a large central window, on each side of which is a colossal figure of Hospitality and Liberty respectively. Over this again are the m 2 1 64 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. arms of the Howards, sculptured, and these again are surmounted by the machi- colations, parapet, &c. Immediately on entering this splendid ducal residence, the visitor reaches the Grand- staircase leading to its various apartments. The Baron's Hall, or Banqueting Chamber, is a remarkably fine, and even gorgeous, apartment. "Its architecture, like that of the chapel, is in the style of the fourteenth century. It is 71 feet in length, by 35 in breadth, lofty in proportion, and, as a whole, produces a striking effect on the spectator." The roof is of Spanish chestnut, elaborately carved, and the sculptures around the walls and on the windows are of elegant design. The stained-glass windows are, however, " the grand attraction, for in these the story of English freedom is brilliantly told. They are thirteen in number. The great window illustrates the ratification of the great charter by King John, who seems to pause in the act of affixing his signature to the instru- ment." Behind him are several prelates, while to his right are the Pope's Legate and the Archbishop of Dublin, and, to his left, Cardinal Langton. There are also Baron Fitzwalter, the Master of the Knights Templars, the Lord Mayor, and others. In the other windows, which were superbly executed by Eginton, one of the best of our artists in stained glass, are full-length figures of eight barons of the Norfolk family, who aided in procuring the charter — the heads, however, as well as those in the large window, being portraits of members of the Howard family of the beginning of the present century, at which time the windows were executed. On the walls are several fine suits of armour, &c. This magnificent hall was first opened on the 15th of June, 1815, being the 600th anniversary of the signing of the charter. The Great Drawing-Room is a noble apartment, commanding a magnificent and extensive view of the valley of the Arun, and the surrounding country. In it is a large collection of family portraits, among which are Thomas Howard, Earl of Surrey, vindicating himself (" Sire, he was my crowned king. If the authority of Parliament had placed the crown on that stake, I would have fought for it. Let it place it on your head and you will find me as ready in your defence ") before Henry VII. for the part he took at the battle of Bosworth field ; John, Duke of Norfolk, who fell at Boswortb, and who is generally known as " Jocky of Norfolk," from the rude couplet : — " Jocky of Norfolk, be not too bold, For Dickon thy master is bought and sold " — which was found written on his gate, as a warning, on the morning when he set out on his fatal expedition ; Henry, Eaid of Surrey, the great poet of his ARUNDEL CASTLE. 165 age, " who was not only the ornament of the court of Henry VIII., which he attended in the capacity of companion to the Duke of Richmond, but of the still more brilliant and chivalrous court of Francis I. His travels on the Continent were those of a scholar and knight-errant ; and the vision which he had in Agrippa's magic mirror of his lady-love, the ' Fair Geraldine,' whom he has so nobly perpetuated in verse, excited in him such a transport of enthu- siasm, that, at a tournament in Florence, he challenged all who could handle a lance — Turk, Saracen, or cannibal — to dispute against him her claims to the supremacy of beauty, and came off victorious : but the well-known hatred of the tyrant Henry to all the Howards prematurely extinguished this bright promise of excellence, and Surrey, the last victim of the royal murderer, perished on the scaffold at the early age of twenty-seven : " — " Who has not heard of Surrey's fame X His was the hero's soul of fire, And his the bard's immortal name." In 1547, he was beheaded on Tower Hill. One of the dark blots on British history, was the execution of this true hero of the pen and sword. The portraits also include those of Thomas, Duke of Norfolk (by Holbein), who was beheaded, and his wife, Mary Fitzalan ; Henry Fitzalan ; Cardinal Howard; "Belted Will Howard," of whom we shall speak in our account of Castle Howard ; and various other members of this distinguished family. The Dining-Room, formed out of the ancient family chapel, is principally remarkable for its large stained-glass window, the subject of which is the meeting of King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba — the heads being portraits of the twelfth duke and his duchess. On each side is respectively the mercy- seat in the tabernacle, and the interior of the tabernacle. The Library, the building of which was commenced in 1801, is an apart- ment of much magnificence. The book-cases and reading-galleries are sup- ported by fifteen columns, wrought out of the richest Spanish mahogany ; while the spidered roof displays a beauty of workmanship and delicacy of carving, enriched with fruit- foliage, which have seldom been surpassed. It is divided into several compartments for reading recesses, and communicates with the Alfred Saloon by folded doors. The Chapel adjoins the Baron's Hall, and is a chaste and beautiful apartment. 1 66 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. It is not necessary further to describe the interior of the castle ; but it will be well to note that a chamber over the inner gateway enjoys the traditionary fame of having been the sleeping-place of the Empress Matilda. It is a low square apartment, and contains a bedstead which the queen is said to have occupied ; but, unfortunately for the charm of the tradition, it is some centuries later in date than the time in which she lived. Under the east end of the castle is a large vault, upwards of 60 feet in length, the massive walls of which are formed of blocks of chalk, strengthened with ribs of stone, and are of about 7 feet in thickness. This vault was used, of course, as a place of safety for prisoners, and a curious instance of escape from it is recorded. It seems that in the year 1404 one John Mot was here confined on a charge of robbery, but contrived to make his escape. Before he could get clear away, his flight was discovered, and he was followed. Finding himself closely pursued, he suddenly turned to the College of the Holy Trinity, and seizing the ring attached to the gate just as his captors were about to lay hands on him, claimed the right of sanctuary. He was, howevor, forcibly seized, and carried back to prison. Knowledge of the affair reaching the ears of the priests, two of the parties who assisted the constable in making the seizure of Mot were summoned before the bishop, found guilty, and " ordered to make a pilgrimage on foot to the shrine of St. Richard at Chichester, to present an offering there according to their ability, to be cudgelled (fustigati) five times through the church of Arundel, and five times to recite the pater- noster, ave, and creed, upon their knees before the crucifix of the high altar." Before the sentence, however, could be carried into execution, the prisoner was wisely restored to the church, the cudgelling was remitted, and offerings of burning tapers were substituted. A word may be said about the fine old horned owls that at one time gave renown to the Keep — owls of a peculiar breed, and about whom many curious anecdotes have been related. At present, however, they greet the visitors under glass, in cases ; but it is understood that some of their progeny are preparing to take the places in life of the old denizens of the time-honoured ruin. It will be seen that all the inhabited portions of Arundel Castle are of comparatively recent date ; they are fitted up with much judgment and taste, but by no means gorgeously. In one of the lesser chambers are hung some modern drawings of great merit and value, by Prout, Hunt, ARUNDEL CASTLE. 167 Copley Fielding, David Cox, and other artists of the best days of the British school.* The Keep is the great attraction of the castle and domain of Arundel. Though now but a picturesque ruin, it has been prominent in all the internal contests of the kingdom, from the days of Alfred the Great to the reign of the third William. To this relic of a remote age the public are freely admitted ; and a courteous custodier is always at hand to detail its history, and conduct through its winding and tortuous paths from base to summit. Dating from a time certainly anterior to the Conquest, before the applica- tion of " villainous saltpetre," it must have been impregnable — commanding the adjacent country on all sides, and rendering the Arun a mere tributary to the will of its lords ; it had a large share in controlling the destinies of the kingdom during the several civil wars to which it had been subjected. It remains one of the most picturesque of the ruins that in England recall the memories of battles lost and won, of glories continually claimed and resigned by rival competitors, and of heroes whose mortal parts have been dust from ages so remote that their records are read only in " the dim twilight of tradition." The historian, Tierney, states that the Keep probably comprised the prin- cipal feature of the Saxon stronghold. It is of a circular formation, and of immense strength. The height from the bottom of the fosse, on the external side, was 70 feet ; on the internal, 69 ; which, with walls and battlements, produced an elevation altogether of 96 feet on the east ; 103 on the west. The walls varied from 8 to 10 feet, strengthened by ribs and buttresses. The inner space, which is circular, afforded accommodation to the garrison ; in extent it varied from 59 to 67 feet in diameter. In the interior were several chambers, converging towards a subterraneous room in the centre. Differing from other Keeps, it contained no openings or loopholes from which the enemy could be annoyed, and it was only from the ramparts and battlements that the garrison could repel the assaults of the assailant. No traces can be seen of the original Saxon entrance. * It is a curious fact that the ground-rents accruing from streets in the Strand, London— Arundel and Norfolk Streets — are still devoted to the improving and repairing of Arundel Castle. In 1786, consider- able arrears being due, the tenants were called upon to pay them ; but refused, unless it were agreed to devote them, according to ancient tenure, to such improvements and repairs. The then Duke of Norfolk was compelled to yield a matter in serious dispute ; and the result was a thorough restoration of the venerable castle, which, up to that time, had been almost such a ruin as it was left by Sir William Waller during the war between the King and the Parliament. It is said that in these restorations, between the years 1786 and 1816, no less a sum than £600,000 was expended. 