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+Project Gutenberg's Notes and Queries, Number 80, May 10, 1851, 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 80, May 10, 1851
+ A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists,
+ Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: May 23, 2010 [EBook #32495]
+
+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
+http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
+generously made available by The Internet Library of Early
+Journals.)
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note: A few typographical errors have been corrected: they
+are listed at the end of the text.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+{361} NOTES AND QUERIES:
+
+A MEDIUM OF INTER-COMMUNICATION FOR LITERARY MEN, ARTISTS, ANTIQUARIES,
+GENEALOGISTS, ETC.
+
+"When found, make a note of."--CAPTAIN CUTTLE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+No. 80.]
+SATURDAY, MAY 10. 1851..
+[Price Threepence. Stamped Edition 4d.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ Page
+
+ The Great Exhibition, Notes and Queries, and Chaucer's
+ Prophetic View of the Crystal Palace 361
+
+ NOTES:--
+ On "The Lay of the Last Minstrel" 364
+
+ Poems discovered among the Papers of Sir Kenelm
+ Digby 367
+
+ Folk-Lore:--The Christmas Thorn--Milk-maids--Disease
+ cured by Sheep--Sacramental Wine--"Nettle in Dock out" 367
+
+ Metropolitan Improvements, by R. J. King 368
+
+ Minor Notes:--Meaning of Luncheon--Charade upon
+ Nothing translated--Giving the Lie--Anachronisms
+ of Painters--Spenser's Faerie Queene--Prayer of
+ Mary Queen of Scots--A small Instance of Warren
+ Hastings' Magnanimity--Richard Baxter--Registry
+ of Dissenting Baptisms in Churches 369
+
+ QUERIES:--
+ Notes and Queries relating to Scandinavia, by W. E. C.
+ Nourse 370
+
+ The Rotation of the Earth, by Robert Snow 371
+
+ Minor Queries:--William ap Jevan's Descendants--
+ "Geographers on Afric's Downs"--Irish Brigade--Passage
+ in Oldham--Mont-de-Piété--Poem upon the Grave--When
+ self-striking Clocks first invented--Clarkson's
+ Richmond--Sir Francis Windebank's elder Son--Incised
+ Slab--Etymology of Balsall--St. Olave's Churches--
+ Sabbatical and Jubilee Years of the Jews--Arms of the
+ Isle of Man--Doctrine of the Resurrection--National
+ Debts--Leicester's Commonwealth 372
+
+ REPLIES:--
+ Histoire des Sévarambes 374
+
+ Was there an "Outer Temple" in the Possession of the
+ Knights Templars or Knights of St. John? by Peter
+ Cunningham 375
+
+ Obeism, by H. H. Breen 376
+
+ San Marino 376
+
+ The Bellman and his History, by C. H. Cooper 377
+
+ Replies to Minor Queries:--"God takes those soonest,"
+ &c.--Disinterment for Heresy--The Vellum-bound
+ Junius--Pursuits of Literature--Dutch Books--Engilbert,
+ Archbishop of Treves--Charles Lamb's
+ Epitaph--Charles II. in Wales--"Ex Pede Herculem"--God's
+ Acre--Abbot Eustacius--Vox Populi
+ Vox Dei--Francis Moore and his Almanack 377
+
+ MISCELLANEOUS:--
+ Notes on Books, Sales, Catalogues, &c. 381
+
+ Books and Odd Volumes wanted 382
+
+ Notices to Correspondents 382
+
+ Advertisements 382
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE GREAT EXHIBITION, NOTES AND QUERIES, AND CHAUCER'S PROPHETIC VIEW OF
+THE CRYSTAL PALACE.
+
+The first of May, eighteen hundred and fifty-one, will be remembered in the
+Calendar for centuries after those who witnessed its glories shall have
+passed away. Its memory will endure with our language; and the Macaulays
+and Hallams of the time to come will add brilliancy to their pages by
+recounting the gorgeous yet touching ceremonial of this great Apotheosis of
+Peace. Peace has occasionally received some foretaste of that day's glory;
+but only at times, when the sense of its value had been purchased by the
+horrors which accompany even the most glorious warfare. But never until the
+reign of Victoria were its blessings thus recognised and thus celebrated,
+after they had been uninterruptedly enjoyed for upwards of a quarter of a
+century. Who then, among the thousands assembled around our Sovereign in
+that eventful scene, but felt his joy heightened by gratitude, that his lot
+had been cast in these happy days.
+
+It was a proud day for Queen Victoria, for her Illustrious Consort, for all
+who had had "art or part" in the great work so happily conceived, so
+admirably executed. And we would add (even at the risk of reminding our
+readers of Dennis' energetic claim, "That's my Thunder!") that it was also
+a proud day for all who, like ourselves, desire to promote
+intercommunication between men of the same pursuits,--to bring them
+together in a spirit, not of envious rivalry, but of generous
+emulation,--to make their powers, faculties, and genius subservient to the
+common welfare of mankind. In our humble way we have striven earnestly to
+perform our share in this great mission; and although in the Crystal Palace
+cottons may take the place of comments, steam-engines of Shakspeare, the
+palpable creations of the sculptor of the super-sensual imaginings of the
+poet, the real of the ideal,--still the GREAT EXHIBITION OF THE INDUSTRY OF
+ALL NATIONS is, in more senses than one, merely a MONSTER NUMBER OF "NOTES
+AND QUERIES." So palpable, indeed, is this similarity, that, if the
+long-talked-of _Order of Civil Merit_ should be instituted, (and certainly
+there was never a more fitting moment than the present for so honouring the
+cultivators of the peaceful arts), we make no doubt that "NOTES AND
+QUERIES" will not be forgotten. Should our prophecy be fulfilled, we need
+scarcely remind our readers of Captain Cuttle's injunction and our Motto.
+{362}
+
+And here, talking of prophecy, we would, first reminding our readers how,
+in the olden time, the Poet and the Prophet were looked upon as identical,
+call their attention to the following vision of our Queen in her Crystal
+Palace, which met the eye when in "fine phrensy rolling" of the Father of
+English Poetry, as he has recorded in his _House of Fame_. Had Chaucer
+attended the opening of the Exhibition as "_Our own Reporter_," could his
+description have been more exact?
+
+ THE TEMPLE Y-MADE OF GLAS.
+
+ _A Prevision by Dan Chaucer_, A.D. 1380.
+
+ Now hearken every manir man
+ That English understandè can,
+ And listeth to my dreme to here,
+ For nowe at erst shall ye lere:
+ O thought, that wrote al that I met
+ And in the tresorie it set
+ Of my braine, nowe shall men see
+ If any vertue in thee bee
+ To tellen al my dreme aright
+ Nowe kithe thy engine and thy might!
+ * * * * * *
+ But, as I slept, me mette I was
+ Within a temple ymade of glas,
+ In which there were mo images
+ Of gold, standing in sundry stages,
+ Sette in mo rich tabernacles,
+ And with perrie mo pinnacles,
+ And mo curious portraitures,
+ And queint manner of figures
+ Of gold worke, than I saw ever.
+ But all the men that been on live
+ Ne han the conning to descrive
+ The beaute of that ilke place,
+ Ne couden casten no compace
+ Soch another for to make,
+ That might of beauty be his make;
+ Ne so wonderly ywrought,
+ That it astonieth yet my thought,
+ And maketh all my witte to swinke
+ On this castel for to thinke,
+ So that the wondir great beautie
+ Caste, crafte, and curiositie,
+ Ne can I not to you devise,
+ My witte ne may not me suffise;
+ But nathelesse all the substaunce
+ I have yet in my remembraunce,
+ For why? Me thoughtin, by saint Gile,
+ All was of stone of berile,
+ Bothe the castel and the toure,
+ And eke the hall, and every boure;
+ Without peeces or joynings,
+ But many subtell compassings,
+ As barbicans and pinnacles,
+ Imageries and tabernacles;
+ I saw, and ful eke of windowes
+ As flakes fallen in great snowes;
+ And eke in each of the pinnacles
+ Weren sundry habitacles.
+ When I had seene all this sight
+ In this noble temple thus,
+ Hey, Lord, thought I, that madest us,
+ Yet never saw I such noblesse
+ Of images, nor such richesse
+ As I see graven in this church,
+ But nought wote I who did them worche,
+ Yet certaine as I further passe,
+ I wol you all the shape devise.
+ Yet I ententive was to see,
+ And for to poren wondre low,
+ If I could anywise yknow
+ What manner stone this castel was:
+ For it was like a limed glas,
+ But that it shone full more clere,
+ But of what congeled matere
+ It was, I n' iste redely,
+ But at the last espied I,
+ And found that it was every dele
+ A thing of yse and not of stele:
+ Thought I, "_By Saint Thomas of Kent,_
+ _This were a feeble foundement_
+ _To builden on a place so hie;_
+ _He ought him little to glorifie_
+ _That hereon bilte, God so me save._"
+ But, Lord, so faire it was to shewe,
+ For it was all with gold behewe:
+ Lo, how should I now tell all this,
+ Ne of the hall eke what need is?
+ But in I went, and that anone,
+ There met I crying many one
+ "A larges, a larges, hold up well!
+ God save the Lady of this pell!
+ Our owne gentill Lady Fame
+ And hem that willen to have a name."
+ For in this lustie and rich place
+ All on hie above a deis
+ Satte in a see imperiall
+ That made was of rubie royall
+ A feminine creature
+ That never formed by nature
+ Was soche another one I saie:
+ For alderfirst, soth to saie,
+ Me thought that she was so lite
+ That the length of a cubite
+ Was lenger than she seemed to be;
+ * * * * * *
+ Tho was I ware at the last
+ As mine eyen gan up cast
+ That this ilke noble queene
+ On her shoulders gan sustene
+ Both the armes and the name
+ Of tho that had large fame.
+ And thus found I sitting this goddesse
+ In noble honour and richesse
+ Of which I stinte a while now
+ Other thing to tellen you.
+ {363}
+ But Lord the perrie and the richesse,
+ I saw sitting on the goddesse,
+ And the heavenly melodie
+ Of songes full of armonie
+ I heard about her trone ysong
+ That all the palais wall rong.
+ Tho saw I standen hem behind
+ A farre from hem, all by hemselve
+ Many a thousand times twelve,
+ That made loud minstralcies,
+ In conemuse and shalmies,
+ And many another pipe,
+ That craftely began to pipe.
