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A43426 Domus carthusiana, or, An account of the most noble foundation of the Charter-House near Smithfield in London both before and since the reformation : with the life and death of Thomas Sutton, esq., the founder thereof, and his last will and testament : to which are added several prayers, fitted for the private devotions and particular occasions of the ancient gentlemen, &c. / by Samuel Herne. Herne, Samuel. 1677 (1677) Wing H1578; ESTC R10688 113,628 343

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did purchase the same unless such other person and persons do pursue their Title Claim or Interest by way of Action or lawful Entry within ten years after the end of this present Session of Parliament Saving to the King's Majesty Exceptions and Savings his Heirs and Successors all such Estate Right Title and Interest as his Majesty had or might have had unto any the said Mannors Lands Tenements and Hereditaments before the said Indenture made other than for or by reason of any Alienation in Mortmain And saving to all and every other person or persons Bodies Politique and Corporate and their Heirs and Successors other than the Heirs of the said Thomas Sutton and other than such person and persons from whom the said Thomas Sutton purchased the said Hospital House Mannors Lands Tenements or Hereditaments or any of them their Heirs Issues and Assigns and Persons claiming by from or under them respectively and other than such Person and Persons as shall claim the title of Alienation in Mortmain of any the said Mannors Lands Tenements and Hereditaments all such Estate Right Title Claim Custome Interest and Demand whatsoever as they or any of them have or shall have in as large and ample manner and form to all intents and purposes as if this Act had never been had nor made The Governours disabled to convey the Hospital House or Lands to the King And be it further enacted and established by the Authority aforesaid That the said Governours and their Successors shall be from and after the end of this present Session of Parliament for ever wholly and utterly disabled in Law to make do levy or suffer any Act or Acts Thing or Things whereby or by means whereof the said Hospital House Mannors Lands Tenements or Hereditaments or any part of them or any of them shall or may be aliened assured given granted demised charged or in any sort conveyed or come to the possession of our said Soveraign Lord the King All conveyances to the King of any the Hos●ital L●●… us to be v●●…d his Heirs or Successors And that all Alienations Assurances Gifts Grants Leases Charges and Conveyances whatsoever from and after the end of this present S●ssion of Parliament to be done suffer●● or made to our said Soveraign Lord the King his Heirs or Successors by the said Governours or their Successors of or out of the said Hospital House Mannors Lands Tenements or Hereditaments or of or out of any part or parcel of them or any of them shall be from and after the end of this present Session of Parliament utterly void and of none effect to all intents constructions and purposes any former Law Statute Act Ordinance or other matter or thing to the contrary notwithstanding The Governours disabled to make any Estates but for 21 years or under or for one two or three lives or for any years determinab●e upon one two or three lives by Indenture in possession and not in Reversion at the usual Rent or more or the t●ue yearly value thereof And be it further enacted and established by the Authority aforesaid that the said Governours and their Succesors and every of them be also from henceforth for ever wholly and utterly disabled in Law to make do levy or suffer any act or acts thing or things whereby or by means whereof the said Hospital-house Mannors Lands Tenements or Hereditaments or any of them or any part of them or any of them shall or may be aliened assured given granted demised charged or in any sort conveyed to any Person or Persons Bodies Politique or Corporate other than Leases and Demises by Indenture of the said Mannors Lands Tenements and Hereditaments and every or any of them other than the said Hospital-house Orchards Gardens Backsides or any of them or any part of them or any of them now used for the habitation or use of or for the Master Preacher Schoolmaster Vsher poor Scholars and poor People of the said Hospital or any of them for the term of One and twenty years or under in possession and not in reversion or for one two or three lives or for any number of years determinable upon one two or three lives in possession and not in reversion and whereupon such yearly rent or more shall be reserved to the Governours of the said Hospital and their Successors during the continuance of every such Lease as is now reserved upon any demise thereof or otherwise the true yearly value thereof and other than Grants by Copy of Court Roll according to the Customes of the several Mannors respectively An Exception by granting by Copy of Court Roll. Provided nevertheless