168 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. Connected with the Keep is, of course, the Well-tower. Bevis's Tower, the Barbican, is seen immediately underneath, while, at a short distance, is " the Chapel of St. Mary, over the gate." The square building, known as the Clock Tower (introduced in the engraving), and through which a vaulted Norman passage leads to the Keep, dates from a period not long after the Conquest ; parts of it bear unequivocal marks of so early an origin. The upper portion of the building has been renovated ; but the lower portion remains almost as perfect as when com- pleted, as it is said to have been, by the first Earl of Arundel. " The passage abutted to the fosse, and was defended by a portcullis and drawbridge." A window is pointed out from which, a.d. 1139, the Empress Maud, it is said, "scolded" the King, Stephen, who besieged the castle in which she was a guest. The Church of St. Martin forms a portion of the Keep, and some relics of the ancient and venerable structure yet endure. It was the oratory of the garrison, and is " mentioned in Domesday Book as enjoying an annual rent of twelve pence, payable by one of the burgesses of Arundel." From a window of an early date is obtained a view of the castle immediately beneath ; but the prospect of the adjacent country is very beautiful, not only of the fertile land and bountiful river, but of the far-off sea ; and hours may be pleasantly and profitably spent on this mount that time has hallowed. In bidding the pleasant theme farewell, we cannot do better than quote the old ryhme: — " Since William, rose, and Harold fell, There have been counts of Arundel ; And earls old Arundel shall have, While rivers flow and forests wave." It is scarcely necessary to add that the grounds and park are worthy of the castle ; they are especially beautiful, varied in hill and dale— the free river at their base — full of magnificently grown trees, and comprise eleven hundred acres, well stocked with deer. In the park, which was originally the hunting forest of the old Earls of Arundel, will be noticed Hiorn's Tower — a triangular, turreted building, of about 50 feet in height, and designed as a prospect tower by the architect whose name it bears. Near to it is Pugh-Dean, where, it is said, Bevis, the Great Castellan of Arundel, and his famous horse, " Hirondelle," are buried. A mound, covered with a clump of Scotch fir-trees, is pointed out as his ARUNDEL CASTLE. 169 burial-place. Near this place, too, is the site of the old chapel and hermitage of St. James. The old bridge over the river Arun was situated a short distance below the present structure. It is first mentioned in the charter which Queen Adeliza granted to the monks of the Priory de Calceto, in which lands for their support, and an allowance of timber for repairs of the bridge, were granted. It was entirely rebuilt in 1724, principally of stone taken from the ruins of the adjoining hospital. In 1831 it was widened and improved. Xk£c* Church of the Holy Trinity, Arundel. The Church of the Holy Trinity. All that remains of this once famous establishment is a square building "enclosing a square yard, partly occupied by cloisters, and partly devoted to other purposes of a monastic establishment." In it are some splendid monuments to members of the noble families who have owned the place. One of the principal is that of Thomas, Earl of Arundel, and his countess, Beatrix, daughter of John, King of Portugal ; and another striking feature is a canopied tomb near the altar. The Church possesses many highly interesting features, and forms a i 7 o THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. pleasing object in the landscape, from whichever side it is seen. It is cruci- form, and consists of a nave with side aisles, a chancel, and transept ; and in the centre rises a low tower, surmounted by a diminutive spire. The original ecclesiastical foundation was that of the alien priory, or cell, dedicated to St. Nicholas, established by Roger de Montgomery, Earl of Arundel, soon after the Conquest, and subjected to the Benedictine Abbey of Seez, or de Sagio, in Normandy. It consisted only of a prior and three or four monks, who continued to conduct the establishment for nearly three centuries, until the third year of the reign of Richard II., when Richard Fitzalan obtained a licence to extinguish the priory and to found a chantry for the maintenance of a master and twelve secular canons with their officers. Upon this change, it was styled " the Church of the Holy Trinity." At the suppression, it was endowed with a yearly revenue of £263 14s. 9(7. Being intended as the mausoleum of his family, the founder supplied ample means to enrich it with examples of monumental splendour. The tomb of his son, Thomas Fitzalan, and his wife, Beatrix, daughter of John, King of Portugal, was the earliest of those placed in the church. It is of alabaster, finely sculptured, and was formerly painted and gilt. It contains the effigies of the earl and his lady ; at the feet of the earl is a horse, the cognizance of the Fitzalans ; and at those of his lady are two lap-dogs. Around, in niches, are small standing figures of ecclesiastics, or pleureurs, with open books, as performing funeral obsequies ; and above them as many escutcheons. Other stately tombs are erected to the memory of John Fitzalan and his wife, and Thomas Arundel and his wife, " one of the eyres of Richard Woodevyle, Earl Rivers, sister to Elizabeth, Queen of England, sometime wife to King Edward IV." The chapel which contains these monuments is still in a dilapidated state, as was the whole church — " ruinated " during the temporary possession of the Iconoclasts of the Commonwealth — until Henry Charles, Duke of Norfolk, restored it, and put upon it a roof, which it had long been without. Visitors to Arundel will note near the bridge some ancient ruins. Accord- ing to the historian, Tierney, they are the remains of the Maison Dieu, that owed its origin to the same munificence as the collegiate chapel and church. It formed a quadrangle, which was occupied by the chapel, refectory, and its offices, and the various chambers. There was a cloister round the court-yard. Quoting the statutes, " the establishment," says Mr. Tierney, "was to consist of twenty poor men, eith er unmarried or widowers, who, from age, sickness ARUNDEL CASTLE. 171 or infirmity, were unable to provide for their own sustenance. They were to be selected from among the most deserving of the surrounding neighbourhood, giving the preference only to the servants or tenants of the founder and his heirs; they were to be men of moral lives and edifying conversation, and were required, as a qualification for their admission, to know the ' Pater Noster,' the ' Ave-Maria,' and the 'Credo,' in Latin." These buildings were dismantled at the time of the dissolution of the monasteries, and no doubt suffered much at the time of the siege and sack of Tombs of Thomas Fitzalan and Lady Beatrix, Arundel Church. Arundel, during the Civil War, by the Parliamentarians under the command of Sir William Waller ; in 1724 a large quantity of the materials was used in the building of the bridge, that portion only being rescued which is now seen, and which has been preserved by the Duke of Norfolk because of the interest attached to the once sacred structure. Arundel, with its many attractions, is barely two hours distant from London, and within half an hour of populous Brighton ; yet visits of strangers to the old town and venerable castle are comparatively few. PENSHUEST. ENSHUEST— the "Home" of the Sidneys— the stately Sidneys : stately in their character, in their careers, in their patriotism, in their heroism, in their rectitude, and in their verse — is surely one of the best of the Stately Homes of England to be included in our series. The very name of Penshurst seems to call up associations of no ordinary charac- ter connected with that heroic race, and with many of the most stirring incidents of British history. With Penshurst every great name memorable in the Augustan age of England is linked for ever ; while its venerable aspect, the solemnity of the surrounding shades, the primitive character of its vicinity, together with its isolated position — away from the haunts of busy men — are in harmony with the memories it awakens. Here lived the earliest and bravest of the Anglo-Norman knights. Here dwelt the ill-fated Bohuns — the three unhappy Dukes of Buckingham, who perished in succession, one in the field and two on the scaffold. And here flourished the Sidneys ! Here, during his few brief years of absence from turmoil in the turbulent countries of Ireland and Wales, resided the elder Sidney, Sir Henry, who, although his fame has been eclipsed by the more dazzling reputation of his gallant son, was in all respects good as well as great — a good soldier, a good subject, a good master, and a good counsellor and actor under circumstances peculiarly perilous. This is the birthplace of " the darling of his time," the " chiefest jewel of a crown," the " diamond of PENSHURST. 