+ And Pursevauntes and Heraudes
+ That crien riche folkes laudes,
+ It weren, all and every man
+ Of hem, as I you tellen can,
+ Had on him throwe a vesture
+ Which men clepe a coate armure.
+ Then saw I in anothir place,
+ Standing in a large space,
+ Of hem that maken bloudy soun,
+ In trumpet, beme, and clarioun.
+ Then saw I stande on thother side
+ Streight downe to the doores wide,
+ From the deis many a pillere
+ Of metall, that shone not full clere,
+ But though ther were of no richesse
+ Yet were they made for great noblesse.
+ There saw I, and knew by name
+ That by such art done, men have fame.
+ There saw I Coll Tragetour
+ Upon a table of sicamour
+ Play an uncouth thing to tell,
+ I saw him carry a wind-mell
+ Under a walnote shale.
+ Then saw I sitting in other sees,
+ Playing upon sundrie other glees,
+ Of which I n' ill as now not rime,
+ For ease of you and losse of time,
+ For time ylost, this know ye,
+ By no way may recovered be.
+ What should I make longer tale?
+ Of all the people that I sey
+ I could not tell till domisdey.
+ Then gan I loke about and see
+ That there came entring into the hall
+ A right great company withall,
+ And that of sondry regions
+ Of all kind of condicions
+ That dwelle in yearth under the Moone,
+ Poore and riche; and all so soone
+ As they were come into the hall
+ They gan on knees doune to fall
+ Before this ilke noble queene.
+ "_Madame,_" sayd they, "_we bee_
+ _Folke that here besechen thee_
+ _That thou graunt us now good fame,_
+ _And let our workes have good name;_
+ _In full recompensacioun_
+ _Of good worke, give us good renoun._"
+ And some of hem she graunted sone,
+ And some she warned well and faire,
+ And some she graunted the _contraire_.
+ Now certainly I ne wist how,
+ Ne where that Fame dwelled or now,
+ Ne eke of her descripcion,
+ Ne also her condicion,
+ Ne the order of her _dome_
+ Knew I not till I hider come.
+ * * * * * *
+ At the last I saw a man,
+ Which that I nought ne can,
+ But he semed for to bee,
+ A man of great auctoritie
+ And therewithall I abraide,
+ Out of my slepe halfe afraide,
+ Remembring well what I had sene,
+ And how hie and farre I had bene
+ In my gost, and had great wonder
+ Of that the God of thonder
+ Had let me knowen, and began to write
+ Like as you have herd me endite,
+ Wherefore to study and rede alway,
+ I purpose to do day by day.
+ Thus in dreaming and in game,
+ Endeth this litell booke of Fame.
+
+We are indebted for this interesting communication to our correspondent
+A. E. B., whose admirable ILLUSTRATIONS OF CHAUCER in our columns have
+given so much pleasure to the admirers of the old poet. Our correspondent
+has sent it to us in the hope that it may be made available in helping
+forward the good work of restoring Chaucer's tomb. We trust it will. The
+Committee who have undertaken that task could, doubtless, raise the hundred
+pounds required, by asking those who have already come forward to help
+them, to change their Crown subscriptions into Pounds. With a right feeling
+for what is due to the poet, they prefer, however, accomplishing the end
+they have in view by small contributions from the admiring many, rather
+than by larger contributions from the few. As we doubt not we number among
+the readers of "NOTES AND QUERIES" many admirers of
+
+ "Old Dan Chaucer, in whose gentle spright,
+ The pure well-head of poetry did dwell,"
+
+to them we appeal, that the monument which was erected by the affectionate
+respect of Nicholas Brigham, nearly three centuries ago, may not in our
+time be permitted to crumble into dust; reminding them, in Chaucer's own
+beautiful language,
+
+ "That they are gentle who do gentle dedes."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+{364}
+
+NOTES.
+
+ON "THE LAY OF THE LAST MINSTREL."
+
+I resume the subject commenced in the comments on "a Passage in _Marmion_,"
+printed in No. 72., March 15, 1851; and I here propose to consider the
+groundwork and mechanism of the most original, though not quite the first
+production of Scott's muse, _The Lay of the Last Minstrel_. In the
+Introduction prefixed to this poem, nearly thirty years after its
+publication, Sir Walter Scott informs the world that the young Countess of
+Dalkeith, much interested and delighted with the wild Border tradition of
+the goblin called "Gilpin Horner" (which is given at length in the notes
+appended to the poem), enjoined on him the task of composing a ballad on
+the subject:
+
+ "And thus" (says Sir Walter) "the goblin story _objected to by several
+ critics as an excrescence upon the poem_, was, in fact, the occasion of
+ its being written."
+
+Yes, and more than this; for, strange as it may appear to those who have
+not critically and minutely attempted to unravel the very artful and
+complicated plot of this singular poem, the Goblin Page is, as it were, the
+key-note to the whole composition, the agent through whose instrumentality
+the fortunes of the house of Branksome are built up anew by the
+pacification of ancient feud, and the union of the fair Margaret with Henry
+of Cranstoun. Yet, so deeply veiled is the plot, and so intricately
+contrived the machinery, that I question if this fact be apparent to one
+reader out of a thousand; and assuredly it has never been presented to my
+view by any one of the critics with whose comments I have become
+acquainted.
+
+The Aristarchus of the _Edinburgh Review_, Mr. Jeffrey, who forsooth
+thought fit to regard the new and original creations of a mighty and
+inventive genius "as a misapplication, in some degree, of very
+extraordinary talents," and "conceived it his duty to make one strong
+effort to bring back _the great apostle of this (literary) heresy to the
+wholesome creed of his instructor_," seems not to have penetrated one inch
+below the surface. In his opinion "the Goblin Page is the capital deformity
+of the poem," "_a perpetual burden_ to the poet and to the readers," "an
+undignified and improbable fiction, which excites neither terror,
+admiration, nor astonishment, but needlessly debases the strain of the
+whole work, and excites at once our incredulity and contempt."
+
+Perhaps so, to the purblind vision of a pedantic formalist; but,
+nevertheless, _The Lay of the Last Minstrel_, that poem, whose varied
+imagery and vivid originality, combined with all its other beauties, have
+been, and ever will be, the delight and admiration of its readers, could
+not exist without this so-called "capital deformity." This I shall
+undertake to demonstrate, and in so doing to prove the "capital absurdity"
+of such criticism as I have cited.
+
+Let us therefore begin with the beginning. The widowed Lady of Branksome,
+brooding over the outrage which had deprived her husband of life, meditates
+only vengeance upon all the parties concerned in this affray. The lovely
+Lady Margaret wept in wild despair, for her lover had stood in arms against
+her father's clan:
+
+ "And well she knew, her mother dread,
+ Before Lord Cranstoun she should wed,
+ Would see her on her dying bed."
+
+The first Canto of the poem contains that singular episode, when--
+
+ "(The Ladye) sits in secret bower
+ In old Lord David's western tower,
+ And listens to a heavy sound
+ That moans the mossy turrets round," &c.
+
+ "From the sound of Teviot's tide
+ Chafing with the mountain side,
+ &c. &c.
+ The Ladye knew it well!
+ It was the Spirit of the Flood that spoke,
+ And he called on the Spirit of the Fell."
+
+And when the River Spirit asks concerning the fair Margaret, who had
+mingled her tears with his stream:
+
+ "What shall be the maiden's fate?
+ Who shall be the maiden's mate?"
+
+the Mountain Spirit replies, that, amid the clouds and mist which veil the
+stars,--
+
+ "Ill may I read their high decree:
+ But no kind influence deign they shower
+ On Teviot's tide and Branksome's tower,
+ Till _pride be quelled_, and _love be free_."
+
+I must here transcribe the following Section xviii.:
+
+ "The unearthly voices ceased,
+ And the heavy sound was still;
+ It died on the river's breast,
+ It died on the side of the hill.
+ But round Lord David's tower,
+ The sound still floated near,
+ For it rung in the Ladye's bower,
+ And it rung in the Ladye's ear,
+ She raised her stately head,
+ And her heart throbbed high with pride:
+ 'Your mountains shall bend,
+ And your streams ascend,
+ Ere Margaret be our foeman's bride!'"
+
+In pursuance of this stern resolution, "the Ladye sought the lofty hall"
+where her retainers were assembled:
+
+ "And from amid the armed train
+ She called to her William of Deloraine."
+
+She then gives him the commission, well remembered by every reader, to
+proceed on that night to Melrose Abbey to unclose the grave of Michael
+{365} Scott, and to rifle it of the magical volume which was accessible
+only on St. Michael's night, at the precise moment when the rays of the
+moon should throw the reflexion of the red cross emblazoned in the eastern
+oriel upon the wizard's monumental stone,--expecting that the possession of
+this "Book of Might" would enable her to direct the destiny of her daughter
+according to the dictates of her own imperious nature. "Dîs aliter visum."
+Fate and MICHAEL SCOTT had willed it otherwise. And here I must beg my
+readers to take notice that this far-famed wizard, Michael Scott, although
+dead and buried, is supposed still to exert his influence from the world of
+spirits as the guardian genius of the house of Buccleuch; and he had been
+beforehand with the Ladye of Branksome in providing Henry of Cranstoun with
+one of his familiar spirits, in the shape of the Goblin Page, _by whose
+agency alone_ (however unconscious the subordinate agent may be) a chain of
+events is linked together which results in the union of the two lovers.
+After this parenthesis I resume the thread of the narrative.
+
+Deloraine rides to Melrose in the night, presents himself to the Monk of
+St. Mary's aisle, opens the sepulchre of the wizard, and presumes to take
+
+ "From the cold hand the Mighty Book,"
+
+in spite of the _ominous frown_ which darkened the countenance of the dead.
+He remounts his steed and wends his way homeward
+
+ "As the dawn of day
+ Began to brighten Cheviot gray;"
+
+while the aged monk, having performed the last duty allotted to him in his
+earthly pilgrimage, retired to his cell and breathed his last in prayer and
+penitence before the cross.
+
+Ere Deloraine could reach his journey's end, he encounters a feudal foeman
+in the person of Lord Cranstoun, attended by his Goblin Page, who is here
+first introduced to the reader. A conflict takes place, and Deloraine being
+struck down wounded and senseless, is left by his adversary to the charge
+of this elf, who in stripping off his corslet espied the "Mighty Book."
