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[Footnote 78: Osbern, 113. Eadmer, 220.]
[Footnote 79: Mr. Lingard has the following note on the accession of Edwy, confirming our previous observations on the meaning of the recognition. "It is observable, that the ancient writers almost always speak of our kings as _elected_. Edwy's grandmother in her charter, (Lye, App. iv.) says, "He was chosen, _gecoren_." The contemporary biographer of Dunstan, (apud Boll. tom. iv. Maii, 344.) says, "Ab universis Anglorum principibus communi electione.""]
[Footnote 80: Hickes' Inst. Gram. Praef.]
[Footnote 81: Lingard's Hist. p. 292.]
[Footnote 82: Thus the Saxon Chronicler says of William I. "Thrice he bore his _king-helmet_ every year, when he was in England; at Easter he bore it at Winchester, at Pentecost at Westminster, and in Mid-winter at Gloucester." p. 450.]
[Footnote 83: We have noticed the present existence of a contemporary account of the coronation of Ethelred II. It demonstrates, that some of the most eloquent pa.s.sages of the prayers now used on the occasion, were the production of what we often denominate the darker ages of the world, and well accords with the preceding sketch of the character and duties of the Saxon kings.
"Two bishops, with the witan[*]," it is said, "shall lead the king to church; and the clergy with the bishops shall sing the anthem, _Firmetur ma.n.u.s tua_, and the _Gloria Patri_. When the king arrives at the church, he shall prostrate himself before the altar, and the _Te Deum_ shall be chanted. When this is finished, the king shall be raised from the ground, and having been _chosen_ by the bishops and people, shall with a clear voice, before G.o.d and all the people, promise that he will observe these three rules." [Then follows the coronation oath, quoted above.]
[Footnote *: MS. Claude, A. 3. Cotton Library.]
The prayers that follow, the bishops shall separately repeat. "We invoke thee, O Lord, Holy Father Almighty and Eternal G.o.d, that this thy servant, whom by the wisdom of thy divine dispensations from the beginning of his existence to this day, thou hast permitted to increase, rejoicing in the flower of youth, enriched with the gift of thy piety, and full of the grace of thy truth, thou mayest cause to be always advancing, day by day, to better things before G.o.d and men;--that rejoicing in the bounty of supernal grace, he may receive the throne of supreme power; and, defended on all sides from his enemies by the wall of thy mercy, he may deserve to govern happily the people committed to him, with the peace of propitiation and the strength of victory."
The following combination of admirable Scripture allusions is extracted from the third prayer, or that offered by the bishop after the consecration, "holding the crown over the king."
"Almighty Creator, everlasting Lord, Governor of heaven and earth, the Maker and Disposer of angels and men, King of kings and Lord of lords!
who made thy faithful servant Abraham to triumph over his enemies, and gavest manifold victories to Moses and Joshua, the _prelates_ of thy people; and didst raise David, thy lowly child, to the summit of the kingdom, and didst free him from the mouth of the lion and the paws of the bear, and from Goliath, and from the malignant sword of Saul; who didst endow Solomon with the ineffable gift of wisdom and peace;--look down propitiously on our humble prayers, and multiply the gifts of thy blessing on this thy servant, whom with humble devotion we have chosen to be king of the Angles and Saxons. Surround him everywhere with the right hand of thy power, that, strengthened with the faith of Abraham, the meekness of Moses, the courage of Joshua, the humility of David, and the wisdom of Solomon, he may be well pleasing to thee in all things, and may always advance in the way of justice with inoffensive progress."
When crowned, the invocation is, "May G.o.d crown thee with the honour of justice, and the labour of fort.i.tude; that by the virtue of _our_ benediction, and by a right faith, and the various fruit of good works, thou mayest attain to the crown of the everlasting kingdom, through his bounty whose kingdom endureth for ever!"
We cannot omit the concluding benedictions, rich with Scripture phraseology as any church could make them.
"May the Almighty Lord give thee, from the dew of heaven, and the fatness of the earth, abundance of corn, wine, and oil! May the people serve thee, and the tribes adore thee! Be the lord of thy brothers, and let the sons of thy mother bow before thee! He who blesses thee shall be filled with blessings; for G.o.d will be thy helper. May the Almighty bless thee with the blessings of the heaven above, and in the mountains and the valleys; with the blessings of the deep below; with the blessings of the suckling and the womb; with the blessings of grapes and apples; and may the blessing of the ancient fathers, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, be heaped upon thee!--May the blessing of Him, who appeared in the bush, come upon his head, and may the full blessing of the Lord be upon his sons, and may he steep his feet in oil! With his horn, as the horn of the rhinoceros, may he push the nations to the extremities of the earth; and may He who has ascended the skies be his auxiliary for ever!"]
[Footnote 84: Chron. Sax. 257.]
[Footnote 85: Lingard, vol. i. 485.]
[Footnote 86: A tax of two s.h.i.+llings per hide on land, gathered annually.]
[Footnote 87: History of England, 8vo. edit. vol. i. p. 413.]
[Footnote 88: Holinshed.]
[Footnote 89: This is the common statement: Mr. Taylor (Glory of Regality, p. 249,) objects to this being considered as a second coronation, and thinks it only a renewal of the royal festivities at Easter, with unusual splendor. But he seems to overlook the formal resolve of the council at Nottingham, on the point.]
[Footnote 90: See the whole speech, in Matt. Paris.]
[Footnote 91: Leg. s.e.x. 154.]
[Footnote 92: Brompton, 1283, 4.]
[Footnote 93: See M. Paris, Rymer, &c.]
[Footnote 94: Holinshed.]
[Footnote 95: The queen is said to have sucked the poison out of a wound which her husband received in the Holy Land, from the poisoned dagger of the emir of Jaffa.--See Lingard, v. ii. p. 369.]
[Footnote 96: Johnes' Froissart, i. xxv.]
[Footnote 97: Rymer, vii.]
[Footnote 98: Rot. Parl. iii.]
[Footnote 99: See the curious original doc.u.ment in Hume.]
[Footnote 100: King Henry IV. p. ii.]
[Footnote 101: See a curious MS. account of this 'solempnyte' in the Cotton Library, as quoted by Mr. Taylor, Glory of Regality, p. 263.]
[Footnote 102: See the preceding Note.]
[Footnote 103: Grafton, vol i. p. 592.]
[Footnote 104: Historic Doubts, Lord Orford's Works, 5 vols. 4to. vol.
ii. p. 146.]
[Footnote 105: Grafton, vol. ii. p. 156.]
[Footnote 106: Burnet on the Reformation, and Appendix.]
[Footnote 107: Walker's Circ.u.mstantial Account, 8vo. 1. p. 78.]
[Footnote 108: Taylor's Preface, p. x.]
[Footnote 109: Page 37.]
[Footnote 110: No. 335.--The Spectator's encomium on Booth is, however, sufficiently slight. The good bishop, it is evident, was better acquainted with the realities he was here describing than these theatrical types.]
[Footnote 111: Here the archbishop took the paten into his hands.]
[Footnote 112: And here broke the bread.]
[Footnote 113: Here the archbishop laid his hand upon all the bread.]
[Footnote 114: Here he took the cup into his hand.]
[Footnote 115: And here laid his hand upon every vessel (be it chalice or flagon) in which there was any wine to be consecrated.]
THE END.