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An Episode of Cathedral
History There was once a
learned gentleman who was
deputed to examine and report upon the archives of the Cathedral of
Southminster. The examination of these records demanded a very
considerable
expenditure of time: hence it became advisable for him to engage
lodgings in
the city: for though the Cathedral body were profuse in their offers of
hospitality, Mr. Lake felt that he would prefer to be master of his
day. This
was recognized as reasonable. The Dean eventually wrote advising Mr.
Lake, if
he were not already suited, to communicate with Mr. Worby, the
principal
Verger, who occupied a house convenient to the church and was prepared
to take
in a quiet lodger for three or four weeks. Such an arrangement was
precisely
what Mr. Lake desired. Terms were easily agreed upon, and early in
December,
like another Mr. Datchery (as he remarked to himself), the investigator
found
himself in the occupation of a very comfortable room in an ancient and
“cathedraly” house. One so familiar with
the customs of
Cathedral churches, and treated with such obvious consideration by the
Dean and
Chapter of this Cathedral in particular, could not fail to command the
respect
of the Head Verger. Mr. Worby even acquiesced in certain modifications
of
statements he had been accustomed to offer for years to parties of
visitors.
Mr. Lake, on his part, found the Verger a very cheery companion, and
took
advantage of any occasion that presented itself for enjoying his
conversation
when the day’s work was over. One evening, about
nine o’clock, Mr. Worby
knocked at his lodger’s door. “I’ve occasion,” he said, “to go across
to the
Cathedral, Mr. Lake, and I think I made you a promise when I did so
next I
would give you the opportunity to see what it looks like at night time.
It is
quite fine and dry outside, if you care to come.” “To be sure I will;
very much obliged to
you, Mr. Worby, for thinking of it, but let me get my coat.” “Here it is, sir,
and I’ve another lantern
here that you’ll find advisable for the steps, as there’s no moon.” “Any one might think
we were Jasper and
Durdles, over again, mightn’t they,” said Lake, as they crossed the
close, for
he had ascertained that the Verger had read Edwin Drood. “Well, so they
might,” said Mr. Worby, with
a short laugh, “though I don’t know whether we ought to take it as a
compliment. Odd ways, I often think, they had at that Cathedral, don’t
it seem
so to you, sir? Full choral matins at seven o’clock in the morning all
the year
round. Wouldn’t suit our boys’ voices nowadays, and I think there’s one
or two
of the men would be applying for a rise if the Chapter was to bring it
in-particular the alltoes.” They were now at the
south-west door. As
Mr. Worby was unlocking it, Lake said, “Did you ever find anybody
locked in
here by accident?” “Twice I did. One
was a drunk sailor;
however he got in I don’t know. I s’pose he went to sleep in the
service, but
by the time I got to him he was praying fit to bring the roof in. Lor’!
what a
noise that man did make! said it was the first time he’d been inside a
church
for ten years, and blest if ever he’d try it again. The other was an
old sheep:
them boys it was, up to their games. That was the last time they tried
it on,
though. There, sir, now you see what we look like; our late Dean used
now and
again to bring parties in, but he preferred a moonlight night, and
there was a
piece of verse he’d coat to ’em, relating to a Scotch cathedral, I
understand;
but I don’t know; I almost think the effect’s better when it’s all
dark-like.
Seems to add to the size and heighth. Now if you won’t mind stopping
somewhere
in the nave while I go up into the choir where my business lays, you’ll
see
what I mean.” Accordingly Lake
waited, leaning against a
pillar, and watched the light wavering along the length of the church,
and up
the steps into the choir, until it was intercepted by some screen or
other
furniture, which only allowed the reflection to be seen on the piers
and roof.
