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November
17th
Born: Vespasian, Roman
emperor, 9 A. D.; Jean Antoine Nollet, natural
philosopher, 1700, Pimpr�, in Noyon; Louis XVIII of
France, 1755, Versailles; Marshal Macdonald, Duke of
Tarentum, Bonapartist general, 1765, Sancerre.
Died: Valentinian I,
Roman emperor, 375; Sir John de Mandeville, Eastern
traveller, 1372, Liege; Queen Mary of England, 1558,
St. James's Palace; John Pious, Prince of Mirandola,
linguist and miscellaneous writer, 1494, Florence;
Nicolas Perrot d'Ablancourt, translator of the
classics, 1664, Ablancourt; John Earle, bishop of
Salisbury, author of Microcosmographp, 1665, Oxford;
Alain Rene le Sage, author of Gil Bias, 1747,
Boulogne-sur-Mer; Thomas, Duke of Newcastle,
statesman, 1768; Empress Catharine the Great of
Russia, 1796, St. Petersburg; Charlotte, queen of
George III, 1818, Kew; Thomas, Lord
Erskine, eminent
pleader, 1823, Almondell, near Edinburgh.
Feast Day: St.
Dionysius, archbishop of Alexandria, confessor, 265.
St. Gregory Thaumaturgus, bishop and confessor, 270.
St. Anian or Agnan, bishop of Orleans, confessor, 453.
St. Gregory, bishop of Tours, confessor, 596. St.
Hugh, bishop of Lincoln, confessor, 1200.
SIR JOHN MANDEVILLE
On 17th November 1372, died at
Liege the celebrated Sir John Mandeville or De
Mandeville, who may be allowed to take rank as the
father of English travellers, and the first in point
of time, of that extended array of writers, who have
made known to their countrymen, by personal
inspection, the regions and peoples of the distant
East. The ground traversed by him was nearly similar
to that journeyed over in the previous century by the
celebrated Venetian, Marco Polo, whose descriptions,
however, of the countries which he visited must be
admitted to be both much fuller and consonant to truth
than those of his English successor. Whilst the
Italian traveller restricts himself, in the main at
least, to such statements as he was warranted in
making, either as eye-witness of the circumstances
described, or as communicated to him by trustworthy
authorities, it is to be regretted that a great
portion of Sir John Mandeville's work is made up of
absurd and incredible stories regarding oriental
productions and manners, which he has adopted without
question, and incorporated into his book, from all
sources of legendary information, classic, popular,
and otherwise. Yet after carefully winnowing the chaff
from the wheat, there remains much curious and
interesting matter, which may be accepted as
presenting a correct picture of Eastern Asia in the
fourteenth century as it appeared to a European and
Englishman of the day. Even the purely romantic and
legendary statements in the narrative have their value
as illustrating the general ideas prevalent in
medieval times on the subject of oriental countries.
Many of these travellers' wonders, so familiar to all
who have read (and who has not in his childhood?)
Sinbad the Sailor, will be found referred to in the
work of Sir John Mandeville.
Of the history of this
enterprising traveller we know little beyond what he
himself informs us in the introduction to his
narrative. From this, and one or two other sources, we
learn that he was born at St. Albans, in
Hertfordshire, about 1300; devoted himself to
mathematics, theology, and medicine (rather a
heterogeneous assemblage of studies), and for some
time followed the profession of a physician. This last
occupation he abandoned after pursuing it for a very
short time, and in 1322, he started on an eastern
tour, the motives for which seem to have been
principally the love of adventure, and desire of
seeing strange countries, and above all others, the
Holy Land, regarding which the recent fervour of the
Crusades had excited an ardent interest in Western
Europe. On Michaelmas-day,
1322, he quitted England on
his travels, proceeding in the first instance to
Egypt, into the service of whose sultan he entered,
and fought for him in various campaigns against the
Bedouin Arabs. He succeeded in ingratiating himself
considerably with his employer, who, according to
Mandeville's account, thus testified his sense of the
English-man's merits.