that it shall and may be lawful to and for the said Governours and their Successors to grant reasonable and convenient Annuities Rents or Fees to such person or persons as shall be Officers Ministers or needful Attendants concerning the affairs of the said Hospital only for life or at will So as the number of the Officers Ministers or needful Attendants be not increased above the Number which now is as fully and amply as they should or might have done as if this Act had never been had or made A Proviso for the Lord North. Provided always and be it enacted that this Act or any thing herein before contained shall no way extend to give any title to the said Hospital in or unto the Mansion-house now in possession of the Right Honourable Dudley Lord North or of his Assigns at or near the East end of the said Hospital nor unto any the Buildings Edifices Courts Gardens Orchards or Grounds thereunto belonging or therewith used or enjoyed nor unto any other the Messuages Tenements or Hereditaments of the said Lord North being within or near the Scite or Precinct of the said Hospital But that it shall and may be lawful to and for the said Lord North his Heirs Tenants and Assigns for ever hereafter to hold and enjoy against the Governours Master and other the Owners or Possessors of the said Hospital in the Charter-house now and for the time being the said Mansion-house and Premises and all ways and passages by Cart or otherwise Easements Waters Water-courses Chanels Pipes Conduits Cocks Liberties Profits and Hereditaments to the same or any of them belonging or therewith or with any of them now used or enjoyed or the which by the true meaning of any Grant Covenant Clause or Agreement contained in one Deed of Feoffment made by Edward Lord North unto Sir William Peter Knight and others bearing date the Sixth day of November in the Fifth year of the Reign of the late Queen Elizabeth and in one other Deed made by Roger late Lord North and others to the Right Noble Prince Thomas late Duke of Norfolk bearing date the last day of May in the Seventh year of the Reign of the said late Queen Elizabeth were meant and intended to belong unto or to be enjoyed with the said Mansion-house or any other the
Mount Carmel The ascent to this Hill is so difficult that it is reckon'd an Emblem of the way to Heaven so high so steep it is and craggy Nature has bestowed upon this Monastery a double Entrance the one is call'd the Carthusian Bridge where two hilly Banks raise themselves to an incredible height and joyn at the top The other is full of danger and wonders being a wearysome and uneasie passage four miles long between two rocky and mountainous risings Hither came these seven Converts with much pains and difficulty under the happy conduct of the aforesaid Bishop and here was to be the Plantation of Bruno's Piety and Holiness The Bishop gravely pronounces En Vester hic locus And then they kneel down and offer up the Sacrifice of Praise and Thanksgiving to Almighty God The Reasons why a Mountain was made choice of rather than a Valley to be the Habitation of this Order are many for say they we are now nearer Heaven here the Patriarchs of old did inhabit when Abram went to Sacrifice he ascended the Mountain and thus did Lot when he escap't the anger of the Lord Moses went up to the Mountain to receive the Law here lived Elias and the Sons of the Prophets This Mountain they compare to Mount Sinai because here Bruno gave them their Rules and Constitution sometimes to Mount Oreb for the renown of their Zeal and Charity to Seir because they are fortunate and have spread over most parts of Christendom to Moriah mons visionis because there the Holy Father beheld the Seven Stars to Mirre mons amaritudinis because of their severe discipline and rigour of life to Mount Sion Tabor and Olivet c. These are the usual Comparisons chiefly founded upon their Marginal Notes of Humour and Fancy As for the number Seven it must not pass without some figurative Comment These are the Seven Angels with the Seven Trumpets Rev. 8.6 to declare War and Destruction to the sinful World The Seven Steps that were seen in Ezekiel's Vision the Seven Candlesticks to enlighten the World and lastly the Eyes of the Lamb. I shall not farther take notice of their playing with this wise number but proceed to their Orders They are obliged to wear Shirts made of Hair never to feed upon flesh on Fridays to eat nothing but bread and water to live asunder in particular Cells and thither to have their Diet singly brought them except on some certain Festival days when they dine together not to entertain any Converse with each other but upon statutable times none to go out of the Monastery but the Superior and Procurator and they only to solicit the concerns of the Covent from this rigorous way of Life some imagine the name of their Order to be derived from Caro tusa now Cartuse from their Austerities and Mortification of the Flesh Their Habit is a white loose Coat with a Cowl of the same but when they go abroad they have a Case of black Stuff