Sybill Arms Little Mote Eynsfor

( 363 ) THE SYBILL ARMS AT LITTLE MOTE, EYNSFORD. BY GEORGE C. DRUCE. IN Vol. XXVI. of Archosologia Cantiana there appeared an article by Mr. E. H. Ernest Hill, A.R.I.B.A., upon the ancient house known as Little Mote, at Eynsford, part of which article was devoted to the arms and pedigree of the Sybill family. These arms appear carved in the two spandrils of the stone fireplace in the lower room, and are illustrated by Mr. Hill. They each represent a tiger gazing at itself in a mirror, its reflection being distinctly visible. After a reference to various other families who bore this device upon their coats of arms, Mr. Hill says : " What the peculiar significance of this coat may be I cannot undertake to determine, though Gruillim is quite equal to the occasion when he proceeds to tell us : ' Some report that those who rob this beast of her yong use a policy to detaine their Damme from following them, by casting sundry Lookingglasses in the way, whereat shee useth long to gaze, whether it be to behold her owne beauty, or because when she seeth her shape in the Glasse, shee thinketh shee seeth one of her yonge ones, and so they escape the swiftness of her pursuite. And thus are many deceived of the substance while they are much busied about th e shado wes."' The ob j ect of the present article is in some measure to fill up the gap in Mr. Hill's. One of the most interesting phases of the study of Heraldry is to trace the sources of the large number of animal and bird subjects that were used as crests. Perhaps the most fruitful in this respect was that important class of mediaeval MSS. known as the Bestiaries, or Books of Beasts. The Bestiarium, or Physiologus, as it was termed in its earlier form, was a kind of religious Natural History book. Many of them were illustrated. The text accompanying the illus364 THE SYBILL ARMS tration gives a description of the animal's nature and habits, often including a fanciful derivation of its name; then follow quotations from the Bible, either mentioning or apparently alluding to the animal; and lastly, the whole was employed to convey some religious or moral lessons to the reader. There is very considerable variation in the different MSS., both in illustration and text, and the symbolism is in some cases entirely different according to the different schools. These books were extremely popular in the Middle Ages, and were widely read, and they afford a key to many animal devices, whether appearing in ecclesiastical buildings, in heraldry, or as inn signs. What motives were present towards the choice of particular animals or birds for knightly crests must be a matter of conjecture, because, although such qualities as courage, gentleness, or constancy may have been expressed or implied in particular animals in the MSS., we do not find in effect that crests were confined to these, but obnoxious, beasts were also freely adopted, although they appear in some instances to have acquired a different signification heraldically. Some of the illustrated Bestiaries contain particulars of from 100 to 120 beasts, birds, and reptiles, and it would be safer to conclude that the fact that these MSS. were religious in character was the more powerful motive, without specifying too exactly the qualifications of the animals themselves. The " Tiger and Mirror " subject was among those adopted in heraldry, and by reference to the MSS. we can ascertain the story. The appended illustration (I.) is reproduced from MS. Add. 11,283 (B.M.), an English Latin Bestiary of the thirteenth century, and shews the full details. On the left is a tiger biting and pawing a mirror, in the centre a conventional tree, and on the right a hunter on horseback riding off with the cub. The illustrations in this MS. are beautifully coloured; the tiger's spots and stripes are well delineated, the former being painted in blue and white circles, the latter in blue and red wavy lines, while the mirror has a blue centre surrounded by white, red, and green circles, evidently intended to reflect the colours of the tiger. .1* ""3 Vi \ , s *3 53 - • £ §* i * s * ~; ^53 a < a v * « « S*££ • •*»•» • -it - S • i* . r«# c »j .. g e «H , g g gis' £ •* ox LU I h Q Z < u h LU I h £ o u AT LITTLE MOTE, EYNSPORD. 