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INN OF THE PRIORS OF TORTINGTON.

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his subjects, for which they both subsequently paid the penalty of death on Tower Hill. They were allowed access to the Priors' garden, "wherein," says Stow, "they met, and consulted of matters at their pleasures." The Inn of the Priors of Tortington subsequently gave place to the mansion of the De Veres, Earls of Oxford, from whom Oxford Court derives its name.

BISHOPSGATE STREET, CROSBY HALL.

DERIVATION OF THE WORD BISHOPSGATE. CROSBY PLACE. ITS PRESENT CONDITION.WHEN BUILT. CHARACTER OF ITS FOUNDER. -ITS TENANTS: - RICHARD THE THIRD, READ, EMPEROR MAXIMILIAN,-REST,-SIR THOMAS MORE,― BOND,-SPENCER,

FIRST EARL of northampTON, COUNTESS OF PEMBROKE,-DUC DE SULLY, SECOND EARL of NORTHAMPTON,

-

-GRESHAM HOUSE.-SIR PAUL PINDAR.

SIR STEPHEN LANGHAM.

BISHOPSGATE Street derives its name from one of the ancient City-gates, which spanned the street where the thoroughfare, called London Wall, now divides Bishopsgate Within, from Bishopsgate Without the walls. The gate in question is said to have been originally built about the year 680, by Erkenwald, Bishop of London. Shortly after the Conquest, it was repaired and beautified by William, one of the successors of Erkenwald in the metropolitan see; and from these circumstances, and from its having been ornamented with the statues of the two Bishops, it derived its name of Bishopsgate. It was finally rebuilt in 1479, in the reign of Edward the Fourth.

The ancient houses, which not long since rendered the aspect of Bishopsgate Street so interesting to the antiquary, are fast disappearing. Fortunately, however, a few still remain; enabling us

to form a tolerable notion of the appearance of an aristocratic street in London, in the days of Henry the Seventh.

Passing down Bishopsgate Street, a small gateway on the right leads us into Crosby Square, the site of that magnificent mansion, Crosby Place, the stately hall of which is still standing. The escape from the noise and bustle of the streets to this quiet spot is of itself a relief; but how delightful are our sensations, when we feel ourselves gazing on those time-honoured walls, within which the usurper Richard hatched his crooked counsels; where Sir Thomas More is said to have composed his great work, the Utopia, and where the great minister Sully lodged, when he arrived in England on that well-known embassy, of which his own pen has bequeathed us so interesting a description!

Had we no other means of computing the vast size of old Crosby Place, the immense extent of the vaults, which are spread beneath and around us, would afford sufficient evidence of its ancient magnificence. All that now remains to us, and rich indeed are we in their possession, are the council-chamber, the throne-room, and the old hall. The throne-room, with its oak-ceiling divided into compartments, and its graceful window extending from the ceiling to the floor, has been deservedly admired. But it is the magnificent old hall, and its host of historical associations, which make us feel that we are standing on classic

ground. We recal the days when it was the scene of the revel and the dance; when the wise, the witty, and the princely, feasted at its festive board; when its vaulted roof echoed back the merry sounds of music, and a thousand tapers flashed on the tapestried walls; when gentle dalliances took place in its oriel window; and where, not improbably, Richard the Third himself may have led off one of the stately dances of the period with the Lady Anne. Nearly four centuries have passed since its princely founder laid his hand to its foundation-stone; and yet it still remains, with its glorious roof, its fine proportions, and its beautiful oriel window, as perfect as when the architect gave his finishing touch to it in the days of the Plantagenets.

Crosby Place was built in the reign of Edward the Sixth, on some ground rented from Alice Ashfield, prioress of the adjoining convent of St. Helen's. The founder was the powerful citizen and soldier, Sir John Crosby, whose monument is still a conspicuous object in St. Helen's Church. He was sheriff of London in 1471, an Alderman, a warden of the Grocers' Company, and represented the City of London in parliament from 1461 to 1466. He lived in the days when the wealth and commerce of London were monopolized by the few, and when its merchants were indeed princes. In figuring to our imaginations a Lord Mayor, or an Alderman, of the time of the Plantagenets, we must not identify him with a Lord Mayor or an Alderman of our own time,

-one of that harmless and hospitable species who give bad dinners by contract, and who figure on the ninth of November in a gingerbread coach, followed by a train of beef-eaters, and rouged sceneshifters in tin armour. We might as well attempt to identify a corpulent peer of our own time, slumbering on the easy benches of the House of Lords, with the stalwart barons who combated on the field of Tewkesbury, or who bore off the palm on the Field of the Cloth of Gold. Sir John Crosby was the prototype of a class who were introduced at the Norman Conquest, and who expired with the Tudors and Plantagenets; a class of men who united the citizen with the warrior, and the merchant with the courtier, the diplomatist, and man of letters. Of such a calibre were Sir William Walworth, who dashed Wat Tyler to the earth at Smithfield; and Sir Thomas Sutton, the princely founder of the Charter House, whom we find at one time accumulating wealth in his quiet counting-house, at another, superintending the firing of the great guns at the siege of Edinburgh, and lastly, crowning a useful existence by founding the noble establishment to which we have just referred. Such a man also was Sir John Crosby. Vast apparently as was his wealth, and peaceful as were his daily occupations, he was, nevertheless, an active partizan in the struggles between the Houses of York and Lancaster. We find him welcoming Edward the Fourth on his landing at Ravenspur, and receiving knighthood for his reward: the fol

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