Not many minutes had passed before Worby reappeared at the door of the
choir
and by waving his lantern signalled to Lake to rejoin him. “I suppose it is
Worby, and not a
substitute,” thought Lake to himself, as he walked up the nave. There
was, in
fact, nothing untoward. Worby showed him the papers which he had come
to fetch
out of the Dean’s stall, and asked him what he thought of the
spectacle: Lake
agreed that it was well worth seeing. “I suppose,” he said, as they
walked
towards the altar-steps together, “that you’re too much used to going
about
here at night to feel nervous — but you must get a start every now and
then,
don’t you, when a book falls down or a door swings to.” “No, Mr. Lake, I
can’t say I think much
about noises, not nowadays: I’m much more afraid of finding an escape
of gas or
a burst in the stove pipes than anything else. Still there have been
times,
years ago. Did you notice that plain altar-tomb there — fifteenth
century we
say it is, I don’t know if you agree to that? Well, if you didn’t look
at it,
just come back and give it a glance, if you’d be so good.” It was on
the north
side of the choir, and rather awkwardly placed: only about three feet
from the
enclosing stone screen. Quite plain, as the Verger had said, but for
some
ordinary stone panelling. A metal cross of some size on the northern
side (that
next to the screen) was the solitary feature of any interest. Lake agreed that it
was not earlier than
the Perpendicular period: “but,” he said, “unless it’s the tomb of some
remarkable person, you’ll forgive me for saying that I don’t think it’s
particularly noteworthy.” “Well, I can’t say
as it is the tomb of
anybody noted in ‘istory,” said Worby, who had a dry smile on his face,
“for we
don’t own any record whatsoever of who it was put up to. For all that,
if
you’ve half an hour to spare, sir, when we get back to the house, Mr.
Lake, I
could tell you a tale about that tomb. I won’t begin on it now; it
strikes cold
here, and we don’t want to be dawdling about all night.” “Of course I should
like to hear it
immensely.” “Very well, sir, you
shall. Now if I might
put a question to you,” he went on, as they passed down the choir
aisle, “in
our little local guide — and not only there, but in the little book on
our
Cathedral in the series — you’ll find it stated that this portion of
the
building was erected previous to the twelfth century. Now of course I
should be
glad enough to take that view, but — mind the step, sir — but, I put it
to you
— does the lay of the stone ’ere in this portion of the wall (which he
tapped
with his key) does it to your eye carry the flavour of what you might
call
Saxon masonry? No? I thought not; no more it does to me: now, if you’ll
believe
me, I’ve said as much to those men — one’s the librarian of our Free
Libry
here, and the other came down from London on purpose — fifty times, if
I have
once, but I might just as well have talked to that bit of stonework.
But there
it is, I suppose every one’s got their opinions.” The discussion of
this peculiar trait of
human nature occupied Mr. Worby almost up to the moment when he and
Lake
re-entered the former’s house. The condition of the fire in Lake’s
sitting-room
led to a suggestion from Mr. Worby that they should finish the evening
in his
own parlour. We find them accordingly settled there some short time
afterwards. Mr. Worby made his
story a long one, and I
will not undertake to tell it wholly in his own words, or in his own
order.
Lake committed the substance of it to paper immediately after hearing
it,
together with some few passages of the narrative which had fixed
themselves verbatim
in his mind; I shall probably find it expedient to condense Lake’s
record to
some extent. Mr. Worby was born,
it appeared, about the
year 1828. His father before him had been connected with the Cathedral,
and
likewise his grandfather. One or both had been choristers, and in later
life
both had done work as mason and carpenter respectively about the
fabric. Worby
himself, though possessed, as he frankly acknowledged, of an
indifferent voice,
had been drafted into the choir at about ten years of age. It was in 1840 that
the wave of the Gothic
revival smote the Cathedral of Southminster. “There was a lot of lovely
stuff
went then, sir,” said Worby, with a sigh. “My father couldn’t hardly
believe it
when he got his orders to clear out the choir. There was a new dean
just come
in-Dean Burscough it was — and my father had been ‘prenticed to a good
firm of
joiners in the city, and knew what good work was when he saw it. Crool
it was,
he used to say: all that beautiful wainscot oak, as good as the day it
was put
up, and garlands-like of foliage and fruit, and lovely old gilding work
on the
coats of arms and the organ pipes. All went to the timber yard — every
bit
except some little pieces worked up in the Lady Chapel, and ’ere in
this
overmantel. Well — I may be mistook, but I say our choir never looked
as well
since. Still there was a lot found out about the history of the church,
and no
doubt but what it did stand in need of repair. There were very few
winters
passed but what we’d lose a pinnicle.” Mr. Lake expressed his
concurrence with
Worby’s views of restoration, but owns to a fear about this point lest
the
story proper should never be reached. Possibly this was perceptible in
his
manner. Worby hastened to
reassure him, “Not but
what I could carry on about that topic for hours at a time, and do do
when I
see my opportunity. But Dean Burscough he was very set on the Gothic
period,
and nothing would serve him but everything must be made agreeable to
that. And
one morning after service he appointed for my father to meet him in the
choir,
and he came back after he’d taken off his robes in the vestry, and he’d
got a
roll of paper with him, and the verger that was then brought in a
table, and
they begun spreading it out on the table with prayer books to keep it
down, and
my father helped ’em, and he saw it was a picture of the inside of a
choir in a
Cathedral; and the Dean — he was a quick spoken gentleman — he says,
‘Well,
Worby, what do you think of that?’ ‘Why’, says my father, ‘I don’t
think I ‘ave
the pleasure of knowing that view. Would that be Hereford Cathedral,
Mr. Dean?’