over it their Heads are shaved just as the Benedictines are Their particular Cells are low built and do contain three or four several Rooms on the ground-floor only having behind each of them a little Garden environed with a high Wall their Diet is brought to them by Lay-brothers and put in at a little Door in the Wall near the entrance thereof unto which there is a Lock the Key whereof is kept by him that serves them At the Hours of Publick Prayers they meet in the Quire Women are not permitted to come within the Precincts of their Monastery nor a man to speak with any of them without special license given by the Superior The Lay Brothers are not shaven but their Hair on the Head is cut short and round their Habit being the same with the Monks saving the Scapular which reacheth but a little below the middle and is girt close to them Which Institution by Bruno was as Polydore affirms in the Year 1080. but others upon better grounds affirm in 1084. As to their Diurnal and Nocturnal Offices they observe the Rule of St. Benedict As for their Number they have not anciently exceeded Thirteen in any one Convent they often glory in this Number upon these Accounts As first because it includes the Decalogue and Trinity then it bears an allusion to Jacob and his Sons as also to our Blessed Saviour and his twelve Disciples This Order frequently I find listed under the Patronage of St. John the Baptist CHAP. III. Of their Transplantation and Number in England 1. Coenobium Withamense THey first were brought hither by King Henry the Second Anno 1181. and the Seven and twentieth year of his Reign at which time he founded a Monastery for them at Witham in Somersetshire whereof Hugh Bishop of London was the first Prior. This Convent was founded to the Honour of the Blessed Virgin St. John the Baptist and All Saints 2. Hentonense In the Four and twentieth of Henry the Third the Lady Ela Countess of Salisbury at Henton in Wiltshire 3. La Salutation Mere Dieu That at the Charter-house For this I design a particular Chapter 4. Beauvaleense In the time of Edward the Third 1343. Nicholas Cantilupe Lord of Ilkeston founded a Religious House for Carthusian Friers at a place called Fair valley in Nottinghamshire 5. Coenobium Sanctae Annae In the Reign of Richard the Second 1381. we find another founded by William de la Souche called the Monastery of St. Anne near Coventry 6. Kingstonense In the same Kings Reign Michael de la Pool Lord of Wingfield Founded another of these Convents at Kingston upon Hull in Yorkshire 1378. 7. Mont-Gracense In the time of Richard the Second Thomas de Holland Duke of Surrey Earl of Kent and Lord of Wake founded another at a place called Mount-grace in Yorkshire And dedicated it to the Assumption of the Mother of God 8. Eppeworthense At Eppeworth beyond the Isle of Axiholme in Lincolnshire was erected the fourth Carthusian Monastery of this King's Reign wherein they did most flourish it was built for the Honour of the Visitation of the Mother of God 9. Sheenense Anno Dom. 1514. Henry the Eighth erected the last Monastery of the Carthusians hard by his own Mannor House Sheen in the County of Surrey and called it The House of Jesus of Bethlehem of Sheen CHAP. IV. Of the Charter-house or Carthusian Monastery near Smithfield With an Account of the particular occasion and Author of the Foundation THE Founder hereof was the brave and renowned Man at Arms Sir Walter de Manny Lord of the same place and born in the Diocess of Cambray now one of the Seventeen United Provinces He was first Banneret and then made by King Edward the Third the 46 th Ashmole Inst Gart. Knight of the Garter not as Speed one of the Founders His Arms three Cheverons Sable the Field Or. I shall begin with the first mention of him in our Chronicles and so trace him down to this
Fundo Erigo c. But in truth the Corporation is made by the King's Charter and the Founder is but an Instrument 9. The mony paid by some of the Governours in their private capacity is good but the payment was as Governours and so they are acquitted 2. a Rent was reserved which was a good consideration 3. a Bargain and Sale was to be upon Confidence and Trust 10. They may plead that they are seized in fore although then it be not in esse In Answer to the Precedents some are Explanatory and some Negatory ex Consuetudine Clericorum This being the Case it was argued shrewdly on the Plaintiff's side By Sir Francis Bacon Solicitor General Mr. Gualter of the Temple And Mr. Yelverton of Grays Inne And on the Defendants side the Hospital c. By Mr. Hubbard Attourney General Mr. Hutton Serjeant at Law Mr. Coventry of the Inner Temple But nevertheless an Adjournment was made of it from the Kings Bench to the Exchequer Chamber where it was solemnly argued by the Judges of the Land Sir Robert Hutton Sir Augustine Nicholls Sir John Doderidge Sir Humphrey Winoh Sir Edward Bromely Sir John Crooke Sir James Altham Sir George Snig Sir Peter Warberton Sir Laurence Tanfield Lord Chief Baron Sir Edward Coke Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. Sir