CHAPTER XLII.
SMITHFIELD.
Bartholomew Fair—A Seven Days' Tournament—Duels and Trial by Ordeal in Smithfield—Terrible Instances of the Odium Theologicum—The
Maid of Kent—Foxe's Account of the Smithfield Martyrs—The Smithfield Gallows—William Wallace in Smithfield—Bartholomew
Priory—The Origin of Bartholomew Fair—St. Bartholomew becomes popular with Sailors—Miscellaneous Occupiers of Smithfield—
Generosity of English Kings to St. Bartholomew's—A Religious Brawl—The London Parish Clerks in Smithfield—The Court of Pie-poudre.
Smithfield, or "Smoothfield," to follow the true
derivation, was from the earliest times a memorable
spot in old London. Bartholomew Fair, established
in the reign of Henry II., in the neighbourhood of
the priory and hospital founded by Rayer, the
king's worthy jester, brought annually great crowds
of revellers to the same place where, in Mary's
cruel reign, so many of her 277 victims perished.
Smithfield, in the reign of the early Edwards, was
a chosen place for tournaments, and here many a
spear was splintered on breastplate and shield,
and many a stout blow given, till armour yielded
or sword shattered.
In 1374 Edward III., then sixty-two, enamoured
of Alice Pierce, held a seven days' tournament in
Smithfield, for her amusement. She sat beside the
old man, in a magnificent car, as the Lady of the
Sun, and was followed by a long train of plumed
knights, careless of the disgrace, each leading by
the bridle a beautiful palfrey, on which was
mounted a gay damsel.
In 1390 that young prodigal, Richard II., wishing to rival the splendid feasts and jousts given
by Charles of France, on the entry of his consort, Isabella of Bavaria, into Paris, invited sixty
knights to a tilt in Smithfield, commencing on the
Sunday after Michaelmas Day. This tournament
was proclaimed by heralds, in England, Scotland,
Hainault, Germany, Flanders, and France. The
Sunday was the feast of the challengers. About
three p.m. came the procession from the Tower
—sixty barbed coursers, in full trappings, each
attended by a squire of honour, and after them
sixty ladies of rank, mounted on palfreys, "most
elegantly and richly dressed," and each leading
by a silver chain a knight, completely armed for
tilting, minstrels and trumpeters attending the procession to Smithfield. Every night there was a
magnificent supper for the tilters at the bishop's
palace, where the king and queen were lodged, and
the dancing lasted till daybreak. On Tuesday
King Edward entertained the foreign knights and
squires, and the queen the ladies. On Friday they
were entertained by the Duke of Lancaster, and
on Saturday the king invited all the foreign knights
to Windsor.
That great historical event, the death of Wat
Tyler, we have elsewhere described, but it is necessary here to touch upon it again. Wrongs, no
doubt, his followers had, but they were savage and
cruel, and intoxicated with murder and plunder.
They had beheaded the Archbishop of Canterbury,
and held London in terror for seven days. Wat
Tyler's insolent behaviour at the meeting in Smithfield (June 15, 1381) greatly alarmed the king's
friends. He came towards Richard, throwing his
dagger in the air, and he even ventured to hold
the king's bridle. Walworth, in the alarm of the
moment, ran his sword into the rough rebel's
throat, and at the same instant a squire stabbed
Wat in the side. It was then that Richard II.
courageously, and with great presence of mind,
led off the rebels to Islington Fields, where the
mayor and a thousand men soon scattered them
to the winds.
Smithfield was frequently chosen as the scene of
mediæval duels, and of the ordeal by battle. The
combat, in the reign of Henry VI., between the
master and the 'prentice, who had accused him
of treason, will be remembered by all readers of
Shakespeare. The ordeal was, perhaps, hardly
fairly tried in this case, as the poor armourer
had been plied with liquor by his over-zealous
friends; but there is one comfort, according to
the poet, he confessed his treason in his dying
moments.
Smithfield was, at one time, a place of torture
peculiarly in favour with theologians. Here that
swollen Ahab, Henry VIII., burnt poor wretches
who denied his ecclesiastical supremacy; here
Mary burnt Protestants, and here Elizabeth burnt
Anabaptists. In 1539 (Henry VIII.) Forest, an
Observant friar, was cruelly burnt in Smithfield, for
denying the king's supremacy, the flames being
lit with "David Darvel Gatheren," an idolatrous
image from Wales. Latimer preached patience to
the friar, while he hung by the waist and struggled
for life. And here, too, was burnt Joan Boucher,
the Maid of Kent, for some theological refinement
as to the incarnation of Christ, Cranmer almost
forcing Edward VI. to sign the poor creature's
death-warrant. "What, my lord!" said Edward,
will ye have me send her quick to the devil, in
her error? I shall lay the charge therefore upon
you, my Lord Cranmer, before God."
