<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<div class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_0" id="Page_0"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i002.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p class="caption"><b>ST. PAUL’S CATHEDRAL.</b><br/>
FROM LUDGATE HILL.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<div class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i003.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<hr class="tb" />
<div class="titlepage">
<h1> <span class="small">TALES OF ENGLISH MINSTERS</span><br/> <br/> ST. PAUL’S</h1>
<p>BY<br/>
<span class="large">ELIZABETH GRIERSON</span></p>
<p><span class="small">AUTHOR OF<br/>
“THE CHILDREN’S BOOK OF EDINBURGH,” “CHILDREN’S TALES<br/>
FROM SCOTTISH BALLADS,” ETC.</span></p>
<p><span class="small">WITH</span><br/>
TWO FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS<br/>
IN COLOUR<br/>
AND FOUR IN BLACK AND WHITE</p>
<p><span class="large">LONDON<br/>
ADAM AND CHARLES BLACK</span><br/>
1910</p>
</div>
<hr class="chap" />
<div class="bbox">
<p class="center"><span class="large">TALES OF<br/>
ENGLISH MINSTERS<br/>
SERIES</span></p>
<p class="center"><small>EACH CONTAINING TWO FULL-PAGE<br/>
ILLUSTRATIONS IN COLOUR AND<br/>
FOUR IN BLACK AND WHITE</small></p>
<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="table">
<tr><td>DURHAM</td><td>YORK</td></tr>
<tr><td>LINCOLN</td><td>ELY</td></tr>
<tr><td>ST. ALBANS </td><td>ST. PAUL’S</td></tr>
<tr><td colspan="2" align="center">CANTERBURY</td></tr>
</table>
<p class="center">
<small>PUBLISHED BY<br/>
A. AND C. BLACK. SOHO SQUARE. LONDON</small></p>
</div>
<p class="center">AGENTS</p>
<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="table">
<tr><td valign="top">AMERICA</td><td> THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br/>
<span class="smcap">64 & 66 Fifth Avenue</span>, NEW YORK</td></tr>
<tr><td valign="top">AUSTRALASIA </td><td> OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS<br/>
<span class="smcap">205 Flinders Lane</span>, MELBOURNE</td></tr>
<tr><td valign="top">CANADA</td><td> THE MACMILLAN COMPANY OF CANADA, LTD.<br/>
<span class="smcap">St. Martin’s House, 70 Bond Street</span>, TORONTO</td></tr>
<tr><td valign="top">INDIA</td><td> MACMILLAN & COMPANY, LTD.<br/>
<span class="smcap">Macmillan Building</span>, BOMBAY<br/>
<span class="smcap">309 Bow Bazaar Street</span>, CALCUTTA</td></tr>
</table>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 class="nobreak">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2></div>
<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="table">
<tr><td colspan="2" align="center">IN COLOUR</td></tr>
<tr><td>ST. PAUL’S CATHEDRAL FROM LUDGATE HILL </td><td class="tdr"><SPAN href="#Page_0"><i>Frontispiece</i></SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr><td> </td><td class="tdr"><small>FACING PAGE</small></td></tr>
<tr><td>SIGNING MAGNA CHARTA</td><td class="tdr"><SPAN href="#Page_8">8</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr><td colspan="2" align="center">IN BLACK AND WHITE</td></tr>
<tr><td>PREACHING AT PAUL’S CROSS</td><td class="tdr"><SPAN href="#Page_17">17</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td>SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN</td><td class="tdr"><SPAN href="#Page_24">24</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td>NELSON’S MONUMENT</td><td class="tdr"><SPAN href="#Page_40">40</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td>THE NAVE</td><td class="tdr"><SPAN href="#Page_48">48</SPAN></td></tr>
</table>
<hr class="chap" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</SPAN></span>
<p class="ph1">ST. PAUL’S CATHEDRAL</p>
</div>
<p class="center"><b>‘The Church of the Citizens.’</b></p>
<h2>I</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">I am</span> sure that there is no one who goes to London
for the first time, no matter how hurried he may
be, who does not try to visit at least three places—the
Tower, Westminster Abbey, and St. Paul’s
Cathedral.</p>
<p>Of these three places, two are churches; but
they are churches that are so connected with the
history of our nation that they almost seem to
stand at the heart of the Empire.</p>
<p>Their stories are linked together in a curious
way, and yet they are quite distinct. As someone
has said, ‘Westminster Abbey was ever the
Church of the King and Government; St. Paul’s
was the Church of the Citizens.’</p>
<p>When we come to study the history of
Cathedrals, we find the way in which they came to
be built is pretty much the same in most cases.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</SPAN></span>
A little church was raised to the glory of God, and
a monastery was founded beside it, which became
the home of a community of monks or nuns, ruled
over by an Abbot or Abbess; and the church was
known as the Abbey Church.</p>
<p>Then by-and-by, sometimes not till quite late, as
at St. Albans, a ‘Bishop’s Stool’ was placed there,
and the Abbey became a Cathedral.</p>
<p>But in the case of St. Paul’s Cathedral it is quite
different. It was built for a Cathedral from the
first. Its builder, instead of adding a monastery
to it, as was usually done, built a monastery having
its own Abbey on a little Island which stood in
some marshy ground on the banks of the Thames,
about a mile away.</p>
<p>This Island was called ‘Thorney Island,’ and the
Abbey Church was dedicated to St. Peter, but
soon it began to be spoken of as the ‘West
Minster,’ or Westminster Abbey, by which name
we know it to-day.</p>
<p>This was how it all came about. In the time of
the early Britons there were Christian churches
scattered up and down the land, and it is almost
certain, from stones that were dug up when the
foundations of the present Cathedral of St. Paul<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</SPAN></span>
were being laid, that in those far bygone days a
little church stood on the Hill of Ludgate, in the
centre of Roman London. But, as you know, the
Roman legions were recalled to Rome in <small>A.D.</small> 410
to help the soldiers there to drive back the vast
hoards of Goths and barbarians who were pouring
down from the north-west upon Italy; and when
they were withdrawn from Britain, there were not
enough fighting-men left to protect her shores from
the next enemies who threatened her.</p>
<p>These were the Jutes, the Angles, and the
Saxons, fierce and heathen warriors who came from
Jutland and from Germany, and landed on our
coasts.</p>
<p>They conquered the British, and rapidly forced
their way inland, ravaging and pillaging wherever
they went; and in the confusion and misery that
followed, Christianity was completely swept away
for a time, to come again with St. Augustine and
St. Columba some two hundred years later. You
know too, perhaps, that when St. Augustine came
to Canterbury and began to preach the Gospel
there, the King of Kent, Ethelbert by name, soon
became a Christian. This King Ethelbert was a
very powerful monarch, and he was Overlord of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</SPAN></span>
the King of the East Saxons, who chanced to be
his nephew, and who lived in what we now call
Essex. Now, while St. Augustine preached to the
men of Kent, a friend of his, named Milletus,
preached to the East Saxons. And when at last
their King became a Christian, his uncle Ethelbert
suggested that, as Kent had its Bishop of
Canterbury, with his Cathedral Church, it would
be a good thing for the Kingdom of the East
Saxons to have a Bishop of its own who would
have his Cathedral Church also.</p>
<p>So, as London was the Capital of the East Saxons,
he proposed to help King Siebert to build a church
there; and Augustine, only too glad to find that
the Faith was spreading, said that Milletus should
be its first Bishop.</p>
<p>It was in this way that the first Cathedral of
St. Paul was built, and, as we have seen, Siebert
also founded the church and monastery of Westminster.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i011.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p class="caption"><b>KING JOHN SIGNING MAGNA CHARTA. PAGE 18.</b><br/>
AFTER THE PAINTING BY ERNEST NORMAND IN THE ROYAL EXCHANGE, LONDON<br/>
<i>By permission of the artist.</i></p>
<p>Now, although their King had been baptized,
and had built two churches in their midst, the
people of London did not want to become Christians;
they were pagans, and were quite content to
worship Thor and Odin, the gods of the tribes of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</SPAN></span>
the North. So for a long time the good Bishop
Milletus preached to them in vain; and far away
in Rome, Pope Gregory, who had hoped that the
new Cathedral in London would become what we
call the ‘Metropolitan Church’ of England—that is,
the church where the Archbishop has his throne—was
sadly disappointed, and had to become accustomed
to the idea of Canterbury, which was a
far less important place than London, having that
honour.</p>
<p>Indeed, for a time it seemed as though, in spite
of Church and Bishops, the new religion would be
driven out. Ethelbert died, and so did his nephew
Siebert, and the Kings who succeeded them either
went back altogether to their pagan worship, or
tried, as an East Anglian King did, to worship
Thor and Odin and Christ all at the same time. I
will tell you just one story about those troubled
days, and it will show you what a terrible struggle
went on between Paganism and Christianity, and
how much we owe to these brave men, priests, and
Abbots, and Bishops, whose names are almost
unknown to us, on whom rested the responsibility
of maintaining the Faith in England, and of whom,
to their honour be it said, hardly one failed.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</SPAN></span>One day Bishop Milletus was administering the
Holy Communion in his church to the little congregation
of Christians who still remained true to
what he had taught them. It is probable that the
altar stood then just where the high-altar in St.