Thomas Flemming Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench was then sick and so not present Here it was judged with the great applause of all that heard it for the Defendants the Governours of the Hospital The Plaintiff being but a man of ordinary quality was judged to have reason to be content with a tolerable provision for him sutable to his degree viz. he had allotted to him the Mannor of Turback in Lancashire consisting of a fair ancient House two Parks and large Demeans plentifully stored with Timber valued at 350 l. per Annum Rent of Assise together with a Rectory worth 100 l. per Annum in the same County and 300 l. by Will Thus was this great Difference at Law decided 1. For the Honour of the Protestant Religion that has produced such a Work of Piety and Charity as never was in the Christian World all things considered for it was the Erection of one Private man who bequeathed a mighty Estate to this pious Use 2. It was for the glory of the King to whom ex congruo condigno it was dedicated that it might bear his Name engage Him in its Institution and His Royal Successours in its future Patronage and Maintenance 3. For the increase of Piety that men in this Age be not deterred from Good Works 4. That Justice and Mercy might come together Righteousness and Peace kiss each other That every Person may have his due esteem we are to understand that much is owing to the lasting memory of Sir Edward Coke who like a firm Rock stood between that and danger he outweather'd the storm and broke the fury of interested and mercenary Eloquence At one time it was almost crushed by the hungry hopes and violence of some Self-seeking Courtiers which made that Oracle of Law more warm and positive in his Determinations He endeavoured and brought it to pass and he deserves a Monument of greater Honour among us than he found in the Church of Norwich And if it were lawful to annex the Succession of a Governour to any but the Royal Family 'T were pity the Name of so Honourable a Patron should ever be out of the List of the Right Honourable the Lords and Governours of the Charter-house Among those who were Enemies to this Religious design I find Sir Francis Bacon writing this following Advice to King James Vide Resuscit May it please your Majesty I Find it a positive Precept in the Old Law That there should be no Sacrifice without Salt The Moral whereof besides the Ceremony may be That God is not pleased with the Body of a good Intention except it be seasoned with that Spiritual Wisdom and Judgment as it be not easily subject to be corrupted and perverted For Salt in the Scripture is both a figure of Wisdom and lasting this cometh into my mind upon this act of Mr. Sutton which seemeth to me as a Sacrifice without Salt having the Materials of a good Intention but not powdred with any such Ordinances and Institutions as may preserve the same from turning corrupt or at least from becoming unsavory and of little use For though the choice of the Feoffees be of the best yet neither can they always live and the very nature of the work it self in the vast and unfit proportion thereof is apt to provoke a mis-imployment it is no diligence of theirs except there be a digression from that Model that can excuse it from running the same way that Gifts of the like condition have heretofore done For to design the Charter-house a Building fit for a Prince 's Habitation for an Hospital is all one as if one should give in Alms a rich embroydered Cloak to a Beggar And certainly a man may see tanquam quae oculis cernuntur that if such an Edifice with Six thousand pounds Revenue be erected into one Hospital it will in a small time degenerate to be made a preferment of some great Person to be Master and he to take all the sweet and the Poor to be stinted and take but the Crums as it comes to pass in divers Hospitals of this Realm which have but the names of Hospitals and are but wealthy Benefices in respect of the Mastership but the poor which is the propter quid little relieved And the like hath been the Fortune of much of the Alms of the Roman Religion in the Great Foundations which being begun in Vain-glory and Ostentation have had their Judgment upon them to end in corruption and abuse This Meditation hath made me presume to write these few Lines to your Majesty being no better than good wishes which your Majesties great Wisdom may make something or nothing of Wherein I desire to be thus understood that if this Foundation such as it is be perfect and good in Law then I am too well acquainted with your Majesties Disposition to advise any course of power or profit which is not grounded upon a right Nay further if the defects be such as a Court of Equity may remedy and cure Then I wish that as St. Peter's Shadow did cure Diseases so the very shadow of a good intention may cure the defects of that Nature But if there be a Right and Birthright planted in the Heir and not remediable by Courts of Equity and that Right be submitted to your Majesty whereby it is both in your power and grace what to do then do I wish that this rude Mass and Chaos of a good Deed were directed rather to a solid Merit and durable Charity than to a blaze of Glory that will but crackle a little in Talk and quickly extinguish And this may be done observing the Species of Mr. Sutton's