Of the last moments of the Smithfield martyrs,
Foxe, their historian, has left a narrative, so simply
told, so pious in tone, and so natural in every
detail, as to guarantee its truth to all but partisans.
A few passages from Foxe will convey a perfect
impression of these touching scenes, and of the faith
wherewith these good and brave men embraced
death. Speaking of Roger Holland, a Protestant
martyr, Foxe says, with a certain exultation:—
"The day they suffered a proclamation was made
that none should be so bold to speak or talk any
word unto them, or receive anything of them, or to
touch them upon pain of imprisonment, without
either bail or mainprize; with divers other cruel
threatening words, contained in the same proclamation. Notwithstanding the people cried out,
desiring God to strengthen them; and they, likewise, still prayed for the people, and the restoring
of His word. At length Roger, embracing the
stake and the reeds, said these words:— 'Lord, I
most humbly thank Thy Majesty that Thou hast
called me from the state of death unto the light of
Thy heavenly word, and now unto the fellowship
of Thy saints, that I may sing and say, Holy, holy,
holy, Lord God of hosts! And Lord, into Thy
hands I commit my spirit. Lord, bless these Thy
people, and save them from idolatry.' And so
he ended his life, looking up into heaven, praying and praising God, with the rest of his fellowsaints: for whose joyful constancy the Lord be
praised."
The end of three more of the holy army Foxe
thus gives:—"And so these three godly men, John
Hallingdale, William Sparrow, and Master Gibson,
being thus appointed to the slaughter, were, the
twelfth day after their condemnation (which was
the 18th day of the said month of November,
1557), burnt in Smithfield in London. And being
brought thither to the stake, after their prayer
made, they were bound thereunto with chains,
and wood set unto them; and after wood, fire,
in the which being compassed about, and the
fiery flames consuming their flesh, at the last
they yielded gloriously and joyfully their souls and
lives into the holy hands of the Lord, to whose
tuition and government I commend thee, good
reader. Amen."
Of the heroic death of John Rogers, the protomartyr in the Marian persecution, Foxe gives the
following account:—
"After that John Rogers," he says, "had been
long and straitly imprisoned, lodged in Newgate
amongst thieves, often examined and very uncharitably treated, and at length unjustly and most
cruelly, by wicked Winchester, condemned. The
4th of February, A.D. 1555, being Monday in the
morning, he was warned suddenly by the keeper's
wife of Newgate, to prepare himself to the fire;
who, being then sound asleep, scarce with much
shogging could be awaked. At length, being raised
and waked, and bid to make haste, 'Then,' said he,
'if it be so I need not tie my points;' and so was
had down first to Bonner to be degraded. That
done, he craved of Bonner but one petition. And
Bonner asking what that should be: 'Nothing,'
said he, 'but that I might talk a few words with
my wife before my burning.' But that could not
be obtained of him. 'Then,' said he, 'you declare
your charity, what it is.' And so he was brought
into Smithfield by Master Chester and Master
Woodroofe, then sheriffs of London, there to be
burnt; where he showed most constant patience,
not using many words, for he could not be permitted; but only exhorting the people constantly
to remain in that faith and true doctrine which he
before had taught and they had learned, and for
the confirmation whereof he was not only content
patiently to suffer and bear all such bitterness and
cruelty as had been showed him, but also most
gladly to resign up his life, and to give his flesh to
the consuming fire, for the testimony of the same.
. . . The Sunday before he suffered he drank
to Master Hooper, being then underneath him, and
bade them commend him unto him, and tell him,
'There was never little fellow better would stick
to a man than he would stick to him,' presupposing
they should both be burned together, although it
happened otherwise, for Master Rogers was burnt
alone. . . Now, when the time came that he, being
delivered to the sheriffs, should be brought out of
Newgate to Smithfield, the place of his execution,
first came to him Master Woodroofe, one of the
aforesaid sheriffs, and calling Master Rogers unto
him, asked him if he would revoke his abominable
doctrine and his evil opinion of the sacrament of
the altar. Master Rogers answered and said,
'That which I have preached I will seal with my
blood.' 'Then,' quoth Master Woodroofe, 'thou
art a heretic.' 'That shall be known,' quoth
Rogers, 'at the day of judgment.' 'Well' quoth
Master Woodroofe, 'I will never pray for thee.'
