登陆注册
34548700000008

第8章 CURIOSITIES OF PARISH REGISTERS(1)

There are three classes of persons who are deeply concerned with parish registers--namely, villains, antiquaries, and the sedulous readers, "parish clerks and others," of the second or "agony" column of the Times. Villains are probably the most numerous of these three classes. The villain of fiction dearly loves a parish register: he cuts out pages, inserts others, intercalates remarks in a different coloured ink, and generally manipulates the register as a Greek manages his hand at ecarte, or as a Hebrew dealer in Moabite bric-a-brac treats a synagogue roll. We well remember one villain who had locked himself into the vestry (he was disguised as an archaeologist), and who was enjoying his wicked pleasure with the register, when the vestry somehow caught fire, the rusty key would not turn in the door, and the villain was roasted alive, in spite of the disinterested efforts to save him made by all the virtuous characters in the story. Let the fate of this bold, bad man be a warning to wicked earls, baronets, and all others who attempt to destroy the record of the marriage of a hero's parents. Fate will be too strong for them in the long run, though they bribe the parish clerk, or carry off in white wax an impression of the keys of the vestry and of the iron chest in which a register should repose.

There is another and more prosaic danger in the way of villains, if the new bill, entitled "The Parish Registers Preservation Act," ever becomes law. The bill provides that every register earlier than 1837 shall be committed to the care of the Master of the Rolls, and removed to the Record Office. Now the common villain of fiction would feel sadly out of place in the Register Office, where a more watchful eye than that of a comic parish clerk would be kept on his proceedings. Villains and local antiquaries will, therefore, use all their parliamentary influence to oppose and delay this bill, which is certainly hard on the parish archaeologist. The men who grub in their local registers, and slowly compile parish or county history, deserve to be encouraged rather than depressed. Mr.

Chester Waters, therefore, has suggested that copies of registers should be made, and the comparatively legible copy left in the parish, while the crabbed original is conveyed to the Record Office in London. Thus the local antiquary would really have his work made more easy for him (though it may be doubted whether he would quite enjoy that condescension), while the villain of romance would be foiled; for it is useless (as a novel of Mr. Christie Murray's proves) to alter the register in the keeping of the parish when the original document is safe in the Record Office. But previous examples of enforced transcription (as in 1603) do not encourage us to suppose that the copies would be very scrupulously made. Thus, after the Reformation, the prayers for the dead in the old registers were omitted by the copyist, who seemed to think (as the contractor for "sandwich men" said to the poor fellows who carried the letter H), "I don't want you, and the public don't want you, and you're no use to nobody." Again, when Laurence Fletcher was buried in St.

Saviour's, Southwark, in 1608, the old register described him as "a player, the King's servant." But the clerk, keeping a note-book, simply called Laurence Fletcher "a man," and (in 1625) he also styled Mr. John Fletcher "a man." Now, the old register calls Mr.

John Fletcher "a poet." To copy all the parish registers in England would be a very serious task, and would probably be but slovenly performed. If they were reproduced, again, by any process of photography, the old difficult court hand would remain as hard as ever. But this is a minor objection, for the local antiquary revels in the old court hand.

From the little volume by Mr. Chester Waters, already referred to ('Parish Registers in England;' printed for the author by F. J.

Roberts, Little Britain, E.C.), we proceed to appropriate such matters of curiosity as may interest minds neither parochial nor doggedly antiquarian. Parish registers among the civilised peoples of antiquity do not greatly concern us. It seems certain that many Polynesian races have managed to record (in verse, or by some rude marks) the genealogies of their chiefs through many hundreds of years. These oral registers are accepted as fairly truthful by some students, yet we must remember that Pindar supposed himself to possess knowledge of at least twenty-five generations before his own time, and that only brought him up to the birth of Jason. Nobody believes in Jason and Medea, and possibly the genealogical records of Maoris and Fijians are as little trustworthy as those of Pindaric Greece. However, to consider thus is to consider too curiously. We only know for certain that genealogy very soon becomes important, and, therefore, that records are early kept, in a growing civilisation. "After Nehemiah's return from the captivity in Babylon, the priests at Jerusalem whose register was not found were as polluted put from the priesthood." Rome had her parish registers, which were kept in the temple of Saturn. But modern parish registers were "discovered" (like America) in 1497, when Cardinal Ximenes found it desirable to put on record the names of the godfathers and godmothers of baptised children. When these relations of "gossip," or God's kin (as the word literally means), were not certainly known, married persons could easily obtain divorces, by pretending previous spiritual relationship.

