DCSIMG

Matters of Grave Concern - part 15

I suppose you could say the two people mentioned in the following epitaphs were either long suffering or had a lot of stamina. The first concerns Nicholas Toke who lies buried at Great Chart in Kent. His stone has the words:

'He married five wives whom he survived

At the age of 93 he walked to London

To seek a sixth

But died before he found her'

This one at Birdbrook in Essex goes four better.

'Martha Blewitt - the wife of nine husbands successively

Buried eight of them

But last of all the woman died also

And was buried May 7th 1681'

Here is a sendoff to an engine driver, a William Pickering and his fireman, Rchard Edger, the latter dying on Christmas Eve in 1845. It is titled 'The Spiritual Railway'.

'The line to heaven by Christ was made

With heavenly truth the lines are laid

From earth to heaven the line extends

To life eternal where it ends

Repentance is the station then

Where passengers are taken in

No fee is there for them to pay

For Jesus is himself the way

God's word is the first engineer

He points the way to heaven so dear

Through tunnels dark and dreary here

It does the way to glory steer

God's love the fire, His truth the steam

Which drives the engine and the train

All you who would to glory ride

Must come to Christ, in Him abide.

Well, you could say that that one has a real old fashioned gospel message, but now for something completely different from Boston, Massachusetts.

'Here I lie bereft of breath

Because a cough carried me off

Then a coffin they carried me of in'

On the grave of a Cornish music teacher are the words:

'Stephen and Time are both even

Stephen beats Time and now Time's beaten Stephen'

In Cumbria we read:

'This tombstone is a milestone

Hah! How so?

Because beneath lies Miles, who's

Miles below'

The use of the pun is widespread amongst old epitaphs and in this series we have come across them before. Here are further examples, the first from Peterborough Cathedral to Sir Richard Worme.

'Does worm eat Worme? Knight Worme this truth confirm

For here, with worms, lies Worme a dish for worms

Does worm eat Worme? Sure Worme will this deny

For Worme with worms, a dish for worms don't lie

'Tis so and 'tis not so, for free from worms

'Tis certain Worme is blest without his worms'

And in Melton Mowbray churchyard there is a grave for Mrs Stone reading:

'Curious enough, we all must say

That what was stone must now be clay

Most curious still, to own we must

That what was stone must soon be dust'

Doctor Potter, Archbishop of Canterbury, 1736, has this said of him:

'Alack and well a-day

Potter himself is turned to clay'

A Devon epitaph goes:

'The wedding day appointed was

The wedding clothes provided

Bur ere the day did come, alas

He sickened and he dieded (sic)

In County Durham we have:

'Here lies John Hill

A man of skill

Whose age was five times ten

He never did good

And never would

If he lived as long again'

A grave in Kent has the words:

'Fear God keep the commandments and

Don't attempt to climb a tree

For that's what caused the death of me'

Next week in Part 16 - A Famous South Seas Epitaph.


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Sunday 05 February 2012

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