‘No, Worby,’ says the Dean, ‘that’s Southminster Cathedral as we hope
to see it
before many years.’ ‘In-deed, sir,’ says my father, and that was all he
did say
— leastways to the Dean — but he used to tell me he felt really faint
in
himself when he looked round our choir as I can remember it, all
comfortable
and furnished-like, and then see this nasty little dry picter, as he
called it,
drawn out by some London architect. Well, there I am again. But you’ll
see what
I mean if you look at this old view.” Worby reached down a
framed print from the
wall. “Well, the long and the short of it was that the Dean he handed
over to
my father a copy of an order of the Chapter that he was to clear out
every bit
of the choir — make a clean sweep — ready for the new work that was
being
designed up in town, and he was to put it in hand as soon as ever he
could get
the breakers together. Now then, sir, if you look at that view, you’ll
see
where the pulpit used to stand: that’s what I want you to notice, if
you
please.” It was, indeed, easily seen; an unusually large structure of
timber
with a domed sounding-board, standing at the east end of the stalls on
the
north side of the choir, facing the bishop’s throne. Worby proceeded to
explain
that during the alterations, services were held in the nave, the
members of the
choir being thereby disappointed of an anticipated holiday, and the
organist in
particular incurring the suspicion of having wilfully damaged the
mechanism of
the temporary organ that was hired at considerable expense from London. The work of
demolition began with the choir
screen and organ loft, and proceeded gradually eastwards, disclosing,
as Worby
said, many interesting features of older work. While this was going on,
the
members of the Chapter were, naturally, in and about the choir a great
deal,
and it soon became apparent to the elder Worby — who could not help
overhearing
some of their talk — that, on the part of the senior Canons especially,
there
must have been a good deal of disagreement before the policy now being
carried
out had been adopted. Some were of opinion that they should catch their
deaths
of cold in the return-stalls, unprotected by a screen from the draughts
in the
nave: others objected to being exposed to the view of persons in the
choir
aisles, especially, they said, during the sermons, when they found it
helpful
to listen in a posture which was liable to misconstruction. The
strongest
opposition, however, came from the oldest of the body, who up to the
last
moment objected to the removal of the pulpit. “You ought not to touch
it, Mr.
Dean,” he said with great emphasis one morning, when the two were
standing
before it: “you don’t know what mischief you may do.” “Mischief? it’s
not a
work of any particular merit, Canon.” “Don’t call me Canon,” said the
old man
with great asperity, “that is, for thirty years I’ve been known as Dr.
Ayloff,
and I shall be obliged, Mr. Dean, if you would kindly humour me in that
matter.
And as to the pulpit (which I’ve preached from for thirty years, though
I don’t
insist on that) all I’ll say is, I know you’re doing wrong in
moving
it.” “But what sense could there be, my dear Doctor, in leaving it
where it is,
when we’re fitting up the rest of the choir in a totally different style?
What reason could be given — apart from the look of the thing?”
“Reason!
reason!” said old Dr. Ayloff; “if you young men — if I may say so
without any
disrespect, Mr. Dean — if you’d only listen to reason a little, and not
be
always asking for it, we should get on better. But there, I’ve said my
say.”
The old gentleman hobbled off, and as it proved, never entered the
Cathedral
again. The season — it was a hot summer — turned sickly on a sudden.
Dr. Ayloff
was one of the first to go, with some affection of the muscles of the
thorax,
which took him painfully at night. And at many services the number of
choirmen
and boys was very thin. Meanwhile the pulpit
had been done away
with. In fact, the sounding-board (part of which still exists as a
table in a
summer-house in the palace garden) was taken down within an hour or two
of Dr. Ayloff’s
protest. The removal of the base — not effected without considerable
trouble —
disclosed to view, greatly to the exultation of the restoring party, an
altar-tomb — the tomb, of course, to which Worby had attracted Lake’s
attention
that same evening. Much fruitless research was expended in attempts to
identify
the occupant; from that day to this he has never had a name put to him.
