OLD SCARLETT, THE PETERBOROUGH SEXTON.
The following lines below his portrait are characteristic of his age:—
| You see Old Scarlett’s picture stand on hie; But at your feet here doth his body lye. His gravestone doth his age and death-time shew, His office by heis token Second to none for strength and sturdy lymm, A scare-babe mighty voice, with visage grim; He had inter’d two queenes within this place, And this townes householders in his life’s space Twice over; but at length his own time came What he for others did, for him the same Was done: no doubt his soule doth live for aye, In heaven, though his body clad in clay. |
The first of the queens interred by Scarlett was Catherine, the divorced wife of Henry VIII., who died in 1535, at Kimbolton Castle, in Huntingdonshire. The second was Mary, Queen of Scots, who was beheaded at Fotheringay in 1587, and first interred here, though subsequently transported to Westminster Abbey.
Our next example is from Bingley, Yorkshire:—
In memory of Hezekiah Briggs, who died August 5th, 1844, in
the 80th year of his age. He was sexton at this church
43 years, and interred upwards of 7000 corpses.
[Here the names of his wife and several children are given.]
An upright stone in the burial-ground at Hartwith Chapel, in Nidderdale, Yorkshire, bears the following inscription:—