173 the court of Queen Elizabeth." Here, too, was born — and here was interred the mutilated body of — the "later Sidney:" he who had "set up Marcus Brutus for his pattern," and perished on the scaffold — a martyr for the " good old cause," one of the many victims of the meanest and most worthless of his race. With the memories of these three marvellous men — the Sidneys, Henry, Philip, and Algernon — are closely blended those of the worthies of the two most remarkable eras in English history. Who can speak of Penshurst without thinking of Spenser, (" For Sidney heard him sing, and knew his voice,"* of Shakspere, of Ben Jonson — the laureate of the place — of Raleigh, the " friend and frequent guest " of Broke, whose proudest boast is recorded on his tomb, that he was " the servant of Queen Elizabeth, the counsellor of King James, and THE FRIEND of Sir Philip Sidney " — of the many other immortal men who made the reign of Elizabeth- the glory of all time ? Revert- ing to a period less remote, who can think of Penshurst without speaking of the high spirits of a troubled age — " The later Sidney, Marvel, Harrington, Young Vane, and others, who caUed Milton — friend." Although its glory is of the past, and nearly two centuries have intervened between the latest record of "its greatness and its present state ; although it has been silent all that time — a solemn silence, broken only by the false love- note of an unworthy minstrel, for the names of " Waller" and " Sacharissa " discredit rather than glorify its grey walls — who does not turn to Penshurst as to a refreshing fountain by the wayside of wearying history ? The history of the descent of Penshurst to the Sidneys may be summed up in few words— that of the Sidneys themselves will require greater space. It was " the ancient seat of the Pencestres, or Penchesters, who settled here in Norman times,* and one of whom was Sir Stephen, that famous Lord Warden of the Five Ports, and Constable of Dover Castle, who nourished in the reigns * In 1863 Penshurst was visited by the Kent and Sussex Archseological Society, when Mr. Parker, of Oxford (to whom archaeology owes a large debt of gratitude), read a paper descriptive of the seat of the Sidneys. From that paper we shall quote : — " Mr. Parker said that in the time of William the Conqueror there was a house of importance in that place, occupied by a family named after it, Penchester (the castle on the hill), which showed that the house was fortified at that time, doubtless according to the fashion of the age, with deep trenches and mounds and wooden palisades, as represented in the Bayeux tapestry ; and the house within the fortifications must have been a timber house, because if a Norman keep had been there built, there woidd certainly be some remains of it." 174 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. of Henry III. and Edward I., and who was a very learned man, and ordered all the muniments, grants, &c, relating to Dover Castle to be written in a fair book, which he called Castelli Feodarium, and out of which Darell composed the history of that fortress." Dying without male issue, his estates were divided between his two daughters and co-heiresses, Joan, wife of Henry Cobham, and Alice, wife of John de Columbers, to the latter of whom fell Penshurst, &c, which was soon afterwards conveyed to Sir John de Poultney, Penshurst. from the President's Court. who (15th Edward II.) had license to embattle his mansion houses at Pens- hurst and elsewhere. He was four times Lord Mayor of London, and, dying, his widow " married Lovaines, and conveyed these estates into that family with consent of her first husband's immediate heirs ; " and they afterwards passed, by an heiress, to Sir Philip St. Clere, whose son sold them to the Regent Duke of Bedford. On his decease in Paris in the reign of Henry VI., Penshurst and other manors passed to his next brother, Humphrey, the " good PENSHURST. 1 75 Duke of Gloucester," after whose sad death, in 1447, they reverted to the crown, and were, in that same year, granted to the Staffords. On the attainder of Edward, Duke of Buckingham, Penshurst reverted to the Crown. That brilliant nobleman — whose principal crimes were his wealth, his open, manly, and generous nature, and his wise criticisms of the ruinous expenditure on the " field of the cloth of gold " — was treacherously invited to court by the king, and, suspecting no mischief, he obeyed the summons, and set out on his journey from Thornbury, not observing for some time that he was closely followed by three knights of the king's body-guard, " and a secret power of servants-at-arms." His suspicions were first awakened at Windsor, where he lodged for the night, " the same three knights lying close by," and where he was treated with marked disrespect by the king's gentleman harbinger. From Windsor, Buckingham rode on to Westminster, and then took his barge to row down to Greenwich, where the court then was, calling, however, on his way, at York House, to see Cardinal Wolsey, who was denied to him. " Well, yet will I drink of my lord cardinal's wine as I pass," said the duke : " and then a gentleman of my lord cardinal's brought the duke with much reverence into the cellar, where the duke drank ; but when he saw and perceived no cheer to him was made, he changed colour, and departed." Passing forward down the Thames, as he neared the City, his barge was hailed and boarded by Sir Henry Marney, captain of the body-guard, who, in the king's name, attached him as a traitor. He was at once carried on shore and taken through Thames Street to the Tower, " to the great astonishment and regret of the people, to whom he was justly endeared." This was on the 16th of April, 1521. On the 13th of May he was put on his mock trial and was condemned. "I shall never sue the king for life," said he; and he kept his word. On the 17th he was executed, without having once supplicated his brutal king to spare the life he was unjustly taking away. " He was as undaunted in sight of the block as he bad been before his judges ; and he died as brave men die — firmly and meekly, and without bravado." His death was the grief of the people. " God have mercy on his soul, for he was a most wise and noble prince, and the mixTour of all courtesie " — that was written of him at the time. By this detestable piece of royal treachery Henry became possessed of the estates of the duke, and held them in his own hands for several years, enlarging Penshurst Park, and reaping benefit from his unhallowed acquisi- tions. By Edward VI., Penshurst, with its appurtenances, was "granted to 176 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. Sir Ralph Fane, who, within two years, was executed as an accomplice of the Protector Somerset." Soon after this, the young monarch gave Penshurst, with other adjoining estates, to Sir William Sidney, one of the heroes of Flodden Field, " who had been his tutor, chamberlain, and steward of his household from his birth to his coronation." Thus Penshurst came into the family of the Sidneys, con- cerning whom we will proceed to give some particulars. The earliest member of the family of whom aught authentic is known is Sir William Sidney, who lived in the reign of Stephen. His son, Sir Simon (1213), married Margaret, daughter of Sir Thomas Delamere ; and their son again, Sir Roger (1239), married Eleanor, daughter of Sir John Sopham, by whom he had issue two sons, Sir Henry (1268), who succeeded him, and Simon ; and a daughter, married to Sir John Wales. Sir Henry Sidney married Maud, daughter of Robert d'Abernon, and grand-daughter of Sir John d'Abernon. By her he had issue four sons and two daughters, and was succeeded by his eldest son, Sir Henry Sidney, who, marrying a daughter of Sir Ralph Hussey, died in 1306, and was succeeded by his son, Sir William Sidney, who took to wife Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Richard Ashburnham, by whom he had three sons, viz. : William, who married a daughter of John de Altaripa, but died without heirs male; John, who died young; and another John, who succeeded him, and marrying Helen, daughter of Robert Batisford, was the father, by her, of Sir William Sidney. This Sir William took to wife Joanna, daughter of William Brokhull, who married, first, Margaret Orre, and second, Isabell. By his first wife he had issue two sons, John, who succeeded him, and William (of whom presently). This John Sidney had a son John, who married Isabell Payteuine, by whom he had an only daughter and heiress Johanna, who married William Appesley. William Sydney, by his wife, Alicia, daughter and heiress of John Clumford, had one son, William, and four daughters. This William Sidney married Cicely, daughter and co-heiress of Sir John Michell, and Margaret, his wife, who was daughter and heiress of Matham. He was succeeded by his son, William Sidney, who married twice. By his first wife, Isabell St. John, he had a son, William, whose line ended in co-heiresses, married to William Vuedall and John Hampden ; and by his second wife, Thomasen, daughter and heiress of John Barrington, and widow of Lonsford (and who, after Sidney's death, became wife of Lord Hopton), he had issue a son, Nicholas Sidney, who married Anne, cousin and co-heiress of Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk. By her he had a