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+Project Gutenberg's Notes and Queries, Number 185, May 14, 1853, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Notes and Queries, Number 185, May 14, 1853
+ A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists,
+ Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: George Bell
+
+Release Date: January 21, 2007 [EBook #20408]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES AND QUERIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charlene Taylor, Jonathan Ingram, Keith Edkins
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
+generously made available by The Internet Library of Early
+Journals.)
+
+
+
+
+
+{469} NOTES AND QUERIES:
+
+A MEDIUM OF INTER-COMMUNICATION FOR LITERARY MEN, ARTISTS, ANTIQUARIES,
+GENEALOGISTS, ETC.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"When found, make a note of."--CAPTAIN CUTTLE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+No. 185.]
+Saturday, May 14, 1853.
+[Price Fourpence. Stamped Edition 5d.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ NOTES:-- Page
+ English Books of Emblems, by the Rev. Thomas Corser 469
+ Author of Tract on "Advantages of the East India
+ Trade, 1720, 8vo.," by James Crossley 471
+ "Ake" and "Ache," by Thomas Keightley 472
+ Localities mentioned in Anglo-Saxon Charters, by B.
+ Williams 473
+ Inedited Letter 473
+ A Shaksperian Book 474
+ MINOR NOTES:--Shakspeare's Monument--Archbishop
+ Leighton and Pope: Curious Coincidence Of Thought
+ and Expression--Grant of Slaves--Sealing-wax 475
+
+ QUERIES:--
+ Walmer Castle, by C. Waymor 475
+ Scotchmen in Poland, by Peter Cunningham 475
+ Bishop Juxon and Walton's Polyglott Bible 476
+ MINOR QUERIES:--Was Andrew Marvell poisoned?--Anonymous
+ Pamphlet by Dr. Wallis--Mrs. Cobb's
+ Diary--Compass Flower--Nuns of the Hotel Dieu--
+ Purlieu--Jennings Family--Latimer's Brothers-in-
+ Law--Autobiographical Sketch--Schonbornerus--Symbol
+ of Globe and Cross--Booth Family--Ennui--Bankruptcy
+ Records--Golden Bees--The Grindstone
+ Oak--Hogarth--Adamsons of Perth--Cursitor Barons
+ of the Exchequer--Syriac Scriptures 476
+
+ REPLIES:--
+ Psalmanazar, by Rev. Dr. Maitland 479
+ Consecrated Roses, &c., by William J. Thoms 480
+ Campbell's Imitations 481
+ "The Hanover Rat" 481
+ Font Inscriptions 482
+ Irish Rhymes: English Provincialisms: Lowland Scotch 483
+ Pictures by Hogarth 484
+ PHOTOGRAPHIC CORRESPONDENCE:--Washing Collodion
+ Process--Colouring Collodion Pictures--Wanted, a
+ simple Test for a good Lens--Photographic Tent:
+ Restoration of Faded Negatives 484
+ REPLIES TO MINOR QUERIES:--Gibbon's Library--Robert
+ Drury--Grub Street Journal--Wives of Ecclesiastics--Blanco
+ White--Captain Ayloff--General
+ Monk and the University of Cambridge--The Ribston
+ Pippin--Cross and Pile--Ellis Walker--Blackguard--
+ Talleyrand--Lord King and Sclater--"Beware the
+ Cat"--"Bis dat qui cito dat"--High Spirits a Presage
+ of Evil--Colonel Thomas Walcott--Wood of the
+ Cross: Mistletoe--Irish Office for Prisoners--Andries
+ de Græff: Portraits at Brickwall House--"Qui facit
+ per alium, facit per se"--Christian Names--Lamech's
+ War-song--Traitor's Ford 485
+
+ MISCELLANEOUS:--
+ Notes on Books, &c. 489
+ Books and Odd Volumes wanted 490
+ Notices to Correspondents 490
+ Advertisements 490
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Notes.
+
+ENGLISH BOOKS OF EMBLEMS.
+
+It is a remarkable circumstance that whilst the emblems of Alciatus Vent
+through almost innumerable editions, and were translated into most of the
+continental languages, no version of these Emblems should ever have been
+printed in this country, although we believe that MS. translations of them
+are in existence. It is remarkable also that more than half century should
+have elapsed after their appearance, before any English publication on this
+subject should have been committed to the press. Our English authors of
+Books of Emblems were not only late in their appearance, but are few in
+number, and in their embellishments not very original, the plates being for
+the most part mere copies of those already published abroad by Herman Hugo,
+Rollenhagius, and others. The notices of the English writers on this
+entertaining subject are also but meagre and imperfect, and restricted to a
+very few works; both Dibdin, in his slight and rapid sketch on Books of
+Emblems in the _Bibliogr. Decam._, vol. i. p. 254., and the writer in the
+_Retrosp. Rev._, vol. ix. p. 123., having confined their remarks to some
+one or two of the leading writers only, Arwaker, Peacham, Quarles, Whitney,
+and Wither. With the exception of an occasional article in the _Bibl. Ang.
+Poet._, _Cens. Liter. Restituta_, and similar bibliographical volumes, we
+are not aware that any other notice has been taken of this particular
+branch of our literature[1], nor does there exist, {470} that we know of,
+any complete, separate, and distinct catalogue of such works.
+
+Being anxious, therefore, to obtain a correct account of what may be termed
+the English Series of Books of Emblems, I inclose a list of all those in my
+own possession, and of the titles of such others as I have been able to
+collect; and I shall be glad if any of your readers can make any additions
+to the series, confining them at the same time strictly to Books of
+Emblems, and not admitting fables, heraldic works, or older publications
+not coming within the same category. A good comprehensive work on this
+subject of Books of Emblems, not confined merely to the English series, but
+embracing the whole foreign range, giving an account both of the writers of
+the verses, and also of the engravers, and the different styles of art in
+each, is still a great desideratum in our literary history; and if ably and
+artistically done, with suitable illustrations of the various engravings
+and other ornaments, would form a very interesting, instructive, and
+entertaining volume; and I sincerely hope that the time will not be far
+distant when such a volume will be found in our libraries.
+
+I conclude with a Query of inquiry, whether anything is known of the
+present resting-place of a _Treatise on Emblems_, which the late Mr. Beloe
+informs us, at the close of his _Literary Anecdotes_, vol. vi. p. 406., he
+had written at "considerable length," from communications furnished him by
+the Marquis of Blandford, whose collection of Emblems was at that time one
+of the richest and most extensive in the kingdom, and whose treatise, if
+published, might perhaps prove a valuable addition to our information on
+this portion of our literature.
+
+I would also inquire who was Thomas Combe, and what did he write, who is
+thus mentioned by Meres in his _Palladis Tamia: Wits Treasury_, Lond. 1598,
+8vo., as one of our English writers of Emblems: "As the Latines have those
+emblematists, Andreas Alciatus, Reusnerus, and Sambucus, so we have these,
+Geffrey Whitney, Andrew Willet, and _Thomas Combe_." Is anything known of
+the latter, or of his writings?
+
+THOMAS CORSER.
+
+Stand Rectory.
+
+_List of English Writers of Books of Emblems._
+
+A. (H.) Parthenia Sacra, of the Mysterious and Delicious Garden of the
+Sacred Parthenis: Symbolically set forth and enriched with Pious Devises
+and Emblems for the entertainment of devout Soules, &c. By H. A. Plates.
+8vo. Printed by John Cousturier, 1633.
+
+Abricht (John A. M.). Divine Emblems. Embellished with Etchings of Copper
+after the fashion of Master Francis Quarles. 12mo. Lond. 1838.
+
+Arwaker (Edmund). Pia Desideria, or Divine Addresses in Three Books. With
+47 Copper Plates by Sturt. 8vo. Lond. 1686.
+
+Ashrea: or the Grove of Beatitudes. Represented in Emblemes: and by the Art
+of Memory to be read on our Blessed Saviour Crucified, &c. 12mo. Lond.
+1665.
+
+Astry (Sir James). The Royal Politician represented in One Hundred Emblems.
+Written in Spanish by Don Diego Saavedra Faxardo, &c. Done into English
+from the Original. By Sir James Astry. In Two Vols. With Portrait of
+William Duke of Gloucester, and other Plates. 8vo. Lond. 1700. Printed for
+Matthew Gylliflower.
+
+Ayres (Philip). Emblemata Amatoria. Emblems of Love in Four Languages.
+Dedicated to the Ladys. By Ph. Ayres, Esq. With 44 Plates on Copper. 8vo.
+Lond. 1683.
+
+Barclay (Alexander).[2] The Ship of Fooles, wherein is shewed the folly of
+all States, &c. Translated out of Latin into Englishe. With numerous
+Woodcuts. Imprinted by John Cawood. Folio, bl. letter, Lond. 1570.
+
+Blount (Thomas). The Art of making Devises: treating of Hieroglyphicks,
+Symboles, Emblemes, Ænigmas, &c. Translated from the French of Henry
+Estienne. 4to. Lond. 1646.
+
+Bunyan (John). Emblems by J. Bunyan. [I have not seen this work, but
+suspect it is only a common chap-book. A copy was in one of Lilly's
+Catalogues.]
+
+Burton (R.). Choice Emblems, Divine and Moral, Ancient and Modern; or
+Delights for the Ingenious in above Fifty Select Emblems, Curiously
+Ingraven upon Copper Plates. With engraved Frontispiece, &c. 12mo. Lond.
+1721. Printed for Edmund Parker.
+
+Castanoza (John). The Spiritual Conflict, or The Arraignment of the Spirit
+of Selfe-Love and Sensuality at the Barre of Truth and Reason. First
+published in Spanish by the Reverend Father John Castanoza, afterwards put
+into the Latin, Italian, German, French, and English Languages. With
+numerous Engravings. 12mo. at Paris, 1652.
+
+Choice Emblems, Natural, Historical, Fabulous, Moral, and Divine. 12mo.
+Lond. 1772.
+
+Colman (W.). La Dance Machabre, or Death's Duell, by W. C. With engraved
+Frontispiece by Cecil, and Plate. 8vo. Lond. 163--.
+
+Compendious Emblematist; or Writing and Drawing made easy. With many
+Plates. 4to. Lond.
+
+Emblems Divine, Moral, Natural, and Historical, Expressed in Sculpture, and
+applied to the several Ages, Occasions, and Conditions of the Life of Man.
+By a Person of Quality. With Woodcut Engravings and Metrical Illustrations.
+8vo. Lond. 1673. Printed by J. C. for Will. Miller.
+
+Emblems for the Entertainment and Improvement of Youth, with Explanations,
+on 62 Copper Plates. White Knights. 8vo. n. d., Part I.
+
+Emblems of Mortality. With Holbein's Cuts of the Dance of Death, modernized
+and engraved by Bewick. Three Editions. 8vo. Lond. 1789.
+
+Farlie (Robert). Lychnocausia, sive Moralia Facum Emblemata. Lights Morall
+Emblems. Kalendarium {471} Humanæ Vitæ. The Kalendar of Man's Life. With
+Frontispiece and numerous Woodcuts. 8vo. Lond. 1638.
+
+Fransi (Abrahami). Insignium Armorum Emblematum Hieroglyphicorum et
+Symbolorum Explicatio. No Plates. 4to. Lond. 1588.
+
+G. (H.). The Mirrour of Majestie: or the Badges of Honour conceitedly
+emblazoned. With Emblems annexed. 4to. 1618. [This is the rarest of the
+English series; only two copies known, one perfect _penes_ me, and another
+imperfect.]
+
+Gent (Thomas). Divine Entertainments; of Penitential Desires, Sighs, and
+Groans of the Wounded Soul. In Two Books, adorned with suitable Cuts. In
+Verse. With numerous Woodcuts. 12mo. Lond. 1724.
+
+Hall (John). Emblems, with elegant Figures newly published. Sparkles of
+Divine Love. Engraved Frontispiece and Plates. 12mo. Lond. 1648.
+
+Heywood (Thomas). Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas, selected out of Lucian,
+&c. With sundry Emblems, extracted from the most elegant Iacobus Catsius,
+&c. 8vo. Lond. 1637. No Plates.
+
+Jenner (Thomas). The Soules Solace; or Thirtie and one Spirituall Emblems.
+With Plates on Copper, and Verses. 4to. Lond. 1631.
+
+---- The Ages of Sin, of Sinnes Birth and Growth. With the Steppes and
+Degrees of Sin, from Thought to finall Impenitence. Nine leaves containing
+nine emblematical engravings, each with six metrical lines beneath. 4to. No
+printer's name, place, or date.
+
+---- A Work for none but Angels and Men, that is, to be able to look into,
+and to know themselves, &c. It contains eight Engravings emblematic of the
+Senses, and is in fact Sir John Davis's poem on the Immortality of the Soul
+turned into prose. 4to. Lond. 1650. Printed by M. S. for Thomas Jenner.
+
+---- Wonderful and Strange Punishments inflicted on the Breakers of the Ten
+Commandments. With curious Plates. 4to. Lond. 1650.
+
+Montenay (Georgette de). A Booke of Armes, or Remembrance: wherein are a
+hundred Godly Emblemata; first invented and elaborated in the French
+Tongue, but now in severall Languages. With Plates. 8vo. Franckfort. 1619.
+
+Murray (Rev. T. B.). An Alphabet of Emblems. With neatly executed Woodcuts.
+12mo. Lond. 1844.
+
+Peacham (Henry). Minerva Britannia, or, A Garden of Heroickall Devises,
+furnished and adorned with Emblemes and Impressas, &c. Numerous Woodcuts.
+4to. Lond. n. d. (1612.)
+
+Protestant's (The) Vade Mecum, or Popery Displayed in its proper Colours,
+in Thirty Emblems, lively representing all the Jesuitical Plots against
+this Nation. With thirty engraved Emblems on copper. 8vo. Lond. 1680.
+Printed for Daniel Brown.
+
+Quarles (Francis). Emblemes by Fra. Quarles. The First Edition. With Plates
+by W. Marshall and others. Rare. 8vo. Lond. 1635. Printed by G. M. at John
+Marriott's.
+
+---- Hieroglyphickes of the Life of Man, by Fra. Quarles. In a Series of
+engraved Emblems on Copper by Will. Marshall. With Verses. 8vo. Lond. 1638.
+Printed by M. Flesher.
+
+Richardson (George). Iconology; or a Collection of Emblematical Figures,
+Moral and Instructive. In Two Volumes. With Plates. 4to. Lond. 1777-79.
+
+Riley (George). Emblems for Youth. Reprinted in 1775, and again in 1779.
+12mo. Lond. 1772.
+
+Ripa (Cæsar). Iconologia; or Morall Emblems. Wherein are express'd various
+Images of Virtues, Vices, &c. Illustrated with 326 Human Figures engraved
+on Copper. By the care and charge of P. Tempest. 4to. Lond. 1709.
+
+S. (P.) The Heroical Devises of M. Claudius Paradin, Canon of Beauvieu.
+Whereunto are added the Lord Gabriel Symons and others. Translated out of
+Latin into English by P. S. With Woodcuts. 16mo. Lond. 1591. Imprinted by
+William Kearney.
+
+Stirry (Thomas). A Rot among the Bishops, or a terrible Tempest in the Sea
+of Canterbury, a Poem with lively Emblems. A Satire against Archbishop
+Laud. With Four Wood Engravings. Rare. 8vo. Lond. 1641.
+
+Thurston (J.). Religious Emblems; being a Series of Engravings on Wood,
+from the Designs of J. Thurston, with Descriptions by the Rev. J. Thomas.
+4to. Lond. 1810.
+
+Vicars (John). A Sight of y^e Transactions of these latter Yeares
+Emblemized with engraven Plates, which men may read without Spectacles.
+Collected by John Vicars. With Engravings of Copper. 4to. Lond. n. d., are
+to be sould by Thomas Jenner at his shop.
+
+---- Prodigies and Apparitions, or England's Warning Pieces. Being a
+seasonable Description by lively figures and apt illustrations of many
+remarkable and prodigious forerunners and apparent Predictions of God's
+Wrath against England, if not timely prevented by true Repentance. Written
+by J. V. With curious Frontispiece and six other Plates. 8vo. Lond. n. d.,
+are to bee sould by Tho. Bates.
+
+Whitney (Geoffrey). A Choice of Emblems and other Devises. Englished and
+Moralized by Geoffrey Whitney. With numerous Woodcuts. 4to. Leyden, 1586.
+Imprinted at Leyden in the house of Christopher, by Grancis Raphalengius.
+
+Willet (Andrew). Sacrorum Emblematum Centuria Una quæ tam ad exemplum aptè
+expressa sunt, &c. No Plates. 4to. Cantabr. n. d. (1598.)
+
+Wither (George). A Collection of Emblems, Ancient and Moderne: Quickened
+with Metricall Illustrations both Morall and Divine. The Plates, 200 in
+number, were engraved by Crispin Pass. Folio, Lond. 1635. Printed by A. M.
+for Henry Taunton.
+
+Wynne (John Huddlestone). Choice Emblems for the Improvement of Youth.
+Plates. 12mo. Lond. 1772.
+
+[Footnote 1: We must exempt from this sweeping assertion a very interesting
+and well-written account of works on this subject, entitled "A Sketch of
+that Branch of Literature called Books of Emblems, as it flourished during
+the 16th and 17th centuries, by Joseph Brooks Yates, Esq., F.S.A.," of West
+Dingle, near Liverpool, the friend of Roscoe, and the worthy and
+intelligent President of the Literary and Philosophical Society of
+Liverpool, read at their meetings, and of which two parts have already been
+printed in their volumes of _Proceedings_. This "Sketch" only requires to
+be enlarged and completed, with specimens added of the different styles of
+the engravings, to render it everything that is to be desired on the
+subject.]
+
+[Footnote 2: Perhaps this, and the works of Colman and Heywood, are
+scarcely to be considered as _Books of Emblems_.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+AUTHOR OF TRACT ON "ADVANTAGES OF THE EAST INDIA TRADE, 1720, 8vo."
+
+Of this pamphlet, originally published in 1701, 8vo., under the title of
+_Considerations upon the East India Trade_, and afterwards in 1720, 8vo.,
+with a new title-page, _The Advantages of the East India Trade to England
+considered_, containing {472} 128 pages, inclusive of Preface, the author
+never yet been ascertained.
+
+Mr. M^cCulloch accords to it, and very deservedly, the highest praise. He
+styles it (_Literature of Political Economy_, p. 100.) "a profound, able,
+and most ingenious tract;" and observes that he has "set the powerful
+influence of the division of labour in the most striking point of view, and
+has illustrated it with a skill and felicity which even Smith has not
+surpassed, but by which he most probably profited." Addison's admirable
+paper in _The Spectator_ (No. 69.) on the advantages of commerce, is only
+an expansion of some of the paragraphs in this pamphlet. In some parts I
+think he has scarcely equalled the force of his original. Take, for
+instance, the following sentences, which admit of fair comparison:
+
+ "We taste the spices of Arabia, yet never feel the scorching sun which
+ brings them forth; we shine in silks which our hands have never
+ wrought; we drink of vineyards which we never planted; the treasures of
+ those mines are ours which we have never digged; we only plough the
+ deep, and reap the harvest of every country in the world."--_Advantages
+ of East India Trade_, p. 59.
+
+ "Whilst we enjoy the remotest products of the north and south, we are
+ free from those extremities of weather which give them birth; our eyes
+ are refreshed with the green fields of Britain, at the same time that
+ our palates are feasted with fruits that rise between the
+ tropics."--_Spectator_, No. 69.
+
+Mr. M^cCulloch makes no conjecture as to the probable author of this very
+able tract; but it appears to me that it may on good grounds be ascribed to
+Henry Martyn, who afterwards--not certainly in accordance with the
+enlightened principles he lays down in this pamphlet--took an active part
+in opposing the treaty of commerce with France, and was rewarded by the
+appointment of Inspector-General of the exports and imports of the customs.
+(See an account of him in Ward's _Lives of Gresham Professors_, p. 332.) He
+was a contributor to _The Spectator_, and Nos. 180. 200. and 232. have been
+attributed to him; and the matter of Sir Andrew Freeport's speculations
+appears to have been furnished by him as Addison and Steele's oracle on
+trade and commerce. It will be seen that in No. 232. he makes exactly the
+same use of Sir William Petty's example of the watch as is done in the
+tract (p.69.), and the coincidence seems to point out one common author of
+both compositions. But, without placing too much stress on this similarity,
+I find, that Collins's _Catalogue_, which was compiled with great care, and
+where it mentions the authors of anonymous works may always be relied upon,
+attributes this tract to Martyn (Collins's _Cat_. 1730-1, 8vo., Part I.,
+No. 3130.). I have a copy of the edition of 1701, in the original binding
+and lettering--lettered "Martyn on the East India Trade "--and copies of
+the edition of 1720 in two separate collections of tracts; one of which
+belonged to A. Chamier, and the other to George Chalmers; in both of which
+the name of Martyn is written as its author on the title-page, and in the
+latter in Chalmers's handwriting. I think therefore we may conclude that
+this tract, which well deserves being more generally known than it is at
+present, was written by Henry Martyn.
+
+JAS. CROSSLEY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+"AKE" AND ACHE.
+
+John Kemble, it is well known, maintained that the latter was the mode of
+pronouncing this word in Shakspeare's days. He was right, and he was wrong;
+for, as I shall show, both modes prevailed, at least in poetry, till the
+end of the seventeenth century. So it was with some other words, _show_ and
+_shew_, for instance. It is, perhaps, hardly necessary to observe that the
+sounds _k, ch, sh, kh_ (guttural) are commutable. Thus the letter _h_ is
+named in Italian, _acca_; in French, _ache_, in English, _aitch_, perhaps
+originally _atch_: our _church_ is the Scottish _kirk_, &c. Accordingly, we
+meet in Shakspeare _reckless_ and _rechless_, _reeky_ and _reechy_; "As I
+could _pike_ (pitch) my lance." (Coriol., Act I. Sc. 1.) Hall has (_Sat_.
+vi. 1.) "Lucan _streaked_ (stretched) on his marble bed." So also there
+were _like_ and _liche_, and the vulgar _cham_ for _I am_ (_Ic eom_, A.-S.)
+
+Having now to show that both _ake_ and _ache_ were in use, I commence with
+the former:
+
+ "Like a milch-doe, whose swelling dugs do _ake_,
+ Hasting to find her fawn hid in some brake."
+ Shakspeare's _Venus and Adonis_
+
+ "By turns now half asleep, now half awake,
+ My wounds began to smart, my hurt to _ake_."
+ Fairfax, _Godf. of Bull._, viii, 26.
+
+ "Yet, ere she went, her vex'd heart, which did _ake_,
+ Somewhat to ease, thus to the king she spake."
+ Drayton, _Barons' Wars_, iii. 75.
+
+ "And cramm'd them till their guts did _ake_
+ With caudle, custard, and plumcake."
+ _Hudibras_, ii. 2.
+
+The following is rather dubious:
+
+ "If chance once in the spring his head should _ach_,
+ It was foretold: thus says my almanack."
+ Hall, _Sat._ ii. 7., ed. Singer.
+
+The _aitch_, or rather, as I think, the _atch_ sound, occurs in the
+following places:
+
+ "_B._ Heigh ho!
+ _M._ For a hawk, a horse, or a husband?
+ _B._ For the letter that begins them all, _H_."
+ _Much Ado about Nothing_, Act III. Sc. 4.
+
+ "Their fears of hostile strokes, their _aches_, losses."
+ _Timon of Athens_, Act V. Sc. 2.
+
+ "Yea, fright all _aches_ from your bones."
+ Jonson, _Fox_, ii. 2.
+
+ {473}
+
+ "Wherefore with mine thou dow thy musick match,
+ Or hath the crampe thy ionts benom'd with _ache_."
+ Spenser, _Shep. Cal._, viii. 4.
+
+ "Or Gellia wore a velvet mastic-patch
+ Upon her temples, when no tooth did _ach_."
+ Hall, _Sat._ vi. 1.
+
+ "As no man of his own self catches
+ The itch, or amorous French _aches_."
+ _Hudibras_, ii, 2.
+
+ "The natural effect of love,
+ As other flames and _aches_ prove."
+ _Ib._, iii. 1.
+
+ "Can by their pangs and _aches_ find
+ All turns and changes of the wind."
+ _Ib._, iii. 2.
+
+These, in Butler, are, I believe, the latest instances of this form of the
+word.
+
+THOMAS KEIGHTLEY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+LOCALITIES MENTIONED IN ANGLO-SAXON CHARTERS.
+
+When Mr. Kemble published the index to his truly national code of
+Anglo-Saxon Charters, he expressly stated that there were many places of
+which he was in doubt, and which are indicated by Italics.
+
+It is only by minute local knowledge that many places can be verified, and
+with the view of eliciting from others the result of their investigations,
+I send you my humble contribution of corrections of places known to myself.
+
+ Bemtún, 940. Bampton, Oxon.
+ Bleódon, 587, 1182. Bleadon, Somerset.
+ Bóclond, 1050. Buckland, Berks.
+ Brixges stán, 813. Brixton, Surrey.
+ Ceomina lacu, 714. Chimney, Oxon.
+ Ceommenige, 940. Idem.
+ Cingestún, 1268, 1276, 1277. Kingston Bagpuxe, Berks.
+ Cingtuninga gemære, 1221. Idem.
+ Colmenora, 1283. Cumnor, Berks.
+ Crócgelád, 1305. Cricklade, Wilts.
+ Dúnnestreátún, 136. Dunster, Somerset.
+ Esstune, 940. Aston-in-Bampton, Oxon.
+ Fifhidan, 546, 1206. Fyfield, Berks.
+ Hearge, 220. Harrow-on-the-Hill.
+ Hengestesige, 556. Hinksey, Berks.
+ Leoie, 1255. Bessil's-leigh, Berks.
+ Monninghæma díc, 645. Monnington, Herefordshire.
+ Osulfe's Lea, 404, is in Suffolk, or near it.
+ Pipmynster, 774, &c., probably Pippingminster, Somerset.
+ Scypford, 714. Shifford, Oxon.
+ Scuccanhláu, 161, is in Berks.
+ Tubbanford, 1141, 1255. Tubney, Berks.
+ Whétindún, 363. Whatindon, Surrey.
+ Wenbeorg, 1053. Wenbury, Devon.
+ Wænríc 775, and Wenrise, 556, is the River Windrush.
+ Wícham (Wítham), 116, 214, 775. Witham, Berks.
+ Wyttanig, 556. Witney, Oxon.
+ Wurðe, Wyrðe, Weorthe, Weorthig, 208, 1171, 1212, 1221. Longworth, Berks.
+ Worth, Wurthige, 743, 1121. Worth, Hants.
+
+The following are omitted:
+
+ Hanlee, 310.
+ Helig, 465.
+ Pendyfig, 427.
+ Stanford, 1301. Stanford, Kent.
+ Stánlége, 1255. Standlake, Oxon.
+ Ðestinctun, 805.
+ Welingaford, 1154. Wallingford, Berks.
+ Wanhæminga, 1135.
+
+B. WILLIAMS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+INEDITED LETTER.
+
+ August 24th, 1690,
+ Qu. Coll. Oxon.
+
+Dear S^r,
+
+I heartily thank you for the favour of your letter, and to shew itt will
+not fail to write as often as anything does occurr worth sending, if you
+think the accountt I give not troublesome. Dr. Adams, Dr. Rudston, and
+Delaune have promis'd to write this post: we remembred you both before and
+after your letters came w^{th} S^r John Matthews, who staid here 3 nights
+this weeke. Our militia is gone home cloath'd in Blew coates but many
+coxcombs of this city have refused to pay their quota towards the buying of
+them, railing against my L^d Abington, who has smooth'd the mob by giving a
+brace of Bucks last Friday in Port Meed. J. M. has bin expected here this
+fortnight: the Lady that calls herselfe by his nane has bin a good while at
+Astrop, and has discover'd her displeasure there, that her husband as shee
+calls him keeps the coach so long from her at Oxford: upon hearing of
+w^{ch} S^r W. H. in a blunt way gave her the old name, w^{ch} caus'd some
+dissatisfaction and left her smal acquaintance: I heare that the
+understanding between our Friend and his uncle is not so good as formerly,
+but I do not think it will end in Abdication. Mr. Painter is admitted
+Rector of Exeter. The _Naked Gospel_[3] was burnt on y^e 19th in the
+Scholes Quadrangle. The Regents first drew up a Petition to have it
+censured; then some others more busy than wise tooke upon them to gett it
+subscribed, and went to coffee houses and taverns as well as colleges for
+that purpose: these proceedings being ag^{st} statute, and reflecting upon
+the vice ch., gave great offence; at last he call'd a meeting of y^e {474}
+heads of houses, who deputed 6 to examine it: they pick'd several Proposit.
+w^{ch} were read. The sentence was in this form: Propositions &^c tanqu[=a]
+falsas et impias in Chris. Relig. et in Ecc. præcipue Anglican[=a]
+contumeliosas damnamus, plerasq; insuper hæreticas esse decernimus et
+declaramus, &^c. This was first subscribed by all y^e heads of Coll. and
+then condemn'd unanimously in a full convocation. The Decree is printed,
+but is too large to send. The Author of y^e Booke has sent about a soft
+vindication of himselfe, that he is unwilling to be accounted a Socinian,
+&c. If I can gett a sight of it I will send you the contents. I do not know
+how far you are in the right about guessing at a Bursar: Tim. seems
+resolv'd to act according to y^e song; but I to shew good nature even
+w^{th}out a tree have promis'd to make him a Dial: and when that's done I
+will doe y^e like at Astrop. I am
+
+Your very humble serv^t,
+W. R.
+
+If you see Coll. Byerly, give my service to him.
+
+Directed thus: These to George Clark, Esq., Secretary of War in Ireland.
+
+By y^e way of London.
+
+Indorsed: W. Rooke, Rec^d at Tipperary, Sept. 7th.
+
+[Footnote 3: [For some account of this work, by Arthur Bury, and the
+controversy respecting it, see Wood's _Athenæ_, edit. Bliss, vol. i. p.
+483. William Rooke, the Writer of the letter, was of Queen's College; made
+B.A., May 16, 1674; M.A., Oct. 30, 1677; B.D., April 12, 1690.--ED.]]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A SHAKSPERIAN BOOK.
+
+"There exists," says Mr. John Wilson, "as it were a talismanic influence in
+regard to the most trivial circumstances connected with Shakspeare," and
+yet this enthusiast has not, in his _Shaksperiana_, alluded to the dramatic
+works of Mary Hornby, written under, and dated from, the _dear_ old roof at
+Stratford-upon-Avon!
+
+It was my late good fortune, after filling my pockets from the twopenny
+boxes of the suburban bookstalls, to find, on turning out the heterogeneous
+contents, that I had accidentally become possessed of _The Broken Vow_, a
+comedy by the aforesaid lady, who waits to be enrolled in that much wanted
+book, a new edition of the _Biographia Dramatica_. This _Broken Bow_ which
+looks like a re-cooking of the _Merry Miller_ of Thomas Sadler, 1766, bears
+to be "printed at Stratford-upon-Avon, for the Author, by W. Barnacle,
+1820." Mary Hornby, following the example of the _preoccupier of the
+butcher's shop_, tries her hand at both tragedy and comedy; in the first
+line she stands charged with the perpetration of _The Battle of Waterloo_,
+which, I doubt not, rivalled its original enactment in its _sanguinary_
+character. I have not been lucky enough to fall in with this, which was a
+_hit_; our fair authoress, in her preface to the comedy under notice,
+modestly attributing its great success more to the kindness of her friends
+than to its literary merit.
+
+Mrs. Hornby sustains the dignity of the drama by adhering to her five acts,
+with prologue and epilogue according to prescription. Looking to the
+prologue for the _who_, the _why_, and the _wherefore_, I am sorry to say I
+find no materials for the concoction of a biographical note; upon the
+second point, the _why_, she tells us:
+
+ "When women teem, be it with bad or good,
+ They must bring forth--forsooth 'tis right they should,
+ But to produce a bantling of the brain,
+ Hard is the task, and oft the labour vain."
+
+That her literary _accouchement_ should not be a failure, she further says:
+
+ "Lord, how I've bother'd all the gods and graces,
+ Who patronize _some_ mortals, in such cases."
+
+I take the expressive use of the word "some" here to indicate her
+predecessor, the ancient occupier of the tenement, who certainly was a
+_protégé_ of the said parties.
+
+Mrs. Hornby then goes on to relate how that during her _gestation_ she
+invoked Apollo, Thalia, and Erato:
+
+ "Soon they arrived, with Hermes at their side,
+ By Jove commission'd, as their friend and guide.
+ But when the mirth-inspiring dames stepp'd o'er
+ The sacred threshold of _great Shakspeare's door_,
+ The heav'nly guests, _who came to laugh with me_,
+ Oppress'd with grief, wept with _Melpomene_;
+ Bow'd pensive o'er the Bard of Nature's tomb,
+ Dropt a sad tear, then left me to my doom!"
+
+I leave the reader to judge for himself whether the Muses really "came to
+laugh" with Mary Hornby, or whether, under the belief of the immortality of
+our Bard, they did not rather expect a pleasant _soirée_ with Gentle Will,
+and naturally enough went off in a huff when they found themselves
+inveigled into a tea-party at Mrs. Hornby's.
+
+Mr. Wilson, in the work above quoted, does condescend to notice Mrs.
+Hornby,--
+
+ "Who rented the butcher's shop under the chamber in which the poet was
+ born, and kept the _Shaksperian Album_, an interesting record of the
+ visitors to that shrine. Some of the subscribers having given vent to
+ original stanzas suggested by the scene, those effusions," continues
+ the lofty bookseller, "_the female in question_ caused to be inscribed
+ and printed in a small pamphlet, which she sells to strangers."
+
+Not a word, you will see, about the poet's mantle having descended upon the
+shoulders of our Mary,--which was unpolite of him, seeing that both the
+tragedy and comedy had the precedence of his book by some years. Not having
+before me the later history of Shakspeare's house, I am unable to say
+whether our subject deserved more consideration and gallant treatment at
+the hands of MR. COLLIER, when he and his colleagues came into possession.
+
+J. O.
+
+{475}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Minor Notes.
+
+_Shakspeare's Monument._--When I was a young man, some thirty or forty
+years ago, I visited the monument of Shakspeare, in the beautiful church of
+Stratford-upon-Avon, and there copied, from the Album which is kept for the
+names of visitors, the following lines:
+
+ "Stranger! to whom this monument is shown,
+ Invoke the poet's curse upon Malone!
+ Whose meddling zeal his barbarous taste displays,
+ And smears his tombstone, as he marr'd his plays.
+ R. F.
+ Oct. 2, 1810."
+
+This has just now been brought to my mind by reading, in page 155. of the
+second volume of Moore's Journal, the following account of a conversation
+at Bowood:
+
+ "Talked of Malone--a dull man--his whitewashing the statue of
+ Shakspeare, at Leamington or Stratford (?), and General Fitzpatrick's
+ (Lord L.'s uncle) epigram on the subject--very good--
+
+ 'And smears his statue as he mars his lays.'"
+
+I cannot but observe that the doubt expressed in the Diary of
+Moore--whether Shakspeare's monument is "at Leamington or Stratford
+(?)"--is curious, and I conceive my version of the last line, besides being
+more correct, is also more pithy. It is incorrect, moreover, to call it a
+_statue_, as it is a three-quarters bust in a niche in the wall.
+
+The extract from _Moore's Diary_, however, satisfactorily explains the
+initials "R. F.," which have hitherto puzzled me.
+
+SENEX.
+
+_Archbishop Leighton and Pope: Curious Coincidence of Thought and
+Expression._--
+
+ "Were the true visage of sin seen at a full light, undressed and
+ unpainted, it were impossible, while it so appeared, that any one soul
+ could be in love with it, but would rather flee from it as hideous and
+ abominable."--Leighton's _Works_, vol. i. p. 121.
+
+ Vice is a monster of such hideous mien,
+ As to be hated, needs but to be seen."--_Pope._
+
+JAMES CORNISH.
+
+_Grant of Slaves._--I send you a copy of a grant of a slave with his
+children, by William, the Lion King of Scotland, to the monks of
+Dunfermline, taken from the _Cart. de Dunfermline_, fol. 13., printed by
+the Bannatyne Club from a MS. in the Advocates' Library here, which you
+may, perhaps, think curious enough to insert in "N. & Q."
+
+ "De Servis.
+
+ "Willielmus Dei gracia Rex Scottorum. Omnibus probis hominibus tocius
+ terre me, clericis et laicis, salutem: Sciant presentis et futuri me
+ dedisse et concessisse et hac carta mea confirmasse, Deo et ecclesie
+ Sancte Trinitatis de Dunfermlene et Abbati et Monachis ibidem, Deo
+ servientibus in liberam et perpetuam elemosinam, Gillandream Macsuthen
+ et ejus liberos et illos eis quietos clamasse, de me, et heredibus
+ meis, in perpetuum. Testibus Waltero de Bid, Cancellario; Willielmo
+ filio Alani, Dapifero; Roberto Aveneli Gillexio Rennerio, Willielmo
+ Thoraldo, apud Strivelin."
+
+G. H. S.
+
+Edinburgh.
+
+_Sealing-wax._--The most careful persons will occasionally drop melting
+sealing-wax on their fingers. The first impulse of every one is to pull it
+off, which is followed by a blister. The proper course is to let the wax
+cool on the finger; the pain is much less, and there is no blister.
+
+UNEDA.
+
+Philadelphia.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Queries.
+
+WALMER CASTLE.
+
+In Hasted's _History of Kent_, vol. iv. p. 172., folio edition, we have as
+follows:
+
+ "Walmer, probably so called _quasi vallum maris_, i. e. the wall or
+ fortification made against the sea, was expressed to have been a member
+ of the port of Sandwich time out of mind," &c.
+
+Again, p. 165., note _m_, we find:
+
+ "Before these three castles were built, there were, between Deal and
+ Walmer Castle, two eminences of earth, called 'The Great and Little
+ Bulwark;' and another, between the north end of Deal and Sandwich
+ Castle (all of which are now remaining): and there was probably one
+ about the middle of the town, and others on the spots where the castles
+ were erected. They had embrasures for guns, and together formed a
+ defensive line of batteries along that part of the coast," &c.
+
+To the new building of these castles Leland alludes, in his _Cygnea
+Cantio_:
+
+ "Jactat Dela novas celebris arces
+ Notus Cæsareis locus trophæis."--Ver. 565.
+
+There are clear remains of a Roman entrenchment close to Walmer Castle.
+(See _Hasted_, vol. iv. p. 162., notes.)
+
+Any of your correspondents who could give me any information tending to
+show that an old fortification had existed on the site of Walmer Castle,
+previous to the erection of the present edifice--or even _almost_ upon the
+same site--would do me a very great kindness if he would communicate it,
+through the columns of "N. & Q.," or by a private letter sent to the
+Editor.
+
+C. WAYMOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SCOTCHMEN IN POLAND.
+
+Can any of your readers throw any light on this passage in Dr. Johnson's
+_Life of Sir John Denham_?
+
+ "He [Sir John Denham] now resided in France, as one of the followers of
+ the exiled king; and, to divert {476} the melancholy of their
+ condition, was sometimes enjoined by his master to write occasional
+ verses; one of which amusements was probably his ode or song upon the
+ Embassy to Poland, by which he and Lord Crofts procured a contribution
+ of ten thousand pounds from the Scotch, that wandered over that
+ kingdom. Poland was at that time very much frequented by itinerant
+ traders, who, in a country of very little commerce and of great extent,
+ where every man resided on his own estate, contributed very much to the
+ accommodation of life, by bringing to every man's house those little
+ necessaries which it was very inconvenient to want, and very
+ troublesome to fetch. I have formerly read, without much reflection, of
+ the multitude of Scotchmen that travelled with their wares in Poland;
+ and that their numbers were not small, the success of this negociation
+ gives sufficient evidence."
+
+The title of Denham's poem is "On my Lord Crofts' and my journey into
+Poland, from whence we brought 10,000l. for his Majesty by the decimation
+of his Scottish subjects there."
+
+PETER CUNNINGHAM.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BISHOP JUXON AND WALTON'S POLYGLOTT BIBLE.
+
+In the library at this island, which formerly belonged to the Knights of
+Malta, there is an edition of Walton's Polyglott Bible, which was published
+in London in 1657. This work is in a most perfect state of preservation.
+
+On the title-page of the first of the eleven volumes, there is written, in
+a bold and perfectly legible manner, the following words:
+
+ "Liber Coll. Di Joannis Bapt^a Oxon Ex dono Reverendiss. in Xt^o Patris
+ Gvil^i Jvxon Archiep. Cantvariensis. A^o D^{ni} 1663."
+
+Just below, but on the right of the above, there is written in a clear hand
+as follows:
+
+ "Ex Libris domus Abbatialis S. Antonij Viennensis, Catalogo Inscript
+ an. 1740. No. 11."
+
+That the question which I shall ask at the end of this Note may be the more
+easily answered, it will perhaps be necessary for me to state, that in the
+year 1777, Rohan, the Grand Master of the Knights of Malta, succeeded in
+annexing the property belonging to the Order of St. Antonio de Vienna to
+that of Malta. In accepting of these estates, which were situated in France
+and Savoy, Rohan bound himself to pay the many mortgages and debts with
+which they were encumbered; and so large an amount had to be thus defrayed,
+that for a hundred years the convent would not be reimbursed for its
+advances, and receive the 120,000 livres, at which sum their annual rental
+would then be valued. Of the foundation of this Order a recent writer
+(Thornton) thus remarks:
+
+ "In 1095 some nobles of Dauphiny united for the relief of sufferers
+ from a kind of leprosy called St. Anthony's fire, which society, in
+ 1218, was erected into a religious body of Hospitallers, having a
+ grand master for chief. This order, after many changes in its
+ constitution, having been left the option between extinction and
+ secularisation, or union with another order, accepted the latter
+ alternative, and selected that of St. John of Jerusalem."
+
+Among the moveable effects which came to the Knights of Malta by this
+arrangement, was a small and well-selected library, and in it this edition
+of Walton's Bible.
+
+Without, therefore, writing more at length on this subject, which might
+take up too much space in "N. & Q.," I would simply add, that my attention
+was called to this work by the Rev. Mr. Howe, chaplain of H.B.M. ship
+"Britannia," and for the purpose of asking, At what time, by whom, and in
+what manner, were these volumes removed from St. John's College at Oxford,
+and transferred to the library of the Order of St. Antonio de Vienna in
+France?
+
+W. W.
+
+La Valetta, Malta.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Minor Queries.
+
+_Was Andrew Marvell poisoned?_--I have just been reading the three
+ponderous quarto volumes comprising _The Works_ of Andrew Marvell, as
+collected and edited by his townsman, Capt. Edward Thompson of Hull. In the
+"Life," near the end of vol. iii., we are told that the patriot died on
+Aug. 16, 1678, "and by poison for he was healthful and vigorous to the
+moment he was seized with the premeditated ruin." And again, in a summary
+of his merits, we are told that "all these patriot virtues were
+insufficient to guard him against the jesuitical machinations of the
+_state_; for what vice and bribery could not influence, was perpetrated by
+poison." This heinous crime, so formally averred against the enemies of
+Marvell, may have been committed by "some person or persons unknown;" but,
+as not a tittle of evidence is adduced or indicated by the zealous
+biographer in support of the charge--Query, had it any foundation in fact?
+In the court, and out of the court, the anti-popish, anti-prelatical
+Puritan had enemies numerous and bitter enough; but is there really any
+other ground for the abominable imputation of foul play alluded to, beyond
+his actually sudden death? Is the hypothesis of poison coeval with the date
+of Marvell's demise? If so, was there any official inquiry--any "crowner's
+quest?" Surely his admiring compatriots on the banks of the Humber did not
+at once quietly sit down with the conviction, that _thus_ "fell one of the
+first characters of this kingdom or of any other."
+
+H.
+
+_Anonymous Pamphlet by Dr. Wallis_ (Vol. vii., p. 403.).--Will MR. CROSSLEY
+have the kindness to give the title of the anonymous pamphlet which, he
+informs us, was published by Dr. John Wallis {477} in defence of the Oxford
+decree of 1695, on the subject of the Trinity?
+
+TYRO.
+
+Dublin.
+
+_Mrs. Cobb's Diary._--Can any of your readers give me any information as to
+the following book, _Extracts from the Diary and Letters of Mrs. Mary
+Cobb_: London, printed by C. and R. Baldwin, 1805, 8vo., pp. 324.; said to
+be _privately printed_?
+
+JOHN MARTIN.
+
+Roxfield, Bedfordshire.
+
+_Compass Flower._--
+
+ "Look at this delicate flower that lifts its head from the meadow--
+ See how its leaves all point to the north, as true as the magnet;
+ It is the compass flower, that the finger of God has suspended
+ Here on its fragile stalk, to direct the traveller's journey
+ Over the sea-like, pathless, limitless waste of the desert."
+ _Evangeline_, Part II. IV. line 140., &c.
+
+Where can I find a description of this flower, and what is its scientific
+name?
+
+In Abercrombie's _Intellectual Powers_, p. 49. edit. 1846, I find the
+following passage:
+
+ "The American hunter finds his way in the trackless forests by
+ attention to minute appearances in the trees, which indicate to him the
+ points of the compass."
+
+Can any one tell me what these "minute appearances" are?
+
+A. H. BATTIER.
+
+East Sheen, Surrey.
+
+_Nuns of the Hotel Dieu._--What is the religions habit of the nuns at the
+hospital of the Hotel Dieu in Paris at the present day?
+
+M. L.
+
+_Purlieu._--Some of your correspondents seem afraid that an attempt to
+repair the deficiencies of our English dictionaries, by research into
+disputed etymologies in "N. & Q.," would tend to produce too much and too
+tedious discussion, and fill its space too much. Could _this_, at least,
+not be done without much objection? Could we not co-operate in finding the
+earliest known mention of words, and thus perhaps trace the occasion and
+manner of their introduction?
+
+At any rate, this word _purlieu_ is certainly in want of some examination.
+Johnson has adopted the wretched etymology of _pur_, Fr. for pure, and
+_lieu_, Fr. for place; and he defines it as a place on the outskirts of a
+forest free of wood.
+
+The earliest record in which this word occurs, so far as I have seen, is in
+an act of Edward III., quoted by Manwood, and it is there spelt _puraley_;
+and it relates to the disafforested parts which several preceding kings
+permitted to be detached from their royal forests.
+
+Might I ask if any of your correspondents find an earlier use of the word;
+and can it be gifted with a probable paternity?
+
+The tracing of the earliest known mention of disputed words is a task
+capable of being finished, and might perhaps be attended, in many cases,
+with happy results. It would rid us probably of many puerilities which
+degrade our current dictionaries.
+
+M. C. E.
+
+_Jennings Family._--Some time since I requested as a great favour that your
+correspondent PERCURIOSUS would kindly inform me where I could get a sight
+of the Spoure MSS. I repeat that I should feel greatly obliged if he would
+do so: and as this is of no public interest, I send postage envelope, in
+the event of PERCURIOSUS obliging me with the desired information.
+
+J. JENNINGS-G.
+
+_Latimer's Brothers-in-Law._--In Bishop Latimer's first sermon, preached
+before King Edward VI., we find the quaint martyr-bishop magnifying the
+paternal prudence for having suitably "married his sisters with five
+pounds, or twenty nobles, apiece;" but neither the editors of the sermon,
+nor the writers of several biographical notices of Latimer consulted by me,
+and in which the extract appears, give any account of the fortunate
+gentlemen whom the generous parent thus doubly blessed with his twofold
+treasure.
+
+Can you, or any of your readers, oblige by furnishing the _names_ of Bishop
+Latimer's brothers-in-law, or by giving some references or brief account of
+them?
+
+* *
+
+_Autobiographical Sketch._--A fragment came into my possession some time
+ago, among a quantity of waste paper in which books were wrapped, which,
+from the singularity of its contents, I felt desirous to trace to the book
+of which it forms a part, but my research has hitherto proved unsuccessful.
+It consists of two leaves of a large octavo sheet, probably published some
+twenty years back, and is headed "Autobiographical Sketch of the Editor."
+It commences with the words: "The Commissioners of the Poor Laws will
+understand me, when I say, that I was born at Putney, in Surrey." The pages
+are of course not consecutive: so after an allusion to the wanderings of
+the writer, I have nothing more up to p. 7., at which is an account of a
+supposed plot against the lord mayor and sheriffs, concocted by him with
+the assistance of some school-boy coadjutors; the object of which appears
+to have been, to overturn the state-coach of the civic functionary, as it
+ascended Holborn Hill, by charging it with a hackney coach, in which sat
+the writer and certain widows armed with bolsters in pink satin bags. The
+word having been given to "Charge!" this new kind of war-chariot was driven
+down the hill at full speed, gunpowder ignited on its roof, and blazing
+squibs protruded {478} through its back, sides, and front. The ingenious
+author declares that the onslaught was crowned with complete success; but
+here, most unfortunately, the sheet ends: and unless you, Mr. Editor, or
+some of your correspondents, will kindly help me to the rest of the
+narrative, I must, I fear return unexperienced to my grave. I have omitted
+to mention, that the date of this event is given as the 4th of July, 1799.
+
+CHEVERELLS.
+
+_Schonbornerus._--Can any of your readers give me information about a book
+I became possessed of by chance a short time ago, or tell me anything
+respecting its author, for whom I have vainly sought biographical
+dictionaries? The volume is a duodecimo, and bears the following
+title-page:
+
+ "Georgii Schonborneri Politicorum, Libri Septem. Editio ad ipsius
+ Authoris emendatum Exemplar nunc primum vulgata. Amsterodami: apud L.
+ Elzevirium, anno 1642."
+
+It is written in Latin, and contains as many quotations as the _Anatomy of
+Melancholy_, or Mr. Digby's _Broad Stone of Honour_.
+
+H. A. B.
+
+_Symbol of Globe and Cross._--Can any one oblige me with an explanation of
+the mysterious symbols on a seal not older than the last century? It
+contains a globe, bearing a cross upon it, and a winged heart above, with
+the legend "_Pour vous_."
+
+C. T.
+
+_Booth Family._--Can any of your Lancashire correspondents afford
+information bearing on the families of Booth of Salford, and Lightbown of
+Manchester? Is any pedigree extant of either of these families, and what
+arms did they bear? Humphrey Booth founded, I believe, a church in Salford
+about the year 1634, the patronage of which still remains, as it might
+seem, in the family, the _Clergy List_ describing it as in the gift of Sir
+R. G. Booth.
+
+There is a Booth Hall in Blackley, a small village lying by the road side,
+between Manchester and Middleton; and from the _inquisitio post mortem_ of
+Humphrey Booth, 12 Car. I., it appears that he died seised of lands in
+Blackley as well as Salford.
+
+Is there any evidence to connect him with this hall, as the place of his
+residence?
+
+A JESUIT.
+
+Jesus College, Cambridge.
+
+_Ennui._--What is our nearest approach to a correct rendering of this
+expression? Some English writer (Lady Morgan, I believe) has defined it
+"mental lukewarmness:" but, if it be true, as La-Motte Houdart says, that--
+
+ "L'ennui naquit un jour de l'uniformité."
+
+the above definition would seem to indicate rather the cause of _ennui_
+than _ennui_ itself.
+
+HENRY H. BREEN.
+
+St. Lucia.
+
+_Bankruptcy Records._--Where can I search for evidence of a bankruptcy,
+probably about 1654? The Chief Registrar's indices do not go back nearly so
+far.
+
+J. K.
+
+_Golden Bees._--Napoleon I. and II. are said to have had their imperial
+robes embroidered with golden bees, as claiming official descent from
+Carolus Magnus. Query, what is the authority for this heraldic distinction,
+said to have been assumed by Charlemagne?
+
+JAMES GRAVES.
+
+Kilkenny.
+
+_The Grindstone Oak._--Can any of your topographical correspondents state
+what is the earliest mention made of an oak tree well known in this part of
+the country, and the destruction of which by fire, on the 5th of November,
+1849, was the subject of regret to all who had seen or heard of it? It was
+called the _Grindstone Oak_, and had been a denizen of the forest of Alice
+Holt, as many suppose, since the days of the Confessor. It measured
+thirty-four feet in circumference, at the height of seven feet from the
+ground; and is mentioned by Gilbert White, in his _History of Selborne_, as
+"the great oak in the Holt, which is deemed by Mr. Marsham to be the
+biggest in this island."
+
+L. L. L.
+
+Near Selborne, Hants.
+
+_Hogarth._--About the year 1746, Mr. Hogarth painted a portrait of himself
+and wife: he afterwards cut the canvass through, and presented the half
+containing his own portrait to a gentleman in Yorkshire.
+
+If any of your numerous readers are in possession of any portrait of Mr.
+Hogarth, about three feet in length, and one foot eight inches wide, or are
+aware of the existence of such a portrait, they will confer a favour by
+addressing a line to
+
+J. PHILLIPS,
+5. Torrington Place, London.
