<h2><SPAN name="page75"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
<p style="text-align: center" class="gutsumm">The Church of the
Holy Trinity, Stratford-on-Avon.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> parish church of
Stratford-on-Avon is a building larger, more lofty, and far more
stately than most towns of this size can boast. There is
reason for this exceptional importance, first in the patronage of
the Bishops of Worcester, on whose manor it was situated, but
chiefly in the benefactions of John of Stratford, one of three
remarkable persons born here in the thirteenth or fourteenth
centuries. John, Robert, and Ralph, who took their
distinguishing name from the town of their birth, were all of one
family; the first two were brothers, the third was their
nephew. John, born in the closing years of the thirteenth
century, became successively Bishop of Winchester and Archbishop
of Canterbury, and was, like most of the great prelates of the
age, a statesman as well, filling the State offices of ambassador
to foreign powers and Lord Chancellor of the realm. He died
in 1348. His brother Robert early became rector of
Stratford-on-Avon, in 1319. He it was who first caused the
town to be paved; not, of course, with pavements that would meet
the approval of a modern town council or the inhabitants, but
probably with something in the nature of cobbles roughly laid
down in the deep mud in which, up to that time, the rude carts of
the age had foundered. It was this mud that set a deep gulf
between neighbours, and had led indirectly to the establishment
in 1296 of the original Guild Chapel, a small building which
stood on the site of the <SPAN name="page76"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>existing larger structure. It
was founded by Robert, the father of John and Robert, largely for
the spiritual welfare of those old or infirm persons who were not
able to attend service at the parish church, by reason of the
distance! Not, we may be sure, the distance of actual
measurement, for the church is at the end of the not very long
street, and a leisurely walk brings you to it in two minutes; but
a distance of miles reckoned in the hindrances and disabilities
provided by the roads of that age. Nothing in the story of
Stratford could more eloquently describe to us the condition of
its streets and the then remoteness of the Old Town district.</p>
<p>But to return to Robert of Stratford, who eventually became
Bishop of Chichester and died in 1362. He it was who
supervised his brother John’s gifts to the church, which
was then an incomplete building, languishing for want of means to
complete it. Apparently it had long before been decided to
replace the small original Norman church with a larger and much
more ambitious building, in the Early English style, judging from
traces of both those architectural periods discernable in the
tower; but the Bishops of Worcester would not loosen their
purse-strings sufficiently, and awaited the coming of that
benefactor who, they were morally certain, was sure to appear
sooner or later and compound with Heaven for his evil courses on
earth by completing it. They did not, however, reckon on
any of their own cloth doing so, for sheer joy of the work.</p>
<p>John of Stratford’s works included the widening of the
north aisle and the rebuilding of the south; the remodelling of
the central tower and the addition of a timber spire, which
remained until the eighteenth century, when it was replaced
(1764) by the present loftier stone spire, which rises
eighty-three feet above the roof of the tower. In 1332 he
founded the chantry chapel of <SPAN name="page77"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>St. Thomas the Martyr in the
church. There five priests were appointed to sing masses
“for ever,” for the good of the souls of founder and
friends. John of Stratford was a great and wise man, but he
did not know that “where the tree falls, there shall it
lie”; nor could he foresee that his “for ever”
would be commuted by the Reformation into a period of two hundred
years.</p>
<p>He endowed his chantry chapel with liberality; almost
extravagance, and even purchased the advowson of the church from
the Bishop. This extremely liberal endowment was perhaps
necessary, for he had considered the eternal welfare of a good
many people besides himself and his relations, and included even
the sovereigns of England, present and to be, and all future
Bishops of Worcester. The priests, therefore, had their
hands full, and shouldered some heavy responsibilities;
for—not to go into individual cases, or specify some of the
shocking examples—it does not need much imagination to
perceive that a tremendous deal of intercession would be
necessary for so unlimited a company as this. Perhaps, in
the circumstances, he could not possibly endow his chantry too
richly.</p>
<p>I do not know how his priests fared for lodgings. He
seems to have omitted that important detail. But his nephew
Ralph supplied the omission, and, in 1351, three years after his
uncle’s death, built a house for them adjoining the
churchyard. It was styled then and for centuries afterwards
“the College.” Thus the church of
Stratford-on-Avon became more richly endowed than the usual
parish church, and was known as “collegiate.”</p>
<p>Many worthy folk followed the precedent set by the founder,
and added to the beauties of the church; chief among them Thomas
Balsall, Warden of the College in the second half of the
fifteenth century, who built the present choir or chancel between
the years 1465–1490. <SPAN name="page78"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>The last beautifier and benefactor
was Dean Balsall’s successor, Ralph Collingwood. His
is the north porch of the church, and he undertook and completed
an important alteration in the nave; unroofing it, removing the
low Decorated clerestory, probably of circular windows, and
taking down the walls to the crown of the nave-arcades; then
building upon them the light and lofty clerestory we see at this
day. He added choir-boys to the establishment, and further
endowed the College, for their maintenance. These were the
last works in the long history of the church. In 1547 the
Reformation came and swept away John of Stratford’s chantry
and confiscated the endowments. The priests were scattered,
and four years later their College was given by the king to John
Dudley, the newly-created Earl of Warwick and lord of the manor
in succession to the Bishops of Worcester. The College
reverted to the Crown, and in 1576 it was let by Queen Elizabeth
to one Richard Coningsby, who in turn let it to John Combe.
