When King Richard died, John, with
a handful of followers, gave his host, Arthur of Brittany,
the slip, and hurried off to Chinon, in Touraine.
Hence he sent a humble message that the Bishop of Lincoln
would deign to visit him. The reason was obvious.
His fate hung in the balance, and the best loved and
most venerated of English bishops would, if he would
but recognise him, turn that scale against Arthur of
Brittany. On the Wednesday in Holy Week, April
19th, 1199, Hugh left Fontevrault, and the anxious
prince rode to meet him and to pay him every court.
John would fain have kept him by his side, but the
bishop excused himself, and the two travelled back
to Fontevrault together, and finally parted at Samur.
They visited the royal tombs at the former place,
but the prudent nuns would not allow the dubious prince
inside their walls “because the abbess was not
at home.” John affected to be charmed at
their scruples, and sent them a pious message, promising
the bishop that he would shew them great favours.
The answer was, “You know that I greatly dislike
every lie. I shall therefore take care not to
tell them your lip promises, unless I have proof that
you certainly mean to fulfil them.” John
at once swore that he would fulfil all as soon as
might be, and the bishop in his presence told the holy
women, commended the prince to them, gave the blessing
and carried off the royal humbug. He then had
a long tale of John’s good resolutions:
he would be pious to God, kind to his subjects, and
just to all; he would take Hugh for his father and
guide, and wait upon him. He then shewed him a
stone, cased in gold, which he wore round his neck,
and told him that its fortunate owner would lack nothing
of his ancestral possessions. “Put not your
faith in a senseless stone,” he was told, “but
only in the living and true heavenly stone, the Lord
Jesus Christ. Lay him most surely as your heart’s
foundation and your hope’s anchor. He truly
is so firm and living a stone that He crushes all
who oppose Him. He suffers not those who rest
on him to fall, but ever raises them to higher things
and enlarges them to ampler deservings.”
They reached then the church porch, where was a lively
sculpture of Doomsday, and on the judge’s left
a company of kings and nobles led to eternal fire.
The bishop said, “Let your mind set ceaselessly
before you the screams and endless agonies of these.
Let these ceaseless tortures be ever in front of your
heart’s eyes. Let the careful remembrance
of these evils teach you how great is the self loss
which is laid upon those who rule other men for a little
time, and, ruling themselves ill, are subjects to demon
spirits in endless agony. These things, while
one can avoid them, one is wise to fear ever, lest
when one cannot avoid them, one should afterwards
happen ceaselessly to endure them.” He then
pointed out that this Day of the Lord was put in the
porch, so that those who entered to ask for their
needs should not forget “the highest and greatest
need of all, pardon for sins,” which they might
ask and have and be free from pains and glad with
eternal joys. John seized the bishop’s hand
and shewed the kings on the right. “Nay,
lord bishop, you should rather shew us these,”
he said “whose example and society we pray to
follow and attain.” For a few days he seemed
exceedingly submissive in deed and speech. The
beggars who wished him well he thanked with bows.
The ragged old women who saluted him he replied to
most gently. But after three days he changed
his tune and dashed the hopes which had begun to spring.
Easter Sunday came, and the bishop was at Mass and
John’s chamberlain slipped twelve gold pieces
into his hand, the usual royal offering. He was
standing (they always stand at Mass) surrounded by
a throng of barons before the bishop and gloated upon
the gold, tossed it in his hand and delayed so long
to offer it, that everybody stared. At last the
bishop, angry at such behaviour, then and there said,
“Why gaze like that?” John replied, “Truly
I am having a look at those gold coins of yours and
thinking that if I had held them a few days ago, I
should not offer them to you but pop them in my own
purse. Still, all the same, take them.”
The angry bishop blushed for the king, drew back his
arm, would not touch such money nor suffer his hand
to be kissed; shook his head at him in fury.