The
structure had been most carefully boxed in under the pulpit-base, so
that such
slight ornament as it possessed was not defaced; only on the north side
of it
there was what looked like an injury; a gap between two of the slabs
composing
the side. It might be two or three inches across. Palmer, the mason,
was
directed to fill it up in a week’s time, when he came to do some other
small
jobs near that part of the choir. The season was
undoubtedly a very trying
one. Whether the church was built on a site that had once been a marsh,
as was
suggested, or for whatever reason, the residents in its immediate
neighbourhood
had, many of them, but little enjoyment of the exquisite sunny days and
the
calm nights of August and September. To several of the older people —
Dr.
Ayloff, among others, as we have seen — the summer proved downright
fatal, but
even among the younger, few escaped either a sojourn in bed for a
matter of
weeks, or at the least, a brooding sense of oppression, accompanied by
hateful
nightmares. Gradually there formulated itself a suspicion — which grew
into a
conviction — that the alterations in the Cathedral had something to say
in the
matter. The widow of a former old verger, a pensioner of the Chapter of
Southminster, was visited by dreams, which she retailed to her friends,
of a
shape that slipped out of the little door of the south transept as the
dark
fell in, and flitted — taking a fresh direction every night — about the
close,
disappearing for a while in house after house, and finally emerging
again when
the night sky was paling. She could see nothing of it, she said, but
that it
was a moving form: only she had an impression that when it returned to
the
church, as it seemed to do in the end of the dream, it turned its head:
and
then, she could not tell why, but she thought it had red eyes. Worby
remembered
hearing the old lady tell this dream at a tea-party in the house of the
chapter
clerk. Its recurrence might, perhaps, he said, be taken as a symptom of
approaching illness; at any rate before the end of September the old
lady was
in her grave. The interest excited
by the restoration of
this great church was not confined to its own county. One day that
summer an
F.S.A., of some celebrity, visited the place. His business was to write
an
account of the discoveries that had been made, for the Society of
Antiquaries,
and his wife, who accompanied him, was to make a series of illustrative
drawings for his report. In the morning she employed herself in making
a
general sketch of the choir; in the afternoon she devoted herself to
details.
She first drew the newly exposed altar-tomb, and when that was
finished, she
called her husband’s attention to a beautiful piece of diaper-ornament
on the
screen just behind it, which had, like the tomb itself, been completely
concealed by the pulpit. Of course, he said, an illustration of that
must be
made; so she seated herself on the tomb and began a careful drawing
which
occupied her till dusk. Her husband had by
this time finished his
work of measuring and description, and they agreed that it was time to
be
getting back to their hotel. “You may as well brush my skirt, Frank,”
said the
lady, “it must have got covered with dust, I’m sure.” He obeyed
dutifully; but,
after a moment, he said, “I don’t know whether you value this dress
particularly, my dear, but I’m inclined to think it’s seen its best
days.
There’s a great bit of it gone.” “Gone? Where?” said she. “I don’t know
where
it’s gone, but it’s off at the bottom edge behind here.” She pulled it
hastily
into sight, and was horrified to find a jagged tear extending some way
into the
substance of the stuff; very much, she said, as if a dog had rent it
away. The
dress was, in any case, hopelessly spoilt, to her great vexation, and
though
they looked everywhere, the missing piece could not be found. There
were many
ways, they concluded, in which the injury might have come about, for
the choir
was full of old bits of woodwork with nails sticking out of them.
Finally, they
could only suppose that one of these had caused the mischief, and that
the
workmen, who had been about all day, had carried off the particular
piece with
the fragment of dress still attached to it. It was about this
time, Worby thought, that
his little dog began to wear an anxious expression when the hour for it
to be
put into the shed in the back yard approached. (For his mother had
ordained
that it must not sleep in the house.) One evening, he said, when he was
just
going to pick it up and carry it out, it looked at him “like a
Christian, and
waved its ‘and, I was going to say — well, you know ‘ow they do carry
on
sometimes, and the end of it was I put it under my coat, and ‘uddled it
upstairs — and I’m afraid I as good as deceived my poor mother on the
subject.
