The earliest European work with which we have to concern ourselves is the
Bayeux tapestry. Although this is really needlework, it is usually treated as
tapestry, and there seems to be no special reason for departing
from the custom. Some authorities state that the Bayeux tapestry was made
by the Empress Matilda, daughter of Henry I., while others consider it the
achievement of Queen Matilda, the wife of William the Conqueror. She is
recorded to have sat quietly awaiting her lord's coming while she
embroidered this quaint souvenir of his prowess in conquest. A veritable
mediæval Penelope, it is claimed that she directed her ladies in this work,
which is thoroughly Saxon in feeling and costuming. It is undoubtedly the
most interesting remaining piece of needlework of the eleventh century, and
it would be delightful if one could believe the legend of its construction. Its
attribution to Queen Matilda is very generally doubted by those who have
devoted much thought to the subject. Mr. Frank Rede Fowke gives it as his
opinion, based on a number of arguments too long to quote in this place,
that the tapestry was not made by Queen Matilda, but was ordered by
Bishop Odo as an ornament for the nave of Bayeux Cathedral, and was
executed by Norman craftsmen in that city. Dr. Rock also favours the theory
that it was worked by order of Bishop Odo. Odo was a brother of William the
Conqueror and might easily have been interested in preserving so important
a record of the Battle of Hastings. Dr. Rock states that the tradition that
Queen Matilda executed the tapestry did not arise at all until 1730.

The work is on linen, executed in worsteds. Fowke gives the length as two
hundred and thirty feet, while Page 156 it is only nineteen inches wide,—a
long narrow strip of embroidery, in many colours on a cream white ground.
In all, there are six hundred and twenty-three figures, besides two hundred
horses and dogs, five hundred and five animals, thirty-seven buildings, forty
-one ships, forty-nine trees, making in all the astonishing number of one
thousand five hundred and twelve objects!

The colours are in varying shades of blue, green, red and yellow worsted.
The colours are used as a child employs crayons; just as they come to
hand. When a needleful of one thread was used up, the next was taken,
apparently quite irrespective of the colour or shade. Thus, a green horse will
be seen standing on red legs, and a red horse will sport a blue stocking! Mr.
J. L. Hayes believes that these varicoloured animals are planned purposely:
that two legs of a green horse are rendered in red on the further side, to
indicate perspective, the same principle accounting for two blue legs on a
yellow horse!















The buildings are drawn in a very primitive way, without consideration for size
or proportion. The solid part of the embroidery is couched on, while much of
the work is only rendered in outline. But the spirited little figures are full of
action, and suggest those in the celebrated Utrecht Psalter. Sometimes one
figure will be as high as the whole width of the material, while again, the
people will be tiny. In the scene representing the burial of Edward the
Confessor, in Westminster Abbey, the roof of the church is several inches
lower than the Page 157 bier which is borne on the shoulders of men nearly
as tall as the tower!

The naïve treatment of details is delicious. Harold, when about to embark,
steps with bare legs into the tide: the water is laid out in the form of a hill of
waves, in order to indicate that it gets deeper later on. It might serve as an
illustration of the Red Sea humping up for the benefit of the Israelites! The
curious little stunted figure with a bald head, in the group of the conference
of messengers, would appear to be an abortive attempt to portray a person
at some distance—he is drawn much smaller than the others to suggest that
he is quite out of hearing! This seems to have been the only attempt at
rendering the sense of perspective. Then comes a mysterious little lady in a
kind of shrine, to whom a clerk is making curious advances; to the casual
observer it would appear that the gentleman is patting her on the cheek, but
we are informed by Thierry that this represents an embroideress, and that
the clerk is in the act of ordering the Bayeux Tapestry itself! Conjecture is
swamped concerning the real intention of this group, and no certain
diagnosis has ever been pronounced! The Countess of Wilton sees in this
group "a female in a sort of porch, with a clergyman in the act of
pronouncing a benediction upon her!" Every one to his taste.

A little farther on there is another unexplained figure: that of a man with his
feet crossed, swinging joyously on a rope from the top of a tower.

Page 158 Soon after the Crowning of Harold, may be seen a crowd of people
gazing at an astronomic phenomenon which has been described by an old
chronicler as a "hairy star." It is recorded as "a blazing starre" such as
"never appears but as a prognostic of afterclaps," and again, as "dreadful to
be seen, with bloudie haires, and all over rough and shagged at the top."
Another author complacently explains that comets "were made to the end
that the ethereal regions might not be more void of monsters than the ocean
is of whales and other great thieving fish!" A very literal interpretation of this
"hairy star" has been here embroidered, carefully fitted out with cog-wheels
and all the paraphernalia of a conventional mediæval comet.







In the scenes dealing with the preparation of the army and the arrangement
of their food, there occurs the lassooing of an ox; the amount of action
concentrated in this group is really wonderful. The ox, springing clear of the
ground, with all his legs gathered up under him, turns his horned head,
which is set on an unduly long neck, for the purpose of inspecting his
pursuers. No better origin for the ancient tradition of the cow who jumped
over the moon could be adduced. And what shall we say of the acrobatic
antics of Leofwine and Gyrth when meeting their deaths in battle? These
warriors are turning elaborate handsprings in their last moments, while
horses are represented as performing such somersaults that they are
practically inverted. In the border of this part of the tapestry, soldiers are
Page 159 seen stripping off the coats of mail from the dead warriors on the
battle-field; this they do by turning the tunic inside out and pulling it off at
the head, and the resulting attitudes of the victims are quaint and realistic in
the extreme! The border has been appropriately described as "a layer of
dead men." In the tenth and eleventh centuries one of the regular petitions
in the Litany was "From the fury of the Normans Good Lord Deliver us."

The Bayeux Tapestry was designated, in 1746, as "the noblest monument in
the world relating to our old English History." It has passed through most
trying vicissitudes, having been used in war time as a canvas covering to a
transport wagon, among other experiences. For centuries this precious
treasure was neglected and not understood. In his "Tour" M. Ducarel states:
"The priests... to whom we addressed ourselves for a sight of this
remarkable piece of antiquity, knew nothing of it; the circumstance only of its
being annually hung up in their church led them to understand what we
wanted, no person then knowing that the object of our inquiries any ways
related to the Conqueror." This was in the nineteenth century.
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