“Put down there what you hold,” he said,
“and go.” The king cast his money
into the silver basin and slunk away. John’s
insult was all the greater because out of Lincoln
none of the bishop’s people was ever allowed
to nibble one crumb of the alms. That day the
bishop had preached upon the conduct and future prospects
of princes. John neither liked the duration nor
the direction of the sermon, and sent thrice to the
preacher to stop his talk and get on with the Mass
so that he might go to his victuals. But not
a bit of it. The preacher talked louder and longer
until all applauded and some wept, and he told them
how worthily they ought to partake of the true Sacramental
Bread, who came from heaven and gives life to the
world. John shared neither in the word nor the
Sacrament. Neither then nor on Ascension Day,
when he was made king, did he communicate. Indeed
it was said he had never done so since he was grown
up.
Next Sunday the court was at Rouen
and Archbishop Walter was investing John with the
sacred emblems of the Duchy of Normandy during the
High Mass. A banner on a lance was handed to
the new duke. John advanced, amid cheers, and
the foolish cackle of laughter of his former boon
companions. He looked over his shoulder to grin
back at the fools, his friends, and from his feeble
grasp the old banner fell upon the pavement!
But Hugh had left him for England before this evil
omen. When the bishop reached Flèche on
Easter Monday, he went to church to vest for Mass.
His servants rushed in to say that the guards had seized
his horses and carts, and robbers had taken some of
his pack horses. The company, including Gilbert
de Glanville of Rochester, his friend, begged him
not to say Mass, but merely to read the gospel and
hurry out of the trap. Neither chagrined at his
loss, nor moved by their terrors, he went deaf and
silent to the altar. He was not content either
with a plain celebration. He must need have sandals,
tunic, and all the rest of the robes, and add a pontifical
blessing to the solemn celebration. As he was
unrobing the magistrates came in a fine state of repentance,
with restitution, safe conducts, and humble words.
He jested with them and past on to St. Peter’s,
at Le Mans. Here another alarm met them.
Arthur’s troopers rushed the place in the night
meaning to catch John. News of more robberies
and violence came, but thanks to the Abbot he got
safely on and Dame Constance of Brittany sent him many
apologies and assurances. He reached Sees safely
but insisted upon going aside for a little pious colloquy
with a learned and devout Abbot of Persigne, although
the country was in a very dangerous condition for travelling.
He found the good man away; so he said Mass and went
on, and at last got home to tell them at Lincoln that
all was peace. His progress was a triumph of
delighted crowds, for the hearts of his people had
been with him in all the struggle thus safely ended,
and the sea of people shouted, “Blessed is he
that cometh in the name of the Lord,” as their
father rode towards his cathedral town. The commons
evidently felt that the liberties of the church were
the outworks of the liberties of the land.
But the god of victory is a maimed
god, and the battles of the world irked Hugh’s
contemplative soul. He wished to lay by his heavy
burden of bishopric and to go back to his quiet cell,
the white wool tunic, the silence, and the careful
cleaning of trenchers. The office of a bishop
in his day left little time for spiritual tillage either
at home or abroad. Not only the bishops had to
confirm, ordain to all orders, consecrate, anoint,
impose penance, and excommunicate, but they had to
decide land questions concerning lands in frank almoin,
all probate and nullity of marriage cases, and to
do all the legal work of a king’s baron besides.
The judicial duties lay heavily upon him. He used
to say that a bishop’s case was harder than
a lord warden’s or a mayor’s, for he had
to be always on the bench; they only sometimes.
They might look after their family affairs, but he
could hardly ever handle the cure of souls. For
the second or third time he sent messengers to ask
Papal leave to resign, but Innocent, knowing that
“no one can safely be to the fore who would
not sooner be behind,” rejected the petition
with indignation; and Pharaoh-like increased his tasks
the more by making him legate in nearly every important
case of appeal. People who had nothing to rely
upon except the justice of their cause against powerful
opponents, clamoured for the Lincoln judgments, which
then neither fear nor hope could trim, and which were
as skilful as they were upright, so that men, learned
in the law, ascribed it to the easy explanation of
miracles that a comparative layman should steer his
course so finely.
In the various disputes between monks
and bishops, which were a standing dish in most diocèses,
he took an unbiassed line. In the long fight
waged by Archbishop Baldwin first and then by Hubert
Walter with the monks of Canterbury, which began in
1186, and was not over until Hugh was dead, he rather
favoured the side of the monastery. Yet we find
him speaking multa aspera, many stinging things
to their spokesman, and recommending, as the monk
said, prostration before the archbishop. His
words to the archbishop have been already quoted.