+With the curiosity of an imp he opens the iron-clasped volume by smearing
+the cover with the blood of the knight, and reads ONE SPELL, _and one
+alone, by permission_; for
+
+ "He had not read another spell,
+ When on his cheek a buffet fell,
+ So fierce, it stretched him on the plain
+ Beside the wounded Deloraine.
+ From the ground he rose dismayed,
+ And shook his huge and matted head;
+ One word he muttered, and no more,
+ 'Man of age, thou smitest sore!'
+ &c. &c.
+ Now, if you ask who gave the stroke,
+ I cannot tell, so mot I thrive--
+ _It was not given by man alive._"
+
+But he had read sufficient for the purposes of his mission, and we shall
+see how he applies the knowledge so marvellously acquired.
+
+By the glamour of this spell he was empowered to make one thing assume the
+form of another.
+
+ "It had much of glamour might,
+ Could make a ladye seem a knight;
+ The cobwebs on a dungeon wall,
+ Seem tapestry in a lordly hall,"
+ &c. &c.
+
+The first use he makes of his power is to convey the wounded knight, laid
+across his weary horse, into Branksome Hall
+
+ "Before the beards of the warders all;
+ And each did after swear and say,
+ There only passed a wain of hay."
+
+Having deposited him at the door of the Ladye's bower, he repasses the
+outer court, and finding the young chief at play, entices him into the
+woods under the guise _to him_ of a "comrade gay."
+
+ "Though on the drawbridge, the warders stout,
+ Saw a terrier and a lurcher passing out;"
+
+and, leading him far away "o'er bank and fell," well nigh frightens the
+fair boy to death by resuming his own elvish shape.
+
+ "Could he have had his pleasure wilde,
+ He had crippled the joints of the noble child;
+ &c. &c.
+ But his awful mother he had in dread,
+ _And also his power was limited_,"
+ &c. &c.
+
+Here let me observe that all this contrivance is essential to the conduct
+of the narrative, and if we simply grant the postulate which a legendary
+minstrel has a right to demand, to wit, the potency of magic spells to
+effect such delusions (pictoribus atque Poetis _Quidlibet audendi_ semper
+fuit æqua potestas), all the remainder of the narrative is easy, natural,
+and probable. This contrivance is necessary, because, in the first place,
+if it had been known to the warders that William of Deloraine had been
+brought into the castle wounded almost unto death, he could not be supposed
+capable of engaging Richard Musgrave in single combat two days afterwards;
+nor, in the second place, would the young chief have been permitted to
+stroll out unattended from the guarded precincts.
+
+To proceed: the boy thus bewildered in the forest falls into the lands of
+an English forayer, and is by him conveyed to Lord Dacre, at that time one
+of the Wardens of the Marches, by whom he is detained as a hostage, and
+carried along with the English troops, then advancing towards Branksome
+under the command of the Lord Wardens in person.
+
+ "(But) though the child was led away,
+ In Branksome still he seemed to stay,
+ For so the Dwarf his part did play."
+
+{366} And there, according to his own malicious nature, played likewise a
+score of monkey tricks, all of which, grotesque and "_undignified_"! as
+they may be, yet most ingeniously divert the mind of the reader from the
+real errand and mission of this supernatural being.
+
+Shortly afterwards, on his exhibiting symptoms of cowardice at the expected
+contest, he is conveyed from the castle by the Ladye's order, and speedily
+rejoins his lord, after the infliction of a severe chastisement from the
+arm of Wat Tinlinn. He then procures Cranstoun's admission within the walls
+of Branksome (where the whole clan Scott was assembling at the tidings of
+the English Raid) by the same spell--
+
+ "Which to his lord he did impart,
+ And made him seem, by glamour art,
+ A knight from hermitage."
+
+And on the following day, as Deloraine did not appear in the lists ready to
+engage in the appointed duel with Richard Musgrave, we are told,--
+
+ "Meantime, full anxious was the Dame,
+ For now arose disputed claim,
+ Of who should fight for Deloraine,
+ 'Twixt Harden and 'twixt Thirtlestaine,
+ &c. &c.
+ But yet, not long the strife--for, lo!
+ Himself the Knight of Deloraine,
+ Strong, as it seemed, and free from pain,
+ In armour sheathed from top to toe,
+ Appeared, and craved the combat due;
+ The Dame her charm successful knew,
+ And the fierce chiefs their claims withdrew."
+
+The conflict takes place, and ends in favour of the Scottish knight; when
+the following scene occurs:
+
+ "As if exhausted in the fight,
+ Or musing o'er the piteous sight,
+ The silent victor stands:
+ His beaver did he not unclasp,
+ Marked not the shouts, felt not the grasp
+ Of gratulating hands.
+ When lo! strange cries of wild surprise,
+ Mingled with seeming terror rise
+ Among the Scottish bands,
+ And all, amid the thronged array,
+ In panic haste gave open way
+ To a half-naked ghastly man,
+ Who downward from the castle ran;
+ He crossed the barriers at a bound,
+ And wild and haggard looked around,
+ As dizzy, and in pain;
+ And all, upon the armed ground
+ Knew William of Deloraine!
+ Each ladye sprung from seat with speed,
+ Vaulted each marshal from his steed;
+ 'And who art thou,' they cried,
+ 'Who hast this battle fought and won?'
+ His plumed helm was soon undone--
+ 'Cranstoun of Teviotside!
+ For this fair prize I've fought and won,'
+ And to the Ladye led her son."
+
+Then is described the struggle that takes place in the maternal breast:
+
+ "And how the clan united prayed
+ The Ladye would the feud forego,
+ And deign to bless the nuptial hour
+ Of Cranstoun's Lord and Teviot's Flower.
+
+ XXVI.
+
+ "She looked to river, looked to hill,
+ Thought on the Spirit's prophecy,
+ Then broke her silence stern and still,
+ 'Not you, _but Fate_, has vanquished me;
+ _Their influence kindly stars may shower_
+ On Teviot's tide and Branksome's tower,
+ For pride _is_ quelled, and love _is_ free.'"
+
+The mission of the elf is now accomplished, his last special service having
+been to steal the armour of William of Deloraine "while slept the knight,"
+and thus to enable his master to personate that warrior.
+
+It may be remarked that hitherto there is no direct evidence that the Page
+was sent by Michael Scott. That evidence is reserved for the moment of his
+final disappearance.
+
+On the same evening, after the celebration of the nuptials, a mysterious
+and intense blackness enveloped the assembled company in Branksome Hall.
+
+ "A secret horror checked the feast,
+ And chilled the soul of every guest;
+ Even the high Dame stood half aghast,
+ She knew some evil in the blast;
+ The elvish Page fell to the ground,
+ And, shuddering, muttered, 'Found! found! found!'
+
+ XXV.
+
+ "Then sudden through the darkened air,
+ A flash of lightning came,
+ So broad, so bright, so red the glare,
+ The castle seemed on flame,
+ &c. &c.
+ Full through the guests' bedazzled band
+ Resistless flashed the levin-brand,
+ And filled the hall with smouldering smoke,
+ As on the elvish Page it broke,
+ &c. &c.
+ When ended was the dreadful roar,
+ The elvish Dwarf was seen no more.
+
+ XXVI.
+
+ "Some heard a voice in Branksome Hall,
+ Some saw a sight, not seen by all;
+ That dreadful voice was heard by some
+ Cry, with loud summons, 'Gylbin, come!'
+ And on the spot where burst the brand,
+ Just where the Page had flung him down,
+ Some saw an arm, and some a hand,
+ And some the waving of a gown:
+ The guests in silence prayed and shook,
+ And terror dimmed each lofty look,
+ But none of all the astonished train
+ _Was so dismayed as Deloraine,_
+ &c. &c.
+ {367}
+ At length, by fits, he darkly told,
+ With broken hint, and shuddering cold,
+ That he had seen, right certainly,
+ _A shape with amice wrapped around,_
+ _With a wrought Spanish baldric bound,_
+ _Like a pilgrim from beyond the sea,_
+ And knew--but how it mattered not--
+ IT WAS THE WIZARD, MICHAEL SCOTT."
+
+After this final consummation, it is amusing to notice a slight "incuria"
+on the part of the poet, which I wonder has never been corrected in the
+later editions. Having described the nuptial ceremony of Cranstoun and
+Margaret in the early part of the last Canto, he says in Section xxviii.,
+
+ "Nought of the bridal _will_ I tell,
+ Which _after_ in short space befell,"
+ &c. &c.
+
+I think I have now succeeded in proving that the Goblin Page, so far from
+being a mere "_intruder_" into this glorious poem--so far from being a mere
+after-thought, or interpolation, to "suit the taste of the cottagers of the
+Border," as Mr. Jeffrey "suspects,"--is the essential instrument for
+constructing the machinery of the plot. We have, indeed, the author's word
+that it formed the foundation of the poem. My readers will therefore form
+their own estimate of the value of Mr. Jeffrey's criticisms, couched as
+they are in no very considerate, much less complimentary phraseology. I
+cannot but admire the "douce vengeance" of the gentle-spirited subject of
+his rebukes, who has contented himself with printing these worthless
+sentences of an undiscerning critic along with the text of his poems in the
+last edition,--there to remain a standing memorial of the wisdom of that
+resolution adhered to throughout the life of the accomplished author, who
+tells us,
+
+ "That he from the first determined, that without shutting his ears to
+ the voice of true criticism, he would pay no regard to that which
+ assumed the form of satire."
+
+In point of fact, Sir Walter had no very exalted opinion of the _genus_
+Critic; and I could give one or two anecdotes, which I heard from his own
+lips, strongly reminding one of the old fable of the painter who pleased
+nobody and everybody.
+
+In conclusion, I beg leave to observe, that in these "Notes" I do not
+presume to underrate, in any degree, Mr. Jeffrey's acknowledged powers of
+criticism. He and Scott have alike passed away from the stage of which they
+were long the ornaments in their respective spheres; but I must consider
+that in the passages here cited, _as well as in many others_, he has proved
+himself either incompetent or unwilling to appreciate the originality, the
+power, and, above all, the invention of Sir Walter Scott's genius.
+
+A BORDERER.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+POEMS DISCOVERED AMONG THE PAPERS OF SIR KENELM DIGBY.
