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THE TOWER OF LONDON

AGENTS
AmericaThe Macmillan Company
64 & 66 Fifth Avenue, New York
AustralasiaThe Oxford University Press, Melbourne
CanadaThe Macmillan Company of Canada, Ltd.
27 Richmond Street West, Toronto
IndiaMacmillan & Company, Ltd.
Macmillan Building, Bombay
309 Bow Bazaar Street, Calcutta

THE
TOWER OF LONDON

PAINTED BY
JOHN FULLEYLOVE, R.I.
DESCRIBED BY
ARTHUR POYSER

PUBLISHED BY A. & C.
BLACK · LONDON · MCMVIII

TO
MY FATHER
Thomas Cooper Poyser
THIS BOOK IS
DEDICATED

Full in the midst a mighty pile arose,
Where iron-grated gates their strength oppose
To each invading step, and, strong and steep,
The battled walls arose, the fosse sunk deep.
Slow round the fortress rolled the sluggish stream,
And high in middle air the warder’s turrets gleam.
Anonymous.

PREFACE

The history of the Tower of London is so closely bound up with the history of England, from the Norman Conquest onwards, that it is very difficult to write a record of the one without appearing to have attempted to write a record of the other. A full history of the Tower may read like an attenuated history of England. When the problem has to be solved within the compass of a single chapter the difficulties are very considerably increased. Then again, if a detailed account of Tower annals has been given in a preliminary chapter, there is nothing of any interest left to say when describing a visit to the several buildings within the Tower walls. If the dramatic scene in the Council Chamber of the White Tower, which ended in Lord Hastings being sent, with scant ceremony, to the block on the Green below by Richard III., be described in its proper place in the Historical Sketch (Chapter II.) it cannot again be spoken of in detail when the visit is paid (Chapter III.) to the room in which the event took place. Yet it is beyond doubt that a visitor to the Tower would rather be reminded of that tragic Council meeting when in the Council Chamber itself, than come upon it in the course of the sketch of Tower history, which he would probably have read at home beforehand and forgotten in detail. Still, those who read this book and have no opportunity of visiting the Tower expect that the characters in the moving drama of its history shall have some semblance of life as they walk across the stage. Such a reader demands more than mere names and dates, or he will skip an historical chapter as being intolerably dull. It is no consolation to him to be told that if he will take patience and walk through and round the Tower, in imagination, by keeping his temper and kindly reading Chapters III. and IV., he will discover that much of the human interest omitted in the “history” will be found by the wayside in the “walks.”

In former and larger books on the Tower it will be seen that either the purely historical record under the headings of successive Kings and Queens dwarfs to insignificance the account of the buildings themselves, or the description of the several towers and buildings which constitute the fortress-prison occupies the bulk of the volume, to the exclusion of any adequate historical record giving names and dates in chronological order. But like most difficulties, I think this one can be solved by a judicious compromise; the chapters must be tuned to “equal temperament.” I have endeavoured to keep the balance of the several sections as even as possible; and an historic candidate for the honour of the headsman’s axe, who has been given immortality in the pages of English history by reason of the manner in which he was put to death, passed over in one chapter will have some justice done to his memory in another.

I have attempted no pictorial description of the Tower as a whole or in its several parts. I dared not carry the theory I have just propounded into the realms of word-painting. Mr. Fulleylove has relieved me of that duty. He has brought the Tower buildings, as they stand to-day, before the eyes of all who turn these pages. This he has done with the brush infinitely better than I could do it with the pen.

Though the pages at my disposal are so few in number, I have had the temerity to attempt a description of much that is of interest outside Tower walls. I trust that this boldness may not prove, after all, to be a misplaced virtue. My wish has been to persuade those who come to visit the Tower that there is a great deal to be seen in its immediate vicinity that the majority of visitors have hitherto neglected, either for want of time or want of guidance. A noble and historic building like the Tower resembles a venerable tree whose roots have spread into the soil in all directions, during the uncounted years of its existence, far beyond the position of its stem.