+
+_Adamsons of Perth._--Can any of your Scottish correspondents inform me
+what relationship existed between Patrick Adamson, titular Archbishop of
+St. Andrew's, and the two learned brothers, Henry Adamson, author of the
+_Muses' Threnodie_, and John Adamson, principal of the college at
+Edinburgh, and editor of the _Muses' Welcome_; and whether any existing
+family claims to be descended from them? They were all born at Perth. Henry
+and John were the sons of James Adamson, a merchant and magistrate of the
+fair city. Probably the archbishop was a brother of this James Adamson, and
+son of Patrick Adamson, who was Dean of the Guild when John Knox preached
+his famous sermon at St. John's. Mariota, a daughter of the archbishop, is
+said by Burke to have married Sir Michael {479} Balfour, Bart., of Nortland
+Castle Orkney. Another daughter would appear to have become the wife of
+Thomas Wilson, or Volusenus, as he calls himself, the editor of his
+father-in-law's poems and other publications.
+
+E. H. A.
+
+_Cursitor Barons of the Exchequer._--Will you allow me to repeat a question
+which you inserted in Vol. v., p. 346., as to a list of these officers, and
+any account of their origin and history? Surely some of your
+correspondents, devoted to legal antiquities, can give note a clue to the
+labyrinth which Madox has not ventured to enter. The office still
+exists--with peculiar duties which are still performed--and we know that it
+is an ancient one; all sufficient grounds for inquiry, which I trust will
+meet with some response.
+
+EDWARD FOSS.
+
+_Syriac Scriptures._--I am very anxious to know what editions of the
+Scriptures in Syriac (the _Peshito_) were published between Leusden and
+Schaaf's New Testament, and the entire Bible in 1816 by the Bible Society.
+
+B. H. C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Replies.
+
+PSALMANAZAR.
+
+(Vol. vii., pp. 206. 435.)
+
+Having long felt a great respect for this person, and a great interest in
+all that concerns his history, I am induced to mention the grounds on which
+I have been led to doubt whether the letter in the _Gentleman's Magazine_,
+to which MR. CROSSLEY refers, is worthy of credit. When I first saw it, I
+considered it as so valuable an addition to the information which I had
+collected on the subject, that I was anxious to know who was the writer. It
+had no signature; but the date, "Sherdington, June, 1704," which was
+retained, gave me a clue which, by means not worth detailing, led me to the
+knowledge that what thus appeared in the _Gentleman's Magazine_ for
+February, 1765, had issued from "Curll's chaste press" more than thirty
+years before, in the form of a letter from the person now known in literary
+history as "Curll's Corinna," but by her cotemporaries (see the index of
+Mr. Cunningham's excellent _Handbook of London_) as Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas,
+sometime of Dyot Street, St. Giles's, and afterwards of a locality not
+precisely ascertained, but within the rules of the Fleet, and possibly
+(though Mr. Cunningham does not corroborate this) at some period of her
+life resident in the more genteel quarters which Curll assigns to her. To
+speak more strictly, and make the matter intelligible to any one who may
+look at it in the Magazine, I should add that the first paragraph
+(seventeen lines, on p. 78., dated from "Sherdington," and beginning "I
+dined," says the letter writer, "last Saturday with Sir John Guise, at
+Gloucester") is part of a letter purporting to be written by her lover;
+while all the remainder (on pp. 79-81.) is from Corinna's answer to it.
+
+The worthless and forgotten work of which these letters form a part,
+consists of two volumes. The copy which I borrowed when I discovered what I
+have stated, consisted of a first volume of the second edition (1736), and
+a second volume of the first edition (1732). The title of the second volume
+(which I give as belonging to the earlier edition) is:
+
+ "The Honourable Lovers: or, the second and last Volume of Pylades and
+ Corinna. Being the remainder of Love Letters, and other Pieces (in
+ Verse and Prose), which passed between Richard Gwinnett, Esq.; of Great
+ Shurdington, in Gloucestershire, and Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas, Jun., of
+ Great Russel Street, Bloomsbury. To which is added, a Collection of
+ familiar Letters between Corinna, Mr. Norris, Capt. Hemington, Lady
+ Chudleigh, Lady Pakington, &c. &c. All faithfully published from their
+ original Manuscripts. London: printed in the Year M.DCC.XXXII. (Price
+ 5s.)"
+
+The title-page of the first volume (second edition) differs principally in
+having the statement that the book was "printed for E. Curll" (whose name
+does not appear in the earlier second volume, though perhaps it may have
+done so in the first of that earlier edition), and an announcement that the
+fidelity of the publication is "attested, by Sir Edward Northey, Knight."
+
+The work is a farrago of low rubbish utterly beneath criticism; and I
+should perhaps hardly think it worth while to say as much as I have said of
+it, had it not been that, in turning it about, I could not help feeling a
+suspicion that Daniel Defoe's hand was in the matter, at least so far as
+that papers that had belonged to him might have come into Curll's hands,
+and furnished materials for the work. It would be tedious to enter into
+details; but the question seemed to me to be one of some interest, because,
+in my own mind, it was immediately followed by another, namely, whether
+Daniel had not more to do than has been suspected with the _History of
+Formosa_? Those who are more familiar with Defoe than I am, will be better
+able to judge whether he was, as Psalmanazar says, "the person who
+Englished it from my Latin;" for the youth was as much disqualified for
+writing the book in English, by being a Frenchman, as he would have been if
+he had been a Formosan. He acknowledges that this person assisted him to
+correct improbabilities; but I do not know that he anywhere throws further
+light on the question respecting the help which he must have had. Daniel
+would be just the man to correct some gross improbabilities, and at the
+same time help him to some more probable fictions. Under this impression I
+recently inquired (see "N. & Q.," Vol. vii., p. 305.) respecting the
+authorship of {480} _Pylades and Corinna_, and the possibility that it
+might be the work of Defoe; but I believe that my question has not been
+answered.
+
+I have already trespassed unreasonably on your columns; but still I must
+beg, in justice to a man whose character, as I have said, I very highly
+respect, to add one remark. When his imposture is referred to, it is not
+always remembered that when he came to this country he was not his own
+master. It seems that he rambled away from his home in the South of France,
+when about fifteen years old; that he spent about two years in wandering
+about France and Germany, and astonishing people by pretending to be, at
+first a converted, and afterwards an unconverted, Formosan; that when
+performing this second, pagan, character, he arrived at Sluys, where a
+Scotch regiment in the Dutch service, under Brigadier Lauder, was
+stationed; that the chaplain, named Innes, detected the fraud, but instead
+of reproving the lad for his sin and folly, only considered how he might
+turn the cheat to his own advantage, and render it conducive to his own
+preferment. The abandoned miscreant actually went through the blasphemous
+mockery of baptizing the youth as a convert from heathenism; named him
+after the brigadier, who stood godfather: claimed credit from the Bishop of
+London for his zeal; and was by the kind prelate invited to bring his
+convert to London. The chaplain lost no time in accepting, was graciously
+received by the bishop and the archbishop, snapped up the first piece of
+preferment that would answer his views (it happened to be the office of
+chaplain-general to the forces in Portugal), and made off, leaving his
+convert to bear the storm which was sure to burst on him, as best he might.
+That a youth thus tutored and thus abandoned, before Johnson was born,
+should have lived to attract his society, and win from him the testimony
+that he was "the best man" whom he had ever known, gives him a claim to our
+respect, which seems to me to be strengthened by everything which I have
+been able to learn respecting him.
+
+S. R. MAITLAND.
+
+Gloucester.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CONSECRATED ROSES, ETC.
+
+(Vol. vii., p. 407.)
+
+Had G.'s Query referred solely to the consecration of _The Golden Rose_, I
+might have given him a satisfactory answer by referring him to Cartari's
+essay on the subject entitled _La Rosa d'Ora Pontificia, &c._, 4to. 1681,
+and to the account (with accompanying engraving) of the _Rose, Sword, and
+Cap_ consecrated by Julius III., and sent by him to Philip and Mary; and to
+Cardinal Pole's exposition of these Papal gifts, which are to be found in
+the 1st volume of F. Angeli Rocca, _Opera Omnia_ (fol. Rome, 1719). In the
+authors to whom I have referred, much curious information will, however, be
+found. I take this opportunity of saying, that as I am about to submit a
+communication on the subject of _The Golden Rose_ to the Society of
+Antiquaries, I shall feel obliged by any hints which may help me to render
+it more complete; and of putting on record in "N. & Q." the following
+particulars of the ceremonial, as it was performed on the 6th of March
+last, which I extract from the _Dublin Weekly Telegraph_ of the 9th of
+April.
+
+ "On Sunday, the 6th [March, 1853], the Benediction of the Golden Rose,
+ was, according to annual usage, performed by the Pontiff previously to
+ High Mass, in the Sistine Chapel, celebrated by a cardinal, at which he
+ assists every Sunday during Lent. To the more ancient practice of
+ blessing, on the fourth Sunday of 'Quaresima,' a pair of gold and
+ silver keys, touched with filings from the chains of St. Peter (which
+ are still preserved in Rome), the Holy See has substituted that of the
+ Benediction of the 'Rosa d'Oro,' to be presented, within the year, to
+ some sovereign or other potentate, who has proved well deserving of the
+ Church. The first positive record respecting the Golden Rose has been
+ ascribed to the Pontificate of Leo IX. (1049-53); but a writer in the
+ _Civitta Catolica_ states that allusion to a census levied for its cost
+ may be found in the annals of a still earlier period. The Pontiffs used
+ formerly to present it annually to the Prefect of Rome, after singing
+ Mass, on this Sunday, at the Lateran, and pronouncing a homily, during
+ which they lifted the consecrated object in one hand whilst expounding
+ to the people its mystic significance. Pius II. (1458) is the last Pope
+ recorded to have thus preached in reference to and thus conferred the
+ Golden Rose; and the first foreign potentate recorded to have received
+ it from the Holy See is Fulk, Count of Anjou, to whom it was presented
+ by Urban II. in 1096. A homily of Innocent III. also contains all
+ explanation of this beautiful symbol--the precious metal, the balsam
+ and musk used in consecrating it, being taken in mystic sense as
+ allusion to the triple substance in the person of the Incarnate
+ Lord--divinity, soul, and body. It is not merely a single flower, but
+ an entire rose-tree that is represented--the whole about a foot in
+ height, most delicately wrought in fine lamina of gold. This being
+ previously deposited between lighted candelabra, on a table in the
+ sacristy, is taken by the youngest cleric of the camera, to be
+ consigned to his Holiness, after the latter has been vested for the
+ solemnity, but before his assuming the mitre. After a beautiful form of
+ prayer, with incense and holy water, the Pontiff then, holding the
+ object in his hand, imparts the Benediction, introducing into the
+ flower which crowns the graceful stem, and is perforated so as to
+ provide a receptacle, balsam of Peru and powder of musk. He then passes
+ with the usual procession into the Sistine, still carrying the rose in
+ his left hand; and during the Mass it remains beneath the crucifix over
+ the altar. If in the course of the year no donation of the precious
+ object is thought advisable, the same is consecrated afresh on the
+ anniversary following. Some have conjectured that the Empress of France
+ will be selected {481} by Pius IX. to receive this honour in the
+ present instance; but this is mere conjecture. On a former occasion, it
+ is true, the Golden Rose was conferred by him on another crowned head
+ of the fairer sex--one entitled to more than common regards from the
+ Supreme Pastor in adversity--the Queen of Naples."
+
+WILLIAM J. THOMS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CAMPBELL'S IMITATIONS.
+
+(Vol. vi., p. 505.)
+
+It is curious that two of the passages pointed out by MR. BREEN, as
+containing borrowed ideas, are those quoted by Alison in his recent volume
+(_Hist. Eur._, vol. i. pp. 429, 430.) to support his panegyric on Campbell,
+of whose "felicitous images" he speaks with some enthusiasm.
+
+The propensity of Campbell to adapt or imitate the thoughts and expressions
+of others has often struck me. Let me then suggest the following (taken at
+random) as further, and I believe hitherto unnoticed, illustrations of that
+propensity:
+
+ 1. "When front to front the banner'd hosts combine,
+ Halt ere they close, and form the dreadful line."
+ _Pleasures of Hope._
+
+ "When front to front the marching armies shine,
+ Halt ere they meet, and form the lengthening line."
+ Pope, _Battle of Frogs and Mice_.
+
+ 2. "As sweep the shot stars down the troubled sky."
+ _Pleasures of Hope._
+
+ "And rolls low thunder thro' _the troubled sky_."
+ Pope, _Frogs and Mice_.
+
+ 3. "With meteor-standard to the winds unfurl'd."
+ _Pleasures of Hope._
+
+ "The imperial _standard_ which full high advanc'd,
+ Shone _like a meteor_ streaming _to the wind_."
+ Milton, _Par. Lost_, i. 535.
+
+ 4. "The dying man to Sweden turn'd his eye,
+ Thought of his home, and clos'd it with a sigh."
+ _Pleasures of Hope._
+
+ "Sternitur infelix alieno vulnere, coelumque
+ Aspicit, _et dulces moriens reminiscitur Argos_."
+ Virgil, _Æn._, x. 782.
+
+ 5. "... Red meteors flash'd along the sky,
+ And conscious Nature shudder'd at the cry."
+ _Pleasures of Hope._
+
+ "... _Fulsere ignes, et conscius_ æther."
+ Virgil, _Æn._, iv. 167.
+
+ 6. "In hollow winds he hears a spirit moan."
+ _Pleasures of Hope._
+
+Shakespeare has the _hollow whistling_ of the southern _wind_.
+
+ 7. "The strings of Nature crack'd with agony."
+ _Pleasures of Hope._
+
+ "His _grief_ grew puissant. and _the strings of life_
+ Began _to crack_."--Shakspeare, _King Lear_.
+
+ 8. "The fierce extremes of good and ill to brook."
+ _Gertrude of Wyoming._
+
+ "... And feel by turns the bitter change
+ Of _fierce extremes, extremes_ by change more _fierce_."
+ Milton, _Par. Lost_, ii. 599.
+
+ 9. "His tassell'd horn beside him laid."
+ _O'Connor's Child._
+
+ "... Ere th' odorous breath of morn
+ Awakes the slumbering leaves, or _tassell'd horn_
+ Shakes the high thicket."--Milton, _Arcades_.
+
+ 10. "The scented wild-weeds and enamell'd moss."
+ _Theodric._
+
+Campbell thinks it necessary to explain this latter epithet in a note: "The
+moss of Switzerland, as well as that of the Tyrol, is remarkable for a
+bright smoothness approaching to the appearance of enamel." And yet was no
+one, or both, of the following passages floating in his brain when his pen
+traced the line?
+
+ "O'er the _smooth enamell'd green_
+ Where no print of sleep hath been."
+ Milton, _Arcades_.
+
+ "Here blushing Flora paints _th' enamell'd ground_."
+ Pope, _Winsdor Forest_.
+
+W. T. M.
+
+Hong Kong.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+"THE HANOVER RAT."
+
+(Vol. vii. p. 206.)
+
+_An Essay on Irish Bulls_ is said to have found its way into a catalogue of
+works upon natural history; with which precedent in my favour, and pending
+the inquiries of _naturalists_, _ratcatchers_, and _farmers_ into the
+history of the above-named formidable invader, I hope MR. HIBBERD will have
+no objection to my intruding a bibliographical curiosity under the
+convenient head he has opened for it in "N. & Q."
+
+My book, then, bears the appropriate title, _An Attempt towards a Natural
+History of the Hanover Rat, dedicated to P***m M******r, M.D., and S----y
+to the Royal Society_, 8vo., pp. 24.: London, 1744.
+
+The writer of this curious piece takes his _cue_ from that remarkable
+production, _An Attempt towards a Natural History of the Polype_, 1743; in
+which the learned Mr. Henry Baker, in a letter to Martin Folkes, of 218
+pages, 8vo., illustrated by a profusion of woodcuts, elaborately describes
+this link between the animal and vegetable creation, and the experiments he
+practised upon the same: commencing with "cutting off a polype's head," and
+so on through a series of scientific barbarities upon his _little
+creature_, which ended only in "turning a polype inside out!"
+
+Following the plan of Mr. Baker, the anonymous author of _The Hanover Rat_
+tells us, that, after thirty years' laborious research, he had {482}
+satisfied himself that this animal was not a native of these islands: "I
+cannot," he says, "particularly mark the date of its first appearance, yet
+I think it is within the memory of man;" and finding favour in its original
+_mine affamée_ state with a few of the most starved and hungry of the
+English rats from the common sewer, he proceeds to show that it _did_
+extirpate the natives; but whether this is the best account, or whether the
+facts of the case as here set forth will satisfy your correspondent, is
+another thing. According to _my_ authority, the aboriginal rat was, at the
+period of writing, sorely put to it to maintain his ground against the
+invading colonists and their unnatural allies the _providers_; and the
+present work seems to have been an effort on the part of one in the
+interest of the former to awaken them to a sense of their danger. In his
+laudable attempts to rally their courage, this advocate reminds them of a
+similar crisis when their country was infested with a species of frog
+called _Dutch frogs_: "which no sooner," says he, "began to be mischievous,
+than its growth and progress was stopped by the natives." "Had we," he
+continues, "but the same public spirit with our ancestors, we need not
+complain to-day of being eaten up by _rats_. Our country is the same, but
+alas! we feel no more the same affection for it." In this way he stimulates
+the invaded to a combined attack upon the common enemy, and we need not
+tell _our_ readers how successfully, nor how desperate the struggle, the
+very next year; which ended in the complete ascendancy of the _Hanover
+rat_, or reigning family, over the unlucky Jacobite native. Under his
+figure of a rat, this Jacobite is very scurrilous indeed upon the
+Hanoverian succession; and, continuing his _polypian_ imitations, relates a
+few coarse experiments upon _his subject_ illustrative of its destructive
+properties, voracity, and sagacity, which set at nought "all the
+contrivances of the farmer to defend his barns; the trailer his warehouse;
+the gentleman his land; or the inferior people their cup-boards and small
+beer cellars. No bars or bolts can keep them out, nor can any gin or trap
+lay hold of them."
+
+Luckily for us living in these latter days, we can extract amusement from
+topics of this nature, which would have subjected our forefathers to severe
+pains and penalties; and looking at the character and mischievous tendency
+of _The Hanover Rat_, I am curious to know if Mary Cooper, the publisher,
+was put under surveillance for her share in its production; for to me it
+appears a more aggravated libel upon the reigning family than that of the
+_Norfolk Prophecy_--for the publication of which, Boswell says, the great
+Samuel Johnson had to play at hide and seek with the officers of justice.
+
+The advent of both Pretenders was preceded by _straws_ like these cast out
+by their adherents, to try _how the current set_. The present _jeu
+d'esprit_, however, is a double-shotted one: for, not content with
+tampering with the public allegiance, this aboriginal rat seems more
+innocently enjoying a laugh at the Royal Society, and its ingenious
+_fellow_ Mr. Baker, in as far as regards the aforesaid elaborate treatise
+upon _polypes_.
+
+J. O.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+FONT INSCRIPTIONS.
+
+(Vol. vii., p. 408.)
+
+MR. ELLACOMBE desires examples of these. I can supply the following:--
+
+At Bradley, Lincolnshire, is a very large font, of the Decorated period,
+with this inscription round the bowl in black letter:
+
+ "Pater Noster, Ave Maria, and Criede, leren ye chyld yt es nede."
+
+This is an early instance of the use of _English_ for inscriptions. The
+sketch was engraved in the work on _Baptismal Fonts_.
+
+At Threckingham, Lincolnshire, I believe I succeeded in deciphering an
+inscription round the font, which was said to have been previously studied
+in vain. It is somewhat defaced; but in all probability the words are,--
+
+ "Ave Maria gracia p... d... t..."
+
+_i. e._ of course, "plena, dominus tecum." The bowl of the font is Early
+English; but the base, round which the inscription runs, appears to be of
+the fifteenth century.
+
+At Burgate, Suffolk, an inscription in black letter is incised on the upper
+step of the font:
+
+ "[Orate pro an--b'] Will'mi Burgate militis et d[=n]e Elionore uxoris
+ eius qui istum fontem fieri fecerunt."
+
+Sir William Burgate died in 1409. It is engraved in the _Proceedings of the
+Bury and West Suffolk Archæological Institute_.
+
+At Caistor, by Norwich:
+
+ "Orate pro animab ... liis ... ici de Castre."
+
+At Walsoken, Norfolk:
+
+ "Remember the soul of S. Honyter and Margaret his wife, and John
+ Beforth, Chaplain."
+
+with the date 1544.
+
+At Gaywood, Norfolk, is a font of Gothic design, lust probably of
+post-Reformation date. On four of the eight sides of the bowl are these
+inscriptions:
+
+ "QVI . CREDIDE "VOCE . PATER
+ RIT . ET . BAPTI NATUS . CORPORE
+ ZATVS . FVERIT FLAMEN . AVE.
+ SALVVS . ERIT." MAT. 3."
+
+ "CHRISTVM . IN "I . AM . THY . GOD
+ DVISTIS . QVOT AND . THE . GOD
+ QVOT . BAPTI OF . THY . SEEDE.
+ ZATI . ESTIS." GEN."
+
+{483}
+
+At Tilney, All Saints, Norfolk, is an inscribed font so similar to the one
+last mentioned that they are probably the works of the same designer.
+
+On the _cover_ of the font at Southacre, Norfolk, is this inscription:
+
+ "Orate p. aia. M[=r]i. Ri[=c]i. Gotts et d[=n]i Galfridi baker,
+ Rectoris huj' [eccl[=i]e qui hoc] opus fieri fece^t."
+
+I may take the opportunity of adding two _pulpit_ inscriptions; one at
+Utterby, Lincolnshire, on the sounding-board:
+
+ "Quoties conscendo animo contimesco."
+
+The other at Swarby, in the same county:
+
+ "O God my Saviour be my sped,
+ To preach thy word, men's soulls to fed."
+
+C. R. M.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+IRISH RHYMES--ENGLISH PROVINCIALISMS--LOWLAND SCOTCH.
+
+(Vol. vi., pp. 605, 606.)
+
+MR. BEDE, who first called attention to a class of rhymes which he
+denominated "Irish," seems to take it ill that I have dealt with his
+observations as somewhat "hypercritical." I acknowledge the justness of his
+criticism; but I did, and must still, demur to the propriety of calling
+certain false rhymes peculiarly _Irish_, when I am able to produce similes
+from poets of celebrity, who cannot stand excused by MR. BEDE'S
+explanation, that the rhymes in question "made music for their Irish ear."
+If, as he tells us, MR. BEDE was not "blind to similar imperfections in
+English poets," I am yet to learn why he should fix on "Swift's Irishisms,"
+and call those errors a national peculiarity, when he finds them so freely
+scattered through the standard poetry of England?
+
+Your correspondent J. H. T. suggests a new direction for inquiry on this
+subject when he conjectures that the pronunciation now called _Irish_ was,
+"during the first half of the eighteenth century, the received
+pronunciation of the most correct speakers of the day;" and MR. BEDE
+himself suggests that _provincialisms_ may sometimes modify the rhymes of
+even so correct a versifier as Tennyson. I hope some of your contributors
+will have "drunk so deep of the well of English undefiled" as to be
+competent to address themselves to this point of inquiry. I cannot pretend
+to do much, being but a shallow philologist; yet, since I received your
+last Number, I have lighted on a passage in that volume of "omnifarious
+information" Croker's _Boswell_, which will not be deemed inapplicable.
+
+Boswell, during a sojourn at Lichfield in 1776, expressed a doubt as to the
+correctness of Johnson's eulogy on his townsmen, as "speaking the purest
+English," and instanced several provincial sounds, such as _there_
+pronounced like _fear_, _once_ like _woonse_. On this passage are a
+succession of notes: Burney observes, that "David Garrick always said
+_shupreme, shuperior_." Malone's note brings the case in point to ours when
+he says, "This is still the vulgar pronunciation in Ireland; the
+pronunciation in Ireland is doubtless that which generally prevailed in
+England in the time of Queen Elizabeth." And Mr. Croker sums up the case
+thus:
+
+ "No doubt the English settlers carried over, and may have in some cases
+ preserved, the English idiom and accent of their day. Bishop Kearny, as
+ well as his friend Mr. Malone, thought that the most remarkable
+ peculiarity of Irish pronunciation, as in _say_ for _sea_, _tay_ for
+ _tea_, was _the English mode, even down to the reign of Queen Anne_;
+ and there are rhymes in Pope, and more frequently in Dryden, that
+ countenance that opinion. But rhymes cannot be depended upon for minute
+ identity of sound."--Croker's _Notes_, A.D. 1776.
+
+If this explanation be adopted, it will account for the examples I have
+been furnishing, and others which I find even among the harmonious rhymes
+of Spenser (he might, however, have caught the brogue in Ireland); yet am I
+free to own that to me popular pronunciation scarcely justifies the
+committing to paper such loose rhymes as ought to grate on that fineness of
+ear which is an essential faculty in the true poet; "here or awa'," in
+England or Ireland, I continue to set them down to "slip-slop composition."
+
+It may not be inappropriate to notice, that among Swift's eccentricities,
+we find a propensity to "out-of-the-way rhymes." In his works are numerous
+examples of couplets made apparently for no other purpose but to show that
+no word could baffle him; and the anecdote of his long research for a rhyme
+for the name of his old enemy Serjent _Betsworth_, and of the curious
+accident by which he obtained it, is well known; from which we may conclude
+that he was on the watch for occasions of exhibiting such rhymes as
+_rakewell_ and _sequel_, _charge ye_ and _clergy_, without supposing him
+ignorant that he was guilty of "lèse majesté" against the laws of correct
+pronunciation.
+
+When I asked MR. BEDE'S decision on a _palpable Cockneyism_ in verse, I did
+so merely with a view, by a "_tu quoque_ pleasantry," to enliven a
+discussion, which I hope we may carry on and conclude in that good humour
+with which I accept his parenthetic hint, that I have made "a bull" of my
+Pegasus. I beg to submit to him, that, as I read the _Classical
+Dictionary_, it is from the _heels_ of Pegasus the fount of poetic
+inspiration is supposed to be derived; and, further, that the _brogue_ is
+not so _malapropos_ to the _heel_ as he imagines, for in Ireland the
+_brogue_ is in use as well to cover the _understanding_ as to _tip the
+tongue_. Could I enjoy the pleasure of MR. BEDE'S company in a stroll over
+my native mountains, he might find that there are occasions on which he
+might be glad to put off {484} his London-made shoe, and "to _wear_ the
+_brogue_, though _speak_ none."
+
+A. B. R.
+
+P.S.--The _postscriptum_ of J. H. T. respecting the pronunciation of
+English being preserved in Scotland, goes direct to an opinion I long since
+formed, that the Lowland Scotch, as we read it in the Waverley Novels, is
+the only genuine unadulterated remains we have of the Saxon language, as
+used before the Norman Conquest. I formed this opinion from continually
+tracing what we call "braid Scotch" to its root, in Bosworth's, and other
+Saxon dictionaries; and I lately found this fact confirmed and accounted
+for in a passage of Verstegan, as follows:--He tells us that after the
+battle of Hastings Prince Edgar Atheling, with his sisters Margaret and
+Christian, retired into Scotland, where King Malcolm married the former of
+these ladies; and proceeds thus:
+
+ "As now the English court, by reason of the aboundance of Normannes
+ therein, became moste to speak French, so the Scottish court, because
+ of the queen, and the many English that came with her, began to speak
+ English; the which language, it would seem, King Malcolm himself had
+ before that learned, and now, by reason of his queen, did more affecte
+ it. But the English toung, in fine, prevailed more in Scotland than the
+ French did in England; _for English became the language of all the
+ south part of Scotland_, the Irish (or Gaelic) having before that been
+ the general language of the whole country, since remaining only in the
+ north."--Verstegan's _Restitution of Antiquities_, A.D. 1605.
+
+Many of your accomplished philological readers will doubtless consider the
+information of this Note trivial and puerile; but they will, I hope, bear
+with a tyro in the science, in recording an original remark of his own,
+borne out by an authority so decisive as Verstegan.
+
+A. B. R.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PICTURES BY HOGARTH.
+
+(Vol. vii., pp. 339. 412.)
+
+In reply to AMATEUR, I can inform him that at the sale of the Marlborough
+effects at Marlborough House about thirty years ago, there were sold four
+or five small whole-lengths in oil of members of that family. They were
+hardly clever enough for what Hogarth's after-style would lead us to
+expect, but there were many reasons for thinking they were by him. They
+came into the possession of Mr. Croker, who presented them, as family
+curiosities, to the second Earl Spencer, and they are now, I presume, in
+the gallery at Althorpe. One of them was peculiarly curious as connected
+with a remarkable anecdote of the great Duchess. Horace Walpole tells us in
+the _Reminiscences_, her granddaughter, Lady Bateman, having persuaded her
+brother, the young Duke of Marlborough, to marry a Miss Trevor without the
+Duchess's consent:
+
+ "The grandam's rage exceeded all bounds. Having a portrait of Lady
+ Bateman, she blackened the face, and then wrote on it, '_Now her
+ outside's as black as her inside._'"
+
+One of the portraits I speak of was of Lady Bateman, and bore on its face
+evidence of having incurred some damage, for the coat of arms with which
+(like all the others, and as was Hogarth's fashion) it was ornamented in
+one corner, were angrily scratched out, as with a knife. Whether this
+defacement gave rise to Walpole's story, or whether the face had been also
+blackened with some stuff that was afterwards removed, seems doubtful; the
+picture itself, according to my recollection, showed no mark but the
+armorial defacement.
+
+I much wonder this style of small whole-lengths has not been more
+prevalent; they give the general air and manner of the personage so much
+better than the bust size can do, and they are so much more suited to the
+size of our ordinary apartments.
+
+C.
+
+Referring to AN AMATEUR'S inquiry as to where any pictures painted by
+Hogarth are to be seen, I beg to say that I have in my possession, and
+should be happy to show him, the portrait of Hogarth's wife (Sir William
+Thornhill's daughter), painted by himself.
+
+LYNDON ROLLS.
+
+Banbury.
+
+The late Bishop Luscombe showed me, at Paris, in 1835, a picture of "The
+Oratorio,"--a subject well known from Hogarth's etching. He told me that he
+bought it at a broker's shop in the Rue St. Denis; that, on examination, he
+found the frame to be English; and that, as the price was small--thirty
+francs, if I remember rightly--he bought the piece, without supposing it to
+be more than a copy. Sir William Knighton, on seeing it in the bishop's
+collection, told him that Hogarth's original had belonged to the Dukes of
+Richmond, and had been in their residence at Paris until the first
+Revolution, since which time it had not been heard of; and Sir William had
+no doubt that the bishop had been so fortunate as to recover it. Perhaps
+some of your readers may have something to say on this story.
+
+J. C. R.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PHOTOGRAPHIC CORRESPONDENCE.
+
+_Washing Collodion Process._--In "N. & Q.," No. 153., p. 320., your valued
+correspondent DR. DIAMOND states "that up to the _final_ period of the
+operation, no washing of the plate is requisite. It prevents, rather than
+assists, the necessary chemical action.".
+
+Now, in all other instructions I have yet seen, it is directed to wash off
+the iron, or other developing solution, _prior_ to immersing in the hypo.,
+and after {485} such immersion, again to wash well in water. I shall feel
+greatly obliged if DR. D. will be kind enough to state whether the
+first-named washing is requisite, or whether the properties of the hypo.,
+or the beauty of the picture, will be in any way injured by the previous
+solutions _not_ having been washed off, prior to the fixings.
+
+C. W.
+
+ [We have submitted this Query to DR. DIAMOND, who informs us that he
+ never adopts the practice of washing off the developing fluid, and
+ considers it not only needless, but sometimes prejudicial, as when such
+ washing has not been resorted to, the hyposulphite solution flows more
+ readily over the picture, and causes none of the unpleasant stains
+ which frequently occur in pictures which have been previously washed,
+ especially if hard water has been used. But besides this, and the
+ saving of time, the doing away with this unnecessary washing economises
+ water, which in out-door practice is often a great consideration. DR.
+ DIAMOND would again impress upon our readers the advantage of using the
+ hyposulphite over and over again, merely keeping up its full strength
+ by the addition of fresh crystals of the salt from time to time, as
+ such practice produces pictures of whiter and softer tone than are ever
+ produced by the raw solution.]
+
+_Colouring Collodion Pictures_ (Vol. vii., p. 388.)--A patent has just been
+taken out (dated September 23, 1852) for this purpose, by Mons. J. L.
+Tardieu, of Paris. He terms his process _tardiochromy_. It consists in
+applying oil or other colours at the back of the pictures, so as to give
+the requisite tints to the several parts of the photograph, without at all
+interfering with its extreme delicacy. It may even, in some cases, be used
+to remedy defects in the photographic picture. The claim is essentially for
+the application of colours at the back, instead of on the surface of
+photographs, whatever kind of colours may be used. It is therefore, of
+course, applicable only to photographs taken on paper, glass, or some
+transparent material.
+
+A. C. WILSON.
+
+_Wanted, a simple Test for a good Lens._--As all writers on Photography
+agree that the first great essential for successful practice is a good
+lens--that is to say, a lens of which the visual and chemical foci
+coincide--can any of the scientific readers of "N. & Q." point out any
+simple test by which unscientific parties desirous of practising
+photography may be enabled to judge of the goodness of a lens? A country
+gentleman, like myself, may purchase a lens from an eminent house, with an
+assurance that it is everything that can be desired (and I am _not_ putting
+an imaginary case), and may succeed in getting beautiful images upon his
+focussing-glass, but very unsatisfactory pictures; and it may not be until
+he has almost abandoned photography, in despair at his own want of skill,
+that he has the opportunity of showing his apparatus, manipulation, &c. to
+some more practised hand, who is enabled to prove that _the lens was not
+capable_ of doing what the vendors stated it could do. Surely scientific
+men must know of a simple test which would save the disappointment I have
+described; and I hope some one will take pity upon me, and send it to "N. &
+Q.," for the benefit of myself and every other
+
+COUNTRY PRACTITIONER.
+
+_Photographic Tent--Restoration of Faded Negatives._--In Vol. vii., p.
+462., I find M. F. M. inquiring for a cheap and portable tent, effective
+for photographic operations out of doors. I have for the last two years,
+and in mid-day (June), prepared calotype paper, and also the collodion
+glass plates, for the camera, under a tent of glazed yellow calico of only
+a single thickness: the light admitted is very great, but does not in the
+least injure the most sensitive plate or paper. It is made square like a
+large bag, so that in a room I can use it double as a blind; and out of
+doors, in a high wind, I have crept into it, and prepared my paper opposite
+the object I intended to calotype.
+
+I should be glad it any of your readers would inform me how a failed
+negative calotype can be restored to its original strength. I last year
+took a great number, some of which have nearly faded away; and others are
+as strong, and as able to be used to print from, as when first done. The
+paper was prepared with the single iodide of silver solution, and rendered
+sensitive with aceto-nitrate sil. and gallic acid in the usual way. I
+attribute the fading to the hyposulphate not being got rid of; and the
+question is, Can the picture he restored?
+
+Are DR. DIAMOND'S _Notes_ published yet?
+
+S. S. B., Jun.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Replies to Minor Queries.
+
+_Gibbon's Library_ (Vol. vii., p. 407.).--I visited it in 1825, in company
+with Dr. Scholl, of Lausanne, who took charge of it for Mr. Beckford. It
+was sold between 1830 and 1835, partly by auction, partly by private sale
+in detail.
+
+JAMES DENNISTOUN.
+
+_Robert Drury_ (Vol. v., p. 533.).--I am afraid that the credit attachable
+to Drury's _Madagascar_ is not supported or strengthened by the
+announcement that the author was "every day to be spoken with" at Old Tom's
+Coffee House in Birchin Lane. _The Apparition of Mrs. Veal_, and other
+productions of a similar description, should make us very doubtful as
+regards the literature of the earlier part of the eighteenth century. Might
+not a person have been suborned to represent the fictitious Robert Drury,
+to the benefit of the coffee-house keeper as well as the publisher? I am
+induced to express this suspicion by a parallel case of the same period.
+_The Ten Years' Voyages of Captain George Roberts_, London, 1726, is
+universally, I {486} believe, considered fictitious, and ascribed to Defoe;
+yet at the end of the work we find:
+
+ "N. B.--The little boy so often mentioned in the foregoing sheets, now
+ lives with Mr. Galapin, a tobacconist, in Monument Yard; and may be
+ referred to for the truth of most of the particulars before related."
+
+W. PINKERTON.
+
+Ham.
+
+_Grub Street Journal_ (Vol. vii., p. 383.).--MR. JAMES CROSSLEY, after
+quoting Eustace Budgell's conjectures as to the writers of this paper,
+leaves it as doubtful whether Pope was or was not one of them. The poet has
+himself contradicted Budgell's insinuation when he retorted upon him in
+those terrible lines (alluding to his alleged forgery of a will):
+
+ "Let Budgell charge low Grub Street to my quill,
+ And write whate'er he please--except my will!"
+
+ALEXANDER ANDREWS.
+
+_Wives of Ecclesiastics_ (Vol. i., p. 115.).--In considering "the statutes
+made by Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas, Archbishop of York, and
+all the other bishops of England," ann. 1108, interdicting the marriage of
+ecclesiastics, might it not be worth investigating, by such of your
+correspondents as are curious on the subject, what had been the antecedents
+of the several bishops themselves?
+
+With respect to Thomas II., Archbishop of York, it is historically certain,
+that he was the _son_ of an ecclesiastic, and likewise the _grandson_ of an
+ecclesiastic (his _father_ being one of the bishops who concurred in these
+statutes). Neither does it seem altogether unlikely that Thomas himself
+also had spent some part of his early life in bonds of wedlock, since we
+learn from the _Monasticon_ (vol. iii. p. 490. of new edit.), that "Thomas,
+_son of Thomas_ (_the second of that name_), _Archbishop of York_,
+confirmed what his predecessors, Thomas and Girard, had given," &c. If this
+be correct, as stated[4], the conclusion is inevitable; but possibly some
+error may have arisen out of the circumstance, that Thomas I. and Thomas
+II., Archbishops of York, were uncle and nephew.
+
+J. SANSOM.
+
+[Footnote 4: Robertus Bloëtus also, who was still Bishop of Lincoln, and
+Rogerus, Bishop of Salisbury, appear to have had sons, though, perhaps, not
+born in wedlock; but query.]
+
+_Blanco White._--In Vol. vii., p. 404., is a copy of a sonnet which is said
+to be "_on_ the Rev. Joseph Blanco White." This sonnet is one which I have
+been in search of for some years. I saw it in a newspaper (I believe the
+_Athenæum_), but not having secured a copy of it at the time, now ten or
+twelve years ago, I have had occasion to regret it ever since, and am
+consequently much obliged to BALLIOLENSIS for his preservation of it in "N.
+& Q." "It is needless," as he well observes, "to say anything in its
+praise." I should add, that my strong impression is that this sonnet was
+written _by_ Blanco White.
+
+H. C. K.
+
+---- Rectory, Hereford.
+
+_Captain Ayloff_ (Vol. vii., p. 429.).--Your correspondent will find a
+short notice of Capt. Ayloff in Jacob's _Poetical Register_ (1719-20, 8vo.,
+2 vols.), and two of his poetical pieces--"Marvell's Ghost" and the
+"Cambridge Commencement"--in Nichols's _Collection of Poems_ (vol. iii. pp.
+186-188.), 1780, 12mo. There is considerable vigour in his "Marvell's
+Ghost;" and had he cultivated his talent, he might have taken a respectable
+place as a poet amongst the writers of his time.
+
+JAS. CROSSLEY.
+
+_General Monk and the University of Cambridge_ (Vol. vii., p. 427.).--I
+cannot doubt that "W. D." was Dr. William Dillingham, Master of Emmanuel
+College, and Vice-Chancellor of the University, from November 1659 till
+November 1660.
+
+The election to which his letter relates took place April 3, 1660. The
+votes were:
+
+ Lord General Moncke 341
+ Thomas Crouch, M.A., Fellow of Trin. Coll. 211
+ Oliver St. John, Chancellor of the University 157
+
+The Vice-Chancellor, in his accounts, makes this charge:
+
+ "Paid to two messengers sent to wait on y^e Lord Generall about y^e
+ burgesship, 4l. 10s."--_M. S. Baker_, xl. 59.
+
+On the 22nd of May, General Monk, who had been also chosen for Devonshire,
+made his election to sit for that county.
+
+C. H. COOPER.
+
+Cambridge.
+
+In reply to LEICESTRIENSIS, I beg leave to inform him that "W. D." was Wm.
+Dillingham, D.D., master of Clare Hall, and at the time Vice-Chancellor of
+the University of Cambridge. The letter in question, which was the original
+draft, was, with a variety of other family papers, _stolen_ from me in
+1843.
+
+J. P. ORD.
+
+P.S.--Query, from whom did the present possessor obtain it?
+
+_The Ribston Pippin_ (Vol. vii., p. 436.).--The remarks of your
+correspondent H. C. K., respecting the uncertain origin of the Ribston
+pippin, reminded me of a communication which I received about fifty years
+ago, from one of the sisters of the late Sir Henry Goodricke, the last of
+the family who possessed Ribston. Though it leaves the question concerning
+the origin of that excellent apple unsettled, yet it may not be
+uninteresting to {487} H. C. K. and some others of your numerous readers. I
+therefore send a transcript:
+
+"_Tradition of the Ribston Pippin Tree._
+
+"About the beginning of the last century, Sir Henry Goodricke, father of
+the late Sir John Goodricke, had three pips sent by a friend in a letter
+from Rouen in Normandy, which were sown at Ribston. Two of the pips
+produced nothing: the third is the present tree, which is in good health,
+and still continues to bear fruit."
+
+"_Another Account._
+
+"Sir Henry, the father of the late Sir John Goodricke, being at Rouen in
+Normandy, preserved the pips of some fine flavoured apples, and sent them
+to Ribston, where they were sown, and the produce in due time planted in
+what then was the park. Out of seven trees planted, five proved decided
+crabs, and are all dead. The other two proved good apples; they never were
+grafted, and one of them is the celebrated original Ribston pippin tree."
+
+The latter tradition has, I believe, always been considered as the most
+correct.
+
+S. D.
+
+_Cross and Pile_ (Vol. vi., _passim._).--The various disquisitions of your
+correspondents on the word _pile_ are very ingenious; but I think it is
+very satisfactorily explained as "a ship" by Joseph Scaliger in _De Re
+nummaria Dissertatio_, Leyden, 1616:
+
+ "Macrobius de nummo _ratito_ loquens, qui erat æreus: _ita fuisse
+ signatum hodieque intelligitur in aleæ lusu, quum pueri denarios in
+ sublime jactantes, Capita aut Navia, lusu teste vetustatis
+ exclamant_."--P. 58.
+
+And in Scaligerana (prima):
+
+ "Nummus ratitus--ce qu'aujourd'hui nous appellons jouer à croix ou à
+ pile, car _pile_ est un vieil mot français qui signifiait un Navire,
+ _unde_ Pilote. Ratitus nummus erat ex ære, sic dictus ab effigie
+ ratus."--Tom. ii., Amsterdam, 1740, p. 130.
+
+See also, _Auctores Latinæ Linguæ_, by Gothofred, 1585, p. 169. l. 53.
+Also, _Dictionnaire National_ of M. Bescherelle, tome ii. p 885., Paris,
+1846, art. PILE (_subst. fém._)
+
+_En passant_, allow me to point out a very curious and interesting account
+of this game, being the pastime of Edward II., in the _Antiquarian
+Repertory_, by Grose and Astle: Lond. 1808, 4to., vol. ii. pp 406-8.
+
+[Phi].
+
+Richmond, Surrey.
+
+_Ellis Walker_ (Vol. vii., p. 382.).--
+
+ "Ellis Walker, D.D.," according to Ware, "was born in the city of York;
+ but came young into Ireland, and was educated in the college of Dublin,
+ where he passed through all his degrees. He fled from thence in the
+ troublesome reign of King James II., and lived with an uncle at York,
+ where he translated _Epictetus_ into verse. After the settlement of
+ Ireland he returned, and for seven years employed himself with great
+ reputation in teaching a public school at Drogheda, where he died on
+ the 17th April, 1701, in the fortieth year of his age; and was buried
+ there in St. Peter's Church, and twenty years after had a monument
+ erected to his memory by one of his scholars."
+
+TYRO.
+
+Dublin.
+
+_Blackguard_ (Vol. vii., pp. 77. 273.).--I am not aware that the following
+extract from Burton's _Anatomy of Melancholy_ has ever yet been quoted
+under this heading. Would it not be worth the while to add it to the
+extract from Hobbes's _Microcosmos_, quoted by JARLTZBERG, Vol. ii., p.
+134. and again, by SIR J. EMERSON TENNENT at Vol. vii., p. 78.:
+
+ "The same author, Cardan, in his _Hyperchen_, out of the doctrine of
+ the Stoicks, will have some of these genii (for so he calls them) to be
+ desirous of men's company, very affable and familiar with them, as dogs
+ are; others again, to abhor as serpents, and care not for them. The
+ same, belike, Trithemius calls _igneos et sublunares, qui numquam
+ demergunt ad inferiora, aut vix ullum habent in terris commercium:
+ generally they far excel men in worth, as a man the meanest worm_;
+ though some there are _inferiour to those of their own rank in worth,
+ as the black guard in a princes court, and to men again, as some
+ degenerate, base, rational creatures are excelled of brute
+ beasts_."--_Anat. of Mel._, Part I. sec. 2. Mem. 1. subs. 2. [Blake,
+ 1836, p. 118.]
+
+C. FORBES.
+
+Temple.
+
+In looking over the second volume of "N. & Q.," I find the use of the word
+_blackguard_ is referred to, and passages illustrative of its meaning are
+given from the works of Beaumont and Fletcher, Hobbes, Butler, &c. To these
+may be added the following fanciful use of the word, which occurs in the
+poems of Charles Sackville, Earl of Dorset; the author of the well-known
+naval song "To all you Ladies now at Land:"
+
+ "Love is all gentleness, all joy,
+ Smooth are his looks, and soft his pace.
+ Her [Belinda's] Cupid is a blackguard boy,
+ That rubs his link full in your face."
+
+CUTHBERT BEDE, B.A.
+
+_Talleyrand_ (Vol. vi., p. 575.).--Talleyrand's maxim is in Young. I regret
+that I cannot give the reference.
+
+Z. E. R.
+
+_Lord King and Sclater_ (Vol. v., pp. 456. 518.).--By Sclater's answer, "as
+I am informed, the Lord Chancellor _King_ was himself fully
+convinced."--Zach. Grey's _Review of Neal_, p. 67., edit. 1744.
+
+_"Beware the Cat"_ (Vol. v., p. 319.).-The "dignitary of Cambridge" was
+probably Dr. Thackeray, provost of King's, who bequeathed all his {488}
+black-letter books to the college. Perhaps _Beware the Cat_ may be among
+them.
+
+Z. E. R.
+
+"_Bis dat qui cito dat_" (Vol. vi., p. 376.).--The following Greek is
+either in the _Anthologia_, or in Joshua Barnes:
+
+ "[Greek: ôkeiai charitos glukerôterai, ên de bradunêi pasa charis
+ phthinuthei, mêde legoito charis.]"
+
+ "Gratia ab officio quod mora tardat, abest."
+
+Z. E. R.
+
+_High Spirits a Presage of Evil._--The Note of your correspondent CUTHBERT
+BEDE (Vol. vii., p. 339.) upon this very interesting point recalls to my
+recollection a line or two in Gilfillan's _First Gallery of Literary
+Portraits_, p. 71., which bears directly upon it. Speaking of the death of
+Percy Bysshe Shelley, the author says, "During all the time he spent in
+Leghorn, he was in brilliant spirits, _to him a sure prognostic of coming
+evil_." I may add, that I have been on terms of intimacy with various
+persons who entertained a dread of finding themselves in good spirits, from
+a strong conviction that some calamity would be sure to befall them. This
+is a curious psychological question, worthy of attention.
+
+W. SAWYER.
+
+Brighton.
+
+_Colonel Thomas Walcot_ (Vol. vii., p. 382.) married Jane, the second
+daughter of James Purcel of Craugh, co. Limerick, and had by her six sons
+and two daughters: John, the eldest, who married Sarah Wright of Holt, in
+Denbighshire; Thomas, Ludlow, and Joseph, which last three died unmarried;
+Edward (who died an infant); William (of whom I have no present trace);
+Catherine and Bridget. The latter married, first, Mr. Cox of Waterford, and
+second, Robert Allen of Garranmore, co. Tipperary. John, the eldest son,
+administered to his father, and possessed himself of his estates and
+effects. I think his son was a John Minchin Walcot, who represented
+Askeaton in Parliament in 1751, died in London in 1753, and was buried in
+St. Margaret's churchyard. Two years after his death his eldest daughter
+married William Cecil Pery, of the line of Viscount Pery, and had by him
+Edmund Henry Pery, member of parliament for Limerick in 1786. A William
+Walcot was on the Irish establishment appointed a major in the 5th Regiment
+of Foot in 1769, but I cannot just now say whether, or how, he was related
+to Colonel Thomas Walcot.
+
+JOHN D'ALTON.
+
+Dublin.
+
+_Wood of the Cross: Mistletoe_ (Vol. vii., p. 437.).--Was S. S. S.'s farmer
+a native of an eastern county? If he came from any part where Scandinavian
+traditions may be supposed to have prevailed, there may be some connexion
+between the myth, that the mistletoe furnished the wood for the cross, and
+that which represents it as forming the arrow with which Hödur, at the
+instigation of Lok, the spirit of evil, killed Baldyr. I have met with a
+tradition in German, that the aspen tree supplied the wood for the cross,
+and hence shuddered ever after at the recollection of its guilt.
+
+T. H. L.
+
+The tradition to which I have been always accustomed is, that the aspen was
+the tree of which the cross was formed, and that its tremulous and
+quivering motion proceeded from its consciousness of the awful use to which
+it had once been put.
+
+W. FRASER.
+
+Tor-Mohun.
+
+_Irish Office for Prisoners_ (Vol. vii, p 410.).--The best reference for
+_English_ readers is to Bishop Mant's edition of the Prayer-Book, in which
+this office is included.
+
+J. C. R.
+
+_Andries de Græff: Portraits at Brickwall House_ (Vol. vii, p.
+406.).--"Andries de Græff. Obiit lxxiii., MDCLXXIV." Was this gentleman
+related to, or the father of, Regulus de Græf, a celebrated physician and
+anatomist, born in July, 1641, at Scomharen, a town in Holland, where his
+father was the first architect? Regulus de Græf married in 1672, and died
+in 1673, at the early age of thirty-two. He published several works,
+chiefly _De Organis Generationis_, &c. (See Hutchinson's _Biographia
+Medica_; and, for a complete list of his works, _Lindonius Renovatus_, p.
+933.: Nuremberg, 1686, 4to.)
+
+S. S. S.
+
+Bath.
+
+"_Qui facit per alium, facit per se_" (Vol. vii., p. 382.).--This is one of
+the most ordinary maxims or "brocards" of the common law of Scotland, and
+implies that the employer is responsible for the acts of his servant or
+agent, done on his employment. Beyond doubt it is borrowed from the civil
+law, and though I cannot find it in the title of the digest, _De Diversis
+Regulis Juris Antiqui_ (lib. 1. tit. 17.), I am sure it will be traced
+either to the "Corpus Juris," or to one of the commentators thereupon.
+
+W. H. M.
+
+_Christian Names_ (Vol. vii., p. 406.).--When Lord Coke says "a man cannot
+have two names of baptism, as he may have divers surnames," he does not
+mean that a man may not have two or more Christian names given to him at
+the font, but that, while he may have "divers surnames at divers times," he
+may not have divers Christian names _at divers times_.
+
+When a man changes his Christian name, he alters his legal identity. The
+surname, however, is assumable at pleasure. The use of surnames came into
+England, according to Camden, about {489} the time of the Conquest, but
+they were not in general use till long after that. Many branches of
+families used to substitute the names of their estate or residence for
+their patronymic, which often makes the tracing of genealogies a difficult
+matter. It was not till the middle of the fourteenth century that surnames
+began to descend from father to son, and a reference to any old document of
+the time will show how arbitrarily such names were assumed.
+
+A surname, in short, may be called a matter of convenience; a Christian
+name, a matter of necessity. The giving two Christian names at baptism did
+not come generally into use till, owing to the multiplication of the
+patronymic, a single Christian name became insufficient to identify the
+individual. Consequently an instance of a double Christian name, previous
+to the commencement of the eighteenth century, is a rarity. The fifth and
+sixth earls of Northumberland bore the names of Henry-Algernon Percy. The
+latter died in 1537.
+
+As to the period at which Christian names were assumed as surnames, your
+correspondent ERICAS is referred to Lower's _English Surnames_.
+
+H. C. K.
+
+---- Rectory, Hereford.
+
+Your correspondent ERICA will not, I think, find an instance in this
+country of a person having more than one Christian name before the last
+century. Charles James Fox and William Wyndham Grenville are the two
+earliest instances I can find. It is trivial but curious to observe, that
+in the lists given at the beginning of the _Oxford Calendar_ of the heads
+of colleges and halls from their several foundations, the first who appears
+with two Christian names is the venerable president of Magdalene College.