Paul’s stands to-day. Only the church would be
much smaller and plainer, and the door would be
locked to prevent unbelieving pagans entering and
disturbing the service by irreverent jeering and
laughter. Suddenly a loud knocking was heard,
then the crash of falling wood. The young King
and his friends had chanced to be passing, and, in
a moment of heedless excitement, had determined
to visit the Christian’s church, and see what amusement
they could get there. Angry at finding the
door locked against them, they had broken it down
without further delay. Up the aisle strode the
King, followed by his mocking companions, to
where the old Bishop was engaged in distributing
the consecrated Bread to the kneeling communicants.
In those days white bread was a rarity,
most of it being dark-coloured and unwholesome;
and this white bread that was used for the Holy
Communion was the whitest and purest of all;
for, in order that it should be so, pious people, even<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</SPAN></span>
the clergy themselves, used to grind the meal
carefully with their own hands, and bake it into
loaves, and bring it to the church as their offering.</p>
<p>‘Give me some of that white bread,’ cried the
young King, stretching out his hand. ‘You gave it
to my father Siebert; give it also to me.’</p>
<p>Perhaps he thought in his reckless insolence that
the Bishop would obey. But King Siebert had
been a baptized Christian, his son was a pagan
and an unbeliever; so, King though he was, he
could not be allowed to join with the Christians in
their solemn Feast. And the brave old Bishop
told him so, knowing full well that the refusal
might cost him his life. The young King did not
put him to death, however, though he was very
angry—perhaps he was ashamed to do so—but it
cost him his Bishopric, for he was driven out of
the Kingdom, and had to leave to seeming ruin
all the work that was so dear to his heart.</p>
<p>But it was only <i>seeming</i> ruin. He had done his
work faithfully; he had laid the foundations, as it
were; and, as has ever happened in the history of
the Church, God saw to it that there were other
men ready to step in, and build upon these foundations.
Other Bishops were appointed—Bishop Cedd<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</SPAN></span>
and Bishop Erkenwald—and in their days the
Christian Faith began to take root again, and
spread among the citizens of London, and they
improved and beautified their Cathedral until it
became famed for its riches and grandeur. Indeed,
Bishop Erkenwald was such a famous preacher,
and did so much for his church, that when he
died he was buried in a golden shrine which
people came to see, just as they visited the shrine
of St. Cuthbert at Durham, and St. Thomas
at Canterbury. As for stout old Bishop Milletus,
although he was driven into exile for a time, he
became in after-years Archbishop of Canterbury,
and his bones lie in the Cathedral there.</p>
<p>Now, it is a curious thing how often those old
churches that we are talking about were destroyed,
either wholly or in part, by fire. And if there was
one church that was fated to suffer more than
another in this way, it was St. Paul’s. It was
partly burned down in <small>A.D.</small> 951. By that time the
Normans were in the country, and they set to
work at once to rebuild it. When it was finished,
it was a very splendid church indeed; but once
more it suffered severely from a fire which broke
out in the City, and destroyed everything from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</SPAN></span>
London Bridge to the Church of St. Clement
Danes, which stands in the Strand.</p>
<p>Let us see what this Cathedral of the Middle
Ages was like. It was the largest church in
England, and was shaped like a cross, and,
instead of having a dome, as the present Cathedral
has, it had a great square tower in the centre, with
a wooden spire, four hundred and sixty feet high.
It stood in the middle of a churchyard, which
was surrounded by a high wall. We still talk
about ‘St. Paul’s Churchyard,’ although it is long
years since anyone was buried there; but if we
are in London, and take a bus along the crowded
Strand, and up Ludgate Hill, we shall arrive at
this old churchyard, and then we shall see the
‘St. Paul’s’ of to-day, and shall be better able
to picture to ourselves the ‘St. Paul’s’ of the
Middle Ages.</p>
<p>When we leave our bus, we find ourselves in an
open space bounded on all sides by busy streets
and fine shops. In the centre of this open space
stands an immense church, with a huge dome
rising from its centre, and on the top of the dome,
standing clearly out against the sky, so far up that
it can be seen from nearly all parts of London, is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</SPAN></span>
an immense gilded cross. In front of the church
there are two great flights of steps, which lead
down into a broad paved space, only separated
from the street by a row of low stone pillars, while
round at the sides lie pleasant gardens, with flagged
walks, where pigeons flutter about, and where, in
summer, hundreds of busy clerks, and shop-girls,
and message-boys, come and sit in their lunch-hour,
and get a breath of fresh air and a little
sunshine.</p>
<p>‘But where is the old churchyard?’ you ask,
looking round in amazement. I will tell you.
These gardens, and the great space in front of the
church, stand to-day where St. Paul’s Churchyard
stood long ago, only there is no longer a wall
round them, and although the name remains, the
gravestones have long since disappeared. Let us
try, however, to think that we are back in the
Middle Ages, and imagine ourselves standing
among the graves in the old churchyard. In front
would be the great church, bigger than that which
now rises before us, with its square tower and
wooden steeple. At the north-east corner of it we
should see a curious erection like a low, eight-sided
tower, with a stone cross on the top of it. That<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</SPAN></span>
was called ‘Paul’s Cross,’ and it was almost as
important a place as the Cathedral itself.</p>
<p>As I said at the beginning, St. Paul’s Church
was the Church of the Citizens. The Monarchs
of the land might be crowned or buried at Westminster,
but it was to St. Paul’s that the people
crowded when they wanted to meet together and
stand up for their rights. So there was a great
bell in the Cathedral belfry, like the bell in St.
Giles’s Cathedral in Edinburgh, which was rung
whenever a question arose which concerned the
burghers of the city, and when its deep tones
were heard, the people ran out of their houses,
and thronged into the churchyard through the
six gates which pierced its encircling wall, and
crowded round Paul’s Cross; and the Aldermen,
ascending by steps to the top of the eight-sided
tower, stood under the Cross, and spoke to them.
Here royal proclamations were made, quarrels
were settled, grievances stated, and put to rights.