'And he wolde have maryed me
fulle highely to a gret princes doughter, gif that I
wolde have forsaken my law and my beleve. But, I
thank God, I had no wille to don it, for nothing
that he behighten me.'
From Egypt Sir John proceeded
to the Holy Land, and from thence continued his
peregrinations till he reached the dominions of the
great Khan of Tartary, a descendant of the celebrated
Genghis, whose sovereignty extended over the greater
part of Central and Eastern Asia, including the
northern provinces of China or Cathay, as it was then
termed by Europeans. Under his banners Mandeville took
service, and fought in his wars with the king of Manci,
whose territories seem to have corresponded to the
southern division of the Celestial Empire. He appears
subsequently to have travelled over the greater part
of the continent of Asia, and also to have visited
some of the East Indian Islands.
The kingdom of Persia
is described by him, and also the dominions of that
celebrated medieval, and semi-mythical potentate, Prester John, whom from
Mandeville's account we would
infer to have been one of the princes of India, whilst
other chroniclers seem to point to the sovereign of
Abyssinia. After an absence of nearly thirty-four
years, Sir John returned to his native country, and
published an account of the regions visited by him in
the East, which he dedicated to Edward III. It is to
be regretted that in this there is so little personal
narrative given, all reference to his own adventures
being nearly comprised in the meagre and
unsatisfactory statements which we have above
furnished. Subsequently to its publication, Sir John
seems to have gone again abroad on his travels, but
the history of his latter days is very obscure. All
that can be definitely ascertained is, that he died at
Liege, in Belgium, and was buried in a convent in that
town.
A manuscript of Sir John
Mandeville's travels, belonging to the fourteenth
century, is preserved in the Cottonian collection in
the British Museum. The first printed English edition
was that issued from the Westminster press in 1499, by
Winkyn de Worde. During the fourteenth and
fifteenth
centuries, the work enjoyed a great reputation, second
only to Marco Polo's, as an authority on all questions
of oriental geography, and was translated into several
languages.
QUEEN ELIZABETH'S DAY
Violent political and
religious excitement characterised the close of the
reign of King Charles II. The unconstitutional acts of
that sovereign, and the avowed tendency of his brother
toward the Church of Rome, made thoughtful men uneasy
for the future peace of the country, and excited the
populace to the utmost degree. It had been usual to
observe the anniversary of the accession of Queen
Elizabeth with rejoicings; and hence the 17th of
November was popularly known as 'Queen Elizabeth's
Day;' but after
the great fire,
these rejoicings were
converted into a satirical saturnalia of the most
turbulent kind.
The Popish Plot, the Meal-tub Plot,
and the murder of Sir Edmundbury Godfrey, had excited
the populace to anti-papistical demonstrations, which
were fostered by many men of the higher class, who
were members of political and Protestant clubs.
Roger
North, who lived in these turbulent times, says that
the Earl of Shaftesbury was the prime mover in all
that opposed the court-party, and the head of the
Green Ribbon Club, who held their meetings at the 'King's Head Tavern,' at the
corner of Chancery Lane.
They obtained their name from the green ribbon worn in
their hats, to distinguish them in any
street-engagement from clubbists of an opposite party.
North says:
'this copious society were a sort of
executive power in and about London; and by
correspondence, all over England.'
They organised and
paid for the great ceremonial processions and
pope-burnings that characterised the years 1679-1681,
and which were well calculated to keep up popular
excitement, and inflame the minds of the most
peaceable citizens.
From the rare pamphlet,
London's Defiance to Rome, which describes 'the
magnificent procession and solemn burning of the pope
at Temple Bar, November 17, 1679,' we learn that:
'the
bells generally about the town began to ring about
three o'clock in the morning;' but the great
procession was deferred till night, when ' the whole
was attended with one hundred and fifty flambeaus and
lights, by order; but so many more came in volunteers,
as made up some thousands At the approach of evening
(all things being in readiness), the solemn procession
began, setting forth from Moorgate, and so passing
first to Aldgate, and thence through Leadenhall
Street, by the Royal Exchange through Cheapside, and
so to Temple Bar. Never were the balconies, windows,
and houses more numerously lined, or the streets
closer thronged, with multitudes of people, all
expressing their abhorrence of popery with continued
shouts and exclamations, so that 'tis modestly
computed that, in the whole progress, there could not
be fewer than two hundred thousand spectators.'