+Antony Ashley Cooper is only a seeming exception; his surname was
+Ashley-Cooper, as is proved by his contributing the letter _a_ to the word
+_cabal_, the nickname of the ministry of which he formed a part. We find
+the custom common enough in Germany at the time of the Reformation, and
+still earlier in Italy. I apprehend that its origin is really in the _tria
+nomina_ of Roman freemen. It was introduced into this country through our
+royal family, but I am not aware of any prince who had the benefit of it
+before Charles James.
+
+I apprehend the passage which ERICA quotes from Lord Coke has not the
+significance which he attributes to it. A man can have but one Christian or
+baptismal name, of however many single names or words that baptismal name
+may be composed. I have spoken in this letter of two Christian names, in
+order to be more intelligible at the expense of correctness.
+
+J. J. H.
+
+Temple.
+
+_Lamech's War-song_ (Vol. vii., p. 432.).--There have been many
+speculations about the origin and meaning of these lines. I agree with
+EWALD in _Die Poetischen Bücher des Alten Bundes_, vol. i., who calls it a
+"sword-song;" and I imagine it might have been preserved by tradition among
+the Canaanitish nations, and so quoted by Moses as familiar to the
+Israelites. I should translate it--
+
+ "Adah and Zillah, hear ye my voice!
+ Wives of Lemek, heed ye my saying!
+ For man do I slay, for my wound;
+ And child, for my bruise.
+ For seven-fold is Cain avenged,
+ And Lemek seventy-fold and seven."
+
+Bishop Hall, in his _Explication of Hard Texts_, paraphrases it thus:
+
+ "And Lamech said to his wives, 'Adah and Zillah, what tell you me of
+ any dangers and fears? Hear my voice, oh ye faint-hearted wives of
+ Lamech, and hearken unto my speech; I pass not of the strength of my
+ adversary: for I know my own valour and power to revenge; if any man
+ give me but a wound or a stroke, though he be never so young and lusty,
+ I can and will kill him dead.'"
+
+Your correspondent H. WALTER says that "every branch of Cain's family was
+destroyed by the Deluge." Where is the authority to be found for the
+tradition, quoted in an _Introduction to the Books of Moses_, by James
+Morison, p. 26., that Naameh, the daughter of Lamech the Cainite and
+Zillah, married Ham, the son of Noah, and thus survived the Flood?
+
+W. FRASER.
+
+Tor-Mohun.
+
+_Traitor's Ford_ (Vol. vii., p. 382.).--Nothing is known of any legend in
+connexion with the stirring events of the battle of Edgehill, or its times,
+and the origin of the name is a matter of speculation. One _Trait_ had
+lands near this stream, and it is thought by some that, from this
+circumstance, it is properly _Trait's_ Ford, corrupted into Traitor's
+Ford,--a locality well known to sportsmen as a favourite meet of the
+Warwickshire hounds.
+
+A. B. R.
+
+Banbury.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Miscellaneous.
+
+NOTES ON BOOKS, ETC.
+
+We understand the Committee appointed by the Society of Antiquaries to
+consider the best mode of restoring the Society to its former efficient
+state, have agreed upon their Report, and also to the revised laws to be
+recommended to the Fellows for adoption. Of the nature of alterations
+suggested, we know nothing; for while, on the one hand, it is stated that
+the Report recommends changes of a most sweeping character, on the other it
+is rumoured that the changes to be proposed are neither many nor important.
+The truth in this, as in most cases, no doubt lies midway between {490} the
+two: and the Report will probably be found to breathe a spirit of
+conservative reform. Embracing, as the proposed changes necessarily must,
+points on which great difference of opinion has existed, and may continue
+to exist, we hope they will receive the impartial consideration of the
+Fellows; and that they will bear in mind, that in coming to the conclusions
+at which they have arrived, the Committee have had the advantage of sources
+of information, necessarily beyond the reach of the body generally; and
+that those very recommendations, which at first sight may seem most open to
+objection, may probably be those which their information most completely
+justifies.
+
+BOOKS RECEIVED.--_Young's Night Thoughts, or Life, Death, and Immortality,
+revised and collated with the early Quarto Editions, with a Life of the
+Author by_ Dr. Doran. This new, handsomely printed, and carefully edited
+reprint of the great work of this noble and original writer, is rendered
+more valuable by the well-written and critical Memoir of Young, which Dr.
+Doran has prefixed to it.--_The National Miscellany_, _May_ 1853. The first
+Number of a New Magazine just issued by Mr. Parker (Oxford), with every
+promise of realising the objects for which it has been projected, namely,
+"to aid the elevation of the reader's mind, to raise some glow of generous
+desire, some high and noble thoughts, some kindly feeling, and a warm
+veneration for all things that are good and true."--_Cyclopædia
+Bibliographica_, Part VIII. This most useful work is in the present Part
+carried from _Fawcett_ (John) to _Göthe_. Every fresh issue of it affords
+additional evidence of the great utility which the complete work will prove
+to all authors, preachers, students, and literary men.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BOOKS AND ODD VOLUMES WANTED TO PURCHASE.
+
+REV. A. DYCE'S EDITION OF DR. RICHARD BENTLEY'S WORKS. Vol. III. Published
+by Francis Macpherson, Middle Row, Holborn. 1836.
+
+DISSERTATION ON ISAIAH XVIII., IN A LETTER TO EDWARD KING, ESQ., by SAMUEL
+LORD BISHOP OF ROCHESTER (HORSLEY). The Quarto Edition, printed for Robson.
+1779.
+
+HISTORY OF ANCIENT WILTS, by SIR R. C. HOARE. The last three Parts.
+
+BEN JONSON'S WORKS. 9 Vols. 8vo. Vols. II., III., IV. Bds.
+
+SIR WALTER SCOTT'S NOVELS. 41 Vols. 8vo. The last nine Vols. Boards.
+
+JACOB'S ENGLISH PEERAGE. Folio Edition, 1766. Vols. II., III., and IV.
+
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+
+ALISON'S EUROPE. (20 Vols.) Vols. XIII., XX.
+
+ABBOTSFORD EDITION OF THE WAVERLEY NOVELS. Odd Vols.
+
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+
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+their names._
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+sent to MR. BELL, Publisher of "NOTES AND QUERIES," 186. Fleet Street.
+
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+Notices to Correspondents.
+
+H. C. B. _No._
+
+J. D. LUCAS (Bristol). _The inscription is Dutch, and means "Praise God for
+all things."_
+
+WALTER J. WATTS _will find much of the literary history of the_ Travels of
+Baron Munchausen, _which were written in ridicule of Bruce, the Abyssinian
+traveller, in our_ 3rd Vol., pp. 117, 305, 453.
+
+P. P. _Longfellow_ is _an American, having been born at Portland. He is
+now, we believe, Professor of Modern Languages and Belles Lettres at
+Cambridge University, U.S._
+
+A BRITON _must be aware that if we were so far to depart from our plan of
+avoiding religious controversy, as to insert his Query, we should be
+inviting endless disputes and discussions, such as our pages could not
+contain, or our readers endure._
+
+C. M. I. _The sides of the stage are described in Stage Directions as_
+O. P. _and_ P. S., _i. e._ Opposite Promp. (_or_ Prompter) _and_ Promp.
+Side.
+
+GENERAL SIR DENNIS PACK (Vol. vii., p. 453.).--_"As the purport of the
+Query may be defeated by two misprints in my communication relative to this
+gallant soldier, may I beg of your readers for 'French rebels,' to
+substitute 'Irish rebels;' and for 'Ballinakell,' 'Ballinakill.' I am
+willing to lay the blame of these errata on my own cacography, rather than
+on the printer's back._
+
+JAMES GRAVES.
+
+Kilkenny."
+
+PHOTOGRAPHIC CORRESPONDENCE. _Replies to our photographic Correspondents
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+the Prospectus.
+
+Specimens of Rates of Premium for Assuring 100l., with a Share in
+three-fourths of the Profits:--
+
+ Age _£ s. d._
+ 17 1 14 4
+ 22 1 18 8
+ 27 2 4 5
+ 32 2 10 8
+ 37 2 18 6
+ 42 3 8 2
+
+ARTHUR SCRATCHLEY, M.A., F.R.A.S., Actuary.
+
+Now ready, price 10s. 6d., Second Edition, with material additions,
+INDUSTRIAL INVESTMENT and EMIGRATION: being a TREATISE on BENEFIT BUILDING
+SOCIETIES, and on the General Principles of Land Investment, exemplified in
+the Cases of Freehold Land Societies, Building Companies, &c. With a
+Mathematical Appendix on Compound Interest and Life Assurance. By ARTHUR
+SCRATCHLEY, M.A., Actuary to the Western Life Assurance Society, 3.
+Parliament Street, London.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A LITERARY CURIOSITY, sent Free by Post on receipt of Three Postage Stamps.
+A Fac-simile of a very remarkably Curious, Interesting, and Droll Newspaper
+of Charles II.'s Period.
+
+J. H. FENNELL, 1. Warwick Court, Holborn, London.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+WANTED, for the Ladies' Institute, 83. Regent Street, Quadrant. LADIES of
+taste for fancy work.--by paying 21s. will be received as members, and
+taught the new style of velvet wool work, which is acquired in a few easy
+lessons. Each lady will be guaranteed constant employment and ready cash
+payment for her work. Apply personally to Mrs. Thoughey. N. B. Ladies
+taught by letter at any distance from London.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+UNITED KINGDOM LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY: established by Act of Parliament in
+1834.--8. Waterloo Place, Pall Mall, London.
+
+ HONORARY PRESIDENTS.
+
+ Earl of Courtown
+ Earl Leven and Melville
+ Earl of Norbury
+ Earl of Stair
+ Viscount Falkland
+ Lord Elphinstone
+ Lord Belhaven and Stenton
+ Wm. Campbell, Esq., of Tillichewan
+
+ LONDON BOARD.
+
+ _Chairman._--Charles Graham, Esq.
+ _Deputy-Chairman._--Charles Downes, Esq.
+
+ H. Blair Avarne, Esq.
+ E. Lennox Boyd, Esq., F.S.A., _Resident_.
+ C. Berwick Curtis, Esq.
+ William Fairlie, Esq.
+ D. Q. Henriques, Esq.
+ J. G. Henriques, Esq.
+ F. C. Maitland, Esq.
+ William Railton, Esq.
+ F. H. Thomson, Esq.
+ Thomas Thorby, Esq.
+
+ MEDICAL OFFICERS.
+
+ _Physician._--Arthur H. Hassall, Esq., M.D.,
+ 8. Bennett Street, St. James's.
+
+ _Surgeon._--F. H. Tomson, Esq., 48. Berners Street.
+
+The Bonus added to Policies from March, 1834, to December 31, 1847, is as
+follows:--
+
+ Sum | Time | Sum added to | Sum
+ Assured. | Assured. | Policy | Payable
+ | +--------------------+ at Death.
+ | | In 1841. In 1848. |
+ ---------+----------+---------+----------+----------
+ £ | | £ s.d.| £ s.d.| £ s.d.
+ 5000 | 14 years | 683 6 8 | 787 10 0 | 6470 16 8
+ * 1000 | 7 years | - - | 157 10 0 | 1157 10 0
+ 500 | 1 year | - - | 11 5 0 | 511 5 0
+
+* EXAMPLE.--At the commencement of the year 1841, a person aged thirty took
+out a Policy for 1000l., the annual payment for which is 24l. 1s. 8d.; in
+1847 he had paid in premiums 168l. 11s. 8d.; but the profits being 2-1/4
+per cent. per annum on the sum insured (which is 22l. 10s. per annum for
+each 1000l.) he had 157l. 10s. added to the Policy, almost as much as the
+premiums paid.
+
+The Premiums, nevertheless, are on the most moderate scale, and only
+one-half need be paid for the first five years, when the Insurance is for
+Life. Every information will be afforded on application to the Resident
+Director.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+HEAL & SON'S ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE OF BEDSTEADS, sent free by post. It
+contains designs and prices of upwards of ONE HUNDRED different Bedsteads:
+also of every description of Bedding, Blankets, and Quilts. And their new
+warerooms contain an extensive assortment of Bed-room Furniture, Furniture
+Chintzes, Damasks, and Dimities, so as to render their Establishment
+complete for the general furnishing of Bed-rooms.
+
+HEAL & SON, Bedstead and Bedding Manufacturers, 196. Tottenham Court Road.
+{492}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MR. HALLIWELL'S
+FOLIO EDITION OF SHAKSPEARE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SPECIMEN COPIES of the First Volume of this Work may be seen at MR.
+SKEFFINGTON'S, 192. Piccadilly, and at MR. RUSSELL SMITH'S, 36. Soho
+Square, London.
+
+The Editor having, at a great sacrifice, adhered to the original limit, and
+the estimates having been considerably exceeded, has been compelled, to
+avoid incurring an extravagant loss, to make the terms very absolute, and
+to raise the Subscription to the later copies. Notwithstanding, therefore,
+the great demand for the Work, a few copies may still be secured by early
+written application.
+
+All communications on the subject are requested to be addressed to--
+
+J. O. HALLIWELL, ESQ., AVENUE LODGE, BRIXTON HILL, SURREY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+TO ALL WHO HAVE FARMS OR GARDENS.
+
+THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
+
+(The Horticultural Part edited by PROF. LINDLEY)
+
+Of Saturday May 7, contains Articles on
+
+ Agriculture, history of
+ Attraction, capillary
+ Barley, to transplant, by Messrs. Hardy
+ Beetle, instinct of
+ Books noticed
+ Butterfly, instinct of
+ Calendar, horticultural
+ ----, agricultural
+ Columnea Schiedeana
+ Dahlia, the, by Mr. Edwards
+ Digging machine, Samuelson's
+ Eggs, to keep
+ Farm leases, by Mr. Morton
+ Frost, plants injured by
+ Grapes, colouring
+ Green, German, by Mr. Prideaux
+ Heat, bottom
+ Heating, gas, by Mr. Lucas
+ Ireland, tenant-right in
+ Kilwhiss _v._ Rothamsted experiments, by Mr. Russell
+ Land, transfer of
+ Law of transfer
+ Leases, farm, by Mr. Morton
+ Level, new plummet, by Mr. Ennis
+ Nelumbium luteum
+ Orchard houses, by Mr. Russell (with engravings)
+ Orchids, sale of
+ Paints, green, by Mr. Prideaux
+ Plants, effects of frost on
+ ----, bottom-heat for
+ Potatoe disease, by Mr. Hopps
+ Rooks
+ Schools, self-supporting
+ Society of Arts
+ Societies, proceedings of the Horticultural, Linnean, National
+ Floricultural, Agricultural of England
+ Sparrows
+ Strawberry, Cuthill's
+ Tenant-right in Ireland
+ Veitch's Nursery, Chelsea
+ Water Lilies, eradicating
+ Winter, the late
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE and AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE contains, in addition to
+the above, the Covent Garden, Mark Lane, Smithfield, and Liverpool prices,
+with returns from the Potato, Hop, Hay, Coal, Timber, Bark, Wool, and Seed
+Markets, and a _complete Newspaper, with a condensed account of all the
+transactions of the week_.
+
+ORDER of any Newsvender. OFFICE for Advertisements, 5. Upper Wellington
+Street, Covent Gardens, London.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Published on the 4th May, 1853, in One Volume 4to., cloth, price 24s.
+
+A NEW GREEK HARMONY OF THE FOUR GOSPELS, including an Introductory
+Treatise, and numerous Tables, Indexes, and Diagrams. By WILLIAM STROUD,
+M.D.
+
+SAMUEL BAGSTER & SONS, 15. Paternoster Row, London.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MUSEUM OF CLASSICAL ANTIQUITIES.
+Vol. II. Pt. 4. 6s. 6d., and Supplement 5s., April and May, 1853.
+
+ON THE TRUE SITE OF CALVARY, with a restored Plan of the ancient City of
+JERUSALEM.
+
+By [Arabic: **]
+
+T. RICHARDS, 37. Great Queen Street, Lincoln's Inn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+NEW EDITION OF LAYS OF THE SCOTTISH CAVALIERS.
+
+On Monday will be published in fcap. 8vo., a new Edition, being the SIXTH,
+of
+
+LAYS OF THE SCOTTISH CAVALIERS. BY W. EDMONSTOUN AYTOUN. Price 7s. 6d.
+
+WILLIAM BLACKWOOD & SONS, Edinburgh and London.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+This day is published,
+
+PICTORIAL ILLUSTRATIONS of the Catalogue of Manuscripts in Gonville and
+Caius College Library. Selected by the REV. J. J. SMITH. Being Facsimiles
+of Illumination, Text, and Autograph, done in Lithograph, 4to. size, with
+Letter-press Description in 8vo., as Companion to the published Catalogue,
+price 1l. 4s.
+
+A few copies may be had of which the colouring of the Plates is more highly
+finished. Price 1l. 10s.
+
+Cambridge: JOHN DEIGHTON.
+
+London: GEORGE BELL.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CONCLUDING VOLUME OF ARNOLD'S SELECTIONS FROM CICERO.
+
+Now ready, 12mo., price 2s. 6d.
+
+SELECTIONS from CICERO. Part V.; CATO MAJOR, sive De SENECTUTE Dialogus.
+With English Notes, from the German of JULIUS SOMMERBRODT, by the REV.
+HENRY BROWNE, M.A., Canon of Chichester. (Forming a New Volume of ARNOLD'S
+SCHOOL CLASSICS.)
+
+RIVINGTONS, St. Paul's Church Yard, and Waterloo Place.
+
+Of whom may be had, (in the same Series,)
+
+SELECTIONS from CICERO, with ENGLISH NOTES. PART I. Orations, 4s. PART II.
+Epistles, 5s. PART III. Tusculan Disputations, 5s. 6d. PART IV. De Finibus
+Malorum et Bonorum. 5s. 6d.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Just published, quarto, 5s., cloth,
+
+TEMPLE BAR: THE CITY GOLGOTHA.--Narrative of the Historical Occurrences of
+a Criminal Character, associated with the present Bar. BY A MEMBER OF THE
+INNER TEMPLE.
+
+ "A chatty and anecdotical history of this last remaining gate of the
+ city, acceptable particularly to London antiquaries."--_Notes and
+ Queries_.
+
+DAVID BOGUE, Fleet Street.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+IN VOLUMES FOR THE POCKET, PRICE FIVE SHILLINGS EACH.
+
+Now ready, in Six Volumes, fcp. 8vo., price 5s. each.
+
+BOWDLER'S FAMILY SHAKSPEARE. In which nothing is _added_ to the Original
+Text; but those Words and Expressions are _omitted_ which cannot with
+propriety be read aloud in a Family. A New Edition.
+
+*** Also a LIBRARY EDITION, with 36 Wood Engravings, from Designs by
+Smirke, Howard, and other Artists; complete in One Volume, 8vo., price One
+Guinea.
+
+London: LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, & LONGINGS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE NATIONAL MISCELLANY, No. I., for MAY, price 1s., contains:--
+
+ 1. Our First Words.
+ 2. A Few Words for May-Day.
+ 3. The Love of Horrors.
+ 4. Layard's Last Discoveries.
+ 5. Railway Literature.
+ 6. The Old Royal Palaces at Oxford.
+ 7. The Poultry Mania.
+ 8. Public Libraries.
+ 9. Slavery in America.
+ 10. Social Life in Paris.
+
+JOHN HENRY PARKER 377. Strand; and of all Booksellers and Railway stations.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ROYAL ASYLUM OF ST. ANN'S SOCIETY.--Waiting not for the Child of those once
+in prosperity to become an Orphan, but by Voluntary Contributions affording
+at once a Home, Clothing, Maintenance, and Education.
+
+The Half-yearly Election will take place at the London Tavern on Friday,
+August l2th, next.
+
+Forms of Nomination may be procured at the Office, where Subscriptions will
+be thankfully received.
+
+Executors of Benefactors by Will become Life Governors according to the
+amount of the Bequest.
+
+E. F. LEEKS, Secretary.
+
+2. Charlotte Row, Mansion House.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Printed by THOMAS CLARK SHAW, of No. 10. Stonefield Street, in the Parish
+of St. Mary, Islington, at No. 5. New Street Square, in the Parish of St.
+Bride, in the City of London; and published by GEORGE BELL, of No. 186.
+Fleet Street, in the Parish of St. Dunstan in the West, in the City of
+London, Publisher, at No. 186. Fleet Street aforesaid.--Saturday, May 14,
+1853.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Queries, Number 185, May 14,
+1853, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES AND QUERIES ***
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+ <title>
+ Notes And Queries, Issue 185.
+ </title>
+
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's Notes and Queries, Number 185, May 14, 1853, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Notes and Queries, Number 185, May 14, 1853
+ A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists,
+ Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: George Bell
+
+Release Date: January 21, 2007 [EBook #20408]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES AND QUERIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charlene Taylor, Jonathan Ingram, Keith Edkins
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
+generously made available by The Internet Library of Early
+Journals.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<p><!-- Page 469 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page469"></a>{469}</span></p>
+
+<h1>NOTES AND QUERIES:</h1>
+
+<h2>A MEDIUM OF INTER-COMMUNICATION FOR LITERARY MEN, ARTISTS, ANTIQUARIES,
+GENEALOGISTS, ETC.</h2>
+
+<hr class="short" >
+
+<h3><b>"When found, make a note of."</b>&mdash;CAPTAIN CUTTLE.</h3>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+
+<table width="100%" class="nomar" summary="masthead" title="masthead">
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left; width:25%">
+ <p><b>No. 185.</b></p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:center; width:50%">
+ <p><b><span class="sc">Saturday, May</span> 14, 1853.</b></p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:right; width:25%">
+ <p><b>Price Fourpence.<br /> Stamped Edition
+ 5d.</b></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>CONTENTS.</h3>
+
+
+<table class="nomar" summary="Contents" title="Contents">
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><span class="sc">Notes</span>:&mdash;</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Page</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>English Books of Emblems, by the Rev. Thomas Corser</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page469">469</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Author of Tract on "Advantages of the East India Trade, 1720,
+ 8vo.," by James Crossley</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page471">471</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>"Ake" and "Ache," by Thomas Keightley</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page472">472</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Localities mentioned in Anglo-Saxon Charters, by B. Williams</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page473">473</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Inedited Letter</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page473">473</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>A Shaksperian Book</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page474">474</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><span class="sc">Minor Notes</span>:&mdash;Shakspeare's
+ Monument&mdash;Archbishop Leighton and Pope: Curious Coincidence Of
+ Thought and Expression&mdash;Grant of Slaves&mdash;Sealing-wax</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page475">475</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><span class="sc">Queries</span>:&mdash;</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Walmer Castle, by C. Waymor</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page475">475</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Scotchmen in Poland, by Peter Cunningham</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page475">475</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Bishop Juxon and Walton's Polyglott Bible</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page476">476</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><span class="sc">Minor Queries</span>:&mdash;Was Andrew Marvell
+ poisoned?&mdash;Anonymous Pamphlet by Dr. Wallis&mdash;Mrs. Cobb's
+ Diary&mdash;Compass Flower&mdash;Nuns of the Hotel Dieu&mdash;
+ Purlieu&mdash;Jennings Family&mdash;Latimer's
+ Brothers-in-Law&mdash;Autobiographical
+ Sketch&mdash;Schonbornerus&mdash;Symbol of Globe and
+ Cross&mdash;Booth Family&mdash;Ennui&mdash;Bankruptcy
+ Records&mdash;Golden Bees&mdash;The Grindstone
+ Oak&mdash;Hogarth&mdash;Adamsons of Perth&mdash;Cursitor Barons of
+ the Exchequer&mdash;Syriac Scriptures</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page476">476</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><span class="sc">Replies</span>:&mdash;</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Psalmanazar, by Rev. Dr. Maitland</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page479">479</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Consecrated Roses, &amp;c., by William J. Thoms</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page480">480</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Campbell's Imitations</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page481">481</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>"The Hanover Rat"</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page481">481</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Font Inscriptions</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page482">482</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Irish Rhymes: English Provincialisms: Lowland Scotch</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page483">483</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Pictures by Hogarth</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page484">484</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><span class="sc">Photographic Correspondence</span>:&mdash;Washing
+ Collodion Process&mdash;Colouring Collodion Pictures&mdash;Wanted, a
+ simple Test for a good Lens&mdash;Photographic Tent: Restoration of
+ Faded NegativesLatimer's</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page484">484</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><span class="sc">Replies To Minor Queries</span>:&mdash;Gibbon's
+ Library&mdash;Robert Drury&mdash;Grub Street Journal&mdash;Wives of
+ Ecclesiastics&mdash;Blanco White&mdash;Captain Ayloff&mdash;General
+ Monk and the University of Cambridge&mdash;The Ribston
+ Pippin&mdash;Cross and Pile&mdash;Ellis
+ Walker&mdash;Blackguard&mdash; Talleyrand&mdash;Lord King and
+ Sclater&mdash;"Beware the Cat"&mdash;"Bis dat qui cito
+ dat"&mdash;High Spirits a Presage of Evil&mdash;Colonel Thomas
+ Walcott&mdash;Wood of the Cross: Mistletoe&mdash;Irish Office for
+ Prisoners&mdash;Andries de Græff: Portraits at Brickwall
+ House&mdash;"Qui facit per alium, facit per se"&mdash;Christian
+ Names&mdash;Lamech's War-song&mdash;Traitor's Ford</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page485">485</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><span class="sc">Miscellaneous</span>:&mdash;</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Notes on Books, &amp;c.</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page489">489</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Books and Odd Volumes wanted</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page490">490</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Notices to Correspondents</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page490">490</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Advertisements</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align:left">
+ <p><a href="#page490">490</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h2>Notes.</h2>
+
+<h3>ENGLISH BOOKS OF EMBLEMS.</h3>
+
+ <p>It is a remarkable circumstance that whilst the emblems of Alciatus
+ Vent through almost innumerable editions, and were translated into most
+ of the continental languages, no version of these Emblems should ever
+ have been printed in this country, although we believe that MS.
+ translations of them are in existence. It is remarkable also that more
+ than half century should have elapsed after their appearance, before any
+ English publication on this subject should have been committed to the
+ press. Our English authors of Books of Emblems were not only late in
+ their appearance, but are few in number, and in their embellishments not
+ very original, the plates being for the most part mere copies of those
+ already published abroad by Herman Hugo, Rollenhagius, and others. The
+ notices of the English writers on this entertaining subject are also but
+ meagre and imperfect, and restricted to a very few works; both Dibdin, in
+ his slight and rapid sketch on Books of Emblems in the <i>Bibliogr.
+ Decam.</i>, vol. i. p. 254., and the writer in the <i>Retrosp. Rev.</i>,
+ vol. ix. p. 123., having confined their remarks to some one or two of the
+ leading writers only, Arwaker, Peacham, Quarles, Whitney, and Wither.
+ With the exception of an occasional article in the <i>Bibl. Ang.
+ Poet.</i>, <i>Cens. Liter. Restituta</i>, and similar bibliographical
+ volumes, we are not aware that any other notice has been taken of this
+ particular branch of our literature<a name="footnotetag1"
+ href="#footnote1"><sup>[1]</sup></a>, nor does there exist, <!-- Page 470
+ --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page470"></a>{470}</span> that we know
+ of, any complete, separate, and distinct catalogue of such works.</p>
+
+ <p>Being anxious, therefore, to obtain a correct account of what may be
+ termed the English Series of Books of Emblems, I inclose a list of all
+ those in my own possession, and of the titles of such others as I have
+ been able to collect; and I shall be glad if any of your readers can make
+ any additions to the series, confining them at the same time strictly to
+ Books of Emblems, and not admitting fables, heraldic works, or older
+ publications not coming within the same category. A good comprehensive
+ work on this subject of Books of Emblems, not confined merely to the
+ English series, but embracing the whole foreign range, giving an account
+ both of the writers of the verses, and also of the engravers, and the
+ different styles of art in each, is still a great desideratum in our
+ literary history; and if ably and artistically done, with suitable
+ illustrations of the various engravings and other ornaments, would form a
+ very interesting, instructive, and entertaining volume; and I sincerely
+ hope that the time will not be far distant when such a volume will be
+ found in our libraries.</p>
+
+ <p>I conclude with a Query of inquiry, whether anything is known of the
+ present resting-place of a <i>Treatise on Emblems</i>, which the late Mr.
+ Beloe informs us, at the close of his <i>Literary Anecdotes</i>, vol. vi.
+ p. 406., he had written at "considerable length," from communications
+ furnished him by the Marquis of Blandford, whose collection of Emblems
+ was at that time one of the richest and most extensive in the kingdom,
+ and whose treatise, if published, might perhaps prove a valuable addition
+ to our information on this portion of our literature.</p>
+
+ <p>I would also inquire who was Thomas Combe, and what did he write, who
+ is thus mentioned by Meres in his <i>Palladis Tamia: Wits Treasury</i>,
+ Lond. 1598, 8vo., as one of our English writers of Emblems: "As the
+ Latines have those emblematists, Andreas Alciatus, Reusnerus, and
+ Sambucus, so we have these, Geffrey Whitney, Andrew Willet, and <i>Thomas
+ Combe</i>." Is anything known of the latter, or of his writings?</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Thomas Corser</span>.
+
+ <p class="address">Stand Rectory.
+
+<p class="cenhead"><i>List of English Writers of Books of Emblems.</i></p>
+
+ <p>A. (H.) Parthenia Sacra, of the Mysterious and Delicious Garden of the
+ Sacred Parthenis: Symbolically set forth and enriched with Pious Devises
+ and Emblems for the entertainment of devout Soules, &amp;c. By H.&nbsp;A.
+ Plates. 8vo. Printed by John Cousturier, 1633.</p>
+
+ <p>Abricht (John A.&nbsp;M.). Divine Emblems. Embellished with Etchings of
+ Copper after the fashion of Master Francis Quarles. 12mo. Lond. 1838.</p>
+
+ <p>Arwaker (Edmund). Pia Desideria, or Divine Addresses in Three Books.
+ With 47 Copper Plates by Sturt. 8vo. Lond. 1686.</p>
+
+ <p>Ashrea: or the Grove of Beatitudes. Represented in Emblemes: and by
+ the Art of Memory to be read on our Blessed Saviour Crucified, &amp;c.
+ 12mo. Lond. 1665.</p>
+
+ <p>Astry (Sir James). The Royal Politician represented in One Hundred
+ Emblems. Written in Spanish by Don Diego Saavedra Faxardo, &amp;c. Done
+ into English from the Original. By Sir James Astry. In Two Vols. With
+ Portrait of William Duke of Gloucester, and other Plates. 8vo. Lond.
+ 1700. Printed for Matthew Gylliflower.</p>
+
+ <p>Ayres (Philip). Emblemata Amatoria. Emblems of Love in Four Languages.
+ Dedicated to the Ladys. By Ph. Ayres, Esq. With 44 Plates on Copper. 8vo.
+ Lond. 1683.</p>
+
+ <p>Barclay (Alexander).<a name="footnotetag2"
+ href="#footnote2"><sup>[2]</sup></a> The Ship of Fooles, wherein is
+ shewed the folly of all States, &amp;c. Translated out of Latin into
+ Englishe. With numerous Woodcuts. Imprinted by John Cawood. Folio, bl.
+ letter, Lond. 1570.</p>
+
+ <p>Blount (Thomas). The Art of making Devises: treating of
+ Hieroglyphicks, Symboles, Emblemes, Ænigmas, &amp;c. Translated from the
+ French of Henry Estienne. 4to. Lond. 1646.</p>
+
+ <p>Bunyan (John). Emblems by J. Bunyan. [I have not seen this work, but
+ suspect it is only a common chap-book. A copy was in one of Lilly's
+ Catalogues.]</p>
+
+ <p>Burton (R.). Choice Emblems, Divine and Moral, Ancient and Modern; or
+ Delights for the Ingenious in above Fifty Select Emblems, Curiously
+ Ingraven upon Copper Plates. With engraved Frontispiece, &amp;c. 12mo.
+ Lond. 1721. Printed for Edmund Parker.</p>
+
+ <p>Castanoza (John). The Spiritual Conflict, or The Arraignment of the
+ Spirit of Selfe-Love and Sensuality at the Barre of Truth and Reason.
+ First published in Spanish by the Reverend Father John Castanoza,
+ afterwards put into the Latin, Italian, German, French, and English
+ Languages. With numerous Engravings. 12mo. at Paris, 1652.</p>
+
+ <p>Choice Emblems, Natural, Historical, Fabulous, Moral, and Divine.
+ 12mo. Lond. 1772.</p>
+
+ <p>Colman (W.). La Dance Machabre, or Death's Duell, by W.&nbsp;C. With
+ engraved Frontispiece by Cecil, and Plate. 8vo. Lond. 163&mdash;.</p>
+
+ <p>Compendious Emblematist; or Writing and Drawing made easy. With many
+ Plates. 4to. Lond.</p>
+
+ <p>Emblems Divine, Moral, Natural, and Historical, Expressed in
+ Sculpture, and applied to the several Ages, Occasions, and Conditions of
+ the Life of Man. By a Person of Quality. With Woodcut Engravings and
+ Metrical Illustrations. 8vo. Lond. 1673. Printed by J.&nbsp;C. for Will.
+ Miller.</p>
+
+ <p>Emblems for the Entertainment and Improvement of Youth, with
+ Explanations, on 62 Copper Plates. White Knights. 8vo. n.&nbsp;d., Part I.</p>
+
+ <p>Emblems of Mortality. With Holbein's Cuts of the Dance of Death,
+ modernized and engraved by Bewick. Three Editions. 8vo. Lond. 1789.</p>
+
+ <p>Farlie (Robert). Lychnocausia, sive Moralia Facum Emblemata. Lights
+ Morall Emblems. Kalendarium <!-- Page 471 --><span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page471"></a>{471}</span> Humanæ Vitæ. The Kalendar of Man's Life.
+ With Frontispiece and numerous Woodcuts. 8vo. Lond. 1638.</p>
+
+ <p>Fransi (Abrahami). Insignium Armorum Emblematum Hieroglyphicorum et
+ Symbolorum Explicatio. No Plates. 4to. Lond. 1588.</p>
+
+ <p>G. (H.). The Mirrour of Majestie: or the Badges of Honour conceitedly
+ emblazoned. With Emblems annexed. 4to. 1618. [This is the rarest of the
+ English series; only two copies known, one perfect <i>penes</i> me, and
+ another imperfect.]</p>
+
+ <p>Gent (Thomas). Divine Entertainments; of Penitential Desires, Sighs,
+ and Groans of the Wounded Soul. In Two Books, adorned with suitable Cuts.
+ In Verse. With numerous Woodcuts. 12mo. Lond. 1724.</p>
+
+ <p>Hall (John). Emblems, with elegant Figures newly published. Sparkles
+ of Divine Love. Engraved Frontispiece and Plates. 12mo. Lond. 1648.</p>
+
+ <p>Heywood (Thomas). Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas, selected out of
+ Lucian, &amp;c. With sundry Emblems, extracted from the most elegant
+ Iacobus Catsius, &amp;c. 8vo. Lond. 1637. No Plates.</p>
+
+ <p>Jenner (Thomas). The Soules Solace; or Thirtie and one Spirituall
+ Emblems. With Plates on Copper, and Verses. 4to. Lond. 1631.</p>
+
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash; The Ages of Sin, of Sinnes Birth and Growth. With the
+ Steppes and Degrees of Sin, from Thought to finall Impenitence. Nine
+ leaves containing nine emblematical engravings, each with six metrical
+ lines beneath. 4to. No printer's name, place, or date.</p>
+
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash; A Work for none but Angels and Men, that is, to be able
+ to look into, and to know themselves, &amp;c. It contains eight
+ Engravings emblematic of the Senses, and is in fact Sir John Davis's poem
+ on the Immortality of the Soul turned into prose. 4to. Lond. 1650.
+ Printed by M.&nbsp;S. for Thomas Jenner.</p>
+
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash; Wonderful and Strange Punishments inflicted on the
+ Breakers of the Ten Commandments. With curious Plates. 4to. Lond.
+ 1650.</p>
+
+ <p>Montenay (Georgette de). A Booke of Armes, or Remembrance: wherein are
+ a hundred Godly Emblemata; first invented and elaborated in the French
+ Tongue, but now in severall Languages. With Plates. 8vo. Franckfort.
+ 1619.</p>
+
+ <p>Murray (Rev. T. B.). An Alphabet of Emblems. With neatly executed
+ Woodcuts. 12mo. Lond. 1844.</p>
+
+ <p>Peacham (Henry). Minerva Britannia, or, A Garden of Heroickall
+ Devises, furnished and adorned with Emblemes and Impressas, &amp;c.
+ Numerous Woodcuts. 4to. Lond. n.&nbsp;d. (1612.)</p>
+
+ <p>Protestant's (The) Vade Mecum, or Popery Displayed in its proper
+ Colours, in Thirty Emblems, lively representing all the Jesuitical Plots
+ against this Nation. With thirty engraved Emblems on copper. 8vo. Lond.
+ 1680. Printed for Daniel Brown.</p>
+
+ <p>Quarles (Francis). Emblemes by Fra. Quarles. The First Edition. With
+ Plates by W. Marshall and others. Rare. 8vo. Lond. 1635. Printed by G.&nbsp;M.
+ at John Marriott's.</p>
+
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash; Hieroglyphickes of the Life of Man, by Fra. Quarles. In
+ a Series of engraved Emblems on Copper by Will. Marshall. With Verses.
+ 8vo. Lond. 1638. Printed by M. Flesher.</p>
+
+ <p>Richardson (George). Iconology; or a Collection of Emblematical
+ Figures, Moral and Instructive. In Two Volumes. With Plates. 4to. Lond.
+ 1777-79.</p>
+
+ <p>Riley (George). Emblems for Youth. Reprinted in 1775, and again in
+ 1779. 12mo. Lond. 1772.</p>
+
+ <p>Ripa (Cæsar). Iconologia; or Morall Emblems. Wherein are express'd
+ various Images of Virtues, Vices, &amp;c. Illustrated with 326 Human
+ Figures engraved on Copper. By the care and charge of P. Tempest. 4to.
+ Lond. 1709.</p>
+
+ <p>S. (P.) The Heroical Devises of M. Claudius Paradin, Canon of
+ Beauvieu. Whereunto are added the Lord Gabriel Symons and others.
+ Translated out of Latin into English by P.&nbsp;S. With Woodcuts. 16mo. Lond.
+ 1591. Imprinted by William Kearney.</p>
+
+ <p>Stirry (Thomas). A Rot among the Bishops, or a terrible Tempest in the
+ Sea of Canterbury, a Poem with lively Emblems. A Satire against
+ Archbishop Laud. With Four Wood Engravings. Rare. 8vo. Lond. 1641.</p>
+
+ <p>Thurston (J.). Religious Emblems; being a Series of Engravings on
+ Wood, from the Designs of J. Thurston, with Descriptions by the Rev. J.
+ Thomas. 4to. Lond. 1810.</p>
+
+ <p>Vicars (John). A Sight of y<sup>e</sup> Transactions of these latter
+ Yeares Emblemized with engraven Plates, which men may read without
+ Spectacles. Collected by John Vicars. With Engravings of Copper. 4to.
+ Lond. n.&nbsp;d., are to be sould by Thomas Jenner at his shop.</p>
+
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash; Prodigies and Apparitions, or England's Warning Pieces.
+ Being a seasonable Description by lively figures and apt illustrations of
+ many remarkable and prodigious forerunners and apparent Predictions of
+ God's Wrath against England, if not timely prevented by true Repentance.
+ Written by J.&nbsp;V. With curious Frontispiece and six other Plates. 8vo.
+ Lond. n.&nbsp;d., are to bee sould by Tho. Bates.</p>
+
+ <p>Whitney (Geoffrey). A Choice of Emblems and other Devises. Englished
+ and Moralized by Geoffrey Whitney. With numerous Woodcuts. 4to. Leyden,
+ 1586. Imprinted at Leyden in the house of Christopher, by Grancis
+ Raphalengius.</p>
+
+ <p>Willet (Andrew). Sacrorum Emblematum Centuria Una quæ tam ad exemplum
+ aptè expressa sunt, &amp;c. No Plates. 4to. Cantabr. n.&nbsp;d. (1598.)</p>
+
+ <p>Wither (George). A Collection of Emblems, Ancient and Moderne:
+ Quickened with Metricall Illustrations both Morall and Divine. The
+ Plates, 200 in number, were engraved by Crispin Pass. Folio, Lond. 1635.
+ Printed by A.&nbsp;M. for Henry Taunton.</p>
+
+ <p>Wynne (John Huddlestone). Choice Emblems for the Improvement of Youth.
+ Plates. 12mo. Lond. 1772.</p>
+
+<div class="note">
+ <a name="footnote1"></a><b>Footnote 1:</b><a
+ href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+ <p>We must exempt from this sweeping assertion a very interesting and
+ well-written account of works on this subject, entitled "A Sketch of that
+ Branch of Literature called Books of Emblems, as it flourished during the
+ 16th and 17th centuries, by Joseph Brooks Yates, Esq., F.S.A.," of West
+ Dingle, near Liverpool, the friend of Roscoe, and the worthy and
+ intelligent President of the Literary and Philosophical Society of
+ Liverpool, read at their meetings, and of which two parts have already
+ been printed in their volumes of <i>Proceedings</i>. This "Sketch" only
+ requires to be enlarged and completed, with specimens added of the
+ different styles of the engravings, to render it everything that is to be
+ desired on the subject.</p>
+
+ <a name="footnote2"></a><b>Footnote 2:</b><a
+ href="#footnotetag2">(return)</a>
+ <p>Perhaps this, and the works of Colman and Heywood, are scarcely to be
+ considered as <i>Books of Emblems</i>.</p>
+
+</div>
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>AUTHOR OF TRACT ON "ADVANTAGES OF THE EAST
+INDIA TRADE, 1720, 8vo."</h3>
+
+ <p>Of this pamphlet, originally published in 1701, 8vo., under the title
+ of <i>Considerations upon the East India Trade</i>, and afterwards in
+ 1720, 8vo., with a new title-page, <i>The Advantages of the East India
+ Trade to England considered</i>, containing <!-- Page 472 --><span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page472"></a>{472}</span> 128 pages, inclusive
+ of Preface, the author never yet been ascertained.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. M<sup>c</sup>Culloch accords to it, and very deservedly, the
+ highest praise. He styles it (<i>Literature of Political Economy</i>, p.
+ 100.) "a profound, able, and most ingenious tract;" and observes that he
+ has "set the powerful influence of the division of labour in the most
+ striking point of view, and has illustrated it with a skill and felicity
+ which even Smith has not surpassed, but by which he most probably
+ profited." Addison's admirable paper in <i>The Spectator</i> (No. 69.) on
+ the advantages of commerce, is only an expansion of some of the
+ paragraphs in this pamphlet. In some parts I think he has scarcely
+ equalled the force of his original. Take, for instance, the following
+ sentences, which admit of fair comparison:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"We taste the spices of Arabia, yet never feel the scorching sun which
+ brings them forth; we shine in silks which our hands have never wrought;
+ we drink of vineyards which we never planted; the treasures of those
+ mines are ours which we have never digged; we only plough the deep, and
+ reap the harvest of every country in the world."&mdash;<i>Advantages of
+ East India Trade</i>, p. 59.</p>
+
+ <p>"Whilst we enjoy the remotest products of the north and south, we are
+ free from those extremities of weather which give them birth; our eyes
+ are refreshed with the green fields of Britain, at the same time that our
+ palates are feasted with fruits that rise between the
+ tropics."&mdash;<i>Spectator</i>, No. 69.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>Mr. M<sup>c</sup>Culloch makes no conjecture as to the probable author
+ of this very able tract; but it appears to me that it may on good grounds
+ be ascribed to Henry Martyn, who afterwards&mdash;not certainly in
+ accordance with the enlightened principles he lays down in this
+ pamphlet&mdash;took an active part in opposing the treaty of commerce
+ with France, and was rewarded by the appointment of Inspector-General of
+ the exports and imports of the customs. (See an account of him in Ward's
+ <i>Lives of Gresham Professors</i>, p. 332.) He was a contributor to
+ <i>The Spectator</i>, and Nos. 180. 200. and 232. have been attributed to
+ him; and the matter of Sir Andrew Freeport's speculations appears to have
+ been furnished by him as Addison and Steele's oracle on trade and
+ commerce. It will be seen that in No. 232. he makes exactly the same use
+ of Sir William Petty's example of the watch as is done in the tract
+ (p.69.), and the coincidence seems to point out one common author of both
+ compositions. But, without placing too much stress on this similarity, I
+ find, that Collins's <i>Catalogue</i>, which was compiled with great
+ care, and where it mentions the authors of anonymous works may always be
+ relied upon, attributes this tract to Martyn (Collins's <i>Cat</i>.
+ 1730-1, 8vo., Part I., No. 3130.). I have a copy of the edition of 1701,
+ in the original binding and lettering&mdash;lettered "Martyn on the East
+ India Trade "&mdash;and copies of the edition of 1720 in two separate
+ collections of tracts; one of which belonged to A. Chamier, and the other
+ to George Chalmers; in both of which the name of Martyn is written as its
+ author on the title-page, and in the latter in Chalmers's handwriting. I
+ think therefore we may conclude that this tract, which well deserves
+ being more generally known than it is at present, was written by Henry
+ Martyn.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Jas. Crossley</span>.
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>"AKE" AND ACHE.</h3>
+
+ <p>John Kemble, it is well known, maintained that the latter was the mode
+ of pronouncing this word in Shakspeare's days. He was right, and he was
+ wrong; for, as I shall show, both modes prevailed, at least in poetry,
+ till the end of the seventeenth century. So it was with some other words,
+ <i>show</i> and <i>shew</i>, for instance. It is, perhaps, hardly
+ necessary to observe that the sounds <i>k, ch, sh, kh</i> (guttural) are
+ commutable. Thus the letter <i>h</i> is named in Italian, <i>acca</i>; in
+ French, <i>ache</i>, in English, <i>aitch</i>, perhaps originally
+ <i>atch</i>: our <i>church</i> is the Scottish <i>kirk</i>, &amp;c.
+ Accordingly, we meet in Shakspeare <i>reckless</i> and <i>rechless</i>,
+ <i>reeky</i> and <i>reechy</i>; "As I could <i>pike</i> (pitch) my
+ lance." (Coriol., Act I. Sc. 1.) Hall has (<i>Sat</i>. vi. 1.) "Lucan
+ <i>streaked</i> (stretched) on his marble bed." So also there were
+ <i>like</i> and <i>liche</i>, and the vulgar <i>cham</i> for <i>I am</i>
+ (<i>Ic eom</i>, A.-S.)</p>
+
+ <p>Having now to show that both <i>ake</i> and <i>ache</i> were in use, I
+ commence with the former:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Like a milch-doe, whose swelling dugs do <i>ake</i>,</p>
+ <p>Hasting to find her fawn hid in some brake."</p>
+ <p class="i6">Shakspeare's <i>Venus and Adonis</i></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"By turns now half asleep, now half awake,</p>
+ <p>My wounds began to smart, my hurt to <i>ake</i>."</p>
+ <p class="i6">Fairfax, <i>Godf. of Bull.</i>, viii, 26.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Yet, ere she went, her vex'd heart, which did <i>ake</i>,</p>
+ <p>Somewhat to ease, thus to the king she spake."</p>
+ <p class="i6">Drayton, <i>Barons' Wars</i>, iii. 75.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"And cramm'd them till their guts did <i>ake</i></p>
+ <p>With caudle, custard, and plumcake."</p>
+ <p class="i6"><i>Hudibras</i>, ii. 2.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>The following is rather dubious:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"If chance once in the spring his head should <i>ach</i>,</p>
+ <p>It was foretold: thus says my almanack."</p>
+ <p class="i6">Hall, <i>Sat.</i> ii. 7., ed. Singer.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>The <i>aitch</i>, or rather, as I think, the <i>atch</i> sound, occurs
+ in the following places:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"<i>B.</i> Heigh ho!</p>
+ <p><i>M.</i> For a hawk, a horse, or a husband?</p>
+ <p><i>B.</i> For the letter that begins them all, <i>H</i>."</p>
+ <p class="i6"><i>Much Ado about Nothing</i>, Act III. Sc. 4.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Their fears of hostile strokes, their <i>aches</i>, losses."</p>
+ <p class="i6"><i>Timon of Athens</i>, Act V. Sc. 2.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Yea, fright all <i>aches</i> from your bones."</p>
+ <p class="i6">Jonson, <i>Fox</i>, ii. 2.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+<!-- Page 473 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page473"></a>{473}</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Wherefore with mine thou dow thy musick match,</p>
+ <p>Or hath the crampe thy ionts benom'd with <i>ache</i>."</p>
+ <p class="i6">Spenser, <i>Shep. Cal.</i>, viii. 4.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Or Gellia wore a velvet mastic-patch</p>
+ <p>Upon her temples, when no tooth did <i>ach</i>."</p>
+ <p class="i6">Hall, <i>Sat.</i> vi. 1.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"As no man of his own self catches</p>
+ <p>The itch, or amorous French <i>aches</i>."</p>
+ <p class="i6"><i>Hudibras</i>, ii, 2.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"The natural effect of love,</p>
+ <p>As other flames and <i>aches</i> prove."</p>
+ <p class="i6"><i>Ib.</i>, iii. 1.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Can by their pangs and <i>aches</i> find</p>
+ <p>All turns and changes of the wind."</p>
+ <p class="i6"><i>Ib.</i>, iii. 2.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>These, in Butler, are, I believe, the latest instances of this form of
+ the word.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Thomas Keightley.</span>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>LOCALITIES MENTIONED IN ANGLO-SAXON CHARTERS.</h3>
+
+ <p>When Mr. Kemble published the index to his truly national code of
+ Anglo-Saxon Charters, he expressly stated that there were many places of
+ which he was in doubt, and which are indicated by Italics.</p>
+
+ <p>It is only by minute local knowledge that many places can be verified,
+ and with the view of eliciting from others the result of their
+ investigations, I send you my humble contribution of corrections of
+ places known to myself.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Bemtún, 940. Bampton, Oxon.</p>
+ <p>Bleódon, 587, 1182. Bleadon, Somerset.</p>
+ <p>Bóclond, 1050. Buckland, Berks.</p>
+ <p>Brixges stán, 813. Brixton, Surrey.</p>
+ <p>Ceomina lacu, 714. Chimney, Oxon.</p>
+ <p>Ceommenige, 940. Idem.</p>
+ <p>Cingestún, 1268, 1276, 1277. Kingston Bagpuxe, Berks.</p>
+ <p>Cingtuninga gem&#x1FD;re, 1221. Idem.</p>
+ <p>Colmenora, 1283. Cumnor, Berks.</p>
+ <p>Crócgelád, 1305. Cricklade, Wilts.</p>
+ <p>Dúnnestreátún, 136. Dunster, Somerset.</p>
+ <p>Esstune, 940. Aston-in-Bampton, Oxon.</p>
+ <p>Fifhidan, 546, 1206. Fyfield, Berks.</p>
+ <p>Hearge, 220. Harrow-on-the-Hill.</p>
+ <p>Hengestesige, 556. Hinksey, Berks.</p>
+ <p>Leoie, 1255. Bessil's-leigh, Berks.</p>
+ <p>Monninghæma díc, 645. Monnington, Herefordshire.</p>
+ <p>Osulfe's Lea, 404, is in Suffolk, or near it.</p>
+ <p>Pipmynster, 774, &amp;c., probably Pippingminster, Somerset.</p>
+ <p>Scypford, 714. Shifford, Oxon.</p>
+ <p>Scuccanhláu, 161, is in Berks.</p>
+ <p>Tubbanford, 1141, 1255. Tubney, Berks.</p>
+ <p>Whétindún, 363. Whatindon, Surrey.</p>
+ <p>Wenbeorg, 1053. Wenbury, Devon.</p>
+ <p>Wænríc 775, and Wenrise, 556, is the River Windrush.</p>
+ <p>Wícham (Wítham), 116, 214, 775. Witham, Berks.</p>
+ <p>Wyttanig, 556. Witney, Oxon.</p>
+ <p>Wurðe, Wyrðe, Weorthe, Weorthig, 208, 1171, 1212, 1221. Longworth, Berks.</p>
+ <p>Worth, Wurthige, 743, 1121. Worth, Hants.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>The following are omitted:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Hanlee, 310.</p>
+ <p>Helig, 465.</p>
+ <p>Pendyfig, 427.</p>
+ <p>Stanford, 1301. Stanford, Kent.</p>
+ <p>Stánlége, 1255. Standlake, Oxon.</p>
+ <p>Ðestinctun, 805.</p>
+ <p>Welingaford, 1154. Wallingford, Berks.</p>
+ <p>Wanhæminga, 1135.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">B. Williams.</span>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>INEDITED LETTER.</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i3">August 24th, 1690,</p>
+ <p class="i3">Qu. Coll. Oxon.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>Dear S<sup>r</sup>,</p>
+
+ <p>I heartily thank you for the favour of your letter, and to shew itt
+ will not fail to write as often as anything does occurr worth sending, if
+ you think the accountt I give not troublesome. Dr. Adams, Dr. Rudston,
+ and Delaune have promis'd to write this post: we remembred you both
+ before and after your letters came w<sup>th</sup> S<sup>r</sup> John
+ Matthews, who staid here 3 nights this weeke. Our militia is gone home
+ cloath'd in Blew coates but many coxcombs of this city have refused to
+ pay their quota towards the buying of them, railing against my
+ L<sup>d</sup> Abington, who has smooth'd the mob by giving a brace of
+ Bucks last Friday in Port Meed. J.&nbsp;M. has bin expected here this
+ fortnight: the Lady that calls herselfe by his nane has bin a good while
+ at Astrop, and has discover'd her displeasure there, that her husband as
+ shee calls him keeps the coach so long from her at Oxford: upon hearing
+ of w<sup>ch</sup> S<sup>r</sup> W.&nbsp;H. in a blunt way gave her the old
+ name, w<sup>ch</sup> caus'd some dissatisfaction and left her smal
+ acquaintance: I heare that the understanding between our Friend and his
+ uncle is not so good as formerly, but I do not think it will end in
+ Abdication. Mr. Painter is admitted Rector of Exeter. The <i>Naked
+ Gospel</i><a name="footnotetag3" href="#footnote3"><sup>[3]</sup></a> was
+ burnt on y<sup>e</sup> 19th in the Scholes Quadrangle. The Regents first
+ drew up a Petition to have it censured; then some others more busy than
+ wise tooke upon them to gett it subscribed, and went to coffee houses and
+ taverns as well as colleges for that purpose: these proceedings being
+ ag<sup>st</sup> statute, and reflecting upon the vice ch., gave great
+ offence; at last he call'd a meeting of y<sup>e</sup> <!-- Page 474
+ --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page474"></a>{474}</span> heads of
+ houses, who deputed 6 to examine it: they pick'd several Proposit.
