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October 5th
Born:
Jonathan Edwards, eminent Calvinistic
divine, 1703, Windsor, Connecticut;
Horace Walpole,
Earl of Orford, celebrated virtuoso and man of
letters, 1717, Wareham,, Dorsetshire;. Dr. William
Wilkie, author of the Epigoniad, 1721, Dalmeny,
Linlithgowshire; Lloyd, Lord Kenyon, distinguished
lawyer, 1732, Greddington, Flintshire.
Died:
Justin, Roman emperor, 578; Henry III,
emperor of Germany, 1056; Philip III, the Bold, king
of France, 1285; Edward Bruce, brother of King Robert,
killed at Fagher, Ireland, 1318; Augustus III, king of
Poland, 1763, Dresden; Charles, Marquis Cornwallis,
governor-general of India, 1805, Ghazepore, Benares;
Bernard, Comte de Lac�pd�, eminent naturalist, 1825.
Feast Day:
St. Placidus, abbot, and companions, martyrs, 546.
St. Galla widow, about 550.
HEART-BEQUESTS
Some curious notions and practices respecting the
human heart came into vogue about the time of the
first Crusade, and were by many believed to have
originated among those who died in that expedition. As
the supposed seat of the affections, the heart was
magnified into undue importance, and, after the death
of a beloved or distinguished person, became the
object of more solicitude than all the rest of his
body. Thus the heart was considered the most valuable
of all legacies, and it became the habit for a person
to bequeath it to his dearest friend, or to his most
favourite church, abbey, or locality, as a token of
his supreme regard. And when no such bequest was made,
the friends or admirers of deceased persons would
cause their hearts to be carefully embalmed, and then,
enclosing them in some costly casket, would preserve
them as precious treasure, or entomb them with special
honor. This remarkable practice, which has been
continued more or less down to the present century,
was most prevalent during the medieval ages�numerous
instances of which are still on record, and many of
them are curious and interesting. Our space will only
permit us to give a few specimens:
Robert, the famous Earl of Mellent and
Leicester, died in 1118, in the abbey of Preaux,
where his body was buried, but his heart, by his
own order, was conveyed to the hospital at
Brackley, to be there preserved in salt.
He had been among the early Crusaders in the Holy
Land, and was, says Henry of Huntingdon, 'the most
sagacious in political affairs of all who lived
between this and Jerusalem. His mind was enlightened,
his eloquence persuasive, his shrewdness acute.' But
he was rapacious, wily, and unscrupulous, and acquired
much of his vast possessions, which were very
extensive, both in England and Normandy, by unjust mancoeuvres, and acts of
cruelty and violence. When he
perceived death approaching, he assumed the monastic
habit, the usual act of atonement in such characters
at that period, and died a penitent in the abbey of
Praeux, but, while he founded the hospital at Brackley,
where his heart was preserved, he stoutly refused to
restore any of the possessions which he had unjustly
acquired.
Isabella, daughter of William the Marshal, Earl of
Pembroke, and wife of Richard, brother of Henry III,
died at Berkhamstead in 1239, and ordered her heart to
be sent in a silver cup to her brother, then abbot of
Tewkesbury, to be there buried before the high-altar.
Her body was buried at Beaulieu, in Hampshire. 'The
noble Isabella, Countess of Gloucester and Cornwall,'
says Matthew Paris, 'was taken dangerously ill of
the
yellow jaundice, and brought to the point of death.
She became senseless, and after having had the ample
tresses of her flaxen hair cut off, and made a full
confession of her sins, she departed to the Lord,
together with a boy to whom she had given birth. When
Earl Richard, who had gone into Cornwall, heard of
this event, he broke out into the most sorrowful
lamentations, and mourned inconsolably.' Henry, their
son, while attending mass in the church of St.
Lawrence, at Viterbo, in Tuscany, was cruelly murdered
by Simon De Monfort and Guy
de Montfort, in revenge for the death
of their father at the battle of Evesham, in which,
however, he appears to have had no part. His heart was
sent in a golden vase to Westminster Abbey, where it
was deposited in the tomb of Edward the Confessor. On
his monument was a gilt statue holding his heart,
labeled with these words: 'I bequeath to my father my
heart pierced with the dagger.' His father, Richard,
king of the Romans, having been thrice married, died
in 1272, from grief at his son's murder. His body was
buried at the abbey of Hayles, his own foundation, and
his heart was deposited in the church of the Minorite
Brethren, at Oxford, under a costly pyramid erected by
his widow.
The heart of John Baliol, Lord of Barnard Castle,
who died in 1269, was, by his widow's desire, embalmed
and enclosed in an ivory casket richly enamelled with
silver. His affectionate widow, Devorgilla, used to
have this casket placed on the table every day when
she ate her meals, and ordered it to be laid on her
own heart, when she was herself placed in her tomb.