Here, also, sermons were preached in the open air
by famous preachers.</p>
<p>Indeed, I think that I may safely say that
‘Paul’s Cross’ was the centre of the public life of
London. It has long since been pulled down,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</SPAN></span>
however; but if we go to the north-west corner of
the gardens, we can still see the place where it
stood, clearly marked on the pavement.</p>
<p>The Bishop’s Palace also stood within the wall,
and two little churches, one of which was founded
by Gilbert à Becket, father of Thomas of Canterbury,
who was a silk-mercer in Cheapside; while
the other was a parish church—the Church of
St. Faith—which was pulled down in after-years,
and the people who went to Service there were
allowed to worship in the crypt of the Cathedral
instead.</p>
<p>It would only weary you to attempt to describe
the interior of the old church. It would be very
like the other Cathedrals of that time, which were
all more richly adorned before the Reformation
than they are now. All the accounts which we
read of it show us that it was very magnificent,
with rich carvings, and stained glass, and no less
than seventy side-chapels and chantries, each with
its own altar, and, richer than all others, the great
Shrine of St. Erkenwald, with its ornaments and
jewels.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i022.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p class="caption"><b>PREACHING AT ST. PAUL’S CROSS.</b></p>
<p>I think that it will be much more interesting to
talk of some of the scenes that took place there in
these far-off days. Let us go back, for instance,
almost eight hundred years, to the day when the
news arrived in London that the King of England,
Henry I., lay dead in France. He and his brother,
William Rufus, were, as you know, sons of the
great Norman Conqueror, and during their reigns
the country had been well governed and prosperous.
But when Henry died, no one quite knew what to
do next. For the rightful heir to the throne was
Henry’s daughter Maud, who had married a
French Count of Anjou, who, as you remember,
was the first of his race to be called ‘Plantagenet,’
because he was in the habit, as he rode along, of
plucking a piece of broom (<i>Planta genista</i>) and
sticking it in the front of his cap. Now, the
English people did not love this Geoffry of Anjou,
who was a greedy and selfish man, and they had
no wish to have him for their King, as they
would certainly have to do if his wife became
Queen. So their thoughts turned to Maud’s
cousin, Count Stephen of Blois, who, although his
father was a Frenchman, had an English mother,
and who had been brought up in England at his
uncle’s Court. Most people wished to have him as
their King; but no one dare suggest it until the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</SPAN></span>
citizens of London took matters into their own
hands.</p>
<p>‘The country needed a Monarch,’ they said,
‘and if the Barons would not take the responsibility
of electing one, they would.’ And without
more ado the Portreve (or Lord Mayor) and
Aldermen caused the great bell of St. Paul’s to be
rung, summoning the burghers to a ‘Folk-mote’ or
council; and when they had all gathered round the
Cross in the churchyard, the matter was discussed,
and it was agreed that it would be better for
England that Stephen should be King rather than
that Maud should be Queen; and straightway the
city gates were thrown open to the Count, and the
citizens swore allegiance to him, and he was
crowned King of England.</p>
<p>Perhaps, after all, it would have been better if
the citizens had chosen Maud, for, as history
shows, Stephen did not turn out to be a very
good King.</p>
<p>Another great decision that was made at a
public meeting at St. Paul’s was the framing of
Magna Charta—that great Charter which secured,
for all time to come, justice and liberty to English
freemen.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</SPAN></span>In these old days, especially after the Normans
came into the country, Kings were apt to think
that might was right, and that they could do what
they chose with their subjects. If a man displeased
the King, or if he wanted to seize his land, he could
simply throw him into prison and keep him there,
sometimes until he died, without giving him even
a trial. Then, too, if the Monarch wanted money,
he simply forced the people to give it to him, and
no one had any security that what was his to-day
might not be the King’s to-morrow.</p>
<p>When Henry I. came to the throne, he wanted
to please the people, because he had an elder
brother living, who had gone to the Crusades, and
he was afraid that unless he gained the affection of
his subjects before his brother came back, they
might choose the latter to be King instead of him.
So he granted them a Charter, promising not to seize
any of their property, nor to tax them unduly, nor
to touch any of the lands belonging to the Church.
He did not keep those promises very well, however,
and his successors, Stephen, and Henry, and
Richard, and John, did not keep them at all; and
by the middle of King John’s reign the country
was in a very bad state indeed. No heed was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</SPAN></span>
given to the advice or wishes of the great nobles,
who ought to have had a voice in the government
of the country, while the common people were so
oppressed and down-trodden that they were ready
to rise in rebellion. And they would have done so
if it had not been for the wisdom and prudence of
two great men—Stephen Langton, Archbishop of
Canterbury, and William Marshal, eldest son of
the Earl of Pembroke. Stephen Langton was a
foreigner, whom the Pope had sent to Canterbury,
but he was a good man, a real ‘Father in God’ to
his people, and he believed that he was set over
them to look after their bodies as well as their
souls. When he found out how down-trodden
the poor folk of England were, he made up his
mind that such a state of things should not
continue. So he began to inquire into the laws,
and he found out about this old Charter, which had
been granted by Henry I., but had never
been kept, and had long since been forgotten.
The wise Archbishop did not say anything, but he
quietly set to work to find a copy of this Charter.
After some trouble he discovered one, hidden
away among the papers of an old monastery. He
then summoned all the chief people in the country<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</SPAN></span>
to meet him at St. Paul’s Cathedral. That was
one of the most memorable assemblies in English
history. All the powerful Nobles and Barons, all
the stately Bishops and Priors, all the sober Aldermen
of the great city, met together and listened
with deep interest while the Archbishop read aloud
to them the promises which had been made by
Henry I., and recorded on the parchment which
he held in his hand; then pointed out to them
that these promises had never been kept, and that
the people of England had a right to demand that
they should be kept. He finished his speech by
calling upon his listeners to band themselves
together, and never rest satisfied till they had
obtained redress from the grievous wrongs which
had pressed upon them, and upon their poorer
brethren.</p>
<p>The Archbishop’s words were not in vain.
Nobles and Barons crowded round him, and,
laying their hands upon their swords, took a solemn
oath that they would insist upon the principles of
Henry’s Charter being maintained, and would do
their best to protect the liberties of the people.</p>
<p>This was just before Christmas-time, and when
the King came to hold his Christmas Court in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</SPAN></span>
London, these same Nobles, armed to the teeth,
and accompanied by the Churchmen and the
principal citizens, appeared before him, and
demanded that he should listen to their requests,
and make proper laws to guard their liberties.</p>
<p>King John was frightened, but he did not
want to give in; so, like the weak man that he
was, he did not return a direct answer, but said
that he would think over the matter, and meet them
again at Easter. He thought that in this way he
could put them off, and never give them an answer
at all. But the people were determined, and
formed themselves into an army, which they called
the ‘Army of God, and of Holy Church,’ and all
the clergy, and all the citizens of London, and
Exeter, and Lincoln, supported them, and the King
was obliged to yield.</p>
<p>So it came about that one June day a great
assembly of people met on the banks of the Thames
near Windsor. On one side was encamped the
King, with a handful of followers, and on the
other the great army of Barons, and nobles, and
citizens had pitched their tents on a piece of
marshy land known by the name of Runnymede.
In the middle of the river was a small island, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</SPAN></span>
on this island a few men chosen by the King, and a
few men chosen by the Nobles, met to discuss
matters; at least, they pretended to discuss matters,
for everyone knew what the end would be. The
King was powerless to resist the wishes of the great
concourse of people gathered across the river, and
before nightfall ‘Magna Charta,’ the ‘Great
Charter,’ had been drawn up and signed.</p>
<p>I cannot tell you all the good things that were
secured to Englishmen by this great deed, but
there was one thing which, above all others, it
gained for them—and gained for us as well—Justice.
It is one of our proudest boasts that, by English
law, no man, be he ever so poor or degraded, is
condemned unheard; that every man is counted
innocent till, by a fair trial, he is proved to be
guilty. And the very foundation of our freedom
rests on some words that were written that day on
that old parchment: ‘<i>We will sell to no man, we will
not delay nor deny to any man, justice or right</i>.’</p>
<p>But if the great bell of St. Paul’s could call the
citizens to fight for their liberty as Englishmen
against the oppression of the King, it could also
summon them to fight for their liberty as Churchmen
against the oppression of the Pope. We must<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</SPAN></span>
always remember that when first Christianity was
brought to England, in the time of the Romans, and
the ancient British Church was formed, it did not
owe allegiance to the Bishops of Rome as it did in
later days. It was only after it had been swept
away by the invasion of the Angles and Saxons,
and then brought back again to the South of
England by St. Augustine, who came direct from
Pope Gregory of Rome, that the belief arose that
it was right that the Church of England should be
ruled by the Pope.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i031.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p class="caption"><b>SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN</b><br/>
From a painting by Sir G. Kneller in the National Portrait Gallery, London<br/>
<span class="captionright"><small>(<i>Page 38</i>)</small></span></p>
<p>Up in the North, on the other hand, in Scotland
and in Northumbria, where Christianity had been
brought by St. Columba and his followers, who,
as you remember, came from Ireland, it was a
very much longer time before the Church would
admit the Papal claims, though at last it did so.