+ w<sup>ch</sup> were read. The sentence was in this form: Propositions
+ &amp;<sup>c</sup> tanqu&#x101; falsas et impias in Chris. Relig. et in
+ Ecc. præcipue Anglican&#x101; contumeliosas damnamus, plerasq; insuper
+ hæreticas esse decernimus et declaramus, &amp;<sup>c</sup>. This was
+ first subscribed by all y<sup>e</sup> heads of Coll. and then condemn'd
+ unanimously in a full convocation. The Decree is printed, but is too
+ large to send. The Author of y<sup>e</sup> Booke has sent about a soft
+ vindication of himselfe, that he is unwilling to be accounted a Socinian,
+ &amp;c. If I can gett a sight of it I will send you the contents. I do
+ not know how far you are in the right about guessing at a Bursar: Tim.
+ seems resolv'd to act according to y<sup>e</sup> song; but I to shew good
+ nature even w<sup>th</sup>out a tree have promis'd to make him a Dial:
+ and when that's done I will doe y<sup>e</sup> like at Astrop. I am</p>
+
+<p class="cenhead">Your very humble serv<sup>t</sup>,<br />
+W.&nbsp;R.</p>
+
+ <p>If you see Coll. Byerly, give my service to him.</p>
+
+ <p>Directed thus: These to George Clark, Esq., Secretary of War in
+ Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>By y<sup>e</sup> way of London.</p>
+
+ <p>Indorsed: W. Rooke, Rec<sup>d</sup> at Tipperary, Sept. 7th.</p>
+
+<div class="note">
+ <a name="footnote3"></a><b>Footnote 3:</b><a
+ href="#footnotetag3">(return)</a>
+ <p>[For some account of this work, by Arthur Bury, and the controversy
+ respecting it, see Wood's <i>Athenæ</i>, edit. Bliss, vol. i. p. 483.
+ William Rooke, the Writer of the letter, was of Queen's College; made
+ B.A., May 16, 1674; M.A., Oct. 30, 1677; B.D., April 12,
+ 1690.&mdash;<span class="sc">Ed.</span>]</p>
+
+</div>
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>A SHAKSPERIAN BOOK.</h3>
+
+ <p>"There exists," says Mr. John Wilson, "as it were a talismanic
+ influence in regard to the most trivial circumstances connected with
+ Shakspeare," and yet this enthusiast has not, in his <i>Shaksperiana</i>,
+ alluded to the dramatic works of Mary Hornby, written under, and dated
+ from, the <i>dear</i> old roof at Stratford-upon-Avon!</p>
+
+ <p>It was my late good fortune, after filling my pockets from the
+ twopenny boxes of the suburban bookstalls, to find, on turning out the
+ heterogeneous contents, that I had accidentally become possessed of
+ <i>The Broken Vow</i>, a comedy by the aforesaid lady, who waits to be
+ enrolled in that much wanted book, a new edition of the <i>Biographia
+ Dramatica</i>. This <i>Broken Bow</i> which looks like a re-cooking of
+ the <i>Merry Miller</i> of Thomas Sadler, 1766, bears to be "printed at
+ Stratford-upon-Avon, for the Author, by W. Barnacle, 1820." Mary Hornby,
+ following the example of the <i>preoccupier of the butcher's shop</i>,
+ tries her hand at both tragedy and comedy; in the first line she stands
+ charged with the perpetration of <i>The Battle of Waterloo</i>, which, I
+ doubt not, rivalled its original enactment in its <i>sanguinary</i>
+ character. I have not been lucky enough to fall in with this, which was a
+ <i>hit</i>; our fair authoress, in her preface to the comedy under
+ notice, modestly attributing its great success more to the kindness of
+ her friends than to its literary merit.</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Hornby sustains the dignity of the drama by adhering to her five
+ acts, with prologue and epilogue according to prescription. Looking to
+ the prologue for the <i>who</i>, the <i>why</i>, and the
+ <i>wherefore</i>, I am sorry to say I find no materials for the
+ concoction of a biographical note; upon the second point, the <i>why</i>,
+ she tells us:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"When women teem, be it with bad or good,</p>
+ <p>They must bring forth&mdash;forsooth 'tis right they should,</p>
+ <p>But to produce a bantling of the brain,</p>
+ <p>Hard is the task, and oft the labour vain."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>That her literary <i>accouchement</i> should not be a failure, she
+ further says:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Lord, how I've bother'd all the gods and graces,</p>
+ <p>Who patronize <i>some</i> mortals, in such cases."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>I take the expressive use of the word "some" here to indicate her
+ predecessor, the ancient occupier of the tenement, who certainly was a
+ <i>protégé</i> of the said parties.</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Hornby then goes on to relate how that during her
+ <i>gestation</i> she invoked Apollo, Thalia, and Erato:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Soon they arrived, with Hermes at their side,</p>
+ <p>By Jove commission'd, as their friend and guide.</p>
+ <p>But when the mirth-inspiring dames stepp'd o'er</p>
+ <p>The sacred threshold of <i>great Shakspeare's door</i>,</p>
+ <p>The heav'nly guests, <i>who came to laugh with me</i>,</p>
+ <p>Oppress'd with grief, wept with <i>Melpomene</i>;</p>
+ <p>Bow'd pensive o'er the Bard of Nature's tomb,</p>
+ <p>Dropt a sad tear, then left me to my doom!"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>I leave the reader to judge for himself whether the Muses really "came
+ to laugh" with Mary Hornby, or whether, under the belief of the
+ immortality of our Bard, they did not rather expect a pleasant
+ <i>soirée</i> with Gentle Will, and naturally enough went off in a huff
+ when they found themselves inveigled into a tea-party at Mrs.
+ Hornby's.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Wilson, in the work above quoted, does condescend to notice Mrs.
+ Hornby,&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"Who rented the butcher's shop under the chamber in which the poet was
+ born, and kept the <i>Shaksperian Album</i>, an interesting record of the
+ visitors to that shrine. Some of the subscribers having given vent to
+ original stanzas suggested by the scene, those effusions," continues the
+ lofty bookseller, "<i>the female in question</i> caused to be inscribed
+ and printed in a small pamphlet, which she sells to strangers."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>Not a word, you will see, about the poet's mantle having descended
+ upon the shoulders of our Mary,&mdash;which was unpolite of him, seeing
+ that both the tragedy and comedy had the precedence of his book by some
+ years. Not having before me the later history of Shakspeare's house, I am
+ unable to say whether our subject deserved more consideration and gallant
+ treatment at the hands of <span class="sc">Mr. Collier</span>, when he
+ and his colleagues came into possession.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">J. O.
+
+<p><!-- Page 475 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page475"></a>{475}</span></p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h2>Minor Notes.</h2>
+
+ <p><i>Shakspeare's Monument.</i>&mdash;When I was a young man, some
+ thirty or forty years ago, I visited the monument of Shakspeare, in the
+ beautiful church of Stratford-upon-Avon, and there copied, from the Album
+ which is kept for the names of visitors, the following lines:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Stranger! to whom this monument is shown,</p>
+ <p>Invoke the poet's curse upon Malone!</p>
+ <p>Whose meddling zeal his barbarous taste displays,</p>
+ <p>And smears his tombstone, as he marr'd his plays.</p>
+ <p class="i16">R. F.</p>
+ <p>Oct. 2, 1810."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>This has just now been brought to my mind by reading, in page 155. of
+ the second volume of Moore's Journal, the following account of a
+ conversation at Bowood:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"Talked of Malone&mdash;a dull man&mdash;his whitewashing the statue
+ of Shakspeare, at Leamington or Stratford (?), and General Fitzpatrick's
+ (Lord L.'s uncle) epigram on the subject&mdash;very good&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg1">'And smears his statue as he mars his lays.'"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>I cannot but observe that the doubt expressed in the Diary of
+ Moore&mdash;whether Shakspeare's monument is "at Leamington or Stratford
+ (?)"&mdash;is curious, and I conceive my version of the last line,
+ besides being more correct, is also more pithy. It is incorrect,
+ moreover, to call it a <i>statue</i>, as it is a three-quarters bust in a
+ niche in the wall.</p>
+
+ <p>The extract from <i>Moore's Diary</i>, however, satisfactorily
+ explains the initials "R.&nbsp;F.," which have hitherto puzzled me.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Senex</span>.
+
+ <p><i>Archbishop Leighton and Pope: Curious Coincidence of Thought and
+ Expression.</i>&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"Were the true visage of sin seen at a full light, undressed and
+ unpainted, it were impossible, while it so appeared, that any one soul
+ could be in love with it, but would rather flee from it as hideous and
+ abominable."&mdash;Leighton's <i>Works</i>, vol. i. p. 121.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Vice is a monster of such hideous mien,</p>
+ <p>As to be hated, needs but to be seen."&mdash;<i>Pope.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">James Cornish</span>.
+
+ <p><i>Grant of Slaves.</i>&mdash;I send you a copy of a grant of a slave
+ with his children, by William, the Lion King of Scotland, to the monks of
+ Dunfermline, taken from the <i>Cart. de Dunfermline</i>, fol. 13.,
+ printed by the Bannatyne Club from a MS. in the Advocates' Library here,
+ which you may, perhaps, think curious enough to insert in "N. &amp;
+ Q."</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"De Servis.</p>
+
+ <p>"Willielmus Dei gracia Rex Scottorum. Omnibus probis hominibus tocius
+ terre me, clericis et laicis, salutem: Sciant presentis et futuri me
+ dedisse et concessisse et hac carta mea confirmasse, Deo et ecclesie
+ Sancte Trinitatis de Dunfermlene et Abbati et Monachis ibidem, Deo
+ servientibus in liberam et perpetuam elemosinam, Gillandream Macsuthen et
+ ejus liberos et illos eis quietos clamasse, de me, et heredibus meis, in
+ perpetuum. Testibus Waltero de Bid, Cancellario; Willielmo filio Alani,
+ Dapifero; Roberto Aveneli Gillexio Rennerio, Willielmo Thoraldo, apud
+ Strivelin."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p class="author">G. H. S.
+
+ <p class="address">Edinburgh.
+
+ <p><i>Sealing-wax.</i>&mdash;The most careful persons will occasionally
+ drop melting sealing-wax on their fingers. The first impulse of every one
+ is to pull it off, which is followed by a blister. The proper course is
+ to let the wax cool on the finger; the pain is much less, and there is no
+ blister.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Uneda</span>.
+
+ <p class="address">Philadelphia.
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h2>Queries.</h2>
+
+<h3>WALMER CASTLE.</h3>
+
+ <p>In Hasted's <i>History of Kent</i>, vol. iv. p. 172., folio edition,
+ we have as follows:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"Walmer, probably so called <i>quasi vallum maris</i>, i.&nbsp;e. the wall
+ or fortification made against the sea, was expressed to have been a
+ member of the port of Sandwich time out of mind," &amp;c.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>Again, p. 165., note <i>m</i>, we find:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"Before these three castles were built, there were, between Deal and
+ Walmer Castle, two eminences of earth, called 'The Great and Little
+ Bulwark;' and another, between the north end of Deal and Sandwich Castle
+ (all of which are now remaining): and there was probably one about the
+ middle of the town, and others on the spots where the castles were
+ erected. They had embrasures for guns, and together formed a defensive
+ line of batteries along that part of the coast," &amp;c.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>To the new building of these castles Leland alludes, in his <i>Cygnea
+ Cantio</i>:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Jactat Dela novas celebris arces</p>
+ <p>Notus Cæsareis locus trophæis."&mdash;Ver. 565.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>There are clear remains of a Roman entrenchment close to Walmer
+ Castle. (See <i>Hasted</i>, vol. iv. p. 162., notes.)</p>
+
+ <p>Any of your correspondents who could give me any information tending
+ to show that an old fortification had existed on the site of Walmer
+ Castle, previous to the erection of the present edifice&mdash;or even
+ <i>almost</i> upon the same site&mdash;would do me a very great kindness
+ if he would communicate it, through the columns of "N. &amp; Q.," or by a
+ private letter sent to the Editor.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">C. Waymor</span>.
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>SCOTCHMEN IN POLAND.</h3>
+
+ <p>Can any of your readers throw any light on this passage in Dr.
+ Johnson's <i>Life of Sir John Denham</i>?</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"He [Sir John Denham] now resided in France, as one of the followers
+ of the exiled king; and, to divert <!-- Page 476 --><span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page476"></a>{476}</span> the melancholy of
+ their condition, was sometimes enjoined by his master to write occasional
+ verses; one of which amusements was probably his ode or song upon the
+ Embassy to Poland, by which he and Lord Crofts procured a contribution of
+ ten thousand pounds from the Scotch, that wandered over that kingdom.
+ Poland was at that time very much frequented by itinerant traders, who,
+ in a country of very little commerce and of great extent, where every man
+ resided on his own estate, contributed very much to the accommodation of
+ life, by bringing to every man's house those little necessaries which it
+ was very inconvenient to want, and very troublesome to fetch. I have
+ formerly read, without much reflection, of the multitude of Scotchmen
+ that travelled with their wares in Poland; and that their numbers were
+ not small, the success of this negociation gives sufficient
+ evidence."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>The title of Denham's poem is "On my Lord Crofts' and my journey into
+ Poland, from whence we brought 10,000<i>l.</i> for his Majesty by the
+ decimation of his Scottish subjects there."</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Peter Cunningham</span>.
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>BISHOP JUXON AND WALTON'S POLYGLOTT BIBLE.</h3>
+
+ <p>In the library at this island, which formerly belonged to the Knights
+ of Malta, there is an edition of Walton's Polyglott Bible, which was
+ published in London in 1657. This work is in a most perfect state of
+ preservation.</p>
+
+ <p>On the title-page of the first of the eleven volumes, there is
+ written, in a bold and perfectly legible manner, the following words:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"Liber Coll. Di Joannis Bapt<sup>a</sup> Oxon Ex dono Reverendiss. in
+ Xt<sup>o</sup> Patris Gvil<sup>i</sup> Jvxon Archiep. Cantvariensis.
+ A<sup>o</sup> D<sup>ni</sup> 1663."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>Just below, but on the right of the above, there is written in a clear
+ hand as follows:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"Ex Libris domus Abbatialis S. Antonij Viennensis, Catalogo Inscript
+ an. 1740. No. 11."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>That the question which I shall ask at the end of this Note may be the
+ more easily answered, it will perhaps be necessary for me to state, that
+ in the year 1777, Rohan, the Grand Master of the Knights of Malta,
+ succeeded in annexing the property belonging to the Order of St. Antonio
+ de Vienna to that of Malta. In accepting of these estates, which were
+ situated in France and Savoy, Rohan bound himself to pay the many
+ mortgages and debts with which they were encumbered; and so large an
+ amount had to be thus defrayed, that for a hundred years the convent
+ would not be reimbursed for its advances, and receive the 120,000 livres,
+ at which sum their annual rental would then be valued. Of the foundation
+ of this Order a recent writer (Thornton) thus remarks:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"In 1095 some nobles of Dauphiny united for the relief of sufferers
+ from a kind of leprosy called St. Anthony's fire, which society, in 1218,
+ was erected into a religious body of Hospitallers, having a grand master
+ for chief. This order, after many changes in its constitution, having
+ been left the option between extinction and secularisation, or union with
+ another order, accepted the latter alternative, and selected that of St.
+ John of Jerusalem."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>Among the moveable effects which came to the Knights of Malta by this
+ arrangement, was a small and well-selected library, and in it this
+ edition of Walton's Bible.</p>
+
+ <p>Without, therefore, writing more at length on this subject, which
+ might take up too much space in "N. &amp; Q.," I would simply add, that
+ my attention was called to this work by the Rev. Mr. Howe, chaplain of
+ H.B.M. ship "Britannia," and for the purpose of asking, At what time, by
+ whom, and in what manner, were these volumes removed from St. John's
+ College at Oxford, and transferred to the library of the Order of St.
+ Antonio de Vienna in France?</p>
+
+ <p class="author">W. W.
+
+ <p class="address">La Valetta, Malta.
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h2>Minor Queries.</h2>
+
+ <p><i>Was Andrew Marvell poisoned?</i>&mdash;I have just been reading the
+ three ponderous quarto volumes comprising <i>The Works</i> of Andrew
+ Marvell, as collected and edited by his townsman, Capt. Edward Thompson
+ of Hull. In the "Life," near the end of vol. iii., we are told that the
+ patriot died on Aug. 16, 1678, "and by poison for he was healthful and
+ vigorous to the moment he was seized with the premeditated ruin." And
+ again, in a summary of his merits, we are told that "all these patriot
+ virtues were insufficient to guard him against the jesuitical
+ machinations of the <i>state</i>; for what vice and bribery could not
+ influence, was perpetrated by poison." This heinous crime, so formally
+ averred against the enemies of Marvell, may have been committed by "some
+ person or persons unknown;" but, as not a tittle of evidence is adduced
+ or indicated by the zealous biographer in support of the
+ charge&mdash;Query, had it any foundation in fact? In the court, and out
+ of the court, the anti-popish, anti-prelatical Puritan had enemies
+ numerous and bitter enough; but is there really any other ground for the
+ abominable imputation of foul play alluded to, beyond his actually sudden
+ death? Is the hypothesis of poison coeval with the date of Marvell's
+ demise? If so, was there any official inquiry&mdash;any "crowner's
+ quest?" Surely his admiring compatriots on the banks of the Humber did
+ not at once quietly sit down with the conviction, that <i>thus</i> "fell
+ one of the first characters of this kingdom or of any other."</p>
+
+ <p class="author">H.
+
+ <p><i>Anonymous Pamphlet by Dr. Wallis</i> (Vol. vii., p.
+ 403.).&mdash;Will <span class="sc">Mr. Crossley</span> have the kindness
+ to give the title of the anonymous pamphlet which, he informs us, was
+ published by Dr. John Wallis <!-- Page 477 --><span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page477"></a>{477}</span> in defence of the Oxford decree of 1695,
+ on the subject of the Trinity?</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Tyro</span>.
+
+ <p class="address">Dublin.
+
+ <p><i>Mrs. Cobb's Diary.</i>&mdash;Can any of your readers give me any
+ information as to the following book, <i>Extracts from the Diary and
+ Letters of Mrs. Mary Cobb</i>: London, printed by C. and R. Baldwin,
+ 1805, 8vo., pp. 324.; said to be <i>privately printed</i>?</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">John Martin</span>.
+
+ <p class="address">Roxfield, Bedfordshire.
+
+ <p><i>Compass Flower.</i>&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Look at this delicate flower that lifts its head from the meadow&mdash;</p>
+ <p>See how its leaves all point to the north, as true as the magnet;</p>
+ <p>It is the compass flower, that the finger of God has suspended</p>
+ <p>Here on its fragile stalk, to direct the traveller's journey</p>
+ <p>Over the sea-like, pathless, limitless waste of the desert."</p>
+ <p class="i6"><i>Evangeline</i>, Part II. <span class="scac">IV</span>. line 140., &amp;c.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>Where can I find a description of this flower, and what is its
+ scientific name?</p>
+
+ <p>In Abercrombie's <i>Intellectual Powers</i>, p. 49. edit. 1846, I find
+ the following passage:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"The American hunter finds his way in the trackless forests by
+ attention to minute appearances in the trees, which indicate to him the
+ points of the compass."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>Can any one tell me what these "minute appearances" are?</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">A. H. Battier</span>.
+
+ <p class="address">East Sheen, Surrey.
+
+ <p><i>Nuns of the Hotel Dieu.</i>&mdash;What is the religions habit of
+ the nuns at the hospital of the Hotel Dieu in Paris at the present
+ day?</p>
+
+ <p class="author">M. L.
+
+ <p><i>Purlieu.</i>&mdash;Some of your correspondents seem afraid that an
+ attempt to repair the deficiencies of our English dictionaries, by
+ research into disputed etymologies in "N. &amp; Q.," would tend to
+ produce too much and too tedious discussion, and fill its space too much.
+ Could <i>this</i>, at least, not be done without much objection? Could we
+ not co-operate in finding the earliest known mention of words, and thus
+ perhaps trace the occasion and manner of their introduction?</p>
+
+ <p>At any rate, this word <i>purlieu</i> is certainly in want of some
+ examination. Johnson has adopted the wretched etymology of <i>pur</i>,
+ Fr. for pure, and <i>lieu</i>, Fr. for place; and he defines it as a
+ place on the outskirts of a forest free of wood.</p>
+
+ <p>The earliest record in which this word occurs, so far as I have seen,
+ is in an act of Edward III., quoted by Manwood, and it is there spelt
+ <i>puraley</i>; and it relates to the disafforested parts which several
+ preceding kings permitted to be detached from their royal forests.</p>
+
+ <p>Might I ask if any of your correspondents find an earlier use of the
+ word; and can it be gifted with a probable paternity?</p>
+
+ <p>The tracing of the earliest known mention of disputed words is a task
+ capable of being finished, and might perhaps be attended, in many cases,
+ with happy results. It would rid us probably of many puerilities which
+ degrade our current dictionaries.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">M. C. E.
+
+ <p><i>Jennings Family.</i>&mdash;Some time since I requested as a great
+ favour that your correspondent <span class="sc">Percuriosus</span> would
+ kindly inform me where I could get a sight of the Spoure MSS. I repeat
+ that I should feel greatly obliged if he would do so: and as this is of
+ no public interest, I send postage envelope, in the event of <span
+ class="sc">Percuriosus</span> obliging me with the desired
+ information.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">J. Jennings-G.</span>
+
+ <p><i>Latimer's Brothers-in-Law.</i>&mdash;In Bishop Latimer's first
+ sermon, preached before King Edward VI., we find the quaint martyr-bishop
+ magnifying the paternal prudence for having suitably "married his sisters
+ with five pounds, or twenty nobles, apiece;" but neither the editors of
+ the sermon, nor the writers of several biographical notices of Latimer
+ consulted by me, and in which the extract appears, give any account of
+ the fortunate gentlemen whom the generous parent thus doubly blessed with
+ his twofold treasure.</p>
+
+ <p>Can you, or any of your readers, oblige by furnishing the <i>names</i>
+ of Bishop Latimer's brothers-in-law, or by giving some references or
+ brief account of them?</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><b>* *</b>
+
+ <p><i>Autobiographical Sketch.</i>&mdash;A fragment came into my
+ possession some time ago, among a quantity of waste paper in which books
+ were wrapped, which, from the singularity of its contents, I felt
+ desirous to trace to the book of which it forms a part, but my research
+ has hitherto proved unsuccessful. It consists of two leaves of a large
+ octavo sheet, probably published some twenty years back, and is headed
+ "Autobiographical Sketch of the Editor." It commences with the words:
+ "The Commissioners of the Poor Laws will understand me, when I say, that
+ I was born at Putney, in Surrey." The pages are of course not
+ consecutive: so after an allusion to the wanderings of the writer, I have
+ nothing more up to p. 7., at which is an account of a supposed plot
+ against the lord mayor and sheriffs, concocted by him with the assistance
+ of some school-boy coadjutors; the object of which appears to have been,
+ to overturn the state-coach of the civic functionary, as it ascended
+ Holborn Hill, by charging it with a hackney coach, in which sat the
+ writer and certain widows armed with bolsters in pink satin bags. The
+ word having been given to "Charge!" this new kind of war-chariot was
+ driven down the hill at full speed, gunpowder ignited on its roof, and
+ blazing squibs protruded <!-- Page 478 --><span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page478"></a>{478}</span> through its back, sides, and front. The
+ ingenious author declares that the onslaught was crowned with complete
+ success; but here, most unfortunately, the sheet ends: and unless you,
+ Mr. Editor, or some of your correspondents, will kindly help me to the
+ rest of the narrative, I must, I fear return unexperienced to my grave. I
+ have omitted to mention, that the date of this event is given as the 4th
+ of July, 1799.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Cheverells.</span>
+
+ <p><i>Schonbornerus.</i>&mdash;Can any of your readers give me
+ information about a book I became possessed of by chance a short time
+ ago, or tell me anything respecting its author, for whom I have vainly
+ sought biographical dictionaries? The volume is a duodecimo, and bears
+ the following title-page:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"Georgii Schonborneri Politicorum, Libri Septem. Editio ad ipsius
+ Authoris emendatum Exemplar nunc primum vulgata. Amsterodami: apud L.
+ Elzevirium, anno 1642."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>It is written in Latin, and contains as many quotations as the
+ <i>Anatomy of Melancholy</i>, or Mr. Digby's <i>Broad Stone of
+ Honour</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">H. A. B.
+
+ <p><i>Symbol of Globe and Cross.</i>&mdash;Can any one oblige me with an
+ explanation of the mysterious symbols on a seal not older than the last
+ century? It contains a globe, bearing a cross upon it, and a winged heart
+ above, with the legend "<i>Pour vous</i>."</p>
+
+ <p class="author">C. T.
+
+ <p><i>Booth Family.</i>&mdash;Can any of your Lancashire correspondents
+ afford information bearing on the families of Booth of Salford, and
+ Lightbown of Manchester? Is any pedigree extant of either of these
+ families, and what arms did they bear? Humphrey Booth founded, I believe,
+ a church in Salford about the year 1634, the patronage of which still
+ remains, as it might seem, in the family, the <i>Clergy List</i>
+ describing it as in the gift of Sir R.&nbsp;G. Booth.</p>
+
+ <p>There is a Booth Hall in Blackley, a small village lying by the road
+ side, between Manchester and Middleton; and from the <i>inquisitio post
+ mortem</i> of Humphrey Booth, 12 Car. I., it appears that he died seised
+ of lands in Blackley as well as Salford.</p>
+
+ <p>Is there any evidence to connect him with this hall, as the place of
+ his residence?</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">A Jesuit.</span>
+
+ <p class="address">Jesus College, Cambridge.
+
+ <p><i>Ennui.</i>&mdash;What is our nearest approach to a correct
+ rendering of this expression? Some English writer (Lady Morgan, I
+ believe) has defined it "mental lukewarmness:" but, if it be true, as
+ La-Motte Houdart says, that&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"L'ennui naquit un jour de l'uniformité."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>the above definition would seem to indicate rather the cause of
+ <i>ennui</i> than <i>ennui</i> itself.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Henry H. Breen.</span>
+
+ <p class="address">St. Lucia.
+
+ <p><i>Bankruptcy Records.</i>&mdash;Where can I search for evidence of a
+ bankruptcy, probably about 1654? The Chief Registrar's indices do not go
+ back nearly so far.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">J. K.
+
+ <p><i>Golden Bees.</i>&mdash;Napoleon I. and II. are said to have had
+ their imperial robes embroidered with golden bees, as claiming official
+ descent from Carolus Magnus. Query, what is the authority for this
+ heraldic distinction, said to have been assumed by Charlemagne?</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">James Graves.</span>
+
+ <p class="address">Kilkenny.
+
+ <p><i>The Grindstone Oak.</i>&mdash;Can any of your topographical
+ correspondents state what is the earliest mention made of an oak tree
+ well known in this part of the country, and the destruction of which by
+ fire, on the 5th of November, 1849, was the subject of regret to all who
+ had seen or heard of it? It was called the <i>Grindstone Oak</i>, and had
+ been a denizen of the forest of Alice Holt, as many suppose, since the
+ days of the Confessor. It measured thirty-four feet in circumference, at
+ the height of seven feet from the ground; and is mentioned by Gilbert
+ White, in his <i>History of Selborne</i>, as "the great oak in the Holt,
+ which is deemed by Mr. Marsham to be the biggest in this island."</p>
+
+ <p class="author">L. L. L.
+
+ <p class="address">Near Selborne, Hants.
+
+ <p><i>Hogarth.</i>&mdash;About the year 1746, Mr. Hogarth painted a
+ portrait of himself and wife: he afterwards cut the canvass through, and
+ presented the half containing his own portrait to a gentleman in
+ Yorkshire.</p>
+
+ <p>If any of your numerous readers are in possession of any portrait of
+ Mr. Hogarth, about three feet in length, and one foot eight inches wide,
+ or are aware of the existence of such a portrait, they will confer a
+ favour by addressing a line to</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">J. Phillips</span>,<br />
+5. Torrington Place, London.
+
+ <p><i>Adamsons of Perth.</i>&mdash;Can any of your Scottish
+ correspondents inform me what relationship existed between Patrick
+ Adamson, titular Archbishop of St. Andrew's, and the two learned
+ brothers, Henry Adamson, author of the <i>Muses' Threnodie</i>, and John
+ Adamson, principal of the college at Edinburgh, and editor of the
+ <i>Muses' Welcome</i>; and whether any existing family claims to be
+ descended from them? They were all born at Perth. Henry and John were the
+ sons of James Adamson, a merchant and magistrate of the fair city.
+ Probably the archbishop was a brother of this James Adamson, and son of
+ Patrick Adamson, who was Dean of the Guild when John Knox preached his
+ famous sermon at St. John's. Mariota, a daughter of the archbishop, is
+ said by Burke to have married Sir Michael <!-- Page 479 --><span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page479"></a>{479}</span> Balfour, Bart., of
+ Nortland Castle Orkney. Another daughter would appear to have become the
+ wife of Thomas Wilson, or Volusenus, as he calls himself, the editor of
+ his father-in-law's poems and other publications.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">E. H. A.
+
+ <p><i>Cursitor Barons of the Exchequer.</i>&mdash;Will you allow me to
+ repeat a question which you inserted in Vol. v., p. 346., as to a list of
+ these officers, and any account of their origin and history? Surely some
+ of your correspondents, devoted to legal antiquities, can give note a
+ clue to the labyrinth which Madox has not ventured to enter. The office
+ still exists&mdash;with peculiar duties which are still
+ performed&mdash;and we know that it is an ancient one; all sufficient
+ grounds for inquiry, which I trust will meet with some response.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Edward Foss</span>.
+
+ <p><i>Syriac Scriptures.</i>&mdash;I am very anxious to know what
+ editions of the Scriptures in Syriac (the <i>Peshito</i>) were published
+ between Leusden and Schaaf's New Testament, and the entire Bible in 1816
+ by the Bible Society.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">B. H. C.
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h2>Replies.</h2>
+
+<h3>PSALMANAZAR.</h3>
+
+<p class="cenhead">(Vol. vii., pp. 206. 435.)</p>
+
+ <p>Having long felt a great respect for this person, and a great interest
+ in all that concerns his history, I am induced to mention the grounds on
+ which I have been led to doubt whether the letter in the <i>Gentleman's
+ Magazine</i>, to which <span class="sc">Mr. Crossley</span> refers, is
+ worthy of credit. When I first saw it, I considered it as so valuable an
+ addition to the information which I had collected on the subject, that I
+ was anxious to know who was the writer. It had no signature; but the
+ date, "Sherdington, June, 1704," which was retained, gave me a clue
+ which, by means not worth detailing, led me to the knowledge that what
+ thus appeared in the <i>Gentleman's Magazine</i> for February, 1765, had
+ issued from "Curll's chaste press" more than thirty years before, in the
+ form of a letter from the person now known in literary history as
+ "Curll's Corinna," but by her cotemporaries (see the index of Mr.
+ Cunningham's excellent <i>Handbook of London</i>) as Mrs. Elizabeth
+ Thomas, sometime of Dyot Street, St. Giles's, and afterwards of a
+ locality not precisely ascertained, but within the rules of the Fleet,
+ and possibly (though Mr. Cunningham does not corroborate this) at some
+ period of her life resident in the more genteel quarters which Curll
+ assigns to her. To speak more strictly, and make the matter intelligible
+ to any one who may look at it in the Magazine, I should add that the
+ first paragraph (seventeen lines, on p. 78., dated from "Sherdington,"
+ and beginning "I dined," says the letter writer, "last Saturday with Sir
+ John Guise, at Gloucester") is part of a letter purporting to be written
+ by her lover; while all the remainder (on pp. 79-81.) is from Corinna's
+ answer to it.</p>
+
+ <p>The worthless and forgotten work of which these letters form a part,
+ consists of two volumes. The copy which I borrowed when I discovered what
+ I have stated, consisted of a first volume of the second edition (1736),
+ and a second volume of the first edition (1732). The title of the second
+ volume (which I give as belonging to the earlier edition) is:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"The Honourable Lovers: or, the second and last Volume of Pylades and
+ Corinna. Being the remainder of Love Letters, and other Pieces (in Verse
+ and Prose), which passed between Richard Gwinnett, Esq.; of Great
+ Shurdington, in Gloucestershire, and Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas, Jun., of
+ Great Russel Street, Bloomsbury. To which is added, a Collection of
+ familiar Letters between Corinna, Mr. Norris, Capt. Hemington, Lady
+ Chudleigh, Lady Pakington, &amp;c. &amp;c. All faithfully published from
+ their original Manuscripts. London: printed in the Year <span
+ class="scac">M.DCC.XXXII.</span> (Price 5<i>s.</i>)"</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>The title-page of the first volume (second edition) differs
+ principally in having the statement that the book was "printed for E.
+ Curll" (whose name does not appear in the earlier second volume, though
+ perhaps it may have done so in the first of that earlier edition), and an
+ announcement that the fidelity of the publication is "attested, by Sir
+ Edward Northey, Knight."</p>
+
+ <p>The work is a farrago of low rubbish utterly beneath criticism; and I
+ should perhaps hardly think it worth while to say as much as I have said
+ of it, had it not been that, in turning it about, I could not help
+ feeling a suspicion that Daniel Defoe's hand was in the matter, at least
+ so far as that papers that had belonged to him might have come into
+ Curll's hands, and furnished materials for the work. It would be tedious
+ to enter into details; but the question seemed to me to be one of some
+ interest, because, in my own mind, it was immediately followed by
+ another, namely, whether Daniel had not more to do than has been
+ suspected with the <i>History of Formosa</i>? Those who are more familiar
+ with Defoe than I am, will be better able to judge whether he was, as
+ Psalmanazar says, "the person who Englished it from my Latin;" for the
+ youth was as much disqualified for writing the book in English, by being
+ a Frenchman, as he would have been if he had been a Formosan. He
+ acknowledges that this person assisted him to correct improbabilities;
+ but I do not know that he anywhere throws further light on the question
+ respecting the help which he must have had. Daniel would be just the man
+ to correct some gross improbabilities, and at the same time help him to
+ some more probable fictions. Under this impression I recently inquired
+ (see "N. &amp; Q.," Vol. vii., p. 305.) respecting the authorship of <!--
+ Page 480 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page480"></a>{480}</span>
+ <i>Pylades and Corinna</i>, and the possibility that it might be the work
+ of Defoe; but I believe that my question has not been answered.</p>
+
+ <p>I have already trespassed unreasonably on your columns; but still I
+ must beg, in justice to a man whose character, as I have said, I very
+ highly respect, to add one remark. When his imposture is referred to, it
+ is not always remembered that when he came to this country he was not his
+ own master. It seems that he rambled away from his home in the South of
+ France, when about fifteen years old; that he spent about two years in
+ wandering about France and Germany, and astonishing people by pretending
+ to be, at first a converted, and afterwards an unconverted, Formosan;
+ that when performing this second, pagan, character, he arrived at Sluys,
+ where a Scotch regiment in the Dutch service, under Brigadier Lauder, was
+ stationed; that the chaplain, named Innes, detected the fraud, but
+ instead of reproving the lad for his sin and folly, only considered how
+ he might turn the cheat to his own advantage, and render it conducive to
+ his own preferment. The abandoned miscreant actually went through the
+ blasphemous mockery of baptizing the youth as a convert from heathenism;
+ named him after the brigadier, who stood godfather: claimed credit from
+ the Bishop of London for his zeal; and was by the kind prelate invited to
+ bring his convert to London. The chaplain lost no time in accepting, was
+ graciously received by the bishop and the archbishop, snapped up the
+ first piece of preferment that would answer his views (it happened to be
+ the office of chaplain-general to the forces in Portugal), and made off,
+ leaving his convert to bear the storm which was sure to burst on him, as
+ best he might. That a youth thus tutored and thus abandoned, before
+ Johnson was born, should have lived to attract his society, and win from
+ him the testimony that he was "the best man" whom he had ever known,
+ gives him a claim to our respect, which seems to me to be strengthened by
+ everything which I have been able to learn respecting him.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">S. R. Maitland</span>.
+
+ <p class="address">Gloucester.
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>CONSECRATED ROSES, ETC.</h3>
+
+<p class="cenhead">(Vol. vii., p. 407.)</p>
+
+ <p>Had G.'s Query referred solely to the consecration of <i>The Golden
+ Rose</i>, I might have given him a satisfactory answer by referring him
+ to Cartari's essay on the subject entitled <i>La Rosa d'Ora Pontificia,
+ &amp;c.</i>, 4to. 1681, and to the account (with accompanying engraving)
+ of the <i>Rose, Sword, and Cap</i> consecrated by Julius III., and sent
+ by him to Philip and Mary; and to Cardinal Pole's exposition of these
+ Papal gifts, which are to be found in the 1st volume of F. Angeli Rocca,
+ <i>Opera Omnia</i> (fol. Rome, 1719). In the authors to whom I have
+ referred, much curious information will, however, be found. I take this
+ opportunity of saying, that as I am about to submit a communication on
+ the subject of <i>The Golden Rose</i> to the Society of Antiquaries, I
+ shall feel obliged by any hints which may help me to render it more
+ complete; and of putting on record in "N. &amp; Q." the following
+ particulars of the ceremonial, as it was performed on the 6th of March
+ last, which I extract from the <i>Dublin Weekly Telegraph</i> of the 9th
+ of April.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"On Sunday, the 6th [March, 1853], the Benediction of the Golden Rose,
+ was, according to annual usage, performed by the Pontiff previously to
+ High Mass, in the Sistine Chapel, celebrated by a cardinal, at which he
+ assists every Sunday during Lent. To the more ancient practice of
+ blessing, on the fourth Sunday of 'Quaresima,' a pair of gold and silver
+ keys, touched with filings from the chains of St. Peter (which are still
+ preserved in Rome), the Holy See has substituted that of the Benediction
+ of the 'Rosa d'Oro,' to be presented, within the year, to some sovereign
+ or other potentate, who has proved well deserving of the Church. The
+ first positive record respecting the Golden Rose has been ascribed to the
+ Pontificate of Leo IX. (1049-53); but a writer in the <i>Civitta
+ Catolica</i> states that allusion to a census levied for its cost may be
+ found in the annals of a still earlier period. The Pontiffs used formerly
+ to present it annually to the Prefect of Rome, after singing Mass, on
+ this Sunday, at the Lateran, and pronouncing a homily, during which they
+ lifted the consecrated object in one hand whilst expounding to the people
+ its mystic significance. Pius II. (1458) is the last Pope recorded to
+ have thus preached in reference to and thus conferred the Golden Rose;
+ and the first foreign potentate recorded to have received it from the
+ Holy See is Fulk, Count of Anjou, to whom it was presented by Urban II.
+ in 1096. A homily of Innocent III. also contains all explanation of this
+ beautiful symbol&mdash;the precious metal, the balsam and musk used in
+ consecrating it, being taken in mystic sense as allusion to the triple
+ substance in the person of the Incarnate Lord&mdash;divinity, soul, and
+ body. It is not merely a single flower, but an entire rose-tree that is
+ represented&mdash;the whole about a foot in height, most delicately
+ wrought in fine lamina of gold. This being previously deposited between
+ lighted candelabra, on a table in the sacristy, is taken by the youngest
+ cleric of the camera, to be consigned to his Holiness, after the latter
+ has been vested for the solemnity, but before his assuming the mitre.
+ After a beautiful form of prayer, with incense and holy water, the
+ Pontiff then, holding the object in his hand, imparts the Benediction,
+ introducing into the flower which crowns the graceful stem, and is
+ perforated so as to provide a receptacle, balsam of Peru and powder of
+ musk. He then passes with the usual procession into the Sistine, still
+ carrying the rose in his left hand; and during the Mass it remains
+ beneath the crucifix over the altar. If in the course of the year no
+ donation of the precious object is thought advisable, the same is
+ consecrated afresh on the anniversary following. Some have conjectured
+ that the Empress of France will be selected <!-- Page 481 --><span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page481"></a>{481}</span> by Pius IX. to receive
+ this honour in the present instance; but this is mere conjecture. On a
+ former occasion, it is true, the Golden Rose was conferred by him on
+ another crowned head of the fairer sex&mdash;one entitled to more than
+ common regards from the Supreme Pastor in adversity&mdash;the Queen of
+ Naples."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">William J. Thoms.</span>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>CAMPBELL'S IMITATIONS.</h3>
+
+<p class="cenhead">(Vol. vi., p. 505.)</p>
+
+ <p>It is curious that two of the passages pointed out by <span
+ class="sc">Mr. Breen</span>, as containing borrowed ideas, are those
+ quoted by Alison in his recent volume (<i>Hist. Eur.</i>, vol. i. pp.
+ 429, 430.) to support his panegyric on Campbell, of whose "felicitous
+ images" he speaks with some enthusiasm.</p>
+
+ <p>The propensity of Campbell to adapt or imitate the thoughts and
+ expressions of others has often struck me. Let me then suggest the
+ following (taken at random) as further, and I believe hitherto unnoticed,
+ illustrations of that propensity:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>1. &nbsp; "When front to front the banner'd hosts combine,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Halt ere they close, and form the dreadful line."</p>
+ <p class="i12"><i>Pleasures of Hope.</i></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2hg3">"When front to front the marching armies shine,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Halt ere they meet, and form the lengthening line."</p>
+ <p class="i12">Pope, <i>Battle of Frogs and Mice</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>2. &nbsp; "As sweep the shot stars down the troubled sky."</p>
+ <p class="i12"><i>Pleasures of Hope.</i></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2hg3">"And rolls low thunder thro' <i>the troubled sky</i>."</p>
+ <p class="i12">Pope, <i>Frogs and Mice</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>3. &nbsp; "With meteor-standard to the winds unfurl'd."</p>
+ <p class="i12"><i>Pleasures of Hope.</i></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2hg3">"The imperial <i>standard</i> which full high advanc'd,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Shone <i>like a meteor</i> streaming <i>to the wind</i>."</p>
+ <p class="i12">Milton, <i>Par. Lost</i>, i. 535.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>4. &nbsp; "The dying man to Sweden turn'd his eye,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Thought of his home, and clos'd it with a sigh."</p>
+ <p class="i12"><i>Pleasures of Hope.</i></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2hg3">"Sternitur infelix alieno vulnere, c&oelig;lumque</p>
+ <p class="i2">Aspicit, <i>et dulces moriens reminiscitur Argos</i>."</p>
+ <p class="i12">Virgil, <i>Æn.</i>, x. 782.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>5. &nbsp; "... Red meteors flash'd along the sky,</p>
+ <p class="i2">And conscious Nature shudder'd at the cry."</p>
+ <p class="i12"><i>Pleasures of Hope.</i></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2hg3">"... <i>Fulsere ignes, et conscius</i> æther."</p>
+ <p class="i12">Virgil, <i>Æn.</i>, iv. 167.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>6. &nbsp; "In hollow winds he hears a spirit moan."</p>
+ <p class="i12"><i>Pleasures of Hope.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>Shakespeare has the <i>hollow whistling</i> of the southern
+ <i>wind</i>.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>7. &nbsp; "The strings of Nature crack'd with agony."</p>
+ <p class="i12"><i>Pleasures of Hope.</i></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2hg3">"His <i>grief</i> grew puissant. and <i>the strings of life</i></p>
+ <p class="i2">Began <i>to crack</i>."&mdash;Shakspeare, <i>King Lear</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>8. &nbsp; "The fierce extremes of good and ill to brook."</p>
+ <p class="i12"><i>Gertrude of Wyoming.</i></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2hg3">"... And feel by turns the bitter change</p>
+ <p class="i2">Of <i>fierce extremes, extremes</i> by change more <i>fierce</i>."</p>
+ <p class="i12">Milton, <i>Par. Lost</i>, ii. 599.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>9. &nbsp; "His tassell'd horn beside him laid."</p>
+ <p class="i12"><i>O'Connor's Child.</i></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2hg3">"... Ere th' odorous breath of morn</p>
+ <p class="i2">Awakes the slumbering leaves, or <i>tassell'd horn</i></p>
+ <p class="i2">Shakes the high thicket."&mdash;Milton, <i>Arcades</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>10. "The scented wild-weeds and enamell'd moss."</p>
+ <p class="i12"><i>Theodric.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>Campbell thinks it necessary to explain this latter epithet in a note:
+ "The moss of Switzerland, as well as that of the Tyrol, is remarkable for
+ a bright smoothness approaching to the appearance of enamel." And yet was
+ no one, or both, of the following passages floating in his brain when his
+ pen traced the line?</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"O'er the <i>smooth enamell'd green</i></p>
+ <p>Where no print of sleep hath been."</p>
+ <p class="i12">Milton, <i>Arcades</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Here blushing Flora paints <i>th' enamell'd ground</i>."</p>
+ <p class="i12">Pope, <i>Winsdor Forest</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p class="author">W. T. M.
+
+ <p class="address">Hong Kong.
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>"THE HANOVER RAT."</h3>
+
+<p class="cenhead">(Vol. vii. p. 206.)</p>
+
+ <p><i>An Essay on Irish Bulls</i> is said to have found its way into a
+ catalogue of works upon natural history; with which precedent in my
+ favour, and pending the inquiries of <i>naturalists</i>,
+ <i>ratcatchers</i>, and <i>farmers</i> into the history of the
+ above-named formidable invader, I hope <span class="sc">Mr.
+ Hibberd</span> will have no objection to my intruding a bibliographical
+ curiosity under the convenient head he has opened for it in "N. &amp;
+ Q."</p>
+
+ <p>My book, then, bears the appropriate title, <i>An Attempt towards a
+ Natural History of the Hanover Rat, dedicated to P***m M******r, M.D.,
+ and S&mdash;&mdash;y to the Royal Society</i>, 8vo., pp. 24.: London,
+ 1744.</p>
+
+ <p>The writer of this curious piece takes his <i>cue</i> from that
+ remarkable production, <i>An Attempt towards a Natural History of the
+ Polype</i>, 1743; in which the learned Mr. Henry Baker, in a letter to
+ Martin Folkes, of 218 pages, 8vo., illustrated by a profusion of
+ woodcuts, elaborately describes this link between the animal and
+ vegetable creation, and the experiments he practised upon the same:
+ commencing with "cutting off a polype's head," and so on through a series
+ of scientific barbarities upon his <i>little creature</i>, which ended
+ only in "turning a polype inside out!"</p>
+
+ <p>Following the plan of Mr. Baker, the anonymous author of <i>The
+ Hanover Rat</i> tells us, that, after thirty years' laborious research,
+ he had <!-- Page 482 --><span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page482"></a>{482}</span> satisfied himself that this animal was
+ not a native of these islands: "I cannot," he says, "particularly mark
+ the date of its first appearance, yet I think it is within the memory of
+ man;" and finding favour in its original <i>mine affamée</i> state with a
+ few of the most starved and hungry of the English rats from the common
+ sewer, he proceeds to show that it <i>did</i> extirpate the natives; but
+ whether this is the best account, or whether the facts of the case as
+ here set forth will satisfy your correspondent, is another thing.
+ According to <i>my</i> authority, the aboriginal rat was, at the period
+ of writing, sorely put to it to maintain his ground against the invading
+ colonists and their unnatural allies the <i>providers</i>; and the
+ present work seems to have been an effort on the part of one in the
+ interest of the former to awaken them to a sense of their danger. In his
+ laudable attempts to rally their courage, this advocate reminds them of a
+ similar crisis when their country was infested with a species of frog
+ called <i>Dutch frogs</i>: "which no sooner," says he, "began to be
+ mischievous, than its growth and progress was stopped by the natives."
+ "Had we," he continues, "but the same public spirit with our ancestors,
+ we need not complain to-day of being eaten up by <i>rats</i>. Our country
+ is the same, but alas! we feel no more the same affection for it." In
+ this way he stimulates the invaded to a combined attack upon the common
+ enemy, and we need not tell <i>our</i> readers how successfully, nor how
+ desperate the struggle, the very next year; which ended in the complete
+ ascendancy of the <i>Hanover rat</i>, or reigning family, over the
+ unlucky Jacobite native. Under his figure of a rat, this Jacobite is very
+ scurrilous indeed upon the Hanoverian succession; and, continuing his
+ <i>polypian</i> imitations, relates a few coarse experiments upon <i>his
+ subject</i> illustrative of its destructive properties, voracity, and
+ sagacity, which set at nought "all the contrivances of the farmer to
+ defend his barns; the trailer his warehouse; the gentleman his land; or
+ the inferior people their cup-boards and small beer cellars. No bars or
+ bolts can keep them out, nor can any gin or trap lay hold of them."</p>
+
+ <p>Luckily for us living in these latter days, we can extract amusement
+ from topics of this nature, which would have subjected our forefathers to
+ severe pains and penalties; and looking at the character and mischievous
+ tendency of <i>The Hanover Rat</i>, I am curious to know if Mary Cooper,
+ the publisher, was put under surveillance for her share in its
+ production; for to me it appears a more aggravated libel upon the
+ reigning family than that of the <i>Norfolk Prophecy</i>&mdash;for the
+ publication of which, Boswell says, the great Samuel Johnson had to play
+ at hide and seek with the officers of justice.</p>
+
+ <p>The advent of both Pretenders was preceded by <i>straws</i> like these
+ cast out by their adherents, to try <i>how the current set</i>. The
+ present <i>jeu d'esprit</i>, however, is a double-shotted one: for, not
+ content with tampering with the public allegiance, this aboriginal rat
+ seems more innocently enjoying a laugh at the Royal Society, and its
+ ingenious <i>fellow</i> Mr. Baker, in as far as regards the aforesaid
+ elaborate treatise upon <i>polypes</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">J. O.
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>FONT INSCRIPTIONS.</h3>
+
+<p class="cenhead">(Vol. vii., p. 408.)</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Mr. Ellacombe</span> desires examples of these. I can
+ supply the following:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>At Bradley, Lincolnshire, is a very large font, of the Decorated
+ period, with this inscription round the bowl in black letter:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"Pater Noster, Ave Maria, and Criede, leren ye chyld yt es nede."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>This is an early instance of the use of <i>English</i> for
+ inscriptions. The sketch was engraved in the work on <i>Baptismal
+ Fonts</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>At Threckingham, Lincolnshire, I believe I succeeded in deciphering an
+ inscription round the font, which was said to have been previously
+ studied in vain. It is somewhat defaced; but in all probability the words
+ are,&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"Ave Maria gracia p... d... t..."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p><i>i.&nbsp;e.</i> of course, "plena, dominus tecum." The bowl of the font
+ is Early English; but the base, round which the inscription runs, appears
+ to be of the fifteenth century.</p>
+
+ <p>At Burgate, Suffolk, an inscription in black letter is incised on the
+ upper step of the font:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"[Orate pro an&mdash;b'] Will'mi Burgate militis et d<span
+ class="over">n</span>e Elionore uxoris eius qui istum fontem fieri
+ fecerunt."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>Sir William Burgate died in 1409. It is engraved in the <i>Proceedings
+ of the Bury and West Suffolk Archæological Institute</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>At Caistor, by Norwich:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"Orate pro animab ... liis ... ici de Castre."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>At Walsoken, Norfolk:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"Remember the soul of S. Honyter and Margaret his wife, and John
+ Beforth, Chaplain."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>with the date 1544.</p>
+
+ <p>At Gaywood, Norfolk, is a font of Gothic design, lust probably of
+ post-Reformation date. On four of the eight sides of the bowl are these
+ inscriptions:</p>
+
+
+<table width="62%" class="nob" summary="Font inscriptions from Gaywood" title="Font inscriptions from Gaywood">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:center; width:50%">
+ <p>"QVI . CREDIDE<br /> RIT . ET . BAPTI<br /> ZATVS . FVERIT<br />
+ SALVVS . ERIT."<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:center; width:50%">
+ <p>"VOCE . PATER<br /> NATUS . CORPORE<br /> FLAMEN . AVE.<br /> MAT.