son, Sir William PEXSHURST. Sidney, who married Anne, daughter of Hugh Pagenham, and by her had, besides Sir Henry, who succeeded him, four daughters, viz. : Frances, who became Countess of Sussex by her marriage to Thomas Ratcliffe, Earl of Sussex, Viscount Fitzwalter, Lord Egremont and Burnell, Lord Chamberlain, Knight of the Garter, and one of the Privy Council ; Mary, married to Sir William Dormer ; Lucy, married to Sir James Harrington ; and Anne, married to Sir William Fitzwilliam. This Sir William Sidney was made a knight, 3rd Henry VIII., at the burning of Conquest, and a banneret on Flodden Field, 5th Henry VIII. He was chamberlain to Prince Edward (afterwards Edward VI.), and also steward of his household ; and his wife was " governesse of the sayd prince while he was in his nurse's handes." To him it was that Penshurst was given by Edward VI. as a mark of affectionate regard. Dying in 1553, he was succeeded by his son, Sir Henry Sidney, who was a Knight of the Garter, Lord President of Wales, and one of the Privy Council ; he married Lady Mary, eldest daughter of John, Duke of Northumberland, and 178 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. by her had issue " the incomparable " Sir Philip, and two other sons, Eobert and Thomas, and a daughter, Mary, married to Henry Herbert, Earl of Pem- broke. This Henry Sidney was knighted, 3rd Edward VI., and was, when only twenty-two years of age, sent by that amiable young monarch as ambassador to tbe French court. Under Queen Mary he was Lord Trea- surer of Ireland, and Lord Cbief Justice, and under Elizabeth was, in 1564, made Lord President of the Council in the Marches of Wales ; Knight of the Garter in 1564 ; and was twice Lord Deputy of Ireland and Lord President of Wales. Sir Henry Sidney had been brought up and educated with Edward VI., "being companion and many times the bedfellow of the prince;" and that young king died in his arms. Tbis death so affected Sir Henry, " that he returned to Penshurst to indulge his melancholy. Here he soon afterwards sheltered the ruined family of his father-in-law, the Duke of Northumberland, in whose fall he would in all probability have been implicated but for his retirement." He died at Ludlow, the seat of his government, in 1586 — his heart being tbere buried, but his body was interred with great solemnity, by the queen's order, at Penshurst. The concurring testimony of all historians and biographers, such as Camden, Sir Richard Cox, Campian (in his " His- tory of Ireland"), Hollinshed, Anthony-a-Wood, and Lloyd (in his "State Worthies "), proves the extraordinary courage, abilities, and virtue of Sir Henry Sidney. These qualities made him the most direct and clear politician. He seems to have been incapable of intrigue and the supple arts of the court. " His dispatches are full, open, and manly ; and Ireland, and perhaps Wales, to this day experience the good effects of his wise government." " As the father was, so was the son ;" the son being Sir Philip Sidney, to whom we have alluded. Sir Philip was born at Penshurst, November 29th, 1554. His life was one scene of romance from its commencement to its close. His early years were spent in travel ; and on his return he was married to the daughter of Sir Francis Walsingham, a lady of many accomplishments, and of " extraordinary handsomeness," but his heart was given to another. The Lady Penelope Devereux won it, and kept it till he fell on the field of Zutphen. Family regards had forbidden their marriage, but she was united to the immortal part of him, and that contract has not yet been dissolved. She is still the Philoclea of the "Arcadia," and Stella in the poems ol " Astrophel." It is unnecessary to follow in detail the course of Sir Philip Sidney's life. There is no strange inconsistency to reason off, no stain to clear, PENSHURST. 170 no blame to talk away. We describe it when we name bis accomplisbments ; we remember it as we would a dream of uninterrupted glory. His learning, bis beauty, bis cbivalry, bis grace, sbed a lustre on tbe most glorious reign recorded in tbe Englisb annals. England herself, " by reason of tbe wide- spread fame of Sir Philip Sidney," rose exalted in the eyes of foreign nations — he was the idol, the darling of his own. For with every sort of power at his View from the Garden. command, it was bis creed to think all vain but affection and honour, and to hold the simplest and cheapest pleasures the truest and most precious. The only displeasure he ever incurred at court was when he vindicated the rights and independence of English commoners in his own gallant person against tbe arrogance of English nobles in the person of the Earl of Oxford. For a time, then, he retired from the court, and sought rest in his loved simplicity. He Avent to Wilton ; and there, for the amusement of bis dear sister, Mary, Countess of Pembroke, be wrote, between tbe years 1579 and 1581, the n 2 180 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. " Arcadia," a work whose strange fortune it has been to be too highly valued in one age, and far too underrated in another. Immediately after its publi- cation it was received with unbounded applause. " From it was taken the language of compliment and love; it gave a tinge of similitude to the colloquial and courtly dialect of the time ; and from thence its influence was communi- cated to the lucubrations of the poet, the historian, and the divine." The book is a mixture of what has been termed the heroic and the pastoral romance, interspersed with interludes and episodes, and details the various and mar- vellous adventures of two friends, Musidorus and Pyrocles. It was not intended to be published to the world, but was written merely to pleasure the Countess of Pembroke — " a principal ornament to the family of the Sidneys." The famous epitaph, usually ascribed to the pen of Ben Jonson, though in reality, it appears, written by William Browne, the author of " Britannia's Pastorals," and preserved in a MS. volume of his poems in the Lansdowne Collection in the British Museum, although so well known, will bear repeating here : — " Underneath this sable hearse Lies the subject of all verse, Sidney's sister ! Pembroke's mother ! Death, ere thou hast slain another Fair, and learn'd, and good as she, Time shall throw a dart at thee ! Marble piles let no man raise To her name for after-days ; Some kind woman, born as she, Reading' this, like Niobe, Shall turn marble, and become Both her mourner and her tomb." Again, however, Sidney returned to court, and his queen seized every opportunity to do him honour. He received her smiles with the same high and manly gallantry, the same plain and simple boldness, with which he had taken her frowns. In the end, Elizabeth, who, to preserve this "jewel of her crown," had forcibly laid hands on him when he projected a voyage to America with Sir Francis Drake, and placed her veto on his quitting England when he was offered the crown of Poland, could not restrain his bravery in battle when circumstances called him there. At Zutphen, on the 22nd of September, 1586, he received a mortal wound ; and here occurred the touching incident to which, perhaps, more than to any other circumstance, Sir Philip is indebted for his heroic fame. It is thus related by his friend and biographer, Fulke Greville, Lord Broke : — " In his sad progress, passing along by the rest PENSHURST. 181 of the army, where his uncle, the general, was, and being thirsty from excess of bleeding, he called for drink, which was presently brought him ; but, as he was putting the bottle to his mouth, he saw a poor soldier carried along, who had been wounded at the same time, ghastly, casting up his eyes at the bottle; which Sir Philip perceiving, took it from his head before he drank, and delivered to the poor man with these words : ' Thy necessity is yet greater than mine.' He lived in great pain for many days after he was wounded, and died on the 17th of October, 1586." The close of his life affords a beautiful lesson. " Calmly and steadily he awaited the approach of death. His prayers were long and fervent ; his bearing was indeed that of a Christian hero." He had a noble funeral ; kings clad themselves in garments of grief : a whole people grieved for the loss of the most accomplished scholar, the most graceful courtier, the best soldier, and the worthiest man of the country and the age. He was buried in state, in the old Cathedral of St. Paul, on the 16th of February. Both Universities composed verses to his memory, and so general was the mourning for him, that, " for many months after his death, it was accounted indecent for any gentleman of quality to appear at court or in the city in any light or gaudy apparel." We may place implicit faith in the testimony of the contemporaries of Sir Philip Sidney; and by all of them he is described as very near perfection. Their praises must have been as sincere as they were hearty ; for his fortune was too poor to furnish him with the means to purchase them with other than gifts of kindly zeal, affectionate sympathy, cordial advice, and generous recom- mendations to more prosperous men. From Spenser himself we learn that Sidney " First did lift my muse out of the floor." In his dedication of the " Ruins of Time " to Sidney's sister, he speaks of her brother as " the hope of all learned men, and the patron of my young muse." " He was," writes Camden, "the great glory of his family, the great hope of mankind, the most lively pattern of virtue, and the darling of the learned world." Sir Philip, dying without issue, was succeeded by his brother, Sir Robert Sidney, who was created Lord Sidney of Penshurst, and afterwards Viscount Lisle and Earl of Leicester, and a Knight of the Garter, by James I. He died at Penshurst in July, 1626, and was succeeded in his title and estates by hi$ son, Robert, as second Earl of Leicester. This nobleman was " several times ambassador to foreign courts, and in 1641 was appointed Lord-Lieutenant of THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. Ireland, but, through some unfounded aspersions cast against his fidelity and honour, he was never permitted to seat himself in his new station, and was ultimately dispossessed of it." He retired in disgust to Penshurst, where he spent his time in literary retirement, for he was well read in the classics, and spoke Latin, French, Italian, and Spanish, and purchased most of the curious books in those languages, " and several learned men made him presents of their works." He remained in retirement at Penshurst during the domination The Baron's Court. of the Parliament and the rule of the Protector, and died there in November, 1677, in the eighty-second year of his age. His lordship, who married the Lady Dorothea Percy, had fourteen children, six sons and eight daughters. His eldest son, Philip, succeeded to the title and estates, and lived in troubled times the life of an easy gentleman. Not so the second son, Algernon, the famous scion of the Sidneys, whose name is scarcely less renowned in history than that of his great- uncle, Sir Pbilip. Of the daughters, Lady Dorothea PENSHURST. 