After that the dog acted very artful with ‘iding itself under the bed
for
half-an-hour or more before bed-time came, and we worked it so as my
mother
never found out what we’d done.” Of course Worby was glad of its
company
anyhow, but more particularly when the nuisance that is still
remembered in
Southminster as “the crying” set in. “Night after night,”
said Worby, “that dog
seemed to know it was coming; he’d creep out, he would, and snuggle
into the
bed and cuddle right up to me shivering, and when the crying come he’d
be like
a wild thing, shoving his head under my arm, and I was fully near as
bad. Six
or seven times we’d hear it, not more, and when he’d dror out his ‘ed
again I’d
know it was over for that night. What was it like, sir? Well, I never
heard but
one thing that seemed to hit it off. I happened to be playing about in
the
Close, and there was two of the Canons met and said ‘Good morning’ one
to
another. ‘Sleep well last night?’ says one — it was Mr. Henslow that
one, and
Mr. Lyall was the other —‘Can’t say I did,’ says Mr. Lyall, ‘rather too
much of
Isaiah 34. 14 for me.’ ‘34. 14,’ says Mr. Henslow, ‘what’s that?’ ‘You
call
yourself a Bible reader!’ says Mr. Lyall. (Mr. Henslow, you must know,
he was
one of what used to be termed Simeon’s lot — pretty much what we should
call
the Evangelical party.) ‘You go and look it up.’ I wanted to know what
he was
getting at myself, and so off I ran home and got out my own Bible, and
there it
was: ‘the satyr shall cry to his fellow.’ Well, I thought, is that what
we’ve
been listening to these past nights? and I tell you it made me look
over my
shoulder a time or two. Of course I’d asked my father and mother about
what it
could be before that, but they both said it was most likely cats: but
they
spoke very short, and I could see they was troubled. My word! that was
a noise
—‘ungry-like, as if it was calling after some one that wouldn’t come.
If ever
you felt you wanted company, it would be when you was waiting for it to
begin
again. I believe two or three nights there was men put on to watch in
different
parts of the Close; but they all used to get together in one corner,
the
nearest they could to the High Street, and nothing came of it. “Well, the next
thing was this. Me and
another of the boys — he’s in business in the city now as a grocer,
like his
father before him — we’d gone up in the Close after morning service was
over,
and we heard old Palmer the mason bellowing to some of his men. So we
went up
nearer, because we knew he was a rusty old chap and there might be some
fun
going. It appears Palmer’d told this man to stop up the chink in that
old tomb.
Well, there was this man keeping on saying he’d done it the best he
could, and
there was Palmer carrying on like all possessed about it. ‘Call that
making a
job of it?’ he says. ‘If you had your rights you’d get the sack for
this. What
do you suppose I pay you your wages for? What do you suppose I’m going
to say
to the Dean and Chapter when they come round, as come they may do any
time, and
see where you’ve been bungling about covering the ‘ole place with mess
and
plaster and Lord knows what?’ ‘Well, master, I done the best I could,’
says the
man; ‘I don’t know no more than what you do ‘ow it come to fall out
this way. I
tamped it right in the ‘ole,’ he says, ‘and now it’s fell out,’ he
says, ‘I
never see.’ “‘Fell out?’ says
old Palmer, ‘why it’s
nowhere near the place. Blowed out, you mean,’ and he picked up a bit
of plaster,
and so did I, that was laying up against the screen, three or four feet
off,
and not dry yet; and old Palmer he looked at it curious-like, and then
he
turned round on me and he says, ‘Now then, you boys, have you been up
to some
of your games here?’ ‘No,’ I says, ‘I haven’t, Mr. Palmer; there’s none
of us
been about here till just this minute,’ and while I was talking the
other boy,
Evans, he got looking in through the chink, and I heard him draw in his
breath,
and he came away sharp and up to us, and says he, ‘I believe there’s
something
in there. I saw something shiny.’ ‘What! I daresay,’ says old Palmer;
‘Well, I
ain’t got time to stop about there. You, William, you go off and get
some more
stuff and make a job of it this time; if not, there’ll be trouble in my
yard,’
he says. “So the man he went
off, and Palmer too,
and us boys stopped behind, and I says to Evans, ‘Did you really see
anything
in there?’ ‘Yes,’ he says, ‘I did indeed.’ So then I says, ‘Let’s shove
something in and stir it up.’ And we tried several of the bits of wood
that was
