登陆注册
34548700000010

第10章 CURIOSITIES OF PARISH REGISTERS(3)

A novelty was introduced into registers in 1678. The law required (for purposes of protecting trade) that all the dead should be buried in woollen winding-sheets. The price of the wool was the obolus paid to the Charon of the Revenue. After March 25, 1667, no person was to be "buried in any shirt, shift, or sheet other that should be made of woole only." Thus when the children in a little Oxfordshire village lately beheld a ghost, "dressed in a long narrow gown of woollen, with bandages round the head and chin," it is clear that the ghost was much more than a hundred years old, for the act "had fallen into disuse long before it was repealed in 1814." But this has little to do with parish registers. The addition made to the duties of the keeper of the register in 1678 was this--he had to take and record the affidavit of a kinsman of the dead, to the effect that the corpse was actually buried in woollen fabric. The upper classes, however, preferred to bury in linen, and to pay the fine of 5L. When Mistress Oldfield, the famous actress, was interred in 1730, her body was arrayed "in a very fine Brussels lace headdress, a holland shift with a tucker and double ruffles of the same lace, and a pair of new kid gloves."In 1694 an empty exchequer was replenished by a tax on marriages, births, and burials, the very extortion which had been feared by the insurgents in the Pilgrimage of Grace. The tax collectors had access without payment of fee to the registers. The registration of births was discontinued when the Taxation Acts expired. An attempt to introduce the registration of births was made in 1753, but unsuccessfully. The public had the old superstitious dread of anything like a census. Moreover, the custom was denounced as "French," and therefore abominable. In the same way it was thought telling to call the cloture "the French gag" during some recent discussions of parliamentary rules. In 1783 the parish register was again made the instrument of taxation, and threepence was charged on every entry. Thus "the clergyman was placed in the invidious light of a tax collector, and as the poor were often unable or unwilling to pay the tax, the clergy had a direct inducement to retain their good-will by keeping the registers defective."It is easy to imagine the indignation in Scotland when "bang went saxpence" every time a poor man had twins! Of course the Scotch rose up against this unparalleled extortion. At last, in 1812, "Rose's Act" was passed. It is styled "an Act for the better regulating and preserving registers of births," but the registration of births is altogether omitted from its provisions. By a stroke of the wildest wit the penalty of transportation for fourteen years, for ****** a false entry, "is to be divided equally between the informer and the poor of the parish." A more casual Act has rarely been drafted.

Without entering into the modern history of parish registers, we may borrow a few of the ancient curiosities to be found therein, the blunders and the waggeries of forgotten priests, and curates, and parish clerks. In quite recent times (1832) it was thought worth while to record that Charity Morrell at her wedding had signed her name in the register with her right foot, and that the ring had been placed on the fourth toe of her left foot; for poor Charity was born without arms. Sometimes the time of a birth was recorded with much minuteness, that the astrologers might draw a more accurate horoscope. Unlucky children, with no acknowledged fathers, were entered in a variety of odd ways. In Lambeth (1685), George Speedwell is put down as "a merry begot;" Anne Twine is "filia uniuscujusque." At Croydon, a certain William is "terraefilius"(1582), an autochthonous infant. Among the queer names of foundlings are "Nameless," "Godsend," "Subpoena," and "Moyses and Aaron, two children found," not in the bulrushes, but "in the street."The rule was to give the foundling for surname the name of the parish, and from the Temple Church came no fewer than one hundred and four foundlings named "Temple," between 1728 and 1755. These Temples are the plebeian gens of the patrician house which claims descent from Godiva. The use of surnames as Christian names is later than the Reformation, and is the result of a reaction against the exclusive use of saints' names from the calendar. Another example of the same reaction is the use of Old Testament names, and "Ananias and Sapphira were favourite names with the Presbyterians."It is only fair to add that these names are no longer popular with Presbyterians, at any rate in the Kirk of Scotland. The old Puritan argument was that you would hardly select the name of too notorious a scriptural sinner, "as bearing testimony to the triumph of grace over original sin." But in America a clergyman has been known to decline to christen a child "Pontius Pilate," and no wonder.