It was a fine and picturesque residence, familiar enough to
Shakespeare, who was on intimate terms with Combe, and received
from him a bequest of £5 on his death in 1614. It was
demolished in 1799.</p>
<p>The church is approached through the churchyard by a fine
avenue of lime-trees leading up to the north porch, where a
verger, or some such creature, habited in a hermaphrodite kind of
garment, which is neither exactly clerical nor lay, waits for the
visitor’s sixpences; for you may not enter for nothing,
unless perhaps at times of divine service, and even then are
allowed but grudgingly by these clerical entrepreneurs, who
suspect you have come not so much for worship as with the idea of
depriving them of a sixpence. I think, however, you would
find it difficult to glimpse the chancel and the Shakespeare
monument before the intention would be <SPAN name="page79"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>suspected and the enterprising person
successfully headed off.</p>
<p>We will first encircle the exterior, where the many
gravestones of departed Stratford worthies lean at every
imaginable angle, the oldest of them, almost, or perhaps
absolutely, contemporary with Shakespeare, grown or growing
undecipherable. Some day Stratford will be sorry for
neglecting them and their possible interest in the comparative
study of Shakespeare and his fellow-townsmen. But
everything connected, either intimately or remotely, with him has
always been neglected until the record has almost perished.
It is the singular fate of Shakespearean associations.</p>
<p>The exterior of the fabric, it will soon be noticed, is
greatly weathered; more particularly the Perpendicular chancel,
which must at no distant date be restored. It is
surprising, and an excellent tribute to the security of the
foundations of this work, built on the banks of the river over
four hundred years ago, that its walls have not fallen seriously
out of plumb, like that of the north nave-arcade; especially when
the rather daring slightness of the design is considered,
consisting of vast mullioned and transomed windows with but
little wall-space between. The gargoyles leering down from
the dripstones are a weird series of bat-winged creatures of
nightmare-land. On the south side, however, is a very good
Bear and Ragged Staff gargoyle, and next it, going westward, a
nondescript Falstaffian monster, his legs amputated by time and
weather.</p>
<p>The churchyard wall goes sheer down into the water of the
Avon. The elms look down upon the stream, the rooks hold
noisy parliaments in their boughs, and the swans float stately
by.</p>
<p>Entering by the roomy north porch, where the person with the
bisexual garments will take your sixpence and <SPAN name="page80"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>sell you
picture-postcards, it is noticed that the good Late Perpendicular
stone panelling is obscured, and the effect destroyed, by the
extreme licence given in the placing of monumental tablets on the
walls; a practice, judging from the dates upon them, still in
existence. It is quite clear from this that the building
might well be in better hands.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p80.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="Ancient Knocker, Stratford-on-Avon Church" title= "Ancient Knocker, Stratford-on-Avon Church" src="images/p80.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>A very fine brazen knocker with grotesque head holding the
ring in its mouth is a feature of the doorway. Although
affixed to late fifteenth-century wood-work, the knocker would
seem really to be nearly two hundred years earlier. It
appears on picture-cards without number as the “Sanctuary
Knocker,” and metal reproductions of it are to be had in
the town; but there is nothing to show that this church was ever
one of those that owned the privilege of sanctuary. In the
inexact modern way, every curious old knocker on church doors is
“sanctuary”; but in reality the ancient privilege was
too valuable to be <SPAN name="page81"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
81</span>granted with the indiscriminate freedom this would
argue.</p>
<p>Immediately within the church is seen the old register-book in
a glass case, containing the entries recording the baptism and
burial of Shakespeare, with the broken bow of the old font at
which he was baptised. Many years ago it was removed from
the church, to make room for a new, and lay neglected in a garden
in the town. It has been re-lined with lead, and is used
for baptisms, on request.</p>
<p>From the west end of the nave, where these relics are placed,
the long view eastward shows this to be a very striking example
of those churches whose chancels are not on the same axis with
the rest of the building. The chancel in this instance
inclines very markedly to the north. The symbolism of this
feature in ancient churches is still matter for dispute; and it
is really doubtful if it is symbolical and not the product of
inexact planning, or caused by some old local conditions of the
site which do not now appear; or whether it was thought to