+
+Since I last wrote to you on the subject of these poems, I have discovered
+the remaining portions of Ben Jonson's poem on the Lady Venetia: I have
+therefore no doubt now that my MS. is a genuine autograph; and if so, not
+only this, but the "Houreglasse," which was inserted in your 63rd No., is
+Ben Jonson's. This last has, I think, never been published; nor have I ever
+seen in print the followings lines, which are written in the same hand and
+on the same paper as the "Houreglasse." They were probably written after
+Lady Venetia's death.
+
+ "You wormes (my rivals), whiles she was alive,
+ How many thousands were there that did strive
+ To have your freedome? for theyr sakes forbeare,
+ Unseemely holes in her soft skin to wear,
+ But if you must (as what worme can abstaine?)
+ Taste of her tender body, yet refraine
+ With your disordered eatings to deface her,
+ And feed yourselves so as you most may grace her.
+ First through her eartippes, see you work a paire
+ Of holes, which, as the moyst enclosed _ayre_ [_air_]
+ Turnes into water, may the cold droppes take,
+ And in her eares a payre of jewels make.
+ That done, upon her bosome make your feaste,
+ Where on a crosse carve Jesus in her brest.
+ Have you not yet enough of that soft skinne,
+ The touch of which, in times past, might have bin
+ Enough to ransome many a thousande soule
+ Captiv'd to love? then hence your bodies roule
+ A little higher; where I would you have
+ This epitaph upon her forehead grave;
+ Living, she was fayre, yong, and full of witt;
+ Dead, all her faults are in her forehead writt."
+
+If I am wrong in supposing this never to have been printed, I shall feel
+much obliged by one of your correspondents informing me of the fact.
+
+H. A. B.
+
+Trin. Col. Cambridge.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FOLK LORE.
+
+_The Christmas Thorn._--In my neighbourhood (near Bridgewater) the
+Christmas thorn blossoms on the 6th of January (Twelfth-day), and on this
+day only. The villagers in whose gardens it grows, and indeed many others,
+verily believe that this fact pronounces the truth of this being the day of
+Christ's birth.
+
+S. S. B.
+
+_Milk-maids in 1753._--To Folk-lore may be added the following short
+extract from Read's _Weekly Journal_, May 5, 1733:
+
+ "On May-Day the Milk-Maids who serve the Court, danced Minuets and
+ Rigadoons before the Royal Family, at St. James's House, with great
+ applause."
+
+Y. S.
+
+_Diseases cured by Sheep_ (Vol. iii., p. 320.).--The attempted cure of
+consumption, or some {368} complaints, by walking among a flock of sheep,
+is not new. The present Archbishop of Dublin was recommended it, or
+practised it at least, when young. For pulmonary complaints the principle
+was perhaps the same as that of following a plough, sleeping in a room over
+a cowhouse, breathing the diluted smoke of a limekiln, that is, the
+inhaling of carbonic acid, all practised about the end of the last century,
+when the knowledge of the gases was the favourite branch of chemistry.
+
+A friend of mine formerly met Dr. Beddoes riding up Park Street in Bristol
+almost concealed by a vast bladder tied to his horse's mouth. He said he
+was trying an experiment with oxygen on a broken-winded horse. Afterwards,
+finding that oxygen did not answer, he very wisely tried the gas most
+opposite to it in nature.
+
+C. B.
+
+_Sacramental Wine_ (Vol. iii., p. 320.).--This idea is a relic of Roman
+Catholic times. In Ireland a weakly child is frequently brought to the
+altar rails, and the priest officiating at mass requested to allow it to
+drink from the chalice of what is termed _the ablution_, that is, the wine
+and water with which the chalice is _rinsed_ after the priest has taken the
+communion, and which ablution ordinarily is taken by the priest. _Here_ the
+efficacy is ascribed to the cup having just before contained the blood of
+Our Lord. I have heard it seriously recommended in a case of hooping-cough.
+Your correspondent MR. BUCKMAN does not give sufficient credit for common
+sense to the believers in some portion of folk lore. Red wine is considered
+tonic, and justly, as it contains a greater proportion of _turmic_ than
+white. The yellow bark of the barberry contains an essential tonic
+ingredient, as the Jesuit's bark does _quinine_, or that of the willow
+_salicine_. Nettle juice is well known as a purifier of the blood; and the
+navelwort, like Euphrosia, which is properly called _Eyebright_, is as
+likely to have had its name from its proved efficacy as a simple, as from
+any fancied likeness to the region affected. The old monks were shrewd
+herbalists. They were generally the physicians of their neighbourhood, and
+the names and uses of the simples used by them survive the ruin of the
+monasteries and the expulsion of their tenants.
+
+KERRIENSIS.
+
+"_Nettle in Dock out_" (Vol. iii., pp. 133. 201. 205.).--I can assure
+A. E. B. that in the days of my childhood, long before I had ever heard of
+Chaucer, I used invariably, when I was stung with nettles, to rub the part
+affected with a dock-leaf or stalk, and repeat,
+
+ "Nettle out, dock in."
+
+This charm is so common in Huntingdonshire at this day that it seems to
+come to children almost instinctively. None of them can tell where they
+first heard it, any more than why they use it.
+
+ARUN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+METROPOLITAN IMPROVEMENTS.
+
+The following passage from a sermon preached at Paul's Cross, March 26,
+1620, by John King, Bishop of London, refers in a curious manner to many
+improvements and alterations which have either been already effected in our
+own time, or are still in contemplation. The sermon was "on behalfe of
+Paule's Church," then in a ruinous condition; and was delivered in the
+presence of James himself, who suggested the preacher's text, Psal. cii.
+13, 14.
+
+ "So had my manner ever beene aforetime," says the Bishop, "to open the
+ volume of this Booke, and goe through the fields of the Old and New
+ Testament, plucking and rubbing such eares of corne therein as I best
+ liked, makings, choice (I meane) of my text, and buckling myself to my
+ task at myne owne discretion; but now I am girt and tied to a Scripture
+ by him, who as he hath most right to command, so best skill to direct
+ and appoint the best service I can."
+
+After an elaborate laudation of England, and of London as the "gem and
+eye," which has
+
+ "the body of the King, the morning and midday influence of that
+ glorious sun; other parts having but the evening.... _O fortunati
+ nimium_; you have the finest flowre of the wheat, and purest bloud of
+ the grape, that is, the choice of His blessed Word hath God given unto
+ you; and great is the companie of the preachers"--
+
+the Bishop proceeds thus:
+
+ "Not to weary mine eyes with wandering and roving after private, but to
+ fixe upon publicke alone,--when I behold that forrest of masts upon
+ your river for trafficke, and that more than miraculous bridge, which
+ is the _communis terminus_, to joyne the two bankes of that river; your
+ Royall Exchange for merchants, your Halls for Companies, your gates for
+ defence, your markets for victuall, your aqueducts for water, your
+ granaries for provision, your Hospitalls for the poore, your Bridewells
+ for the idle, your Chamber for orphans, and your Churches for holy
+ assemblies; I cannot denie them to be magnificent workes, and your
+ Citty to deserve the name of an Augustious and majesticall Citty; to
+ cast into the reckoning those of later edition, the beautifying of your
+ fields without, and pitching your Smithfield within, new gates, new
+ waterworkes, and the like, which have been consecrated by you to the
+ dayes of his Majestie's happy reigne: and I hope the cleansing of the
+ River, which is the _vena porta_ to your Citty, will follow in good
+ time. But after all these, as Christ to the young man in the Gospell,
+ which had done all and more, _Unum tibi deest, si vis perfectus esse,
+ vade, vende_; so may I say to you. There is yet one thing wanting unto
+ you, if you will be perfit,--perfit this church: not by parting from
+ _all_, but somewhat, not to the poore, but to God himselfe. This Church
+ is your Sion indeed, other are but _Synagogues_, this your _Jerusalem
+ the mother to them all_, other but daughters brought up at her knees;
+ this the Cathedrall, other but Parochiall Churches; this the _Bethel_
+ for the daily and constant service of God, other have their
+ intermissions, this the common to you all, and to this _doe {369} your
+ tribes ascend_ in their greatest solemnities; others appropriated to
+ several Congregations, this the standart in the high rode of gaze;
+ others are more retired, this the mirrour and marke of strangers, other
+ have but their side lookes; finally, this unto you, as _S. Peters in
+ the Vatican_ at Rome, _S. Marks_ at Venice, and that of _Diana_ at
+ Ephesus, and this at Jerusalem of the Jewes; or if there be any other
+ of glory and fame in the Christian world, which they most joy in."
+
+RICHARD JOHN KING.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Minor Notes.
+
+_Meaning of Luncheon._--Our familiar name of _luncheon_ is derived from the
+daily meal of the Spaniards at eleven o'clock, termed _once_ or _l'once_
+(pronounced _l'onchey_).--From Ford's _Gatherings in Spain_.
+
+A. L.
+
+_Charade upon Nothing translated._--In your No. for July a correspondent
+asks who was the author of the very quaint charade upon "Nothing:"
+
+ "Me, the contented man desires,
+ The poor man has, the rich requires,
+ The miser gives, the spendthrift saves,
+ And all must carry to their graves."
+
+Possibly he may not object to read, without troubling himself as to the
+authorship of, the subjoined translation:
+
+ "Me, qui sorte sua contentus vixerit, optat,
+ Et quum pauper habet, dives habere velit;
+ Spargit avarus opum, servat sibi prodigus æris,
+ Secum post fati funera quisque feret."
+
+EFFIGIES.
+
+_Giving the Lie._--The great affront of giving the lie arose from the
+phrase "Thou liest," in the oath taken by the defendant in judicial combats
+before engaging, when charged with any crime by the plaintiff, and Francis
+I. of France, to make current his giving the lie to the Emperor Charles V.,
+first stamped it with infamy by saying, in a solemn Assembly, that "he was
+no honest man that would bear the lie."
+
+BLOWEN.
+
+_Anachronisms of Painters._--An amusing list is given in D'Israeli's
+_Curiosities of Literature_ (edit. 1839, p. 131.). The following are
+additional:
+
+At Hagley Park, Worcestershire, the seat of Lord Lyttleton, is a painting
+by Varotari, a pupil of Paul Veronese, of Christ and the Woman taken in
+Adultery. One of the Jewish elders present wears spectacles.
+
+At Kedleston, Derbyshire, the seat of Lord Scarsdale, is a painting by
+Rembrandt, Daniel interpreting Belsazzar's Dream. Daniel's head is covered
+with a peruke of considerable magnitude.