With Carlyle’s Abbot Sampson and the Bishop
of Ely he was appointed by Innocent to hush the long
brawl. The Pope, tired and angry, wrote (September,
1199) to the commissioners to compel the archbishop,
even with ecclesiastical censures. They reply
rather sharply to his holiness that he is hasty and
obscure; and so the matter dragged on. Then in
1195 the inevitable Geoffrey Plantagenet, the bastard,
Archbishop of York, before mentioned, has a lively
dispute with his canons. Hugh is ordered by the
Pope to suspend him, but would rather be suspended
(by the neck) himself. Geoffrey certainly was
a little extreme, even for those days a
Broad Churchman indeed. He despises the Sacraments,
said the canons, he hunts, hawks, fights, does not
ordain, dedicate, or hold synods, but chases the canons
with armed men and robs them; but Hugh, though he cannot
defend the man, seems to know better of him, and at
any rate will not be a mere marionette of Rome.
Geoffrey, indeed, came out nobly in the struggles
with king John in later story, as a defender of the
people. Then there is the dispute between the
Bishop of Coventry, another striking bishop, who brought
stout fellows against the saucy monks. He had
bought their monastery for three hundred marks of
the king, and when they would not budge, he chased
them away with beating and maiming, sacked their house,
burnt their charters, and so on. Hugh was against
this too vigorous gentleman, who was clearly indefensible;
but it was by no means because he was blindly prejudiced
in favour of monks, for he seems to have supported
the Bishop of Rochester against his monks. These
disputes of astonishing detail, are very important
in the history of the church, as by their means the
Papal Empire grew to a great height of power; and
however little the bishops’ methods commend themselves,
the monasteries, which became rebel castles in every
diocese, were very subversive of discipline, and their
warfare equally worldly.
In cases less ecclesiastical, we have
a glimpse of Hugh defending two young orphans against
Jordan of the Tower, the most mighty of Londoners.
This powerful robber of the weak came to the court
with an army of retainers, king’s men and London
citizens, to overawe all opposition. The “father
of orphans” made a little speech on the occasion
which has come down to us. “In truth, Jordan,
although you may have been dear to us, yet against
God we can yield nothing to you. But it is evident
that against your so many and great abetters it is
useless not only for these little ones to strive,
but even for ourselves and our fellow judges.
So what we shall do, we wish you to know. Yet
I speak for my own self. I shall free my soul.
I shall therefore write to my lord the Pope that you
alone in these countries traverse his jurisdiction;
you alone strive to nullify his authority.”
The vociferous and well-backed Jordan took the hint.
He dismounted from his high horse, and the orphans
got their own again. But these and like duties
were a heavy cross to Hugh. He hoped to be excused
of God because he obeyed orders, rather than rewarded
because he did well. Like Cowley, he looked upon
business as “the frivolous pretence of human
lusts to shake off innocence.” He would
not even look at his own household accounts, but delegated
such work to trustworthy folk, while these behaved
well. If they misbehaved he quickly detected
it and sent them packing.
We have now reached the year A.D.
1200. King John has been crowned for a year.
Hugh was not present at this ceremony, and the king,
anxious still for his support, sends for him to be
present at the great peace he was concluding with
France. By this treaty the Dauphin was to marry
Blanche of Castile and become Earl of Évreux, a dangerous
earldom, and Philip was to drop the cause of young
Arthur and give up debateable Vexin. Hugh also
was tempted over seas by the hope of visiting his old
haunts, which he felt must be done now or never, for
health and eyesight were failing him, and he needed
this refreshment for his vexed soul. It was in
the Chateau Gaillard again that he met the king, left
him in the sweet spring time at the end of May, for
a pilgrim tour to shrines and haunts of holy men living
and dead a pilgrimage made possible by the
new peace.
Here it must be confessed that modern
sympathy is apt to falter, for though we can understand
the zeal of American tourists for chips of palaces
and the communal moral code peculiar to archaeologists,
coin collectors, and umbrella snatchers, we cannot
understand the enthusiasm which the manliest, holiest,
and robustest minds then displayed for relics, for
stray split straws and strained twigs from the fledged
bird’s nests whence holy souls had fled to other
skies. To us these things mean but little; but
to Hugh they meant very much. The facts must
be given, and the reader can decide whether they are
beauty spots or warts upon the strong, patient, brave
face upon which they appear.