183 became Countess of Sunderland, and she was the famous " Sacharissa " of the poet Waller. Waller wooed her in vain ; she estimated the frivolous poet at his true value. He called her " Sacharissa — a name, as he used to say plea- santly, derived from saccharum, sugar." Sacharissa and her lover met long after the spring of life, and on her asking him "when he would write such fine verses on her again?" the poet ungallantly replied, " Oh, madam, when you are as young again !" Algernon Sidney was born at Penshurst, in 1621. He had scarcely reached the age of manhood when he was called upon to play his part in the mighty drama then acting before the world. He joined the Parliament, and became a busy soldier — serving with repute in Ireland, where he was " some time Lieutenant-General of the Horse and Governor of Dublin," until Cromwell assumed the position of a sovereign, when Sidney retired in disgust to the family seat in Kent, and began to write his celebrated " Discourses on Government." At the Restoration he was abroad, and " being so noted a republican," thought it unsafe to return to England ; for seventeen years after this event he was a wanderer throughout Europe, suffering severe privations, " exposed (according to his own words) to all those troubles, inconveniences, and mischiefs into which they are liable who have nothing to subsist upon, in a place farre from home, wheare no assistance can possibly be expected, and wheare I am known to be of a quality which makes all lowe and meane wayes of living shamefull and detestible." The school of adversity failed to subdue the proud spirit of the republican ; and on his return to his native country, 1677, at the entreaty of his father, "who desired to see him before he died," the " later Sidney" became a marked man, whom the depraved Charles and his minions were resolved to sacrifice. He was accused of high treason, implicated in the notorious Rye House Plot, carried through a form of trial on the 21st of November, and beheaded on Tower Hill on the 8th of December, 1683. His execution was a judicial murder. Philip, third earl, lived to a great age, eighty-two, and dying in 1696, was succeeded by his grandson, John, who, dying unmarried, was succeeded suc- cessively by two of his brothers ; the last earl, Jocelyn, died in 1743, without any legitimate issue. He, however, left a natural daughter, afterwards married to Mr. Streatfield, to whom he devised the whole of his estates. His next elder brother, Colonel Thomas Sidney, who died before him, had, how- ever, left two daughters, to whom the estate properly devolved as co-heiresses ; and after a long course of litigation their right was established, and the guardians of the young lady found it necessary to consent to a compromise THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. (sanctioned by Act of Parliament) with the husbands of the two co-heiresses. In the division of the property, Penshurst passed to the younger of the co- heiresses, Elizabeth, wife of William Perry, Esq. (who assumed the name of Sidney), of Turville Park, Buckinghamshire, who repaired the mansion, and added to its collection of pictures. He died in 1757, and his widow, Mrs. Perry- Sidney, was left in sole possession. This lady, after the death of her elder sister, Lady Sherrard, purchased most of the family estates which had fallen to that lady's share. A claim to the estates and title of Earl of Leicester was made by a son of the countess of the last earl (Jocelyn), born after her separation from her husband, but was unsuccessful. Mrs. Perry- Sidney had an only son, Algernon Perry- Sidney, who died during her lifetime, but left two daughters, his and her co-heiresses, to the elder of whom, Elizabeth, who was married to Bysshe Shelley, Esq., Pens- hurst passed. Their son, Sir John Shelley Sidney, Bart., inherited Penshurst and the manors and estates in Kent; he was created a baronet in 1818. He was succeeded as second baronet by his son, Sir Philip Charles Sidney, D.C.L., G.C.H., &c, who was an equerry to the king. He was born in 1800, and in 1825 married the Lady Sophia Fitzclarence, one of the daughters of his Majesty King AVilliam IV. and Mrs. Jordan, and sister to the Earl of Munster. In 1835 he was raised to the peerage by William IV., by the title of Baron de LTsle and Dudley. By his wife, the Lidy Sophia Fitzclarence (who died in 1837), his lordship had issue one son, the present peer, and three daughters, the Honourable Adelaide Augusta Wilhelmina, married to her cousin, the Honourable Frederick Charles George Fitzclarence (who has assumed the name of Hunlocke), son of the first Earl of Munster ; the Honour- able Ernestine Wellington, married to Philip Percival, Esq.; and the Honourable Sophia Philippa. The present noble owner of Penshurst, Philip Sidney, second Baron de L'Isle and Dudley, and a baronet, was born in 1828. He was educated at Eton, and was an officer in the Royal Horse Guards. He is a Deputy- Lieutenant of Kent and of Yorkshire, and Hereditary Visitor of Sidney- Sussex College, Cambridge. His lordship, who succeeded his father in 1851, married, in 1850, Mary, only daughter of Sir William Foulis, Bart., of Ingle by Manor, and has issue living, by her, four sons, the Honourable Philip, the heir- presumptive to the title, born 1853; the Honourable Algernon, born 1854; the Honourable Henry, born 1858 ; and the Honourable AVilliam, born 1859 ; and one daughter, the Honourable Mary Sophia, born 1851. PENSHURST. 185 The arms of Lord de LTsle and Dudley are, quarterly, first and fourth, or, a phoon, azure, for Sidney ; second and third, sable, on a fesse engrailed, between 'three whelk shells, or, a mullet for dhference, for Shelley. Crests, first, a porcupine, statant, azure, quills collar and chain, or, for Sidney; second, a griffin's head erased, argent, ducally gorged, or, for Shelley. Supporters, dexter, a porcupine, azure, quills collar and chain, or; sinister, a lion, queue fourchee, vert. Motto : " Quo Fata Vocant." The Village and Entrance to Churchyard. Penshurst, or, as it is called, Penshurst House, or Castle, or Place, " the seat of the Sidneys," adjoins the village to which it gives a name. It is situated in the weald of Kent, nearly six miles south-west of Tunbridge, and about thirty miles from London. The neighbourhood is remarkably primitive. As an example of the prevailing character of the houses, we have copied a group that stands at the entrance of the churchyard — a small cluster of quiet cottages (recently, however, rebuilt upon the old model), behind which repose the rude i86 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. forefathers of the hamlet, with brave knights of imperishable renown, and near which is an elm of prodigious size and age, that has seen generations after generations flourish and decay. The sluggish Medway creeps lazily round the park, which consists of about 400 acres, finely wooded, and happily diversified with hill and dale. A double row of beech-trees of some extent preserves the name of " Sacharissa's Walk," and a venerable oak, called " Sidney's Oak," the trunk of which is hollowed by time, is pointed out as The Record Tower and the Church, from the Garden. the veritable tree that was planted on the day of Sir Philip's birth ; of which Rare Ben Jonson thus writes : — " That taller tree of which a nut was set At his great birth when all the muses met;" — to which Waller makes reference as " the sacred mark of noble Sidney's birth ; " concerning which Southey also has some lines ; and from which a host of lesser poets have drawn inspiration. PEJVSHURST. 