Walking without any definite object
through St. Paul’s Churchyard, a little while
ago, we happened to turn down a street entitled ‘Paul’s-chain,’
and keeping straight forward for a few hundred yards,
found ourself, as a natural consequence, in Doctors’
Commons. Now Doctors’ Commons being familiar
by name to everybody, as the place where they grant
marriage-licenses to love-sick couples, and divorces
to unfaithful ones; register the wills of people who
have any property to leave, and punish hasty gentlemen
who call ladies by unpleasant names, we no sooner
discovered that we were really within its precincts,
than we felt a laudable desire to become better acquainted
therewith; and as the first object of our curiosity
was the Court, whose decrees can even unloose the
bonds of matrimony, we procured a direction to it;
and bent our steps thither without delay.
Crossing a quiet and shady court-yard,
paved with stone, and frowned upon by old red brick
houses, on the doors of which were painted the names
of sundry learned civilians, we paused before a small,
green-baized, brass-headed-nailed door, which yielding
to our gentle push, at once admitted us into an old
quaint-looking apartment, with sunken windows, and
black carved wainscoting, at the upper end of which,
seated on a raised platform, of semicircular shape,
were about a dozen solemn-looking gentlemen, in crimson
gowns and wigs.
At a more elevated desk in the centre,
sat a very fat and red-faced gentleman, in tortoise-shell
spectacles, whose dignified appearance announced the
judge; and round a long green-baized table below, something
like a billiard-table without the cushions and pockets,
were a number of very self-important-looking personages,
in stiff neckcloths, and black gowns with white fur
collars, whom we at once set down as proctors.
At the lower end of the billiard-table was an individual
in an arm-chair, and a wig, whom we afterwards discovered
to be the registrar; and seated behind a little desk,
near the door, were a respectable-looking man in black,
of about twenty-stone weight or thereabouts, and a
fat-faced, smirking, civil-looking body, in a black
gown, black kid gloves, knee shorts, and silks, with
a shirt-frill in his bosom, curls on his head, and
a silver staff in his hand, whom we had no difficulty
in recognising as the officer of the Court.
The latter, indeed, speedily set our mind at rest
upon this point, for, advancing to our elbow, and opening
a conversation forthwith, he had communicated to us,
in less than five minutes, that he was the apparitor,
and the other the court-keeper; that this was the
Arches Court, and therefore the counsel wore red gowns,
and the proctors fur collars; and that when the other
Courts sat there, they didn’t wear red gowns
or fur collars either; with many other scraps of intelligence
equally interesting. Besides these two officers,
there was a little thin old man, with long grizzly
hair, crouched in a remote corner, whose duty, our
communicative friend informed us, was to ring a large
hand-bell when the Court opened in the morning, and
who, for aught his appearance betokened to the contrary,
might have been similarly employed for the last two
centuries at least.
The red-faced gentleman in the tortoise-shell
spectacles had got all the talk to himself just then,
and very well he was doing it, too, only he spoke
very fast, but that was habit; and rather thick, but
that was good living. So we had plenty of time
to look about us. There was one individual who
amused us mightily. This was one of the bewigged
gentlemen in the red robes, who was straddling before
the fire in the centre of the Court, in the attitude
of the brazen Colossus, to the complete exclusion
of everybody else. He had gathered up his robe
behind, in much the same manner as a slovenly woman
would her petticoats on a very dirty day, in order
that he might feel the full warmth of the fire.
His wig was put on all awry, with the tail straggling
about his neck; his scanty grey trousers and short
black gaiters, made in the worst possible style, imported
an additional inelegant appearance to his uncouth
person; and his limp, badly-starched shirt-collar almost
obscured his eyes. We shall never be able to
claim any credit as a physiognomist again, for, after
a careful scrutiny of this gentleman’s countenance,
we had come to the conclusion that it bespoke nothing
but conceit and silliness, when our friend with the
silver staff whispered in our ear that he was no other
than a doctor of civil law, and heaven knows what
besides. So of course we were mistaken, and he
must be a very talented man. He conceals it
so well though perhaps with the merciful
view of not astonishing ordinary people too much that
you would suppose him to be one of the stupidest dogs
alive.
The gentleman in the spectacles having
concluded his judgment, and a few minutes having been
allowed to elapse, to afford time for the buzz of the
Court to subside, the registrar called on the next
cause, which was ’the office of the Judge promoted
by Bumple against Sludberry.’ A general
movement was visible in the Court, at this announcement,
and the obliging functionary with silver staff whispered
us that ’there would be some fun now, for this
was a brawling case.’
We were not rendered much the wiser
by this piece of information, till we found by the
opening speech of the counsel for the promoter, that,
under a half-obsolete statute of one of the Edwards,
the court was empowered to visit with the penalty
of excommunication, any person who should be proved
guilty of the crime of ‘brawling,’ or ‘smiting,’
in any church, or vestry adjoining thereto; and it
appeared, by some eight-and-twenty affidavits, which
were duly referred to, that on a certain night, at
a certain vestry-meeting, in a certain parish particularly
set forth, Thomas Sludberry, the party appeared against
in that suit, had made use of, and applied to Michael
Bumple, the promoter, the words ’You be blowed;’
and that, on the said Michael Bumple and others remonstrating
with the said Thomas Sludberry, on the impropriety
of his conduct, the said Thomas Sludberry repeated
the aforesaid expression, ‘You be blowed;’
and furthermore desired and requested to know, whether
the said Michael Bumple ‘wanted anything for
himself;’ adding, ’that if the said Michael
Bumple did want anything for himself, he, the said
Thomas Sludberry, was the man to give it him;’
at the same time making use of other heinous and sinful
expressions, all of which, Bumple submitted, came within
the intent and meaning of the Act; and therefore he,
for the soul’s health and chastening of Sludberry,
prayed for sentence of excommunication against him
accordingly.