And St. Aidan and St. Cuthbert, who founded the
Northumbrian Church, being missionaries from the
ancient British Church, which St. Columba represented,
did not feel obliged to obey the Pope in
the same way that St. Augustine did. It would
take me too long to tell you about the differences
that existed between the Church in the
North and that in the South, the chief of which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</SPAN></span>
was that they did not keep the festival of Easter
on the same day. The Church of St. Augustine,
following the example of Rome, kept it on one day;
the Church of St. Columba, following the example
of the British and Eastern Churches, observed it
some ten days later, as the Russians and Greeks
do still.</p>
<p>But as time went on the rule of the Pope began
to weigh heavily upon the English people. They
thought that they had the right to elect their own
Bishops and Archbishops, while the Pope thought
that he had the right to do so, and at first he very
often sent foreigners to fill the English Sees.</p>
<p>Sometimes, indeed very often, they were good
men. The saintly Bishop Hugh of Lincoln came
from Savoy. Archbishop Theodore of Canterbury
was a Greek, who came from far-away Tarsus, the
city of St. Paul. But some of them were bad men,
haughty and insolent, who wanted to override
English laws and English freedom. And when
this happened the people were apt to rebel, and
declare that only English Bishops should rule in
the Church of England.</p>
<p>Things came to a crisis when, in the thirteenth
century, a great many Italians came over to England,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</SPAN></span>
and were given some of the highest offices in the
country. Among them were two brothers of good
birth, Peter of Savoy and his brother Boniface.
Peter, who had a grand house in the Strand, called
Savoy House, was made a Privy Councillor, and
was given the chief seat at the King’s Council
Board. Boniface, who was a priest, was, by the
wish of the Pope, made Archbishop of Canterbury.
Now, Boniface of Savoy had mistaken his vocation.
He was young, and handsome, and full of roistering
spirits; he would have made a good soldier, and
doubtless his men would have admired him for his
reckless daring; but he was haughty, and insolent,
and overbearing, and sadly lacking in common
sense—not fit to be placed in the great position in
which he found himself.</p>
<p>He brought with him a band of armed retainers,
who, when they rode through the streets of London,
robbed the stalls in the market-places as though
they had been wild marauders, instead of the
servants of a Christian Bishop. Their Master
behaved no better than they did. There was in
the City a monastery called St. Bartholomew’s, in
Smithfield. He resolved to visit it, and, appearing
at the gate with his men, demanded an entrance.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</SPAN></span>
For some reason the Prior resented this—perhaps
Boniface’s insolent manner made him angry; perhaps
he felt that it was the Bishop of London’s place to
inspect his monastery, and not the Archbishop of
Canterbury’s. At any rate, he refused to admit the
Prelate.</p>
<p>And what do you think happened? Without
more ado the Archbishop clenched his fist, and
knocked the Prior to the ground. It was a foolish
as well as a wicked act, for of course the news of
what had been done spread through London, and
the citizens began to say to each other that a man
who could do a deed like that was not fit to be an
Archbishop.</p>
<p>A little time afterwards, Boniface determined to
visit St. Paul’s Cathedral, and call upon the Bishop
of London for his tithes or first-fruits. He may
have been acting quite within his rights to do this:
I do not know; but the citizens, at any rate, made
up their minds that, if he came with his demands
to their Cathedral Church, he would find out what
they thought of him. So the big bell was rung,
and they gathered round the Cross in their
thousands. Archbishop Boniface heard of this in
his Palace at Lambeth, and, although he would not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</SPAN></span>
be turned from his purpose, he put on a suit of
armour under his robes before he ventured near the
Cathedral. When he arrived there, he found, to
his rage, that the citizens had closed the gates
against him, and instead of being awed by his angry
remonstrances, they jeered and hooted at him, and
even threatened him with violence, so that at last
he thought it wise to go home.</p>
<p>But worse was to follow. Now that an Italian
Archbishop sat on the throne of Canterbury, a
great many Italian priests came over, and were
given the best livings in the Church. Their
manners were no better than those of their
countryman, and the citizens became so enraged
at the behaviour of these foreigners, and at the
unjust way in which the Pope had forced them
upon them, that they determined that not one of
them should set foot in the church that they
looked on as especially their own.</p>
<p>And they were in such deadly earnest that it
actually came about that, when two of these priests
attempted to enter the precincts one day, the people
crowded into the churchyard and killed them on
the spot. After this they rushed to Lambeth, and
besieged the Palace there, uttering such threats that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</SPAN></span>
Boniface, the ‘Handsome Archbishop’, as they
called him, was glad to escape as best he could,
and fly abroad for safety. He never came back,
and we can fancy that the Pope was more careful
in future whom he sent to England, for the citizens
of London had taught him a lesson, and shown him
that he could not lord it over them with impunity.</p>
<p>Just one more story about these old days, and
then we must come to the St. Paul’s that we know.</p>
<p>It was in the reign of King Edward III., and
the Church of England had lost its first purity,
and grown rich and corrupt. Many of the Bishops
and clergy had forgotten what they had been made
ministers of God for, and, instead of thinking about
the needs of their people, they thought only of how
much wealth they could heap up for themselves,
and how luxuriously they could live.</p>
<p>The Reformation was yet a long way off, but
there were two men in the country who wanted to
put an end to this state of affairs, and they wanted
to do so for two very different reasons. You have all
heard of John Wyclif, the earliest of the English
Reformers. He was one of those two men, and he
wanted to weaken the power of Rome, because he
saw that the poor people of this country were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</SPAN></span>
being robbed, in order to enrich the Pope and his
favourites, who, as we have seen, were put into
high places in the Church. So he began to point
out the abuses that existed, and to urge people not
to submit to them any longer.</p>
<p>The other man was a powerful Noble, ‘John of
Gaunt—Time-honoured Lancaster,’ as Shakespeare
calls him; and I am afraid that the reason why he
wanted the power taken from the clergy was, that
he hoped that when they could no longer collect
great sums of money from the common people, he
and his brother Nobles might be able to do so
instead.</p>
<p>So when, one day, Wyclif was summoned to
appear before the Bishop of London, Bishop
Courtenay, to answer for the heretical notions
which it was reported that he was spreading, the
Duke of Lancaster espoused his cause, and stood
by his side.</p>
<p>It must have been a curious scene—the grave
Bishop in his robes, seated on his throne, with his
advisers round him; the thin, worn priest from
Lutterworth, with his pale, studious face and black
gown; and the proud Noble, who was, at that time,
one of the most powerful men in the country.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</SPAN></span>Some of the citizens had crept into the church,
to hear what the monk had to say, but they did
not hear him say very much, for the Duke of
Lancaster soon began to wrangle with the Bishop.
He hated the clergy, because he was envious of
their position and the power that they had over the
simple folk, and his pride could not brook the
questions that the Bishop put to his friend. At
last he lost his temper altogether, and, after speaking
very rudely to the Prelate, he threatened to
drag him out of the church by the hair of his head.