36 5 In MS. Harl. 4751 (B.M.) the details are much the same, but the hunter is armed with a sword. In MS. 12 F. xiii. (B.M.) the hunter is in mail and surcoat. In MS. Harl. 3244 (B.M.) the tiger is pawing a green mirror, while the hunter rides off with the cub on a blue horse, holding another mirror. In MS. 12 C. xix. (B.M.), a Flemish Bestiary, the tiger is blue with spots of a darker blue, and the hunter holds a blue cub. He is in a long green tunic with brown cloak, on a pale yellowish horse with blue and brown saddlecloths. In MS. Ashmole 1511 (Bod.) the details correspond generally with the above. In MS. Slo. 3544 (B.M.) the tiger appears alone, with red and green spots. These details are sufficient to establish the connection with the heraldic device at Little Mote. For an explanation of the story we turn to the text of MS. Add. 11,283, of which I give a full translation: "The tigress is so called on account of its rapid flight; for this is the word which the Persians, Greeks, and Medes use for { arrow.' Now it is a beast adorned with numerous spots and wonderful for its courage and swiftness.* And from its name the river Tigris is called, as that is the most rapid of all rivers. These (beasts) Hircania especially produces. The tigress, indeed, when it finds its lair empty and its offspring carried off, at once follows on the track of the robber, who, though riding on ever so swift a horse, when he sees that he is being outstripped by the swiftness of the beast and that no possible means Of evading it are at hand, has recourse to a cunning artifice, as follows: When he sees it close to him, he throws down a sphere of glass. The tigress is deceived by her own reflection, and believes it to be her offspring. She checks her flight, desiring to recover her cub. Once more relaxing her useless gaze she bounds forward to catch the horseman with all her strength, and under the stimulus of anger rapidly overtakes the fugitive. Again by throwing * There is an error on the part of the copyist in the Latin text of this MS., which I point out because it falls within the part illustrated. " Variis distincta mirabilis virtute et velocitate miraclis," should read as in Harl. 4571, " Variis distincta maculis virtute et veloeitate mirabilis." 366 THE SYBILL ARMS down another sphere he retards her pursuit, and yet the memory of the fraud does not drown the instinct of the mother. She paws her own empty reflection, and crouches down as if to suckle her cub. Thus misled by her zealous maternal care, she loses both her offspring and her revenge." I t will be noticed that beyond the sentiment involved in the last sentence there is no symbolism here, but it must not be supposed that the subject was not made use of in that way, because if we turn to one of the French Bestiaries, that written by Pierre, a " clerc," early in the thirteenth century at the instance of "l'eveque Philipon Cuers," who was Bishop of Beauvais 1175 to 1217, we find it fully developed. This MS. is in the Picardy dialect, and somewhat difficult to translate.* The illustrations differ considerably from those in the English Latin MSS. The hunter is on foot, and carries two cubs, while the tiger, which has wings, is gazing at a mirror fixed to a tree, another being below (PLATE III.). In MS. Harl. 273 (B.M.), a Bestiaire d'Amours in Old French, the hunter is also on foot, and carries a cub and a mirror. The text commences : " Une beste est qui est apelee tigre, cest une maniere de sarpent," and there is no mention of the river Tigris. A translation runs thus: " There is a beast which is called tiger; it is a kind of serpent. This beast is of a nature so courageous and fierce that no living man dares to approach it. When the beast has young and the hunters have found out the place where they are, they obtain possession of them by setting to work in the way you will now see. The hunters take mirrors and carry them with them when they go to capture the young of the tiger. Then they watch until they see the tiger go off and leave its den and its young; they then seize the cubs, and place the mirrors in the path just when they leave. The character of the tiger is such that however angry it may be it is unable to look in the mirror without its gaze becoming fixed. It believes then that it is its cub that it sees in the mirror; it recognizes its figure with great satisfaction, and believes * The text is given in Cahier and Martin's Melanges oVArchaologie, vol. ii., p. X40. ,;,.,..£/. I f •1 . VU t j ^ / ^ lK^ t ^ f - tmo - ^ ' fji cafe** THE TIGER AND THE MIRROR (III). From an early thirteenth-century Pieardy Bestiary (Paris). AT LITTLE MOTE, EYNSEOBD. 