Born: Pindar, lyric
poet, 518 B.C., Thebes; Alexander III of Scotland,
1241, Roxburgh; Gian Galeazzo Visconti, celebrated
Duke of Milan, founder of the cathedral, 1402;
Francois R�n�, Vicomte de Chateaubriand, moral and
romantic writer, 1768, St. Mato.
Died: John Corvinus
Huniades, Hungarian general, 1456, Zenalin; Robert
Dudley, Earl of Leicester, favourite of Queen
Elizabeth, 1588; John James Heidegger, Master of the
Revels to George II;
Charles Townshend,
orator and
statesman, 1767.
Feast Day: Saints
Marcellus and Valerian, martyrs, 179. St. Ultan, first
bishop of Ardbraccan, in Meath, 656. St. Ida, widow,
9th century. The Translation of St. Cuthbert, about
995. St. Rosalia, virgin, 1160. St. Rosa of Viterbo,
virgin, about 1252.
TRANSLATION OF
St. CUTHBERT
Cuthbert�originally a
shepherd-boy in Lauderdale, afterwards a monk at Old
Melrose on the Tweed, finally bishop of the
Northumbrian island of Lindisfarne, in which capacity
he died in the year 688�is remarkable for the
thousand-years' long history which he had, after
experiencing that which brings most men their quietus.
Fearing future incursions of the Danes, he charged his
little religious community that, in case any such
event should take place, they would quit the island,
taking his bones along with them. Eleven years after
his death, having raised his body to give it a more
honourable place, they were amazed to find it had
undergone not the slightest decay. In consequence of
this miraculous circumstance, it became, in its new
shrine, an object of great popular veneration, and the
cause of many other miracles; and so it continued till
the year 875, when at length, to escape the Danes, the
monks had to carry it away, and commence a wandering
life on the mainland.
After seven years of constant
movement, the body of St. Cuthbert found rest at
Chester-le-Street; but it was, in a sense, only
temporary, for in 995, a new incursion of the Danes
sent it off once more upon its travels. It was kept
some time at Rippon, in Yorkshire, and when the danger
was past, the monks set out on their return to
Chester-le-Street. They were miraculously arrested,
however, at a spot called Duirholm (the deer's
meadow), on the river Wear, and there finally settled
with the precious corpse of their holy patron, giving
rise to what has since been one of the grandest
religious establishments of the British empire, the
cathedral of Durham. This is the event which was for
some ages celebrated as the Translation of St.
Cuthbert.
For upwards of a hundred
years, the tomb of St. Cuthbert, with his uncorrupted
body, continued to be visited by devout pilgrims, and
in 1104, on the erection of the present cathedral of
Durham, it was determined to remove his remains to a
shrine within the new structure. Some doubts had been
expressed as to the permanence of his
incorruptibility, and to silence all such misgivings,
the clergy of the church, having met in conclave
beside the saint's coffin the night before its
intended removal, resolved to satisfy themselves by an
actual inspection. After preparing themselves for the
task by prayer, they removed, with trembling hands,
the external fastenings, and opened the first coffin,
within which a second was found, covered with rough
hides, and enclosing a third coffin, enveloped in
several folds of linen.
On removing the lid of this
last receptacle, a second lid appeared, which on being
raised with much fear and agitation, the swathed body
of the saint lay before them 'in a perfect state.'
According to the narrative, the monks were appalled as
if by some fearful interposition of Heaven; but after
a short interval, they all fell flat on the ground,
repeated amid a deluge of tears the seven penitential
psalms, and prayed the Lord not to correct them in his
anger, nor chasten them in his displeasure. The next
day the miraculous body was shewn to the multitude,
though it is honestly stated by the chronicler that
the whole of it, including the face, was covered with
linen, the only flesh visible being through a chink
left in the cerecloths at the neck. Thereafter it was
placed in the shrine destined for it behind the great
altar, where it remained undisturbed for the ensuing
four hundred and twenty-six years, and proved the
source of immense revenues to the cathedral.
No shrine in England was more
lavishly adorned or maintained than that of St.