同类推荐
  • Evangeline

    Evangeline

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 闲情偶寄

    闲情偶寄

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 黄箓五老悼亡仪

    黄箓五老悼亡仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 桂林风土记

    桂林风土记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 范文正集

    范文正集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 瓦罗兰召唤师

    瓦罗兰召唤师

    当艾瑞莉娅守护着重新建立的国度、举起传世之剑,当阿卡丽听从了卡尔玛的建议、站在均衡之前,当锐雯追寻着真正的诺克萨斯精神、行走在难分的敌我之间……当纷争四起,英雄们需要站立在联盟之巅,他们需要召唤师,协助他们取得胜利。召唤师,存在于瓦罗兰大陆力量之巅的魔法师。
  • 千茶中学篮球部

    千茶中学篮球部

    千茶中学,一个刚刚成立两年的高中,其篮球部参加过两次全国竞赛,最终都在前十强时落败,于是,千茶的篮球部便有了“废物”的称号,可是,这一切,都从几个新生的身上开始改变……
  • 零星琐忆:嗜血少女碎梦

    零星琐忆:嗜血少女碎梦

    她,沐雨玖。半工半读的学生,唯一和别人不同的是:有个恶毒的后妈、伪善的姐姐、爱闯祸的弟弟、以及从未关心过自己的爸爸。于是,她被爸爸逐出家族,心从此被蒙上一层厚厚的薄冰,偶然的一个机会她走向了一条用人的尸骨堆起来的王者之路,几年之后一身白衣站在天台,微风吹过让女孩皱起了眉头,喃喃自语的说:“呵,现在只要他们不来惹我,我是不会去灭掉他们的……倘若不知好歹,就别怪我不客气。”明明是温柔如水般的嗓音说的,却让人感到毛骨悚然,情不自禁想要逃离这里。女孩笑了接着女孩碾碎了蔷薇花瓣,随着风若即若离突然眼睛又如一条小猫咪了起来…
  • The Author of Beltraffio

    The Author of Beltraffio

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 让天空亮起来

    让天空亮起来

    我们的青春,不长。没有时间悲伤。我们的爱情,不长,没有时间沧桑。我们的未来,不长,没有时间成长。
  • 凝墨少年郎

    凝墨少年郎

    每个人的人生都有着这样的经历,这是少年的风华,又仿如中年的沉稳,最终的,归往何处?
  • 欧皮皮事件簿:不敢想的大问题

    欧皮皮事件簿:不敢想的大问题

    生命本是一堂课,大人所承受的,孩子也应该懂得。除夕夜,爸爸忍不住告诉他所有的真相。欧皮皮害怕极了,他怕失去妈妈,但他却也因此变得坚强起来:因为爱,他决定和家人一起去勇敢地面对这个现实……
  • 江湖传书

    江湖传书

    主人公叫闯荡江湖的日常,无厘头的事,遇上各种人,各种事,开心就得了。
  • 叛逆少女的阳光少年

    叛逆少女的阳光少年

    推荐一下乐沁的文文《BOSS太腹黑:萌妻别跑!》和《晨曦有阳光》谢谢支持她是所有人眼中的乖乖女,却没想过有一天也会变成所有人眼中的坏女孩。妈妈去世后,父亲一心扑到事业上。她以为她只要努力做到最好,父亲就会像以前那样宠她、爱她。但是没有,从那以后,她开始变得叛逆。高阳是所有人眼中的阳光男孩,却没人知道他的故事到底有多长。
  • 待月已成疮痍

    待月已成疮痍

    冥君,一个让千亿人恐惧心颤的职名,他,身为冥君,却带着一脸温和得让人失神的微笑,踏上冥君之位又是为何?