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  • July 1, 1880
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The Masonic Magazine, July 1, 1880: Page 42

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    Article THE STORY OF ARDEN OF FAVERSHAM. Page 1 of 4 →
Page 42

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Story Of Arden Of Faversham.

THE STORY OF ARDEN OF FAVERSHAM .

BY THOMAS B . TKOWSDALE , Author of " Glimpses of Olden Kent , " " Lore of the Months , " Sfc . ABOUT the middle of the sixteenth century a terrible tragedy in private life was enacted at the quiet old town of Faversham , in Kentthe

, memory of which is preserved by a popular play grounded upon the event . In the year 1539 , "bluff King Hal , " having ordered the principal part of the monastic buildings at Faversham to be razed to the ground , granted the site of the Abbey , with some adjoining lands , to Sir Thomas Cheyney , who alienated them five years afterwards to Mr . Thomas Arden , or Ardern , a gentleman of Faversham . It was this Arden whose atrocious murder in the

year 1550 has become lastingly impressed upon the history of the town . Holinshed , in his " Chronicle , " furnishes particulars of the tragic event , ancl we cannot do better than follow the old chronicler ' s account . Arden ' s wife , " Mistress Alice , young , tall , and well favoured of shape and countenance , " formed an improper connection with one Mosbye , a "black , swart man . " Mosbye had been servant to Sir Edward North , Alice ' s father-in-law ,

and subsequently settled as a tailor in London . The infatuated wife , lost to all sense of honour and duty , conspired with her paramour to put an end to her husband ' s existence in order that she might marry the profligate " black , swart man . " They employed , as their confederates , one John Green , a Faversham tailor ; George Bradshaw , a goldsmith of the same town ; ancl one " Black Will , of Calyce [ Calais ] , a murderer , which murderer w as privily sent for from Calyce by the earnest suite , appoyntment ancl confederacye of Alice Arden ancl Thomas Mosbye . " The conspirators watched Master Arden

" walking in Poule ' s ' ( St . Paul s Cathedral , the nave of which was a public promenade in those clays ) , but could not find an opportunit y to murder him . They then lay in wait for him on Rainham Down , ancl a second time in Broomy Close ( both in the vicinity of Faversham ) ; but on all these occasions were frustrated by accidental circumstances from accomplishing their purpose . The wicked wife then laid a plot for murdering her husband in his own house . She procured the services of Mosbye ' s sisterCicelPounderand of two of

, y , Arden ' s domestic servants , Michael Sanderson and Elizabeth Stafford . On a particular day , according to a preconcerted plan , Black Will secreted himself in a closet at the end of Arden ' s parlour . After supper Arden sat clown to play some kind of game with Mosbye , which it had been arranged the latter should invite him to engage in . Green stood at Arden ' s back , holding a candle in his hand "to shaddowe Black Will when he should come out" and

, the other conspirators had their cue . At a given signal in the game " Black Will came with a napkyn in his hand , and sodenlye came behind Arden ' s back , threw the said napkyn over his hedd and face and strangled him ; and forthwith Mosbye stept to him and strake him with a taylor ' s great pressingiron upon the skull to the braine , ancl immediately drew out his dagger , which was great and broadand therewith cut the said Arden ' s throat . " It is added

, , that " Mistress Arden herself , with a knife , gave him seven or ei ght pricks into the breast . " When Black Will had helped to drag the dead bod y into the closet he went to Cicely Pounder ' s house , received ei ght pounds for his nefarious services , ancl left Faversham . Cicel y then proceeded to Arden ' s habitation and assisted in bearing the corpse out into a meadow called the