She was buried, according to her own direction, near
the altar in New Abbey, which she herself had founded
in Galloway, and the casket containing her husband's
heart placed on her bosom. From this touching
incident, the abbey received the name of Dolce Cor, or
Sweet-heart Abbey, and for its arms bore in chief a
heart over two pastoral staffs, and in base three
mullets of five points.
Hearts were not only bequeathed by Crusaders, who
died in the Holy Land, to their friends at home, in
testimony of unaltered affection, but were sometimes
sent there in fulfillment of an unaccomplished vow.
Thus Edward I, after he ascended the throne, again
took the cross, promising to return to Jerusalem, and
give his best support to the crusade, which was then
in a depressed condition. But, being detained by his
wars with Scotland, unexpected death, in 1307,
prevented the fulfilment of his engagement. He
therefore, on his death-bed, charged his son to send
his heart to Palestine, accompanied with a hundred and
forty knights and their retinues, in discharge of his
vow. Having provided two thousand pounds of silver for
the support of this expedition, and I his heart being
so conveyed thither, he trusted that God would accept
this fulfilment of his vow, and grant his blessing on
the undertaking: He also imprecated I eternal
damnation on any who should expend the money for any
other purpose. But the disobedient son little regarded
the commandment of his father.'
It is remarkable that the two sworn foes, Edward I
of England, and Robert Bruce, king of Scotland,
should
have alike decided to send their hearts to be buried
in the Holy Land. Each gave the order on his
death-bed; each had the same motive for giving it; and
the injunction of each was destined to be unperformed;
but had their wishes been realised, the hearts of
these two inveterate enemies would have met to rest
quietly together for ever, in the same sepulchre.
The account of Bruce's heart is very interesting.
As he lay on his death-bed, in 1329, he entreated Sir
James Douglas, his dear and trusty friend, to carry
his heart to Jerusalem, because he had not, on account
of his war with England, been able to fulfil a vow
which he had made to assist in the crusade. Sir James,
weeping exceedingly, vowed, on the honor of a knight,
faithfully to discharge the trust reposed in him.
After the king's death, his heart was taken from his
body, embalmed, and enclosed in a silver case which,
by a chain, Douglas suspended to his neck; and then,
having provided a suitable retinue to attend him, he
departed for the Holy Land. On reaching Spain, he
found the king of Castile hotly engaged in war with
the Moors, and thinking any contest with Saracens
consistent with his vow, he joined the Spaniards in a
battle against the Moors, but, ignorant of their mode
of fighting, was soon surrounded by horsemen, so that
escape was impossible. In desperation, he took the
precious heart from his neck, and threw it before him,
shouting aloud: "Pass on as thou wort wont; I will
follow or die!' He followed, and was immediately
struck to the earth. His dead body was found after the
battle, lying over the heart of Bruce. His body was
carried away by his friends, and honorably buried in
his own church of St. Bride, at Douglas. Bruce's heart
was intrusted to the charge of Sir
Simon Locard of
Lee, who bore it back to Scotland, and deposited it
beneath the altar in Melrose Abbey, where, perhaps, it
still remains.
From this incident, Sir Simon changed
his name from Locard to Lockheart (as it used to be
spelled), and bore in his arms a heart within a
fetterlock, with the motto, 'Corda serrata pando.'
From the same incident, the Douglases bear a human
heart, imperially crowned, and have in their
possession an ancient sword, emblazoned with two hands
holding a heart, and dated 1329, the year in which
Bruce died. An old ballad, quoted in the notes to
Scott's Marmion, has this stanza
'I will ye charge, efter gat I depart,
To holy
grave, and thair bury my hart;
Let it remain ever bothe tyme and howr,
To ye last day I see my
Savior.'
Mrs. Hemans has some beautiful lines on Bruce's
heart, in Melrose Abbey, of which the following is the
first stanza:
Heart! that didst press forward still,
Where
the trumpet's note rang shrill,
Where the knightly
swords were crossing,
And the plumes like sea-foam
tossing;
Leader of the charging spear,
Fiery heart!�and liest thou here?
May this
narrow spot inurn
Aught that so could beat and burn?'
Sir Robert Peckham, who died abroad, caused his
heart to be sent into England, and buried in his
family vault at Denham, in Buckinghamshire. He died in
1569, but his heart appears to have remained for many
years unburied, as we gather from the following entry
in the parish-register of burials: Edmund us Peckham,
Esgr., sonne of Sir George Peckham, July 18, 1586. On
the same day was the harte Of Sr Robert Peckham,
knight, buried in the vault under the chappell.' The
heart is enclosed in a leaden case thus inscribed: 'J.