367 positively to have found its cub. It delights in admiringthe beauty of its form to such an extent that it forgets to pursue those who have taken its young, and stops where it is as still as a captive beast. It is thus that the hunters get possession of the cubs." Physiologus says on this subject: " Take care you are not like the tiger. And Amos the prophet proclaims that this world is an image of the forest where the tigers abound, and adjures us to keep watch attentively over our cub, that is to say, over our soul. For the hunters {i.e., the devil) lie in wait for us and spy us out. They always have mirrors ready, if they see a chance to be able to seize our cub. The mirrors are the elaborate feasts, the great pleasures of the world that we desire ; fine clothes, horses, beautiful women, and all the other objects of sin. It is thus that the hunters produce an image in the mirror that they throw before man. I t is why every man should consecrate himself to the service of his Creator, for then no enemy would have any power over the Soul of man, that is to say, over the cub which he covets." The symbolism here speaks for itself, and is typical of what occurs throughout the Bestiary. Sometimes it takes the form of dogmatic Christian teaching; sometimes it points the virtues of Christ and his followers, or condemns his ill-treatment by the Jews and foretells their punishment; or again is more moral, taking the line that the Devil is always ready with his wiles and sinners getting into his clutches will be destroyed. The ingenuity with which the various characteristics of the animals are turned is marvellous. The monkey carrying its favourite young one in front is the Devil carrying off sinners whom he loves to hell; the peacock's beautiful feathers, on the other hand, denote the Gentile nations coming to Christ, resplendent with many virtues through His grace. The feature about the illustration in the French MS. is the wings of the tiger. In dealing with this subject le Pere Cahier says {Melanges d'Archwologie, vol. ii., p. 141) : " Si le copiste n'a point trahi l'auteur en classant le tigre parmi les serpents, ce serait le seul serpent non pas & ailes, mais b, 368 THE SYBILL ARMS quatre pieds, dont nos miniatures offriraient l'exemple. Cette addition des ailes doit done avoir une autre cause; et s'expliquerait mieux par 1'expression dont se sert le livre ' de Bestiis' attribue a Hughes de Saint-Victor (p. 438) en exposant pourquoi cet animal, comme le grand fleuve de la Perse, a recu un nom qui rappelle le vol d'une fleche. f Tigris vocata est propter volucrem fugam,' eclairissement philologique qui aura entraine un ' quiproquo ' zoologique." This explanation may be sound, but it is a curious circumstance that whereas the reference to the swiftness of the river Tigris and the arrow occur in the English Latin Bestiaries, none of the illustrations in these MSS. that I have inspected shew the tiger with wings; whereas in the French MS., where there is no mention of either, the tiger has wings. It is true the Picardy Bestiary was translated from the Latin, but from what version it is impossible to say. I think the artist followed the text, and seeing the tiger described as "une maniere de sarpent," he gave it wings, because it was the custom to represent nearly all serpents or snakes in dragon form, and therefore winged.* The allusion to the rapidity of the river Tigris came into the Bestiary from Pliny's Natural History. In Book VI., ch. 31, he describes it, and tells us that " when its course becomes more rapid it assumes the name of Tigris, given to it on account of its swiftness, that word signifying an arrow in the Median language." In Lucan's Pharsalia (Book VIII., 439) there is also an allusion to the swiftness of the Tigris as opposed to the slow current of the Euphrates. Both Pliny and Lucan, amongst others, were largely drawn upon by the writers of the Bestiaries, as their names are frequently mentioned, and moreover a variety of curious notions appear that are distinctly traceable to the former. In the case of the tiger, not only are Ave indebted to Pliny for the allusion to the river Tigris, but also for the main part of the story. In Book VIII., ch. 25, he says: "Hyrcania and India produce the tiger, an animal of tremendous swiftness, a quality * Spaces were left in the text for the illustrations to be filled in afterwards. In MS. 12 ]?. xiii. (B.M.) they are only partly completed, AT LITTLE MOTE, EYNSEORD. 