“The Masonic Magazine: 1880-07-01, Page 42” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01071880/page/42/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
PREFACE TO THE EIGHTH VOLUME. Article 3
Untitled Article 4
ST. JOHN'S LODGE, BOLTON. Article 6
THE MYSTIC CRAFT. Article 8
KLOSS'S MASONIC BIBLIOGRAPHY. Article 9
THE RUNES.* Article 10
A LECTURE ON THE ANTIQUITY OF LAYING CORNER STONES WITH RELIGIOUS AND MYSTICAL CEREMONIES.* Article 12
RIGHTS AND TENETS OF THE ESSENES. Article 17
OLD ST. PAUL'S. Article 19
THE WAKEFIELD NEW MASONIC HALL. Article 21
BOOKS AND BOOKS. Article 24
MASONIC ADDRESS. Article 27
WANTED—A WIFE! Article 29
THE YORK FABRIC ROLLS. Article 30
VINOVIUM. Article 32
" ONCE UPON A TIME." Article 34
ENCHANTMENT. Article 35
A SERMON Article 36
THE LONDON COMPANIES. Article 40
THE END OF THE PLAY. Article 41
THE STORY OF ARDEN OF FAVERSHAM. Article 42
MASONIC AND GENERAL ARCHAEOLOGIA. Article 45
TRURO: Article 49
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Page 42

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Story Of Arden Of Faversham.

THE STORY OF ARDEN OF FAVERSHAM .

BY THOMAS B . TKOWSDALE , Author of " Glimpses of Olden Kent , " " Lore of the Months , " Sfc . ABOUT the middle of the sixteenth century a terrible tragedy in private life was enacted at the quiet old town of Faversham , in Kentthe

, memory of which is preserved by a popular play grounded upon the event . In the year 1539 , "bluff King Hal , " having ordered the principal part of the monastic buildings at Faversham to be razed to the ground , granted the site of the Abbey , with some adjoining lands , to Sir Thomas Cheyney , who alienated them five years afterwards to Mr . Thomas Arden , or Ardern , a gentleman of Faversham . It was this Arden whose atrocious murder in the

year 1550 has become lastingly impressed upon the history of the town . Holinshed , in his " Chronicle , " furnishes particulars of the tragic event , ancl we cannot do better than follow the old chronicler ' s account . Arden ' s wife , " Mistress Alice , young , tall , and well favoured of shape and countenance , " formed an improper connection with one Mosbye , a "black , swart man . " Mosbye had been servant to Sir Edward North , Alice ' s father-in-law ,

and subsequently settled as a tailor in London . The infatuated wife , lost to all sense of honour and duty , conspired with her paramour to put an end to her husband ' s existence in order that she might marry the profligate " black , swart man . " They employed , as their confederates , one John Green , a Faversham tailor ; George Bradshaw , a goldsmith of the same town ; ancl one " Black Will , of Calyce [ Calais ] , a murderer , which murderer w as privily sent for from Calyce by the earnest suite , appoyntment ancl confederacye of Alice Arden ancl Thomas Mosbye . " The conspirators watched Master Arden

" walking in Poule ' s ' ( St . Paul s Cathedral , the nave of which was a public promenade in those clays ) , but could not find an opportunit y to murder him . They then lay in wait for him on Rainham Down , ancl a second time in Broomy Close ( both in the vicinity of Faversham ) ; but on all these occasions were frustrated by accidental circumstances from accomplishing their purpose . The wicked wife then laid a plot for murdering her husband in his own house . She procured the services of Mosbye ' s sisterCicelPounderand of two of

, y , Arden ' s domestic servants , Michael Sanderson and Elizabeth Stafford . On a particular day , according to a preconcerted plan , Black Will secreted himself in a closet at the end of Arden ' s parlour . After supper Arden sat clown to play some kind of game with Mosbye , which it had been arranged the latter should invite him to engage in . Green stood at Arden ' s back , holding a candle in his hand "to shaddowe Black Will when he should come out" and

, the other conspirators had their cue . At a given signal in the game " Black Will came with a napkyn in his hand , and sodenlye came behind Arden ' s back , threw the said napkyn over his hedd and face and strangled him ; and forthwith Mosbye stept to him and strake him with a taylor ' s great pressingiron upon the skull to the braine , ancl immediately drew out his dagger , which was great and broadand therewith cut the said Arden ' s throat . " It is added

, , that " Mistress Arden herself , with a knife , gave him seven or ei ght pricks into the breast . " When Black Will had helped to drag the dead bod y into the closet he went to Cicely Pounder ' s house , received ei ght pounds for his nefarious services , ancl left Faversham . Cicel y then proceeded to Arden ' s habitation and assisted in bearing the corpse out into a meadow called the

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