The Parish Clerk (1907) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 362 pages of information about The Parish Clerk (1907).

The Parish Clerk (1907) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 362 pages of information about The Parish Clerk (1907).
The vicar was excommunicated in 1589.  His successor quickly resigned, and the next vicar was soon involved in feuds with some of his puritanically inclined parishioners.  The quarrel was increased by the unworthy conduct of Robert Smyth, a preacher and lecturer who was appointed and paid by the corporation, and cared little for vicar or bishop.  He was an extreme Puritan, and had a considerable following in the parish.  His refusal to wear a surplice, though ordered to do so by the bishop, brought the dispute to a head.  He was inhibited, but his followers retorted by accusing the vicar of being a companion of tipplers and fooling away his time with pipe and tabor, and finally bringing an accusation against him, on account of which the poor man was cited before the High Commission Court.  The charge came to nothing, and Smyth for a time conformed and wore his surplice.  Then some of the Puritan faction refused to accept the vicar’s ministrations, and two of them were tried at the assizes and sent to gaol.  “If they would rather go to gaol than church,” said the town clerk, “much good may it do them.  I am not of their mind.”  Passive resisters were not encouraged in those days.  But the relations between vicar and lecturer continued strained, and the former bethought him of his faithful clerk, Robert Langdon, as a helper in the ministry.  He applied to the bishop to raise him to the diaconate, and this was done, Langdon being ordained deacon on 21 September, 1606, by William Cotton, Bishop of Exeter.  The record of this notable event, the ordination of a parish clerk, thus appears in the ordination register of the diocese: 

“In festo Matthaei Apostoli Dominus Episcopus in ecclesia parochiali de Silfertone xxi mo die Septembris 1606 ordines sacros celebrando ordinavit, sequuntur Diaconi tunc et ibidinem ordinati videlicet Robertus Langdon de Barnestapli.”

[Footnote 95:  Transactions of the Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature, and Art, 1904, xxxvi. pp. 390-414.]

Langdon remained parish clerk and deacon nineteen years, and the register contained the record of his burial, “Robert Langdon deacon 5th July 1625.”  He seems to have brought peace to the troubled mind of his vicar, whose tombstone declares: 

     “Many are the troubles of the Righteous
     But the Lord delivereth out of all.”

Langdon used to keep the registers, and he began to record in them a series of notes on passing events which add greatly to the interest of such volumes.  Thus we find an account of a grievous fire at Tiverton in 1595, a violent storm at Barnstaple in 1606, and a great frost in the same year; another fire at Tiverton in 1612, and the scraps of Latin which appear show that he was a man of some education.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Parish Clerk (1907) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.