+ 3."<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:center">
+ <p>"CHRISTVM . IN<br /> DVISTIS . QVOT<br /> QVOT . BAPTI<br /> ZATI
+ . ESTIS."</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:center">
+ <p>"I . AM . THY . GOD<br /> AND . THE . GOD<br /> OF . THY .
+ SEEDE.<br />
+ GEN."</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p><!-- Page 483 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page483"></a>{483}</span></p>
+
+ <p>At Tilney, All Saints, Norfolk, is an inscribed font so similar to the
+ one last mentioned that they are probably the works of the same
+ designer.</p>
+
+ <p>On the <i>cover</i> of the font at Southacre, Norfolk, is this
+ inscription:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"Orate p. aia. M<span class="over">r</span>i. Ri<span
+ class="over">c</span>i. Gotts et d<span class="over">n</span>i Galfridi
+ baker, Rectoris huj' [eccl&#x12B;e qui hoc] opus fieri
+ fece<sup>t</sup>."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>I may take the opportunity of adding two <i>pulpit</i> inscriptions;
+ one at Utterby, Lincolnshire, on the sounding-board:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Quoties conscendo animo contimesco."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>The other at Swarby, in the same county:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"O God my Saviour be my sped,</p>
+ <p>To preach thy word, men's soulls to fed."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p class="author">C. R. M.
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>IRISH RHYMES&mdash;ENGLISH PROVINCIALISMS&mdash;LOWLAND SCOTCH.</h3>
+
+<p class="cenhead">(Vol. vi., pp. 605, 606.)</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Mr. Bede</span>, who first called attention to a
+ class of rhymes which he denominated "Irish," seems to take it ill that I
+ have dealt with his observations as somewhat "hypercritical." I
+ acknowledge the justness of his criticism; but I did, and must still,
+ demur to the propriety of calling certain false rhymes peculiarly
+ <i>Irish</i>, when I am able to produce similes from poets of celebrity,
+ who cannot stand excused by <span class="sc">Mr. Bede's</span>
+ explanation, that the rhymes in question "made music for their Irish
+ ear." If, as he tells us, <span class="sc">Mr. Bede</span> was not "blind
+ to similar imperfections in English poets," I am yet to learn why he
+ should fix on "Swift's Irishisms," and call those errors a national
+ peculiarity, when he finds them so freely scattered through the standard
+ poetry of England?</p>
+
+ <p>Your correspondent J. H. T. suggests a new direction for inquiry on
+ this subject when he conjectures that the pronunciation now called
+ <i>Irish</i> was, "during the first half of the eighteenth century, the
+ received pronunciation of the most correct speakers of the day;" and
+ <span class="sc">Mr. Bede</span> himself suggests that
+ <i>provincialisms</i> may sometimes modify the rhymes of even so correct
+ a versifier as Tennyson. I hope some of your contributors will have
+ "drunk so deep of the well of English undefiled" as to be competent to
+ address themselves to this point of inquiry. I cannot pretend to do much,
+ being but a shallow philologist; yet, since I received your last Number,
+ I have lighted on a passage in that volume of "omnifarious information"
+ Croker's <i>Boswell</i>, which will not be deemed inapplicable.</p>
+
+ <p>Boswell, during a sojourn at Lichfield in 1776, expressed a doubt as
+ to the correctness of Johnson's eulogy on his townsmen, as "speaking the
+ purest English," and instanced several provincial sounds, such as
+ <i>there</i> pronounced like <i>fear</i>, <i>once</i> like <i>woonse</i>.
+ On this passage are a succession of notes: Burney observes, that "David
+ Garrick always said <i>shupreme, shuperior</i>." Malone's note brings the
+ case in point to ours when he says, "This is still the vulgar
+ pronunciation in Ireland; the pronunciation in Ireland is doubtless that
+ which generally prevailed in England in the time of Queen Elizabeth." And
+ Mr. Croker sums up the case thus:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"No doubt the English settlers carried over, and may have in some
+ cases preserved, the English idiom and accent of their day. Bishop
+ Kearny, as well as his friend Mr. Malone, thought that the most
+ remarkable peculiarity of Irish pronunciation, as in <i>say</i> for
+ <i>sea</i>, <i>tay</i> for <i>tea</i>, was <i>the English mode, even down
+ to the reign of Queen Anne</i>; and there are rhymes in Pope, and more
+ frequently in Dryden, that countenance that opinion. But rhymes cannot be
+ depended upon for minute identity of sound."&mdash;Croker's <i>Notes</i>,
+ <span class="scac">A.D.</span> 1776.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>If this explanation be adopted, it will account for the examples I
+ have been furnishing, and others which I find even among the harmonious
+ rhymes of Spenser (he might, however, have caught the brogue in Ireland);
+ yet am I free to own that to me popular pronunciation scarcely justifies
+ the committing to paper such loose rhymes as ought to grate on that
+ fineness of ear which is an essential faculty in the true poet; "here or
+ awa'," in England or Ireland, I continue to set them down to "slip-slop
+ composition."</p>
+
+ <p>It may not be inappropriate to notice, that among Swift's
+ eccentricities, we find a propensity to "out-of-the-way rhymes." In his
+ works are numerous examples of couplets made apparently for no other
+ purpose but to show that no word could baffle him; and the anecdote of
+ his long research for a rhyme for the name of his old enemy Serjent
+ <i>Betsworth</i>, and of the curious accident by which he obtained it, is
+ well known; from which we may conclude that he was on the watch for
+ occasions of exhibiting such rhymes as <i>rakewell</i> and <i>sequel</i>,
+ <i>charge ye</i> and <i>clergy</i>, without supposing him ignorant that
+ he was guilty of "lèse majesté" against the laws of correct
+ pronunciation.</p>
+
+ <p>When I asked <span class="sc">Mr. Bede's</span> decision on a
+ <i>palpable Cockneyism</i> in verse, I did so merely with a view, by a
+ "<i>tu quoque</i> pleasantry," to enliven a discussion, which I hope we
+ may carry on and conclude in that good humour with which I accept his
+ parenthetic hint, that I have made "a bull" of my Pegasus. I beg to
+ submit to him, that, as I read the <i>Classical Dictionary</i>, it is
+ from the <i>heels</i> of Pegasus the fount of poetic inspiration is
+ supposed to be derived; and, further, that the <i>brogue</i> is not so
+ <i>malapropos</i> to the <i>heel</i> as he imagines, for in Ireland the
+ <i>brogue</i> is in use as well to cover the <i>understanding</i> as to
+ <i>tip the tongue</i>. Could I enjoy the pleasure of <span class="sc">Mr.
+ Bede's</span> company in a stroll over my native mountains, he might find
+ that there are occasions on which he might be glad to put off <!-- Page
+ 484 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page484"></a>{484}</span> his
+ London-made shoe, and "to <i>wear</i> the <i>brogue</i>, though
+ <i>speak</i> none."</p>
+
+ <p class="author">A. B. R.
+
+ <p>P.S.&mdash;The <i>postscriptum</i> of J. H. T. respecting the
+ pronunciation of English being preserved in Scotland, goes direct to an
+ opinion I long since formed, that the Lowland Scotch, as we read it in
+ the Waverley Novels, is the only genuine unadulterated remains we have of
+ the Saxon language, as used before the Norman Conquest. I formed this
+ opinion from continually tracing what we call "braid Scotch" to its root,
+ in Bosworth's, and other Saxon dictionaries; and I lately found this fact
+ confirmed and accounted for in a passage of Verstegan, as
+ follows:&mdash;He tells us that after the battle of Hastings Prince Edgar
+ Atheling, with his sisters Margaret and Christian, retired into Scotland,
+ where King Malcolm married the former of these ladies; and proceeds
+ thus:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"As now the English court, by reason of the aboundance of Normannes
+ therein, became moste to speak French, so the Scottish court, because of
+ the queen, and the many English that came with her, began to speak
+ English; the which language, it would seem, King Malcolm himself had
+ before that learned, and now, by reason of his queen, did more affecte
+ it. But the English toung, in fine, prevailed more in Scotland than the
+ French did in England; <i>for English became the language of all the
+ south part of Scotland</i>, the Irish (or Gaelic) having before that been
+ the general language of the whole country, since remaining only in the
+ north."&mdash;Verstegan's <i>Restitution of Antiquities</i>, <span
+ class="scac">A.D.</span> 1605.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>Many of your accomplished philological readers will doubtless consider
+ the information of this Note trivial and puerile; but they will, I hope,
+ bear with a tyro in the science, in recording an original remark of his
+ own, borne out by an authority so decisive as Verstegan.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">A. B. R.
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>PICTURES BY HOGARTH.</h3>
+
+<p class="cenhead">(Vol. vii., pp. 339. 412.)</p>
+
+ <p>In reply to <span class="sc">Amateur</span>, I can inform him that at
+ the sale of the Marlborough effects at Marlborough House about thirty
+ years ago, there were sold four or five small whole-lengths in oil of
+ members of that family. They were hardly clever enough for what Hogarth's
+ after-style would lead us to expect, but there were many reasons for
+ thinking they were by him. They came into the possession of Mr. Croker,
+ who presented them, as family curiosities, to the second Earl Spencer,
+ and they are now, I presume, in the gallery at Althorpe. One of them was
+ peculiarly curious as connected with a remarkable anecdote of the great
+ Duchess. Horace Walpole tells us in the <i>Reminiscences</i>, her
+ granddaughter, Lady Bateman, having persuaded her brother, the young Duke
+ of Marlborough, to marry a Miss Trevor without the Duchess's consent:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"The grandam's rage exceeded all bounds. Having a portrait of Lady
+ Bateman, she blackened the face, and then wrote on it, '<i>Now her
+ outside's as black as her inside.</i>'"</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>One of the portraits I speak of was of Lady Bateman, and bore on its
+ face evidence of having incurred some damage, for the coat of arms with
+ which (like all the others, and as was Hogarth's fashion) it was
+ ornamented in one corner, were angrily scratched out, as with a knife.
+ Whether this defacement gave rise to Walpole's story, or whether the face
+ had been also blackened with some stuff that was afterwards removed,
+ seems doubtful; the picture itself, according to my recollection, showed
+ no mark but the armorial defacement.</p>
+
+ <p>I much wonder this style of small whole-lengths has not been more
+ prevalent; they give the general air and manner of the personage so much
+ better than the bust size can do, and they are so much more suited to the
+ size of our ordinary apartments.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">C.
+
+ <p>Referring to <span class="sc">An Amateur's</span> inquiry as to where
+ any pictures painted by Hogarth are to be seen, I beg to say that I have
+ in my possession, and should be happy to show him, the portrait of
+ Hogarth's wife (Sir William Thornhill's daughter), painted by
+ himself.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Lyndon Rolls</span>.
+
+ <p class="address">Banbury.
+
+ <p>The late Bishop Luscombe showed me, at Paris, in 1835, a picture of
+ "The Oratorio,"&mdash;a subject well known from Hogarth's etching. He
+ told me that he bought it at a broker's shop in the Rue St. Denis; that,
+ on examination, he found the frame to be English; and that, as the price
+ was small&mdash;thirty francs, if I remember rightly&mdash;he bought the
+ piece, without supposing it to be more than a copy. Sir William Knighton,
+ on seeing it in the bishop's collection, told him that Hogarth's original
+ had belonged to the Dukes of Richmond, and had been in their residence at
+ Paris until the first Revolution, since which time it had not been heard
+ of; and Sir William had no doubt that the bishop had been so fortunate as
+ to recover it. Perhaps some of your readers may have something to say on
+ this story.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">J. C. R.
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>PHOTOGRAPHIC CORRESPONDENCE.</h3>
+
+ <p><i>Washing Collodion Process.</i>&mdash;In "N. &amp; Q.," No. 153., p.
+ 320., your valued correspondent <span class="sc">Dr. Diamond</span>
+ states "that up to the <i>final</i> period of the operation, no washing
+ of the plate is requisite. It prevents, rather than assists, the
+ necessary chemical action.".</p>
+
+ <p>Now, in all other instructions I have yet seen, it is directed to wash
+ off the iron, or other developing solution, <i>prior</i> to immersing in
+ the hypo., and after <!-- Page 485 --><span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page485"></a>{485}</span> such immersion, again to wash well in
+ water. I shall feel greatly obliged if <span class="sc">Dr.</span> D.
+ will be kind enough to state whether the first-named washing is
+ requisite, or whether the properties of the hypo., or the beauty of the
+ picture, will be in any way injured by the previous solutions <i>not</i>
+ having been washed off, prior to the fixings.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">C. W.
+
+<div class="note">
+ <p>[We have submitted this Query to <span class="sc">Dr. Diamond</span>,
+ who informs us that he never adopts the practice of washing off the
+ developing fluid, and considers it not only needless, but sometimes
+ prejudicial, as when such washing has not been resorted to, the
+ hyposulphite solution flows more readily over the picture, and causes
+ none of the unpleasant stains which frequently occur in pictures which
+ have been previously washed, especially if hard water has been used. But
+ besides this, and the saving of time, the doing away with this
+ unnecessary washing economises water, which in out-door practice is often
+ a great consideration. <span class="sc">Dr. Diamond</span> would again
+ impress upon our readers the advantage of using the hyposulphite over and
+ over again, merely keeping up its full strength by the addition of fresh
+ crystals of the salt from time to time, as such practice produces
+ pictures of whiter and softer tone than are ever produced by the raw
+ solution.]</p>
+
+</div>
+
+ <p><i>Colouring Collodion Pictures</i> (Vol. vii., p. 388.)&mdash;A
+ patent has just been taken out (dated September 23, 1852) for this
+ purpose, by Mons. J.&nbsp;L. Tardieu, of Paris. He terms his process
+ <i>tardiochromy</i>. It consists in applying oil or other colours at the
+ back of the pictures, so as to give the requisite tints to the several
+ parts of the photograph, without at all interfering with its extreme
+ delicacy. It may even, in some cases, be used to remedy defects in the
+ photographic picture. The claim is essentially for the application of
+ colours at the back, instead of on the surface of photographs, whatever
+ kind of colours may be used. It is therefore, of course, applicable only
+ to photographs taken on paper, glass, or some transparent material.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">A. C. Wilson</span>.
+
+ <p><i>Wanted, a simple Test for a good Lens.</i>&mdash;As all writers on
+ Photography agree that the first great essential for successful practice
+ is a good lens&mdash;that is to say, a lens of which the visual and
+ chemical foci coincide&mdash;can any of the scientific readers of "N.
+ &amp; Q." point out any simple test by which unscientific parties
+ desirous of practising photography may be enabled to judge of the
+ goodness of a lens? A country gentleman, like myself, may purchase a lens
+ from an eminent house, with an assurance that it is everything that can
+ be desired (and I am <i>not</i> putting an imaginary case), and may
+ succeed in getting beautiful images upon his focussing-glass, but very
+ unsatisfactory pictures; and it may not be until he has almost abandoned
+ photography, in despair at his own want of skill, that he has the
+ opportunity of showing his apparatus, manipulation, &amp;c. to some more
+ practised hand, who is enabled to prove that <i>the lens was not
+ capable</i> of doing what the vendors stated it could do. Surely
+ scientific men must know of a simple test which would save the
+ disappointment I have described; and I hope some one will take pity upon
+ me, and send it to "N. &amp; Q.," for the benefit of myself and every
+ other</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Country Practitioner</span>.
+
+ <p><i>Photographic Tent&mdash;Restoration of Faded
+ Negatives.</i>&mdash;In Vol. vii., p. 462., I find M.&nbsp;F.&nbsp;M. inquiring for
+ a cheap and portable tent, effective for photographic operations out of
+ doors. I have for the last two years, and in mid-day (June), prepared
+ calotype paper, and also the collodion glass plates, for the camera,
+ under a tent of glazed yellow calico of only a single thickness: the
+ light admitted is very great, but does not in the least injure the most
+ sensitive plate or paper. It is made square like a large bag, so that in
+ a room I can use it double as a blind; and out of doors, in a high wind,
+ I have crept into it, and prepared my paper opposite the object I
+ intended to calotype.</p>
+
+ <p>I should be glad it any of your readers would inform me how a failed
+ negative calotype can be restored to its original strength. I last year
+ took a great number, some of which have nearly faded away; and others are
+ as strong, and as able to be used to print from, as when first done. The
+ paper was prepared with the single iodide of silver solution, and
+ rendered sensitive with aceto-nitrate sil. and gallic acid in the usual
+ way. I attribute the fading to the hyposulphate not being got rid of; and
+ the question is, Can the picture he restored?</p>
+
+ <p>Are <span class="sc">Dr. Diamond's</span> <i>Notes</i> published
+ yet?</p>
+
+ <p class="author">S. S. B., Jun.
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h2>Replies to Minor Queries.</h2>
+
+ <p><i>Gibbon's Library</i> (Vol. vii., p. 407.).&mdash;I visited it in
+ 1825, in company with Dr. Scholl, of Lausanne, who took charge of it for
+ Mr. Beckford. It was sold between 1830 and 1835, partly by auction,
+ partly by private sale in detail.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">James Dennistoun</span>.
+
+ <p><i>Robert Drury</i> (Vol. v., p. 533.).&mdash;I am afraid that the
+ credit attachable to Drury's <i>Madagascar</i> is not supported or
+ strengthened by the announcement that the author was "every day to be
+ spoken with" at Old Tom's Coffee House in Birchin Lane. <i>The Apparition
+ of Mrs. Veal</i>, and other productions of a similar description, should
+ make us very doubtful as regards the literature of the earlier part of
+ the eighteenth century. Might not a person have been suborned to
+ represent the fictitious Robert Drury, to the benefit of the coffee-house
+ keeper as well as the publisher? I am induced to express this suspicion
+ by a parallel case of the same period. <i>The Ten Years' Voyages of
+ Captain George Roberts</i>, London, 1726, is universally, I <!-- Page 486
+ --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page486"></a>{486}</span> believe,
+ considered fictitious, and ascribed to Defoe; yet at the end of the work
+ we find:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"N. B.&mdash;The little boy so often mentioned in the foregoing
+ sheets, now lives with Mr. Galapin, a tobacconist, in Monument Yard; and
+ may be referred to for the truth of most of the particulars before
+ related."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">W. Pinkerton</span>.
+
+ <p class="address">Ham.
+
+ <p><i>Grub Street Journal</i> (Vol. vii., p. 383.).&mdash;<span
+ class="sc">Mr. James Crossley</span>, after quoting Eustace Budgell's
+ conjectures as to the writers of this paper, leaves it as doubtful
+ whether Pope was or was not one of them. The poet has himself
+ contradicted Budgell's insinuation when he retorted upon him in those
+ terrible lines (alluding to his alleged forgery of a will):</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Let Budgell charge low Grub Street to my quill,</p>
+ <p>And write whate'er he please&mdash;except my will!"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Alexander Andrews</span>.
+
+ <p><i>Wives of Ecclesiastics</i> (Vol. i., p. 115.).&mdash;In considering
+ "the statutes made by Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas,
+ Archbishop of York, and all the other bishops of England," ann. 1108,
+ interdicting the marriage of ecclesiastics, might it not be worth
+ investigating, by such of your correspondents as are curious on the
+ subject, what had been the antecedents of the several bishops
+ themselves?</p>
+
+ <p>With respect to Thomas II., Archbishop of York, it is historically
+ certain, that he was the <i>son</i> of an ecclesiastic, and likewise the
+ <i>grandson</i> of an ecclesiastic (his <i>father</i> being one of the
+ bishops who concurred in these statutes). Neither does it seem altogether
+ unlikely that Thomas himself also had spent some part of his early life
+ in bonds of wedlock, since we learn from the <i>Monasticon</i> (vol. iii.
+ p. 490. of new edit.), that "Thomas, <i>son of Thomas</i> (<i>the second
+ of that name</i>), <i>Archbishop of York</i>, confirmed what his
+ predecessors, Thomas and Girard, had given," &amp;c. If this be correct,
+ as stated<a name="footnotetag4" href="#footnote4"><sup>[4]</sup></a>, the
+ conclusion is inevitable; but possibly some error may have arisen out of
+ the circumstance, that Thomas I. and Thomas II., Archbishops of York,
+ were uncle and nephew.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">J. Sansom</span>.
+
+<div class="note">
+ <a name="footnote4"></a><b>Footnote 4:</b><a
+ href="#footnotetag4">(return)</a>
+ <p>Robertus Bloëtus also, who was still Bishop of Lincoln, and Rogerus,
+ Bishop of Salisbury, appear to have had sons, though, perhaps, not born
+ in wedlock; but query.</p>
+
+</div>
+ <p><i>Blanco White.</i>&mdash;In Vol. vii., p. 404., is a copy of a
+ sonnet which is said to be "<i>on</i> the Rev. Joseph Blanco White." This
+ sonnet is one which I have been in search of for some years. I saw it in
+ a newspaper (I believe the <i>Athenæum</i>), but not having secured a
+ copy of it at the time, now ten or twelve years ago, I have had occasion
+ to regret it ever since, and am consequently much obliged to <span
+ class="sc">Balliolensis</span> for his preservation of it in "N. &amp;
+ Q." "It is needless," as he well observes, "to say anything in its
+ praise." I should add, that my strong impression is that this sonnet was
+ written <i>by</i> Blanco White.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">H. C. K.
+
+ <p class="address">&mdash;&mdash; Rectory, Hereford.
+
+ <p><i>Captain Ayloff</i> (Vol. vii., p. 429.).&mdash;Your correspondent
+ will find a short notice of Capt. Ayloff in Jacob's <i>Poetical
+ Register</i> (1719-20, 8vo., 2 vols.), and two of his poetical
+ pieces&mdash;"Marvell's Ghost" and the "Cambridge Commencement"&mdash;in
+ Nichols's <i>Collection of Poems</i> (vol. iii. pp. 186-188.), 1780,
+ 12mo. There is considerable vigour in his "Marvell's Ghost;" and had he
+ cultivated his talent, he might have taken a respectable place as a poet
+ amongst the writers of his time.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Jas. Crossley</span>.
+
+ <p><i>General Monk and the University of Cambridge</i> (Vol. vii., p.
+ 427.).&mdash;I cannot doubt that "W.&nbsp;D." was Dr. William Dillingham,
+ Master of Emmanuel College, and Vice-Chancellor of the University, from
+ November 1659 till November 1660.</p>
+
+ <p>The election to which his letter relates took place April 3, 1660. The
+ votes were:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Lord General Moncke &mdash; 341</p>
+ <p>Thomas Crouch, M.A., Fellow of Trin. Coll. &mdash; 211</p>
+ <p>Oliver St. John, Chancellor of the University &mdash; 157</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>The Vice-Chancellor, in his accounts, makes this charge:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"Paid to two messengers sent to wait on y<sup>e</sup> Lord Generall
+ about y<sup>e</sup> burgesship, 4<i>l.</i> 10<i>s.</i>"&mdash;<i>M.&nbsp;S.
+ Baker</i>, xl. 59.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>On the 22nd of May, General Monk, who had been also chosen for
+ Devonshire, made his election to sit for that county.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">C. H. Cooper</span>.
+
+ <p class="address">Cambridge.
+
+ <p>In reply to <span class="sc">Leicestriensis</span>, I beg leave to
+ inform him that "W.&nbsp;D." was Wm. Dillingham, D.D., master of Clare Hall,
+ and at the time Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge. The
+ letter in question, which was the original draft, was, with a variety of
+ other family papers, <i>stolen</i> from me in 1843.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">J. P. Ord</span>.
+
+ <p>P.S.&mdash;Query, from whom did the present possessor obtain it?</p>
+
+ <p><i>The Ribston Pippin</i> (Vol. vii., p. 436.).&mdash;The remarks of
+ your correspondent H.&nbsp;C.&nbsp;K., respecting the uncertain origin of the
+ Ribston pippin, reminded me of a communication which I received about
+ fifty years ago, from one of the sisters of the late Sir Henry Goodricke,
+ the last of the family who possessed Ribston. Though it leaves the
+ question concerning the origin of that excellent apple unsettled, yet it
+ may not be uninteresting to <!-- Page 487 --><span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page487"></a>{487}</span> H.&nbsp;C.&nbsp;K. and some others of your numerous
+ readers. I therefore send a transcript:</p>
+
+<p class="cenhead">"<i>Tradition of the Ribston Pippin Tree.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"About the beginning of the last century, Sir Henry Goodricke, father
+ of the late Sir John Goodricke, had three pips sent by a friend in a
+ letter from Rouen in Normandy, which were sown at Ribston. Two of the
+ pips produced nothing: the third is the present tree, which is in good
+ health, and still continues to bear fruit."</p>
+
+<p class="cenhead">"<i>Another Account.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"Sir Henry, the father of the late Sir John Goodricke, being at Rouen
+ in Normandy, preserved the pips of some fine flavoured apples, and sent
+ them to Ribston, where they were sown, and the produce in due time
+ planted in what then was the park. Out of seven trees planted, five
+ proved decided crabs, and are all dead. The other two proved good apples;
+ they never were grafted, and one of them is the celebrated original
+ Ribston pippin tree."</p>
+
+ <p>The latter tradition has, I believe, always been considered as the
+ most correct.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">S. D.
+
+ <p><i>Cross and Pile</i> (Vol. vi., <i>passim.</i>).&mdash;The various
+ disquisitions of your correspondents on the word <i>pile</i> are very
+ ingenious; but I think it is very satisfactorily explained as "a ship" by
+ Joseph Scaliger in <i>De Re nummaria Dissertatio</i>, Leyden, 1616:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"Macrobius de nummo <i>ratito</i> loquens, qui erat æreus: <i>ita
+ fuisse signatum hodieque intelligitur in aleæ lusu, quum pueri denarios
+ in sublime jactantes, Capita aut Navia, lusu teste vetustatis
+ exclamant</i>."&mdash;P. 58.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>And in Scaligerana (prima):</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"Nummus ratitus&mdash;ce qu'aujourd'hui nous appellons jouer à croix
+ ou à pile, car <i>pile</i> est un vieil mot français qui signifiait un
+ Navire, <i>unde</i> Pilote. Ratitus nummus erat ex ære, sic dictus ab
+ effigie ratus."&mdash;Tom. ii., Amsterdam, 1740, p. 130.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>See also, <i>Auctores Latinæ Linguæ</i>, by Gothofred, 1585, p. 169.
+ l. 53. Also, <i>Dictionnaire National</i> of M. Bescherelle, tome ii. p
+ 885., Paris, 1846, art. <span class="sc">Pile</span> (<i>subst.
+ fém.</i>)</p>
+
+ <p><i>En passant</i>, allow me to point out a very curious and
+ interesting account of this game, being the pastime of Edward II., in the
+ <i>Antiquarian Repertory</i>, by Grose and Astle: Lond. 1808, 4to., vol.
+ ii. pp 406-8.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="grk">&Phi;</span>.
+
+ <p class="address">Richmond, Surrey.
+
+ <p><i>Ellis Walker</i> (Vol. vii., p. 382.).&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"Ellis Walker, D.D.," according to Ware, "was born in the city of
+ York; but came young into Ireland, and was educated in the college of
+ Dublin, where he passed through all his degrees. He fled from thence in
+ the troublesome reign of King James II., and lived with an uncle at York,
+ where he translated <i>Epictetus</i> into verse. After the settlement of
+ Ireland he returned, and for seven years employed himself with great
+ reputation in teaching a public school at Drogheda, where he died on the
+ 17th April, 1701, in the fortieth year of his age; and was buried there
+ in St. Peter's Church, and twenty years after had a monument erected to
+ his memory by one of his scholars."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Tyro</span>.
+
+ <p class="address">Dublin.
+
+ <p><i>Blackguard</i> (Vol. vii., pp. 77. 273.).&mdash;I am not aware that
+ the following extract from Burton's <i>Anatomy of Melancholy</i> has ever
+ yet been quoted under this heading. Would it not be worth the while to
+ add it to the extract from Hobbes's <i>Microcosmos</i>, quoted by <span
+ class="sc">Jarltzberg</span>, Vol. ii., p. 134. and again, by <span
+ class="sc">Sir J. Emerson Tennent</span> at Vol. vii., p. 78.:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"The same author, Cardan, in his <i>Hyperchen</i>, out of the doctrine
+ of the Stoicks, will have some of these genii (for so he calls them) to
+ be desirous of men's company, very affable and familiar with them, as
+ dogs are; others again, to abhor as serpents, and care not for them. The
+ same, belike, Trithemius calls <i>igneos et sublunares, qui numquam
+ demergunt ad inferiora, aut vix ullum habent in terris commercium:
+ generally they far excel men in worth, as a man the meanest worm</i>;
+ though some there are <i>inferiour to those of their own rank in worth,
+ as the black guard in a princes court, and to men again, as some
+ degenerate, base, rational creatures are excelled of brute
+ beasts</i>."&mdash;<i>Anat. of Mel.</i>, Part I. sec. 2. Mem. 1. subs. 2.
+ [Blake, 1836, p. 118.]</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">C. Forbes</span>.
+
+ <p class="address">Temple.
+
+ <p>In looking over the second volume of "N. &amp; Q.," I find the use of
+ the word <i>blackguard</i> is referred to, and passages illustrative of
+ its meaning are given from the works of Beaumont and Fletcher, Hobbes,
+ Butler, &amp;c. To these may be added the following fanciful use of the
+ word, which occurs in the poems of Charles Sackville, Earl of Dorset; the
+ author of the well-known naval song "To all you Ladies now at Land:"</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Love is all gentleness, all joy,</p>
+ <p class="i1">Smooth are his looks, and soft his pace.</p>
+ <p>Her [Belinda's] Cupid is a blackguard boy,</p>
+ <p class="i1">That rubs his link full in your face."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Cuthbert Bede</span>, B.A.
+
+ <p><i>Talleyrand</i> (Vol. vi., p. 575.).&mdash;Talleyrand's maxim is in
+ Young. I regret that I cannot give the reference.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">Z. E. R.
+
+ <p><i>Lord King and Sclater</i> (Vol. v., pp. 456. 518.).&mdash;By
+ Sclater's answer, "as I am informed, the Lord Chancellor <i>King</i> was
+ himself fully convinced."&mdash;Zach. Grey's <i>Review of Neal</i>, p.
+ 67., edit. 1744.</p>
+
+ <p><i>"Beware the Cat"</i> (Vol. v., p. 319.).-The "dignitary of
+ Cambridge" was probably Dr. Thackeray, provost of King's, who bequeathed
+ all his <!-- Page 488 --><span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page488"></a>{488}</span> black-letter books to the college.
+ Perhaps <i>Beware the Cat</i> may be among them.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">Z. E. R.
+
+ <p>"<i>Bis dat qui cito dat</i>" (Vol. vi., p. 376.).&mdash;The following
+ Greek is either in the <i>Anthologia</i>, or in Joshua Barnes:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"<span title="ôkeiai charitos glukerôterai, ên de bradunêi pasa charis phthinuthei, mêde legoito charis." class="grk"
+ >&#x1F60;&kappa;&epsilon;&#x1FD6;&alpha;&iota;
+ &chi;&#x1F71;&rho;&iota;&tau;&omicron;&sigmaf;
+ &gamma;&lambda;&upsilon;&kappa;&epsilon;&rho;&#x1F7D;&tau;&epsilon;&rho;&alpha;&iota;,
+ &#x1F22;&nu; &delta;&#x1F72;
+ &beta;&rho;&alpha;&delta;&upsilon;&nu;&#x1FC7; &pi;&#x1FB6;&sigma;&alpha;
+ &chi;&#x1F71;&rho;&iota;&sigmaf;
+ &phi;&theta;&iota;&nu;&#x1F7B;&theta;&epsilon;&iota;,
+ &mu;&eta;&delta;&#x1F72;
+ &lambda;&#x1F73;&gamma;&omicron;&iota;&tau;&omicron;
+ &chi;&alpha;&rho;&iota;&sigmaf;.</span>"</p>
+
+ <p>"Gratia ab officio quod mora tardat, abest."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p class="author">Z. E. R.
+
+ <p><i>High Spirits a Presage of Evil.</i>&mdash;The Note of your
+ correspondent <span class="sc">Cuthbert Bede</span> (Vol. vii., p. 339.)
+ upon this very interesting point recalls to my recollection a line or two
+ in Gilfillan's <i>First Gallery of Literary Portraits</i>, p. 71., which
+ bears directly upon it. Speaking of the death of Percy Bysshe Shelley,
+ the author says, "During all the time he spent in Leghorn, he was in
+ brilliant spirits, <i>to him a sure prognostic of coming evil</i>." I may
+ add, that I have been on terms of intimacy with various persons who
+ entertained a dread of finding themselves in good spirits, from a strong
+ conviction that some calamity would be sure to befall them. This is a
+ curious psychological question, worthy of attention.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">W. Sawyer.</span>
+
+ <p class="address">Brighton.
+
+ <p><i>Colonel Thomas Walcot</i> (Vol. vii., p. 382.) married Jane, the
+ second daughter of James Purcel of Craugh, co. Limerick, and had by her
+ six sons and two daughters: John, the eldest, who married Sarah Wright of
+ Holt, in Denbighshire; Thomas, Ludlow, and Joseph, which last three died
+ unmarried; Edward (who died an infant); William (of whom I have no
+ present trace); Catherine and Bridget. The latter married, first, Mr. Cox
+ of Waterford, and second, Robert Allen of Garranmore, co. Tipperary.
+ John, the eldest son, administered to his father, and possessed himself
+ of his estates and effects. I think his son was a John Minchin Walcot,
+ who represented Askeaton in Parliament in 1751, died in London in 1753,
+ and was buried in St. Margaret's churchyard. Two years after his death
+ his eldest daughter married William Cecil Pery, of the line of Viscount
+ Pery, and had by him Edmund Henry Pery, member of parliament for Limerick
+ in 1786. A William Walcot was on the Irish establishment appointed a
+ major in the 5th Regiment of Foot in 1769, but I cannot just now say
+ whether, or how, he was related to Colonel Thomas Walcot.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">John D'Alton.</span>
+
+ <p class="address">Dublin.
+
+ <p><i>Wood of the Cross: Mistletoe</i> (Vol. vii., p. 437.).&mdash;Was
+ S.&nbsp;S.&nbsp;S.'s farmer a native of an eastern county? If he came from any part
+ where Scandinavian traditions may be supposed to have prevailed, there
+ may be some connexion between the myth, that the mistletoe furnished the
+ wood for the cross, and that which represents it as forming the arrow
+ with which Hödur, at the instigation of Lok, the spirit of evil, killed
+ Baldyr. I have met with a tradition in German, that the aspen tree
+ supplied the wood for the cross, and hence shuddered ever after at the
+ recollection of its guilt.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">T. H. L.
+
+ <p>The tradition to which I have been always accustomed is, that the
+ aspen was the tree of which the cross was formed, and that its tremulous
+ and quivering motion proceeded from its consciousness of the awful use to
+ which it had once been put.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">W. Fraser.</span>
+
+ <p class="address">Tor-Mohun.
+
+ <p><i>Irish Office for Prisoners</i> (Vol. vii, p 410.).&mdash;The best
+ reference for <i>English</i> readers is to Bishop Mant's edition of the
+ Prayer-Book, in which this office is included.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">J. C. R.
+
+ <p><i>Andries de Græff: Portraits at Brickwall House</i> (Vol. vii, p.
+ 406.).&mdash;"Andries de Græff. Obiit lxxiii., <span
+ class="scac">MDCLXXIV</span>." Was this gentleman related to, or the
+ father of, Regulus de Græf, a celebrated physician and anatomist, born in
+ July, 1641, at Scomharen, a town in Holland, where his father was the
+ first architect? Regulus de Græf married in 1672, and died in 1673, at
+ the early age of thirty-two. He published several works, chiefly <i>De
+ Organis Generationis</i>, &amp;c. (See Hutchinson's <i>Biographia
+ Medica</i>; and, for a complete list of his works, <i>Lindonius
+ Renovatus</i>, p. 933.: Nuremberg, 1686, 4to.)</p>
+
+ <p class="author">S. S. S.
+
+ <p class="address">Bath.
+
+ <p>"<i>Qui facit per alium, facit per se</i>" (Vol. vii., p.
+ 382.).&mdash;This is one of the most ordinary maxims or "brocards" of the
+ common law of Scotland, and implies that the employer is responsible for
+ the acts of his servant or agent, done on his employment. Beyond doubt it
+ is borrowed from the civil law, and though I cannot find it in the title
+ of the digest, <i>De Diversis Regulis Juris Antiqui</i> (lib. 1. tit.
+ 17.), I am sure it will be traced either to the "Corpus Juris," or to one
+ of the commentators thereupon.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">W. H. M.
+
+ <p><i>Christian Names</i> (Vol. vii., p. 406.).&mdash;When Lord Coke says
+ "a man cannot have two names of baptism, as he may have divers surnames,"
+ he does not mean that a man may not have two or more Christian names
+ given to him at the font, but that, while he may have "divers surnames at
+ divers times," he may not have divers Christian names <i>at divers
+ times</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>When a man changes his Christian name, he alters his legal identity.
+ The surname, however, is assumable at pleasure. The use of surnames came
+ into England, according to Camden, about <!-- Page 489 --><span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page489"></a>{489}</span> the time of the
+ Conquest, but they were not in general use till long after that. Many
+ branches of families used to substitute the names of their estate or
+ residence for their patronymic, which often makes the tracing of
+ genealogies a difficult matter. It was not till the middle of the
+ fourteenth century that surnames began to descend from father to son, and
+ a reference to any old document of the time will show how arbitrarily
+ such names were assumed.</p>
+
+ <p>A surname, in short, may be called a matter of convenience; a
+ Christian name, a matter of necessity. The giving two Christian names at
+ baptism did not come generally into use till, owing to the multiplication
+ of the patronymic, a single Christian name became insufficient to
+ identify the individual. Consequently an instance of a double Christian
+ name, previous to the commencement of the eighteenth century, is a
+ rarity. The fifth and sixth earls of Northumberland bore the names of
+ Henry-Algernon Percy. The latter died in 1537.</p>
+
+ <p>As to the period at which Christian names were assumed as surnames,
+ your correspondent <span class="sc">Ericas</span> is referred to Lower's
+ <i>English Surnames</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">H. C. K.
+
+ <p class="address">&mdash;&mdash; Rectory, Hereford.
+
+ <p>Your correspondent <span class="sc">Erica</span> will not, I think,
+ find an instance in this country of a person having more than one
+ Christian name before the last century. Charles James Fox and William
+ Wyndham Grenville are the two earliest instances I can find. It is
+ trivial but curious to observe, that in the lists given at the beginning
+ of the <i>Oxford Calendar</i> of the heads of colleges and halls from
+ their several foundations, the first who appears with two Christian names
+ is the venerable president of Magdalene College. Antony Ashley Cooper is
+ only a seeming exception; his surname was Ashley-Cooper, as is proved by
+ his contributing the letter <i>a</i> to the word <i>cabal</i>, the
+ nickname of the ministry of which he formed a part. We find the custom
+ common enough in Germany at the time of the Reformation, and still
+ earlier in Italy. I apprehend that its origin is really in the <i>tria
+ nomina</i> of Roman freemen. It was introduced into this country through
+ our royal family, but I am not aware of any prince who had the benefit of
+ it before Charles James.</p>
+
+ <p>I apprehend the passage which <span class="sc">Erica</span> quotes
+ from Lord Coke has not the significance which he attributes to it. A man
+ can have but one Christian or baptismal name, of however many single
+ names or words that baptismal name may be composed. I have spoken in this
+ letter of two Christian names, in order to be more intelligible at the
+ expense of correctness.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">J. J. H.
+
+ <p class="address">Temple.
+
+ <p><i>Lamech's War-song</i> (Vol. vii., p. 432.).&mdash;There have been
+ many speculations about the origin and meaning of these lines. I agree
+ with <span class="sc">Ewald</span> in <i>Die Poetischen Bücher des Alten
+ Bundes</i>, vol. i., who calls it a "sword-song;" and I imagine it might
+ have been preserved by tradition among the Canaanitish nations, and so
+ quoted by Moses as familiar to the Israelites. I should translate
+ it&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Adah and Zillah, hear ye my voice!</p>
+ <p>Wives of Lemek, heed ye my saying!</p>
+ <p>For man do I slay, for my wound;</p>
+ <p>And child, for my bruise.</p>
+ <p>For seven-fold is Cain avenged,</p>
+ <p>And Lemek seventy-fold and seven."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>Bishop Hall, in his <i>Explication of Hard Texts</i>, paraphrases it
+ thus:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"And Lamech said to his wives, 'Adah and Zillah, what tell you me of
+ any dangers and fears? Hear my voice, oh ye faint-hearted wives of
+ Lamech, and hearken unto my speech; I pass not of the strength of my
+ adversary: for I know my own valour and power to revenge; if any man give
+ me but a wound or a stroke, though he be never so young and lusty, I can
+ and will kill him dead.'"</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>Your correspondent <span class="sc">H. Walter</span> says that "every
+ branch of Cain's family was destroyed by the Deluge." Where is the
+ authority to be found for the tradition, quoted in an <i>Introduction to
+ the Books of Moses</i>, by James Morison, p. 26., that Naameh, the
+ daughter of Lamech the Cainite and Zillah, married Ham, the son of Noah,
+ and thus survived the Flood?</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">W. Fraser</span>.
+
+ <p class="address">Tor-Mohun.
+
+ <p><i>Traitor's Ford</i> (Vol. vii., p. 382.).&mdash;Nothing is known of
+ any legend in connexion with the stirring events of the battle of
+ Edgehill, or its times, and the origin of the name is a matter of
+ speculation. One <i>Trait</i> had lands near this stream, and it is
+ thought by some that, from this circumstance, it is properly
+ <i>Trait's</i> Ford, corrupted into Traitor's Ford,&mdash;a locality well
+ known to sportsmen as a favourite meet of the Warwickshire hounds.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">A. B. R.
+
+ <p class="address">Banbury.
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h2>Miscellaneous.</h2>
+
+<h3>NOTES ON BOOKS, ETC.</h3>
+
+ <p>We understand the Committee appointed by the Society of Antiquaries to
+ consider the best mode of restoring the Society to its former efficient
+ state, have agreed upon their Report, and also to the revised laws to be
+ recommended to the Fellows for adoption. Of the nature of alterations
+ suggested, we know nothing; for while, on the one hand, it is stated that
+ the Report recommends changes of a most sweeping character, on the other
+ it is rumoured that the changes to be proposed are neither many nor
+ important. The truth in this, as in most cases, no doubt lies midway
+ between <!-- Page 490 --><span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page490"></a>{490}</span> the two: and the Report will probably be
+ found to breathe a spirit of conservative reform. Embracing, as the
+ proposed changes necessarily must, points on which great difference of
+ opinion has existed, and may continue to exist, we hope they will receive
+ the impartial consideration of the Fellows; and that they will bear in
+ mind, that in coming to the conclusions at which they have arrived, the
+ Committee have had the advantage of sources of information, necessarily
+ beyond the reach of the body generally; and that those very
+ recommendations, which at first sight may seem most open to objection,
+ may probably be those which their information most completely
+ justifies.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Books Received</span>.&mdash;<i>Young's Night
+ Thoughts, or Life, Death, and Immortality, revised and collated with the
+ early Quarto Editions, with a Life of the Author by</i> Dr. Doran. This
+ new, handsomely printed, and carefully edited reprint of the great work
+ of this noble and original writer, is rendered more valuable by the
+ well-written and critical Memoir of Young, which Dr. Doran has prefixed
+ to it.&mdash;<i>The National Miscellany</i>, <i>May</i> 1853. The first
+ Number of a New Magazine just issued by Mr. Parker (Oxford), with every
+ promise of realising the objects for which it has been projected, namely,
+ "to aid the elevation of the reader's mind, to raise some glow of
+ generous desire, some high and noble thoughts, some kindly feeling, and a
+ warm veneration for all things that are good and
+ true."&mdash;<i>Cyclopædia Bibliographica</i>, Part VIII. This most
+ useful work is in the present Part carried from <i>Fawcett</i> (John) to
+ <i>Göthe</i>. Every fresh issue of it affords additional evidence of the
+ great utility which the complete work will prove to all authors,
+ preachers, students, and literary men.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>BOOKS AND ODD VOLUMES WANTED TO PURCHASE.</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Rev. A. Dyce's Edition of Dr. Richard Bentley's
+ Works</span>. Vol. III. Published by Francis Macpherson, Middle Row,
+ Holborn. 1836.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Dissertation on Isaiah XVIII., in a Letter to Edward
+ King, Esq</span>., by <span class="sc">Samuel Lord Bishop of Rochester
+ (Horsley).</span> The Quarto Edition, printed for Robson. 1779.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">History of Ancient Wilts</span>, by <span
+ class="sc">Sir R.&nbsp;C. Hoare</span>. The last three Parts.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Ben Jonson's Works</span>. 9 Vols. 8vo. Vols. II.,
+ III., IV. Bds.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Sir Walter Scott's Novels</span>. 41 Vols. 8vo. The
+ last nine Vols. Boards.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Jacob's English Peerage</span>. Folio Edition, 1766.
+ Vols. II., III., and IV.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Gammer Gurton's Needle</span>.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Alison's Europe</span>. (20 Vols.) Vols. XIII.,
+ XX.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Abbotsford Edition of the Waverley Novels</span>. Odd
+ Vols.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">The Truth Teller</span>. A Periodical.</p>
+
+ <p>*** <i>Correspondents sending Lists of Books Wanted are requested to
+ send their names.</i></p>
+
+ <p>*** Letters, stating particulars and lowest price, <i>carriage
+ free</i>, to be sent to <span class="sc">Mr. Bell</span>, Publisher of
+ "NOTES AND QUERIES," 186. Fleet Street.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>Notices to Correspondents.</h3>
+
+ <p>H. C. B. <i>No.</i></p>
+
+ <p>J. D. <span class="sc">Lucas</span> (Bristol). <i>The inscription is
+ Dutch, and means "Praise God for all things."</i></p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Walter J. Watts</span> <i>will find much of the
+ literary history of the</i> Travels of Baron Munchausen, <i>which were
+ written in ridicule of Bruce, the Abyssinian traveller, in our</i> 3rd
+ Vol., pp. 117, 305, 453.</p>
+
+ <p>P. P. <i>Longfellow</i> is <i>an American, having been born at
+ Portland. He is now, we believe, Professor of Modern Languages and Belles
+ Lettres at Cambridge University, U.S.</i></p>
+
+ <p>A <span class="sc">Briton</span> <i>must be aware that if we were so
+ far to depart from our plan of avoiding religious controversy, as to
+ insert his Query, we should be inviting endless disputes and discussions,
+ such as our pages could not contain, or our readers endure.</i></p>
+
+ <p>C. M. I. <i>The sides of the stage are described in Stage Directions
+ as</i> O.&nbsp;P. <i>and</i> P.&nbsp;S., <i>i.&nbsp;e.</i> Opposite Promp. (<i>or</i>
+ Prompter) <i>and</i> Promp. Side.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">General Sir Dennis Pack</span> (Vol. vii., p.
+ 453.).&mdash;<i>"As the purport of the Query may be defeated by two
+ misprints in my communication relative to this gallant soldier, may I beg
+ of your readers for 'French rebels,' to substitute 'Irish rebels;' and
+ for 'Ballinakell,' 'Ballinakill.' I am willing to lay the blame of these
+ errata on my own cacography, rather than on the printer's back.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">James Graves</span>.
+
+ <p class="address">Kilkenny."
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Photographic Correspondence</span>. <i>Replies to our
+ photographic Correspondents next week.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>A few complete sets of</i> "<span class="sc">Notes and
+ Queries</span>," Vols. i. <i>to</i> vi., <i>price Three Guineas, may now
+ be had; for which early application is desirable.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"<span class="sc">Notes and Queries</span>" <i>is published at noon on
+ Friday, so that the Country Booksellers may receive Copies in that
+ night's parcels, and deliver them to their Subscribers on the
+ Saturday.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+ <p><b>PURE NERVOUS</b> or MIND COMPLAINTS.&mdash;If the readers of <span
+ class="sc">Notes and Queries</span>, who suffer from depression of
+ spirits, confusion, headache, blushing, groundless fears, unfitness for
+ business or society, blood to the head, failure of memory, delusions,
+ suicidal thoughts, fear of insanity, &amp;c., will call on, or correspond
+ with, REV. DR. WILLIS MOSELEY, who, out of above 22,000 applicants, knows
+ not fifty uncured who have followed his advice, he will instruct them how
+ to get well, without a fee, and will render the same service to the
+ friends of the insane.&mdash;At home from 11 to 3.</p>
+
+ <p>18. BLOOMSBURY STREET, BEDFORD SQUARE.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+ <p><b>PHOTOGRAPHIC SCHOOL</b>.&mdash;ROYAL POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTION.</p>
+
+ <p>The SCHOOL is NOW OPEN for instruction in all branches of Photography,
+ to Ladies and Gentlemen, on alternate days, from Eleven till Four
+ o'clock, under the joint direction of T.&nbsp;A. MALONE, Esq., who has long
+ been connected with Photography, and J.&nbsp;H. PEPPER, Esq., the Chemist to
+ the Institution.</p>
+
+ <p>A Prospectus, with terms, may be had at the Institution.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+ <p><b>XYLO-IODIDE OF SILVER</b>, exclusively used at all the Photographic
+ Establishments. The superiority of this preparation is now generally
+ acknowledged. In all cases where a quantity is required, the two
+ solutions may be had at wholesale price in separate bottles; in which
+ state it may be kept for years, and exported to any climate. Full
+ instructions for use.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Caution.</i>&mdash;Each bottle is stamped with a red label, bearing
+ my name,</p>
+
+ <p>RICHARD W. THOMAS, Chemist, 10. Pall Mall.</p>
+
+ <p><b>CYANOGEN SOAP</b> for removing instantaneously Photographic Stains
+ from the Hands, and cleansing all kinds of Photographic Dishes, Glasses,
+ Linen, &amp;c. Prepared solely by R.&nbsp;W. THOMAS, Chemist, 10 Pall Mall,
+ Manufacturer of Pure Photographic Chemicals, and may be procured of all
+ respectable Chemists; in pots at 1<i>s.</i>, 2<i>s.</i>, and 3<i>s.</i>
+ 6<i>d.</i> each, through MESSRS. EDWARDS, 67. St. Paul's Church
+ Yard&mdash;MESSRS. BARCLAY, 95. Farringdon Street, Wholesale Agents.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<p class="cenhead">PULLEYN'S COMPENDIUM.<br />
+One Volume, crown 8vo., bound in cloth, price 6s.,</p>
+
+ <p><b>THE ETYMOLOGICAL COMPENDIUM</b>; or, PORTFOLIO OF ORIGINS AND
+ INVENTIONS; relating to&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Language, Literature, and Government.</p>
+ <p>Architecture and Sculpture.</p>
+ <p>Drama, Music, Painting, and Scientific Discoveries.</p>
+ <p>Articles of Dress, &amp;c.</p>
+ <p>Titles, Dignities, &amp;c.</p>
+ <p>Names, Trades, Professions.</p>
+ <p>Parliament, Laws, &amp;c.</p>
+ <p>Universities and Religious Sects.</p>
+ <p>Epithets and Phrases.</p>
+ <p>Remarkable Customs.</p>
+ <p>Games, Field Sports.</p>
+ <p>Seasons, Months, and Days of the Week.</p>
+ <p>Remarkable Localities, &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>By WILLIAM PULLEYN.</p>
+
+ <p>The Third Edition, revised and improved, by MERTON A. THOMAS, ESQ.</p>
+
+ <p>London: WILLIAM TEGG &amp; CO., 85. Queen Street, Cheapside.</p>
+
+<p><!-- Page 491 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page491"></a>{491}</span></p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<p class="cenhead">Just published, price 1<i>s.</i>, free by Post 1<i>s.</i>, 4<i>d.</i>,</p>
+
+ <p><b>THE WAXED-PAPER PHOTOGRAPHIC PROCESS</b> of GUSTAVE LE GRAY'S NEW
+ EDITION. Translated from the French.</p>
+
+ <p>Sole Agents in the United Kingdom for VOIGHTLANDER &amp; SON'S
+ celebrated Lenses for Portraits and Views.</p>
+
+ <p>General Depôt for Turner's, Whatman's. Canson Frères', La Croix, and
+ other Talbotype Papers.</p>
+
+ <p>Pure Photographic Chemicals.</p>
+
+ <p>Instructions and Specimens in every Branch of the Art.</p>
+
+ <p>GEORGE KNIGHT &amp; SONS, Foster Lane, London.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+ <p><b>PHOTOGRAPHIC PAPER</b>.&mdash;Negative and Positive Paper of
+ Whatman's, Turners, Sanford's, and Canson Frères' make. Waxed-Paper for
+ Le Gray's Process. Iodized and Sensitive Paper for every kind of
+ Photography.</p>
+
+ <p>Sold by JOHN SANFORD, Photographic Stationer, Aldine Chambers, 13.
+ Paternoster Row, London.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+ <p><b>PHOTOGRAPHIC PICTURES</b>.&mdash;A Selection of the above beautiful
+ Productions (comprising Views in VENICE, PARIS, RUSSIA, NUBIA, &amp;c.)