+
+J. E.
+
+_Spenser's Faerie Queene._--The following brief notes may perhaps prove
+interesting:--
+
+1. Spenser gives us a hint of the annoyances to which Shakspeare and
+Burbage may have been subject:--
+
+ "All suddenly they heard a troublous noise,
+ That seemed some perilous tumult to design,
+ Confused with women's cries and shorts of boys,
+ Such as the troubled theatres oft-times annoys."--B. IV. iii. 37.
+
+2. Spenser's solitary pun occurs in book iv. canto viii. verse 31.:
+
+ "But when the world wox old, it wox _war-old_,
+ Whereof it hight."
+
+3. Cleanliness does not appear to have been a virtue much in vogue in the
+"glorious days of good Queen Bess." Spenser (book iv. canto xi. verse 47.)
+speaks of
+
+ "Her silver feet, fair washed against this day,"
+
+_i. e._ for a special day of rejoicing.
+
+4. An instance of the compound epithets so much used by Chapman in his
+translation of Homer, is found in Spenser's description of the sea-nymphs,
+book iv. canto xi. verse 50.:
+
+ "Eione well-in-age,
+ And seeming-still-to-smile Glauconome."
+
+J. H. C.
+
+Adelaide, South Australia.
+
+_Prayer of Mary Queen of Scots._--The incorrect arrangement, in Seward's
+_Anecdotes_, of the following beautiful lines, said to be composed by Mary
+Queen of Scots, and repeated immediately before her execution, and a
+diffuse paraphrase subjoined, in which all their tenderness is lost by
+destroying their brevity and simplicity, may justify another arrangement,
+and an attempt to preserve their simple and tender character in fewer words
+and a different measure:--
+
+ "O Domine Deus, O Lord, my God,
+ Speravi in Te, I have trusted in Thee:
+ O mi care Jesu, My Jesu beloved,
+ Nunc libera me: Me presently free:
+ In dura catena, In cruel chains,
+ Desidero Te. In penal pains,
+ Languendo, gemendo, I long for Thee,
+ Et genu flectendo, I moan, I groan,
+ Adoro, imploro, I bend my knee;
+ Ut liberes me. I adore, I implore,
+ Me presently free."
+
+Can any of your correspondents inform me where these lines first appear? on
+what authority they are ascribed to Mary Queen of Scots? and also who
+mentions their having been repeated immediately before her execution?
+
+ALEXANDER PYTTS FALCONER.
+
+Beeton-Christchurch, Hants.
+
+_A small Instance of Warren Hastings' Magnanimity._--During the latter
+years of his life, Warren Hastings was in the habit of visiting General
+D'Oyley in the New Forest; and thus he became {370} acquainted with the
+Rev. W. Gilpin, vicar of Boldre, and author of _Forest Scenery_, &c. Mr.
+Gilpin's custom was to receive morning visitors, who sat and enjoyed his
+agreeable conversation; and Warren Hastings, when staying in the
+neighbourhood, often resorted to the Boldre Parsonage. It happened, one
+Sunday, that Mr. Gilpin preached a sermon on the character of Felix, which
+commenced in words like these:
+
+ "Felix was a bad man, and a bad governor. He took away another man's
+ wife and lived with her; and he behaved with extortion and cruelty in
+ the province over which he ruled."
+
+Other particulars followed equally in accordance with the popular charges
+against the late Governor-General of India, who, to the preacher's dismay,
+was unexpectedly discovered sitting in the D'Oyley pew. Mr. Gilpin
+concluded that he then saw the last of his "great" friend. But, not so: on
+the following morning Warren Hastings came, with his usual pleasant manner,
+for a chat with the vicar, and of course made no allusion to the sermon.
+
+This was told me by a late valued friend, who was a nephew and curate of
+Mr. Gilpin; and I am not aware that the anecdote has been put on record.
+
+ALFRED GATTY.
+
+Ecclesfield.
+
+_Richard Baxter._--In the long list of Richard Baxter's works, one is
+entitled, _An unsavoury Volume of Mr. Jo. Crawford's anatomized: or, a
+Nosegay of the choicest Flowers in that Garden, presented to Mr. Joseph
+Caryl, by Richard Baxter_. 8vo., Lond. 1654.
+
+At the end of a postscript to this tract, the following sentence is
+subjoined:
+
+ "Whatsoever hath escaped me in these writings that is against meekness,
+ peace, and brotherly love, let it be all unsaid, and hereby revoked;
+ and I desire the pardon of it from God and Man.
+
+RICHARD BAXTER."
+
+Baxter's literary career was not the least extraordinary part of his
+history. Orme's life of him says, that the catalogue of his works contains
+nearly a hundred and sixty-eight distinct publications. A list of no less
+than one hundred and seven is given at the end of his _Compassionate
+Counsel to all Young Men_, 8vo., Lond. 1682.
+
+Baxter's most popular treatises, as the world knows, were his _Call to the
+Unconverted_, and his _Saint's Everlasting Rest_.
+
+H. E.
+
+_Registry of Dissenting Baptisms in Churches._--A fact came to my knowledge
+some time since, which seems worthy of having _a note of it_ made, and
+recorded in your journal. On looking over the registry of baptisms
+administered in the meeting-house of an ancient city, I was struck by the
+occurrence of four names, which I had seen entered in a genealogy as from
+the baptismal registry of one of its parish churches. This appeared to me
+so strange, that I examined the parish registry in order to verify it; and
+I found that the baptisms were actually recorded as on the same days in
+both registries. Of course, the father, having had his child baptized by
+the dissenting minister, prevailed on the clergyman of his parish church to
+register it.
+
+Whether this was a common custom at the time when it took place (1715-21) I
+have no means of knowing. As a fee was probably charged for the
+registration, it was not likely to be asked for in all instances; and, no
+doubt, when it was asked for, many clergymen would consider it inconsistent
+with their duty to grant it.
+
+D. X.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Queries.
+
+NOTES AND QUERIES RELATING TO SCANDINAVIA.
+
+Can any of your readers furnish a list of the different editions of _Olaus
+Magnus_? I have lately met with a curious one entitled _Historia delle
+Gente et della Natura delle Cose Settentrionali, da Olao Magno Gotho
+Arcivescovo di Vpsala nel Regno di Suezia e Gozia, descritta in XXII Libri.
+Tradotta in Lingua Toscana. In Vinegia, 1565._ This edition, in folio,
+contains a very interesting old map of Scandinavia, and a profusion of
+little cuts or engravings, representing men, animals, gods, mountains,
+weapons, religious rites, natural wonders, and everything relating to the
+people and the country that could be conceived or gathered together. Is
+there any English translation of Olaus Magnus?
+
+Is there any English translation of Jornandes' _Histoire Générale des
+Goths_? It is full of curious matter. The French edition of 1603 gives the
+following accounts of the midnight sun:--
+
+ "Diverses nations ne laissent pas d'habiter ces contrées" (Scanzia or
+ Scandinavia). "Ptolomée en nomme sept principales. Celle qui s'appelle
+ Adogit, et qui est la plus reculée vers le Nord, voit (dit on) durant
+ l'Esté le Soleil rouler l'horizon quarante jours sans se coucher; mais
+ aussi pendant l'Hyver, elle est privée de sa lumière un pareil espace
+ de temps, payant ainsi par le long ennui que lui cause l'absence de cet
+ Astre, la joye que sa longue présence lui avoit fait ressentir."
+
+There is a little old book called _Histoire des Intrigues Galantes de la
+Reine Christine de Suède et de sa Cour, pendant son sejour à Rome. A
+Amsterdam_, 1697. It opens thus:
+
+ "Rome, qui est le centre de la religion, est aussi le Théâtre des plus
+ belles Comédies du Monde:"
+
+and after giving various accounts, personal and incidental, of her
+mercurial majesty, and of her pilgrimage to Rome, recites the following
+epigram on her first intrigue there, which, to give due precedence to the
+church, happened to be with a Cardinal, named Azolin:-- {371}
+
+ "Mais Azolin dans Rome
+ Sceut charmer ses ennuis,
+ Elle eût sans ce grand homme
+ Passé de tristes nuits;"
+
+adding:
+
+ "Dans ce peu de paroles Mr. de Coulanges [its author] dit beaucoup de
+ choses, et fait comprendre l'intrigue du Cardinal avec la Reine."
+
+I can find no account of this Reverend Cardinal. Who was he (if anybody),
+and what is his history? And who was the author of these odd memoirs of the
+Swedish Queen?
+
+At page 228. of "NOTES AND QUERIES" I see mention of an English translation
+of _Danish_ ballads by Mr. Borrow. Is there any translation of _Norwegian_
+ballads? Many of them are very beautiful and characteristic, and well
+worthy of an able rendering into our own language, if there were any one to
+undertake it. There is also much beauty in the Norwegian national music, of
+which a pretty but limited collection, the _Norske Field-Melodier_,
+arranged by Lindeman, is published at Christiania.
+
+What is the best method of reaching Iceland? and what _really good_ books
+have been published on that country within the last twenty years?
+
+WILLIAM E. C. NOURSE.
+
+London, April 22. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ROTATION OF THE EARTH.
+
+Query, Has Mons. Foucault's pendulum experiment been as yet clearly
+enunciated? and do I understand it aright, when I conceive it is intended
+to show the existence of a certain uniform _rotation in azimuth of the
+horizon_, but different for different latitudes; which rotation, if made
+out to exist, is acquired solely in virtue of the uniform diurnal rotation
+(15° hourly) in right ascension of the equator, identical in all latitudes.
+
+A pendulum, manifestly, can only be suspended vertically, and can only
+vibrate in a vertical plane; and surely can only be conceived, in the
+course of the experiment, to be referred to the _horizon_, that great
+circle of the heavenly sphere to which all vertical circles are referred.
