The Mediæval Hospitals of England by Rotha Mary Clay
1462. From these facts several conclusions are drawn. The industrial
826 words | Chapter 93
and self-supporting character of the hospital was relaxed because war
and pestilence left England shorthanded; land was uncultivated and
the hospital lost its thraves of [p223] corn. All this is true, but
much of the misery lay at the door of the wardens. One unscrupulous
master made 500 marks yearly by the traffic in pensions; in 1391 the
hospital was “charged with corrodies[143] sold and given, oppressed by
the excessive expenditure of its heads, and laden with debt, so that
its remaining revenues are insufficient to support master, brethren
and sisters or the poor and needy inmates, whereby the hospital is
threatened with extinction.” On another occasion the poor “Cremettes”
(as the inmates were called[144]) made a petition to the king because
their master had put the chalices and ornaments of the hospital in
pledge, etc. There are preserved in the Record Office a number of
documents relating to visitations of this house; these confirm the
evidence of contemporary Patent Rolls.
At Gloucester the sale of pensions, jewels, corn, and even of beds,
is reported; bed-money was extracted from the poor (20_s._ from one,
and 6_s._ 8_d._ from another, who had lost his legs). Part of St.
Bartholomew’s was unroofed, pigs had access to it, the inmates lacked
food and clothing, whilst the utmost depravity prevailed in the
household (1380). One extravagant warden of God’s House, Portsmouth,
spent eight or nine hundred marks yearly, yet kept no hospitality:—
“butt the master will not obey to that and so seruys the powr pepull
at hys pleysure, that ys, with uere cowrse bred and smaller drynke,
wiche ys contrary to all good consyens.”
When a warden was to be elected to the Maison Dieu, Dover (1533), a
certain John de Ponte announced to Cromwell:—“The master is dead, and
a great benefice [p224] is fallen unto the king, with which you may
oblige your friends or take it yourself, and I will serve the same.” If
such was the prevalent tone of those in authority, it is small wonder
that Brinklow wrote about the year 1536:—“I heare that the masters of
your hospitals be so fat that the pore be kept leane and bare inough.”
There is strong censure upon the administration of the London hospitals
in the petition for their re-foundation (1538); they had been provided
to relieve the poor, but “nowe a smalle nomber of chanons, preestes and
monks be founden for theyr own synguler proffytt lucre and commodytye
onely,” and these do not regard “the myserable people lyeing in the
streete offendyng every clene person passyng by the way.” About the
year 1536, Robert Copland, in _The hye way to the Spyttell hous_, says:—
“For I haue sene at sondry hospytalles
That many haue lyen dead without the walles
And for lacke of socour haue dyed wretchedly
Vnto your foundacyon I thynke contrary.
Moche people resorte here and have lodgyng,
But yet I maruell greatly of one thyng
That in the nyght so many lodge without.”
Many charitable institutions were in a languishing condition. Some,
of course, had never been endowed, whilst others had only slender
resources. Frequently the depreciation in money had caused a shrinkage
in a once-adequate revenue; sometimes the land had been filched away by
neighbouring landowners. Writing of Sherborne, Leland observes that the
almshouse “stondith yet, but men get most of the land by pece meales.”
He notes the dilapidated state of houses here and there; at Beverley
“ther was an Hospital of St. Nicholas, but [p225] it is dekayid,”
and at St. Michael’s, Warwick, “the Buildings of the House are sore
decayed.” The condition of St. John’s, Lutterworth, described in the
Certificate of 1545, was such that no hospitality was kept;[145] there
were “noe pore men within the same Hospytal remaynyng or inhabityng;
and the house, with the chapel, gretly in decaye and ruyne.” At
Stoke-upon-Trent, it appeared that there was a priest called master
of St. Loye’s hospital, but he did not know to what intent or deed of
charity it was founded.[146] Frequently the possessions had dwindled
until they barely sufficed to support a chaplain, and no charity was
distributed. The Certificate of St. John’s, Calne, states that abuse
is apparent, because there are no paupers, but all profits go to the
master; these, however, only amounted to 66_s._ 5_d._ St. John’s,
Bedford, was worth 20_s._ a year, and “there is found neuer a poore
person nor hath not ben by the space of many yeres.” In some cases the
foundation had entirely dropped out of existence, as at Winchcombe,
where Leland notes that “now the Name onely of Spittle remaineth.”
The Statute of 1545 stated that it was well known that the governors
and wardens of hospitals, or the greatest number of them, did not
exercise due authority nor expend the revenues in alms according to the
foundation. The avowed object of the Act was “to reduce and bring them
into a more decent and convenient order.
[p226]
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