THE TOWER OF LONDON.
Some of the following inscriptions are to be found in the "Beauchamp Tower."
In the third recess on the left hand is "T.C. I leve in hope, and I gave q credit to mi frinde, in time did stande me most in hande, so wolde I never doe againe, excepte I hade him suer in bande, and to al men wishe I so, unles ye sussteine the leike lose as I do.
"Unhappie is that mane whose actes doth procuer,
The miseri of this house imprison to induer.
"1576, Thomas Clark."
Just opposite the same is
"Hit is the poynt of a wyse man to try and then truste,
For Hapy is he who fyndeth one that is juste.
"T. Clarke."
In the same part of the room between the two last recesses is this, in old English:
"Ano. Dni ... Mens. As.
1568 J.H.S. 23
"No hope is hard or vayne
That happ doth ous attayne."
And on the wall on the top of the Beauchamp Tower, are the following lines on a Goldfinch:—
"Where Raleigh pined within a prison's gloom,
I chearful sung, nor murmur'd at my doom,
Where heroes bold and patriots firm could dwell,
A Goldfinch in Content his note might swell;
But death more gentle than the law's decree,
Hath paid my ransom from captivity.
"Buried June 23rd, 1794, by a fellow-prisoner
in the Tower of London."