369 which is more especially tested when we deprive it of all its whelps, which are always very numerous. They are seized by the hunter, who lies in wait for them, being provided with the fleetest horse he can possibly obtain, and which he frequently changes for a fresh one. As soon as the female finds her lair empty—for the male takes no care whatever of his offspring—headlong she darts forth, and traces them by the smell. Her approach is made known by her cries, upon which the hunter throws down one of the whelps; this she snatches up with her teeth, and more swiftly even, under the weight, returns to her lair, then again sets out in pursuit; and this she continues to do until the hunter has reached his vessel, while the animal vainly vents her fury upon the shore."* There is no indication here for what purpose the cubs were required, but that there was a demand for tigers in Pome for show purposes we learn from various sources. Pliny tells us (Book VIII., ch. 25) that a tame tiger was first exhibited in the arena by the Emperor Augustus, and that the Emperor Claudius exhibited four at one time. Martial also mentions them as being exhibited by Domitian. I t will be seen that for heraldic purposes only a part of the subject, the Tiger and the Mirror, was taken. The Mermaid or Syren affords another instance, the accessories being dropped. Mr. Hill gives the full blazon of the Sybill coat as: " Argent, a tiger statant reguardant coward gules at a mirror on the ground azure, handled or." I append a drawing of a crest of the fifteenth century, f for which I am indebted to Mr. Oswald Barron, F.S.A., as it illustrates the Sybill coat with the exception of the tail " coward," but I am unfortunately unable to give any particulars of the family to which it belongs. The employment in heraldry of these subjects from the Mediaeval Bestiaries was of less importance than the influence they had on ecclesiastical architecture. They were drawn upon extensively for decorative details for doorways, * Bonn's Trans, t See tail-piece. YQIt. XXVIII. 370 THE SYBILL ARMS fonts, bench-ends, misericordes, etc. Some, such as the mermaid, griffin, or centaur, are plentiful; others, as the unicorn, asp, or peacock, are scarce. At the present moment I know of only one example of the Tiger and the Mirror, upon a misericorde of the fifteenth century at Chester Cathedral, which, by the kindness of Mr. F. H. Crossley of Knutsford, I am able to reproduce (II. 1). It agrees very well with the illustrations in the Latin Bestiaries at the British Museum, except that the hunter is shewn as a knight in armour. He carries the cub in his left hand, while he is in the act of throwing down a mirror with the other. We have here a good illustration of the composition of the subject being subordinated to exigencies of space. It would have been inconvenient for the carver to have made the hunter upright on account of the ledge, and so he has adroitly made him bending backwards in the act of dropping the mirror. The duplication of the tigers, which are more like dogs, is in the same way due to the need for symmetry. One of them is pawing the mirror exactly as in the MSS. I t is to be hoped that more architectural examples will be forthcoming. But this does not exhaust the list, for such legendary subjects were freely used for the ornamentation of such objects as caskets. An inspection of the ivory caskets in the Maskell collection at the British Museum shew examples of the Unicorn legend, the Lai d'Aristote, and Round Table romances, but I have not noticed the Tiger legend. That it was used, however, in this way appears from an account of a small carved wooden casket which was contributed in 1876 by the late Professor Westwood to the Journal of the Royal Archaeological Institute (vol. xxxiii., p. 400), with illustrations, one of which the Council of the Society has kindly allowed me to reproduce. On the bottom appears, among other subjects, the Tiger and the Mirror. It shews the hunter on foot carrying the cub, while the tiger gazes at a mirror set in a tree. Professor Westwood puts the date of this casket at the end of the thirteenth century. The symbolism of the casket subjects is usually chivalrous rather than religious, Photn.1 1.—FROM CHESTER CATHEDRAL. C-P. E. Cramtey. 7>'"1'"-] 2.—FROM LITTLE MOTE, ETXSFORD. THE TIGER AND THE MIRROR. (II.) rH f . * . y t»t . -KTSr W c*Ki*

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