187 Until within the last thirty or forty years Penshurst House was in a sadly dilapidated state. Its utter ruin, indeed, appeared a settled thing, until Lord de L'Isle set himself to the task of its restoration, and under his admir- able direction it rapidly assumed its ancient character — a combination of several styles of architecture, in which the Tudor predominated. One of our views is of the mansion, from the principal approach through the park. In another view the west front is shown, the north front being seen in short per- spective ; on the left is " Sir Henry's Tower," containing his arms, and an inscription stating that he was " Lord Deputie General of the Realm of Ireland in 1579." This tower terminates the north wing, in which is the principal entrance, by an ancient gateway, leading through one of the smaller courts to the great hall. Over this gateway is an antique slab, setting forth that " The most religious and renowned Prince, Edward the Sixt, Kinge of England, France, and Ireland, gave this house of Pencestre with the manors, landes and appurtenaynces thereunto belonginge to, unto his trustye and well-beloved servant, Syr William Sidney, Knight Banneret." We cannot do better than ask our readers to accompany Mr. Parker in his tour through the house. Ascending the staircase on one side of the hall, the company passed through the solar or lord's chamber, at one end of which Mr. Parker thought the chapel had been originally screened oft', and that it was changed into a ball-room in the reign of Queen Anne. The Buckingham Building, which was next visited, was found to have been admirably restored, although it had fallen into a sad state of ruin. Fragments of one of the old windows, however, were discovered, and these enabled the architect to restore it completely. Mr. Parker considered it to be one of the most beautiful instances of restoration he had seen. It gave a most vivid idea of its original state. The company then descended into the lower chamber or parlour of the house of the time of Edward III., which was perfectly preserved, and an excel- lent example of a mediaeval vaulted substructure. Passing to the Elizabethan house, the company entered a suite of rooms elegantly furnished, and con- taining many exceedingly interesting objects. The chairs were of the time of Charles II., of English manufacture, and the best specimens of that date that could be found. There were also a couch of the same period, and an Augsburg clock of the seventeenth century, some very old and valuable paintings, and choice cabinets of carved ebony. Among other curiosities was an illustration of the funeral procession of Sir Philip Sidney. Mr. Parker then drew attention to the exterior architectural style of the Buckingham Building, added in the time THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. of Richard II., and admirably restored by the architect. The recent restora- tion of the Elizabethan Building had also been ably done. The windows were especially noticeable, by the skilful manner in which the work had been executed after the style of fragments of the old work. The Elizabethan front was also an object of much interest. The exterior architecture in the servants' court was a noble composition, full of interest. Thus the " restorations " have been made in good taste and with sound The Hall and Minstrels Gallery. judgment; and the seat of the Sidneys has regained its rank as one of the finest and most extensive edifices in the county of Kent. In the interior the "Hall" is remarkably fine and interesting, with good architectural features. The pointed timber roof, upon which the slates are laid, is supported by a series of grotesque life-size corbels ; and the screen of the gallery is richly carved and panelled. The gallery — "The Minstrels' Gallery" — fills the side opposite the dais, and the Gothic windows are PE\ T SHURST. 189 narrow and lofty. Every object, indeed, calls to mind and illustrates the age of feudalism. The oak tables, on which retainers feasted, still occupy the hall, and in its centre are the huge dogs in an octagonal enclosure, beneath the louvre, or lanthorn, in the roof, which formerly permitted egress to the smoke. "On each side of the hall," writes Mr. Parker, "were two tables and benches, which, if not actually contemporaneous with it, were certainly among the earliest pieces of furniture remaining in England. There was no doubt a similar — or probably a more ornamental — one on the dais at the upper end of the hall where the Elizabethan table now stood, which was used by the lord and his more honoured guests, the side tables in the lower part of the hall being for the domestics and retainers, and guests of that class. One end of the dais had been altered, so that the original arrangement could not be seen ; but there would necessarily be at one end the sideboard, or buffet, filled with plate, arranged on shelves to be well displayed, whilst it also formed a sort of cupboard, with doors which could be closed and locked. This piece of furniture was usually placed in the recess formed by a bay window in halls of the fifteenth century, but it was doubtful whether the bay window was in use as early as the fourteenth. At the opposite end of the dais was the door to the staircase of the solar or upper chamber, used as the withdrawing-room for the ladies after dinner ; and by its side there was another door leading to the cellar. This was originally the lower chamber under the solar, but afterwards there was often a short passage to the cellar, which was sometimes underground, and the original cellar, or lower chamber, became the parlour. But there were always two chambers, one over the other, behind the dais, the two together often not reaching so high as the roof of the hall. The upper room was the lord's chamber, from which there was usually a look-out into the hall, as a check to the more riotous proceedings after the lord and his family or his guests had retired ; or for the lords to see that the guests were assembled before descending with his family into the hall. In the centre of the hall was the original hearth or reredos, almost the only one, he believed, remaining. By the side of it were the andirons, or fire-dogs, for arranging logs of wood upon the hearth, and over it was an opening in the roof, with a small ornamented turret to cover it, called a smoke-louvre, which unfortunately had been removed, after having been previously Italianised and spoilt. The custom of having a large fire of logs of wood in the hall continued long after fire-places and chimneys i go THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. were used in the other chambers ; and it was a mistake to suppose that they were unknown in this country until the fifteenth century. There were many fire-places and chimneys of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries in the chambers, but it was not customary to use them in the hall before the fifteenth. In spite of all the modern contrivances for warming rooms, it might be doubted whether for warming a large and lofty hall it was possible to obtain more heat from the same quantity of fuel than was obtained from the open fire, and where the space was so large and the roof so high that no practical inconvenience could be felt from the smoke, which naturally ascended and escaped by the louvre." Leaving the hall, the Ball-room is entered ; it is long and narrow, the Avails being covered with family portraits — some original, some copies. Queen Elizabeth's room succeeds : it contains much of the furniture, tapestry- covered, that was placed there when the virgin queen visited the mansion. In one corner is an ancient mandoline ; some portraits of the chiefs of the heroic race are here ; and here is a singular picture, representing Queen Elizabeth dancing with the Earl of Leicester. The family portraits are gathered in the "Picture Gallery;" it contains no others; none but a member of it has been admitted with one exception — that of Edward VI., who gave the estate to the Sidneys. Among them are several of Sir Philip and Algernon Sidney, one of Sir Philip's sister, the Countess of Pembroke, to whom he addressed the "Arcadia," and who is immortalised in the epitaph we have just given, and one by Lely of the " Sacharissa " of the muse of Waller. A small chamber in the mansion contains, however, a few treasures of rarer value than all its copies of " fair women and brave men." Among some curious family relics and records is a lock of Sir Philip Sidney's hair ; it is of a pale auburn. A lock of the hair of the ill-fated Algernon is also with it, and in tint nearly resembles that of his illustrious great-uncle. There are many other relics of interest and value scattered throughout the mansion, but towards the close of the last century a grand collection of ancient armour, worn by generations of the Sidneys, richly emblazoned and inlaid, was sold as old iron that cumbered one of the rooms of the house ; while MSS. of inestimable worth, including correspondence with the leading worthies of many centuries, mysteriously disappeared, and were probably consumed as waste paper, useful only for lighting fires. The church at Penshurst is dedicated to St. John the Baptist. It imme- diately adjoins the park, and is connected, by a private walk, with the PEXSHLTRST. igr gardens of the mansion. It is an ancient and very venerable structure, containing many monuments to the Sidneys, and to members of the families of Dragnowt, Cambridge, Egerton, Head, Darkenol, Pawle, and Yden. The most interesting and beautifully wrought of the tombs is to the memory of Sir William Sidney, Knight Banneret, Chamberlain and Steward to Edward VI., and Lord of the Manor of Penshurst, who died in 1553. It stands in a small chapel at the west end of the chancel, and at the foot of the tomb is a very antique figure, carved in marble, supposed to be a memorial to Sir Stephen de Pencestre. Below is the vault which contains the dust of generations of the Sidneys. Sir William Sidney's monument is a fine example of art, elaborately and delicately sculptured ; it contains a long inscription, engraved on a brass tablet, the lettering in which is as clear and as sharp as if it were the work of yesterday. The roof of this chapel is peculiarly light and elegant. In both exterior and interior it is highly picturesque. The oak gallery is one of the earliest erections of the kind that followed the Keformation. Mr. Parker, in his address to the Archaeological Society, thus spoke of the church: — "It exhibited specimens of the