+ may be seen at BLAND &amp; LONG'S, 153. Fleet Street, where may also be
+ procured Apparatus of every Description, and pure Chemicals for the
+ practice of Photography in all its Branches.</p>
+
+ <p>Calotype, Daguerreotype, and Glass Pictures for the Stereoscope.</p>
+
+ <p>BLAND &amp; LONG, Opticians, Philosophical and Photographical
+ Instrument Makers, and Operative Chemists, 153. Fleet Street.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+ <p><b>PHOTOGRAPHY</b>.&mdash;Collodion (Iodized with the Ammonio-Iodide
+ of Silver).&mdash;J. B. HOCKIN &amp; CO., Chemists, 289. Strand, were the
+ first in England who published the application of this agent (see
+ <i>Athenæum</i>, Aug. 14th). Their Collodion (price 9<i>d.</i> per oz.)
+ retains its extraordinary sensitiveness, tenacity, and colour unimpaired
+ for months: it may be exported to any climate, and the Iodizing Compound
+ mixed as required. J. B. HOCKIN &amp; CO. manufacture PURE CHEMICALS and
+ all APPARATUS with the latest Improvements adapted for all the
+ Photographic and Daguerreotype processes. Cameras for Developing in the
+ open Country. GLASS BATHS adapted to any Camera. Lenses from the best
+ Makers. Waxed and Iodized Papers, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+ <p><b>PHOTOGRAPHY</b>&mdash;HORNE &amp; CO.'s Iodized Collodion, for
+ obtaining Instantaneous Views, and Portraits in from three to thirty
+ seconds, according to light.</p>
+
+ <p>Portraits obtained by the above, for delicacy of detail rival the
+ choicest Daguerreotypes, specimens of which may be seen at their
+ Establishment.</p>
+
+ <p>Also every description of Apparatus, Chemicals, &amp;c. &amp;c. used
+ in this beautiful Art.&mdash;123. and 121. Newgate Street.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+ <p><b>BENNETT'S MODEL WATCH</b>, as shown at the GREAT EXHIBITION, No. 1.
+ Class X., in Gold and Silver Cases, in five qualities, and adapted to all
+ Climates, may now be had at the MANUFACTORY, 65. CHEAPSIDE. Superior Gold
+ London-made Patent Levers, 17, 15, and 12 guineas. Ditto, in Silver
+ Cases, 8, 6, and 4 guineas. First-rate Geneva Levers, in Gold Cases, 12,
+ 10, and 8 guineas. Ditto, in Silver Cases, 8, 6, and 5 guineas. Superior
+ Lever, with Chronometer Balance, Gold, 27, 23, and 19 guineas. Bennett's
+ Pocket Chronometer, Gold, 50 guineas; Silver, 40 guineas. Every Watch
+ skilfully examined, timed, and its performance guaranteed. Barometers,
+ 2<i>l.</i>, 3<i>l.</i>, and 4<i>l.</i> Thermometers from 1<i>s.</i>
+ each.</p>
+
+ <p>BENNETT. Watch, Clock, and Instrument Maker to the Royal Observatory,
+ the Board of Ordinance, the Admiralty, and the Queen,</p>
+
+ <p>65. CHEAPSIDE.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>CLERICAL, MEDICAL, AND GENERAL
+LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY.</h3>
+
+<hr class="short" >
+
+<p class="cenhead">Established 1824.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" >
+
+ <p>FIVE BONUSES have been declared: at the last in January, 1852, the sum
+ of 131,125<i>l.</i> was added to the Policies, producing a Bonus varying
+ with the different ages from 24-1/2 to 55 per cent. on the Premiums paid
+ during the five years, or from 5<i>l.</i> to 12<i>l.</i> 10<i>s.</i> per
+ cent. on the Sum Assured.</p>
+
+ <p>The small share of Profit divisible in future among the Shareholders
+ being now provided for, the ASSURED will hereafter derive all the
+ benefits obtainable from a Mutual Office, WITHOUT ANY LIABILITY OR RISK
+ OF PARTNERSHIP.</p>
+
+ <p>POLICIES effected before the 30th of June next, will be entitled, at
+ the next Division, to one year's additional share of Profits over later
+ Assurers.</p>
+
+ <p>On Assurances for the whole of Life only one half of the Premiums need
+ be paid for the first five years.</p>
+
+ <p>INVALID LIVES may be Assured at rates proportioned to the risk.</p>
+
+ <p>Claims paid <i>thirty</i> days after proof of death, and all Policies
+ are <i>Indisputable</i> except in cases of fraud.</p>
+
+ <p>Tables of Rates and forms of Proposal can be obtained of any of the
+ Society's Agents, or of</p>
+
+ <p class="author">GEORGE H. PINCKARD, Resident Secretary.
+
+ <p class="address"><i>99. Great Russell Street, Bloomsbury, London.</i>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>WESTERN LIFE ASSURANCE
+AND ANNUITY SOCIETY,</h3>
+
+<p class="cenhead">3. PARLIAMENT STREET, LONDON.</p>
+
+ <p>Founded A.D. 1842.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Directors.</i></p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>H. E. Bicknell, Esq.</p>
+ <p>W. Cabell, Esq.</p>
+ <p>T. S. Cocks, Jun. Esq. M.P.</p>
+ <p>G. H. Drew, Esq.</p>
+ <p>W. Evans, Esq.</p>
+ <p>W. Freeman, Esq.</p>
+ <p>F. Fuller, Esq.</p>
+ <p>J. H. Goodhart, Esq.</p>
+ <p>T. Grissell, Esq.</p>
+ <p>J. Hunt, Esq.</p>
+ <p>J. A. Lethbridge, Esq.</p>
+ <p>E. Lucas, Esq.</p>
+ <p>J. Lys Seager, Esq.</p>
+ <p>J. B. White, Esq.</p>
+ <p>J. Carter Wood, Esq.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p><i>Trustees.</i></p>
+
+ <p>W. Whateley, Esq., Q.C.; L. C. Humfrey, Esq., Q.C.; George Drew,
+ Esq.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Physician.</i>&mdash;William Rich. Basham, M.D.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Bankers.</i>&mdash;Messrs. Cocks, Biddulph, and Co., Charing
+ Cross.</p>
+
+ <p>VALUABLE PRIVILEGE.</p>
+
+ <p>POLICIES effected in this Office do not become void through temporary
+ difficulty in paying a Premium, as permission is given upon application
+ to suspend the payment at interest, according to the conditions detailed
+ on the Prospectus.</p>
+
+ <p>Specimens of Rates of Premium for Assuring 100<i>l.</i>, with a Share
+ in three-fourths of the Profits:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<table width="17%" class="nob" summary="Specimens of Rates" title="Specimens of Rates">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:left; width:57%">
+ <p>Age</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right; width:14%">
+ <p><i>£</i></p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right; width:14%">
+ <p><i>s.</i></p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right; width:14%">
+ <p><i>d.</i></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>17</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>1</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>14</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>4</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>22</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>1</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>18</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>8</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>27</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>2</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>4</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>5</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>32</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>2</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>10</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>8</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>37</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>2</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>18</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>6</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>42</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>3</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>8</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nob" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>2</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+ <p>ARTHUR SCRATCHLEY, M.A., F.R.A.S., Actuary.</p>
+
+ <p>Now ready, price 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, Second Edition, with material
+ additions, INDUSTRIAL INVESTMENT and EMIGRATION: being a TREATISE on
+ BENEFIT BUILDING SOCIETIES, and on the General Principles of Land
+ Investment, exemplified in the Cases of Freehold Land Societies, Building
+ Companies, &amp;c. With a Mathematical Appendix on Compound Interest and
+ Life Assurance. By ARTHUR SCRATCHLEY, M.A., Actuary to the Western Life
+ Assurance Society, 3. Parliament Street, London.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+ <p><b>A LITERARY CURIOSITY</b>, sent Free by Post on receipt of Three
+ Postage Stamps. A Fac-simile of a very remarkably Curious, Interesting,
+ and Droll Newspaper of Charles II.'s Period.</p>
+
+ <p>J. H. FENNELL, 1. Warwick Court, Holborn, London.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+ <p><b>WANTED</b>, for the Ladies' Institute, 83. Regent Street, Quadrant.
+ LADIES of taste for fancy work.&mdash;by paying 21<i>s.</i> will be
+ received as members, and taught the new style of velvet wool work, which
+ is acquired in a few easy lessons. Each lady will be guaranteed constant
+ employment and ready cash payment for her work. Apply personally to Mrs.
+ Thoughey. N. B. Ladies taught by letter at any distance from London.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+ <p><b>UNITED KINGDOM LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY:</b> established by Act of
+ Parliament in 1834.&mdash;8. Waterloo Place, Pall Mall, London.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>HONORARY PRESIDENTS.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Earl of Courtown</p>
+ <p>Earl Leven and Melville</p>
+ <p>Earl of Norbury</p>
+ <p>Earl of Stair</p>
+ <p>Viscount Falkland</p>
+ <p>Lord Elphinstone</p>
+ <p>Lord Belhaven and Stenton</p>
+ <p>Wm. Campbell, Esq., of Tillichewan</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">LONDON BOARD.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p><i>Chairman.</i>&mdash;Charles Graham, Esq.</p>
+ <p><i>Deputy-Chairman.</i>&mdash;Charles Downes, Esq.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>H. Blair Avarne, Esq.</p>
+ <p>E. Lennox Boyd, Esq., F.S.A., <i>Resident</i>.</p>
+ <p>C. Berwick Curtis, Esq.</p>
+ <p>William Fairlie, Esq.</p>
+ <p>D. Q. Henriques, Esq.</p>
+ <p>J. G. Henriques, Esq.</p>
+ <p>F. C. Maitland, Esq.</p>
+ <p>William Railton, Esq.</p>
+ <p>F. H. Thomson, Esq.</p>
+ <p>Thomas Thorby, Esq.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>MEDICAL OFFICERS.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p><i>Physician.</i>&mdash;Arthur H. Hassall, Esq., M.D.,</p>
+ <p>8. Bennett Street, St. James's.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p><i>Surgeon.</i>&mdash;F. H. Tomson, Esq., 48. Berners Street.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>The Bonus added to Policies from March, 1834, to December 31, 1847, is
+ as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<table width="30%" class="allb" summary="Bonus added to Policies" title="Bonus added to Policies">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:center; width:33%" rowspan="2">
+ <p>Sum<br />
+ Assured</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:center; width:33%" rowspan="2">
+ <p>Time<br />
+ Assured.</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:center" colspan="2">
+ <p>Sum added to<br />
+ Policy</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:center; width:0%" rowspan="2">
+ <p>Sum<br /> Payable<br /> at
+ Death.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:center">
+ <p>In 1841.</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:center">
+ <p>In 1848.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><i>£&nbsp; &nbsp;</i></p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:left">
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:right; width:33%">
+ <p><i>£ &nbsp; s. d.</i></p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><i>£ &nbsp; s. d.</i></p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><i>£ &nbsp; s. d.</i></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>5000</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>14 years</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>683 &nbsp; 6 &nbsp;8&nbsp;</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>787 10 &nbsp;0&nbsp;</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>6470 16 &nbsp;8&nbsp;</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>* 1000</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>&nbsp; 7 years</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:center">
+ <p>-</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>157 10 &nbsp;0&nbsp;</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>1157 10 &nbsp;0&nbsp;</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>500</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>&nbsp; 1 year</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:center">
+ <p>-</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>11 &nbsp; 5 &nbsp;0&nbsp;</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="allb" style="text-align:right">
+ <p>511 &nbsp; 5 &nbsp;0&nbsp;</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+ <p>* <span class="sc">Example.</span>&mdash;At the commencement of the
+ year 1841, a person aged thirty took out a Policy for 1000<i>l.</i>, the
+ annual payment for which is 24<i>l.</i> 1<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>; in 1847 he
+ had paid in premiums 168<i>l.</i> 11<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>; but the profits
+ being 2-1/4 per cent. per annum on the sum insured (which is 22<i>l.</i>
+ 10<i>s.</i> per annum for each 1000<i>l.</i>) he had 157<i>l.</i>
+ 10<i>s.</i> added to the Policy, almost as much as the premiums paid.</p>
+
+ <p>The Premiums, nevertheless, are on the most moderate scale, and only
+ one-half need be paid for the first five years, when the Insurance is for
+ Life. Every information will be afforded on application to the Resident
+ Director.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+ <p><b>HEAL &amp; SON'S</b> ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE OF BEDSTEADS, sent free
+ by post. It contains designs and prices of upwards of ONE HUNDRED
+ different Bedsteads: also of every description of Bedding, Blankets, and
+ Quilts. And their new warerooms contain an extensive assortment of
+ Bed-room Furniture, Furniture Chintzes, Damasks, and Dimities, so as to
+ render their Establishment complete for the general furnishing of
+ Bed-rooms.</p>
+
+ <p>HEAL &amp; SON, Bedstead and Bedding Manufacturers, 196. Tottenham
+ Court Road. <!-- Page 492 --><span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page492"></a>{492}</span></p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<h3>MR. HALLIWELL'S<br />
+FOLIO EDITION OF SHAKSPEARE.</h3>
+
+<hr class="short" >
+
+ <p>SPECIMEN COPIES of the First Volume of this Work may be seen at MR.
+ SKEFFINGTON'S, 192. Piccadilly, and at MR. RUSSELL SMITH'S, 36. Soho
+ Square, London.</p>
+
+ <p>The Editor having, at a great sacrifice, adhered to the original
+ limit, and the estimates having been considerably exceeded, has been
+ compelled, to avoid incurring an extravagant loss, to make the terms very
+ absolute, and to raise the Subscription to the later copies.
+ Notwithstanding, therefore, the great demand for the Work, a few copies
+ may still be secured by early written application.</p>
+
+ <p>All communications on the subject are requested to be addressed
+ to&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>J. O. HALLIWELL, ESQ., <span class="sc">Avenue Lodge, Brixton Hill,
+ Surrey</span>.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<p class="cenhead">TO ALL WHO HAVE FARMS OR GARDENS.</p>
+
+ <p><b>THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.</b></p>
+
+ <p>(The Horticultural Part edited by PROF. LINDLEY)</p>
+
+ <p>Of Saturday May 7, contains Articles on</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Agriculture, history of</p>
+ <p>Attraction, capillary</p>
+ <p>Barley, to transplant, by Messrs. Hardy</p>
+ <p>Beetle, instinct of</p>
+ <p>Books noticed</p>
+ <p>Butterfly, instinct of</p>
+ <p>Calendar, horticultural</p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;, agricultural</p>
+ <p>Columnea Schiedeana</p>
+ <p>Dahlia, the, by Mr. Edwards</p>
+ <p>Digging machine, Samuelson's</p>
+ <p>Eggs, to keep</p>
+ <p>Farm leases, by Mr. Morton</p>
+ <p>Frost, plants injured by</p>
+ <p>Grapes, colouring</p>
+ <p>Green, German, by Mr. Prideaux</p>
+ <p>Heat, bottom</p>
+ <p>Heating, gas, by Mr. Lucas</p>
+ <p>Ireland, tenant-right in</p>
+ <p>Kilwhiss <i>v.</i> Rothamsted experiments, by Mr. Russell</p>
+ <p>Land, transfer of</p>
+ <p>Law of transfer</p>
+ <p>Leases, farm, by Mr. Morton</p>
+ <p>Level, new plummet, by Mr. Ennis</p>
+ <p>Nelumbium luteum</p>
+ <p>Orchard houses, by Mr. Russell (with engravings)</p>
+ <p>Orchids, sale of</p>
+ <p>Paints, green, by Mr. Prideaux</p>
+ <p>Plants, effects of frost on</p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;, bottom-heat for</p>
+ <p>Potatoe disease, by Mr. Hopps</p>
+ <p>Rooks</p>
+ <p>Schools, self-supporting</p>
+ <p>Society of Arts</p>
+ <p>Societies, proceedings of the Horticultural, Linnean, National Floricultural, Agricultural of England</p>
+ <p>Sparrows</p>
+ <p>Strawberry, Cuthill's</p>
+ <p>Tenant-right in Ireland</p>
+ <p>Veitch's Nursery, Chelsea</p>
+ <p>Water Lilies, eradicating</p>
+ <p>Winter, the late</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+<hr class="short" >
+
+ <p>THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE and AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE contains, in
+ addition to the above, the Covent Garden, Mark Lane, Smithfield, and
+ Liverpool prices, with returns from the Potato, Hop, Hay, Coal, Timber,
+ Bark, Wool, and Seed Markets, and a <i>complete Newspaper, with a
+ condensed account of all the transactions of the week</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>ORDER of any Newsvender. OFFICE for Advertisements, 5. Upper
+ Wellington Street, Covent Gardens, London.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<p class="cenhead">Published on the 4th May, 1853, in One Volume
+4to., cloth, price 24<i>s.</i></p>
+
+ <p><b>A NEW GREEK HARMONY</b> OF THE FOUR GOSPELS, including an
+ Introductory Treatise, and numerous Tables, Indexes, and Diagrams. By
+ WILLIAM STROUD, M.D.</p>
+
+ <p>SAMUEL BAGSTER &amp; SONS, 15. Paternoster Row, London.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<p class="cenhead">MUSEUM OF CLASSICAL ANTIQUITIES.<br />
+Vol. II. Pt. 4. 6<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, and Supplement 5<i>s.</i>, April and May, 1853.</p>
+
+ <p><b>ON THE TRUE SITE OF CALVARY</b>, with a restored Plan of the
+ ancient City of JERUSALEM.</p>
+
+<p class="cenhead">By <img src="images/048.png" alt="Arabic signature" /></p>
+
+ <p>T. RICHARDS, 37. Great Queen Street, Lincoln's Inn.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<p class="cenhead">NEW EDITION OF LAYS OF THE
+SCOTTISH CAVALIERS.<p class="cenhead">
+
+ <p>On Monday will be published in fcap. 8vo., a new Edition, being the
+ SIXTH, of</p>
+
+ <p><b>LAYS OF THE SCOTTISH CAVALIERS. By W. EDMONSTOUN AYTOUN</b>. Price
+ 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+ <p>WILLIAM BLACKWOOD &amp; SONS, Edinburgh and London.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<p class="cenhead">This day is published,</p>
+
+ <p><b>PICTORIAL ILLUSTRATIONS</b> of the Catalogue of Manuscripts in
+ Gonville and Caius College Library. Selected by the REV. J. J. SMITH.
+ Being Facsimiles of Illumination, Text, and Autograph, done in
+ Lithograph, 4to. size, with Letter-press Description in 8vo., as
+ Companion to the published Catalogue, price 1<i>l.</i> 4<i>s.</i></p>
+
+ <p>A few copies may be had of which the colouring of the Plates is more
+ highly finished. Price 1<i>l.</i> 10<i>s.</i></p>
+
+ <p>Cambridge: JOHN DEIGHTON.</p>
+
+ <p>London: GEORGE BELL.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<p class="cenhead">CONCLUDING VOLUME OF ARNOLD'S
+SELECTIONS FROM CICERO.</p>
+
+ <p>Now ready, 12mo., price 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+ <p><b>SELECTIONS</b> from <b>CICERO</b>. Part V.; CATO MAJOR, sive De
+ SENECTUTE Dialogus. With English Notes, from the German of JULIUS
+ SOMMERBRODT, by the REV. HENRY BROWNE, M.A., Canon of Chichester.
+ (Forming a New Volume of ARNOLD'S SCHOOL CLASSICS.)</p>
+
+ <p>RIVINGTONS, St. Paul's Church Yard, and Waterloo Place.</p>
+
+ <p>Of whom may be had, (in the same Series,)</p>
+
+ <p>SELECTIONS from CICERO, with ENGLISH NOTES. PART I. Orations,
+ 4<i>s.</i> PART II. Epistles, 5<i>s.</i> PART III. Tusculan Disputations,
+ 5<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> PART IV. De Finibus Malorum et Bonorum. 5<i>s.</i>
+ 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<p class="cenhead">Just published, quarto, 5<i>s.</i>, cloth,</p>
+
+ <p><b>TEMPLE BAR: THE CITY GOLGOTHA</b>.&mdash;Narrative of the
+ Historical Occurrences of a Criminal Character, associated with the
+ present Bar. BY A MEMBER OF THE INNER TEMPLE.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1">
+
+ <p>"A chatty and anecdotical history of this last remaining gate of the
+ city, acceptable particularly to London antiquaries."&mdash;<i>Notes and
+ Queries</i>.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>DAVID BOGUE, Fleet Street.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+<p class="cenhead">IN VOLUMES FOR THE POCKET, PRICE
+FIVE SHILLINGS EACH.</p>
+
+ <p>Now ready, in Six Volumes, fcp. 8vo., price 5<i>s.</i> each.</p>
+
+ <p><b>BOWDLER'S FAMILY SHAKSPEARE</b>. In which nothing is <i>added</i>
+ to the Original Text; but those Words and Expressions are <i>omitted</i>
+ which cannot with propriety be read aloud in a Family. A New Edition.</p>
+
+ <p>*** Also a LIBRARY EDITION, with 36 Wood Engravings, from Designs by
+ Smirke, Howard, and other Artists; complete in One Volume, 8vo., price
+ One Guinea.</p>
+
+ <p>London: LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, &amp; LONGINGS.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+ <p><b>THE NATIONAL MISCELLANY</b>, No. I., for MAY, price 1<i>s.</i>,
+ contains:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>1. Our First Words.</p>
+ <p>2. A Few Words for May-Day.</p>
+ <p>3. The Love of Horrors.</p>
+ <p>4. Layard's Last Discoveries.</p>
+ <p>5. Railway Literature.</p>
+ <p>6. The Old Royal Palaces at Oxford.</p>
+ <p>7. The Poultry Mania.</p>
+ <p>8. Public Libraries.</p>
+ <p>9. Slavery in America.</p>
+ <p>10. Social Life in Paris.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>JOHN HENRY PARKER 377. Strand; and of all Booksellers and Railway
+ stations.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+ <p><b>ROYAL ASYLUM OF ST. ANN'S SOCIETY</b>.&mdash;Waiting not for the
+ Child of those once in prosperity to become an Orphan, but by Voluntary
+ Contributions affording at once a Home, Clothing, Maintenance, and
+ Education.</p>
+
+ <p>The Half-yearly Election will take place at the London Tavern on
+ Friday, August l2th, next.</p>
+
+ <p>Forms of Nomination may be procured at the Office, where Subscriptions
+ will be thankfully received.</p>
+
+ <p>Executors of Benefactors by Will become Life Governors according to
+ the amount of the Bequest.</p>
+
+ <p>E. F. LEEKS, Secretary.</p>
+
+ <p>2. Charlotte Row, Mansion House.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" >
+
+ <p>Printed by <span class="sc">Thomas Clark Shaw</span>, of No. 10.
+ Stonefield Street, in the Parish of St. Mary, Islington, at No. 5. New
+ Street Square, in the Parish of St. Bride, in the City of London; and
+ published by <span class="sc">George Bell</span>, of No. 186. Fleet
+ Street, in the Parish of St. Dunstan in the West, in the City of London,
+ Publisher, at No. 186. Fleet Street aforesaid.&mdash;Saturday, May 14,
+ 1853.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Queries, Number 185, May 14,
+1853, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES AND QUERIES ***
+
+***** This file should be named 20408-h.htm or 20408-h.zip *****
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+Project Gutenberg's Notes and Queries, Number 185, May 14, 1853, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Notes and Queries, Number 185, May 14, 1853
+ A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists,
+ Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: George Bell
+
+Release Date: January 21, 2007 [EBook #20408]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES AND QUERIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charlene Taylor, Jonathan Ingram, Keith Edkins
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
+generously made available by The Internet Library of Early
+Journals.)
+
+
+
+
+
+{469} NOTES AND QUERIES:
+
+A MEDIUM OF INTER-COMMUNICATION FOR LITERARY MEN, ARTISTS, ANTIQUARIES,
+GENEALOGISTS, ETC.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"When found, make a note of."--CAPTAIN CUTTLE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+No. 185.]
+Saturday, May 14, 1853.
+[Price Fourpence. Stamped Edition 5d.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ NOTES:-- Page
+ English Books of Emblems, by the Rev. Thomas Corser 469
+ Author of Tract on "Advantages of the East India
+ Trade, 1720, 8vo.," by James Crossley 471
+ "Ake" and "Ache," by Thomas Keightley 472
+ Localities mentioned in Anglo-Saxon Charters, by B.
+ Williams 473
+ Inedited Letter 473
+ A Shaksperian Book 474
+ MINOR NOTES:--Shakspeare's Monument--Archbishop
+ Leighton and Pope: Curious Coincidence Of Thought
+ and Expression--Grant of Slaves--Sealing-wax 475
+
+ QUERIES:--
+ Walmer Castle, by C. Waymor 475
+ Scotchmen in Poland, by Peter Cunningham 475
+ Bishop Juxon and Walton's Polyglott Bible 476
+ MINOR QUERIES:--Was Andrew Marvell poisoned?--Anonymous
+ Pamphlet by Dr. Wallis--Mrs. Cobb's
+ Diary--Compass Flower--Nuns of the Hotel Dieu--
+ Purlieu--Jennings Family--Latimer's Brothers-in-
+ Law--Autobiographical Sketch--Schonbornerus--Symbol
+ of Globe and Cross--Booth Family--Ennui--Bankruptcy
+ Records--Golden Bees--The Grindstone
+ Oak--Hogarth--Adamsons of Perth--Cursitor Barons
+ of the Exchequer--Syriac Scriptures 476
+
+ REPLIES:--
+ Psalmanazar, by Rev. Dr. Maitland 479
+ Consecrated Roses, &c., by William J. Thoms 480
+ Campbell's Imitations 481
+ "The Hanover Rat" 481
+ Font Inscriptions 482
+ Irish Rhymes: English Provincialisms: Lowland Scotch 483
+ Pictures by Hogarth 484
+ PHOTOGRAPHIC CORRESPONDENCE:--Washing Collodion
+ Process--Colouring Collodion Pictures--Wanted, a
+ simple Test for a good Lens--Photographic Tent:
+ Restoration of Faded Negatives 484
+ REPLIES TO MINOR QUERIES:--Gibbon's Library--Robert
+ Drury--Grub Street Journal--Wives of Ecclesiastics--Blanco
+ White--Captain Ayloff--General
+ Monk and the University of Cambridge--The Ribston
+ Pippin--Cross and Pile--Ellis Walker--Blackguard--
+ Talleyrand--Lord King and Sclater--"Beware the
+ Cat"--"Bis dat qui cito dat"--High Spirits a Presage
+ of Evil--Colonel Thomas Walcott--Wood of the
+ Cross: Mistletoe--Irish Office for Prisoners--Andries
+ de Graeff: Portraits at Brickwall House--"Qui facit
+ per alium, facit per se"--Christian Names--Lamech's
+ War-song--Traitor's Ford 485
+
+ MISCELLANEOUS:--
+ Notes on Books, &c. 489
+ Books and Odd Volumes wanted 490
+ Notices to Correspondents 490
+ Advertisements 490
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Notes.
+
+ENGLISH BOOKS OF EMBLEMS.
+
+It is a remarkable circumstance that whilst the emblems of Alciatus Vent
+through almost innumerable editions, and were translated into most of the
+continental languages, no version of these Emblems should ever have been
+printed in this country, although we believe that MS. translations of them
+are in existence. It is remarkable also that more than half century should
+have elapsed after their appearance, before any English publication on this
+subject should have been committed to the press. Our English authors of
+Books of Emblems were not only late in their appearance, but are few in
+number, and in their embellishments not very original, the plates being for
+the most part mere copies of those already published abroad by Herman Hugo,
+Rollenhagius, and others. The notices of the English writers on this
+entertaining subject are also but meagre and imperfect, and restricted to a
+very few works; both Dibdin, in his slight and rapid sketch on Books of
+Emblems in the _Bibliogr. Decam._, vol. i. p. 254., and the writer in the
+_Retrosp. Rev._, vol. ix. p. 123., having confined their remarks to some
+one or two of the leading writers only, Arwaker, Peacham, Quarles, Whitney,
+and Wither. With the exception of an occasional article in the _Bibl. Ang.
+Poet._, _Cens. Liter. Restituta_, and similar bibliographical volumes, we
+are not aware that any other notice has been taken of this particular
+branch of our literature[1], nor does there exist, {470} that we know of,
+any complete, separate, and distinct catalogue of such works.
+
+Being anxious, therefore, to obtain a correct account of what may be termed
+the English Series of Books of Emblems, I inclose a list of all those in my
+own possession, and of the titles of such others as I have been able to
+collect; and I shall be glad if any of your readers can make any additions
+to the series, confining them at the same time strictly to Books of
+Emblems, and not admitting fables, heraldic works, or older publications
+not coming within the same category. A good comprehensive work on this
+subject of Books of Emblems, not confined merely to the English series, but
+embracing the whole foreign range, giving an account both of the writers of
+the verses, and also of the engravers, and the different styles of art in
+each, is still a great desideratum in our literary history; and if ably and
+artistically done, with suitable illustrations of the various engravings
+and other ornaments, would form a very interesting, instructive, and
+entertaining volume; and I sincerely hope that the time will not be far
+distant when such a volume will be found in our libraries.
+
+I conclude with a Query of inquiry, whether anything is known of the
+present resting-place of a _Treatise on Emblems_, which the late Mr. Beloe
+informs us, at the close of his _Literary Anecdotes_, vol. vi. p. 406., he
+had written at "considerable length," from communications furnished him by
+the Marquis of Blandford, whose collection of Emblems was at that time one
+of the richest and most extensive in the kingdom, and whose treatise, if
+published, might perhaps prove a valuable addition to our information on
+this portion of our literature.
+
+I would also inquire who was Thomas Combe, and what did he write, who is
+thus mentioned by Meres in his _Palladis Tamia: Wits Treasury_, Lond. 1598,
+8vo., as one of our English writers of Emblems: "As the Latines have those
+emblematists, Andreas Alciatus, Reusnerus, and Sambucus, so we have these,
+Geffrey Whitney, Andrew Willet, and _Thomas Combe_." Is anything known of
+the latter, or of his writings?
+
+THOMAS CORSER.
+
+Stand Rectory.
+
+_List of English Writers of Books of Emblems._
+
+A. (H.) Parthenia Sacra, of the Mysterious and Delicious Garden of the
+Sacred Parthenis: Symbolically set forth and enriched with Pious Devises
+and Emblems for the entertainment of devout Soules, &c. By H. A. Plates.
+8vo. Printed by John Cousturier, 1633.
+
+Abricht (John A. M.). Divine Emblems. Embellished with Etchings of Copper
+after the fashion of Master Francis Quarles. 12mo. Lond. 1838.
+
+Arwaker (Edmund). Pia Desideria, or Divine Addresses in Three Books. With
+47 Copper Plates by Sturt. 8vo. Lond. 1686.
+
+Ashrea: or the Grove of Beatitudes. Represented in Emblemes: and by the Art
+of Memory to be read on our Blessed Saviour Crucified, &c. 12mo. Lond.
+1665.
+
+Astry (Sir James). The Royal Politician represented in One Hundred Emblems.
+Written in Spanish by Don Diego Saavedra Faxardo, &c. Done into English
+from the Original. By Sir James Astry. In Two Vols. With Portrait of
+William Duke of Gloucester, and other Plates. 8vo. Lond. 1700. Printed for
+Matthew Gylliflower.
+
+Ayres (Philip). Emblemata Amatoria. Emblems of Love in Four Languages.
+Dedicated to the Ladys. By Ph. Ayres, Esq. With 44 Plates on Copper. 8vo.
+Lond. 1683.
+
+Barclay (Alexander).[2] The Ship of Fooles, wherein is shewed the folly of
+all States, &c. Translated out of Latin into Englishe. With numerous
+Woodcuts. Imprinted by John Cawood. Folio, bl. letter, Lond. 1570.
+
+Blount (Thomas). The Art of making Devises: treating of Hieroglyphicks,
+Symboles, Emblemes, AEnigmas, &c. Translated from the French of Henry
+Estienne. 4to. Lond. 1646.
+
+Bunyan (John). Emblems by J. Bunyan. [I have not seen this work, but
+suspect it is only a common chap-book. A copy was in one of Lilly's
+Catalogues.]
+
+Burton (R.). Choice Emblems, Divine and Moral, Ancient and Modern; or
+Delights for the Ingenious in above Fifty Select Emblems, Curiously
+Ingraven upon Copper Plates. With engraved Frontispiece, &c. 12mo. Lond.
+1721. Printed for Edmund Parker.
+
+Castanoza (John). The Spiritual Conflict, or The Arraignment of the Spirit
+of Selfe-Love and Sensuality at the Barre of Truth and Reason. First
+published in Spanish by the Reverend Father John Castanoza, afterwards put
+into the Latin, Italian, German, French, and English Languages. With
+numerous Engravings. 12mo. at Paris, 1652.
+
+Choice Emblems, Natural, Historical, Fabulous, Moral, and Divine. 12mo.
+Lond. 1772.
+
+Colman (W.). La Dance Machabre, or Death's Duell, by W. C. With engraved
+Frontispiece by Cecil, and Plate. 8vo. Lond. 163--.
+
+Compendious Emblematist; or Writing and Drawing made easy. With many
+Plates. 4to. Lond.
+
+Emblems Divine, Moral, Natural, and Historical, Expressed in Sculpture, and
+applied to the several Ages, Occasions, and Conditions of the Life of Man.
+By a Person of Quality. With Woodcut Engravings and Metrical Illustrations.
+8vo. Lond. 1673. Printed by J. C. for Will. Miller.
+
+Emblems for the Entertainment and Improvement of Youth, with Explanations,
+on 62 Copper Plates. White Knights. 8vo. n. d., Part I.
+
+Emblems of Mortality. With Holbein's Cuts of the Dance of Death, modernized
+and engraved by Bewick. Three Editions. 8vo. Lond. 1789.
+
+Farlie (Robert). Lychnocausia, sive Moralia Facum Emblemata. Lights Morall
+Emblems. Kalendarium {471} Humanae Vitae. The Kalendar of Man's Life. With
+Frontispiece and numerous Woodcuts. 8vo. Lond. 1638.
+
+Fransi (Abrahami). Insignium Armorum Emblematum Hieroglyphicorum et
+Symbolorum Explicatio. No Plates. 4to. Lond. 1588.
+
+G. (H.). The Mirrour of Majestie: or the Badges of Honour conceitedly
+emblazoned. With Emblems annexed. 4to. 1618. [This is the rarest of the
+English series; only two copies known, one perfect _penes_ me, and another
+imperfect.]
+
+Gent (Thomas). Divine Entertainments; of Penitential Desires, Sighs, and
+Groans of the Wounded Soul. In Two Books, adorned with suitable Cuts. In
+Verse. With numerous Woodcuts. 12mo. Lond. 1724.
+
+Hall (John). Emblems, with elegant Figures newly published. Sparkles of
+Divine Love. Engraved Frontispiece and Plates. 12mo. Lond. 1648.
+
+Heywood (Thomas). Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas, selected out of Lucian,
+&c. With sundry Emblems, extracted from the most elegant Iacobus Catsius,
+&c. 8vo. Lond. 1637. No Plates.
+
+Jenner (Thomas). The Soules Solace; or Thirtie and one Spirituall Emblems.
+With Plates on Copper, and Verses. 4to. Lond. 1631.
+
+---- The Ages of Sin, of Sinnes Birth and Growth. With the Steppes and
+Degrees of Sin, from Thought to finall Impenitence. Nine leaves containing
+nine emblematical engravings, each with six metrical lines beneath. 4to. No
+printer's name, place, or date.
+
+---- A Work for none but Angels and Men, that is, to be able to look into,
+and to know themselves, &c. It contains eight Engravings emblematic of the
+Senses, and is in fact Sir John Davis's poem on the Immortality of the Soul
+turned into prose. 4to. Lond. 1650. Printed by M. S. for Thomas Jenner.
+
+---- Wonderful and Strange Punishments inflicted on the Breakers of the Ten
+Commandments. With curious Plates. 4to. Lond. 1650.
+
+Montenay (Georgette de). A Booke of Armes, or Remembrance: wherein are a
+hundred Godly Emblemata; first invented and elaborated in the French
+Tongue, but now in severall Languages. With Plates. 8vo. Franckfort. 1619.
+
+Murray (Rev. T. B.). An Alphabet of Emblems. With neatly executed Woodcuts.
+12mo. Lond. 1844.
+
+Peacham (Henry). Minerva Britannia, or, A Garden of Heroickall Devises,
+furnished and adorned with Emblemes and Impressas, &c. Numerous Woodcuts.
+4to. Lond. n. d. (1612.)
+
+Protestant's (The) Vade Mecum, or Popery Displayed in its proper Colours,
+in Thirty Emblems, lively representing all the Jesuitical Plots against
+this Nation. With thirty engraved Emblems on copper. 8vo. Lond. 1680.
+Printed for Daniel Brown.
+
+Quarles (Francis). Emblemes by Fra. Quarles. The First Edition. With Plates
+by W. Marshall and others. Rare. 8vo. Lond. 1635. Printed by G. M. at John
+Marriott's.
+
+---- Hieroglyphickes of the Life of Man, by Fra. Quarles. In a Series of
+engraved Emblems on Copper by Will. Marshall. With Verses. 8vo. Lond. 1638.
+Printed by M. Flesher.
+
+Richardson (George). Iconology; or a Collection of Emblematical Figures,
+Moral and Instructive. In Two Volumes. With Plates. 4to. Lond. 1777-79.
+
+Riley (George). Emblems for Youth. Reprinted in 1775, and again in 1779.
+12mo. Lond. 1772.
+
+Ripa (Caesar). Iconologia; or Morall Emblems. Wherein are express'd various
+Images of Virtues, Vices, &c. Illustrated with 326 Human Figures engraved
+on Copper. By the care and charge of P. Tempest. 4to. Lond. 1709.
+
+S. (P.) The Heroical Devises of M. Claudius Paradin, Canon of Beauvieu.
+Whereunto are added the Lord Gabriel Symons and others. Translated out of
+Latin into English by P. S. With Woodcuts. 16mo. Lond. 1591. Imprinted by
+William Kearney.
+
+Stirry (Thomas). A Rot among the Bishops, or a terrible Tempest in the Sea
+of Canterbury, a Poem with lively Emblems. A Satire against Archbishop
+Laud. With Four Wood Engravings. Rare. 8vo. Lond. 1641.
+
+Thurston (J.). Religious Emblems; being a Series of Engravings on Wood,
+from the Designs of J. Thurston, with Descriptions by the Rev. J. Thomas.
+4to. Lond. 1810.
+
+Vicars (John). A Sight of y^e Transactions of these latter Yeares
+Emblemized with engraven Plates, which men may read without Spectacles.
+Collected by John Vicars. With Engravings of Copper. 4to. Lond. n. d., are
+to be sould by Thomas Jenner at his shop.
+
+---- Prodigies and Apparitions, or England's Warning Pieces. Being a
+seasonable Description by lively figures and apt illustrations of many
+remarkable and prodigious forerunners and apparent Predictions of God's
+Wrath against England, if not timely prevented by true Repentance. Written
+by J. V. With curious Frontispiece and six other Plates. 8vo. Lond. n. d.,
+are to bee sould by Tho. Bates.
+
+Whitney (Geoffrey). A Choice of Emblems and other Devises. Englished and
+Moralized by Geoffrey Whitney. With numerous Woodcuts. 4to. Leyden, 1586.
+Imprinted at Leyden in the house of Christopher, by Grancis Raphalengius.
+
+Willet (Andrew). Sacrorum Emblematum Centuria Una quae tam ad exemplum apte
+expressa sunt, &c. No Plates. 4to. Cantabr. n. d. (1598.)
+
+Wither (George). A Collection of Emblems, Ancient and Moderne: Quickened
+with Metricall Illustrations both Morall and Divine. The Plates, 200 in
+number, were engraved by Crispin Pass. Folio, Lond. 1635. Printed by A. M.
+for Henry Taunton.
+
+Wynne (John Huddlestone). Choice Emblems for the Improvement of Youth.
+Plates. 12mo. Lond. 1772.
+
+[Footnote 1: We must exempt from this sweeping assertion a very interesting
+and well-written account of works on this subject, entitled "A Sketch of
+that Branch of Literature called Books of Emblems, as it flourished during
+the 16th and 17th centuries, by Joseph Brooks Yates, Esq., F.S.A.," of West
+Dingle, near Liverpool, the friend of Roscoe, and the worthy and
+intelligent President of the Literary and Philosophical Society of
+Liverpool, read at their meetings, and of which two parts have already been
+printed in their volumes of _Proceedings_. This "Sketch" only requires to
+be enlarged and completed, with specimens added of the different styles of
+the engravings, to render it everything that is to be desired on the
+subject.]
+
+[Footnote 2: Perhaps this, and the works of Colman and Heywood, are
+scarcely to be considered as _Books of Emblems_.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+AUTHOR OF TRACT ON "ADVANTAGES OF THE EAST INDIA TRADE, 1720, 8vo."
+
+Of this pamphlet, originally published in 1701, 8vo., under the title of
+_Considerations upon the East India Trade_, and afterwards in 1720, 8vo.,
+with a new title-page, _The Advantages of the East India Trade to England
+considered_, containing {472} 128 pages, inclusive of Preface, the author
+never yet been ascertained.
+
+Mr. M^cCulloch accords to it, and very deservedly, the highest praise. He
+styles it (_Literature of Political Economy_, p. 100.) "a profound, able,
+and most ingenious tract;" and observes that he has "set the powerful
+influence of the division of labour in the most striking point of view, and
+has illustrated it with a skill and felicity which even Smith has not
+surpassed, but by which he most probably profited." Addison's admirable
+paper in _The Spectator_ (No. 69.) on the advantages of commerce, is only
+an expansion of some of the paragraphs in this pamphlet. In some parts I
+think he has scarcely equalled the force of his original. Take, for
+instance, the following sentences, which admit of fair comparison:
+
+ "We taste the spices of Arabia, yet never feel the scorching sun which
+ brings them forth; we shine in silks which our hands have never
+ wrought; we drink of vineyards which we never planted; the treasures of
+ those mines are ours which we have never digged; we only plough the
+ deep, and reap the harvest of every country in the world."--_Advantages
+ of East India Trade_, p. 59.
+
+ "Whilst we enjoy the remotest products of the north and south, we are
+ free from those extremities of weather which give them birth; our eyes
+ are refreshed with the green fields of Britain, at the same time that
+ our palates are feasted with fruits that rise between the
+ tropics."--_Spectator_, No. 69.
+
+Mr. M^cCulloch makes no conjecture as to the probable author of this very
+able tract; but it appears to me that it may on good grounds be ascribed to
+Henry Martyn, who afterwards--not certainly in accordance with the
+enlightened principles he lays down in this pamphlet--took an active part
+in opposing the treaty of commerce with France, and was rewarded by the
+appointment of Inspector-General of the exports and imports of the customs.
+(See an account of him in Ward's _Lives of Gresham Professors_, p. 332.) He
+was a contributor to _The Spectator_, and Nos. 180. 200. and 232. have been
+attributed to him; and the matter of Sir Andrew Freeport's speculations
+appears to have been furnished by him as Addison and Steele's oracle on
+trade and commerce. It will be seen that in No. 232. he makes exactly the
+same use of Sir William Petty's example of the watch as is done in the
+tract (p.69.), and the coincidence seems to point out one common author of
+both compositions. But, without placing too much stress on this similarity,
+I find, that Collins's _Catalogue_, which was compiled with great care, and
+where it mentions the authors of anonymous works may always be relied upon,
+attributes this tract to Martyn (Collins's _Cat_. 1730-1, 8vo., Part I.,
+No. 3130.). I have a copy of the edition of 1701, in the original binding
+and lettering--lettered "Martyn on the East India Trade "--and copies of
+the edition of 1720 in two separate collections of tracts; one of which
+belonged to A. Chamier, and the other to George Chalmers; in both of which
+the name of Martyn is written as its author on the title-page, and in the
+latter in Chalmers's handwriting. I think therefore we may conclude that
+this tract, which well deserves being more generally known than it is at
+present, was written by Henry Martyn.
+
+JAS. CROSSLEY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+"AKE" AND ACHE.
+
+John Kemble, it is well known, maintained that the latter was the mode of
+pronouncing this word in Shakspeare's days. He was right, and he was wrong;
+for, as I shall show, both modes prevailed, at least in poetry, till the
+end of the seventeenth century. So it was with some other words, _show_ and
+_shew_, for instance. It is, perhaps, hardly necessary to observe that the
+sounds _k, ch, sh, kh_ (guttural) are commutable. Thus the letter _h_ is
+named in Italian, _acca_; in French, _ache_, in English, _aitch_, perhaps
+originally _atch_: our _church_ is the Scottish _kirk_, &c. Accordingly, we
+meet in Shakspeare _reckless_ and _rechless_, _reeky_ and _reechy_; "As I
+could _pike_ (pitch) my lance." (Coriol., Act I. Sc. 1.) Hall has (_Sat_.
+vi. 1.) "Lucan _streaked_ (stretched) on his marble bed." So also there
+were _like_ and _liche_, and the vulgar _cham_ for _I am_ (_Ic eom_, A.-S.)
+
+Having now to show that both _ake_ and _ache_ were in use, I commence with
+the former:
+
+ "Like a milch-doe, whose swelling dugs do _ake_,
+ Hasting to find her fawn hid in some brake."
+ Shakspeare's _Venus and Adonis_
+
+ "By turns now half asleep, now half awake,
+ My wounds began to smart, my hurt to _ake_."
+ Fairfax, _Godf. of Bull._, viii, 26.
+
+ "Yet, ere she went, her vex'd heart, which did _ake_,
+ Somewhat to ease, thus to the king she spake."
+ Drayton, _Barons' Wars_, iii. 75.
+
+ "And cramm'd them till their guts did _ake_
+ With caudle, custard, and plumcake."
+ _Hudibras_, ii. 2.
+
+The following is rather dubious:
+
+ "If chance once in the spring his head should _ach_,
+ It was foretold: thus says my almanack."
+ Hall, _Sat._ ii. 7., ed. Singer.
+
+The _aitch_, or rather, as I think, the _atch_ sound, occurs in the
+following places:
+
+ "_B._ Heigh ho!
+ _M._ For a hawk, a horse, or a husband?
+ _B._ For the letter that begins them all, _H_."
+ _Much Ado about Nothing_, Act III. Sc. 4.
+
+ "Their fears of hostile strokes, their _aches_, losses."
+ _Timon of Athens_, Act V. Sc. 2.
+
+ "Yea, fright all _aches_ from your bones."
+ Jonson, _Fox_, ii. 2.
+
+ {473}
+
+ "Wherefore with mine thou dow thy musick match,
+ Or hath the crampe thy ionts benom'd with _ache_."
+ Spenser, _Shep. Cal._, viii. 4.
+
+ "Or Gellia wore a velvet mastic-patch
+ Upon her temples, when no tooth did _ach_."
+ Hall, _Sat._ vi. 1.
+
+ "As no man of his own self catches
+ The itch, or amorous French _aches_."
+ _Hudibras_, ii, 2.
+
+ "The natural effect of love,
+ As other flames and _aches_ prove."
+ _Ib._, iii. 1.
+
+ "Can by their pangs and _aches_ find
+ All turns and changes of the wind."
+ _Ib._, iii. 2.
+
+These, in Butler, are, I believe, the latest instances of this form of the
+word.
+
+THOMAS KEIGHTLEY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+LOCALITIES MENTIONED IN ANGLO-SAXON CHARTERS.
+
+When Mr. Kemble published the index to his truly national code of
+Anglo-Saxon Charters, he expressly stated that there were many places of
+which he was in doubt, and which are indicated by Italics.
+
+It is only by minute local knowledge that many places can be verified, and
+with the view of eliciting from others the result of their investigations,
+I send you my humble contribution of corrections of places known to myself.
+
+ Bemtun, 940. Bampton, Oxon.
+ Bleodon, 587, 1182. Bleadon, Somerset.
+ Boclond, 1050. Buckland, Berks.
+ Brixges stan, 813. Brixton, Surrey.
+ Ceomina lacu, 714. Chimney, Oxon.
+ Ceommenige, 940. Idem.
+ Cingestun, 1268, 1276, 1277. Kingston Bagpuxe, Berks.
+ Cingtuninga gemaere, 1221. Idem.
+ Colmenora, 1283. Cumnor, Berks.
+ Crocgelad, 1305. Cricklade, Wilts.
+ Dunnestreatun, 136. Dunster, Somerset.
+ Esstune, 940. Aston-in-Bampton, Oxon.
+ Fifhidan, 546, 1206. Fyfield, Berks.
+ Hearge, 220. Harrow-on-the-Hill.
+ Hengestesige, 556. Hinksey, Berks.
+ Leoie, 1255. Bessil's-leigh, Berks.
+ Monninghaema dic, 645. Monnington, Herefordshire.
+ Osulfe's Lea, 404, is in Suffolk, or near it.
+ Pipmynster, 774, &c., probably Pippingminster, Somerset.
+ Scypford, 714. Shifford, Oxon.
+ Scuccanhlau, 161, is in Berks.
+ Tubbanford, 1141, 1255. Tubney, Berks.
+ Whetindun, 363. Whatindon, Surrey.
+ Wenbeorg, 1053. Wenbury, Devon.
+ Waenric 775, and Wenrise, 556, is the River Windrush.
+ Wicham (Witham), 116, 214, 775. Witham, Berks.
+ Wyttanig, 556. Witney, Oxon.
+ Wurethe, Wyrethe, Weorthe, Weorthig, 208, 1171, 1212, 1221. Longworth, Berks.
+ Worth, Wurthige, 743, 1121. Worth, Hants.
+
+The following are omitted:
+
+ Hanlee, 310.
+ Helig, 465.
+ Pendyfig, 427.
+ Stanford, 1301. Stanford, Kent.
+ Stanlege, 1255. Standlake, Oxon.
+ Ethestinctun, 805.
+ Welingaford, 1154. Wallingford, Berks.
+ Wanhaeminga, 1135.
+
+B. WILLIAMS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+INEDITED LETTER.
+
+ August 24th, 1690,
+ Qu. Coll. Oxon.
+
+Dear S^r,
+
+I heartily thank you for the favour of your letter, and to shew itt will
+not fail to write as often as anything does occurr worth sending, if you
+think the accountt I give not troublesome. Dr. Adams, Dr. Rudston, and
+Delaune have promis'd to write this post: we remembred you both before and
+after your letters came w^{th} S^r John Matthews, who staid here 3 nights
+this weeke. Our militia is gone home cloath'd in Blew coates but many
+coxcombs of this city have refused to pay their quota towards the buying of
+them, railing against my L^d Abington, who has smooth'd the mob by giving a
+brace of Bucks last Friday in Port Meed. J. M. has bin expected here this
+fortnight: the Lady that calls herselfe by his nane has bin a good while at
+Astrop, and has discover'd her displeasure there, that her husband as shee
+calls him keeps the coach so long from her at Oxford: upon hearing of
+w^{ch} S^r W. H. in a blunt way gave her the old name, w^{ch} caus'd some
+dissatisfaction and left her smal acquaintance: I heare that the
+understanding between our Friend and his uncle is not so good as formerly,
+but I do not think it will end in Abdication. Mr. Painter is admitted
+Rector of Exeter. The _Naked Gospel_[3] was burnt on y^e 19th in the
+Scholes Quadrangle. The Regents first drew up a Petition to have it
+censured; then some others more busy than wise tooke upon them to gett it
+subscribed, and went to coffee houses and taverns as well as colleges for
+that purpose: these proceedings being ag^{st} statute, and reflecting upon
+the vice ch., gave great offence; at last he call'd a meeting of y^e {474}
+heads of houses, who deputed 6 to examine it: they pick'd several Proposit.
+w^{ch} were read. The sentence was in this form: Propositions &^c tanqu[=a]
+falsas et impias in Chris. Relig. et in Ecc. praecipue Anglican[=a]
+contumeliosas damnamus, plerasq; insuper haereticas esse decernimus et
+declaramus, &^c. This was first subscribed by all y^e heads of Coll. and
+then condemn'd unanimously in a full convocation. The Decree is printed,
+but is too large to send. The Author of y^e Booke has sent about a soft
+vindication of himselfe, that he is unwilling to be accounted a Socinian,
+&c. If I can gett a sight of it I will send you the contents. I do not know
+how far you are in the right about guessing at a Bursar: Tim. seems
+resolv'd to act according to y^e song; but I to shew good nature even
+w^{th}out a tree have promis'd to make him a Dial: and when that's done I
+will doe y^e like at Astrop. I am
+
+Your very humble serv^t,
+W. R.
+
+If you see Coll. Byerly, give my service to him.
+
+Directed thus: These to George Clark, Esq., Secretary of War in Ireland.
+
+By y^e way of London.
+
+Indorsed: W. Rooke, Rec^d at Tipperary, Sept. 7th.
+
+[Footnote 3: [For some account of this work, by Arthur Bury, and the
+controversy respecting it, see Wood's _Athenae_, edit. Bliss, vol. i. p.
+483. William Rooke, the Writer of the letter, was of Queen's College; made
+B.A., May 16, 1674; M.A., Oct. 30, 1677; B.D., April 12, 1690.--ED.]]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A SHAKSPERIAN BOOK.