'But I will pray for you,' quoth Master Rogers;
and so was brought the same day, which was Monday, the 4th of February, by the sheriffs towards
Smithfield, saying the psalm 'Miserere' by the way,
all the people wonderfully rejoicing at his constancy, with great praises and thanks to God for
the same. And there, in the presence of Master
Rochester, Comptroller of the Queen's Household,
Sir Richard Southwell, both the sheriffs, and a wonderful number of people, the fire was put unto him;
and when it had taken hold both upon his legs and
shoulders, he, as one feeling no smart, washed his
hands in the flame as though it had been in cold
water. And, after lifting up his hands unto heaven,
not removing the same until such time as the
devouring fire had consumed them, most mildly
this happy martyr yielded up his spirit into the
hands of his heavenly Father. A little before his
burning at the stake his pardon was brought if
he would have recanted, but he utterly refused.
He was the first martyr of all the blessed company
that suffered in Queen Mary's time, that gave
the first adventure upon the fire. His wife and
children, being eleven in number, and ten able to
go, and one sucking on her breast, met him by the
way as he went towards Smithfield. This sorrowful sight of his own flesh and blood could nothing
move him; but that he constantly and cheerfully
took his death, with wonderful patience, in the
defence and quarrel of Christ's Gospel."
The chosen place for executions before Tyburn
was the Elms, Smithfield, between "the horsepond and Turnmill brook," which, according to
Stow, began to be built on in the reign of Henry
V. The gallows seems to have been removed to
Tyburn about the reign of Henry IV. In Stow's
time none of the ancient elms remained. Here
that brave Scotch patriot and guerilla chief Sir
William Wallace, was executed, on St. Bartholomew's Eve, 1305. After many cruel reprisals on
the soldiers of Edward I., and many victories, this
true patriot was betrayed by a friend, and surrendered
to the conquerors. He was dragged from the Tower
by horses, and then hung, and, while still conscious,
quartered. Here also perished ignominiously Mortimer, the cruel favourite of the queen, the murderess
of her husband, Edward II. Edward III., then aged
eighteen, seized the regicide, Mortimer, at Nottingham Castle, and he was hung at the Elms, the
body remaining on the gibbet, says Stow, "two
days and nights, to be seen of the people."
The history of Bartholomew Priory and of Bartholomew Fair, so admirably narrated by Mr. Henry
Morley, is an interesting chapter in the history of
Smithfield. The priory was founded by Rayer, a
monk, who had been jester and revel-master to
Henry I., a specially superstitious monarch. Rayer
was converted by a vision he saw during a pilgrimage to Rome, where he had fallen grievously
sick. In his vision Rayer was borne up to a high
place by a beast with four feet and two wings, from
whence he saw the mouth of the bottomless pit. As
he stood there, crying out and trembling, a man of
majestic beauty, who proclaimed himself St. Bartholomew the Apostle, came to his succour. The
saint said that, by common favour and command
of the celestial council, he had chosen a place in
the suburbs of London where Rayer should found
a church in his name. Of the cost he was to doubt
nothing; it would be his (St. Bartholomew's) part
to provide necessaries.
On Rayer's return to London he told his friends
and the barons of London, and by their advice made
his request to the king, who at once granted it, and
the church was founded early in the twelfth century. It was an unpromising place, though called
the King's Market, almost all marsh and dirty fens,
and on the only dry part stood the Elms gibbet.
Rayer, wise in his generation, now feigned to be halfwitted, drawing children and idlers together, to fill
the marsh with stones and rubbish. In spite of
his numerous enemies, many miracles attended the
building of the new priory. At evensong a light
appeared on the new roof; a cripple recovered the
use of his limbs at the altar; by a vision Rayer
discovered a choral book which a Jew had stolen;
a blind boy recovered his sight. In the twelfth
year of his prelacy Rayer obtained from King
Henry a most ample charter, and leave to institute
a three days' fair on the Feast of St. Bartholomew,
forbidding any but the prior levying dues on the
frequenters of the fair during those three days.
Fairs, as Mr. Morley has most learnedly shown,
generally originated in the assembling of pilgrims
to church festivals, and St. Bartholomew's Fair was
no exception to the rule.
Rayer, after witnessing endless miracles, and
showing a most creditable invention, and a true
knowledge of his old juggler's art, died in 1143,
leaving a little flock of thirteen monks, living very
well on the oblations of the rich Londoners. The
miracles continued very well. The saint became
a favourite with seamen, and the sailors of a
Flemish ship, saved by prayers to the saint of
Smithfield, presented a silver ship at his altar.
The saint appeared to a sailor on a wreck, and led
a wrecked Flemish merchant to land in safety.
He cured madmen, and was famous in cases of
fires and possession by devils.
Fragments of the old Norman priory of Rayer
still exist in Bartholomew Close, and the dim
passage called Middlesex Passage. This latter
place is a fragment of the old priory, overhung
by the wreck of the great priory hall, now broken
up, divided into floors, and turned into a tobaccofactory. On each side of this passage there is
access to separated portions of the crypt. In one
pickle-store there are pointed Norman arches under
a high vaulted ceiling. The entrance to the crypt
used to be by a descent of twenty-five feet, until
the floor was raised for business convenience.