+
+A spectator at the north pole has the pole of the heavens coincident with
+his zenith; and there, all declination circles are also vertical circles;
+and there, the equator coincides with the horizon; whereby the whole effect
+of the rotation of the earth there (15° hourly) may be conceived to be
+given to the _horizon_: whilst, at the equator, the horizon is
+perpendicular to the equator, which therefore gives no such rotation at all
+to the horizon. Simple inspection of a celestial globe will illustrate
+this. Considering the matter thus, at the pole the rotation of the
+_horizon_ is 15° hourly, and at the equator is 0, or nothing. But the sine
+of the latitude (=90°) at the pole is unity, or 1; and the sine of the
+latitude (=0°) at the equator is 0. Therefore, at these two extremes, the
+expression 15° × sin. lat. actually does give the amount of _hourly
+apparent rotation of the horizon_; namely, 15° at one place, and 0° at the
+other. Now, as I understand the experiment, as given in the public prints,
+it is asserted that the same expression of 15° × sin. lat. will give the
+_rotation of the horizon_ in intermediate latitudes; of which rotation I
+subjoin a table calculated for the purpose.
+
+ +-----------+-------------+-----------------------+---------------------+
+ | | | Value of | Apparent |
+ | | Natural | 15° × Sin. Lat., | corresponding |
+ | Degrees | Values of | or apparent | Times of _Horizon_, |
+ | of | Sine of the | _hourly_ Amount of | performing |
+ | Latitude. | Latitude. | Rotation of | one Rotation |
+ | | | _Horizon_, in Degrees | of 360°, in Hours |
+ | | | and Decimals. | and Decimals. |
+ +-----------+-------------+-----------------------+---------------------+
+ | ° | | ° | h |
+ | 0 | 0.000 | 0.00 | Infinite time. |
+ | 1 | 0.017 | 0.26 | 1371.0 |
+ | 2 | 0.035 | 0.53 | 682.1 |
+ | 3 | 0.053 | 0.79 | 458.5 |
+ | 4 | 0.070 | 1.05 | 342.6 |
+ | 5 | 0.087 | 1.31 | 255.4 |
+ | 6 | 0.104 | 1.57 | 229.6 |
+ | 7 | 0.122 | 1.83 | 169.9 |
+ | 8 | 0.139 | 2.09 | 172.5 |
+ | 9 | 0.156 | 2.35 | 153.4 |
+ | 10 | 0.173 | 2.60 | 138.1 |
+ | 20 | 0.342 | 5.13 | 70.2 |
+ | 30 | 0.500 | 7.50 | 48.0 |
+ | 40 | 0.643 | 9.64 | 37.3 |
+ | 50 | 0.766 | 11.49 | 31.3 |
+ | 60 | 0.866 | 13.00 | 27.7 |
+ | 70 | 0.940 | 14.09 | 25.5 |
+ | 80 | 0.985 | 14.77 | 24.4 |
+ | 90 | 1.000 | 15.00 | 24.0 |
+ +-----------+-------------+-----------------------+---------------------+
+
+Now this is the point which, it should seem, ought to be the business of
+experimenters to establish; it being proposed, as we are informed, to
+swing, in different latitudes, freely suspended pendulums, over horizontal
+dials, or circular tables, properly graduated, similarly to the horizons of
+common globes; and to note the _apparent_ variation of the plane of
+oscillation of the pendulums with respect to the graduated dials; these
+latter serving as representatives of the horizon. For the hypothesis is (as
+I understand it), that the pendulums will continue to swing each of them
+severally in one invariable vertical plane fixed in free space, whilst the
+horizontal dials beneath, by their rotation, will slip away, as it were,
+and turn round in _azimuth_, from under the planes of the pendulums.
+
+It should seem to be imperative on those who wish to put this experiment to
+proof, to give all possible attention to the precautions suggested in the
+excellent paper that appeared on the subject, on Saturday, April 19, in the
+_Literary Gazette_, copied also into the _Morning Post_ of Monday the 21st.
+To my mind, the experiment is beset with practical difficulties; but even
+should the matter {372} be satisfactorily made out to those best capable of
+judging, I cannot readily conceive of an experiment less likely than the
+above to carry conviction to the minds of the wholly unlearned of the
+rotation of the earth.
+
+I perceive that B.A.C., in the _Times_ of April 24, avows his determined
+scepticism as to the virtue of the experiment.
+
+ROBERT SNOW.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MINOR QUERIES.
+
+_William ap Jevan's Descendants._--In Burke's _Landed Gentry_, p. 1465.,
+mention is made of William ap Jevan, "an attendant upon Jasper Duke of
+Bedford, and afterwards upon Hen. VII.;" and of a son, Morgan Williams,
+ancestor of the Cromwells. Will some correspondent oblige by giving a
+reference to where any account may be met with of any other son, or
+children, to such William ap Jevan, and his or their descendants?
+
+W. P. A.
+
+"_Geographers on Afric Downs._"--Can any of your correspondents tell me
+where these lines are to be found?--
+
+ "So geographers on Afric downs,
+ Plant elephants instead of towns."
+
+They sound Hudibrastic, but I cannot find them in _Hudibras_.
+
+A. S.
+
+_Irish Brigade._--Can any of your correspondents furnish any account of
+what were called "The Capitulations of the Irish Brigades?" These
+_Capitulations_ (to prevent mistakes) were simply the agreements under
+which foreign regiments entered the French service. The Swiss regiments had
+their special "capitulations" until 1830, when they ceased to be employed
+in France. They appear to have differed in almost every regiment of the
+Irish brigade; the privileges of some being greater than those of others.
+One was common to all, namely, the right of _trial_ by their officers or
+comrades solely, and according to the laws of their own country.
+
+Also, is there any history of the brigades published? I have heard that a
+Colonel Dromgoole published one. Can any information be afforded on that
+head?
+
+K.
+
+_Passage in Oldham._--The following lines, on the virtues of "impudence,"
+occur in that exquisite satirist, Oldham, described by Dryden as "too
+little and too lately known:"
+
+ "Get that great gift and talent, impudence,
+ Accomplish'd mankind's highest excellence:
+ 'Tis that alone prefers, alone makes great,
+ Confers alone wealth, titles, and estate;
+ Gains place at court, can make a fool a peer;
+ An ass a bishop; can vil'st blockhead rear
+ To wear red hats, and sit in porph'ry chair:
+ 'Tis learning, parts, and skill, and wit, and sense,
+ Worth, merit, honour, virtue, innocence."
+
+I quote this passage chiefly with reference to the "porphyry chair," and
+with the view of ascertaining whether the allusion has been explained in
+any edition of Oldham's Poems. Does the expression refer to any established
+use of such chairs by the wearers of "red hats?" or is it intended merely
+to convey a general idea of the sumptuousness and splendour of their style
+of living?
+
+HENRY H. BREEN.
+
+St. Lucia, March, 1851.
+
+_Mont-de-Piété._-Can any of your readers furnish information as to the
+connexion between these words and the thing which they are used to denote?
+Mrs. Jameson says, in her _Legends of the Monastic Orders_, p. 307.:
+
+ "Another attribute of St. Bernardin's of Siena, is the
+ _Monte-di-Pietà_, a little green hill composed of three mounds, and on
+ the top either a cross or a standard, on which is the figure of the
+ dead Saviour, usually called in Italy a _Pietà_. St. B. is said to have
+ been the founder of the charitable institutions still called in France
+ _Monts-de-Piété_, originally for the purpose of lending to the poor
+ small sums on trifling pledges--what we should now call a loan
+ society,--and which, in their commencement, were purely disinterested
+ and beneficial. In every city which he visited as a preacher, he
+ founded a Monte-di-Pietà; and before his death, these institutions had
+ spread all over Italy and through a great part of France."
+
+It is added in a note:
+
+ "Although the figures holding the M. di P. are, in Italian prints and
+ pictures, styled 'San Bernardino da Siena,' there is reason to presume
+ that the honour is at least shared by another worthy of the same order,
+ 'Il Beato Bernardino da Feltri,' a celebrated preacher at the end of
+ the fifteenth century. Mention is made of his preaching against the
+ Jews and usurers, on the miseries of the poor, and on the necessity of
+ having a _Monte-di-Pietà_ at Florence, in a sermon delivered in the
+ church of Santa Croce in the year 1488."
+
+On p. 308. is a representation of the Monte-di-Pietà, borne in the saint's
+hand. I need not specify the points on which the foregoing extract still
+leaves information to be desired.
+
+W. B. H.
+
+Manchester.
+
+_Poem upon the Grave._--A. D. would be obliged by being informed where to
+find a poem upon The Grave. Two voices speak in it, and, it commences--
+
+ "How peaceful the grave; its quiet how deep!
+ Its zephyrs breathe calmly, and soft is its sleep,
+ And flowerets perfume it with ether."
+
+The second voice replies--
+
+ "How lonesome the grave; how deserted and drear," &c. &c.
+
+_Clocks: when self-striking Clocks first invented._--In Bolingbroke's
+_Letters on the Study of History_ {373} (Letter IV.), I read the following
+passage in relation to a certain person:
+
+ "His reason had not the merit of common mechanism. When you press a
+ watch or pull a clock, they answer your question with precision; for
+ they repeat exactly the hour of the day, and tell you neither more nor
+ less than you desire to know."
+
+I believe this work was written about 1711. Can you tell me when the
+self-striking clock was invented, and by whom?
+
+JINGO.
+
+_Clarkson's "Richmond."_--Can any of your readers inform me who is in
+possession of the papers of the late Mr. Clarkson, the historian of
+Richmond, in Yorkshire? I wish to know what were the ancient documents, or
+other sources, from which the learned author ascertained some facts stated
+in his valuable work. To whom should I apply on the subject?
+
+D. Q.
+
+_"Felix quem faciunt," &c._--I wish you could tell me where I can find this
+line:
+
+ "Felix quem faciunt aliena pericula cautum."
+
+EFFIGIES.
+
+Whitehall.
+
+_Sir Francis Windebank's elder Son._--Sir Francis Windebank, "of
+treacherous memory," it is well known, died at Paris in September, 1646. He
+had two sons; what became of Thomas, the _elder_? Francis, the _second_,
+was a colonel in the royal army: he was tried for cowardice in surrendering
+Blechingdon House, in Oxfordshire, to Oliver Cromwell without a blow; and
+being found guilty, was shot at Broken Hayes, near Oxford, in April, 1645.
+I am anxious to make out the fate of his elder brother.
+
+EDWARD F. RIMBAULT.
+
+_Incised Slab._--I have a large incised slab in my church, with the figures
+of a man (Richard Grenewey) and his wife upon it, with the date 1473.
+Following the date, and filling up the remainder of the line of the
+inscription, is the figure of a cock in a fighting attitude. Can any of
+your readers enlighten me on the subject?
+
+H. C. K.