+
+"There exists," says Mr. John Wilson, "as it were a talismanic influence in
+regard to the most trivial circumstances connected with Shakspeare," and
+yet this enthusiast has not, in his _Shaksperiana_, alluded to the dramatic
+works of Mary Hornby, written under, and dated from, the _dear_ old roof at
+Stratford-upon-Avon!
+
+It was my late good fortune, after filling my pockets from the twopenny
+boxes of the suburban bookstalls, to find, on turning out the heterogeneous
+contents, that I had accidentally become possessed of _The Broken Vow_, a
+comedy by the aforesaid lady, who waits to be enrolled in that much wanted
+book, a new edition of the _Biographia Dramatica_. This _Broken Bow_ which
+looks like a re-cooking of the _Merry Miller_ of Thomas Sadler, 1766, bears
+to be "printed at Stratford-upon-Avon, for the Author, by W. Barnacle,
+1820." Mary Hornby, following the example of the _preoccupier of the
+butcher's shop_, tries her hand at both tragedy and comedy; in the first
+line she stands charged with the perpetration of _The Battle of Waterloo_,
+which, I doubt not, rivalled its original enactment in its _sanguinary_
+character. I have not been lucky enough to fall in with this, which was a
+_hit_; our fair authoress, in her preface to the comedy under notice,
+modestly attributing its great success more to the kindness of her friends
+than to its literary merit.
+
+Mrs. Hornby sustains the dignity of the drama by adhering to her five acts,
+with prologue and epilogue according to prescription. Looking to the
+prologue for the _who_, the _why_, and the _wherefore_, I am sorry to say I
+find no materials for the concoction of a biographical note; upon the
+second point, the _why_, she tells us:
+
+ "When women teem, be it with bad or good,
+ They must bring forth--forsooth 'tis right they should,
+ But to produce a bantling of the brain,
+ Hard is the task, and oft the labour vain."
+
+That her literary _accouchement_ should not be a failure, she further says:
+
+ "Lord, how I've bother'd all the gods and graces,
+ Who patronize _some_ mortals, in such cases."
+
+I take the expressive use of the word "some" here to indicate her
+predecessor, the ancient occupier of the tenement, who certainly was a
+_protege_ of the said parties.
+
+Mrs. Hornby then goes on to relate how that during her _gestation_ she
+invoked Apollo, Thalia, and Erato:
+
+ "Soon they arrived, with Hermes at their side,
+ By Jove commission'd, as their friend and guide.
+ But when the mirth-inspiring dames stepp'd o'er
+ The sacred threshold of _great Shakspeare's door_,
+ The heav'nly guests, _who came to laugh with me_,
+ Oppress'd with grief, wept with _Melpomene_;
+ Bow'd pensive o'er the Bard of Nature's tomb,
+ Dropt a sad tear, then left me to my doom!"
+
+I leave the reader to judge for himself whether the Muses really "came to
+laugh" with Mary Hornby, or whether, under the belief of the immortality of
+our Bard, they did not rather expect a pleasant _soiree_ with Gentle Will,
+and naturally enough went off in a huff when they found themselves
+inveigled into a tea-party at Mrs. Hornby's.
+
+Mr. Wilson, in the work above quoted, does condescend to notice Mrs.
+Hornby,--
+
+ "Who rented the butcher's shop under the chamber in which the poet was
+ born, and kept the _Shaksperian Album_, an interesting record of the
+ visitors to that shrine. Some of the subscribers having given vent to
+ original stanzas suggested by the scene, those effusions," continues
+ the lofty bookseller, "_the female in question_ caused to be inscribed
+ and printed in a small pamphlet, which she sells to strangers."
+
+Not a word, you will see, about the poet's mantle having descended upon the
+shoulders of our Mary,--which was unpolite of him, seeing that both the
+tragedy and comedy had the precedence of his book by some years. Not having
+before me the later history of Shakspeare's house, I am unable to say
+whether our subject deserved more consideration and gallant treatment at
+the hands of MR. COLLIER, when he and his colleagues came into possession.
+
+J. O.
+
+{475}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Minor Notes.
+
+_Shakspeare's Monument._--When I was a young man, some thirty or forty
+years ago, I visited the monument of Shakspeare, in the beautiful church of
+Stratford-upon-Avon, and there copied, from the Album which is kept for the
+names of visitors, the following lines:
+
+ "Stranger! to whom this monument is shown,
+ Invoke the poet's curse upon Malone!
+ Whose meddling zeal his barbarous taste displays,
+ And smears his tombstone, as he marr'd his plays.
+ R. F.
+ Oct. 2, 1810."
+
+This has just now been brought to my mind by reading, in page 155. of the
+second volume of Moore's Journal, the following account of a conversation
+at Bowood:
+
+ "Talked of Malone--a dull man--his whitewashing the statue of
+ Shakspeare, at Leamington or Stratford (?), and General Fitzpatrick's
+ (Lord L.'s uncle) epigram on the subject--very good--
+
+ 'And smears his statue as he mars his lays.'"
+
+I cannot but observe that the doubt expressed in the Diary of
+Moore--whether Shakspeare's monument is "at Leamington or Stratford
+(?)"--is curious, and I conceive my version of the last line, besides being
+more correct, is also more pithy. It is incorrect, moreover, to call it a
+_statue_, as it is a three-quarters bust in a niche in the wall.
+
+The extract from _Moore's Diary_, however, satisfactorily explains the
+initials "R. F.," which have hitherto puzzled me.
+
+SENEX.
+
+_Archbishop Leighton and Pope: Curious Coincidence of Thought and
+Expression._--
+
+ "Were the true visage of sin seen at a full light, undressed and
+ unpainted, it were impossible, while it so appeared, that any one soul
+ could be in love with it, but would rather flee from it as hideous and
+ abominable."--Leighton's _Works_, vol. i. p. 121.
+
+ Vice is a monster of such hideous mien,
+ As to be hated, needs but to be seen."--_Pope._
+
+JAMES CORNISH.
+
+_Grant of Slaves._--I send you a copy of a grant of a slave with his
+children, by William, the Lion King of Scotland, to the monks of
+Dunfermline, taken from the _Cart. de Dunfermline_, fol. 13., printed by
+the Bannatyne Club from a MS. in the Advocates' Library here, which you
+may, perhaps, think curious enough to insert in "N. & Q."
+
+ "De Servis.
+
+ "Willielmus Dei gracia Rex Scottorum. Omnibus probis hominibus tocius
+ terre me, clericis et laicis, salutem: Sciant presentis et futuri me
+ dedisse et concessisse et hac carta mea confirmasse, Deo et ecclesie
+ Sancte Trinitatis de Dunfermlene et Abbati et Monachis ibidem, Deo
+ servientibus in liberam et perpetuam elemosinam, Gillandream Macsuthen
+ et ejus liberos et illos eis quietos clamasse, de me, et heredibus
+ meis, in perpetuum. Testibus Waltero de Bid, Cancellario; Willielmo
+ filio Alani, Dapifero; Roberto Aveneli Gillexio Rennerio, Willielmo
+ Thoraldo, apud Strivelin."
+
+G. H. S.
+
+Edinburgh.
+
+_Sealing-wax._--The most careful persons will occasionally drop melting
+sealing-wax on their fingers. The first impulse of every one is to pull it
+off, which is followed by a blister. The proper course is to let the wax
+cool on the finger; the pain is much less, and there is no blister.
+
+UNEDA.
+
+Philadelphia.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Queries.
+
+WALMER CASTLE.
+
+In Hasted's _History of Kent_, vol. iv. p. 172., folio edition, we have as
+follows:
+
+ "Walmer, probably so called _quasi vallum maris_, i. e. the wall or
+ fortification made against the sea, was expressed to have been a member
+ of the port of Sandwich time out of mind," &c.
+
+Again, p. 165., note _m_, we find:
+
+ "Before these three castles were built, there were, between Deal and
+ Walmer Castle, two eminences of earth, called 'The Great and Little
+ Bulwark;' and another, between the north end of Deal and Sandwich
+ Castle (all of which are now remaining): and there was probably one
+ about the middle of the town, and others on the spots where the castles
+ were erected. They had embrasures for guns, and together formed a
+ defensive line of batteries along that part of the coast," &c.
+
+To the new building of these castles Leland alludes, in his _Cygnea
+Cantio_:
+
+ "Jactat Dela novas celebris arces
+ Notus Caesareis locus trophaeis."--Ver. 565.
+
+There are clear remains of a Roman entrenchment close to Walmer Castle.
+(See _Hasted_, vol. iv. p. 162., notes.)
+
+Any of your correspondents who could give me any information tending to
+show that an old fortification had existed on the site of Walmer Castle,
+previous to the erection of the present edifice--or even _almost_ upon the
+same site--would do me a very great kindness if he would communicate it,
+through the columns of "N. & Q.," or by a private letter sent to the
+Editor.
+
+C. WAYMOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SCOTCHMEN IN POLAND.
+
+Can any of your readers throw any light on this passage in Dr. Johnson's
+_Life of Sir John Denham_?
+
+ "He [Sir John Denham] now resided in France, as one of the followers of
+ the exiled king; and, to divert {476} the melancholy of their
+ condition, was sometimes enjoined by his master to write occasional
+ verses; one of which amusements was probably his ode or song upon the
+ Embassy to Poland, by which he and Lord Crofts procured a contribution
+ of ten thousand pounds from the Scotch, that wandered over that
+ kingdom. Poland was at that time very much frequented by itinerant
+ traders, who, in a country of very little commerce and of great extent,
+ where every man resided on his own estate, contributed very much to the
+ accommodation of life, by bringing to every man's house those little
+ necessaries which it was very inconvenient to want, and very
+ troublesome to fetch. I have formerly read, without much reflection, of
+ the multitude of Scotchmen that travelled with their wares in Poland;
+ and that their numbers were not small, the success of this negociation
+ gives sufficient evidence."
+
+The title of Denham's poem is "On my Lord Crofts' and my journey into
+Poland, from whence we brought 10,000l. for his Majesty by the decimation
+of his Scottish subjects there."
+
+PETER CUNNINGHAM.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BISHOP JUXON AND WALTON'S POLYGLOTT BIBLE.
+
+In the library at this island, which formerly belonged to the Knights of
+Malta, there is an edition of Walton's Polyglott Bible, which was published
+in London in 1657. This work is in a most perfect state of preservation.
+
+On the title-page of the first of the eleven volumes, there is written, in
+a bold and perfectly legible manner, the following words:
+
+ "Liber Coll. Di Joannis Bapt^a Oxon Ex dono Reverendiss. in Xt^o Patris
+ Gvil^i Jvxon Archiep. Cantvariensis. A^o D^{ni} 1663."
+
+Just below, but on the right of the above, there is written in a clear hand
+as follows:
+
+ "Ex Libris domus Abbatialis S. Antonij Viennensis, Catalogo Inscript
+ an. 1740. No. 11."
+
+That the question which I shall ask at the end of this Note may be the more
+easily answered, it will perhaps be necessary for me to state, that in the
+year 1777, Rohan, the Grand Master of the Knights of Malta, succeeded in
+annexing the property belonging to the Order of St. Antonio de Vienna to
+that of Malta. In accepting of these estates, which were situated in France
+and Savoy, Rohan bound himself to pay the many mortgages and debts with
+which they were encumbered; and so large an amount had to be thus defrayed,
+that for a hundred years the convent would not be reimbursed for its
+advances, and receive the 120,000 livres, at which sum their annual rental
+would then be valued. Of the foundation of this Order a recent writer
+(Thornton) thus remarks:
+
+ "In 1095 some nobles of Dauphiny united for the relief of sufferers
+ from a kind of leprosy called St. Anthony's fire, which society, in
+ 1218, was erected into a religious body of Hospitallers, having a
+ grand master for chief. This order, after many changes in its
+ constitution, having been left the option between extinction and
+ secularisation, or union with another order, accepted the latter
+ alternative, and selected that of St. John of Jerusalem."
+
+Among the moveable effects which came to the Knights of Malta by this
+arrangement, was a small and well-selected library, and in it this edition
+of Walton's Bible.
+
+Without, therefore, writing more at length on this subject, which might
+take up too much space in "N. & Q.," I would simply add, that my attention
+was called to this work by the Rev. Mr. Howe, chaplain of H.B.M. ship
+"Britannia," and for the purpose of asking, At what time, by whom, and in
+what manner, were these volumes removed from St. John's College at Oxford,
+and transferred to the library of the Order of St. Antonio de Vienna in
+France?
+
+W. W.
+
+La Valetta, Malta.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Minor Queries.
+
+_Was Andrew Marvell poisoned?_--I have just been reading the three
+ponderous quarto volumes comprising _The Works_ of Andrew Marvell, as
+collected and edited by his townsman, Capt. Edward Thompson of Hull. In the
+"Life," near the end of vol. iii., we are told that the patriot died on
+Aug. 16, 1678, "and by poison for he was healthful and vigorous to the
+moment he was seized with the premeditated ruin." And again, in a summary
+of his merits, we are told that "all these patriot virtues were
+insufficient to guard him against the jesuitical machinations of the
+_state_; for what vice and bribery could not influence, was perpetrated by
+poison." This heinous crime, so formally averred against the enemies of
+Marvell, may have been committed by "some person or persons unknown;" but,
+as not a tittle of evidence is adduced or indicated by the zealous
+biographer in support of the charge--Query, had it any foundation in fact?
+In the court, and out of the court, the anti-popish, anti-prelatical
+Puritan had enemies numerous and bitter enough; but is there really any
+other ground for the abominable imputation of foul play alluded to, beyond
+his actually sudden death? Is the hypothesis of poison coeval with the date
+of Marvell's demise? If so, was there any official inquiry--any "crowner's
+quest?" Surely his admiring compatriots on the banks of the Humber did not
+at once quietly sit down with the conviction, that _thus_ "fell one of the
+first characters of this kingdom or of any other."
+
+H.
+
+_Anonymous Pamphlet by Dr. Wallis_ (Vol. vii., p. 403.).--Will MR. CROSSLEY
+have the kindness to give the title of the anonymous pamphlet which, he
+informs us, was published by Dr. John Wallis {477} in defence of the Oxford
+decree of 1695, on the subject of the Trinity?
+
+TYRO.
+
+Dublin.
+
+_Mrs. Cobb's Diary._--Can any of your readers give me any information as to
+the following book, _Extracts from the Diary and Letters of Mrs. Mary
+Cobb_: London, printed by C. and R. Baldwin, 1805, 8vo., pp. 324.; said to
+be _privately printed_?
+
+JOHN MARTIN.
+
+Roxfield, Bedfordshire.
+
+_Compass Flower._--
+
+ "Look at this delicate flower that lifts its head from the meadow--
+ See how its leaves all point to the north, as true as the magnet;
+ It is the compass flower, that the finger of God has suspended
+ Here on its fragile stalk, to direct the traveller's journey
+ Over the sea-like, pathless, limitless waste of the desert."
+ _Evangeline_, Part II. IV. line 140., &c.
+
+Where can I find a description of this flower, and what is its scientific
+name?
+
+In Abercrombie's _Intellectual Powers_, p. 49. edit. 1846, I find the
+following passage:
+
+ "The American hunter finds his way in the trackless forests by
+ attention to minute appearances in the trees, which indicate to him the
+ points of the compass."
+
+Can any one tell me what these "minute appearances" are?
+
+A. H. BATTIER.
+
+East Sheen, Surrey.
+
+_Nuns of the Hotel Dieu._--What is the religions habit of the nuns at the
+hospital of the Hotel Dieu in Paris at the present day?
+
+M. L.
+
+_Purlieu._--Some of your correspondents seem afraid that an attempt to
+repair the deficiencies of our English dictionaries, by research into
+disputed etymologies in "N. & Q.," would tend to produce too much and too
+tedious discussion, and fill its space too much. Could _this_, at least,
+not be done without much objection? Could we not co-operate in finding the
+earliest known mention of words, and thus perhaps trace the occasion and
+manner of their introduction?
+
+At any rate, this word _purlieu_ is certainly in want of some examination.
+Johnson has adopted the wretched etymology of _pur_, Fr. for pure, and
+_lieu_, Fr. for place; and he defines it as a place on the outskirts of a
+forest free of wood.
+
+The earliest record in which this word occurs, so far as I have seen, is in
+an act of Edward III., quoted by Manwood, and it is there spelt _puraley_;
+and it relates to the disafforested parts which several preceding kings
+permitted to be detached from their royal forests.
+
+Might I ask if any of your correspondents find an earlier use of the word;
+and can it be gifted with a probable paternity?
+
+The tracing of the earliest known mention of disputed words is a task
+capable of being finished, and might perhaps be attended, in many cases,
+with happy results. It would rid us probably of many puerilities which
+degrade our current dictionaries.
+
+M. C. E.
+
+_Jennings Family._--Some time since I requested as a great favour that your
+correspondent PERCURIOSUS would kindly inform me where I could get a sight
+of the Spoure MSS. I repeat that I should feel greatly obliged if he would
+do so: and as this is of no public interest, I send postage envelope, in
+the event of PERCURIOSUS obliging me with the desired information.
+
+J. JENNINGS-G.
+
+_Latimer's Brothers-in-Law._--In Bishop Latimer's first sermon, preached
+before King Edward VI., we find the quaint martyr-bishop magnifying the
+paternal prudence for having suitably "married his sisters with five
+pounds, or twenty nobles, apiece;" but neither the editors of the sermon,
+nor the writers of several biographical notices of Latimer consulted by me,
+and in which the extract appears, give any account of the fortunate
+gentlemen whom the generous parent thus doubly blessed with his twofold
+treasure.
+
+Can you, or any of your readers, oblige by furnishing the _names_ of Bishop
+Latimer's brothers-in-law, or by giving some references or brief account of
+them?
+
+* *
+
+_Autobiographical Sketch._--A fragment came into my possession some time
+ago, among a quantity of waste paper in which books were wrapped, which,
+from the singularity of its contents, I felt desirous to trace to the book
+of which it forms a part, but my research has hitherto proved unsuccessful.
+It consists of two leaves of a large octavo sheet, probably published some
+twenty years back, and is headed "Autobiographical Sketch of the Editor."
+It commences with the words: "The Commissioners of the Poor Laws will
+understand me, when I say, that I was born at Putney, in Surrey." The pages
+are of course not consecutive: so after an allusion to the wanderings of
+the writer, I have nothing more up to p. 7., at which is an account of a
+supposed plot against the lord mayor and sheriffs, concocted by him with
+the assistance of some school-boy coadjutors; the object of which appears
+to have been, to overturn the state-coach of the civic functionary, as it
+ascended Holborn Hill, by charging it with a hackney coach, in which sat
+the writer and certain widows armed with bolsters in pink satin bags. The
+word having been given to "Charge!" this new kind of war-chariot was driven
+down the hill at full speed, gunpowder ignited on its roof, and blazing
+squibs protruded {478} through its back, sides, and front. The ingenious
+author declares that the onslaught was crowned with complete success; but
+here, most unfortunately, the sheet ends: and unless you, Mr. Editor, or
+some of your correspondents, will kindly help me to the rest of the
+narrative, I must, I fear return unexperienced to my grave. I have omitted
+to mention, that the date of this event is given as the 4th of July, 1799.
+
+CHEVERELLS.
+
+_Schonbornerus._--Can any of your readers give me information about a book
+I became possessed of by chance a short time ago, or tell me anything
+respecting its author, for whom I have vainly sought biographical
+dictionaries? The volume is a duodecimo, and bears the following
+title-page:
+
+ "Georgii Schonborneri Politicorum, Libri Septem. Editio ad ipsius
+ Authoris emendatum Exemplar nunc primum vulgata. Amsterodami: apud L.
+ Elzevirium, anno 1642."
+
+It is written in Latin, and contains as many quotations as the _Anatomy of
+Melancholy_, or Mr. Digby's _Broad Stone of Honour_.
+
+H. A. B.
+
+_Symbol of Globe and Cross._--Can any one oblige me with an explanation of
+the mysterious symbols on a seal not older than the last century? It
+contains a globe, bearing a cross upon it, and a winged heart above, with
+the legend "_Pour vous_."
+
+C. T.
+
+_Booth Family._--Can any of your Lancashire correspondents afford
+information bearing on the families of Booth of Salford, and Lightbown of
+Manchester? Is any pedigree extant of either of these families, and what
+arms did they bear? Humphrey Booth founded, I believe, a church in Salford
+about the year 1634, the patronage of which still remains, as it might
+seem, in the family, the _Clergy List_ describing it as in the gift of Sir
+R. G. Booth.
+
+There is a Booth Hall in Blackley, a small village lying by the road side,
+between Manchester and Middleton; and from the _inquisitio post mortem_ of
+Humphrey Booth, 12 Car. I., it appears that he died seised of lands in
+Blackley as well as Salford.
+
+Is there any evidence to connect him with this hall, as the place of his
+residence?
+
+A JESUIT.
+
+Jesus College, Cambridge.
+
+_Ennui._--What is our nearest approach to a correct rendering of this
+expression? Some English writer (Lady Morgan, I believe) has defined it
+"mental lukewarmness:" but, if it be true, as La-Motte Houdart says, that--
+
+ "L'ennui naquit un jour de l'uniformite."
+
+the above definition would seem to indicate rather the cause of _ennui_
+than _ennui_ itself.
+
+HENRY H. BREEN.
+
+St. Lucia.
+
+_Bankruptcy Records._--Where can I search for evidence of a bankruptcy,
+probably about 1654? The Chief Registrar's indices do not go back nearly so
+far.
+
+J. K.
+
+_Golden Bees._--Napoleon I. and II. are said to have had their imperial
+robes embroidered with golden bees, as claiming official descent from
+Carolus Magnus. Query, what is the authority for this heraldic distinction,
+said to have been assumed by Charlemagne?
+
+JAMES GRAVES.
+
+Kilkenny.
+
+_The Grindstone Oak._--Can any of your topographical correspondents state
+what is the earliest mention made of an oak tree well known in this part of
+the country, and the destruction of which by fire, on the 5th of November,
+1849, was the subject of regret to all who had seen or heard of it? It was
+called the _Grindstone Oak_, and had been a denizen of the forest of Alice
+Holt, as many suppose, since the days of the Confessor. It measured
+thirty-four feet in circumference, at the height of seven feet from the
+ground; and is mentioned by Gilbert White, in his _History of Selborne_, as
+"the great oak in the Holt, which is deemed by Mr. Marsham to be the
+biggest in this island."
+
+L. L. L.
+
+Near Selborne, Hants.
+
+_Hogarth._--About the year 1746, Mr. Hogarth painted a portrait of himself
+and wife: he afterwards cut the canvass through, and presented the half
+containing his own portrait to a gentleman in Yorkshire.
+
+If any of your numerous readers are in possession of any portrait of Mr.
+Hogarth, about three feet in length, and one foot eight inches wide, or are
+aware of the existence of such a portrait, they will confer a favour by
+addressing a line to
+
+J. PHILLIPS,
+5. Torrington Place, London.
+
+_Adamsons of Perth._--Can any of your Scottish correspondents inform me
+what relationship existed between Patrick Adamson, titular Archbishop of
+St. Andrew's, and the two learned brothers, Henry Adamson, author of the
+_Muses' Threnodie_, and John Adamson, principal of the college at
+Edinburgh, and editor of the _Muses' Welcome_; and whether any existing
+family claims to be descended from them? They were all born at Perth. Henry
+and John were the sons of James Adamson, a merchant and magistrate of the
+fair city. Probably the archbishop was a brother of this James Adamson, and
+son of Patrick Adamson, who was Dean of the Guild when John Knox preached
+his famous sermon at St. John's. Mariota, a daughter of the archbishop, is
+said by Burke to have married Sir Michael {479} Balfour, Bart., of Nortland
+Castle Orkney. Another daughter would appear to have become the wife of
+Thomas Wilson, or Volusenus, as he calls himself, the editor of his
+father-in-law's poems and other publications.
+
+E. H. A.
+
+_Cursitor Barons of the Exchequer._--Will you allow me to repeat a question
+which you inserted in Vol. v., p. 346., as to a list of these officers, and
+any account of their origin and history? Surely some of your
+correspondents, devoted to legal antiquities, can give note a clue to the
+labyrinth which Madox has not ventured to enter. The office still
+exists--with peculiar duties which are still performed--and we know that it
+is an ancient one; all sufficient grounds for inquiry, which I trust will
+meet with some response.
+
+EDWARD FOSS.
+
+_Syriac Scriptures._--I am very anxious to know what editions of the
+Scriptures in Syriac (the _Peshito_) were published between Leusden and
+Schaaf's New Testament, and the entire Bible in 1816 by the Bible Society.
+
+B. H. C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Replies.
+
+PSALMANAZAR.
+
+(Vol. vii., pp. 206. 435.)
+
+Having long felt a great respect for this person, and a great interest in
+all that concerns his history, I am induced to mention the grounds on which
+I have been led to doubt whether the letter in the _Gentleman's Magazine_,
+to which MR. CROSSLEY refers, is worthy of credit. When I first saw it, I
+considered it as so valuable an addition to the information which I had
+collected on the subject, that I was anxious to know who was the writer. It
+had no signature; but the date, "Sherdington, June, 1704," which was
+retained, gave me a clue which, by means not worth detailing, led me to the
+knowledge that what thus appeared in the _Gentleman's Magazine_ for
+February, 1765, had issued from "Curll's chaste press" more than thirty
+years before, in the form of a letter from the person now known in literary
+history as "Curll's Corinna," but by her cotemporaries (see the index of
+Mr. Cunningham's excellent _Handbook of London_) as Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas,
+sometime of Dyot Street, St. Giles's, and afterwards of a locality not
+precisely ascertained, but within the rules of the Fleet, and possibly
+(though Mr. Cunningham does not corroborate this) at some period of her
+life resident in the more genteel quarters which Curll assigns to her. To
+speak more strictly, and make the matter intelligible to any one who may
+look at it in the Magazine, I should add that the first paragraph
+(seventeen lines, on p. 78., dated from "Sherdington," and beginning "I
+dined," says the letter writer, "last Saturday with Sir John Guise, at
+Gloucester") is part of a letter purporting to be written by her lover;
+while all the remainder (on pp. 79-81.) is from Corinna's answer to it.
+
+The worthless and forgotten work of which these letters form a part,
+consists of two volumes. The copy which I borrowed when I discovered what I
+have stated, consisted of a first volume of the second edition (1736), and
+a second volume of the first edition (1732). The title of the second volume
+(which I give as belonging to the earlier edition) is:
+
+ "The Honourable Lovers: or, the second and last Volume of Pylades and
+ Corinna. Being the remainder of Love Letters, and other Pieces (in
+ Verse and Prose), which passed between Richard Gwinnett, Esq.; of Great
+ Shurdington, in Gloucestershire, and Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas, Jun., of
+ Great Russel Street, Bloomsbury. To which is added, a Collection of
+ familiar Letters between Corinna, Mr. Norris, Capt. Hemington, Lady
+ Chudleigh, Lady Pakington, &c. &c. All faithfully published from their
+ original Manuscripts. London: printed in the Year M.DCC.XXXII. (Price
+ 5s.)"
+
+The title-page of the first volume (second edition) differs principally in
+having the statement that the book was "printed for E. Curll" (whose name
+does not appear in the earlier second volume, though perhaps it may have
+done so in the first of that earlier edition), and an announcement that the
+fidelity of the publication is "attested, by Sir Edward Northey, Knight."
+
+The work is a farrago of low rubbish utterly beneath criticism; and I
+should perhaps hardly think it worth while to say as much as I have said of
+it, had it not been that, in turning it about, I could not help feeling a
+suspicion that Daniel Defoe's hand was in the matter, at least so far as
+that papers that had belonged to him might have come into Curll's hands,
+and furnished materials for the work. It would be tedious to enter into
+details; but the question seemed to me to be one of some interest, because,
+in my own mind, it was immediately followed by another, namely, whether
+Daniel had not more to do than has been suspected with the _History of
+Formosa_? Those who are more familiar with Defoe than I am, will be better
+able to judge whether he was, as Psalmanazar says, "the person who
+Englished it from my Latin;" for the youth was as much disqualified for
+writing the book in English, by being a Frenchman, as he would have been if
+he had been a Formosan. He acknowledges that this person assisted him to
+correct improbabilities; but I do not know that he anywhere throws further
+light on the question respecting the help which he must have had. Daniel
+would be just the man to correct some gross improbabilities, and at the
+same time help him to some more probable fictions. Under this impression I
+recently inquired (see "N. & Q.," Vol. vii., p. 305.) respecting the
+authorship of {480} _Pylades and Corinna_, and the possibility that it
+might be the work of Defoe; but I believe that my question has not been
+answered.
+
+I have already trespassed unreasonably on your columns; but still I must
+beg, in justice to a man whose character, as I have said, I very highly
+respect, to add one remark. When his imposture is referred to, it is not
+always remembered that when he came to this country he was not his own
+master. It seems that he rambled away from his home in the South of France,
+when about fifteen years old; that he spent about two years in wandering
+about France and Germany, and astonishing people by pretending to be, at
+first a converted, and afterwards an unconverted, Formosan; that when
+performing this second, pagan, character, he arrived at Sluys, where a
+Scotch regiment in the Dutch service, under Brigadier Lauder, was
+stationed; that the chaplain, named Innes, detected the fraud, but instead
+of reproving the lad for his sin and folly, only considered how he might
+turn the cheat to his own advantage, and render it conducive to his own
+preferment. The abandoned miscreant actually went through the blasphemous
+mockery of baptizing the youth as a convert from heathenism; named him
+after the brigadier, who stood godfather: claimed credit from the Bishop of
+London for his zeal; and was by the kind prelate invited to bring his
+convert to London. The chaplain lost no time in accepting, was graciously
+received by the bishop and the archbishop, snapped up the first piece of
+preferment that would answer his views (it happened to be the office of
+chaplain-general to the forces in Portugal), and made off, leaving his
+convert to bear the storm which was sure to burst on him, as best he might.
+That a youth thus tutored and thus abandoned, before Johnson was born,
+should have lived to attract his society, and win from him the testimony
+that he was "the best man" whom he had ever known, gives him a claim to our
+respect, which seems to me to be strengthened by everything which I have
+been able to learn respecting him.
+
+S. R. MAITLAND.
+
+Gloucester.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CONSECRATED ROSES, ETC.
+
+(Vol. vii., p. 407.)
+
+Had G.'s Query referred solely to the consecration of _The Golden Rose_, I
+might have given him a satisfactory answer by referring him to Cartari's
+essay on the subject entitled _La Rosa d'Ora Pontificia, &c._, 4to. 1681,
+and to the account (with accompanying engraving) of the _Rose, Sword, and
+Cap_ consecrated by Julius III., and sent by him to Philip and Mary; and to
+Cardinal Pole's exposition of these Papal gifts, which are to be found in
+the 1st volume of F. Angeli Rocca, _Opera Omnia_ (fol. Rome, 1719). In the
+authors to whom I have referred, much curious information will, however, be
+found. I take this opportunity of saying, that as I am about to submit a
+communication on the subject of _The Golden Rose_ to the Society of
+Antiquaries, I shall feel obliged by any hints which may help me to render
+it more complete; and of putting on record in "N. & Q." the following
+particulars of the ceremonial, as it was performed on the 6th of March
+last, which I extract from the _Dublin Weekly Telegraph_ of the 9th of
+April.
+
+ "On Sunday, the 6th [March, 1853], the Benediction of the Golden Rose,
+ was, according to annual usage, performed by the Pontiff previously to
+ High Mass, in the Sistine Chapel, celebrated by a cardinal, at which he
+ assists every Sunday during Lent. To the more ancient practice of
+ blessing, on the fourth Sunday of 'Quaresima,' a pair of gold and
+ silver keys, touched with filings from the chains of St. Peter (which
+ are still preserved in Rome), the Holy See has substituted that of the
+ Benediction of the 'Rosa d'Oro,' to be presented, within the year, to
+ some sovereign or other potentate, who has proved well deserving of the
+ Church. The first positive record respecting the Golden Rose has been
+ ascribed to the Pontificate of Leo IX. (1049-53); but a writer in the
+ _Civitta Catolica_ states that allusion to a census levied for its cost
+ may be found in the annals of a still earlier period. The Pontiffs used
+ formerly to present it annually to the Prefect of Rome, after singing
+ Mass, on this Sunday, at the Lateran, and pronouncing a homily, during
+ which they lifted the consecrated object in one hand whilst expounding
+ to the people its mystic significance. Pius II. (1458) is the last Pope
+ recorded to have thus preached in reference to and thus conferred the
+ Golden Rose; and the first foreign potentate recorded to have received
+ it from the Holy See is Fulk, Count of Anjou, to whom it was presented
+ by Urban II. in 1096. A homily of Innocent III. also contains all
+ explanation of this beautiful symbol--the precious metal, the balsam
+ and musk used in consecrating it, being taken in mystic sense as
+ allusion to the triple substance in the person of the Incarnate
+ Lord--divinity, soul, and body. It is not merely a single flower, but
+ an entire rose-tree that is represented--the whole about a foot in
+ height, most delicately wrought in fine lamina of gold. This being
+ previously deposited between lighted candelabra, on a table in the
+ sacristy, is taken by the youngest cleric of the camera, to be
+ consigned to his Holiness, after the latter has been vested for the
+ solemnity, but before his assuming the mitre. After a beautiful form of
+ prayer, with incense and holy water, the Pontiff then, holding the
+ object in his hand, imparts the Benediction, introducing into the
+ flower which crowns the graceful stem, and is perforated so as to
+ provide a receptacle, balsam of Peru and powder of musk. He then passes
+ with the usual procession into the Sistine, still carrying the rose in
+ his left hand; and during the Mass it remains beneath the crucifix over
+ the altar. If in the course of the year no donation of the precious
+ object is thought advisable, the same is consecrated afresh on the
+ anniversary following. Some have conjectured that the Empress of France
+ will be selected {481} by Pius IX. to receive this honour in the
+ present instance; but this is mere conjecture. On a former occasion, it
+ is true, the Golden Rose was conferred by him on another crowned head
+ of the fairer sex--one entitled to more than common regards from the
+ Supreme Pastor in adversity--the Queen of Naples."
+
+WILLIAM J. THOMS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CAMPBELL'S IMITATIONS.
+
+(Vol. vi., p. 505.)
+
+It is curious that two of the passages pointed out by MR. BREEN, as
+containing borrowed ideas, are those quoted by Alison in his recent volume
+(_Hist. Eur._, vol. i. pp. 429, 430.) to support his panegyric on Campbell,
+of whose "felicitous images" he speaks with some enthusiasm.
+
+The propensity of Campbell to adapt or imitate the thoughts and expressions
+of others has often struck me. Let me then suggest the following (taken at
+random) as further, and I believe hitherto unnoticed, illustrations of that
+propensity:
+
+ 1. "When front to front the banner'd hosts combine,
+ Halt ere they close, and form the dreadful line."
+ _Pleasures of Hope._
+
+ "When front to front the marching armies shine,
+ Halt ere they meet, and form the lengthening line."
+ Pope, _Battle of Frogs and Mice_.
+
+ 2. "As sweep the shot stars down the troubled sky."
+ _Pleasures of Hope._
+
+ "And rolls low thunder thro' _the troubled sky_."
+ Pope, _Frogs and Mice_.
+
+ 3. "With meteor-standard to the winds unfurl'd."
+ _Pleasures of Hope._
+
+ "The imperial _standard_ which full high advanc'd,
+ Shone _like a meteor_ streaming _to the wind_."
+ Milton, _Par. Lost_, i. 535.
+
+ 4. "The dying man to Sweden turn'd his eye,
+ Thought of his home, and clos'd it with a sigh."
+ _Pleasures of Hope._
+
+ "Sternitur infelix alieno vulnere, coelumque
+ Aspicit, _et dulces moriens reminiscitur Argos_."
+ Virgil, _AEn._, x. 782.
+
+ 5. "... Red meteors flash'd along the sky,
+ And conscious Nature shudder'd at the cry."
+ _Pleasures of Hope._
+
+ "... _Fulsere ignes, et conscius_ aether."
+ Virgil, _AEn._, iv. 167.
+
+ 6. "In hollow winds he hears a spirit moan."
+ _Pleasures of Hope._
+
+Shakespeare has the _hollow whistling_ of the southern _wind_.
+
+ 7. "The strings of Nature crack'd with agony."
+ _Pleasures of Hope._
+
+ "His _grief_ grew puissant. and _the strings of life_
+ Began _to crack_."--Shakspeare, _King Lear_.
+
+ 8. "The fierce extremes of good and ill to brook."
+ _Gertrude of Wyoming._
+
+ "... And feel by turns the bitter change
+ Of _fierce extremes, extremes_ by change more _fierce_."
+ Milton, _Par. Lost_, ii. 599.
+
+ 9. "His tassell'd horn beside him laid."
+ _O'Connor's Child._
+
+ "... Ere th' odorous breath of morn
+ Awakes the slumbering leaves, or _tassell'd horn_
+ Shakes the high thicket."--Milton, _Arcades_.
+
+ 10. "The scented wild-weeds and enamell'd moss."
+ _Theodric._
+
+Campbell thinks it necessary to explain this latter epithet in a note: "The
+moss of Switzerland, as well as that of the Tyrol, is remarkable for a
+bright smoothness approaching to the appearance of enamel." And yet was no
+one, or both, of the following passages floating in his brain when his pen
+traced the line?
+
+ "O'er the _smooth enamell'd green_
+ Where no print of sleep hath been."
+ Milton, _Arcades_.
+
+ "Here blushing Flora paints _th' enamell'd ground_."
+ Pope, _Winsdor Forest_.
+
+W. T. M.
+
+Hong Kong.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+"THE HANOVER RAT."
+
+(Vol. vii. p. 206.)
+
+_An Essay on Irish Bulls_ is said to have found its way into a catalogue of
+works upon natural history; with which precedent in my favour, and pending
+the inquiries of _naturalists_, _ratcatchers_, and _farmers_ into the
+history of the above-named formidable invader, I hope MR. HIBBERD will have
+no objection to my intruding a bibliographical curiosity under the
+convenient head he has opened for it in "N. & Q."
+
+My book, then, bears the appropriate title, _An Attempt towards a Natural
+History of the Hanover Rat, dedicated to P***m M******r, M.D., and S----y
+to the Royal Society_, 8vo., pp. 24.: London, 1744.
+
+The writer of this curious piece takes his _cue_ from that remarkable
+production, _An Attempt towards a Natural History of the Polype_, 1743; in
+which the learned Mr. Henry Baker, in a letter to Martin Folkes, of 218
+pages, 8vo., illustrated by a profusion of woodcuts, elaborately describes
+this link between the animal and vegetable creation, and the experiments he
+practised upon the same: commencing with "cutting off a polype's head," and
+so on through a series of scientific barbarities upon his _little
+creature_, which ended only in "turning a polype inside out!"
+
+Following the plan of Mr. Baker, the anonymous author of _The Hanover Rat_
+tells us, that, after thirty years' laborious research, he had {482}
+satisfied himself that this animal was not a native of these islands: "I
+cannot," he says, "particularly mark the date of its first appearance, yet
+I think it is within the memory of man;" and finding favour in its original
+_mine affamee_ state with a few of the most starved and hungry of the
+English rats from the common sewer, he proceeds to show that it _did_
+extirpate the natives; but whether this is the best account, or whether the
+facts of the case as here set forth will satisfy your correspondent, is
+another thing. According to _my_ authority, the aboriginal rat was, at the
+period of writing, sorely put to it to maintain his ground against the
+invading colonists and their unnatural allies the _providers_; and the
+present work seems to have been an effort on the part of one in the
+interest of the former to awaken them to a sense of their danger. In his
+laudable attempts to rally their courage, this advocate reminds them of a
+similar crisis when their country was infested with a species of frog
+called _Dutch frogs_: "which no sooner," says he, "began to be mischievous,
+than its growth and progress was stopped by the natives." "Had we," he
+continues, "but the same public spirit with our ancestors, we need not
+complain to-day of being eaten up by _rats_. Our country is the same, but
+alas! we feel no more the same affection for it." In this way he stimulates
+the invaded to a combined attack upon the common enemy, and we need not
+tell _our_ readers how successfully, nor how desperate the struggle, the
+very next year; which ended in the complete ascendancy of the _Hanover
+rat_, or reigning family, over the unlucky Jacobite native. Under his
+figure of a rat, this Jacobite is very scurrilous indeed upon the
+Hanoverian succession; and, continuing his _polypian_ imitations, relates a
+few coarse experiments upon _his subject_ illustrative of its destructive
+properties, voracity, and sagacity, which set at nought "all the
+contrivances of the farmer to defend his barns; the trailer his warehouse;
+the gentleman his land; or the inferior people their cup-boards and small
+beer cellars. No bars or bolts can keep them out, nor can any gin or trap
+lay hold of them."
+
+Luckily for us living in these latter days, we can extract amusement from
+topics of this nature, which would have subjected our forefathers to severe
+pains and penalties; and looking at the character and mischievous tendency
+of _The Hanover Rat_, I am curious to know if Mary Cooper, the publisher,
+was put under surveillance for her share in its production; for to me it
+appears a more aggravated libel upon the reigning family than that of the
+_Norfolk Prophecy_--for the publication of which, Boswell says, the great
+Samuel Johnson had to play at hide and seek with the officers of justice.
+
+The advent of both Pretenders was preceded by _straws_ like these cast out
+by their adherents, to try _how the current set_. The present _jeu
+d'esprit_, however, is a double-shotted one: for, not content with
+tampering with the public allegiance, this aboriginal rat seems more
+innocently enjoying a laugh at the Royal Society, and its ingenious
+_fellow_ Mr. Baker, in as far as regards the aforesaid elaborate treatise
+upon _polypes_.
+
+J. O.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+FONT INSCRIPTIONS.
+
+(Vol. vii., p. 408.)
+
+MR. ELLACOMBE desires examples of these. I can supply the following:--
+
+At Bradley, Lincolnshire, is a very large font, of the Decorated period,
+with this inscription round the bowl in black letter:
+
+ "Pater Noster, Ave Maria, and Criede, leren ye chyld yt es nede."
+
+This is an early instance of the use of _English_ for inscriptions. The
+sketch was engraved in the work on _Baptismal Fonts_.
+
+At Threckingham, Lincolnshire, I believe I succeeded in deciphering an
+inscription round the font, which was said to have been previously studied
+in vain. It is somewhat defaced; but in all probability the words are,--
+
+ "Ave Maria gracia p... d... t..."
+
+_i. e._ of course, "plena, dominus tecum." The bowl of the font is Early
+English; but the base, round which the inscription runs, appears to be of
+the fifteenth century.
+
+At Burgate, Suffolk, an inscription in black letter is incised on the upper
+step of the font:
+
+ "[Orate pro an--b'] Will'mi Burgate militis et d[=n]e Elionore uxoris
+ eius qui istum fontem fieri fecerunt."
+
+Sir William Burgate died in 1409. It is engraved in the _Proceedings of the
+Bury and West Suffolk Archaeological Institute_.
+
+At Caistor, by Norwich:
+
+ "Orate pro animab ... liis ... ici de Castre."
+
+At Walsoken, Norfolk:
+
+ "Remember the soul of S. Honyter and Margaret his wife, and John
+ Beforth, Chaplain."
+
+with the date 1544.
+
+At Gaywood, Norfolk, is a font of Gothic design, lust probably of
+post-Reformation date. On four of the eight sides of the bowl are these
+inscriptions:
+
+ "QVI . CREDIDE "VOCE . PATER
+ RIT . ET . BAPTI NATUS . CORPORE
+ ZATVS . FVERIT FLAMEN . AVE.
+ SALVVS . ERIT." MAT. 3."
+
+ "CHRISTVM . IN "I . AM . THY . GOD
+ DVISTIS . QVOT AND . THE . GOD
+ QVOT . BAPTI OF . THY . SEEDE.
+ ZATI . ESTIS." GEN."
+
+{483}
+
+At Tilney, All Saints, Norfolk, is an inscribed font so similar to the one
+last mentioned that they are probably the works of the same designer.
+
+On the _cover_ of the font at Southacre, Norfolk, is this inscription:
+
+ "Orate p. aia. M[=r]i. Ri[=c]i. Gotts et d[=n]i Galfridi baker,
+ Rectoris huj' [eccl[=i]e qui hoc] opus fieri fece^t."
+
+I may take the opportunity of adding two _pulpit_ inscriptions; one at
+Utterby, Lincolnshire, on the sounding-board:
+
+ "Quoties conscendo animo contimesco."
+
+The other at Swarby, in the same county:
+
+ "O God my Saviour be my sped,
+ To preach thy word, men's soulls to fed."
+
+C. R. M.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+IRISH RHYMES--ENGLISH PROVINCIALISMS--LOWLAND SCOTCH.
+
+(Vol. vi., pp. 605, 606.)
+
+MR. BEDE, who first called attention to a class of rhymes which he
+denominated "Irish," seems to take it ill that I have dealt with his
+observations as somewhat "hypercritical." I acknowledge the justness of his
+criticism; but I did, and must still, demur to the propriety of calling
+certain false rhymes peculiarly _Irish_, when I am able to produce similes
+from poets of celebrity, who cannot stand excused by MR. BEDE'S
+explanation, that the rhymes in question "made music for their Irish ear."
+If, as he tells us, MR. BEDE was not "blind to similar imperfections in
+English poets," I am yet to learn why he should fix on "Swift's Irishisms,"
+and call those errors a national peculiarity, when he finds them so freely
+scattered through the standard poetry of England?
+
+Your correspondent J. H. T. suggests a new direction for inquiry on this
+subject when he conjectures that the pronunciation now called _Irish_ was,
+"during the first half of the eighteenth century, the received
+pronunciation of the most correct speakers of the day;" and MR. BEDE
+himself suggests that _provincialisms_ may sometimes modify the rhymes of
+even so correct a versifier as Tennyson. I hope some of your contributors
+will have "drunk so deep of the well of English undefiled" as to be
+competent to address themselves to this point of inquiry. I cannot pretend
+to do much, being but a shallow philologist; yet, since I received your
+last Number, I have lighted on a passage in that volume of "omnifarious
+information" Croker's _Boswell_, which will not be deemed inapplicable.
+
+Boswell, during a sojourn at Lichfield in 1776, expressed a doubt as to the
+correctness of Johnson's eulogy on his townsmen, as "speaking the purest
+English," and instanced several provincial sounds, such as _there_
+pronounced like _fear_, _once_ like _woonse_. On this passage are a
+succession of notes: Burney observes, that "David Garrick always said
+_shupreme, shuperior_." Malone's note brings the case in point to ours when
+he says, "This is still the vulgar pronunciation in Ireland; the
+pronunciation in Ireland is doubtless that which generally prevailed in
+England in the time of Queen Elizabeth." And Mr. Croker sums up the case
+thus:
+
+ "No doubt the English settlers carried over, and may have in some cases
+ preserved, the English idiom and accent of their day. Bishop Kearny, as
+ well as his friend Mr. Malone, thought that the most remarkable
+ peculiarity of Irish pronunciation, as in _say_ for _sea_, _tay_ for
+ _tea_, was _the English mode, even down to the reign of Queen Anne_;
+ and there are rhymes in Pope, and more frequently in Dryden, that
+ countenance that opinion. But rhymes cannot be depended upon for minute
+ identity of sound."--Croker's _Notes_, A.D. 1776.
+
+If this explanation be adopted, it will account for the examples I have
+been furnishing, and others which I find even among the harmonious rhymes
+of Spenser (he might, however, have caught the brogue in Ireland); yet am I
+free to own that to me popular pronunciation scarcely justifies the
+committing to paper such loose rhymes as ought to grate on that fineness of
+ear which is an essential faculty in the true poet; "here or awa'," in
+England or Ireland, I continue to set them down to "slip-slop composition."
+
+It may not be inappropriate to notice, that among Swift's eccentricities,
+we find a propensity to "out-of-the-way rhymes." In his works are numerous
+examples of couplets made apparently for no other purpose but to show that
+no word could baffle him; and the anecdote of his long research for a rhyme
+for the name of his old enemy Serjent _Betsworth_, and of the curious
+accident by which he obtained it, is well known; from which we may conclude
+that he was on the watch for occasions of exhibiting such rhymes as
+_rakewell_ and _sequel_, _charge ye_ and _clergy_, without supposing him
+ignorant that he was guilty of "lese majeste" against the laws of correct
+pronunciation.
+
+When I asked MR. BEDE'S decision on a _palpable Cockneyism_ in verse, I did
+so merely with a view, by a "_tu quoque_ pleasantry," to enliven a
+discussion, which I hope we may carry on and conclude in that good humour
+with which I accept his parenthetic hint, that I have made "a bull" of my
+Pegasus. I beg to submit to him, that, as I read the _Classical
+Dictionary_, it is from the _heels_ of Pegasus the fount of poetic
+inspiration is supposed to be derived; and, further, that the _brogue_ is
+not so _malapropos_ to the _heel_ as he imagines, for in Ireland the
+_brogue_ is in use as well to cover the _understanding_ as to _tip the
+tongue_. Could I enjoy the pleasure of MR. BEDE'S company in a stroll over
+my native mountains, he might find that there are occasions on which he
+might be glad to put off {484} his London-made shoe, and "to _wear_ the
+_brogue_, though _speak_ none."
+
+A. B. R.
+
+P.S.--The _postscriptum_ of J. H. T. respecting the pronunciation of
+English being preserved in Scotland, goes direct to an opinion I long since
+formed, that the Lowland Scotch, as we read it in the Waverley Novels, is
+the only genuine unadulterated remains we have of the Saxon language, as
+used before the Norman Conquest. I formed this opinion from continually
+tracing what we call "braid Scotch" to its root, in Bosworth's, and other
+Saxon dictionaries; and I lately found this fact confirmed and accounted
+for in a passage of Verstegan, as follows:--He tells us that after the
+battle of Hastings Prince Edgar Atheling, with his sisters Margaret and
+Christian, retired into Scotland, where King Malcolm married the former of
+these ladies; and proceeds thus:
+
+ "As now the English court, by reason of the aboundance of Normannes
+ therein, became moste to speak French, so the Scottish court, because
+ of the queen, and the many English that came with her, began to speak
+ English; the which language, it would seem, King Malcolm himself had
+ before that learned, and now, by reason of his queen, did more affecte
+ it. But the English toung, in fine, prevailed more in Scotland than the
+ French did in England; _for English became the language of all the
+ south part of Scotland_, the Irish (or Gaelic) having before that been
+ the general language of the whole country, since remaining only in the
+ north."--Verstegan's _Restitution of Antiquities_, A.D. 1605.
+
+Many of your accomplished philological readers will doubtless consider the
+information of this Note trivial and puerile; but they will, I hope, bear
+with a tyro in the science, in recording an original remark of his own,
+borne out by an authority so decisive as Verstegan.
+
+A. B. R.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PICTURES BY HOGARTH.
+
+(Vol. vii., pp. 339. 412.)
+
+In reply to AMATEUR, I can inform him that at the sale of the Marlborough
+effects at Marlborough House about thirty years ago, there were sold four
+or five small whole-lengths in oil of members of that family. They were
+hardly clever enough for what Hogarth's after-style would lead us to
+expect, but there were many reasons for thinking they were by him. They
+came into the possession of Mr. Croker, who presented them, as family
+curiosities, to the second Earl Spencer, and they are now, I presume, in
+the gallery at Althorpe. One of them was peculiarly curious as connected
+with a remarkable anecdote of the great Duchess. Horace Walpole tells us in
+the _Reminiscences_, her granddaughter, Lady Bateman, having persuaded her
+brother, the young Duke of Marlborough, to marry a Miss Trevor without the
+Duchess's consent:
+
+ "The grandam's rage exceeded all bounds. Having a portrait of Lady
+ Bateman, she blackened the face, and then wrote on it, '_Now her
+ outside's as black as her inside._'"
+
+One of the portraits I speak of was of Lady Bateman, and bore on its face
+evidence of having incurred some damage, for the coat of arms with which
+(like all the others, and as was Hogarth's fashion) it was ornamented in
+one corner, were angrily scratched out, as with a knife. Whether this
+defacement gave rise to Walpole's story, or whether the face had been also
+blackened with some stuff that was afterwards removed, seems doubtful; the
+picture itself, according to my recollection, showed no mark but the
+armorial defacement.
+
+I much wonder this style of small whole-lengths has not been more
+prevalent; they give the general air and manner of the personage so much
+better than the bust size can do, and they are so much more suited to the
+size of our ordinary apartments.
+
+C.
+
+Referring to AN AMATEUR'S inquiry as to where any pictures painted by
+Hogarth are to be seen, I beg to say that I have in my possession, and
+should be happy to show him, the portrait of Hogarth's wife (Sir William
+Thornhill's daughter), painted by himself.
+
+LYNDON ROLLS.
+
+Banbury.