His first objective, when he left
the Andelys, was Meulan, and there he “approached
St. Nicasius.” This saint, a very fine fellow,
had been Bishop of Rheims, eight hundred years before.
When the Vandals invaded the land he had advanced
to meet them with a procession of singers and got
an ugly sword cut, which lopt off a piece of his head.
He went on still singing till he dropped dead.
This brave fellow’s skull Hugh took in his hands,
worshipped the saint, gave gold; and then tried hard
to tweak out one of his teeth: but such dentistry
was unavailing. He then put his fingers into
the nostrils which had so often drawn in the sweet
odour of Christ and got with ease a lovely little bone,
which had parted the eyes, kissed it and felt a richer
hope of being directed into the way of peace and salvation;
for so great a bishop would certainly fix his spiritual
eyes upon him after this.
Next he went to St. Denis, where he
prayed long at the tombs of the saints. The scholars
of Paris, of all breeds, turned out in crowds to see
a man, who, after St. Nicholas, had done so much good
to clerks. Kisses, colloquies and invitations
rained upon him, but he chose to lodge in the house
of his relative Reimund. This man he had made
Canon of Lincoln, and he afterwards refused to buy
off King John and became an exile for conscience and
the patron of exiles, and thus was in life and character
a true son of St. Hugh. Among the visitors here
were the Dauphin Lewis and Arthur of Brittany.
The latter turned up his nose when told to live in
love and peace with Uncle John; but Lewis carried off
the bishop to cheer his weeping political bride Blanche,
lately bartered into the match. The good bishop
walked to the palace, and Blanche bore a merry face
and a merry heart after he had talked with her.
The next place was Troyes, and here
a wretch came with a doleful story. He had been
bailiff to the Earl of Leicester, had torn a rogue
from sanctuary at Brackley; had been excommunicated
by Hugh, with all his mates. They had submitted
and been made to dig up the putrid body and carry
it a mile, clad only in their drawers, be whipped at
every church door they passed, bury the body with
their own hands, and then come to Lincoln for more
flogging: and all this in the winter. This
sentence frightened the bailiff, who bolted; but ill-luck
dogged him. He lost his place, his money, and
at last came to beg for shrift and punishment.
Hugh gave him a seven years’ penance and he went
on his way rejoicing.
The next great place was Vienne on
the Rhone. Here were the ashes of St. Anthony
of the Desert, wrapped in the tunic of Paul, the first
hermit. The Carthusian Bruno had caught the enthusiasm
for solitude from these ambulatory ashes, which had
travelled from Alexandria to Constantinople and so
to Vienne in 1070. Of course they were working
miracles, chiefly upon those afflicted by St. Anthony’s
fire. The medical details are given at some length,
and the cures described in the Great Life. For
the general reader it is enough to say that Hugh said
Mass near the precious but plain chest, and that he
gave a good sum for the convalescent home where the
poor sufferers were housed. Whether change of
air, a hearty diet, and strong faith be enough to arrest
this (now rare) disease is a scientific question rather
than a theological one; but if, as we are told, St.
Anthony sent thunder bolts upon castles and keeps
where his pilgrims were maltreated, his spirit was
somewhat of that Boanerges type which is flatly snubbed
in the Gospel. From Vienne Hugh went to his own
Grenoble among those mountains which have, as Ruskin
says, “the high crest or wall of cliff on the
top of their slopes, rising from the plain first in
mounds of meadow-land and bosses of rock and studded
softness of forest; the brown cottages peeping through
grove above grove, until just where the deep shade
of the pines becomes blue or purple in the haze of
height, a red wall of upper precipice rises from the
pasture land and frets the sky with glowing serration."
A splendid procession came out to welcome him, and
the city was hung with festoons of flowers and gay
silken banners. He was led with chaunting to
the cathedral of St. John Baptist, his particular
saint, and that of his Order, upon the very feast of
the great herald. There he sang the High Mass
with intense devoutness, and after the gospel preached
to the people, “giving them tears to drink,”
but in moderation, for he begged all their prayers
for his littleness and unworthiness, whereas they
knew quite well what a good and great fellow he was.