Procession
commemorative of the murder of Sir Edmundbury
Godfrey
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The way was cleared by six
pioneers in caps and red waistcoats, followed by a
bellman bearing his lantern
and staff, and ringing his
bell, crying out all the way in a loud but dolesome
voice: 'Remember Justice Godfrey!' He was followed by
a man on horseback, dressed like a Jesuit, carrying a
dead body before him, 'representing Justice Godfrey,
in like manner as he was carried by the assassins to
Primrose Hill.'
We copy from a very rare print
of the period, this, the most exciting part of the
evening's display. Godfrey was a London magistrate,
before whom the notorious Titus Oates had made his
first deposition; he was found murdered in the fields
at the back of Primrose Hill, with a sword run through
his body, to make it appear that by falling upon it
intentionally, he had committed suicide; but wounds in
other parts of his person, and undeniable marks of
strangulation, testified the truth. There was little
need for a bell-man to recall this dark ,deed to the
remembrance of the Londoners.
The excitement was increased
by another performer in the procession, habited as a
priest, 'giving pardons very plentifully to all those
that should murder Protestants, and proclaiming it
meritorious.' He was followed by a train of other
priests, and 'six Jesuits with bloody daggers;' then,
by way of relief, came 'a consort of wind-musick.'
This was succeeded by a long array of Catholic church
dignitaries, ending with 'the pope, in a lofty
glorious pageant, representing a chair of state,
covered with scarlet, richly embroidered and fringed,
and bedecked with golden balls and crosses.' At his
feet were two boys with censers,' at his back his
holiness's privy-councillor (the degraded seraphim,
Anglic�, the devil), frequently caressing, hugging,
and whispering him, and ofttimes instructing him aloud
to destroy his majesty, to forge a Protestant plot,
and to fire the city again, to which purpose he held
an infernal torch in his hand.' When the procession
reached the foot of Chancery Lane, in Fleet Street, it
came to a stop; 'then having entertained the thronging
spectators for some time with the ingenious fireworks,
a vast bonfire being prepared just overagainst the
Inner Temple gate, his holiness, after some
compliments and reluctances, was decently toppled from
all his grandeur into the flames.' This concluding
feat was greeted by 'a prodigious shout, that might be
heard far beyond Somerset House,' where the Queen
Catharine was lodged at that time, but the
ultra-Protestant author of this pamphlet, anxious to
make the most of the public lungs, declares:
'twas believed the echo, by
continued reverberations before it ceased, reached
Scotland, France, and even Rome itself, damping them
all with a dreadful astonishment.'
This show proved so immensely
popular, that it was reproduced next year, with
additional political pageantry. Justice Godfrey, of
course, was there, but Mrs. Celliers and the Meal-tub
figured also, accompanied by four Protestants, 'in
bipartite garments of black and white,' to indicate
their trimming vacillation; followed by a man bearing
a banner, on which was inscribed, 'We Protestants in
Masquerade usher in Popery.' Then came a large display
of priests and clerical dignitaries, winding up with
the pope, represented with his foot on the neck of the
Emperor Frederick of Germany. After him came Dona
Olimpia, and nuns of questionable character; the
procession concluding with a scene of the trial, and
execution by burning, of a heretic. This procession
was also 'lively represented to the eye on a
copper-plate,' and we copy as much of it as depicts
the doings in Fleet Street, from Temple Bar to
Chancery Lane. At the corner of the lane is the King's
Head Tavern, the rendezvous of the Green Ribbon Club,
agreeing exactly with North's description:
'This house was doubly
balconied in the front for the clubsters to issue
forth in fresco, with hats and no perukes; pipes in
their mouths, merry faces, and diluted throats for
vocal encouragement of the canaglia below, at the
bonfires.'