H. S. Robertus Peckham Eques Auratus Anglus Cor suum
Dulciss. patrie major. Monumentis commendari. Obiit 1
SeptembrisMD. XIX.'
Edward Lord Windsor, of Bradenham, Bucks, who died
at Spa, January 24, 1574, bequeathed his body to be
buried in the cathedral church of the noble city of
Liege, with a convenient tomb to his memory, but his
heart to be enclosed in lead, and sent into England,
there to be buried in the chapel at Bradenham, under
his father's tomb, in token of a true Englishman.' The
case containing this heart, which has on it a long
inscription, is still in the vault at Bradenham, and
was seen in 1848, when Isaac d'Israeli was buried in
the same vault.
The circumstances respecting the heart of Lord
Edward Bruce, who was killed in a duel in 1613, are
interesting. His body was interred at Bergen, in
Holland, where he died, and a monument was there
erected to his memory. But a tradition remained in his family, that his
heart had been conveyed to Scotland, and deposited in
the burial-ground adjoining the old Abbey-Church of Culross, in Perthshire. The
tradition had become to
many a discredited tale, when, to put it to the test,
a search was made in 1806 for the precious relic. Two
flat stones, strongly clasped together with iron, were
discovered about two feet below the level of the
pavement, and partly under an old projection in the
wall.
These stones had on them no
inscription, but the
singularity of their being thus braced together,
induced the searchers to separate them, when a silver
case, shaped like a heart, was found in a cavity
between the stones. The case, which was engraved with
the arms and name of Lord Edward Bruce, had hinges and
clasps, and on being opened, was found to contain a
heart carefully embalmed in a brownish coloured
liquid. After drawings of it were taken, it was
carefully replaced in its former situation. In
another cavity in the stones was a small leaden box,
which had probably contained the bowels, but if so,
they had then become dust.
It may be noticed in passing, as another proof of
the undue importance attributed to the heart, that formerly the executioner of a
traitor
was required to remove the body from the gallows
before life was extinct, and plucking out the heart,
to hold it up in his hands, and exclaim aloud, 'Here
is the heart of a traitor!' 'It was currently
reported,' says Anthony Wood, 'that when the
executioner held up the heart of Sir
Everard Digby,
and said, "Here is the heart of a traitor!" Sir Everard made answer
and said, "Thou liest!" 'This
story, which rests solely on Wood's authority, is
generally discredited, though Lord
Bacon affirms there
are instances of persons saying two or three words in
similar cases.
From attaching such importance to the human heart,
doubtless arose the practice, which is exemplified in
many of our churches, of representing it so freely in
sepulchral commemoration. And this occurs, not only
where a heart alone is buried, but often the figure of
a heart with an inscription is adopted as the sole
memorial over the remains of the whole body. An
example may be seen in St. John's Church, Margate,
Kent (see engraving on the previous page). A plate of
brass, cut into the shape and size of a human heart,
is sunk into the slab which covers the remains of a
former vicar of the church. The heart is inscribed
with the words 'Credo q",' which begin each
inscription on three scrolls that issue from the
heart, thus:
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Redemptor meus vivit
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credo qd
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De terra surrecturus
sum
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In carne mea videbo demun Salvatorem meum.
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Beneath the heart is a Latin inscription, which
shews that the whole body of the deceased was interred
below. In English it is as follows: 'Here lies Master
John Smyth, formerly vicar of this church. He died the
thirtieth day of October, A.D. 1433. Amen.'
Sometimes hearts are represented as bleeding, or
sprinkled with drops of blood, which was probably to
symbolize extreme penitence, or special devotedness to
a religious life.

Representation of a heart in church of Lillingstone
Dayrell
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An example occurs on a brassin the church of Lillingstone Dayrell, Bucks, and is represented in
the
accompanying wood-cut. The heart is inscribed with the
letters J. H. C., and is held in two hands cut off at
the wrists, which are clothed in richly-worked
ruffles.
This heart commemorates the interment of John Merston,
rector, who died in 1416. A heart is sometimes placed
on the breast, or held in the hands of an effigy
representing
the person commemorated. The latter case is probably
in allusion to Lamentations iii. 41. In such
instances, sepulchral hearts are to be regarded as
merely emblematic, or, being the chief organ of life,
as representatives of the whole body. But in many
instances they mark the burial of hearts alone. Thus,
in Chichester Cathedral is a slab of Purbeck marble,
on which is chiseled a trefoil enclosing hands holding
a heart, and surrounded by this inscription:
ICI GIST LE COUER MAUDE DE
The rest of the inscription has been obliterated.
Another interesting memorial of the burial of a heart
formerly existed in Gaxley Church, Huntingdonshire.