In an instant, the listening citizens sprang to their
feet. They were not very interested in Wyclif’s
reforms—probably, at that time, they did not know
very much about them—but this powerful Duke
was no friend of theirs, and they were enraged at
the thought that he dared come into their Cathedral
and threaten their Bishop. With one accord they
rushed to the belfry and tolled the great bell, and
when, as was their duty, crowds of other citizens
gathered in the churchyard to see what had
happened, they told them, in excited tones, that
John of Gaunt was in the church with his followers,
and threatening to lay hands on the Bishop.</p>
<p>Then a perfect tempest arose. Some of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</SPAN></span>
crowd rushed into the church, declaring that they
would murder the Duke; others went off to his
Palace in the Strand, determined to break into it
and pillage it, in order to punish him for his
insolence. And they were in such deadly earnest
that they would have carried out both threats had
not Bishop Courtenay himself interfered, and saved
his enemy from their violence.</p>
<p>Just before the Reformation the great church
was at the very height of its glory—from an outward
point of view, at least. We read that there were
no less than one hundred and thirty clergy who
were supposed to minister there, and that there
were so many people connected with it—schoolmasters,
schoolboys, singing-men, choir-boys,
bedesmen, bookbinders, sextons, gardeners, bell-ringers,
etc.—that employment must have been
given to more than a thousand people. It all
seems very grand and glorious; but if we read
further, we find that it had grown just like the
Temple in our Lord’s time: there was a great
deal of outward magnificence, and yet the very
purpose that the church had been built for—the
Service and Worship of God, was in danger of
being forgotten. Instead of being kept as God’s<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</SPAN></span>
house, entirely for His Worship, we find that the
great nave was the fashionable meeting-place of the
good folk of London, and they used it as we should
use a promenade to-day.</p>
<p>Francis Osborne, an old historian, writes: ‘It
was the fashion in those days ... for the principal
Gentry, Lords and Courtiers, and men of all professions,
to meet in S. Paul’s by eleven of the
clock ... and walk in the middle aisle till twelve,
and after dinner from three till six, during which
time some discoursed of business, and others of news.’</p>
<p>Then came the Reformation; and, as always
happens when a great change like that is taking
place, people were so zealous to sweep away all the
abuses that had crept in, that they ‘lost their
heads,’ as we say, and did many wrong and unseemly
things. It was right and needful that the
Church should be reformed; but it was not right
nor needful that all the splendid carving, and
decorated stonework, and beautifully illuminated
books, and gold and silver altar vessels, which had
been given for the Service of God by pious men
and women, should be broken by hammers, or
burned, or carried away and melted down, to fill
the pockets of worthless noblemen.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</SPAN></span>It was right that the nave should no longer be
the place of resort for all the fashionable loungers
in the city; but it did not improve matters when
the same nave was turned into cavalry barracks
for Oliver Cromwell’s soldiers, and the rough men
were allowed to play games and behave in any
way that they liked in the church.</p>
<p>No, the history of that time is not pleasant
reading; and we feel almost glad when we hear
that, first of all, the wooden spire was struck
by lightning, and set on fire, and then that the
whole church was burned down by the Great Fire
that devastated London in September, 1666; for
then a new beginning could be made, and those
unhappy old stories forgotten.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 class="nobreak">II</h2></div>
<p>You all know about the Great Fire of London:
how it came after the Plague, and how it seemed
such a calamity at the time, but proved, after
all, a blessing in disguise, for it burned down
all the old plague-infested, unhealthy wooden
houses, which were so crowded together that the
streets were narrow and dark, and made room for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</SPAN></span>
better buildings and wider streets, and brought in
a healthier mode of living altogether.</p>
<p>Just before the Fire broke out, a proposal had been
made to restore the old Cathedral, and a famous
architect, Sir Christopher Wren, had been called
on to discuss the matter. He had agreed to undertake
the work, and was prepared to do so, when
the Great Fire took place, and when it was over,
there was nothing left of the church but the
blackened walls.</p>
<p>Then people shook their heads, and said that it
would be impossible to restore it. A new Cathedral
might be built somewhere else, but the St. Paul’s
that they had known on Ludgate Hill had gone
for ever.</p>
<p>But Sir Christopher Wren differed from them.
‘It would be impossible to restore the church,’ he
said, ‘or even to rebuild it on its old foundation, but
there was no reason why a new foundation should
not be laid, and a new church built upon it.’</p>
<p>‘That was all very well,’ answered the objectors
to the scheme; but how did Dr. Wren propose to
take down the walls and level the old foundations?</p>
<p>He suggested gunpowder; and with a little care
he could have blown down the walls quite safely,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</SPAN></span>
but a stupid master-builder thought that he could
do the work himself, without the architect superintending,
and he set to work one morning, and
used such a big charge of the explosive that a great
many of the half-ruined houses in the neighbourhood
fell with the force of the explosion, and people got
such a fright that they objected to gunpowder
being used at all.</p>
<p>The famous architect was not dismayed, however,
at this opposition. He believed in the proverb that
says, ‘Where there’s a will, there’s a way.’ So he
procured a great beam of wood, forty feet long,
and had it covered at both ends with iron. Then
he slung this beam up in a wooden erection, something
like a triangle, and used it as a battering-ram
to break down the walls. At first it appeared as if
it would be in vain. The workmen battered at the
walls for a whole day, and not a stone fell. But
Wren persevered, and the next day he was rewarded,
for the great buttresses fell at last with a
crash, and he was able to proceed with his work.</p>
<p>And this he did most thoroughly. Someone
has said of him that he ‘built for eternity,’ and,
as far as any man can do so, the saying is true.</p>
<p>Everyone knows that the security of a building<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</SPAN></span>
depends greatly upon the kind of foundation it
rests upon. No matter how well built it is, no
matter how showy the walls may be, if the foundation
is not firm and solid, sooner or later it must
fall to pieces, unless something is done to repair it.</p>
<p>Christopher Wren knew of this danger, and the
first thing that he set his workmen to do was to
dig down forty feet into the earth to find out if the
ground on which he intended to build was quite
solid and secure. Doubtless many people laughed
at him, and said that he was too particular, but he
did not care, and they stopped laughing when it
was discovered that right down at the north-east
corner there was a pit, and if the new Cathedral
had been built over this, sooner or later the ground
would have sunk, and the wall of the building have
cracked, and in all probability fallen to pieces.
However, Dr. Wren made his workmen dig deeper,
till they got to the bottom of this pit; then he
filled it up with a pier of solid stone. It took him
a whole year to do this, but at the end of that time
he was ready to begin the church, knowing that
underneath it was a foundation that was absolutely
secure.</p>
<p>Then arose the great Cathedral that we see<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</SPAN></span>
to-day. It took some thirty years to build, and
when it was finished, the highest stone in the
lantern that rests on the dome was laid in its place
by Sir Christopher Wren’s son.</p>
<p>But now we learn something about Sir Christopher
that shows that he was a good as well as a clever
man. Do you remember what is said in the Bible
about people who can rule their own spirits, and
are slow to be angry? That they are really greater
than the men who conquer cities, and whom the
world admires. Tried by this standard, Sir
Christopher was a really great man. For he was
not only clever enough to build St. Paul’s Cathedral,
but he could rule his own spirit, and not vex himself
over the way in which his enemies treated him.</p>
<p>The story of Sir Christopher Wren’s life—for he
was knighted as a reward for his work—is as
interesting as any of the stories connected with
St. Paul’s Cathedral. He was the son of a Wiltshire
clergyman, and his love of architecture dated from
a time when the roof of his father’s church had
grown so old that it threatened to fall down.
