Newstead Abbey
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The ghost of a spiteful monk who delighted in misfortune was said to haunt Newstead Abbey, Nottinghamshire, England, the ancestral home of the colorful Byron family. The abbey was the priory of the Black Augustine canons for almost 400 years. But in the sixteenth century King Henry VIII, an gry with the Roman Catholic church for opposing the annulment of his marriage to Catherine of Aragon, began confiscating church lands and parceling out some of them to his nobles. Newstead Ab bey fell to the Byrons and remained in the family for the next 300 years. The last Lord Byron to inherit it was none other than the Romantic poet and handsome rakehell, George Gordon, who not only loved the estate but found fodder for his verse in the the most notable of its several ghosts, the Black Friar.
No one knows who this restless soul might have been in life, but some believe that his shade, cowled and dark visaged, repre sented the church’s curse on usurpers
of its lands. Certainly the Black Friar seemed ill-disposed toward the Byrons. Legend tells that when a family member died, the phantom monk would make a visit to gloat at the tragedy. Conversely, it would present a sorrowful face at happy occasions sUch as births. The appear ance of the grief-stricken mien was the
: norm at most family weddings as well but not all. The poet Lord Byron averred
he saw the ghost looking cheerful enough
at his own marnage to Annabella Mil banke, which he would come to descnbe as the unhappiest event of his life.
In his Don Juan, Byron alludes to the
Black Friar:
By the marriage-bed of their lords, ‘tis
said,
He flits on the bridal eve;
And ‘tis held as faith, to their bed of
death
He comes—but not to grieve.
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