Cuthbert; it literally blazed with ornaments of gold,
silver, and precious stones, and to enrich the
possessions of the holy man, and his representative
the bishop of Durham, many a fair estate was
impoverished or diverted from the natural heirs. The
corporax cloth, which the saint had used to cover the
chalice when he said mass, was enclosed in a silk
banner, and employed in gaining victories for the
Plantagenet kings of England. It turned the fate of
the day at the battle of Neville's Cross, in 1346,
when David of Scotland was defeated; and it
soon after witnessed the taking of Berwick by Edward
III. But all the glories of St. Cuthbert were to be
extinguished at the Reformation, when his tomb was
irreverently disturbed. It had, however, a better fate
than many other holy places at this eventful epoch, as
the coffin, instead of being ignominiously broken up,
and its contents dispersed, was carefully closed, a
new exterior coffin added, and the whole buried
underneath the defaced shrine.
For the greater part of three
centuries more, the body of St. Cuthbert lay here
undisturbed. He was not forgotten during this time,
but a legend prevailed that the site of his tomb was
known only to the Catholic clergy, three of whom, it
was alleged, and no more, were intrusted with the
secret at a time, one being admitted to a knowledge of
it as another died�all this being in the hope of a
time arriving when the shrine might be re-erected, and
the incorrupt body presented once more to the
veneration of the people. It is hardly necessary to
observe, that this story of a secret was pure fiction,
as the exact site of the tomb could be easily
ascertained.

Golden cross
worn by St. Cuthbert, and found on his body
at the opening of his tomb in 1827
|
The next appearance of St.
Cuthbert was in May 1827, when, in presence of a
distinguished assemblage, including the dignitaries of
Durham Cathedral, his remains were again exhumed from
their triple encasement of coffins. After the larger
fragments of the lid, sides, and ends of the last
coffin had been removed, there appeared below a dark
substance of the length of a human body, which proved
to be a skeleton, lying with its feet to the east,
swathed apparently in one or more shrouds of linen or
silk, through which there projected the brow of the
skull and the lower part of the leg bones. On the
breast lay a small golden cross, of which a
representation is here given.
The whole body was perfectly
dry, and no offensive smell was perceptible. From all
the appearances, it was plain that the swathings had
been wrapped round a dry skeleton, and not round a
complete body, for not only was there no space left
between the swathing and the bones, but not the least
trace of the decomposition of flesh was to be found.
It was thus clear that a fraud had been practised, and
a skeleton dressed up in the habiliments of the grave,
for the purpose of imposing on popular credulity, and
benefiting thereby the influence and temporal
interests of the church. In charity, however, to the
monks of Durham, it may be surmised that the
perpetration of the fraud was originally the work of a
few, but having been successful in the first instance,
the belief in the incorruptibility of St. Cuthbert's
body came soon to be universally acquiesced in, by
clergy as well as laity.
Perhaps the history of the
saint is not yet finished, and after the lapse of
another cycle of years, a similar curiosity may lead
to a re-examination of his relics, and Macaulay's New
Zealander, after sketching the ruins of St. Paul's
from a broken arch of London Bridge, may travel
northwards to Durham, to witness the disinterment from
the battered and grass-grown precincts of its
cathedral, of the bones of the Lauderdale shepherd of
the seventh century.
ST. CUTHBERT'S BEADS
On a rock, by Lindisfarne,
Saint Cuthbert sits, and toils to frame
The sea-born beads that bear his name:
Such tales had Whitby's fishers told,
And said they might his shape behold,
And hear his anvil sound;
A deadened clang�a huge dim form,
Seen but, and heard, when gathering storm,
And night were closing round.
Marmion
There is a Northumbrian
legend, to the effect that, on dark nights, when the
sea was running high, and the winds roaring fitfully,
the spirit of St. Cuthbert was heard on the recurring
lulls forging beads for the faithful. He used to sit
in the storm-mist, among the spray and sea-weeds, on a
fragment of rock on the shore of the island of
Lindisfarne, and solemnly hammer away, using another
fragment of rock as his anvil. A remarkable
circumstance connected with the legend is, that after
a storm the shore was found strewed with the beads St.
Cuthbert was said to have so forged. And a still more
remarkable circumstance connected with the legend
consists in the fact that, although St. Cuthbert is,
now, neither seen nor heard at work, the shore is
still found strewed with the beads after a storm. The
objects which are called beads are, in fact, certain
portions of the fossilised remains of animals, called
crinoids, which once inhabited the deep in myriads.