produce some acoustical advantages. It is thought that no
example can be adduced of an inclination southwards, and that,
therefore, the feature is a designed one. The favourite
interpretation is that it repeats the inclination of the
Saviour’s head upon the Cross.</p>
<p>Advancing up the nave, it will soon be noticed that the north
nave-arcade is greatly out of plumb, and leans outwards; a
result, no doubt, of Collingwood’s alterations and
additions placing too heavy a weight upon it.</p>
<p>At the east end of the north aisle is the former Lady Chapel,
now and for long past known as the Clopton Chapel, from the tombs
of that family placed there. No structural difference, no
variation in the plan of the church, marks the chapel from the
rest of the building, from which it is screened very slightly by
a low pierced <SPAN name="page82"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
82</span>railing on one side, and on the south, looking into the
nave, by the ornate stone screen erected by Sir Hugh Clopton, the
founder of the family chapel and architect of his own
fortunes. It is a part of the tomb intended for himself,
and there can be no doubt but that he saw it rising to completion
with the satisfaction of a man assured of being not only wealthy,
but hoping to live in fame as the benefactor of his native town,
for which he did so much.</p>
<p>The screen is crested with elaborate pierced conventional
Tudor foliage, and fronted with his arms, and with those of the
City of London, the Grocers’ Company, and the Merchants of
the Staple. The brass inscribed plates have long since been
torn away, and the tomb is entirely without inscription or
effigy; as perhaps it is well it should be, for, in spite of all
these elaborate preparations, and although directing that he
should lie here, Sir Hugh Clopton was, after all, buried in the
City of London, where he had made his fortune, and of which he
was Lord Mayor in 1492, and in which he died in 1496. The
church of St. Margaret, Lothbury, where he was buried, perished
in the Great Fire of London, one hundred and seventy years
later.</p>
<p>Sir Hugh Clopton died a bachelor, and the other tombs are
those of his brother’s descendants. That of William
Clopton, who died in 1592 and is described simply as
“Esquire,” stands against the north wall of the
Chapel. He was great-nephew of Sir Hugh. He is
represented in armour, and his wife, who followed him four years
later, lies beside him in effigy, both figures with prayerfully
raised hands. Above them, on the wall, quite by themselves,
are represented the interesting family of this worthy pair, seven
in all, sculptured and painted in miniature, in the likeness of
so many big-headed Dutch dolls, with the name of each <SPAN name="page83"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>duly
inscribed; Elizabeth, Lodowicke, Joyce, Margaret, William, Anne,
and again William, the first of that name having died an infant,
as did also Elizabeth and Lodowicke. These three are
represented as little mummy-like creatures, swathed tightly in
linen folds.</p>
<p>But the most gorgeous of all the Clopton tombs is the next in
order of date. This is the lofty and extremely elaborate
and costly monument of George Carew, Earl of Totnes and Baron
Clopton, who married Joyce, eldest daughter of the already
mentioned William Clopton. He died in 1629, and his wife in
1636. This costly memorial, together with that to her
father and mother, was her handiwork, and she seems to have
completely enjoyed herself in the progress of the
commission. The Countess of Totnes and her husband are
represented in full-length, recumbent effigies, sculptured in
alabaster. The Earl is shown in armour and his wife is seen
habited in a white fur robe, coloured red outside. A deep
ruff is round her neck, and she wears a coronet. The Earl
of Totnes was Master of the Ordnance to James the First; hence
the symbolical sculptured implements of war in front of the
monument; including two cannon, two kegs of powder and a pile of
shot; one mortar, a gun, some halberds and a flag.</p>
<p>A later inscription records that Sir John Clopton caused these
tombs to be repaired and beautified in 1714. In 1719 he
died, aged 80; and in course of time his own tomb became a
candidate for repair. No Cloptons then survived to perform
that pious office, which was observed by Sir Arthur Hodgson, the
owner of Clopton House, in 1892.</p>
<p>The monument of Sir Edward Walker, who died in 1676, is the
memorial of a man who held some important positions. He was
Charles the First’s Secretary of War, and afterwards Garter
King-of-Arms and military <SPAN name="page84"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>editor of Clarendon’s
<i>History of the Rebellion</i>. He has some interest for
the students of Shakespeare’s life, for it was he who
bought New Place in 1675.</p>
<p>There are some smaller tablets on the walls, including one
with a little effigy of a certain Amy Smith, who was for forty
years “waiting-gentlewoman” to the Countess of
Totnes. She is seen devoutly kneeling at a <i>prie-Dieu</i>
chair.</p>
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