There is a tradition that at the end of this long
subterranean hall there used to be a door opening
into the church; now the visitor to the shrine will
only find, through an alley a door and bit of church
wall hemmed in between factories. The present
church is the choir of the old priory, and the nave
is entirely gone; the last line of the square of
cloisters had been turned into a stable, and fell
down some thirty years ago. The apse is shorn
off, and a base brick wall closes that forlorn space.
"Half-way," says Mr. Morley, "between capital
and base of the pillars of that oratory of the Virgin
which a miracle commended once to reverence, now
stands the floor of the vestry of the parish church."
The walls and aisles on either side of the church
are still nearly as when Rayer's sham miracles and
pious trickeries were all over, and he took a last
glance at the great work of his singular life, and
the house raised to God and the builder's own
vanity. The high aspiring columns and solid
arches, the zig-zag ornaments of the early Normans,
are still as when Rayer eyed them with crafty
triumph.

PLACE OF EXECUTION IN OLD SMITHFIELD:
The site of the priory was chosen with a true
monkish wisdom. The saint had included in his
wishes a piece of the king's Friday Market, and
horses, oxen, sheep, and pigs would all bring grist,
in one way or another, to the omnivorous monastic
mill. Already Smithfield was the great horsemarket of London. as it continued to be for many
long centuries. On Shrove Tuesday every schoolboy came here to play football; and it was also
the Rotten Row of the horsemen of the Middle
Ages. It was the great Campus Martius for shamfights and tilts. It was a ground for bowls and
archery; the favourite haunt of jugglers, acrobats,
and posture-makers. There were probably, in
early times, says Mr. Morley, two Bartholomew
Fairs, one held in Smithfield, and one within the
priory bounds. The real fair was held within the
priory gates, and in the priory churchyard; where,
too, on certain festivals, schoolmasters used to
bring their boys, to hold in public logical controversies. The churchyard fair seems from the
first to have been chiefly a draper's and clothiers'
fair; and the gates were locked every night, and
guarded, to protect the booths and stands.

THE "HAND AND SHEARS." A CASE BEFORE THE COURT OF PIE-POUDRE. (From a Drawing dated 1811.)
The English kings did not forget the hospital.
In 1223 we find that King Henry III. gave an old
oak from Windsor Forest as fuel for the infirm in
the Hospital of St. Bartholomew, the generous grant
to be renewed every year. In 1244 (Henry III.)
a disgraceful religious brawl occurred at the very
gate of the West Smithfield Priory. Boniface, the
Provençal Archbishop of Canterbury, came to visit
Rayer's friars, and was received with solemn procession. The bishop was rather angry at the state,
and told the canons that he passed not for honour,
but to visit them as part of the duties of his office.
The canons, irritated at his pride, replied that
having a learned bishop of their own, they desired
no other visitation. The archbishop, furious at
this, smote the sub-prior on the face, crying, "Indeed! indeed! doth it become you English traitors
so to answer me?" Then, bursting with oaths, this
worthy ecclesiastic fell on the unfortunate sub-prior,
tore his rich cope to shreds, trampled them under
foot, and then thrust the wearer back with such
force against a chancel pillar as nearly to kill him.
The canons, alarmed at this furious onslaught,
pulled the archbishop on his back, and in so doing
discovered that he was armed. The archbishop's
Provençal attendants, seeing their master down,
fell in their turn on the Smithfield canons, beat
them, rent their frocks, and trod them under foot.
The canons then ran, covered with blood and
mire, to the king, at Westminster, but he refused
to interfere. The citizens, by this time roused,
would have rung the common bell, and torn the
foreign archbishop to pieces, had he not fled over
the water to Lambeth. They called him a ruffian
and a cruel brute, and said he was greedy for
money, unlearned and strange, and, moreover, had
a wife.
The early miracle plays seem to have been often
performed at Smithfield. In 1390 the London
parish clerks played interludes in the fields at
Skinner's Well, for three consecutive days to
Richard II., his queen, and court. In 1409
(Henry IV.) the parish clerks played Matter from
the Creation of the World for eight consecutive
days; after which followed jousts. In those early
times delegates of the merchant tailors, with their
silver measure, attended Bartholomew Fair, to try
the measures of the drapers and clothiers.
From the earliest times of which there is record,
says Mr. Morley, whose wide nets few odd facts
escape, the Court of Pie-poudre, which has jurisdiction over offences committed in the fair, was
held within the priory gates, the prior being lord of
the fair. It was held, indeed, to the last, close by,
in Cloth Fair. After 1445 the City claimed to be
joint lord of the fair with the prior, and four aldermen were always appointed as keepers of the fair
and of the Court of Pie-poudre.