And, as often happens in a country parish, there
were not very many rich men living there who
could give money to pay for the building of a new<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</SPAN></span>
one. So the Vicar determined that, instead of
paying for an architect, he would draw the
plans, and superintend the building of the roof
himself.</p>
<p>And we can imagine how little Christopher
would hear all about the new church roof, and how
he would look over his father’s shoulder and watch
him when he was drawing the plans, and how he
would spend all his play-time in the church, looking
at the joiners putting up the wooden beams, and
the other workmen working on the walls, while his
father went up and down, superintending everything,
and very likely lending a helping hand
himself. Perhaps it was in these early days that
the boy determined that he, too, would build
churches when he was grown up.</p>
<p>Then he had an ‘Uncle Matthew,’ who was
Bishop of Ely, and as he grew older he would go
and visit him, and would wander across from the
Palace into Queen Etheldreda’s beautiful Minster
Church, and stand and look up in wonder at the
Lantern Tower; and his uncle would tell him the
story of how it once fell, and how Alan de
Walsingham built it up again, and perhaps it was
that which gave him the idea, which he carried out<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</SPAN></span>
afterwards at St. Paul’s, of a great church with an
enormous dome in the centre of it, under which
thousands of people could assemble, as they do on
Sunday afternoons at St. Paul’s to-day, and listen
to the sermon of some great preacher.</p>
<p>He did something else first, however, for he was
very fond of watching the stars, and when he went
to Oxford he watched them so closely, and learned
so much about them, that he was made Professor
of Astronomy.</p>
<p>But although he was made Professor of
Astronomy, he seems to have gone on all the
time studying architecture, and drawing plans of
churches, and at last King Charles heard of him,
and asked him to draw some plans of churches for
him. In this way he became known as a clever
architect, and when the Great Fire took place, and a
large part of London had to be rebuilt, he not only
built a new Cathedral, but forty-two other churches
as well; besides which he built Marlborough
House, and a great part of Greenwich Hospital.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i050.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p class="caption"><span class="captionright"><small><i>Photochrom Co., Ltd.</i></small></span><br/>
<br/>
<b>ST. PAUL’S CATHEDRAL: NELSON’S MONUMENT</b><br/>
<span class="captionright"><small>(<i>Page 59</i>)</small></span></p>
<p>So you see that he had a useful, busy life, and
it was a very long one as well, for he lived till
he was an old man of ninety-one. He was not
very kindly treated towards the end of his life, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</SPAN></span>
this was because of what is called ‘political
jealousy.’ It had been the Stuart Kings who had
brought him into notice, and given him the post of
Surveyor-General; but when the House of Hanover
came into power, their followers said, ‘Oh, we
cannot have any of the friends of the Stuarts
holding good posts; we must take them from
them, and give them to those of our own party.’</p>
<p>And so Sir Christopher Wren’s office was taken
from him, and given to another man, and something
else was done that vexed him quite as much as
losing his post.</p>
<p>He had meant his great Cathedral to stand as it
stands to-day, with an open space all round it.
Someone suggested that it would look much better
if it were enclosed by a wall. And, in spite of Sir
Christopher’s remonstrances, a wall was built, which
quite spoilt the effect in his eyes.</p>
<p>He might have gone up and down the world
trying to prove to everyone that his idea was best,
and he might have made himself and his friends
very unhappy over the unkindness and injustice
that had been shown him, but, instead of this, he
only shrugged his shoulders when he looked at the
unsightly wall, and said, with a little laugh, that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</SPAN></span>
‘ladies thought nothing looked well without an
edging.’ Then he retired quietly to Hampton
Court, where he had a house, and occupied himself
until he died with his old hobby of Astronomy, and
with reading Theology and Philosophy.</p>
<p>We read that occasionally the old man would
‘give himself a treat,’ and do you know what that
treat was? He would come to London, and walk
quietly up the Strand to St. Paul’s Churchyard,
and stand and look for a while at the great and
beautiful Cathedral that he had built, and then he
would go home feeling quite content and happy,
for he knew that it would stand for long centuries
after the ugly wall had been pulled down again,
and that future generations would forget all the
unkind and untrue things that people had said
about him, while they would always remember that
it was he, Christopher Wren, who was the builder
of St. Paul’s.</p>
<p>And there was something else, I think, which
must have made him very happy towards the
close of his life. In those days people were not
above taking bribes—that is, they would take
money, let us say, from a timber merchant, and
promise that they would use his timber, whether it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</SPAN></span>
was good or bad; or from a stonemason, and use
his stones, no matter how badly they were hewn.
But Wren had never done this; his hands were
clean, and he left such a splendid name for uprightness
and honesty behind him that after his death
someone wrote of him, ‘In a corrupt age, all
testimonies leave him spotless.’</p>
<p>Now let us go inside the Cathedral, and walk
round it, although it is so full of monuments that
it is impossible to tell you the story of each.</p>
<p>As we look at them we realize that St. Paul’s
still keeps its character of the Citizens’ Church.</p>
<p>In Westminster Abbey, Kings, and poets, and
writers lie buried, or have monuments put up to
their memory, but here, in St. Paul’s, most of the
monuments are those of national heroes, of men
who have lived and died for the Empire.</p>
<p>We will just look at one or two. If, as we walk
up the nave, we keep to our right hand, we come,
on the north side, to a recumbent statue of bronze,
and we are almost certain to find one or two people
standing looking at it, and perhaps someone has
laid a tiny bunch of flowers against the slab on
which the figure rests. For this is the monument
erected to General Gordon, and there is no man<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</SPAN></span>
who has died in recent years whose memory is held
more in honour by the people of England. For he
died in the attempt to save women and children
from deadly peril; and these poor people were not
English—they had not even white skins—but were
Soudanese, who lived in far-away Khartoum. I
expect that most of you have read the life of this
great man, but for the sake of those who have not,
I will tell you a little about him. To begin with,
he was what we call ‘unique’—that is, there is no
one else who is quite like him, and no one can read
the story of his life without thinking of two words,
‘Hero’ and ‘Saint.’</p>
<p>Somehow he reminds us of a strong climber, who
spends his days toiling up a great mountain, and
always getting higher and higher, and nearer and
nearer Heaven, while most of us are content to
remain down in the valley, where life is not so
hard, but where the air is less pure, and the roads
are dusty.</p>
<p>And just as we read in the old stories about
heroes having one possession that kept them
strong, such as a magic sword, or shield, or
helmet, so we can clearly see one thing in General
Gordon’s life that made him what he was—something<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</SPAN></span>
that enabled him to be brave, and
chivalrous, and modest; to care absolutely nothing
about praise, or blame, or reward, or even money
(the thing that so many people care so much about)—and
that one thing was absolute faith in God and
in God’s Providence.</p>
<p>Most of us live our lives as something that
belongs to ourselves; and we make our own plans,
and choose our own careers, and we think twice
before we do this or that, trying to see what the
consequences of our act will be.</p>
<p>To General Gordon life was simply a time that
was given to him to do God’s will—and he was
certain that whatever came to him was God’s will—so
it was all the same to him whether the days
brought joy or sorrow, praise or blame, riches or
poverty, life or death.</p>
<p>He was a good soldier of the Queen—for Queen
Victoria was living then—but he was also a good
soldier of Jesus Christ; perhaps one of the best
that has ever enlisted in that great army, for he
took his orders, and carried them out to the best
of his power, never questioning, never grumbling,
quite certain, whatever the consequences turned
out to be, that everything was right.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</SPAN></span>And it was this great faith that made him go,
promptly and fearlessly, into danger that other
men might have shrunk from, and with reason.
He is sometimes called ‘Chinese Gordon,’ because
once, when there was a rebellion in China, the
Emperor asked for a British officer to help to quell
it, and Gordon was sent. The rebels had entrenched
themselves in forts, and Gordon used to lead bands
of soldiers to storm these forts, carrying only a
little cane in his hand, with which he pointed out
to the men what he wanted them to do. And the
Chinese were so amazed that they thought that the
little cane was enchanted, and they called it his
‘magic wand,’ and believed that it protected him
from all harm.</p>
<p>After the rebellion was quelled he came home,
and was stationed at Gravesend, where he was
employed in constructing forts. He might have
been puffed up by the reputation that he had earned
in China, and have become proud and self-conscious;
but instead of that, he lived very quietly, visiting
infirmaries and ragged schools in his leisure time.