laying about, but they were all too big. Then Evans he had a sheet of
music
he’d brought with him, an anthem or a service, I forget which it was
now, and
he rolled it up small and shoved it in the chink; two or three times he
did it,
and nothing happened. ‘Give it me, boy,’ I said, and I had a try. No,
nothing
happened. Then, I don’t know why I thought of it, I’m sure, but I
stooped down
just opposite the chink and put my two fingers in my mouth and whistled
— you know
the way — and at that I seemed to think I heard something stirring, and
I says
to Evans, ‘Come away,’ I says; ‘I don’t like this.’ ‘Oh, rot,’ he says,
‘Give
me that roll,’ and he took it and shoved it in. And I don’t think ever
I see
any one go so pale as he did. ‘I say, Worby,’ he says, ‘it’s caught, or
else
some one’s got hold of it.’ ‘Pull it out or leave it,’ I says, ‘Come
and let’s
get off.’ So he gave a good pull, and it came away. Leastways most of
it did,
but the end was gone. Torn off it was, and Evans looked at it for a
second and
then he gave a sort of a croak and let it drop, and we both made off
out of
there as quick as ever we could. When we got outside Evans says to me,
‘Did you
see the end of that paper.’ ‘No,’ I says, ‘only it was torn.’ ‘Yes, it
was,’ he
says, ‘but it was wet too, and black!’ Well, partly because of the
fright we
had, and partly because that music was wanted in a day or two, and we
knew
there’d be a set-out about it with the organist, we didn’t say nothing
to any
one else, and I suppose the workmen they swept up the bit that was left
along
with the rest of the rubbish. But Evans, if you were to ask him this
very day
about it, he’d stick to it he saw that paper wet and black at the end
where it
was torn.” After that the boys
gave the choir a wide
berth, so that Worby was not sure what was the result of the mason’s
renewed
mending of the tomb. Only he made out from fragments of conversation
dropped by
the workmen passing through the choir that some difficulty had been met
with,
and that the governor — Mr. Palmer to wit — had tried his own hand at
the job.
A little later, he happened to see Mr. Palmer himself knocking at the
door of
the Deanery and being admitted by the butler. A day or so after that,
he
gathered from a remark his father let fall at breakfast that something
a little
out of the common was to be done in the Cathedral after morning service
on the
morrow. “And I’d just as soon it was today,” his father added, “I don’t
see the
use of running risks.” “‘Father,’ I says, ‘what are you going to do in
the
Cathedral tomorrow?’ and he turned on me as savage as I ever see him —
he was a
wonderful good-tempered man as a general thing, my poor father was. ‘My
lad,’
he says, ‘I’ll trouble you not to go picking up your elders’ and
betters’ talk:
it’s not manners and it’s not straight. What I’m going to do or not
going to do
in the Cathedral tomorrow is none of your business: and if I catch
sight of you
hanging about the place tomorrow after your work’s done, I’ll send you
home with
a flea in your ear. Now you mind that.’ Of course I said I was very
sorry and
that, and equally of course I went off and laid my plans with Evans. We
knew
there was a stair up in the corner of the transept which you can get up
to the
triforium, and in them days the door to it was pretty well always open,
and
even if it wasn’t we knew the key usually laid under a bit of matting
hard by.
So we made up our minds we’d be putting away music and that, next
morning while
the rest of the boys was clearing off, and then slip up the stairs and
watch
from the triforium if there was any signs of work going on. “Well, that same
night I dropped off asleep
as sound as a boy does, and all of a sudden the dog woke me up, coming
into the
bed, and thought I, now we’re going to get it sharp, for he seemed more
frightened than usual. After about five minutes sure enough came this
cry. I
can’t give you no idea what it was like; and so near too — nearer than
I’d
heard it yet — and a funny thing, Mr. Lake, you know what a place this
Close is
for an echo, and particular if you stand this side of it. Well, this
crying
never made no sign of an echo at all. But, as I said, it was dreadful
near this
night; and on the top of the start I got with hearing it, I got another
fright;
for I heard something rustling outside in the passage. Now to be sure I
thought
I was done; but I noticed the dog seemed to perk up a bit, and next
there was
some one whispered outside the door, and I very near laughed out loud,
for I
knew it was my father and mother that had got out of bed with the
noise.
‘Whatever is it?’ says my mother. ‘Hush! I don’t know,’ says my father,
excited-like, ‘don’t disturb the boy. I hope he didn’t hear nothing.’ “So, me knowing they
were just outside, it
made me bolder, and I slipped out of bed across to my little window —
giving on
the Close — but the dog he bored right down to the bottom of the bed —
and I
looked out. First go off I couldn’t see anything. Then right down in
the shadow
under a buttress I made out what I shall always say was two spots of
red — a
dull red it was — nothing like a lamp or a fire, but just so as you
could pick
’em out of the black shadow. I hadn’t but just sighted ’em when it
seemed we
wasn’t the only people that had been disturbed, because I see a window
in a
house on the left-hand side become lighted up, and the light moving. I
just
turned my head to make sure of it, and then looked back into the shadow
for
those two red things, and they were gone, and for all I peered about
and
stared, there was not a sign more of them. Then come my last fright
that night
— something come against my bare leg — but that was all right: that was
my
little dog had come out of bed, and prancing about, making a great
to-do, only
holding his tongue, and me seeing he was quite in spirits again, I took
him
back to bed and we slept the night out! “Next morning I made
out to tell my mother
I’d had the dog in my room, and I was surprised, after all she’d said
about it
before, how quiet she took it. ‘Did you?’ she says. ‘Well, by good
rights you
ought to go without your breakfast for doing such a thing behind my
back: but I
don’t know as there’s any great harm done, only another time you ask my
permission, do you hear?’ A bit after that I said something to my
father about
having heard the cats again. ‘Cats,’ he says, and he looked over
at my
poor mother, and she coughed and he says, ‘Oh! ah! yes, cats. I believe
I heard
’em myself.’ “That was a funny
morning altogether:
nothing seemed to go right. The organist he stopped in bed, and the
minor Canon
he forgot it was the 19th day and waited for the Venite; and
after a bit
the deputy he set off playing the chant for evensong, which was a
minor; and
then the Decani boys were laughing so much they couldn’t sing, and when
it came
to the anthem the solo boy he got took with the giggles, and made out
his nose
was bleeding, and shoved the book at me what hadn’t practised the verse
and
wasn’t much of a singer if I had known it. Well, things was rougher,
you see,
fifty years ago, and I got a nip from the counter-tenor behind me that
I
remembered. “So we got through
somehow, and neither the
men nor the boys weren’t by way of waiting to see whether the Canon in
residence — Mr. Henslow it was — would come to the vestries and fine
’em, but I
don’t believe he did: for one thing I fancy he’d read the wrong lesson
for the
first time in his life, and knew it. Anyhow Evans and me didn’t find no
difficulty in slipping up the stairs as I told you, and when we got up
we laid
ourselves down flat on our stomachs where we could just stretch our
heads out
over the old tomb, and we hadn’t but just done so when we heard the
verger that
was then, first shutting the iron porch-gates and locking the
south-west door,
and then the transept door, so we knew there was something up, and they
meant
to keep the public out for a bit. “Next thing was, the
Dean and the Canon
come in by their door on the north, and then I see my father, and old
Palmer,
and a couple of their best men, and Palmer stood a talking for a bit
with the
Dean in the middle of the choir. He had a coil of rope and the men had
crows.
All of ’em looked a bit nervous. So there they stood talking, and at
last I
heard the Dean say, ‘Well, I’ve no time to waste, Palmer. If you think
this’ll
satisfy Southminster people, I’ll permit it to be done; but I must say
this,
that never in the whole course of my life have I heard such arrant
nonsense
from a practical man as I have from you. Don’t you agree with me,
Henslow?’ As
far as I could hear Mr. Henslow said something like ‘Oh! well we’re
told,
aren’t we, Mr. Dean, not to judge others?’ and the Dean he gave a kind
of
sniff, and walked straight up to the tomb, and took his stand behind it
with
his back to the screen, and the others they come edging up rather
gingerly. Henslow,
he stopped on the south side and scratched on his chin, he did. Then
the Dean
spoke up: ‘Palmer,’ he says, ‘which can you do easiest, get the slab
off the
top, or shift one of the side slabs?’ “Old Palmer and his
men they pottered about
a bit looking round the edge of the top slab and sounding the sides on
the
south and east and west and everywhere but the north. Henslow said
something
about it being better to have a try at the south side, because there
was more
light and more room to move about in. Then my father, who’d been
watching of
them, went round to the north side, and knelt down and felt of the slab
by the
chink, and he got up and dusted his knees and says to the Dean: ‘Beg
pardon,
Mr. Dean, but I think if Mr. Palmer’ll try this here slab he’ll find
it’ll come
out easy enough. Seems to me one of the men could prize it out with his
crow by
means of this chink.’ ‘Ah! thank you, Worby,’ says the Dean; ‘that’s a
good
suggestion. Palmer, let one of your men do that, will you?’ “So the man come
round, and put his bar in
and bore on it, and just that minute when they were all bending over,
and we
boys got our heads well out over the edge of the triforium, there come
a most
fearful crash down at the west end of the choir, as if a whole stack of
big
timber had fallen down a flight of stairs. Well, you can’t expect me to
tell
you everything that happened all in a minute. Of course there was a
terrible
commotion. I heard the slab fall out, and the crowbar on the floor, and
I heard
the Dean say ‘Good God!’ “When I looked down
again I saw the Dean
tumbled over on the floor, the men was making off down the choir,
Henslow was
just going to help the Dean up, Palmer was going to stop the men, as he
said
afterwards, and my father was sitting on the altar step with his face
in his
hands. The Dean he was very cross. ‘I wish to goodness you’d look where
you’re
coming to, Henslow,’ he says. ‘Why you should all take to your heels
when a
stick of wood tumbles down I cannot imagine,’ and all Henslow could do,
explaining he was right away on the other side of the tomb, would not
satisfy
him. “Then Palmer came
back and reported there
was nothing to account for this noise and nothing seemingly fallen
down, and
when the Dean finished feeling of himself they gathered round — except
my
father, he sat where he was — and some one lighted up a bit of candle
and they
looked into the tomb. ‘Nothing there,’ says the Dean, ‘what did I tell
you?
Stay! here’s something. What’s this: a bit of music paper, and a piece
of torn
stuff — part of a dress it looks like. Both quite modern — no interest
whatever. Another time perhaps you’ll take the advice of an educated
man’— or
something like that, and off he went, limping a bit, and out through
the north
door, only as he went he called back angry to Palmer for leaving the
door
standing open. Palmer called out ‘Very sorry, sir,’ but he shrugged his
shoulders, and Henslow says, ‘I fancy Mr. Dean’s mistaken. I closed the
door
behind me, but he’s a little upset.’ Then Palmer says, ‘Why, where’s
Worby?’ and
they saw him sitting on the step and went up to him. He was recovering
himself,
it seemed, and wiping his forehead, and Palmer helped him up on to his
legs, as
I was glad to see. “They were too far
off for me to hear what
they said, but my father pointed to the north door in the aisle, and
Palmer and
Henslow both of them looked very surprised and scared. After a bit, my
father
and Henslow went out of the church, and the others made what haste they
could
to put the slab back and plaster it in. And about as the clock struck
twelve
the Cathedral was opened again and us boys made the best of our way
home. “I was in a great
taking to know what it
was had given my poor father such a turn, and when I got in and found
him
sitting in his chair taking a glass of spirits, and my mother standing
looking
anxious at him, I couldn’t keep from bursting out and making confession
where
I’d been. But he didn’t seem to take on, not in the way of losing his
temper.
‘You was there, was you? Well did you see it?’ ‘I see everything,
father,’ I
said, ‘except when the noise came.’ ‘Did you see what it was knocked
the Dean
over?’ he says, ‘that what come out of the monument? You didn’t? Well,
that’s a
mercy.’ ‘Why, what was it, father?’ I said. ‘Come, you must have seen
it,’ he
says. ‘Didn’t you see? A thing like a man, all over hair, and
two great
eyes to it?’ “Well, that was all
I could get out of him
that time, and later on he seemed as if he was ashamed of being so
frightened,
and he used to put me off when I asked him about it. But years after,
when I
was got to be a grown man, we had more talk now and again on the
matter, and he
always said the same thing. ‘Black it was,’ he’d say, ‘and a mass of
hair, and
two legs, and the light caught on its eyes.’ “Well, that’s the
tale of that tomb, Mr.
Lake; it’s one we don’t tell to our visitors, and I should be obliged
to you
not to make any use of it till I’m out of the way. I doubt Mr. Evans’ll
feel
the same as I do, if you ask him.” This proved to be
the case. But over twenty
years have passed by, and the grass is growing over both Worby and
Evans; so
Mr. Lake felt no difficulty about communicating his notes — taken in
1890 — to
me. He accompanied them with a sketch of the tomb and a copy of the
short
inscription on the metal cross which was affixed at the expense of Dr.
Lyall to
the centre of the northern side. It was from the Vulgate of Isaiah
xxxiv., and
consisted merely of the three words — IBI CUBAVIT LAMIA. |