Whole specimens of a crinoid are rare, but several
parts of it are common enough.
It consisted of
a long stem
supporting a cup or head; and out of the head grew
five arms or branches. The stem and the branches were
flexible, and waved to and fro in the waters; but the
base was firmly attached to the sea-bottom. The
flexibility of the stems and branches was gained by
peculiar formation; they were made of a series of flat
plates or ossicula, like thick wafers piled one above
another, and all strung together by a cord of animal
matter, which passed through the entire animal. These
plates, in their fossilised form detached from one
another, are the beads in question. The absence of the
animal matter leaves a hole in the centre of each
piece, through which they can be strung together,
rosary-fashion. They vary in size; some are about the
diameter of a pea, others of a sixpence. They are most
frequently found in fragments of the stems, an inch or
two long, each inch containing about a dozen joints or
beads. Crinoids are classed by modern naturalists with
the order echinodermata�that is to say, among the
sea-stars and sea-urchins. The entrochal marble of
Derbyshire, used for chimney-pieces and ornamental
purposes, includes a vast quantity of the fragments of
crinoids. Those found at Lindisfarne have been
embedded in shale, out of which they have been washed
by the sea, and cast ashore.
A MASTER OF THE
REVELS
John James Heidegger, a native
of Switzerland, after wandering, in various
capacities, through the greater part of Europe, came
to England early in the eighteenth century; and by his
witty conversation and consummate address, soon gained
the good graces of the gay and fashionable, who gave
him the appellation of the Swiss Count. His first
achievement was to bring out an opera (Thomyres), then
a novel and not very popular kind of entertainment in
England. By his excellent arrangements, and judicious
improvements on all previous performances, Heidegger
may be said to have established the opera in public
favour. Becoming manager of the Opera House in the
Haymarket, he acquired the favour of George II; and
introducing the then novel amusement of masquerades,
he was appointed master of the revels, and
superintendent of masquerades and operas to the royal
household. Heidegger now became the fashion; the first
nobility in the land vied in bestowing their caresses
upon him. From a favourite, he became an autocrat; no
public or private festival, ball, assembly, or concert
was considered complete, if not submitted to the
superintendence of the Swiss adventurer. Installed by
common consent as arbiter elegantiarum, Heidegger, for
a long period, realised an income of �5000 per annum,
which he freely squandered in a most luxurious style
of life, and in the exercise of a most liberal
charity.
Though tall and well made,
Heidegger was characterised by a surpassing ugliness
of face. He had the good sense to joke on his own
peculiar hardness of countenance, and one day laid a
wager with the Earl of Chesterfield, that the latter
could not produce, in all London, an uglier face than
his own. The earl, after a strict search, found a
woman in St. Giles's, whose features were, at first
sight, thought to be as ill-favoured as those of the
master of the revels; but when Heidegger put on the
woman's head-dress, it was unanimously admitted that
he had won the wager.
Jolly, a fashionable tailor of
the period, is said to have also been rather
conspicuous by a Caravaggio style of countenance. One
day, when pressingly and inconveniently dunning a
noble duke, his Grace exclaimed: 'I will not pay you,
till you shew me an uglier man than yourself.' Jolly
bowed, retired, went home, and wrote a polite note to
Heidegger, stating that the duke particularly wished
to see him, at a certain hour, on the following
morning. Heidegger duly attended; the duke denied
having sent for him; but the mystery was unravelled by
Jolly making his appearance. The duke then saw the
joke, and with laughter acknowledging the condition he
stipulated was fulfilled, paid the bill.
As might be supposed,
Heidegger was the constant butt of the satirists and
caricaturists of his time. Hogarth introduces
him into
several of his works, and a well-known sketch of
'Heidegger in a Rage,' attributed to Hogarth,
illustrates a remarkable practical joke played upon
the master of the revels. The Duke of Montague gave a
dinner at the 'Devil Tavern' to several of the
nobility and gentry, who were all in the plot, and to
which Heidegger was invited. As previously arranged,
the bottle was passed round with such celerity, that
the Swiss became helplessly intoxicated, and was
removed to another room, and placed upon a bed, where
he soon fell into a pro-found sleep. A modeller, who
was in readiness, then took a mould of his face, from
which a wax mask was made. An expert mimic and actor,
resembling Heidegger in height and figure, was
instructed in the part he had to perform, and a suit
of clothes, exactly similar to that worn by the master
of the revels on public occasions, being procured,
everything was in readiness for the next masquerade.