+
+_Etymology of Balsall._--Will you allow me to ask some of your readers to
+give me the etymology of _Balsall_? It occurs frequently about here, as
+Balsall Temple, B. Street, B. Grange, B. Common, and near Birmingham is
+Balsall Heath. It is not to be confounded with Beausall Common, which also
+is near this place.
+
+F. R.
+
+Kenilworth.
+
+_St. Olave's Churches._--In the _Calendar of the Anglican Church_, Parker,
+Oxford, 1851, at pp. 267. and 313., it is stated that Saint Olave helped
+King Ethelred to dislodge the Danes from London and Southwark, by
+destroying London Bridge; and that, in gratitude for this service, the
+churches at each end of the bridge are dedicated to him;--on the Southwark
+side, St. Olave's, Tooley Street, is; but was there ever a church on the
+London side, bearing the same name?--The nearest one to the bridge is St.
+Olave's, Hart Street; but that is surely too distant to be called "at the
+end of the bridge."
+
+E. N. W.
+
+Southwark, April 21. 1851.
+
+_Sabbatical and Jubilee Years of the Jews._--As the solution of many
+interesting topics in connexion with Jewish history is yet dependent on the
+_period_ of the institution of the Sabbatical and Jubilee years, the
+following observations will not perhaps be deemed unworthy of a "nook" in
+your columns. A spark may blaze! I therefore throw it out to be fanned into
+a more brilliant light by those of your readers whose studies peculiarly
+fit them to inquire more searchingly into the subject. The Jews, it has
+been remarked by various writers, were ignorant of _astronomy_. Both,
+however, the Sabbatical and Jubilee years have been, as I conceive and will
+endeavour to show, founded on astronomical observation, commemorative of no
+particular event in Jewish history, but simply that of the moon's
+revolutions; for instance, with reference to the _Sabbatical_ year,
+allowing for a difference of four days and a half, which occurs _annually_
+in the time of the moon's position on the equator, it would require, in
+order to realise a number corresponding to the days (29) employed by the
+moon in her synodical revolution round the earth, a period to elapse of
+little less than six years and a half: thus exhibiting the Jews' _seventh_
+or _Sabbatical year_, or year of rest. This result, besides being
+instructive and commemorative of the moon's menstrual course, is at the
+same time indicative, as each Sabbatical year rolls past, of the approach
+of the "_finisher of the Seven Sabbaths of years_," or year of Jubilee, so
+designated from its being to the chosen people of God, under the Jewish
+dispensation, a year of "freedom and redemption," in commemoration of the
+moon's _complete_ revolution, viz., her return to a certain position at the
+precise time at which she set out therefrom, an event which takes place but
+once in _fifty years_: in other words, if the moon be on the equator, say,
+on the first day of February, and calculating twenty-nine days to the
+month, or twelve lunations to the year, a cycle of fifty years, or "seven
+Sabbaths of years," must elapse ere she will again be in that position on
+the same day.
+
+HIPPARCHUS.
+
+Limehouse, March 31. 1851.
+
+_Arms of Isle of Man._--The arms of the Isle of Man are gules, three legs
+conjoined in the fess point, &c. &c. or. These arms were stamped on the old
+halfpence of the island, and we may well call them the current coin.
+
+In an old edition of the _Mythology of Natalis_ {374} _Comus_, Patavii,
+1637, small 4to., at page 278., I find an Icon of Triptolemus sent by Ceres
+in a chariot drawn by serpents, hovering in the clouds over what I suppose
+to be Sicily, or Trinacria; and on a representation of a city below the
+chariot occurs the very same form of coin, the three legs conjoined, with
+the addition of three ears of corn.
+
+This seems to me to be a curious coincidence.
+
+MERVINIENSIS.
+
+_Doctrine of the Resurrection._--Can any of your readers inform me of any
+traces of the doctrine of the Resurrection to be found in authors anterior
+to the Christian era? The following passage from Diogenes Laertius is
+quoted in St. John's _Manners and Customs of Ancient Greece_, vol. i. p.
+355.:
+
+ "[Greek: Kai anabiôsesthai, kata tous Magous, phêsi (theopompos), tous
+ anthrôpous, kai esesthai athanatous.]"
+
+How far does the statement in this passage involve the idea of a _bodily_
+resurrection? I fancy the doctrine is not countenanced by any of the
+apparitions in the poetical Hades of Virgil, or of other poets.
+
+ZETETICUS.
+
+_National Debts._--Is there any published work descriptive of the origin of
+the foundation of a "National Debt" in Florence so early as the year 1344,
+when the state, owing a sum of money, created a "Mount or Bank," the shares
+in which were transferable, like our stocks? It is not mentioned in Niccolo
+Machiavelli's _History of Florence_; but I have a note of the fact, without
+a reference to the authority. Is there any precedent prior to the
+foundation of our National Debt?
+
+F. E. M.
+
+_Leicester's Commonwealth._--Are the real authors of _Leicester's
+Commonwealth_, and the poetical tract generally found with it, _Leicester's
+Ghost_, known? According to Dodd's _Church History_, the first is
+_erroneously_ attributed to Robert Parsons the Jesuit.
+
+EDWARD F. RIMBAULT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Replies.
+
+HISTOIRE DES SÉVARAMBES.
+
+(Vol. iii., pp. 4. 72. 147.)
+
+The History of the Sevarites, in the original English edition, consists of
+two parts: the first published in 1675, in 114 pages, small 12mo., without
+a preface; the second published in 1679, in 140 pages, with a preface of
+six pages. The French version of this work is much altered and enlarged.
+The title is changed into _Histoire des Sévarambes_, the "Sevarites" being
+dropped. There is a preface of fifteen pages, containing a supposed letter
+from Thomas Skinner, dated Bruges, Oct. 28, 1672. The work is divided into
+five parts, three of which are in the first, and two in the second volume
+of the Amsterdam edition of 1716. These five parts are together more than
+twice as bulky as the two parts of the English work. There is no copy of
+the original French edition of 1677-9 described by Marchand, in any English
+public library; but if there is a copy in the French national library, any
+of your bibliographical correspondents at Paris could easily ascertain
+whether (as is probably the case) the Amsterdam edition is a mere reprint
+from the original Paris edition.
+
+The French version of this work is not only much enlarged, but it differs
+in the names and incidents, and is fuller in the account of the
+institutions and customs of the imaginary state. The English edition of
+1738 (1 vol. 8vo.) is a literal translation from the French version, though
+it does not purport to be a translation. It may be doubted whether the
+translator was aware of the existence of the English publication of 1675-9.
+The German translation was published in 1680; the Dutch translation in
+1682: both these appear to have been taken from the French.
+
+Morhof (_Polyhistor._, vol. i. p. 74.), who inserts this work among the
+_libri damnati_, and dwells upon its deistical character, refers to the
+French version; and though he knew that the book had originally appeared in
+English, he probably was not aware of the difference between the two
+versions. A note added by his first editor, Moller, states that Morhof
+often told his friends that he believed Isaac Vossius to have been the
+author of the work. Isaac Vossius was in England from 1670 until his death,
+which took place at Windsor, February 21, 1689. His residence in England,
+combined with the known laxity of his religious opinions, doubtless
+suggested to Morhof the conjecture that he wrote this freethinking Utopia.
+There is, however, no external evidence to support this conjecture, or to
+show that it had any better foundation than the conjecture that Bishop
+Berkeley wrote _Gaudentio di Lucca_. The University of Leyden purchased the
+library of Isaac Vossius for 36,000 florins. If it is still preserved at
+Leyden, a search among his books might ascertain whether there is among
+them any copy of the English or French editions of this work, and whether
+they contain any written remark by their former possessor. Moreover, it is
+to be observed that the system of natural religion is for the first time
+developed in the French edition; and this was the part which chiefly gave
+the book its celebrity: whereas, the supposition of Morhof implies that the
+English and French versions are identical.
+
+Heumann, in his _Schediasma de Libris Anonymis et Pseudonymis_ (Jena,
+1711), p. 161. (reprinted in Mylius, _Bibliotheca Anon. et Pseudon._,
+Hamburg, 1740, vol. i. pp. 170-6.) has an article on the _Histoire des
+Sévarambes_. It is there stated that "Messieurs de Portroyal" superintended
+the French translation of the work; but no authority is given for the
+statement. Christian Thomasius, {375} in his _Monthly Review_ of November
+1689, attributed the work to D'Allais (or Vairasse). He alleged three
+reasons for this belief: 1. The rumour current in France; 2. The fact that
+Allais sold the book, as well as his French grammar; 3. That a comparison
+of the two works, in respect of style and character of mind, renders it
+most probable that both are by the same author. The testimony of Thomasius
+is important, as the date of its publication is only ten years posterior to
+the publication of the last part of the French version.
+
+Leclerc, in a review of the _Schediasma_ of Heumann, in the _Bibliothèque
+Choisie_, published in 1712 (tom. xxv. p. 402., with an addendum, tom.
+xxvi. p. 460.), attests positively that Vairasse was the author of the work
+in question. He says that Vairasse (or, as he spells the name, Veiras) took
+the name of D'Allais in order to sell his book. He had this fact from
+persons well acquainted with Vairasse. He likewise mentions that Vairasse
+was well known to Locke, who gave Leclerc an account of his birthplace.
+Leclerc adds that he was acquainted with a person to whom Vairasse wished
+to dedicate his book (viz. the _Histoire des Sévarambes_), _and who
+possessed a copy of it, with a species of dedication, written in his hand_.
+
+This testimony is so distinct and circumstantial, as to leave no reasonable
+doubt as to the connexion of Vairasse with the French version. The
+difficulty as to the authorship of the English version still, however,
+remains considerable. The extensive alterations introduced in the French
+edition certainly render it probable that _two_ different writers were
+concerned in the work. The words of Leclerc respecting the information
+received from Locke are somewhat ambiguous; but they do not necessarily
+imply that Locke knew anything as to the connexion of Vairasse with the
+book, though they are not inconsistent with this meaning. Locke had
+doubtless become acquainted with Vairasse during his residence in England.
+Considering the length of time which Vairasse passed in England, and the
+eminence of the persons with whom he is said to have had relations (viz.
+the Duke of York, Lord Clarendon, and Locke), it is singular that no
+mention of him should be discoverable in any English book.
