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THE MONUMENT.

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Pudding Lane it broke out. When examined, however, before a Committee of the House of Commons, all he could state was, that, according to his usual custom, he had visited every part of his house at twelve o'clock at night, at which hour everything appeared to be in perfect security. Only in one of the grates, he affirmed, was there any fire, which he raked out, and as the room was paved with bricks, he considered it utterly impossible that the conflagration could have been caused by the smouldering embers.

Prompted by rage and bigotry, general opinion attributed the fire to the Roman Catholics, though for what purpose they should have been the incendiaries does not appear. The strictest possible scrutiny was subsequently carried on by a Parliamentary Committee, without in any degree implicating them; and yet, in deference to popular prejudice, the Government, after a lapse of fifteen years, most unfairly permitted the following inscription to be engraved on the Monument :

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"This pillar was set up in perpetual remembrance of that most dreadful burning of this Protestant City, begun and carried on by the treachery and malice of the Popish faction, in the beginning of September, in the year of our Lord 1666, in order to the carrying on their horrid plot for extirpating the Protestant religion, and Old English liberty, and the introducing Popery and Slavery."

It is needless to remark, that it is to the calumny contained in this inscription that Pope, himself a Roman Catholic, alludes in the well-known couplet which we have already quoted.

At the accession of James the Second, the obnoxious inscription was by his orders effaced. King William, however, permitted it to be restored after the Revolution, but it now no longer disgraces the noble column, having been erased by an Act of Common Council, on the 26th January, 1831.

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THE MONUMENT.'

The total damage which the City sustained by the fire was computed at no less than ten millions seven hundred and sixteen thousand pounds. Fearful, however, as was the calamity, it proved in the end a blessing. For centuries past, the plague had continued lurking in the obscure and filthy allies of the City; periodically bursting forth from its lurking-places, and committing the most frightful ravages; and accordingly, to obviate this evil, the new streets were made wider, and the inhabitants admitted to the blessings of light and air. The consequence has been the total disappearance of the plague in London since the great fire.

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A few words remain to be said respecting the Monument on Fish Street Hill. This fine column, which is of the Doric order, measures two hundred and two feet in height, being twenty-four feet higher than Trajan's Pillar at Rome. was commenced by Sir Christopher Wren in 1671, and completed in 1677, at an expense of £13,700. The staircase in the interior consists of three hundred and forty-five steps. On the west side of the pedestal is a bas-relief,—the work of Caius Gabriel Cibber, the father of the poet,-in which the principal figure is a female, representing the city of London, lamenting over a heap of ruins. Behind her is Time, gradually raising her up; and at her side is the figure of Providence, who gently touches her with one hand, while with a winged sceptre in the other she directs her attention to two goddesses in the clouds-one holding a cornucopia, the emblem of plenty; the other holding a branch of the palm-tree, the emblem of peace. At her feet is a beehive, denoting that industry is the source of wealth, and that the greatest misfortunes may be overcome by perseverance and application. In another part is a view of the City in flames; the inhabitants being represented in great consternation, lifting up their hands to heaven and invoking its mercy.

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On a raised platform, opposite to the burning city, stands the figure of Charles the Second, in a Roman habit, with a truncheon in his hand, invoking Liberty, Architecture, and Science to descend to the aid of the city. Behind the King stands his brother the Duke of York, holding a garland in one hand to crown the rising city, and a sword in the other for her defence. The three other sides of the base of the column contain Latin inscriptions; the one on the north, detailing the extent and particulars of the conflagration; that on the south, explaining the measures taken under the auspices of Charles the Second for rebuilding and re-beautifying the City. On the east side are the names of the Lord Mayors who were in office during the period the column was in course of erection.*

The compliments paid to Charles, both in the bas-relief, and in the inscriptions, are not greater than he deserved. His personal exertions during the progress of the conflagration, and the interest which he subsequently took in the sufferings of his subjects, were certainly highly to his credit. Moreover, had the plans been adopted for rebuilding the City which emanated from the genius of Sir Christopher Wren, and which were warmly supported by his royal master, London would unquestionably have been the most stately city in the world. Unfortunately, however, space was of too much value-property too much divided—and people in too great a hurry to repair past losses by future profits-to admit of the realization of these magnificent projects.

* "Six persons have thrown themselves off the monument :-William Green, a weaver, June 25th, 1750; Thomas Cradock, a baker, July 7th, 1788; Lyon Levi, a Jew, Jan. 18th, 1810; a girl named Moyes, the daughter of a baker in Heminge's Row, Sept. 11th, 1839; a boy named Hawes, October 18th, 1839; and a girl of the age of seventeen, in August, 1842. This kind of death becoming popular, it was deemed advisible to encage the Monument as we now see it.""-Cunningham's London," Art.

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It had been the intention of Sir Christopher Wren to surmount the Monument with a statue of Charles the Second, and when he laid his original design before the King, the column was thus ornamented. Charles, however, declined the honour. "Not," says Wren, "that his Majesty disliked a statue; but he was pleased to think a large ball of metal, gilt, would be more agreeable." Accordingly the present gilded vase of flames was substituted for the proposed statue. The Latin inscriptions on the Monument were written by Dr. Gale, Dean of York.

FISH STREET HILL, EASTCHEAP, GRACECHURCH STREET, ST. OLAVE'S, HART STREET.

KING'S HEAD TAVERN."-ST. MAGNUS THE MARTYR.-PUDDING LANE.BOAR'S HEAD TAVERN.-SIR JOHN FALSTAFF.-LOMBARD MERCHANTS. EARL OF SUFFOLK.—FENCHURCH STREET.QUEEN ELIZABETH.— ST. OLAVE'S CHURCH.-SIR JOHN MENNIS.-MONUMENT TO PEPYS'S WIFE.-DR. MILLS. -WHITTINGTON'S RESIDENCE.-LADY FANSHAWE.

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N addition to the connection of Fish Street Hill with the great fire, many interesting associations are attached to the spot. Here it is that Shakspeare makes Jack Cade exclaim at the head of his rabble followers,

-"Up Fish Street! down Saint Magnus' corner! kill and knock down! throw them into Thames! What noise is this I hear? Dare any be so bold to sound retreat or parley when I command them kill !"—King Henry VI., part 2, act iv., sc. 8.

In the fourteenth century-when the Kings of England held their court in the Tower, and when the site of the present populous thoroughfares constituted the court district of the metropolis-we find Edward the Black Prince residing on Fish Street Hill. The house, or inn, of the Black Prince, which was of stone and of considerable size, stood at the end of Crooked Lane, facing Monument Yard. In the reign of Elizabeth it had been converted into an inn, or hostelry, and was known by the sign of the Black Bell.

King's Head Court, within a few paces of the Monument,

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