And he so interested himself in the poor boys whom
he found in the streets that he would take them
into his own house, and keep them there until he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</SPAN></span>
found an opportunity to send them to sea, and thus
give them a fresh start in life.</p>
<p>Now comes the story of the Soudan. If you
look at a map of Africa, you will see, south of
Egypt, a tract of country bearing that name. I
have not time to tell you how it came to be under
British protection, but it did, and the natives, who
had been very badly treated before, settled down
to live quietly and peacefully under British rule.</p>
<p>Then a man arose, called the Mahdi, who gathered
together thousands of Arabs and raided the Soudan,
vanquishing the Egyptian troops who tried to fight
against them. The Mahdi became very powerful,
and it was felt that it would take too many of our
soldiers to hold the country against him, so the
British Government determined to give it up. But
we could not leave all the poor Soudanese people
to be massacred by the Arabs, so it was determined
to try to get them safely out of the country into
Egypt, and Gordon was sent out from England to
do this. He was accompanied by a friend of his,
Colonel Stewart, and they went to Khartoum,
which, if you look at the map, you will see is the
Capital of the Soudan, and stands on the banks of
the Nile, surrounded by deserts.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</SPAN></span>They succeeded in sending 2,500 people away in
safety; then the Mahdi and his followers hemmed
them in. Colonel Stewart tried to escape up the
Nile, and summon help from Egypt, but his boat
was wrecked, and he was murdered. And then
Gordon was left alone, the only Englishman in
Khartoum.</p>
<p>It is very sad, and yet it is grand, to read how
that lonely soldier defended the city, for almost a
year, with no one to help him except natives, and
with a howling mob of Arabs outside the walls.
He lived in what was called the ‘Palace,’ and day
after day he used to go up to the roof, and look in
vain down the river, and all over the desert, for the
help which he expected would be sent from
England, and which never came.</p>
<p>It did not come in time, at least, for it was too
late in being sent; and when, at last, after much
danger, a relieving force did reach the city, it was
only to find that it had fallen into the hands of the
Arabs two days before, and that its brave defender,
along with the rest of the inhabitants, had been
killed.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i059.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p class="caption"><span class="captionright"><small><i>Valentine and Sons, Ltd.</i></small></span><br/>
<br/>
<b>ST. PAUL’S CATHEDRAL: THE NAVE</b></p>
<p>Can you imagine the thrill of horror and regret
that swept over England when the news came<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</SPAN></span>
home? It was felt to be such a terrible thing that
one of our countrymen should have been sent out
to attempt such a dangerous and difficult task, and
then left alone for months fighting against such
overpowering odds, and that, when at last help was
sent, we should have to confess that it was sent
‘too late.’</p>
<p>And yet, to General Gordon, facing death alone
in that far-off Soudanese town, it was not terrible;
it was simply a bit of God’s will. Listen to the
words that he wrote just ten days before the end
came, when he knew quite well that if succour did
not come speedily, it need not come at all.</p>
<p>After writing ‘Good-bye’ to all his friends, he
adds, ‘I am quite happy, thank God; and, like
Lawrence, I have tried to do my duty.’</p>
<p>These are not the words of a man who sees
death coming, and is afraid; they are the words of
one who was ‘quite happy,’ because he had done
his life-work as well as he could, and was content
to go home to God, no matter if the way thither
were very rough and very lonely.</p>
<p>His body was never found; probably it was
hacked in pieces by the Mahdi’s wild followers;
and yet he had a ‘funeral.’</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</SPAN></span>For although Englishmen may be slow to act,
they act surely; and fourteen long years after
Gordon’s death, the Soudan was retaken, and after
the great Battle of Omdurman, Lord Kitchener,
with his victorious army, entered Khartoum one
peaceful Sunday morning, and what do you think
was the first thing that he did?</p>
<p>He took his troops, British and Egyptian, into
the open space in front of the ruined Palace where
Gordon had fallen, and formed them into three
sides of a square, while he and his generals stood in
the centre.</p>
<p>And then, after the British and Egyptian flags
had been run up to the roof of the Palace, and a
Royal Salute had been fired, a little group of
clergymen stepped forward. They represented all
parts of the Church, for soldiers of all creeds
wished to take part in Gordon’s ‘funeral.’ Then,
while solemn minute-guns were fired, a Presbyterian
minister read the seventeenth Psalm, which tells how
God’s people, whenever or however they die, will
behold His ‘Face in righteousness,’ and how they
will be ‘satisfied’ when they ‘awake in His
likeness.’</p>
<p>Then an English clergyman said the Lord’s<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</SPAN></span>
Prayer, and an old Roman Catholic Priest, with
snow-white hair, said a memorial prayer for Gordon
and those who had fallen with him. Then the
Scottish pipers wailed out a dirge, and the dark
Egyptian band played Gordon’s favourite hymn,
‘Abide with Me.’ After that the soldiers were
dismissed from their ranks, and were at liberty to
wander up and down, and everybody, down to the
youngest bugler, had a glad feeling in his heart,
that, although they did not know the exact spot
where General Gordon’s bones were resting, they
had done their best, after fourteen years, to give
him Christian burial.</p>
<p>There are many more memorials here of men
about whom we could tell the most interesting
stories, had we only the time. Here is a monument
to Sir John Moore, who was killed at
Corunna; and who, as doubtless you have learned
at school, was ‘buried darkly at dead of night,’
before the defeated English army took to their
boats.</p>
<p>And here is one to Sir John Howard, the great
prison reformer. See, he carries a key in his hand,
to show us how he unlocked the prison doors, and
brought help and comfort to the wretched inmates,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</SPAN></span>
far more hopeless and neglected in his day than
they are in ours.</p>
<p>And here is a representation of a Bishop blessing
little black children. That is Bishop Heber, first
Bishop of Calcutta, who wrote a great many
hymns, some of which I am sure you know—‘Holy,
Holy, Holy, Lord God Almighty,’ ‘From
Greenland’s icy mountains,’ and ‘Brightest and
best of the sons of the morning.’</p>
<p>Here is a beautiful memorial—a bronze angel
stooping to lift the figure of a wounded yet
crowned warrior. Let us read the inscription
under it, for it tells of forty-three thousand men,
sons of the Empire, who flocked from our Colonies—from
Australia, India, Ceylon, New Zealand, and
South Africa—to help us to fight against the Boers,
and who ‘Gave their Lives for the Motherland.’</p>
<p>Near by is a great window, representing our
Lord healing the sick, which was placed there as a
thanksgiving for the recovery of our King from
a very dangerous illness when he was Prince of
Wales.</p>
<p>Look up to the Dome. Do you see the paintings
there? They are so far above us that we can
hardly see them properly; but if we were nearer<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</SPAN></span>
we should see that they are scenes from the life of
St. Paul. They were painted by an artist called
Sir John Thornhill, and he almost lost his life
when he was painting them. Indeed, he would
have done so had it not been for the promptitude
of a friend of his. A great scaffold had been
erected for him to stand on while he was painting,
and it makes us almost giddy to think of the height
that it must have been from the floor. One day
he was up there, working busily, and, luckily, a
friend was with him; for he stepped back to see
the effect of his work, and went so near the edge
of the scaffold that another step would have taken
him over, to be dashed to pieces on the floor
below.</p>
<p>His friend saw his danger, and, seizing a wet
paint-brush, flung it at the painting. The artist
rushed forward to intercept the brush, and so his
life was saved.</p>
<p>Now let us enter the choir, and look at this
wonderful carving on the stalls. This was done by
a famous wood-carver, named Grinling Gibbons,
whose story is as well worth knowing as that of Sir
Christopher Wren. He was partly English and
partly Dutch, and was born in Rotterdam. He<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</SPAN></span>
was very fond of carving, and he used to copy all
the things that he saw growing outside—fruits, and
flowers, and sprays of leaves, and berries—and he
became a very clever carver indeed.</p>
<p>He came to England, and made up his mind to
work hard at his art, and, in order to have time and
quietness to do so, he hired a tiny house at Deptford,
and went and lived there. After he had been
there some time, he determined to do a really great
piece of work.</p>
<p>He was very fond of a wonderful picture of the
Crucifixion, which had been painted by a Venetian
artist named Tintoretto, and he made up his mind
that he would copy this in wood, and frame it in a