said Messuages Tenements or Hereditaments of the said now Lord North according to the true meaning of the said several Deeds And that it shall and may be lawful at all times hereafter to and for the said Dudley Lord North his Heirs Tenants and Assigns and all others inhabiting and possessing the said Mansion-house or any other the said Messuages Tenements or Hereditaments of the said Lord North for themselves their servants and workmen to have free ingress and regress into and from the Orchards Gardens or other places of the said Hospital where it shall be needful to survey repair cleanse amend and new make the said Pipes Conduits Cocks Chanels and Water-courses and all other Pipes Conduits Cocks Chanels and Water-courses that hereafter shall be erected or placed within the precinct of the said Hospital for the conveying of Water unto the said Mansion-house or other the Messuages Tenements or Hereditaments of the said now Lord North or any of them and to that purpose to subvert and digg up the Soil of the said Orchards Gardens or other places of the said Hospital where it shall be needful Provided also A Proviso for the Viscountess Maidstone and be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid that this Act or any thing therein contained shall not in any wise extend unto the Mansion-house of the Right honourable Elizabeth Viscountess of Maidstone scituate and being in Charter-house Church-yard near unto the said Hospital nor to any the Buildings Outhouses Gardens or Grounds therewith used or thereto pertaining nor to any Mansion-houses Buildings or Grounds therewith used of any other person or persons within or near the precinct of the said Church-yard or Hospital and not conveyed or mentioned to be conveyed by the said Thomas Sutton to the said Governours by the said Indenture of Bargain and Sale But that it shall and may be lawful to and for the said Viscountess of Maidstone and all and every other person and persons whatsoever to hold and enjoy the said several Mansion houses and Premisses therewith used or thereto pertaining together with all ways and passages with Carts or otherwise and all Liberties Profits Easements Water and Water-courses Pipes Cocks and Passages for Water and liberty to digg cleanse amend and new make such Pipes Cocks and Water-courses as fully and as amply as if this Act had never been had nor made Ego Henricus Elsyinge Armiger ' Clericus Parliamentorum virtute brevis dicti Domini nostri Regis de Certiorando mihi direct ' his annexat ' certifico superius hoc scriptum verum esse tenorem Actus Parliamenti supradicti in eo brevi mencionat ' In cujus rei testimonium Sigillum nomenque meum apposui atque subscripsi Dat' secundo Die Julii Anno regni dict' Domini nostri Regis Caroli quarto H. Elsyinge Cler ' Parl. Nos autem separales tenores brevis scedulae predict ad requisition ' Gubernatorum terrarum possessionum revencionum bonorum Hospitalis predict duximus Exemplificand ' per presentes In cujus rei testimonium has literas nostras fieri fecimus Patentes Teste meipso apud Westmonasterium Decimo octavo die Julii Anno Regni nostri quarto Cesar Car. Examinat ' per nos Rob. Riche Edw. Clarke Clericos Irrotulat ' Rotul ' Patent ' Cur ' Cancellar ' Domini Regis Caroli infra script ' de Anno Regni ejusdem Regis Angliae c. Quarto Now all things are fixed and settled according to the admirable Ends they were designed for every one enjoying the benefit and refreshments of our Noble Founder's Charity Ezra 6.9 Day by day we have our Portions without fail that we may offer Sacrifices of sweet Savour unto the God of Heaven and pray for the Life and Prosperity of our most gracious King and the Happiness of our Noble Governours The Names of the present Governours 1. The most Reverend Father in God Gilbert Lord Arch-bishop of Canterbury 2. The Lord Chancellor of England 3. The Duke of Buckingham 4. The Duke of Monmouth 5. The Duke of Ormond 6. Lord Chamberlain 7. Lord Treasurer 8. Earl of Bridgewater 9. Earl of Craven 10. Earl of Shaftsbury 11. Lord Bishop of Winchester 12. Lord Bishop of Rochester 13. Lord Robarts 14. Mr. Secretary Coventry 15. Sir William Wild. 16. Martyn Clifford Esquire Thus the Government of this Foundation is fixed upon the most Honourable Grandees of our State and the most Reverend Prelates of our Church they who sit at the Helm of our Kingdom and are graciously pleased to steer and guide this goodly Ship of Renowned Sutton's Charity And here we may note the great Wisdom of our Founder who made choice of men of Honour and Power who were able to maintain his Foundation by their Interest and to grace it with their Honour When any of these Noble Lord happen to decease another is chosen within two months by the voices of the Major part The Patent runs thus TO all whom these