+
+The late Bishop Luscombe showed me, at Paris, in 1835, a picture of "The
+Oratorio,"--a subject well known from Hogarth's etching. He told me that he
+bought it at a broker's shop in the Rue St. Denis; that, on examination, he
+found the frame to be English; and that, as the price was small--thirty
+francs, if I remember rightly--he bought the piece, without supposing it to
+be more than a copy. Sir William Knighton, on seeing it in the bishop's
+collection, told him that Hogarth's original had belonged to the Dukes of
+Richmond, and had been in their residence at Paris until the first
+Revolution, since which time it had not been heard of; and Sir William had
+no doubt that the bishop had been so fortunate as to recover it. Perhaps
+some of your readers may have something to say on this story.
+
+J. C. R.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PHOTOGRAPHIC CORRESPONDENCE.
+
+_Washing Collodion Process._--In "N. & Q.," No. 153., p. 320., your valued
+correspondent DR. DIAMOND states "that up to the _final_ period of the
+operation, no washing of the plate is requisite. It prevents, rather than
+assists, the necessary chemical action.".
+
+Now, in all other instructions I have yet seen, it is directed to wash off
+the iron, or other developing solution, _prior_ to immersing in the hypo.,
+and after {485} such immersion, again to wash well in water. I shall feel
+greatly obliged if DR. D. will be kind enough to state whether the
+first-named washing is requisite, or whether the properties of the hypo.,
+or the beauty of the picture, will be in any way injured by the previous
+solutions _not_ having been washed off, prior to the fixings.
+
+C. W.
+
+ [We have submitted this Query to DR. DIAMOND, who informs us that he
+ never adopts the practice of washing off the developing fluid, and
+ considers it not only needless, but sometimes prejudicial, as when such
+ washing has not been resorted to, the hyposulphite solution flows more
+ readily over the picture, and causes none of the unpleasant stains
+ which frequently occur in pictures which have been previously washed,
+ especially if hard water has been used. But besides this, and the
+ saving of time, the doing away with this unnecessary washing economises
+ water, which in out-door practice is often a great consideration. DR.
+ DIAMOND would again impress upon our readers the advantage of using the
+ hyposulphite over and over again, merely keeping up its full strength
+ by the addition of fresh crystals of the salt from time to time, as
+ such practice produces pictures of whiter and softer tone than are ever
+ produced by the raw solution.]
+
+_Colouring Collodion Pictures_ (Vol. vii., p. 388.)--A patent has just been
+taken out (dated September 23, 1852) for this purpose, by Mons. J. L.
+Tardieu, of Paris. He terms his process _tardiochromy_. It consists in
+applying oil or other colours at the back of the pictures, so as to give
+the requisite tints to the several parts of the photograph, without at all
+interfering with its extreme delicacy. It may even, in some cases, be used
+to remedy defects in the photographic picture. The claim is essentially for
+the application of colours at the back, instead of on the surface of
+photographs, whatever kind of colours may be used. It is therefore, of
+course, applicable only to photographs taken on paper, glass, or some
+transparent material.
+
+A. C. WILSON.
+
+_Wanted, a simple Test for a good Lens._--As all writers on Photography
+agree that the first great essential for successful practice is a good
+lens--that is to say, a lens of which the visual and chemical foci
+coincide--can any of the scientific readers of "N. & Q." point out any
+simple test by which unscientific parties desirous of practising
+photography may be enabled to judge of the goodness of a lens? A country
+gentleman, like myself, may purchase a lens from an eminent house, with an
+assurance that it is everything that can be desired (and I am _not_ putting
+an imaginary case), and may succeed in getting beautiful images upon his
+focussing-glass, but very unsatisfactory pictures; and it may not be until
+he has almost abandoned photography, in despair at his own want of skill,
+that he has the opportunity of showing his apparatus, manipulation, &c. to
+some more practised hand, who is enabled to prove that _the lens was not
+capable_ of doing what the vendors stated it could do. Surely scientific
+men must know of a simple test which would save the disappointment I have
+described; and I hope some one will take pity upon me, and send it to "N. &
+Q.," for the benefit of myself and every other
+
+COUNTRY PRACTITIONER.
+
+_Photographic Tent--Restoration of Faded Negatives._--In Vol. vii., p.
+462., I find M. F. M. inquiring for a cheap and portable tent, effective
+for photographic operations out of doors. I have for the last two years,
+and in mid-day (June), prepared calotype paper, and also the collodion
+glass plates, for the camera, under a tent of glazed yellow calico of only
+a single thickness: the light admitted is very great, but does not in the
+least injure the most sensitive plate or paper. It is made square like a
+large bag, so that in a room I can use it double as a blind; and out of
+doors, in a high wind, I have crept into it, and prepared my paper opposite
+the object I intended to calotype.
+
+I should be glad it any of your readers would inform me how a failed
+negative calotype can be restored to its original strength. I last year
+took a great number, some of which have nearly faded away; and others are
+as strong, and as able to be used to print from, as when first done. The
+paper was prepared with the single iodide of silver solution, and rendered
+sensitive with aceto-nitrate sil. and gallic acid in the usual way. I
+attribute the fading to the hyposulphate not being got rid of; and the
+question is, Can the picture he restored?
+
+Are DR. DIAMOND'S _Notes_ published yet?
+
+S. S. B., Jun.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Replies to Minor Queries.
+
+_Gibbon's Library_ (Vol. vii., p. 407.).--I visited it in 1825, in company
+with Dr. Scholl, of Lausanne, who took charge of it for Mr. Beckford. It
+was sold between 1830 and 1835, partly by auction, partly by private sale
+in detail.
+
+JAMES DENNISTOUN.
+
+_Robert Drury_ (Vol. v., p. 533.).--I am afraid that the credit attachable
+to Drury's _Madagascar_ is not supported or strengthened by the
+announcement that the author was "every day to be spoken with" at Old Tom's
+Coffee House in Birchin Lane. _The Apparition of Mrs. Veal_, and other
+productions of a similar description, should make us very doubtful as
+regards the literature of the earlier part of the eighteenth century. Might
+not a person have been suborned to represent the fictitious Robert Drury,
+to the benefit of the coffee-house keeper as well as the publisher? I am
+induced to express this suspicion by a parallel case of the same period.
+_The Ten Years' Voyages of Captain George Roberts_, London, 1726, is
+universally, I {486} believe, considered fictitious, and ascribed to Defoe;
+yet at the end of the work we find:
+
+ "N. B.--The little boy so often mentioned in the foregoing sheets, now
+ lives with Mr. Galapin, a tobacconist, in Monument Yard; and may be
+ referred to for the truth of most of the particulars before related."
+
+W. PINKERTON.
+
+Ham.
+
+_Grub Street Journal_ (Vol. vii., p. 383.).--MR. JAMES CROSSLEY, after
+quoting Eustace Budgell's conjectures as to the writers of this paper,
+leaves it as doubtful whether Pope was or was not one of them. The poet has
+himself contradicted Budgell's insinuation when he retorted upon him in
+those terrible lines (alluding to his alleged forgery of a will):
+
+ "Let Budgell charge low Grub Street to my quill,
+ And write whate'er he please--except my will!"
+
+ALEXANDER ANDREWS.
+
+_Wives of Ecclesiastics_ (Vol. i., p. 115.).--In considering "the statutes
+made by Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas, Archbishop of York, and
+all the other bishops of England," ann. 1108, interdicting the marriage of
+ecclesiastics, might it not be worth investigating, by such of your
+correspondents as are curious on the subject, what had been the antecedents
+of the several bishops themselves?
+
+With respect to Thomas II., Archbishop of York, it is historically certain,
+that he was the _son_ of an ecclesiastic, and likewise the _grandson_ of an
+ecclesiastic (his _father_ being one of the bishops who concurred in these
+statutes). Neither does it seem altogether unlikely that Thomas himself
+also had spent some part of his early life in bonds of wedlock, since we
+learn from the _Monasticon_ (vol. iii. p. 490. of new edit.), that "Thomas,
+_son of Thomas_ (_the second of that name_), _Archbishop of York_,
+confirmed what his predecessors, Thomas and Girard, had given," &c. If this
+be correct, as stated[4], the conclusion is inevitable; but possibly some
+error may have arisen out of the circumstance, that Thomas I. and Thomas
+II., Archbishops of York, were uncle and nephew.
+
+J. SANSOM.
+
+[Footnote 4: Robertus Bloetus also, who was still Bishop of Lincoln, and
+Rogerus, Bishop of Salisbury, appear to have had sons, though, perhaps, not
+born in wedlock; but query.]
+
+_Blanco White._--In Vol. vii., p. 404., is a copy of a sonnet which is said
+to be "_on_ the Rev. Joseph Blanco White." This sonnet is one which I have
+been in search of for some years. I saw it in a newspaper (I believe the
+_Athenaeum_), but not having secured a copy of it at the time, now ten or
+twelve years ago, I have had occasion to regret it ever since, and am
+consequently much obliged to BALLIOLENSIS for his preservation of it in "N.
+& Q." "It is needless," as he well observes, "to say anything in its
+praise." I should add, that my strong impression is that this sonnet was
+written _by_ Blanco White.
+
+H. C. K.
+
+---- Rectory, Hereford.
+
+_Captain Ayloff_ (Vol. vii., p. 429.).--Your correspondent will find a
+short notice of Capt. Ayloff in Jacob's _Poetical Register_ (1719-20, 8vo.,
+2 vols.), and two of his poetical pieces--"Marvell's Ghost" and the
+"Cambridge Commencement"--in Nichols's _Collection of Poems_ (vol. iii. pp.
+186-188.), 1780, 12mo. There is considerable vigour in his "Marvell's
+Ghost;" and had he cultivated his talent, he might have taken a respectable
+place as a poet amongst the writers of his time.
+
+JAS. CROSSLEY.
+
+_General Monk and the University of Cambridge_ (Vol. vii., p. 427.).--I
+cannot doubt that "W. D." was Dr. William Dillingham, Master of Emmanuel
+College, and Vice-Chancellor of the University, from November 1659 till
+November 1660.
+
+The election to which his letter relates took place April 3, 1660. The
+votes were:
+
+ Lord General Moncke 341
+ Thomas Crouch, M.A., Fellow of Trin. Coll. 211
+ Oliver St. John, Chancellor of the University 157
+
+The Vice-Chancellor, in his accounts, makes this charge:
+
+ "Paid to two messengers sent to wait on y^e Lord Generall about y^e
+ burgesship, 4l. 10s."--_M. S. Baker_, xl. 59.
+
+On the 22nd of May, General Monk, who had been also chosen for Devonshire,
+made his election to sit for that county.
+
+C. H. COOPER.
+
+Cambridge.
+
+In reply to LEICESTRIENSIS, I beg leave to inform him that "W. D." was Wm.
+Dillingham, D.D., master of Clare Hall, and at the time Vice-Chancellor of
+the University of Cambridge. The letter in question, which was the original
+draft, was, with a variety of other family papers, _stolen_ from me in
+1843.
+
+J. P. ORD.
+
+P.S.--Query, from whom did the present possessor obtain it?
+
+_The Ribston Pippin_ (Vol. vii., p. 436.).--The remarks of your
+correspondent H. C. K., respecting the uncertain origin of the Ribston
+pippin, reminded me of a communication which I received about fifty years
+ago, from one of the sisters of the late Sir Henry Goodricke, the last of
+the family who possessed Ribston. Though it leaves the question concerning
+the origin of that excellent apple unsettled, yet it may not be
+uninteresting to {487} H. C. K. and some others of your numerous readers. I
+therefore send a transcript:
+
+"_Tradition of the Ribston Pippin Tree._
+
+"About the beginning of the last century, Sir Henry Goodricke, father of
+the late Sir John Goodricke, had three pips sent by a friend in a letter
+from Rouen in Normandy, which were sown at Ribston. Two of the pips
+produced nothing: the third is the present tree, which is in good health,
+and still continues to bear fruit."
+
+"_Another Account._
+
+"Sir Henry, the father of the late Sir John Goodricke, being at Rouen in
+Normandy, preserved the pips of some fine flavoured apples, and sent them
+to Ribston, where they were sown, and the produce in due time planted in
+what then was the park. Out of seven trees planted, five proved decided
+crabs, and are all dead. The other two proved good apples; they never were
+grafted, and one of them is the celebrated original Ribston pippin tree."
+
+The latter tradition has, I believe, always been considered as the most
+correct.
+
+S. D.
+
+_Cross and Pile_ (Vol. vi., _passim._).--The various disquisitions of your
+correspondents on the word _pile_ are very ingenious; but I think it is
+very satisfactorily explained as "a ship" by Joseph Scaliger in _De Re
+nummaria Dissertatio_, Leyden, 1616:
+
+ "Macrobius de nummo _ratito_ loquens, qui erat aereus: _ita fuisse
+ signatum hodieque intelligitur in aleae lusu, quum pueri denarios in
+ sublime jactantes, Capita aut Navia, lusu teste vetustatis
+ exclamant_."--P. 58.
+
+And in Scaligerana (prima):
+
+ "Nummus ratitus--ce qu'aujourd'hui nous appellons jouer a croix ou a
+ pile, car _pile_ est un vieil mot francais qui signifiait un Navire,
+ _unde_ Pilote. Ratitus nummus erat ex aere, sic dictus ab effigie
+ ratus."--Tom. ii., Amsterdam, 1740, p. 130.
+
+See also, _Auctores Latinae Linguae_, by Gothofred, 1585, p. 169. l. 53.
+Also, _Dictionnaire National_ of M. Bescherelle, tome ii. p 885., Paris,
+1846, art. PILE (_subst. fem._)
+
+_En passant_, allow me to point out a very curious and interesting account
+of this game, being the pastime of Edward II., in the _Antiquarian
+Repertory_, by Grose and Astle: Lond. 1808, 4to., vol. ii. pp 406-8.
+
+[Phi].
+
+Richmond, Surrey.
+
+_Ellis Walker_ (Vol. vii., p. 382.).--
+
+ "Ellis Walker, D.D.," according to Ware, "was born in the city of York;
+ but came young into Ireland, and was educated in the college of Dublin,
+ where he passed through all his degrees. He fled from thence in the
+ troublesome reign of King James II., and lived with an uncle at York,
+ where he translated _Epictetus_ into verse. After the settlement of
+ Ireland he returned, and for seven years employed himself with great
+ reputation in teaching a public school at Drogheda, where he died on
+ the 17th April, 1701, in the fortieth year of his age; and was buried
+ there in St. Peter's Church, and twenty years after had a monument
+ erected to his memory by one of his scholars."
+
+TYRO.
+
+Dublin.
+
+_Blackguard_ (Vol. vii., pp. 77. 273.).--I am not aware that the following
+extract from Burton's _Anatomy of Melancholy_ has ever yet been quoted
+under this heading. Would it not be worth the while to add it to the
+extract from Hobbes's _Microcosmos_, quoted by JARLTZBERG, Vol. ii., p.
+134. and again, by SIR J. EMERSON TENNENT at Vol. vii., p. 78.:
+
+ "The same author, Cardan, in his _Hyperchen_, out of the doctrine of
+ the Stoicks, will have some of these genii (for so he calls them) to be
+ desirous of men's company, very affable and familiar with them, as dogs
+ are; others again, to abhor as serpents, and care not for them. The
+ same, belike, Trithemius calls _igneos et sublunares, qui numquam
+ demergunt ad inferiora, aut vix ullum habent in terris commercium:
+ generally they far excel men in worth, as a man the meanest worm_;
+ though some there are _inferiour to those of their own rank in worth,
+ as the black guard in a princes court, and to men again, as some
+ degenerate, base, rational creatures are excelled of brute
+ beasts_."--_Anat. of Mel._, Part I. sec. 2. Mem. 1. subs. 2. [Blake,
+ 1836, p. 118.]
+
+C. FORBES.
+
+Temple.
+
+In looking over the second volume of "N. & Q.," I find the use of the word
+_blackguard_ is referred to, and passages illustrative of its meaning are
+given from the works of Beaumont and Fletcher, Hobbes, Butler, &c. To these
+may be added the following fanciful use of the word, which occurs in the
+poems of Charles Sackville, Earl of Dorset; the author of the well-known
+naval song "To all you Ladies now at Land:"
+
+ "Love is all gentleness, all joy,
+ Smooth are his looks, and soft his pace.
+ Her [Belinda's] Cupid is a blackguard boy,
+ That rubs his link full in your face."
+
+CUTHBERT BEDE, B.A.
+
+_Talleyrand_ (Vol. vi., p. 575.).--Talleyrand's maxim is in Young. I regret
+that I cannot give the reference.
+
+Z. E. R.
+
+_Lord King and Sclater_ (Vol. v., pp. 456. 518.).--By Sclater's answer, "as
+I am informed, the Lord Chancellor _King_ was himself fully
+convinced."--Zach. Grey's _Review of Neal_, p. 67., edit. 1744.
+
+_"Beware the Cat"_ (Vol. v., p. 319.).-The "dignitary of Cambridge" was
+probably Dr. Thackeray, provost of King's, who bequeathed all his {488}
+black-letter books to the college. Perhaps _Beware the Cat_ may be among
+them.
+
+Z. E. R.
+
+"_Bis dat qui cito dat_" (Vol. vi., p. 376.).--The following Greek is
+either in the _Anthologia_, or in Joshua Barnes:
+
+ "[Greek: okeiai charitos glukeroterai, en de bradunei pasa charis
+ phthinuthei, mede legoito charis.]"
+
+ "Gratia ab officio quod mora tardat, abest."
+
+Z. E. R.
+
+_High Spirits a Presage of Evil._--The Note of your correspondent CUTHBERT
+BEDE (Vol. vii., p. 339.) upon this very interesting point recalls to my
+recollection a line or two in Gilfillan's _First Gallery of Literary
+Portraits_, p. 71., which bears directly upon it. Speaking of the death of
+Percy Bysshe Shelley, the author says, "During all the time he spent in
+Leghorn, he was in brilliant spirits, _to him a sure prognostic of coming
+evil_." I may add, that I have been on terms of intimacy with various
+persons who entertained a dread of finding themselves in good spirits, from
+a strong conviction that some calamity would be sure to befall them. This
+is a curious psychological question, worthy of attention.
+
+W. SAWYER.
+
+Brighton.
+
+_Colonel Thomas Walcot_ (Vol. vii., p. 382.) married Jane, the second
+daughter of James Purcel of Craugh, co. Limerick, and had by her six sons
+and two daughters: John, the eldest, who married Sarah Wright of Holt, in
+Denbighshire; Thomas, Ludlow, and Joseph, which last three died unmarried;
+Edward (who died an infant); William (of whom I have no present trace);
+Catherine and Bridget. The latter married, first, Mr. Cox of Waterford, and
+second, Robert Allen of Garranmore, co. Tipperary. John, the eldest son,
+administered to his father, and possessed himself of his estates and
+effects. I think his son was a John Minchin Walcot, who represented
+Askeaton in Parliament in 1751, died in London in 1753, and was buried in
+St. Margaret's churchyard. Two years after his death his eldest daughter
+married William Cecil Pery, of the line of Viscount Pery, and had by him
+Edmund Henry Pery, member of parliament for Limerick in 1786. A William
+Walcot was on the Irish establishment appointed a major in the 5th Regiment
+of Foot in 1769, but I cannot just now say whether, or how, he was related
+to Colonel Thomas Walcot.
+
+JOHN D'ALTON.
+
+Dublin.
+
+_Wood of the Cross: Mistletoe_ (Vol. vii., p. 437.).--Was S. S. S.'s farmer
+a native of an eastern county? If he came from any part where Scandinavian
+traditions may be supposed to have prevailed, there may be some connexion
+between the myth, that the mistletoe furnished the wood for the cross, and
+that which represents it as forming the arrow with which Hoedur, at the
+instigation of Lok, the spirit of evil, killed Baldyr. I have met with a
+tradition in German, that the aspen tree supplied the wood for the cross,
+and hence shuddered ever after at the recollection of its guilt.
+
+T. H. L.
+
+The tradition to which I have been always accustomed is, that the aspen was
+the tree of which the cross was formed, and that its tremulous and
+quivering motion proceeded from its consciousness of the awful use to which
+it had once been put.
+
+W. FRASER.
+
+Tor-Mohun.
+
+_Irish Office for Prisoners_ (Vol. vii, p 410.).--The best reference for
+_English_ readers is to Bishop Mant's edition of the Prayer-Book, in which
+this office is included.
+
+J. C. R.
+
+_Andries de Graeff: Portraits at Brickwall House_ (Vol. vii, p.
+406.).--"Andries de Graeff. Obiit lxxiii., MDCLXXIV." Was this gentleman
+related to, or the father of, Regulus de Graef, a celebrated physician and
+anatomist, born in July, 1641, at Scomharen, a town in Holland, where his
+father was the first architect? Regulus de Graef married in 1672, and died
+in 1673, at the early age of thirty-two. He published several works,
+chiefly _De Organis Generationis_, &c. (See Hutchinson's _Biographia
+Medica_; and, for a complete list of his works, _Lindonius Renovatus_, p.
+933.: Nuremberg, 1686, 4to.)
+
+S. S. S.
+
+Bath.
+
+"_Qui facit per alium, facit per se_" (Vol. vii., p. 382.).--This is one of
+the most ordinary maxims or "brocards" of the common law of Scotland, and
+implies that the employer is responsible for the acts of his servant or
+agent, done on his employment. Beyond doubt it is borrowed from the civil
+law, and though I cannot find it in the title of the digest, _De Diversis
+Regulis Juris Antiqui_ (lib. 1. tit. 17.), I am sure it will be traced
+either to the "Corpus Juris," or to one of the commentators thereupon.
+
+W. H. M.
+
+_Christian Names_ (Vol. vii., p. 406.).--When Lord Coke says "a man cannot
+have two names of baptism, as he may have divers surnames," he does not
+mean that a man may not have two or more Christian names given to him at
+the font, but that, while he may have "divers surnames at divers times," he
+may not have divers Christian names _at divers times_.
+
+When a man changes his Christian name, he alters his legal identity. The
+surname, however, is assumable at pleasure. The use of surnames came into
+England, according to Camden, about {489} the time of the Conquest, but
+they were not in general use till long after that. Many branches of
+families used to substitute the names of their estate or residence for
+their patronymic, which often makes the tracing of genealogies a difficult
+matter. It was not till the middle of the fourteenth century that surnames
+began to descend from father to son, and a reference to any old document of
+the time will show how arbitrarily such names were assumed.
+
+A surname, in short, may be called a matter of convenience; a Christian
+name, a matter of necessity. The giving two Christian names at baptism did
+not come generally into use till, owing to the multiplication of the
+patronymic, a single Christian name became insufficient to identify the
+individual. Consequently an instance of a double Christian name, previous
+to the commencement of the eighteenth century, is a rarity. The fifth and
+sixth earls of Northumberland bore the names of Henry-Algernon Percy. The
+latter died in 1537.
+
+As to the period at which Christian names were assumed as surnames, your
+correspondent ERICAS is referred to Lower's _English Surnames_.
+
+H. C. K.
+
+---- Rectory, Hereford.
+
+Your correspondent ERICA will not, I think, find an instance in this
+country of a person having more than one Christian name before the last
+century. Charles James Fox and William Wyndham Grenville are the two
+earliest instances I can find. It is trivial but curious to observe, that
+in the lists given at the beginning of the _Oxford Calendar_ of the heads
+of colleges and halls from their several foundations, the first who appears
+with two Christian names is the venerable president of Magdalene College.
+Antony Ashley Cooper is only a seeming exception; his surname was
+Ashley-Cooper, as is proved by his contributing the letter _a_ to the word
+_cabal_, the nickname of the ministry of which he formed a part. We find
+the custom common enough in Germany at the time of the Reformation, and
+still earlier in Italy. I apprehend that its origin is really in the _tria
+nomina_ of Roman freemen. It was introduced into this country through our
+royal family, but I am not aware of any prince who had the benefit of it
+before Charles James.
+
+I apprehend the passage which ERICA quotes from Lord Coke has not the
+significance which he attributes to it. A man can have but one Christian or
+baptismal name, of however many single names or words that baptismal name
+may be composed. I have spoken in this letter of two Christian names, in
+order to be more intelligible at the expense of correctness.
+
+J. J. H.
+
+Temple.
+
+_Lamech's War-song_ (Vol. vii., p. 432.).--There have been many
+speculations about the origin and meaning of these lines. I agree with
+EWALD in _Die Poetischen Buecher des Alten Bundes_, vol. i., who calls it a
+"sword-song;" and I imagine it might have been preserved by tradition among
+the Canaanitish nations, and so quoted by Moses as familiar to the
+Israelites. I should translate it--
+
+ "Adah and Zillah, hear ye my voice!
+ Wives of Lemek, heed ye my saying!
+ For man do I slay, for my wound;
+ And child, for my bruise.
+ For seven-fold is Cain avenged,
+ And Lemek seventy-fold and seven."
+
+Bishop Hall, in his _Explication of Hard Texts_, paraphrases it thus:
+
+ "And Lamech said to his wives, 'Adah and Zillah, what tell you me of
+ any dangers and fears? Hear my voice, oh ye faint-hearted wives of
+ Lamech, and hearken unto my speech; I pass not of the strength of my
+ adversary: for I know my own valour and power to revenge; if any man
+ give me but a wound or a stroke, though he be never so young and lusty,
+ I can and will kill him dead.'"
+
+Your correspondent H. WALTER says that "every branch of Cain's family was
+destroyed by the Deluge." Where is the authority to be found for the
+tradition, quoted in an _Introduction to the Books of Moses_, by James
+Morison, p. 26., that Naameh, the daughter of Lamech the Cainite and
+Zillah, married Ham, the son of Noah, and thus survived the Flood?
+
+W. FRASER.
+
+Tor-Mohun.
+
+_Traitor's Ford_ (Vol. vii., p. 382.).--Nothing is known of any legend in
+connexion with the stirring events of the battle of Edgehill, or its times,
+and the origin of the name is a matter of speculation. One _Trait_ had
+lands near this stream, and it is thought by some that, from this
+circumstance, it is properly _Trait's_ Ford, corrupted into Traitor's
+Ford,--a locality well known to sportsmen as a favourite meet of the
+Warwickshire hounds.
+
+A. B. R.
+
+Banbury.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Miscellaneous.
+
+NOTES ON BOOKS, ETC.
+
+We understand the Committee appointed by the Society of Antiquaries to
+consider the best mode of restoring the Society to its former efficient
+state, have agreed upon their Report, and also to the revised laws to be
+recommended to the Fellows for adoption. Of the nature of alterations
+suggested, we know nothing; for while, on the one hand, it is stated that
+the Report recommends changes of a most sweeping character, on the other it
+is rumoured that the changes to be proposed are neither many nor important.
+The truth in this, as in most cases, no doubt lies midway between {490} the
+two: and the Report will probably be found to breathe a spirit of
+conservative reform. Embracing, as the proposed changes necessarily must,
+points on which great difference of opinion has existed, and may continue
+to exist, we hope they will receive the impartial consideration of the
+Fellows; and that they will bear in mind, that in coming to the conclusions
+at which they have arrived, the Committee have had the advantage of sources
+of information, necessarily beyond the reach of the body generally; and
+that those very recommendations, which at first sight may seem most open to
+objection, may probably be those which their information most completely
+justifies.
+
+BOOKS RECEIVED.--_Young's Night Thoughts, or Life, Death, and Immortality,
+revised and collated with the early Quarto Editions, with a Life of the
+Author by_ Dr. Doran. This new, handsomely printed, and carefully edited
+reprint of the great work of this noble and original writer, is rendered
+more valuable by the well-written and critical Memoir of Young, which Dr.
+Doran has prefixed to it.--_The National Miscellany_, _May_ 1853. The first
+Number of a New Magazine just issued by Mr. Parker (Oxford), with every
+promise of realising the objects for which it has been projected, namely,
+"to aid the elevation of the reader's mind, to raise some glow of generous
+desire, some high and noble thoughts, some kindly feeling, and a warm
+veneration for all things that are good and true."--_Cyclopaedia
+Bibliographica_, Part VIII. This most useful work is in the present Part
+carried from _Fawcett_ (John) to _Goethe_. Every fresh issue of it affords
+additional evidence of the great utility which the complete work will prove
+to all authors, preachers, students, and literary men.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BOOKS AND ODD VOLUMES WANTED TO PURCHASE.
+
+REV. A. DYCE'S EDITION OF DR. RICHARD BENTLEY'S WORKS. Vol. III. Published
+by Francis Macpherson, Middle Row, Holborn. 1836.
+
+DISSERTATION ON ISAIAH XVIII., IN A LETTER TO EDWARD KING, ESQ., by SAMUEL
+LORD BISHOP OF ROCHESTER (HORSLEY). The Quarto Edition, printed for Robson.
+1779.
+
+HISTORY OF ANCIENT WILTS, by SIR R. C. HOARE. The last three Parts.
+
+BEN JONSON'S WORKS. 9 Vols. 8vo. Vols. II., III., IV. Bds.
+
+SIR WALTER SCOTT'S NOVELS. 41 Vols. 8vo. The last nine Vols. Boards.
+
+JACOB'S ENGLISH PEERAGE. Folio Edition, 1766. Vols. II., III., and IV.
+
+GAMMER GURTON'S NEEDLE.
+
+ALISON'S EUROPE. (20 Vols.) Vols. XIII., XX.
+
+ABBOTSFORD EDITION OF THE WAVERLEY NOVELS. Odd Vols.
+
+THE TRUTH TELLER. A Periodical.
+
+*** _Correspondents sending Lists of Books Wanted are requested to send
+their names._
+
+*** Letters, stating particulars and lowest price, _carriage free_, to be
+sent to MR. BELL, Publisher of "NOTES AND QUERIES," 186. Fleet Street.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Notices to Correspondents.
+
+H. C. B. _No._
+
+J. D. LUCAS (Bristol). _The inscription is Dutch, and means "Praise God for
+all things."_
+
+WALTER J. WATTS _will find much of the literary history of the_ Travels of
+Baron Munchausen, _which were written in ridicule of Bruce, the Abyssinian
+traveller, in our_ 3rd Vol., pp. 117, 305, 453.
+
+P. P. _Longfellow_ is _an American, having been born at Portland. He is
+now, we believe, Professor of Modern Languages and Belles Lettres at
+Cambridge University, U.S._
+
+A BRITON _must be aware that if we were so far to depart from our plan of
+avoiding religious controversy, as to insert his Query, we should be
+inviting endless disputes and discussions, such as our pages could not
+contain, or our readers endure._
+
+C. M. I. _The sides of the stage are described in Stage Directions as_
+O. P. _and_ P. S., _i. e._ Opposite Promp. (_or_ Prompter) _and_ Promp.
+Side.
+
+GENERAL SIR DENNIS PACK (Vol. vii., p. 453.).--_"As the purport of the
+Query may be defeated by two misprints in my communication relative to this
+gallant soldier, may I beg of your readers for 'French rebels,' to
+substitute 'Irish rebels;' and for 'Ballinakell,' 'Ballinakill.' I am
+willing to lay the blame of these errata on my own cacography, rather than
+on the printer's back._
+
+JAMES GRAVES.
+
+Kilkenny."
+
+PHOTOGRAPHIC CORRESPONDENCE. _Replies to our photographic Correspondents
+next week._
+
+_A few complete sets of_ "NOTES AND QUERIES," Vols. i. _to_ vi., _price
+Three Guineas, may now be had; for which early application is desirable._
+
+"NOTES AND QUERIES" _is published at noon on Friday, so that the Country
+Booksellers may receive Copies in that night's parcels, and deliver them to
+their Subscribers on the Saturday._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PURE NERVOUS or MIND COMPLAINTS.--If the readers of NOTES AND QUERIES, who
+suffer from depression of spirits, confusion, headache, blushing,
+groundless fears, unfitness for business or society, blood to the head,
+failure of memory, delusions, suicidal thoughts, fear of insanity, &c.,
+will call on, or correspond with, REV. DR. WILLIS MOSELEY, who, out of
+above 22,000 applicants, knows not fifty uncured who have followed his
+advice, he will instruct them how to get well, without a fee, and will
+render the same service to the friends of the insane.--At home from 11 to
+3.
+
+18. BLOOMSBURY STREET, BEDFORD SQUARE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PHOTOGRAPHIC SCHOOL.--ROYAL POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTION.
+
+The SCHOOL is NOW OPEN for instruction in all branches of Photography, to
+Ladies and Gentlemen, on alternate days, from Eleven till Four o'clock,
+under the joint direction of T. A. MALONE, Esq., who has long been
+connected with Photography, and J. H. PEPPER, Esq., the Chemist to the
+Institution.
+
+A Prospectus, with terms, may be had at the Institution.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+XYLO-IODIDE OF SILVER, exclusively used at all the Photographic
+Establishments. The superiority of this preparation is now generally
+acknowledged. In all cases where a quantity is required, the two solutions
+may be had at wholesale price in separate bottles; in which state it may be
+kept for years, and exported to any climate. Full instructions for use.
+
+_Caution._--Each bottle is stamped with a red label, bearing my name,
+
+RICHARD W. THOMAS, Chemist, 10. Pall Mall.
+
+CYANOGEN SOAP for removing instantaneously Photographic Stains from the
+Hands, and cleansing all kinds of Photographic Dishes, Glasses, Linen, &c.
+Prepared solely by R. W. THOMAS, Chemist, 10 Pall Mall, Manufacturer of
+Pure Photographic Chemicals, and may be procured of all respectable
+Chemists; in pots at 1s., 2s., and 3s. 6d. each, through MESSRS. EDWARDS,
+67. St. Paul's Church Yard--MESSRS. BARCLAY, 95. Farringdon Street,
+Wholesale Agents.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PULLEYN'S COMPENDIUM.
+One Volume, crown 8vo., bound in cloth, price 6s.,
+
+THE ETYMOLOGICAL COMPENDIUM; or, PORTFOLIO OF ORIGINS AND INVENTIONS;
+relating to--
+
+ Language, Literature, and Government.
+ Architecture and Sculpture.
+ Drama, Music, Painting, and Scientific Discoveries.
+ Articles of Dress, &c.
+ Titles, Dignities, &c.
+ Names, Trades, Professions.
+ Parliament, Laws, &c.
+ Universities and Religious Sects.
+ Epithets and Phrases.
+ Remarkable Customs.
+ Games, Field Sports.
+ Seasons, Months, and Days of the Week.
+ Remarkable Localities, &c. &c.
+
+By WILLIAM PULLEYN.
+
+The Third Edition, revised and improved, by MERTON A. THOMAS, ESQ.
+
+London: WILLIAM TEGG & CO., 85. Queen Street, Cheapside.
+
+{491}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Just published, price 1s., free by Post 1s., 4d.,
+
+THE WAXED-PAPER PHOTOGRAPHIC PROCESS of GUSTAVE LE GRAY'S NEW EDITION.
+Translated from the French.
+
+Sole Agents in the United Kingdom for VOIGHTLANDER & SON'S celebrated
+Lenses for Portraits and Views.
+
+General Depot for Turner's, Whatman's. Canson Freres', La Croix, and other
+Talbotype Papers.
+
+Pure Photographic Chemicals.
+
+Instructions and Specimens in every Branch of the Art.
+
+GEORGE KNIGHT & SONS, Foster Lane, London.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PHOTOGRAPHIC PAPER.--Negative and Positive Paper of Whatman's, Turners,
+Sanford's, and Canson Freres' make. Waxed-Paper for Le Gray's Process.
+Iodized and Sensitive Paper for every kind of Photography.
+
+Sold by JOHN SANFORD, Photographic Stationer, Aldine Chambers, 13.
+Paternoster Row, London.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PHOTOGRAPHIC PICTURES.--A Selection of the above beautiful Productions
+(comprising Views in VENICE, PARIS, RUSSIA, NUBIA, &c.) may be seen at
+BLAND & LONG'S, 153. Fleet Street, where may also be procured Apparatus of
+every Description, and pure Chemicals for the practice of Photography in
+all its Branches.
+
+Calotype, Daguerreotype, and Glass Pictures for the Stereoscope.
+
+BLAND & LONG, Opticians, Philosophical and Photographical Instrument
+Makers, and Operative Chemists, 153. Fleet Street.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PHOTOGRAPHY.--Collodion (Iodized with the Ammonio-Iodide of Silver).--J. B.
+HOCKIN & CO., Chemists, 289. Strand, were the first in England who
+published the application of this agent (see _Athenaeum_, Aug. 14th). Their
+Collodion (price 9d. per oz.) retains its extraordinary sensitiveness,
+tenacity, and colour unimpaired for months: it may be exported to any
+climate, and the Iodizing Compound mixed as required. J. B. HOCKIN & CO.
+manufacture PURE CHEMICALS and all APPARATUS with the latest Improvements
+adapted for all the Photographic and Daguerreotype processes. Cameras for
+Developing in the open Country. GLASS BATHS adapted to any Camera. Lenses
+from the best Makers. Waxed and Iodized Papers, &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PHOTOGRAPHY--HORNE & CO.'s Iodized Collodion, for obtaining Instantaneous
+Views, and Portraits in from three to thirty seconds, according to light.
+
+Portraits obtained by the above, for delicacy of detail rival the choicest
+Daguerreotypes, specimens of which may be seen at their Establishment.
+
+Also every description of Apparatus, Chemicals, &c. &c. used in this
+beautiful Art.--123. and 121. Newgate Street.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BENNETT'S MODEL WATCH, as shown at the GREAT EXHIBITION, No. 1. Class X.,
+in Gold and Silver Cases, in five qualities, and adapted to all Climates,
+may now be had at the MANUFACTORY, 65. CHEAPSIDE. Superior Gold London-made
+Patent Levers, 17, 15, and 12 guineas. Ditto, in Silver Cases, 8, 6, and 4
+guineas. First-rate Geneva Levers, in Gold Cases, 12, 10, and 8 guineas.
+Ditto, in Silver Cases, 8, 6, and 5 guineas. Superior Lever, with
+Chronometer Balance, Gold, 27, 23, and 19 guineas. Bennett's Pocket
+Chronometer, Gold, 50 guineas; Silver, 40 guineas. Every Watch skilfully
+examined, timed, and its performance guaranteed. Barometers, 2l., 3l., and
+4l. Thermometers from 1s. each.
+
+BENNETT. Watch, Clock, and Instrument Maker to the Royal Observatory, the
+Board of Ordinance, the Admiralty, and the Queen,
+
+65. CHEAPSIDE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CLERICAL, MEDICAL, AND GENERAL LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Established 1824.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FIVE BONUSES have been declared: at the last in January, 1852, the sum of
+131,125l. was added to the Policies, producing a Bonus varying with the
+different ages from 24-1/2 to 55 per cent. on the Premiums paid during the
+five years, or from 5l. to 12l. 10s. per cent. on the Sum Assured.
+
+The small share of Profit divisible in future among the Shareholders being
+now provided for, the ASSURED will hereafter derive all the benefits
+obtainable from a Mutual Office, WITHOUT ANY LIABILITY OR RISK OF
+PARTNERSHIP.
+
+POLICIES effected before the 30th of June next, will be entitled, at the
+next Division, to one year's additional share of Profits over later
+Assurers.
+
+On Assurances for the whole of Life only one half of the Premiums need be
+paid for the first five years.
+
+INVALID LIVES may be Assured at rates proportioned to the risk.
+
+Claims paid _thirty_ days after proof of death, and all Policies are
+_Indisputable_ except in cases of fraud.
+
+Tables of Rates and forms of Proposal can be obtained of any of the
+Society's Agents, or of
+
+GEORGE H. PINCKARD, Resident Secretary.
+
+_99. Great Russell Street, Bloomsbury, London._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+WESTERN LIFE ASSURANCE AND ANNUITY SOCIETY,
+
+3. PARLIAMENT STREET, LONDON.
+
+Founded A.D. 1842.
+
+_Directors._
+
+ H. E. Bicknell, Esq.
+ W. Cabell, Esq.
+ T. S. Cocks, Jun. Esq. M.P.
+ G. H. Drew, Esq.
+ W. Evans, Esq.
+ W. Freeman, Esq.
+ F. Fuller, Esq.
+ J. H. Goodhart, Esq.
+ T. Grissell, Esq.
+ J. Hunt, Esq.
+ J. A. Lethbridge, Esq.
+ E. Lucas, Esq.
+ J. Lys Seager, Esq.
+ J. B. White, Esq.
+ J. Carter Wood, Esq.
+
+_Trustees._
+
+W. Whateley, Esq., Q.C.; L. C. Humfrey, Esq., Q.C.; George Drew, Esq.
+
+_Physician._--William Rich. Basham, M.D.
+
+_Bankers._--Messrs. Cocks, Biddulph, and Co., Charing Cross.
+
+VALUABLE PRIVILEGE.
+
+POLICIES effected in this Office do not become void through temporary
+difficulty in paying a Premium, as permission is given upon application to
+suspend the payment at interest, according to the conditions detailed on
+the Prospectus.
+
+Specimens of Rates of Premium for Assuring 100l., with a Share in
+three-fourths of the Profits:--
+
+ Age _L s. d._
+ 17 1 14 4
+ 22 1 18 8
+ 27 2 4 5
+ 32 2 10 8
+ 37 2 18 6
+ 42 3 8 2
+
+ARTHUR SCRATCHLEY, M.A., F.R.A.S., Actuary.
+
+Now ready, price 10s. 6d., Second Edition, with material additions,
+INDUSTRIAL INVESTMENT and EMIGRATION: being a TREATISE on BENEFIT BUILDING
+SOCIETIES, and on the General Principles of Land Investment, exemplified in
+the Cases of Freehold Land Societies, Building Companies, &c. With a
+Mathematical Appendix on Compound Interest and Life Assurance. By ARTHUR
+SCRATCHLEY, M.A., Actuary to the Western Life Assurance Society, 3.
+Parliament Street, London.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A LITERARY CURIOSITY, sent Free by Post on receipt of Three Postage Stamps.
+A Fac-simile of a very remarkably Curious, Interesting, and Droll Newspaper
+of Charles II.'s Period.
+
+J. H. FENNELL, 1. Warwick Court, Holborn, London.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+WANTED, for the Ladies' Institute, 83. Regent Street, Quadrant. LADIES of
+taste for fancy work.--by paying 21s. will be received as members, and
+taught the new style of velvet wool work, which is acquired in a few easy
+lessons. Each lady will be guaranteed constant employment and ready cash
+payment for her work. Apply personally to Mrs. Thoughey. N. B. Ladies
+taught by letter at any distance from London.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+UNITED KINGDOM LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY: established by Act of Parliament in
+1834.--8. Waterloo Place, Pall Mall, London.
+
+ HONORARY PRESIDENTS.
+
+ Earl of Courtown
+ Earl Leven and Melville
+ Earl of Norbury
+ Earl of Stair
+ Viscount Falkland
+ Lord Elphinstone
+ Lord Belhaven and Stenton
+ Wm. Campbell, Esq., of Tillichewan
+
+ LONDON BOARD.
+
+ _Chairman._--Charles Graham, Esq.
+ _Deputy-Chairman._--Charles Downes, Esq.
+
+ H. Blair Avarne, Esq.
+ E. Lennox Boyd, Esq., F.S.A., _Resident_.
+ C. Berwick Curtis, Esq.
+ William Fairlie, Esq.
+ D. Q. Henriques, Esq.
+ J. G. Henriques, Esq.
+ F. C. Maitland, Esq.
+ William Railton, Esq.
+ F. H. Thomson, Esq.
+ Thomas Thorby, Esq.
+
+ MEDICAL OFFICERS.
+
+ _Physician._--Arthur H. Hassall, Esq., M.D.,
+ 8. Bennett Street, St. James's.
+
+ _Surgeon._--F. H. Tomson, Esq., 48. Berners Street.
+
+The Bonus added to Policies from March, 1834, to December 31, 1847, is as
+follows:--
+
+ Sum | Time | Sum added to | Sum
+ Assured. | Assured. | Policy | Payable
+ | +--------------------+ at Death.
+ | | In 1841. In 1848. |
+ ---------+----------+---------+----------+----------
+ L | | L s.d.| L s.d.| L s.d.
+ 5000 | 14 years | 683 6 8 | 787 10 0 | 6470 16 8
+ * 1000 | 7 years | - - | 157 10 0 | 1157 10 0
+ 500 | 1 year | - - | 11 5 0 | 511 5 0
+
+* EXAMPLE.--At the commencement of the year 1841, a person aged thirty took
+out a Policy for 1000l., the annual payment for which is 24l. 1s. 8d.; in
+1847 he had paid in premiums 168l. 11s. 8d.; but the profits being 2-1/4
+per cent. per annum on the sum insured (which is 22l. 10s. per annum for
+each 1000l.) he had 157l. 10s. added to the Policy, almost as much as the
+premiums paid.
+
+The Premiums, nevertheless, are on the most moderate scale, and only
+one-half need be paid for the first five years, when the Insurance is for
+Life. Every information will be afforded on application to the Resident
+Director.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+HEAL & SON'S ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE OF BEDSTEADS, sent free by post. It
+contains designs and prices of upwards of ONE HUNDRED different Bedsteads:
+also of every description of Bedding, Blankets, and Quilts. And their new
+warerooms contain an extensive assortment of Bed-room Furniture, Furniture
+Chintzes, Damasks, and Dimities, so as to render their Establishment
+complete for the general furnishing of Bed-rooms.
+
+HEAL & SON, Bedstead and Bedding Manufacturers, 196. Tottenham Court Road.
+{492}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MR. HALLIWELL'S
+FOLIO EDITION OF SHAKSPEARE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SPECIMEN COPIES of the First Volume of this Work may be seen at MR.
+SKEFFINGTON'S, 192. Piccadilly, and at MR. RUSSELL SMITH'S, 36. Soho
+Square, London.
+
+The Editor having, at a great sacrifice, adhered to the original limit, and
+the estimates having been considerably exceeded, has been compelled, to
+avoid incurring an extravagant loss, to make the terms very absolute, and
+to raise the Subscription to the later copies. Notwithstanding, therefore,
+the great demand for the Work, a few copies may still be secured by early
+written application.
+
+All communications on the subject are requested to be addressed to--
+
+J. O. HALLIWELL, ESQ., AVENUE LODGE, BRIXTON HILL, SURREY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+TO ALL WHO HAVE FARMS OR GARDENS.
+
+THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
+
+(The Horticultural Part edited by PROF. LINDLEY)
+
+Of Saturday May 7, contains Articles on
+
+ Agriculture, history of
+ Attraction, capillary
+ Barley, to transplant, by Messrs. Hardy
+ Beetle, instinct of
+ Books noticed
+ Butterfly, instinct of
+ Calendar, horticultural
+ ----, agricultural
+ Columnea Schiedeana
+ Dahlia, the, by Mr. Edwards
+ Digging machine, Samuelson's
+ Eggs, to keep
+ Farm leases, by Mr. Morton
+ Frost, plants injured by
+ Grapes, colouring
+ Green, German, by Mr. Prideaux
+ Heat, bottom
+ Heating, gas, by Mr. Lucas
+ Ireland, tenant-right in
+ Kilwhiss _v._ Rothamsted experiments, by Mr. Russell
+ Land, transfer of
+ Law of transfer
+ Leases, farm, by Mr. Morton
+ Level, new plummet, by Mr. Ennis
+ Nelumbium luteum
+ Orchard houses, by Mr. Russell (with engravings)
+ Orchids, sale of
+ Paints, green, by Mr. Prideaux
+ Plants, effects of frost on
+ ----, bottom-heat for
+ Potatoe disease, by Mr. Hopps
+ Rooks
+ Schools, self-supporting
+ Society of Arts
+ Societies, proceedings of the Horticultural, Linnean, National
+ Floricultural, Agricultural of England
+ Sparrows
+ Strawberry, Cuthill's
+ Tenant-right in Ireland
+ Veitch's Nursery, Chelsea
+ Water Lilies, eradicating
+ Winter, the late
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE and AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE contains, in addition to
+the above, the Covent Garden, Mark Lane, Smithfield, and Liverpool prices,
+with returns from the Potato, Hop, Hay, Coal, Timber, Bark, Wool, and Seed
+Markets, and a _complete Newspaper, with a condensed account of all the
+transactions of the week_.
+
+ORDER of any Newsvender. OFFICE for Advertisements, 5. Upper Wellington
+Street, Covent Gardens, London.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Published on the 4th May, 1853, in One Volume 4to., cloth, price 24s.
+
+A NEW GREEK HARMONY OF THE FOUR GOSPELS, including an Introductory
+Treatise, and numerous Tables, Indexes, and Diagrams. By WILLIAM STROUD,
+M.D.
+
+SAMUEL BAGSTER & SONS, 15. Paternoster Row, London.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MUSEUM OF CLASSICAL ANTIQUITIES.
+Vol. II. Pt. 4. 6s. 6d., and Supplement 5s., April and May, 1853.
+
+ON THE TRUE SITE OF CALVARY, with a restored Plan of the ancient City of
+JERUSALEM.
+
+By [Arabic: **]
+
+T. RICHARDS, 37. Great Queen Street, Lincoln's Inn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+NEW EDITION OF LAYS OF THE SCOTTISH CAVALIERS.
+
+On Monday will be published in fcap. 8vo., a new Edition, being the SIXTH,
+of
+
+LAYS OF THE SCOTTISH CAVALIERS. BY W. EDMONSTOUN AYTOUN. Price 7s. 6d.
+
+WILLIAM BLACKWOOD & SONS, Edinburgh and London.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+This day is published,
+
+PICTORIAL ILLUSTRATIONS of the Catalogue of Manuscripts in Gonville and
+Caius College Library. Selected by the REV. J. J. SMITH. Being Facsimiles
+of Illumination, Text, and Autograph, done in Lithograph, 4to. size, with
+Letter-press Description in 8vo., as Companion to the published Catalogue,
+price 1l. 4s.
+
+A few copies may be had of which the colouring of the Plates is more highly
+finished. Price 1l. 10s.
+
+Cambridge: JOHN DEIGHTON.
+
+London: GEORGE BELL.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CONCLUDING VOLUME OF ARNOLD'S SELECTIONS FROM CICERO.
+
+Now ready, 12mo., price 2s. 6d.
+
+SELECTIONS from CICERO. Part V.; CATO MAJOR, sive De SENECTUTE Dialogus.
+With English Notes, from the German of JULIUS SOMMERBRODT, by the REV.
+HENRY BROWNE, M.A., Canon of Chichester. (Forming a New Volume of ARNOLD'S
+SCHOOL CLASSICS.)
+
+RIVINGTONS, St. Paul's Church Yard, and Waterloo Place.
+
+Of whom may be had, (in the same Series,)
+
+SELECTIONS from CICERO, with ENGLISH NOTES. PART I. Orations, 4s. PART II.
+Epistles, 5s. PART III. Tusculan Disputations, 5s. 6d. PART IV. De Finibus
+Malorum et Bonorum. 5s. 6d.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Just published, quarto, 5s., cloth,
+
+TEMPLE BAR: THE CITY GOLGOTHA.--Narrative of the Historical Occurrences of
+a Criminal Character, associated with the present Bar. BY A MEMBER OF THE
+INNER TEMPLE.
+
+ "A chatty and anecdotical history of this last remaining gate of the
+ city, acceptable particularly to London antiquaries."--_Notes and
+ Queries_.
+
+DAVID BOGUE, Fleet Street.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+IN VOLUMES FOR THE POCKET, PRICE FIVE SHILLINGS EACH.
+
+Now ready, in Six Volumes, fcp. 8vo., price 5s. each.
+
+BOWDLER'S FAMILY SHAKSPEARE. In which nothing is _added_ to the Original
+Text; but those Words and Expressions are _omitted_ which cannot with
+propriety be read aloud in a Family. A New Edition.
+
+*** Also a LIBRARY EDITION, with 36 Wood Engravings, from Designs by
+Smirke, Howard, and other Artists; complete in One Volume, 8vo., price One
+Guinea.
+
+London: LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, & LONGINGS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE NATIONAL MISCELLANY, No. I., for MAY, price 1s., contains:--
+
+ 1. Our First Words.
+ 2. A Few Words for May-Day.
+ 3. The Love of Horrors.
+ 4. Layard's Last Discoveries.
+ 5. Railway Literature.
+ 6. The Old Royal Palaces at Oxford.
+ 7. The Poultry Mania.
+ 8. Public Libraries.
+ 9. Slavery in America.
+ 10. Social Life in Paris.
+
+JOHN HENRY PARKER 377. Strand; and of all Booksellers and Railway stations.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ROYAL ASYLUM OF ST. ANN'S SOCIETY.--Waiting not for the Child of those once
+in prosperity to become an Orphan, but by Voluntary Contributions affording
+at once a Home, Clothing, Maintenance, and Education.
+
+The Half-yearly Election will take place at the London Tavern on Friday,
+August l2th, next.
+
+Forms of Nomination may be procured at the Office, where Subscriptions will
+be thankfully received.
+
+Executors of Benefactors by Will become Life Governors according to the
+amount of the Bequest.
+
+E. F. LEEKS, Secretary.
+
+2. Charlotte Row, Mansion House.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Printed by THOMAS CLARK SHAW, of No. 10. Stonefield Street, in the Parish
+of St. Mary, Islington, at No. 5. New Street Square, in the Parish of St.
+Bride, in the City of London; and published by GEORGE BELL, of No. 186.
+Fleet Street, in the Parish of St. Dunstan in the West, in the City of
+London, Publisher, at No. 186. Fleet Street aforesaid.--Saturday, May 14,
+1853.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Queries, Number 185, May 14,
+1853, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES AND QUERIES ***
+
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