architecture of various periods, and is interesting as the burial-place of the ancient families that inhabited the mansion. The north side was of the time of Henry III., and was probably built by Sir Stephen Penchester ; the south side in the time of Edward III. The chancel chapel at the end of the south aisle was the burial-place of the Pulteney family. There were also two chantry chapels on the north side, one of the time of Edward I., and the other of the time of Henry VI. Amongst the other interesting monuments and tablets there is one commemorative of the late illustrious Lord Hardinge." In all respects, therefore, a visit to Penshurst — now by railroad within an hour's distance of the metropolis — may be described as a rare intellectual treat, opening a full and brilliant page of history, abundant in sources of profitable enjoyment to the antiquary, affording a large recompense to the lover or the professor of Art, and exhibiting nature under a vast variety of aspects. :,< * To the park and to the several state rooms the public are on fixed days freely, graciously, and most generously admitted ; and the history of the several leading attractions is related by attentive and intelligent custodians. WAEWICK CASTLE. * ARWICK CASTLE holds foremost rank among the Stately Homes of England, both from its historical associations, and the important positions which, in every age, its lords have occupied in the annals of our country. Situated in one of the most romantic and beautiful districts of a fertile and productive shire, overlooking the " sweet-flowing Avon," and retaining all its characteristics of former strength and grandeur, Warwick Castle is renowned among the most interesting remains of which the kingdom can boast. Of its original foundation, like that of other of our older strongholds, nothing is really known, although much is surmised. It is said to have been a Celtic settlement, converted into a fortress by the Roman invaders. However this may be — and there were several ancient British and Roman roads and stations in the county — it is not our purpose to inquire. It will suffice to say that at the time of the Roman conquest of Warwickshire, which is said to have occurred about the year 50, the county was occupied by two tribes of ancient Britons, the Cornavii and Dobuni, the boundary between these territories being, it would seem, the river Avon. Near the Avon, relics of frontier fortresses on either side have — as at Browns- over, Brailes, Burton Dassett, Brinklow, &c, — been found ; the principal British and Roman roads being the Icknield Street, the Fosse Way, and Watling Street. Warwick is believed, and not without reason, to have been WARWICK CASTLE. 193 one of these frontier fortresses ; its situation would seem to lend strength to the supposition. In Anglo-Saxon times, Warwick formed a part of the king- dom of Mercia, the capital of which was at Repton, in the neighbouring county of Derby. At that period it "fell under the dominion of Warremund, who rebuilt it, and called it Warrewyke, after his own name." Having been taken and destroyed by the Danes, it "so rested," says Dugdale, "until the renowned Lady Ethelfled, daughter to King Alfred — who had the whole earl- dom of Mercia given her by her father to the noble Etheldred in marriage — repaired its ruins, and in the year of Christ dccccxv made a strong fortification here, called the dungeon, for resistance of the enemy, upon a hill of earth, artificially raised near the river side ;" and this formed the nucleus of the present building. In 1016 it is stated to have again suffered from an attack by the Danes, who nearly demolished the fortifications of the castle and did great damage to the town. At the time of making the Domesday survey, Warwick was a royal burgh, and "contained 261 houses, and with its castle was regarded as a place of much consequence ; for orders were issued by the Conqueror to Turchel to repair and fortify the town and castle of Warwick. This was carried into effect, by surrounding the town with a strong wall and ditch, and by enlarging the castle and strengthening its fortifica- tions." In 1172 (19th Henry II.), Warwick Castle was provisioned and garrisoned at an expense of £10 (which would be equivalent to about £200 of our present money), on behalf of the king; and during those troublous times it remained about three years in his hands. In 1173 a sum equal to about £500 of our money was paid to the soldiers in the castle ; and in the following year, the building requiring considerable repair, about £50 was laid out upon it, and a considerable sum was paid to the soldiers who defended it for the king. In 1191 it was again repaired, and also in the reign of King John. In the 48th of Henry III. (1263), William Mauduit, Earl of Warwick, was surprised by the adherents of Simon de Montfort, then holding Kenilworth, and the walls of the castle were completely destroyed ; indeed, so complete was the devastation, that in 1315 "it was returned in an inquisition as worth nothing excepting the herbage in the ditches, valued at Gs. 8d." In 1337 (12th Edward III.) a new building was commenced, and in that year a royal licence was granted for the founding of a chantry chapel in the castle. The building was commenced by Thomas Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, whose monument is preserved in the Beauchamp Chapel. In 1394 (17th Richard II.) Guy's 194 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. Tower is said to have been completed by Thomas Beauchamp, second son of the last named Thomas, at a cost of £395 5s. 2(7., and by him to have been named " Guy's Tower." In the reign of James I. a sum of about £20,000 was expended by the then owner of the castle, Fulke Greville, Lord Broke, " in making it habitable and restoring it to its former importance." From this time downwards, the castle has undergone many alterations, and so-called " beautifyings," at the hands of its different owners; but, despite all, it -iSaS3a=y« The Castle, from the Temple Field. retained its ancient grandeur and its most interesting features, and was, as Sir Walter Scott has said, " the fairest monument of ancient and chivalrous splendour which remains uninjured by time." And now as to its long line of illustrious and valiant owners. Passing over the whimsical list of earls, &c, in Rous's Roll, beginning with " King Guthelyne, about the sixth of Kinge Alexander the greate con- queror," and " Kinge Gwydered, who began to reigne the 4th yere from the WARWICK CASTLE. 195 birth of our Lord," reminding one very forcibly of the " Promptuaire des Medalles," which commences the series with those of " Adam " and of " Heva vx Adam," — the first we need even hint at, so obscure is the matter, is Kohan de Arden, who is stated to have married a daughter and heiress of " iEneas, Earl of Warwick, in the time of the Saxons," and to have succeeded to that title and estates. Rohan de Arden is said to have lived in the reigns of Alfred and Edward the Elder, and to have been succeeded by the " renowned Guy," Earl of Warwick (the legend connected with him will be noticed on subsequent pages), who had married his only daughter and heiress, Felicia. This Sir Guy " is said to have been son of Syward, Lord of Wallingford, which possession Guy also enjoyed." " He was often in conflicts with the Danes in defence of his country ; did many brave exploits ; and, lastly, as the story goes, after his return from the Holy Land, retired from the world, and turn'd hermit, and lived in an adjacent cave, now called ' Guy's Cliff,' wherein he died, and was buried in a chapel there, anno 929, aged about seventy years, leaving issue, by Felicia his wife, Reynborne," who succeeded him, and " married Leonora, or Leoneta, daughter to King Athelstan." From him the descent is said to have been continued in regular succession through father and son (Wegeat or Weyth, Wygod, Alcuin or Aylwin, &c.) to Turchel, who was earl at the time of the Norman Conquest, and who was allowed by that monarch to retain possession of the estates, but was ultimately deprived of both them and of the earldom. The castle having been strengthened and enlarged, its custody was given to Henry de Newburgh, a Norman, who had accompanied the Conqueror, and to him was afterwards granted all the possessions of Turchel de Warwick, and he was made Earl of Warwick. By some he is said to have married the daughter of Turchel, but he is also stated to have married three other ladies. He was succeeded by his son, Roger Newburgh, as second Earl of Warwick, who married Gundred, daughter of the second Earl Warren, by whom he had a son, William, who succeeded him as third earl, and dying without issue, was succeeded by his brother Walleran as fourth earl, who married twice — first, Margaret de Bohun, and second, Alice de Harcourt. By his first wife he had two sons, Henry, who succeeded him, and Walleran. Henry de Newburgh, fifth Earl of Warwick, was a minor at his father's death in 1205, and was placed under Thomas Bassett, of Headington, near Oxford. In the thirteenth year of King John, he was certified as holding 107 knights' fees of the king in capite. Having led an active military life, and married two o 2 196 THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. wives — Margaret D'Oyley and Philippa Bassett — he died 1229, and was suc- ceeded as sixth earl by his son, Thomas de Newburgh. This nobleman married a daughter of the Earl of Salisbury, but died without issue. His sister and heiress, Margery, who was married to John de Mareschal, brother The Keep, from the Inner Court. to the Earl of Pembroke, succeeded to the estates, and her husband became seventh earl. This honour he did not enjoy long, but died without issue "within about half a year of