Presents shall come the Governours of the Lands Possessions Revenues and Goods of the Hospital of King James founded in the Charter-house within the County of Middlesex at the humble Petition and only Costs and Charges of Thomas Sutton Esquire send greeting in our Lord GOD everlasting Whereas _____ one of the Governours of the Lands Possessions Revenues and Goods of the Hospital of King James aforesaid lately died and departed this life by means whereof his room and place of a Governour did become and yet is and continueth void Know ye therefore that the said Governours according to the true intent and meaning of the Letters Patent of our late Soveraign Lord King James for the Foundation of the said Hospital bearing date the Two and twentieth day of June in the Ninth year of his Reign do elect nominate and appoint _____ to be henceforth one of the Governours of the Lands Possessions Revenues and Goods of the said Hospital of King James founded in the Charter-house within the County of Middlesex at the humble Petition and only Costs and Charges of Thomas Sutton Esquire in the room and place of a Governour so being void as aforesaid by the death of the said _____ _____ to be and continue in the room and place and to have exercise and enjoy the said room and place of one of the Governours of the Lands Possessions Revenues and Goods of the Hospital aforesaid according to the true intent and meaning of the said Letters Patent In witness whereof the said Governours have hereunto set their Common Seal and every one of them his particular Seal c. The Members that are kept and maintain'd in the Hospital chiefly consist of old Gentlemen and Children 1. FOurscore ancient Men who have been formerly in the Wars and been serviceable to their King and Country or else decay'd Merchants whose Estates have been swallowed up in the Deep or aged and poor Housholders who have formerly lived in a fair esteem in the World who have a long
Free from disquiet and complaint Which trouble and distract the busie head Such peaceful paths his Infancy did tread Here the great Cowley's Poet and his Saint Was taught the Elements of Speech and Piety Cowley he was the Subject of thy Pen That Pen which did bewail the end Of thy most dear and most lamented Friend For thou didst but desire when he was snatch't from us frail men A modest portion of his sacred fire Yet some may say thy Charity was blind Because it has thy modesty outran For thou hast prov'd so kind T'embalm and bless that very man Who left Religion and his Friend behind 'T is true alas had he not stept aside But in his Mothers bosom dy'd Had his Muse not wanton been Nor fled unto Loretto's shrine He might have long since this begun From smaller Numbers his eternal Song 16. Here our first James that wore the Brittish Crown Weary'd with acclamations and the toyl Of travel to unite this long divided Isle Enter'd withall the Noble Train he ●ed Within these walls three nights he laid his thoughtful head Until he did advance into the Town Until another Palace was prepar'd As Princes came from far to view the Throne Of Mighty Solomon So Scotland's King mov'd many a tedious mile Drawn with the Fame of this Great Pile He came and saw more than ever he had heard 17. Exactly on the South I saw A comely Structure shew its head And when I question'd whose abode It was I heard the Law And Gospels read I saw twice forty Elders drawing nigher I heard the Musick of the sacred Quire And then I knew it was the House of God 18. The Image of thy boundless Soul Where e're our gazing eyes do roul Is the fair object of our view To Youth untaught to number years To active youth well near its prime In glorious Visions it appears The Aged too still dream of you Although they 're e'en worn out with time Here Innocence and Piety Are fed and nurst by Charity Here the tender Plants do grow A handsome and a graceful show There the tall and Aged Oake In patience waits the fatal stroke Which as it falls must lye Until it approach Eternity 19. Sickness and death are almost strangers here No ill-foreboding Comet dare appear Whilst Nedham's nigh they cannot kill No Carthusian blood can spill In vain they tempt his known and mighty skill In vain they make a needless strife All that belongs to human life To every Limb to every Nerve To fortifie repair and long preserve He knows it all And then for shame why do we call The Seat of Health an Hospital H 'as trac'd the Infant from the womb Through all his changes to the Tomb H 'as planted here the Tree of Life that Fate Has no Comission for to enter Here no contagious ills dare venture While this great Aesculapius guards the Gate 20. He that Robs thy Treasury of Love Shall feel the Scourge of Heaven above And as to Scripture if we strive to add 'T is thought a Crime a most as bad For then our Benefactions are in vain We empty Cockles in the boundless Main To thee alone Great Sir we pay this Right Of Thanks Thy arge and crowded Store Will entertain no more No not the Widow's Mite And yet thy Charity 's not bestow'd in vain For many Ages hence