Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 60.djvu/328

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church, Wesley was in other respects very conservative. He advocated the G compass for the organ; and when in 1855 the huge instrument in St. George's Hall, Liverpool (in the construction of which he was the chief musical adviser to the corporation), was built, he wanted both manuals and pedals to begin at G; but a compromise was insisted upon by ‘Father’ Willis, the builder, whereby the manuals began at G and the pedals at C! His views on ‘equal temperament’ were diametrically opposite to those held in the present day. He wrote: ‘The practice of tuning organs by equal temperament is, in my humble opinion, most erroneous’ (Musical Standard, 1 April 1863 p. 242, 15 June 1863 p. 321, 1 July 1863 p. 337).

In addition to those already mentioned, Wesley's compositions include:

  1. Eleven other anthems and three collects.
  2. Services in E, F; chant services in F (two), G, &c.
  3. ‘The European Psalmist: a Collection of Hymn Tunes’ (dedicated to the queen), 1872.
  4. An Ode, composed for the opening of an exhibition, Agricultural Hall, Islington, 17 Oct. 1864.
  5. The Hundreth Psalm, arranged for performance at the laying of the foundation-stone of Netley Hospital, 19 May 1856.
  6. The Psalter, pointed for chanting, 1843.
  7. Words of anthems, 1869.
  8. Organ music.
  9. Pianoforte music, including a set of classical quadrilles.
  10. Glees and songs.
  11. Many hymn-tunes and chants.

His familiar hymn-tune ‘Aurelia’ first appeared in ‘A Selection of Psalms and Hymns, arranged for the Services of the Church of England,’ by Rev. C. Kemble of Bath, 1864.

[Grove's Dict. Music and Musicians, iv. 447; Addit. MSS. 11730 ff. 225–8, 34573 ff. 25, 35, 41, 35012–20, 35026, 35038; Musical Times, June 1876, July 1894, June 1899; Brit. Mus. Cat.; authorities cited; private information.]

F. G. E.

WESSINGTON, JOHN (d. 1451), prior of Durham, was possibly born at, and took his name from, a village in the county of Durham, now known as Washington. He entered the Benedictine order, and was one of the students regularly sent by the Benedictines of Durham to be educated at their house at Oxford, then known as Durham College and now merged in Trinity. In 1398 he became bursar of Durham College, in which he took great interest, obtaining books for its use from the chapter at Durham, and writing in 1422 a treatise to prove that it should be exempt from the jurisdiction of the general ‘prior studentium’ at Oxford because the college existed before the appointment of the prior. This treatise, extant among the manuscripts of Durham cathedral library, is printed in vol. iii. of the Oxford Historical Society's ‘Collectanea,’ 1896. About 1400 Wessington appears as chancellor of Durham Cathedral, and in the autumn of 1416 he was made prior. He retained this office for twenty-nine and a half years, during which he was very active in extending and repairing the buildings of the cathedral and its dependent houses (Hist. Dunelm. Scriptt. Tres, pp. cclxxi–vii). In 1426 he presided over a general chapter of Benedictines in England held at Northampton. He resigned his priory in May 1446, the bishop of Durham, Robert Neville [q. v.], issuing letters for the election of his successor on the 26th. The chapter of Durham, in gratitude for Wessington's services, made liberal provision for his old age. He was assigned a pension of 40l., a private room ‘vocata Coldingham’ in the monastery, and five attendants—a chaplain, an esquire, a clerk, a valet, and a ‘garcio.’ If he wished to leave Durham for his health's sake, he was to be allowed the principal room in the cell at Finchale, and another apartment there called ‘Douglas Tower.’ He died on 9 April 1451.

Bernard gives a list of Wessington's works extant among the manuscripts at Durham Cathedral; they include treatises (1) ‘De Origine Ordinis monachalis’; (2) ‘De Constitutione Monasteriorum Wermuthensis et Girwicensis [Wearmouth and Jervaulx] et Abbatibus eorum;’ (3) ‘De sanctis Monachis Lindisfarnensibus;’ (4) ‘De Fundatione Athenarum et Universitatum Parisiensis et Oxoniensis,’ and (5) ‘Vita S. Pauli primi Eremitæ et S. Antonii.’ His ‘Defensio Jurium, Libertatum, et Possessionum Ecclesiæ Dunelmensis adversus Malitias et Machinationes ipsa molentium impugnare’ extant in Cottonian MS. Vitellius A xix, was badly damaged by fire, but has been partially restored. A volume of his sermons entitled ‘Sermones de Festis principalibus tam de Sanctis quam de Tempore,’ is in the Bodleian Library (Laud MSS. Miscellanea 262), and the same manuscript contains ‘Materiæ pro Sermonibus eodem forsan Auctore.’

[Bernard's Cat. MSS. Angliæ; Cat. Bodleian MSS.; Tanner's Bibliotheca, p. 758; Raine's North Durham, p. 120; Surtees Soc. Publ. vol. ix. pp. clxvi–viii, cclxxi–vii, vol. xxxi. pp. 72–3;