I tender grateful thanks to Lieutenant-General Sir George Bryan Milman, K.C.B., Major of the Tower, for much kindness, both to Mr. Fulleylove and myself; and I can hardly express my indebtedness to the Rev. W. K. Fleming, who has so ungrudgingly given of his time to the task of correcting the proof-sheets.

ARTHUR POYSER.

Trinity Square,
Tower Hill, E.C.

CONTENTS

[CHAPTER I]
PAGE
Introduction[1]
[CHAPTER II]
Historical Sketch[21]
[CHAPTER III]
A Walk through the Tower[87]
[CHAPTER IV]
A Walk round the Tower[134]
[CHAPTER V]
Tower Hill[158]
[CHAPTER VI]
Allhallows Barking by the Tower[169]
[INDEX]:[A],[B],[C],[D],[E],[F],[G],[H],[I],[J],[K],[L],[M],[N],[O],[P],[Q],[R],[S],[T],[U],[V],[W],[Y].[215]

When our gallant Norman foes
Made our merry land their own,
And the Saxons from the Conqueror were flying,
At his bidding it arose,
In its panoply of stone,
A sentinel unliving and undying.
Insensible, I trow,
As a sentinel should be,
Though a queen to save her head should come a-suing;
There’s a legend on its brow
That is eloquent to me,
And it tells of duty done and duty doing.

“The screw may twist and the rack may turn,
And men may bleed and men may burn,
On London town and all its hoard
It keeps its solemn watch and ward!”

Within its wall of rock
The flower of the brave
Have perished with a constancy unshaken.
From the dungeon to the block,
From the scaffold to the grave,
Is a journey many gallant hearts have taken.
And the wicked flames may hiss
Round the heroes who have fought
For conscience and for home in all its beauty,
But the grim old fortalice
Takes little heed of aught
That comes not in the measure of its duty.

“The screw may twist and the rack may turn,
And men may bleed and men may burn,
On London town and all its hoard
It keeps its solemn watch and ward!”
Sir William Gilbert.

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

FACING PAGE
[1.][The White Tower (Keep), with the Lanthorn Tower in the Foreground, from the Tower Bridge][Frontispiece]
[2.][The Byward and Bell Towers, with the King’s House on the right, looking from the Traitor’s Gate][8]
[3.][Top of the Portcullis in Bloody Tower][24]
[4.][Portion of the Armoury, White Tower][40]
[5.][Panorama of the Tower and Greenwich in 1543, by Anthony van den Wyngaerde][48 and 49]
[6.][The Council Chamber in the King’s House][56]
[7.][Gateway of Bloody Tower with entrance to Jewel House (Wakefield Tower)][80]
[8.][Middle Tower (West Front)][90]
[9.][The Traitor’s Gate, from within][98]
[10.][The Bloody Tower and Jewel House (Wakefield Tower), looking East][104]
[11.][Interior of St. John’s Chapel in the White Tower, looking East][112]
[12.][The King’s House from Tower Green][120]
[13.][Principal Room, for State Prisoners, in the Beauchamp Tower][128]
[14.][Chaplain’s House, and Entrance to Church of St. Peter ad Vincula, Tower Green][132]
[15.][Part of a Bastion of Old London Wall, with Clock Tower of the White Tower][136]
[16.][East End of St. John’s Chapel in the White Tower, from Broad Arrow Tower][146]
[17.][The Tower from the Tower Bridge, looking West][150]
[18.][The Tower from Tower Hill][156]
[19.][The Block, Axe, and Executioner’s Mask][166]
[20.][A True and Exact Draught of the Tower Liberties, surveyed in the year 1597 by Gulielmus Haiward and J. Gascoyne][172 and 173]
[21.][The Tower from Great Tower Street (South Porch of Allhallows Barking)][184]
[22.][Church of Allhallows Barking by the Tower (East side of South Aisle)][202]
[Sketch Plan of the Tower at end of Volume.]