it will be found again Thy Bread is cast upon and covers all the Main 20. The Influence of thy mighty Zeal Does warm these Northern parts Dissolves the Ice and softens all our hearts Thy Love amazes all the Roman Spyes It warms our Clime and dazles all our Eyes And what is more in this fair solitude Thou by a Miracle Dost now instruct and feed a multitude So that if Saints above can understand and see How things are acted in this Vale of Misery Thy Charity to us must still encrease For there they say 't will never cease Though all thou hadst on Earth was given Yet thou hast Blessings to bestow On us poor Mortals here below As thou art made Lord Almoner of Heaven The CONTENTS Of the Old Foundation AN Account of the Rise and Original of the Carthusian Order Cap. 1. Page 1. Of the Rules and Constitution of the Order c. 2. p. 7. Of their Transplantation and Number in England c. 3. p. 12. Of the Charter-house or Carthusian Monastery near Smithfield c. 4. p. 15. Of their Fabulous Miracles c. 5. p. 22. King Edward the Third's License or Grant for the Foundation of the Monastery p. 30. Bulla Urbani Papae p. 32. Of the New Foundation Sutton's Life p. 37. The Occasions of his growing Rich p. 40. Knott the Jesuit's unjust Censure of him p. 45. Sutton's Death and Funeral Solemnities p. 54. Bishop Hall's incomparable Letter to stir him up to Charity p. 59. An Act of Parliament to erect the Hospital at Hallingbury in Essex p. 69. King James's Letters Patent to alter the Scituation p. 85. Ecclesiastical Preserments in the Governour 's disposal p. 87. Simon Baxter Heir in Law to the Founder enters an Action of Trespass against the Governours p. 88. The Cas●●●…atea on both sides p. 89. Sir Francis Bacon's Letter to King James to overthrow the Foundation p. 96. The Opening of the House p. 109. An Establishment made whereby all the Officers and Members in the House are to be regulated p. 110. Concerning Assemblies and Committees p. 116. The Election and Duty of a Master p. 120. Of the Preacher p. 123. Of the Physician p. 125. The Register and Solicitor p. 126. The Receiver p. 129. The Ma●ciple p. 130. Schoolmaster and Usher p. 135. The Auditor p. 141. Allowances to the Members p. 145. A Confirmation of the King's Letters Patent by an Act of Parl. for the removal of the Hospital p. 154. The first List of Governours p. 70. The names of the present Governours p. 176. A Patent for a Governour p. 177. Of the number and nature of the Members maintained p. 181. The Warrant for a Pensioner p. 182. How to obtain a place for an old Man or Youth p. 189. A Warrant for a Lad p. 190. An Account of the encrease and present state of the Revenues of the House p. 193. The Founder's Will p. 200. Orders for the Pensioners p. 231. Ordinis Carthusiani Monachus F. H. Van. Houe fec Of the Old FOUNDATION OF THE Charter-House CHAP. I. An Account of the Rise and Original of the Carthusian Order IN the year of our Lord 1082 at what time Gregory the Seventh was Bishop of Rome and in the Sixteenth year of the Reign of King William the Conqueror we are told there hapned in Paris a very strange and wondrous accident the Relation whereof I find much after this manner Bruno a German born at Cologne of an ancient and worthy Family by his studious life and successful endeavours obtained so great a reputation among learned Men that he was at length prevailed with to visit France where he was
others too in the putting out of their mony Once he thought of setting up a Bank in London like that in Amsterdam where People might take up mony at so moderate an Interest as should not eat out their Labour nor waste the heart and life of Trade by making the care pains and ingenuity of the Borrower sweat and toyl for the sole benefit of the Lender Therefore he lodged a 100 l. in some honest mens hands to lend to poor people weekly or monthly by small sums upon good pawns while he lived and when he dyed he left 1000 l. to the Chamber of London to be yearly lent to Ten young Trades-men without Use Besides he ordered his Executors to abate half a years Interest to all his Debtors when they call'd in his mony Thus did this great Man wax rich and known which made him to some evil-minded persons the object of Envy and he finds not the Shadow of that Charity in the World which he shew'd in Substance and Reality Some urge that he served himself too much upon the hopes many had entertained of being his Heirs by receiving those Gifts which some covetous Friends miserunt in hamô by easily purchasing those Lands which they expected should return with Interest I do not understand the unreasonable presumption of men to name and adopt themselves their Neighbours Heirs and if they confirm it not they shall be branded with Injustice The Wisdom of the Serpent is as well required as the Innocency of the Dove He that strives to outreach his Friend is justly caught in his own Snares Others strongly believe he was the Subject of Ben. Johnson's mirth Which if it were true is no real Scandal to this good Man when all things just and honourable sacred and of good