Entries of burials in ancient times often contained some biographical information about the deceased. But nothing could possibly be vaguer than this: "1615, February 28, St. Martin's, Ludgate, was buried an anatomy from the College of Physicians."Man, woman, or child, sinner or saint, we know not, only that "an anatomy" found Christian burial in St. Martin's, Ludgate. How much more full and characteristic is this, from St. Peter's-in-the-East, Oxford (1568): 'There was buried Alyce, the wiff of a naughty fellow whose name is Matthew Manne.' There is immortality for Matthew Manne, and there is, in short-hand, the tragedy of "Alyce his wiff." The reader of this record knows more of Matthew than in two hundred years any one is likely to know of us who moralise over Matthew! At Kyloe, in Northumberland, the intellectual defects of Henry Watson have, like the naughtiness of Manne, secured him a measure of fame. (1696.) "Henry was so great a fooll, that he never could put on his own close, nor never went a quarter of a mile off the house," as Voltaire's Memnon resolved never to do, and as Pascal partly recommends.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 宿命局

    宿命局

    诸天战乱,洪荒天主之子,死于少冲界,万古岁月悠悠而逝,身负神话纪元最强封印,逆天重生,只为破局而存。生无言孤,死亦无悔,心有千创,何惧一伤。
  • 我能无限暴兵

    我能无限暴兵

    在废土苟了六十年的穿越者老头,在生命走向尽头时觉醒了暴兵系统蛊惑人类的邪神。游荡在荒野的食尸鬼。隐藏在人间的血族。深渊巨魔。丛林怪物。笼罩世界的阴云,统统被金属风暴卷碎。【群:599538148】
  • 异界之虫族召唤师

    异界之虫族召唤师

    因为一个意外而来到异界的星际争霸虫族爱好者雷天,当他发现自己拥有了靠“虫能”来召唤虫族的能力后,他会在这个强者为尊的大陆上做出哪些惊世之举呢?雷天说:“别来惹我,我是虫皇我做主!”“你有斗气,我有刺蛇!远近皆可!”“你有魔法,我有蟑螂!专克法师!”“你有狮鹫,我有飞龙!遮天蔽日!”“你是巨龙,我有雷兽!体型一样!”“对手太强,还打不过?好办!我用毒蛉炸死你!”“派军队来?欺负我人少?简单!我用狗海淹死你!”让我们拭目以待,看看虫皇雷天怎样在这新的世界中掀起虫族风暴!
  • 掬花拂尘

    掬花拂尘

    笃信好人有好报的直肠女汉子顾掬尘,为了更靠谱的守护好家人,决定将腹中的直肠多绕几个圈圈。哎,那个谁谁谁,本姑娘已经很费脑了,请不要再时不时跑过来添乱了……
  • 我的骷髅不一般

    我的骷髅不一般

    来到人间之后,亚克决定要好好生活,可是人间却是一片末日,还有个小主人要自己照顾,不过没关系,他不仅会全系魔法,手下还有一堆亡灵生物任他差遣。
  • 都市超级仙皇

    都市超级仙皇

    新书【极品妖孽回都市】已经发布,火热连载中新老读者们,可以支持一下新书!【极品妖孽回都市】万分感谢
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 跪唱青春

    跪唱青春

    当青春与欢笑编织出音符,当爱情与情义写出了乐谱。当这首青春的歌被一个山里的傻小子唱出口时,震撼了全世界!他叫云浩,虽然是一个从山里走进城市的孩子,但是他却在冷酷现实的世界里走出了自己的“脚印”(此书大纲完善,存稿富裕,请大家放心阅读)
  • 总裁的迷茫小娇妻

    总裁的迷茫小娇妻

    “你是谁啊,凭什么管我”“凭我是你男朋友,未来的老公”“你啥时候成我男朋友了?我都不认识你”一个小迷糊蛋遇上了一个高冷总裁,高冷总裁人前高冷,却不知还有话唠的一面