Then he christened his own nephew, the heir of Avalon,
whose uncle Peter was present, and the Bishop of Grenoble
was godfather. The hitherto unbaptised boy was
actually seven years old. Perhaps he had waited
for Uncle Hugh to christen him, and when he had that
honour he was not named Peter, as they proposed, but
John, in honour of the place and day. Adam records
that he taught the little fellow his alphabet and
to spell from letters placed above the altar of St.
John Baptist at Bellay.
Then he left for the Grande Chartreuse,
having to foot it most of the way up the mountains,
sweating not a little, for he was of some diameter,
but he out-walked his companions. He took care
to drop in while the brothers were having their midday
siesta, and he was careful not to be of the
least trouble. Indeed, for three weeks he put
off the bishop, as he did at Witham, and his insignia
all but the ring, and became a humble monk once more.
The clergy and the laity hurried to see him from the
district, and the poor jostled to behold their father;
and each one had dear and gracious words, and many
found his hand second his generous tongue. Some
days he spent at the lower house. Here, too, he
compounded an old and bitter feud between the bishop
and the Count of Geneva whereby the one was exiled
and the other excommunicate.
Near the end of his stay he made a
public present to the House, a silver casket of relics,
which he used to carry in his hand in procession at
dedications. These were only a part of his collection,
for he had a ring of gold and jewels, four fingers
broad, with hollow spaces for relics. At his
ardent desire and special entreaty the monks of Fleury
once gave him a tooth from the jaws of St. Benedict,
the first founder and, as it were, grandfather of
his and other Orders. This came with a good strip
of shroud to boot, and the goldsmith appeared, tools
and all, warned by a dream, from Banbury to Dorchester
to enshrine the precious ivory. The shred of
shroud was liberally divided up among abbots and religious
men, but the tooth, after copious kissing, was sealed
up in the ring. At Fechamp once (that home of
relics!) they kept a bone of St. Mary Magdalen, as
was rashly asserted, sewed up in silks and linen.
He begged to see it, but none dared show it:
but he was not to be denied. Whipping up a penknife
from his notary, he had off the covers pretty quickly,
and gazed at and kissed it reverently. Then he
tried to break off a bit with his fingers, but not
a process would come away. He then tried to nibble
a snippet, but in vain. Finally, he put the holy
bone to his strong back teeth and gave a hearty scrunch.
Two tit-bits came off, and he handed them to the trembling
Adam, saying, “Excellent man, keep these for
us.” The abbots and monks were first struck
dumb, then quaked, and then boiled with indignation
and wrath. “Oh! oh! Abominable!”
they yelled. “We thought the bishop wanted
to worship these sacred and holy things, and lo! he
has, with doggish ritual, put them to his teeth for
mutilation.” While they were raging he quieted
them with words which may give us the key to such
otherwise indecent behaviour. Suppose they had
been having a great Sacramental dispute, and some,
as is likely, had maintained against the bishop that
the grinding of the Host by the teeth of any communicant
meant the grinding of Christ’s very body, then
it becomes evident that Hugh put this their belief
to rather a rough proof, or reproof. Anyhow,
he posed them with this answer, “Since a short
time back we handled together the most saintly body
of the Saint of Saints with fingers granted unworthy;
if we handled It with our teeth or lips, and passed
It on to our inwards, why do we not also in faith so
treat the members of his saints for our defence, their
worship, and the deepening of our memory of them,
and acquire, so far as opportunity allows, what we
are to keep with due honour?”
At Peterborough they had the arm of
St. Oswald, which had kept fresh for over five centuries.
A supple nerve which protruded Hugh had sliced off
and put in this wonderful ring. This, though he
had offered it to the high altar at Lincoln, he would
have left to the Charterhouse; but Adam reminded him
of the fact, so instead thereof he ordered a golden
box full of the relics he gave them to be sent after
his death.
With mutual blessings he took his
last leave of the Grande Chartreuse, and left it in
the body, though his heart and mind could never be
dislodged from its desert place. This place was
his father and his mother, but Lincoln, he did not
forget, was his wife.