From this house to the Temple
Gate, lines cross the street for fireworks to pass.
The scene is depicted at the moment when the effigy of
the pope is pushed from his chair of state into the
huge bonfire below, as if in judgment for the fate of
the Protestant who is condemned to the stake in the
pageant behind him. North speaks of 'the numerous
platoons and volleys of squibs discharged' amid shouts
that 'might have been a cure of deafness itself.'
Dryden alludes to the popularity of the show in the
epilogue to his OEdipus; when, after declaring he has
done his best to entertain the public, he adds:
We know not what you can
desire or hope,
To please you more, but burning of a pope!'
In the Letters to and from the
Earl of Derby, he recounts his visit to this
pope-burning, in company with a French gentleman who
had a curiosity to see it. The earl says:
'I carried him within Temple
Bar to a friend's house of mine, where he saw the
show and the great concourse of people, which was
very great at that time, to his great amazement. At
my return, he seemed frighted that somebody that had
been in the room had known him, for then he might
have been in some danger, for had the mob had the
least intimation of him, they had torn him to
pieces. He wondered when I told him no manner of
mischief was done, not so much as a head broke; but
in three or four hours were all quiet as at other
times.'
In 1682, the court professed
great alarm lest some serious riots should result from
these celebrations, and required the mayor to suppress
them; but the civic magnates declined to interfere,
and the show took place as usual. The following year
it was announced that the pageantry should be grander
than ever, but the mayor was now the nominee of the
king," and effectually suppressed the display,
patrolling all the streets with officers till
midnight, and having the City trained-bands in reserve
in the Exchange, and a company of Horse Guards on the
other side of Temple Bar. 'Thus ended these
Diavolarias,' says Roger North.

Demonstration on
Queen Elizabeth's Day in 1679
Under somewhat similar
excitement, an attempt was made in the reign of Queen
Anne to reproduce these inflammatory processions and
pageants. The strong feeling engendered by the claims
of the High-church party under Dr.
Sacheverell, and
the fears entertained of the
Pretender, led their
opponents to this course. The pageants were
constructed, and the procession arranged; but the
secretary of state interfered, seized the stuffed
figures, and prevented the display. It was intended to
open the procession with twenty watchmen, and as many
more link-boys; to be followed by bag-pipers playing Lilliburlero, drummers with
the pope's arms in
mourning, 'a figure representing Cardinal Gualteri,
lately made by the Pretender Protector of the English
nation, looking down on the ground in a sorrowful
posture.' Then came burlesque representatives of the
Romish officials; standard-bearers 'with the pictures
of the seven bishops who were sent to the Tower;
twelve monks representing the Fellows who were put
into Magdalen College, Oxford, on the expulsion of the
Protestants by James II' These were succeeded by a
number of friars, Jesuits, and cardinals; lastly came
'the pope under a magnificent canopy, with a silver
fringe, accompanied by the Chevalier St. George on the
left, and his counsellor the Devil on the right. The
whole procession clos'd by twenty men bearing
streamers, on each of which was wrought these words:
"God bless Queen Anne, the
nation's great defender!
Keep out the French, the Pope, and the Pretender."
After the proper ditties were
sung, the Pretender was to have been committed to the
flames, being first absolved by the Cardinal Gualteri.
After that, the said cardinal was to have been
absolved by the Pope, and burned. And then the devil
was to jump into the flames with his holiness in his
arms.' The very proper suppression of all this absurd
profanity was construed into a ministerial plot
against the Hanoverian succession. The accession of
George I., a few years afterwards, quieted the fears
of the nation, and ' Queen Elizabeth's Day' ceased to
be made a riotous political anniversary.
SIR
HENRY LEE
At
a tournament held on the 17th November 1559, the first
anniversary of the accession of Queen Elizabeth to the
throne, Sir Henry Lee, of Quarendon, made a vow of
chivalry, that he would, annually, on the return of
that auspicious day, present himself in the tilt-yard,
in honour of the queen; to maintain her beauty, worth,
and dignity, against all-comers, unless prevented by
age, infirmity, or other accident.