The eventful evening having
arrived, George II, who was in the secret, being
present, Heidegger, as soon as his majesty was seated,
ordered the orchestra to play God Save the King; but
his back was no sooner turned, than his counterfeit
commanded the musicians to play Over the Water to
Charlie. The mask, the dress, the imitation of voice
and attitude, were so perfect, that no one suspected a
trick, and all the astonished courtiers, not in the
plot, were thrown into a state of stupid
consternation. Heidegger hearing the change of music,
ran to the music-gallery, stamped and raved at the
musicians, accusing them of drunkenness, or of a
design to ruin him, while the king and royal party
laughed immoderately. While Heidegger stood in the
gallery, God Save the King was played, but when he
went among the dancers, to see if proper decorum were
kept by the company, the counterfeit stepped forward,
swore at the musicians, and asked: had he not just
told them to play Over the Water to Charlie? A pause
ensued, the musicians believing Heidegger to be either
drunk or mad, but as the mimic continued his
vociferations, Charlie was played again. The company
was by this time in complete confusion.
Several officers of the
guards, who were present, believing a studied insult
was intended to the king, and that worse was to
follow, drew their swords, and cries of shame and
treason resounded from all sides. Heidegger, in a
violent rage, rushed towards the orchestra, but he was
stayed by the Duke of Montague, who artfully whispered
that the king was enraged, and his best plan was first
to apologise to the monarch, and then discharge the
drunken musicians. Heidegger went, accordingly, to the
circle immediately before the king, and made a humble
apology for the unaccountable insolence of the
musicians; but he had scarcely spoken ere the
counterfeit approaching, said in a plaintive voice:
'Indeed, sire, it is not my fault, but,' pointing to
the real Heidegger, 'that devil in my likeness.'
The
master of the revels, turning round and seeing his
counterpart, stared, staggered, turned pale, and
nearly swooned from fright. The joke having gone far
enough, the king ordered the counterfeit to unmask;
and then Heidegger 's fear turning into rage, he
retired to his private apartment, and seating himself
in an arm-chair, ordered the lights to be
extinguished, vowing he would never conduct another
masquerade unless the surreptitiously-obtained mask
were immediately broken in his presence. The mask was
delivered up, and Hogarth's sketch represents
Heidegger in his chair, attended by his porter,
carpenter, and candle-snuffer, the obnoxious mask
lying at his feet.
Heidegger gave grand
entertainments to his friends; the king even
condescended to visit him in his house at Barn-Elms.
One day, a discussion took place at his table as to
which nation in Europe had the best-founded claim to
ingenuity. After various opinions had been given,
Heidegger claimed that character for the Swiss,
appealing to himself as a case in point. 'I was,' said
he, 'born a Swiss, in a country where, had I continued
to tread in the steps of my simple but honest
forefathers, twenty pounds a year would have been the
utmost that art or industry could have procured me.
With an empty purse, a solitary coat on my back, and
almost two shirts, I arrived in England, and by the
munificence of a generous prince, and the liberality
of a wealthy nation, am now at the head of a table,
covered with the delicacies of the season, and wines
from different quarters of the globe; I am honoured
with the company, and enjoy the approbation, of the
first characters of the age, in rank, learning, arms,
and arts, with an income of five thousand pounds a
year. Now, I defy any Englishman or native of any
other country in Europe, how highly soever he may be
gifted, to go to Switzerland, and raise such a sum
there, or even to spend it.'
Although an epicure and a
wine-bibber, Heidegger lived to the age of ninety
years. He died on the 4th of September 1749, and was
buried in the church of Richmond, in Surrey. With all
his faults, it must not be forgotten that he gave away
large sums in charity. And in spite of his proverbial
ugliness -
'With a hundred deep
wrinkles impressed on his front,
Like a map with a great many rivers upon 't '-
an engraving of his face,
taken from a mask after death, and inserted in
Lavater's Physiognomy, exhibits strong marks of a
benevolent character, and features by no means
displeasing or disagreeable.