his brother-in-law the late earl." The widow WARWICK CASTLE: i 9 ; then, by special arrangement of Henry III., married John de Placetis, or Plessitis, a Norman by birth, and a great favourite of the king. By the Countess of Warwick he had no issue, and therefore at her death the estates passed to her cousin, William Mauduit, Baron of Hanslape, who died without issue. The title and estates then at his death passed to his sister, Isabel Mauduit, wife of William de Beauchamp, heir of Walter de Beauchamp, Baron of Elmley, who thus through her became heir to the title, which however, — she having entered a nunnery, — was not claimed, but passed, in the person of their son William, into the powerful family of Beauchamp. By Isabel Mauduit William de Beauchamp the elder had four sons — William, who succeeded him ; John, whose grandson was created Baron Beauchamp ; Walter, ancestor of Fulke Greville, Lord Broke ; and Thomas, who died unmarried. William de Beauchamp, who bore the title of Earl of Warwick during his father's life- time, married Maud, one of the co-heiresses of Richard Fitzjohn, by whom he had issue with others, Guy de Beauchamp, who succeeded him as Earl of Warwick. This Guy, so called, no doubt, after the " renowned Guy," attended the king into Scotland, and for his valour at the battle of Falkirk, had granted to him all the lands of Geoffrey de Mowbray in that kingdom, with the exception of Okeford, and all the lands of John de Strivelin, with the castle of Amesfield, and the lands of Drungery. He was one of the noblemen who seized Piers Gaveston, — against whom he held a mortal hatred for having called him " the black hound of Arden," — whom he conveyed to Warwick Castle, from whence he was removed to Blacklow Hill, near Warwick, and beheaded. This Guy married Alice, sister and heiress to Robert de Toni, Baron of Flamstead, and widow of Thomas de Leybourne, and by her had issue two sons and five daughters. He died (it was suspected by poison) in 1315, and was succeeded by his eldest son, Thomas de Beauchamp, who married Catherine Mortimer, daughter of the Earl of March, by whom he had issue seven sons and ten daughters. The sons were — Sir Guy, "a stout soldier," who died in his father's lifetime, leaving three daughters, all nuns, at Shouldham ; Thomas, his successor ; Reynbourne, so called in memory of the son of the "renowned Guy ;" William, who became Lord Abergavenny ; Roger, John, and Jerome. Thomas Beauchamp, the eldest son, who succeeded to the honours, was knighted in the lifetime of his father. He, like his predecessor, made many additions to the castle, the principal of which was the building of Guy's Tower. Having passed a troublous life, being at one time confined and condemned in THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. the Tower of London, he died in 1401, leaving by his wife Margaret, daughter of Lord Ferrars of Groby, two daughters, nuns, and one son, Richard Beauchamp, who succeeded him. This Richard, Earl of Warwick, is said to " have surpassed even the great valour and reputation of his ancestors ;" and, indeed, his career seems altogether to have been one of the most brilliant and successful on record ; and besides having a special herald of his own, "Warwick Herald," he was styled the "Father of Courtesye." "He founded the Chantry of Guy's Cliff, where before this foundation were Guy's Chappel and Cottage." In this he placed the statue of Guy (still seen, though much defaced), made several pious donations, and died at Roan in the 17th of Henry VI. There is extant a very remarkable and curious MS. Life of this renowned warrior ; it is preserved in the British Museum (Julius, E. IV.). In it the illuminations are very spirited, and are highly valuable as examples of armour, &c, of the time, no less than as genuine representations of various valiant deeds in which he was engaged. Three of these we give. Our first shows the figures of the Earl of Warwick and Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, from a picture of the fight with Philip, Duke of Burgundy, before Calais. The next represents " how a mighty duke challenged Erie Richard (Beauchamp) WARWICK CASTLE. 199 for his lady sake, and in justyng slewe the Duke, and then the Empresse toke the Erie's staff and bear from a knight's shouldre, and for great love and favour she sett it on her shouldre. Then Erie Richard made one of perle and precious stones, and offered her that, and she gladly and lovynglee reseaved it." The engraving shows the Earl vanquishing the Duke — his lance has run through his body — and the heralds proclaiming his victory. Behind are the Emperor Sigismund and his Empress, the latter of whom is taking, as recounted, the Earl's badge of the bear and ragged staff from the shoulders of the knight to place upon her own. On the Earl's helmet will be seen his crest of the bear and ragged staff. THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. In the third engraving we see the Earl of Warwick setting out in his own ship, on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. He is dressed in pilgrim guise, and, staff in hand, is just stepping into the boat to be conveyed to the ship, his attendants and luggage following him. The ship is sumptuously fitted with castle and state apartments, and has the sail emblazoned with the Beauchamp arms, and the pennon, besides the St. George's cross of England, bears the bear and ragged staff many times repeated. This badge will be best under- WAR WICK CASTLE. stood by the accompanying engraving. The Earl had two wives ; first, Elizabeth, daughter and heiress of Thomas, Lord Berkley; and second, Isabel, daughter of Thomas le Despencer, Earl of Gloucester. He was succeeded by his son Henry, who was then barely fourteen years old. This Henry de Beauchamp — who had during his father's lifetime been called De Spencer, through his mother's posses- sions — when only nineteen years of age tendered his services to Henry VI. for the defence of Acquitaine, for which the king created him Premier Earl of England, with leave to distinguish himself and his heirs male by wearing in his presence a gold coronet. Three days later, he was created Duke of Warwick, with precedence next to the Duke of Norfolk. After this, he had granted to him, in reversion, the Islands of Guernsey, Jersey, Sark, Erme, and Alderney, which he was to hold for the yearly tribute of a rose. He was also by his sovereign crowned King of the Isle of Wight, his Majesty himself placing the crown upon his head. This young nobleman, however, with all his honours thick upon him, lived but a short life of greatness, and died at Warwick at the early age of twenty-two, in 1445. He married Cicely, daughter of Richard Nevil, Earl of Salisbury, by whom he had an only child, Anne, Countess of Warwick, who died when only six years of age, leaving her aunt Anne, wife of Richard Nevil, Earl of Salisbury, heir to the titles and estates, and thus they passed to the family of Nevil. This Richard Nevil, then Earl of Warwick, is the one so well known in English history as "the stout Earl of Warwick, the king- maker," — "peremptory Warwick," the " wind -changing Warwick," of Shakspere — ■ who, " finding himself strong enough to hold the balance between the families of York and Lancaster, rendered England during the reign of his power a scene of bloodshed and confusion ; and made or unmade kings of this or that house as best suited his passions, pleasures, or interests. His life was passed in wars and broils, destructive to his country and his family." He was killed at the battle of Barnet in 1471. He left issue two daughters, Isabel, married THE STATELY HOMES OF ENGLAND. to George, Duke of Clarence and brother to Edward IV. ; and Anne, married first to Edward, Prince of Wales, and secondly, to his murderer, Richard, Duke of Gloucester, subsequently King Richard III. To the eldest of these daughters, Isabel, came the Warwick estates ; and her husband, George Plantagenet, Duke of Clarence, was, by his brother Edward IV., created Earl of Warwick and Salisbury. That ill-fated and indiscreet nobleman, however, did not live to carry out improvements he had commenced at Warwick. His wife was poisoned ; and he himself, later on, was attainted of high treason, and was drowned in a butt of Malmsey wine in the Tower, by order of his brother, the Duke of Gloucester. Duriug all this time, Anne, Countess of Warwick, widow of Richard Nevil, had under- gone great privations — her possessions being taken from her for her daughters' husbands — and had been living in obscurity ; by Act 3rd Henry VII. she was recalled from such obscurity to be restored to the possessions of her family ; " but that was a refinement of cruelty, for shortly after obtaining pr sses- sion she was forced " to surrender to the king all these immense possessions. After her death, Edward Plantagenet, eldest son of George, Duke of Clarence, assumed the title of Earl of Warwick, but was beheaded on Tower Hill. On his death the title was held in abeyance, and was, after a time, granted to John Dudley, Viscount Lisle, who was descended in the female line from the old Earls of Warwick. This John Dudley, Earl of Warwick, and Viscount Lisle, was made Lord High Chamberlain, a Knight of the Garter, Lord Warden of the North, and Earl Marshal : and was created Duke of Northumberland, but was attainted for the part he took relating to Lady Jane Grey, and beheaded on Tower Hill in 1553. He married Jane, daughter of Sir Edward Guildford, by whom he had a large family, of whom the eldest, Henry, was killed at the siege of Boulogne ; the second, John, was called Earl of Warwick during his father's lifetime ; Ambrose, who was created Earl of Warwick ; Guildford, who was beheaded with his father ; Robert, who C