Elizabeth having
graciously accepted Sir Henry as her knight and
champion, the nobility and gentry of the court,
incited by so worthy an example, formed themselves
into an honourable society of Knights Tilters, which,
yearly assembling in arms, held a grand tourney on
each successive 17th of November. In 1590, Sir Henry,
feeling himself overtaken by age, resigned his assumed
office of Queen's Knight, having previously received
her majesty's permission to appoint the famous Earl of
Cumberland as his successor.
The resignation was
conducted with all due ceremony. The queen being
seated in the gallery, with Viscount Turenne, the
French ambassador, the Knights Tilters rode slowly
into the tilt-yard, to the sound of sweet music. Then,
as if sprung out of the earth, appeared a pavilion of
white silk, representing the sacred temple of Vesta.
In this temple was an altar, covered with a cloth of
gold, on which burned wax candles, in rich
candlesticks. Certain princely presents were also on
the altar, which were handed to the queen by three
young ladies, in the character of vestals. Then the
royal choir, under the leadership of Mr. Hales, sang
the following verses, as Sir Henry Lee's farewell to
the court:
'My golden locks, time hath
to silver turned
(Oh time too swift, and swiftness never ceasing),
My youth 'gainst age, and age at youth have spurned;
But spurned in vain, youth waneth by increasing.
Beauty, strength, and youth, flowers fading bene,
Duty, faith, and love, are roots and ever green.
My helmet, now, shall make a
hive for bees,
And lover's songs shall turn to holy psalms:
A man-at-arms must now sit on his knees,
And feed on prayers, that are old age's alms.
And so, from court to cottage, I depart,
My saint is sure of mine unspotted heart.
And when I sadly sit in
homely cell,
I'll teach my swains this carol for a song,
Blest be the hearts, that think my sovereign well,
Cursed be the souls, that think to do her wrong.
Goddess, vouchsafe this aged man his right,
To be your beadsman, now, that was your knight.'
After this had been sung, Sir
Henry took off his armour, placing it at the foot of a
crowned pillar, bearing the initials E. R. Then
kneeling, he presented the Earl of Cumberland to the
queen, beseeching that she would accept that nobleman
for her knight. Her majesty consenting, Sir Henry
armed the earl and mounted him on horseback; he then
arrayed himself in a peaceful garb of black velvet,
covering his head with a common buttoned cap of
country fashion.
At Ditchley, a former seat of
the Lees, Earls of Litchfield, collateral descendants
of Queen Elizabeth's knight, there was a curious
painting of Sir Henry and his dog, with the motto,
'More Faithful than Favoured.' The traditional account
of this picture, a copy of which is here engraved, is
that Sir Henry, on retiring to rest one night, was
followed to his bedroom by the dog. The animal, being
deemed an intruder, was at once turned out of the
room; but howled and scratched at the door so
piteously that Sir Henry, for the sake of peace, gave
it readmission, when it crept underneath the bed.
After midnight, a treacherous servant, making his way
into the room, was seized and pinned to the ground by
the watchful dog. An alarm being given, and lights
brought, the terrified wretch confessed that his
object was to kill Sir Henry and rob the house. In
commemoration of the event, Sir Henry had the portrait
painted, as a momunent of the gratitude of the master,
the ingratitude of the servant, and the fidelity of
the dog. It is very possible that this anecdote and
picture may have given rise to the well-known story of
a gentleman rescued from murder, at a lonely inn, by
the fidelity and intelligence of his dog, who, by
preventing him from getting into bed, induced him to
suspect some treacherous design on the part of his
landlord, who at midnight, with his accomplices,
ascended through a trap-door in the floor of the
apartment, but were discomfited and slain by the
gentleman, with the aid of the faithful animal.
Sir Henry died at the age of
eighty, in the year 1611. About fifty years ago, his
epitaph could still be deciphered in the then ruined
chapel of Quarendon, in Buckinghamshire.
November 18th
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