report are shamefully exposed to the lewd affronts of a bold and licentious Stage Besides 't is probable the Poet never intended what they think For in that Age several other men were pointed at and who was the true Person was then a matter of doubt If the Poet design'd to injure the Fame of Sutton he was first of all an ungrateful Wretch to abuse those hands which afforded him Bread for he allowed him a constant Pension And secondly he disowned his very Hand-writing which he sent to our Founder in Vindication of himself in this matter In the late unhappy times another sort of Enemy appears and will hardly suffer this pious Benefactor to lye quiet in his Grave The Revenue made a great noise and prov'd something melodious to the ears of the commanding Party therefore they endeavour to find out a way to subvert the House Foundation and all No better Plea than the old Popular Argument used before against his Sacred Majesty Charles the First of ever blessed memory Popery Popery 'T is presently whisper'd about That Sutton dyed a Papist That the House was built upon naughty Popish ground That all the Walls were full of Tapers and Crosses That it was designed to Jesuitical ends and Purposes That there was a great Vault underneath which reach't almost to Islington and for ought they knew it might be full of Powder and Malignants Plots and Superstition all conspiring against the Good Old Cause At this time Edward Cresset Master of the Hospital by his Interest in that Party interposed and laid that storm for which he received publick Thanks from the Lords the Governours Anno 1660. This Freak hardly deserves consideration especially proceeding from that sort of men Mr. Sutton was too well known for this Project to take effect He was an Honest and Religious Protestant constant and exemplary upon all occasions at the Publick Service of God regular and strict in Family Duties accustomed to Prayer reading the Scriptures and very solicitous in his choice of a Holy and Learned Chaplain His thoughts were usually Heaven-ward in his Ejaculations frequently desiring God That as he had bountifully blessed him with a plentiful Estate so he would be pleased to direct him in the disposal of it This he has been often over-heard to say walking in his Garden His Thoughts were not only Divine but his usual Company were Ministers of God's Word for there is no Writing scarce of his to which there is not the hand of a Divine or two Or else he visited the Fatherless and Widows the Impotent and Indigent and in a great measure kept himself unspotted from the World Now that which seems most wonderful is this That men professing the Protestant Religion should indeavour to pull down one of the greatest Monuments of the Reformed Religion it being the common Argument whereby we use to prevent the Papists extravagant Relations of Good Works Had he been a Red-letter Man Mr. Knott the Jesuite in his Answer to Dr. Potter's Book called Charity Mistaken would never have vented this following Reproach But he must be crucified between these two Do your Hospitals deserve so much as to be named Have you any thing of that kind in effect of particular note saving the few mean Nurseries of idle Beggars and debauched People except Sutton 's Hospital which as I have been informed was to receive no profit till his death who also dyed without Children Brother Sister or known Kindred so that per adventure it was escheated to the King c. At length he says He could tell us of the Annunciata at Naples which spends Three hundred thousand Crowns viz. above Eight thousand pounds per Annum feeds and cures One thousand sick persons Nurses and entertains Three thousand Sucking-children c. Then he gives a hint of another famous Hospital in Rome called Sancto Spirito To both which Instances Mr. Fuller does as reproachfully reply by saying That the Infamous Disease of Naples might well cause the erection of so mighty a Structure and as for that at Rome the wonderful plenty of unlawful Issues Children basely born did require so great a Receptacle I question not but both are too blame for where ever we find any sparks of goodness and piety though they lodge in the breast of a Turk or Jew Papist or Protestant yet it is but common Justice to afford every man his due praise 'T is easie also to discover the Jesuit's mistakes for first Mr. Sutton intended to reside upon his Benefaction as Master of it though it pleased God sooner to take him to himself to admit him into the Land of Promise Then his Kindred were known far and near for Simon Baxter Son of his Sister Dorothy endeavoured to overthrow the Settlement of the Estate as being next Heir in Law as after may be seen at large His other Objections concerning penuriousness shall be answered in another place Here now I could to purpose recriminate but that I am sensible it is disingenuous and uncharitable and widens the Breaches of Christendom Let the froward World endeavour to defame and calumniate to bespatter all that is good and laudable yet certainly we ought to rise up in the Vindication of him