This consisted of a small trefoil-headed recess,
sculptured in stone, and containing a pair of hands
holding a heart. Behind this recess was found a round
box, about four inches in diameter, which probably had
contained a heart that had perished, as it was empty
when discovered.
The burial of hearts appears to have been often
attended with some funereal ceremony. The most
remarkable instance on record occurred so recently as
the 16th of August 1775.
This was the burial, as it was called, of
White-head's heart. Paul Whitehead was the son of a
London tradesman, and was himself apprenticed to a woollen-draper, but having received a superior
education, and imbibed a literary bias, he
relinquished business as soon as the terms of his
apprenticeship were completed. He entered into various
literary projects, and published several pieces, both
in prose and verse, chiefly of a satirical character.
In his poetical satires, he adopted
Pope as his model,
but, to use his own expression, 'he found that their
powers were differently appreciated.' His effusions,
however, were not unsuccessful, especially those of a
political character, which he supported by the active
and zealous part lie took at a contested election for
Westminster. His talent and services were so far
appreciated by his party, that Sir Francis Dashwood,
afterwards Lord le Despencer, procured for him an
appointment worth about �800 per annum. This, together
with his wife's fortune of �10,000, placed him in
affluent circumstances, and he passed the remainder of
his life in comparative retirement at Twickenham. His
compositions were of temporary interest, and he
appears to have rightly estimated them himself, for he
positively refused to collect them for a standard
edition. His moral character, in early life, may be
conceived from his being not only a member, but the
secretary of the notorious Medmenham Club, or the mock
Monks of St. Francis.
In later life, his habits were respectable, and he
possessed a benevolent and hospitable disposition. He
died on the 30th of December 1774, aged sixty-four,
and among many other legacies, he bequeathed 'his
HEART to his noble friend and patron, Lord le
Despencer, to be deposited in his mausoleum at West
Wycombe, a village two miles from the town of High
Wycombe and adjoining Wycombe Park, his lordship's
place of residence.' This mausoleum, which was built
with funds bequeathed by George Bubb Dodington, Lord
Melcombe Regis, is a large hexagonal roofless
building, with recesses in the walls for the reception
of busts, urns, or other sepulchral monuments. It
stands within the churchyard near the east end of the
church, which is also a very singular edifice, built
by Lord le Despencer on a remarkably lofty hill, and
about half a mile from the village. Whitehead's heart,
by order of Lord le Despencer, was wrapped in lead,
and enshrined in a marble urn, which cost �50, and on
the 16th of August 1775, eight months after
Whitehead's death, was conveyed from London to be
solemnly deposited within the mausoleum. At twelve
o'clock, the precious relic, having arrived within a
short distance of Wycombe, was carried forward,
accompanied by the following procession:
A grenadier officer in his uniform;
Nine grenadiers, rank and file, two
deep,
the odd one last;
Two German-flute players;
Two choristers in surplices, with
notes pinned to
their backs;
Two German-flute players;
Eleven singing-men in surplices, two
and two,
the odd one last;
Two French-horn players;
Two bassoon players;
Six fifers, two and two;
Four muffled drums, two and two;
The urn containing the Heart,
resting on a bier ornamented with
black crape, and borne by six
soldiers,
with three others on each side to
relieve them;
Lord le Despencer,
as chief mourner, in his regimentals
as colonel of the Bucks Militia,
with crape
round his arm;
Major Skottowe, Captain Lloyd;
Seven other militia officers in
uniform;
Two fifers;
Two drummers;
Twenty soldiers, two and two,
with firelocks reversed.
Dr. Arnold, Mr. Atterbury, and another walked on the
side of the procession all the way, with scrolls of
paper in their hands, beating time. The 'Dead March'
in Saul was played the whole way by the flutes, horns,
and bassoons, successively with the fifes and drums.
The church-bell continued tolling, and great guns were
discharged every three minutes and a half. The hill on
which the church stands was crowded with spectators,
while the procession, moving very slowly up, was an
hour in reaching the mausoleum, and another hour was
spent in marching round it, and performing funereal
glees. The urn was then borne with much ceremony into
the mausoleum, and placed on a pedestal in one of the
niches, with this inscription underneath:
PAUL WHITEHEAD OF TWICKENHAM, ESQR.
Ob. 1775.
Unhallowed hands, this urn forbear,
No gems, nor orient spoilLie here concealed;
but what 's more rare,
A heart that knew no guile.
The ceremony was concluded by the soldiers firing
three volleys, and then marching off with the drums
and fifes playing a merry tune. On the next day, a new
oratorio, called Goliah, composed by Mr. Atterbury,
was performed in the church.
The heart used to be often taken out of the urn, to
be shewn to visitors, and in 1829, notwithstanding the
warning epitaph, was stolen, and has never been
recovered.
October 6th
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