Upon these facts a long argument was
entered into, on both sides, to the great edification
of a number of persons interested in the parochial
squabbles, who crowded the court; and when some very
long and grave speeches had been made pro and
con, the red-faced gentleman in the tortoise-shell
spectacles took a review of the case, which occupied
half an hour more, and then pronounced upon Sludberry
the awful sentence of excommunication for a fortnight,
and payment of the costs of the suit. Upon this,
Sludberry, who was a little, red-faced, sly-looking,
ginger-beer seller, addressed the court, and said,
if they’d be good enough to take off the costs,
and excommunicate him for the term of his natural
life instead, it would be much more convenient to him,
for he never went to church at all. To this
appeal the gentleman in the spectacles made no other
reply than a look of virtuous indignation; and Sludberry
and his friends retired. As the man with the
silver staff informed us that the court was on the
point of rising, we retired too pondering,
as we walked away, upon the beautiful spirit of these
ancient ecclesiastical laws, the kind and neighbourly
feelings they are calculated to awaken, and the strong
attachment to religious institutions which they cannot
fail to engender.
We were so lost in these meditations,
that we had turned into the street, and run up against
a door-post, before we recollected where we were walking.
On looking upwards to see what house we had stumbled
upon, the words ‘Prerogative-Office,’
written in large characters, met our eye; and as we
were in a sight-seeing humour and the place was a public
one, we walked in.
The room into which we walked, was
a long, busy-looking place, partitioned off, on either
side, into a variety of little boxes, in which a few
clerks were engaged in copying or examining deeds.
Down the centre of the room were several desks nearly
breast high, at each of which, three or four people
were standing, poring over large volumes. As
we knew that they were searching for wills, they attracted
our attention at once.
It was curious to contrast the lazy
indifference of the attorneys’ clerks who were
making a search for some legal purpose, with the air
of earnestness and interest which distinguished the
strangers to the place, who were looking up the will
of some deceased relative; the former pausing every
now and then with an impatient yawn, or raising their
heads to look at the people who passed up and down
the room; the latter stooping over the book, and running
down column after column of names in the deepest abstraction.
There was one little dirty-faced man
in a blue apron, who after a whole morning’s
search, extending some fifty years back, had just found
the will to which he wished to refer, which one of
the officials was reading to him in a low hurried
voice from a thick vellum book with large clasps.
It was perfectly evident that the more the clerk read,
the less the man with the blue apron understood about
the matter. When the volume was first brought
down, he took off his hat, smoothed down his hair,
smiled with great self-satisfaction, and looked up
in the reader’s face with the air of a man who
had made up his mind to recollect every word he heard.
The first two or three lines were intelligible enough;
but then the technicalities began, and the little
man began to look rather dubious. Then came a
whole string of complicated trusts, and he was regularly
at sea. As the reader proceeded, it was quite
apparent that it was a hopeless case, and the little
man, with his mouth open and his eyes fixed upon his
face, looked on with an expression of bewilderment
and perplexity irresistibly ludicrous.
A little further on, a hard-featured
old man with a deeply-wrinkled face, was intently
perusing a lengthy will with the aid of a pair of horn
spectacles: occasionally pausing from his task,
and slily noting down some brief memorandum of the
bequests contained in it. Every wrinkle about
his toothless mouth, and sharp keen eyes, told of avarice
and cunning. His clothes were nearly threadbare,
but it was easy to see that he wore them from choice
and not from necessity; all his looks and gestures
down to the very small pinches of snuff which he every
now and then took from a little tin canister, told
of wealth, and penury, and avarice.
As he leisurely closed the register,
put up his spectacles, and folded his scraps of paper
in a large leathern pocket-book, we thought what a
nice hard bargain he was driving with some poverty-stricken
legatee, who, tired of waiting year after year, until
some life-interest should fall in, was selling his
chance, just as it began to grow most valuable, for
a twelfth part of its worth. It was a good speculation a
very safe one. The old man stowed his pocket-book
carefully in the breast of his great-coat, and hobbled
away with a leer of triumph. That will had made
him ten years younger at the lowest computation.
Having commenced our observations,
we should certainly have extended them to another
dozen of people at least, had not a sudden shutting
up and putting away of the worm-eaten old books, warned
us that the time for closing the office had arrived;
and thus deprived us of a pleasure, and spared our
readers an infliction.
We naturally fell into a train of
reflection as we walked homewards, upon the curious
old records of likings and dislikings; of jealousies
and revenges; of affection defying the power of death,
and hatred pursued beyond the grave, which these depositories
contain; silent but striking tokens, some of them,
of excellence of heart, and nobleness of soul; melancholy
examples, others, of the worst passions of human nature.
How many men as they lay speechless and helpless
on the bed of death, would have given worlds but for
the strength and power to blot out the silent evidence
of animosity and bitterness, which now stands registered
against them in Doctors’ Commons!