ur to a peace, and caused the two young princes to be
delivered." So far Hall relates the scene, but there was more in the play
than he remembered or cared to notice, and I am able to complete this
curious picture of a pageant once really and truly a living spectacle in
the old palace at Greenwich, by an inventory of the dresses worn by the
boys and a list of the _dramatis personae_.
The school-boys of St. Paul's were taken down the river with the master in
six boats, at the cost of a shilling a boat--the cost of the dresses and
the other expenses amounting in all to sixty-one shillings.
The characters were--
An orator in apparel of cloth of gold.
Religio, Ecclesia, Veritas, like three widows, in garments of silk, and
suits of lawn and Cyprus.
Heresy and False Interpretation, like sisters of Bohemia, apparelled in
silk of divers colours.
The heretic Luther, like a party friar, in russet damask and black taffety.
Luther's wife, like a frow of Spiers in Almayn, in red silk.
Peter, Paul, and James, in habits of white sarsnet, and three red mantles,
and lace of silver and damask, and pelisses of scarlet.
A Cardinal in his apparel.
Two Sergeants in rich apparel.
The Dolphin and his brother in coats of velvet embroidered with gold, and
capes of satin bound with velvet.
A Messenger in tinsel satin.
Six men in gowns of grey sarsnet.
Six women in gowns of crimson velvet.
War, in rich cloth of gold and feathers, armed.
Three Almeyns, in apparel all cut and holed in silk.
Lady Peace in lady's apparel white and rich.
Lady Quietness and Dame Tranquillity richly beseen in lady's apparel.
It is a strange world. This was in November, 1527. In November, 1530, but
three brief years after, Wolsey lay dying in misery, a disgraced man, at
Leicester Abbey; "the Pope's Holiness" was fast becoming in English eyes
plain Bishop of Rome, held guilty towards this realm of unnumbered
enormities, and all England was sweeping with immeasurable velocity towards
the heretic Luther. So history repeats the lesson to us, not to boast
ourselves of the morrow, for we know not what a day may bring forth.
Before I conclude this survey, it remains for me to say something of the
position of the poor, and of the measures which were taken for the solution
of that most difficult of all problems, the distinguishing the truly
deserving from the worthless and the vagabond. The subject is one to which
in the progress of this
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