wreath of carved fruits and flowers.</p>
<p>It was a very ambitious thing to do, but he
succeeded beautifully, although it took him a long
while, and cost him a great deal of time and work.</p>
<p>Now it chanced that near his little cottage there
was a great mansion called Sayes Court, in which
lived a very wise, rich, and cultured man named
John Evelyn. We know all about him, because
he did what perhaps some of you do:—he kept a
diary, which has been preserved, and which we can
read to-day.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</SPAN></span>And, luckily for Grinling Gibbons, John Evelyn
got to know him, and was a very good friend to
him. If we read Evelyn’s ‘Diary,’ we learn how it
came about.</p>
<p>He tells us how one day he was walking, ‘by
mere accident,’ in a field near Sayes Court, when
he noticed a ‘poore solitary thatched house.’ He
thought he would like to see who lived there, and
he went and knocked, but the door was shut, so he
looked in at the window.</p>
<p>And he saw the young artist working at his
beautiful piece of carving, which was almost
finished. Evelyn was so astonished at finding
such a skilful craftsman living so humbly that he
asked him if he might come in and speak to him.</p>
<p>Gibbons opened the door quite civilly, and
Evelyn tells us that when he saw the work close
at hand he was quite amazed at its beauty and
delicacy. He asked the young carver why he lived
in such a lonely spot, and Gibbons told him that
he wanted to have time ‘to work hard at his
profession without interruption.’</p>
<p>Then Evelyn, who was always ready to do a
kind action and to help people, volunteered to
introduce him to some ‘great man,’ who might,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</SPAN></span>
perhaps, buy the piece of carving, and asked the
sum for which Gibbons would sell it.</p>
<p>The craftsman replied modestly that ‘he was
but a beginner, but he thought that the carving
was worth a hundred pounds.’</p>
<p>Mr. Evelyn thought that it was quite worth a
hundred pounds too, and so the very next time
that he went to Court he told King Charles about
it, and asked him if he might invite the young
artist to bring the piece of work to Whitehall when
it was finished, in order that the King might see it.</p>
<p>King Charles said ‘Yes,’ and kind-hearted John
Evelyn was delighted, for he felt certain that as
soon as the King saw it he would buy it. But,
alas! his expectations were dashed to the ground by
a French ‘peddling woman,’ who sold ‘petticoats
and fauns and baubles out of France’ to the
Queen and the ladies of her Court. And this was
how it happened.</p>
<p>When the piece of carving was brought to the
Palace, the King admired it very much, and would
have bought it, but he thought that he would ask
his wife first how she liked it. So he gave orders
that it was to be carried into the Queen’s apartments,
so that she could see it. She also admired<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</SPAN></span>
it, and was anxious that the King should buy it;
but an old Frenchwoman chanced to be in the
room—the ‘peddling woman,’ as Evelyn calls her—who
was in the habit of bringing over gloves, and
fans, and things of that sort, from France, and
selling them to the Court ladies. When she heard
the price that Charles proposed to give for the
carving, she was afraid that the Queen would run
short of money, and so would not be able to buy
so many things from her as she usually did.</p>
<p>So, when the King left the room, she began to
criticize the carving, and to find fault with it, and
the foolish Queen believed that what she said was
true, and when the King came back, she persuaded
him not to buy it. So poor Grinling had to carry
it back to his little cottage at Deptford, and he
afterwards sold it to a nobleman for eighty pounds.</p>
<p>But, although his first attempt at helping Grinling
Gibbons had not succeeded very well, kind
Mr. Evelyn did not give it up. He happened to
know Sir Christopher Wren, and as Sir Christopher
was busy at that time over the building of the new
Cathedral, he went and saw him, and told him
about his protégé, and asked him if he could not
give him something to do.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</SPAN></span>And Sir Christopher, who was looking about for
someone to carve the woodwork of the stalls, went
down and saw Gibbons’ work, and was so pleased
with it that he engaged him at once to come and
help him. And of course, when Gibbons did this,
he soon became famous, and had no more trouble
in obtaining orders.</p>
<p>Now perhaps you may feel inclined to ask if all
the monuments in St. Paul’s Cathedral are erected
to the memory of men who died far away in other
lands. It looks like it, does it not? for we have
seen Gordon’s monument, who died at Khartoum;
and Moore’s, who died in Spain; and Bishop
Heber’s, who died in India; and that of the
Colonial soldiers, who died in South Africa; and if
we go on looking, we shall find very many more, to
the memory of soldiers and sailors who fought our
battles, and guarded our shores, but whose bones
are resting in foreign lands, or, mayhap, under the
rolling waves of the sea.</p>
<p>But if we go down to the crypt, we shall find that
there are some graves there. Two of them I am
sure that you would like to look at for a moment,
because they are the graves of two men whose
memory will be kept green as long as the English<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</SPAN></span>
nation lasts. One of them was her greatest soldier,
and the other her greatest sailor. I need not tell
you their names, need I?—Arthur, Duke of
Wellington—‘The Iron Duke,’ as men called him—and
Horatio, Lord Nelson, who died at Trafalgar,
on board the <i>Victory</i>.</p>
<p>There are two monuments erected to them,
upstairs, in the great church. That to Wellington
is enormous, and stands just across the aisle from
General Gordon’s. Nelson’s monument is on the
other side of the Cathedral, just at the corner of
the south transept, and is more interesting to look
at than that of Wellington, for it represents the
famous Admiral standing with one sleeve empty—for,
as you remember, his right arm was shot away
at the Battle of Teneriffe—while underneath are
carved the names of his greatest sea-fights, Copenhagen,
Nile, and Trafalgar. Lower still is the
British Lion, emblem of the land he fought for,
and the figure of Britannia, pointing out the great
sailor to two little middies, and telling them to
follow in his steps.</p>
<p>But when, in 1805, Nelson died on board his
battleship, the English people felt that it was not
enough that a monument should be put up to his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</SPAN></span>
memory in the Citizen Church of their Capital.
They wanted his body to rest amongst them;
so it was brought home, and, amid general lamentation,
was buried in this still and silent crypt.</p>
<p>Forty-seven years passed; and once more the
whole nation was mourning, for the Duke of
Wellington was dead. He had not died in action,
as did Nelson, but had fought his fights, and
won his victories, and conquered Napoleon, and
had lived to come home, and enter Parliament, and
serve his country as a politician as well as a soldier.</p>
<p>And when the question arose as to where he
should be buried, it was felt to be fitting that he—‘The
Greatest Soldier,’ as Tennyson calls him—should
be brought and laid beside ‘The Greatest
Sailor,’ and that the</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="verse">‘Sound of those he wrought for,</div>
<div class="verse">And the feet of those he fought for,’</div>
<div class="verse">Should ‘Echo round his bones for evermore.’</div>
</div></div>
<p>Do you know how his body was brought
through the streets of London? Look at this
enormous funeral car standing under this dark arch,
and you will see. It looks so strange and fantastic
that at first sight you hardly know what it is meant
for; but you must remember that it was not made<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</SPAN></span>
out of ordinary wood, like carts and waggons. It
was made out of iron—out of old cannon which had
done their part in the great soldier’s victories.
Look at the names of these victories, twenty-four
of them, engraved upon the body of the car.</p>
<p>You can think what a solemn procession it must
have been, as the mighty soldier and prudent
statesman was borne upon it, through more than a
million silent onlookers, to his last long rest in
St. Paul’s.</p>
<p>Here is another grave that we must look at ere
we leave the Crypt. ‘It cannot be an important
one,’ you say, ‘for there is no monument over it,
only an inscription.’</p>
<p>Ah yes, but read the inscription—‘Lector, Si
Monumentum Requiris, Circumspice.’<SPAN name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</SPAN> That tells
us at once whose grave it is. It is Christopher
Wren’s. And, as we do his bidding, and look
around and above us, and as we ascend the stairs
once more, and enter the magnificent Cathedral
and walk down the nave to the great west door,
we feel that no smaller monument could have been
erected to the man whose marvellous skill planned
it all.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p class="ph2">FOOTNOTE:</p>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></SPAN> ‘Reader, if thou requirest a monument, look around.’</p>
</div>
<hr class="chap" />
<div class="transnote">
<p class="ph2">TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE:</p>
<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
</div>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />