The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction. Volume 17, No. 490, May 21, 1831
This crazy, but not unpicturesque building, was taken down in the autumn of last year, in forming an approach to the New London Bridge. It stood on the eastern side of the High-street, and is worthy of record among the pleasing relics of antiquity, which it has ever been the object of The Mirror to rescue from oblivion. Its style of architecture—that of the seventh Henry—is interesting: there is a florid picturesqueness in the carvings on the fronts of the first and second stories, and probably this ornament extended originally to the uppermost stories, which had subsequently been covered with plaster.
We remember the house for the last twenty years, but cannot trace this or any other alteration in its front. The windows, it will be seen, are of different periods, those on the right-hand second and the left-hand third floor being of the oldest date.
Apart from these attractions, and as a specimen of the olden domestic architecture of the metropolis, the annexed Cut bears an historic interest, in its having been the residence of the ill-starred Anne Boleyn, queen of Henry the Eighth. The interior was in palatial style, having been elaborately finished; and in one of the apartments, we learn that the royal arms were very conspicuous.
Miss Benger, in her agreeable Memoirs of Anne Boleyn , does not mention the Queen's abode in Southwark; but the date of the architecture of the annexed house, and its closer identification with Queen Elizabeth, render the first mentioned circumstance by no means improbable. Previous to the marriage of Anne Boleyn, we learn that Henry passed not a few of his leisure hours in the delightful society of Anne Boleyn. Every day they met and spent many hours in riding or walking together. Her family at this time resided at Durham House, on the site of the Adelphi, and Anne frequently made excursions with Henry in the vicinity of London.
Of the antiquity of this district we could quote more proofs. The galleried inn-yards, and among them that at which the Pilgrims sojourned on their road to Canterbury, are among them. In our last volume too, at page 160, we engraved an ancient Vault in Tooley-street, the remains of the great house, builded of stone, with arched gates, which pertained to the Prior of Lewis, in Sussex, and was his lodging when he came to London. Not far from this was another great House of Stone and Timber, which, in the thirteenth century, was held of John, Earl Warren, by the Abbot of St. Augustins, at Canterbury. Stowe says— It was an ancient piece of worke, and seemeth to be one of the first builded houses on that side of the river, over against the city: it was called the Abbot's Inne of St. Augustine in Southwark.
Various
---
PARLIAMENT.
W.G.C.
SIMPLE AMBITION.
RANSOMS.
H.
THE EQUESTRIAN STATUE OF PETER THE GREAT.
E.A.B.
SONNET TO HOPE.
THE SKETCH-BOOK.
A SCENE FROM LIFE.
SELECT BIOGRAPHY.
PAGANINI, THE VIOLINIST.
W.G.C.
THE NATURALIST.
THE SUSTILLO.
W.G.C.
DESCRIPTION OF A BEAUTIFUL TREE.
SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS.
CIGAR-SMOKING.
THE NEW COINAGE.
SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY.
HYDROSTATICS AND PNEUMATICS.
THE GATHERER.
SCRAPS.
ELECTIONEERING ADVICE.
THE NATIONAL DEBT.
PLURALITIES.
COMPUNCTIOUS VISITINGS.
IMPROMPTU ON THE BURIAL OF SHUTER, THE ACTOR.