Sir John Ernele, great-grandson of Sir John Ernele
above sayd, and eldest sonn of Sir John Ernele, late
Chancellour of the Exchequer, had the command of a
flag-ship, and was eminent in some sea services.
He married the daughter and heir of Sir John Kerle
of.... in Herefordshire.
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A digression. — Anno 1633, I entred into
my grammar at the latin schoole at Yatton-Keynel,
in the church, where the curate, Mr. Hart, taught
the eldest boyes Virgil, Ovid, Cicero, &c. The
fashion then was to save the forules of their bookes
with a false cover of parchment, sc. old manuscript,
which I [could not] was too young to understand; but
I was pleased with the elegancy of the writing and
the coloured initiall letters. I remember the
rector here, Mr. Wm. Stump, great gr.-son of St. the
cloathier of Malmesbury, had severall manuscripts
of the abbey. He was a proper man and a good fellow;
and, when he brewed a barrell of speciall ale, his
use was to stop the bung- hole, under the clay, with
a sheet of manuscript; he sayd nothing did it so well:
which me thought did grieve me then to see. Afterwards
I went to schoole to Mr. Latimer at Leigh-delamer,
the next parish, where was the like use of covering
of bookes. In my grandfather’s dayes the
manuscripts flew about like butterflies. All music
bookes, account bookes, copie bookes, &c. were covered
with old manuscripts, as wee cover them now with blew
paper or marbled paper; and the glovers at Malmesbury
made great havoc of them; and gloves were wrapt up
no doubt in many good pieces of antiquity. Before
the late warres a world of rare manuscripts perished
hereabout; for within half a dozen miles of this place
were the abbey of Malmesbury, where it may be presumed
the library was as well furnished with choice copies
as most libraries of England; and perhaps in this
library we might have found a correct Pliny’s
Naturall History, which Cantus, a monk here, did abridge
for King Henry the Second. Within the aforesaid
compass was Broad stock Priory, Stan Leigh Abbey,
Farleigh Abbey, Bath Abbey, eight miles, and Cirencester
Abbey, twelve miles. Anno 1638 I was transplanted
to Blandford-schoole, in Dorset, to Mr. Wm. Sutton.
(In Mr. Wm. Gardner’s time it was the most eminent
schoole for the education of gentlemen in the West
of England.) Here also was the use of covering of bookes
with old parchments, sc. leases, &c., but I never
saw any thing of a manuscript there. Hereabout
were no abbeys or convents for men. One may also
perceive by the binding of old bookes how the old manuscripts
went to wrack in those dayes. Anno 1647 I went
to Parson Stump out of curiosity, to see his manuscripts,
whereof I had seen some in my childhood; but by that
time they were lost and disperse. His sons were
gunners and souldiers, and scoured their gunnies with
them; but he shewed me severall old deeds granted
by the Lords Abbots, with their scales annexed, which
I suppose his sonn Capt. Tho. Stump of Malmesbury
hath still. [I have quoted part of this curious paragraph
in my Memoir of Aubrey, 4to. 1845.-J. B.]
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