+
+The error, that the work in question was written by Algernon Sidney,
+appears to have arisen from a confusion with the name of Captain Siden, the
+imaginary traveller. Fabricius (_Bibliograph. Antiq._, c. xiv. §16. p.
+491.) mentions Sidney and Vairasse as the two most probable claimants to
+the authorship.
+
+Hume, in his _Essay on Polygamy and Divorces_, refers to the _History of
+the Sevarambians_, and calls it an "agreeable romance."
+
+L.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WAS THERE AN "OUTER TEMPLE" IN THE POSSESSION OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS OR
+KNIGHTS OF ST. JOHN?--(Vol. iii., p. 325.)
+
+I have great pleasure in complying with the very proper request of MR.
+FOSS, and give my authority at once for stating in the _Hand-book for
+London_ that the so-called "Outer Temple" was a part of the Fleet Street
+possession of the Knights Templars or Knights of St. John, or was in any
+manner comprehended within the New Temple property of Fleet Street and
+Temple Bar. My authority is Sir George Buc, whose minute and valuable
+account of the universities of England is dedicated to Sir Edward Coke.
+Buc's words are these:--
+
+ "After this suppression and condemnation of the Templers, their house
+ here in Fleete Street came to the handes and occupation of diuers
+ Lordes. For our Antiquaries and Chronologers say, that after this
+ suppression Sir Thomas Plantagenet Earl of Lancaster (and Cousin to the
+ King then raigning) had it, but beeing after attainted of treason, hee
+ enjoyed it but a short time.
+
+ "Then next Hugh Spencer Earle of Glocester got into it, but he also was
+ soone after attainted, and executed for Treason. After him Andomare de
+ Valence, a nobleman of the great house of Lusignan, and Earle of
+ Pembrooke, was lodged in it for a while. But this house was '_Equus
+ Seianus_' to them all: and (as here it appeareth) was ordayned by God
+ for other better uses, and whereunto now it serueth. After all these
+ noble tenants and occupants were thus exturbed, dead, and gone, then
+ certaine of the reuerend, ancient professours of the Lawes, in the
+ raign of King Edward the Third, obtained a very large or (as I might
+ say) a perpetuall Lease of this Temple, or (as it must bee understood)
+ of two parts thereof distinguished by the names of the Middle Temple
+ and the Inner Temple, from the foresayd Ioannites.... But the other
+ third part, called the Outward Temple, Doctor Stapleton, Bishop of
+ Exceter, had gotten in the raign of the former King, Edward the Second,
+ and conuerted it to a house for him and his successors, Bishops of
+ Exceter ... of whom the late Earle of Essex purchased it, and it is now
+ called Essex house: hauing first beene (as I haue sayd) a part of the
+ Templers' house, and in regard of the scituation thereof, without the
+ Barre, was called the Outward or Utter Temple, as the others, for the
+ like causes, were called the Middle Temple and the Inner Temple."--Sir
+ George Buc, in _Stow_ by Howes, ed. 1631, p. 1068.
+
+This seems decisive, if Buc is to be relied on, as I think he is. But new
+facts, such as MR. FOSS'S researches and MR. BURTT'S diligence are likely
+to bring to light, may upset Buc's statement altogether.
+
+I must join MR. FOSS in his wish to ascertain _when_ the names Inner Temple
+and Middle Temple were first made use of, with a further Query, which I
+should be glad to have settled, _when_ the See of Exeter first obtained the
+site of the so-called {376} "Outer Temple?" Stapleton, by whom it was
+_perhaps_ obtained, was Bishop of Exeter from 1307 to 1326.
+
+PETER CUNNINGHAM.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OBEISM.
+
+(Vol. iii., p. 59.)
+
+In reply to F. H., I beg leave to state that Obeism is not in itself a
+religion, except in the sense in which Burke says that "superstition is the
+religion of feeble minds." It is a belief, real or pretended, in the
+efficacy of certain spells and incantations, and is to the uneducated negro
+what sorcery was to our unenlightened forefathers. This superstition is
+known in St. Lucia by the name of _Kembois_. It is still extensively
+practised in the West Indies, but there is no reason to suppose that it is
+rapidly gaining ground. F. H. will find ample information on the subject in
+Père Labat's _Nouveau Voyage aux Isles françaises de l'Amérique_, tome ii.
+p. 59., and tome iv. pp. 447. 499. and 506., edition of 1742; in Bryan
+Edwards' _History of the West Indies_, vol. ii. ch. iii., 5th edition
+(London, 1819); and in Dr. R. R. Madden's _Residence in the West Indies_,
+vol. ii. letter 27. Perhaps the following particulars from Bryan Edwards
+(who says he is indebted for them to a Mr. Long) on the etymology of
+_obeah_, may be acceptable to some of your readers:--
+
+ "The term _obeah_, _obiah_, or _obia_, (for it is variously written,)
+ we conceive to be the adjective, and _obe_ or _obi_, the noun
+ substantive; and that by the word _obia_--men or women--is meant those
+ who practise _obi_. The origin of the term we should consider as of no
+ importance, in our answer to the question proposed, if, in search of
+ it, we were not led to disquisitions that are highly gratifying to
+ curiosity. From the learned Mr. Bryant's commentary upon the word
+ _oph_, we obtain a very probable etymology of the term. 'A serpent, in
+ the Egyptian language, was called _ob_ or _aub_.' '_Obion_ is still the
+ Egyptian name for a serpent.' 'Moses, in the name of God, forbids the
+ Israelites ever to inquire of the demon _Ob_, which is translated in
+ our Bible, charmer or wizard, divinator aut sorcilegus.' 'The woman at
+ Endor is called _oub_ or _ob_, translated Pythonissa; and _oubaois_ (he
+ cites from _Horus Apollo_) was the name of the Basilisk or Royal
+ Serpent, emblem of the sun, and an ancient oracular deity of Africa.'"
+
+One of your correspondents has formed a substantive from _obe_ by the
+addition of _ism_, and another from _obeah_ by the same process; but it
+will be seen by the above quotation that there is no necessity for that
+obtrusive termination, the superstitious practice in question being already
+sufficiently described by the word _obe_ or _obi_.
+
+HENRY H. BREEN.
+
+St. Lucia, March, 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAN MARINO.
+
+(Vol. iii., p. 321.)
+
+On the death of Sigismondo Pandolfo Malatesta, without legitimate male
+issue, in October, 1468, Pope Paul II. declared Rimini and his other fiefs
+to have reverted to the Holy See. In the spring of the following year the
+Pontiff proceeded, with the assistance of the Venetians, to enforce his
+claim, and threatened the Republicans of San Marino with his vengeance if
+they did not aid him and his allies in gaining possession of Rimini, which
+Roberto Malatesta, one of the illegitimate sons of Sigismondo Pandolfo, had
+seized by stratagem.
+
+By advice of their faithful friend Federigo, Count of Urbino, who was at
+the head of the opposite league, comprising the King of Naples, the Duke of
+Milan, and the Florentines, the San-Marinese forwarded the Papal mandate to
+Florence, and requested through their ambassador, one Ser Bartolomeo, the
+support of that Republic. Several letters appear to have been sent in
+answer to their applications, and the one communicated by MR. SYDNEY SMIRKE
+is characterised by Melchiarre Delfico (_Memorie storiche della Repubblica
+di San Marino._ Capolago, 1842, 8vo. p. 229.) as
+
+ "Del tutto didattica e parenetica intorno alla libertà, di cui i
+ Fiorentini facevano gran vanto, mentre erano quasi alla vigilia di
+ perderla intieramente."
+
+San Marino was not attacked during the campaign, which terminated on the
+30th of August of the same year (1469) with the battle of Vergiano, in
+which Alessandro Sforza, the commander of the Papal forces, was signally
+defeated by Federigo.
+
+San Marino has never, so far as I have been able to ascertain, undergone
+the calamity of a siege, and its inhabitants have uninterruptedly enjoyed
+the blessing of self-government from the foundation of the Republic in the
+third or fourth century to the present time, with the exception of the few
+months of 1503, during which the infamous Cesare Borgia forced them to
+accept a Podestà of his own nomination. Various causes have contributed to
+this lengthened independence; but it may be stated that, in the fifteenth
+and sixteenth centuries, the San Marinese owed it no less to their own
+patriotism, courage, prudence, and good faith, than to the disinterested
+protection of the Counts and Dukes of Urbino, whose history has been so
+ably written by Mr. Dennistoun, in his recently published memoirs of that
+chivalrous race.
+
+The privileges of the Republic were confirmed on the 12th of February,
+1797, by Napoleon Buonaparte, who offered to enlarge its territory,--a boon
+which its citizens were wise enough to decline; thinking, perhaps, with
+Montesquieu, that--
+
+ "Il est de la nature d'une république qu'elle n'ait qu'un petit
+ territoire: sans cela, elle ne peut guère subsister."--_Esprit des
+ Lois_, liv. viii. chap. 16.
+
+Your readers will find some notices of San {377} Marino in Addison's
+_Remarks on several Parts of Italy_; Aristotle's _Politics_, translated by
+Gillies, lib. ii. Appendix.
+
+Its lofty and isolated situation has supplied Jean Paul with a simile in
+his _Unsichtbare Loge_:
+
+ "Alle andre Wissenschaften theilen sich jetzt in eine Universal
+ Monarchie über alle Leser: aber die Alten sitzen mit ihren wenigen
+ philologischen Lehnsleuten einsam auf einem S. Marino-Felsen."--_Jean
+ Paul's_ Werke (Berlin, 1840, 8vo.), vol. i. p. 125.
+
+In the first line of the letter, "ved_a_to" should be ved_u_to; and in the
+seventh line, "difender_ai_" difender_vi_.
+
+F. C. B.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BELLMAN AND HIS HISTORY.
+
+(Vol. iii., p. 324.)
+
+The Bellman's songs may be found in the _Bellman's Treasury, containing
+above a Hundred several Verses, fitted for all Humours and Fancies, and
+suited to all Times and Seasons_. London: 8vo. 1707. Extracts from this
+book are given in Hone's _Every Day Book_, vol. ii. p. 1594.
+
+I have now before me a broadside thus entitled: "A copy of verses, humbly
+presented to the Right Worshipful the Mayor, Aldermen, and Common
+Councilmen, and the rest of my worthy Masters and Mistresses, dwelling in
+Cambridge. By Thomas Adams, Bellman, 1810." There is a large engraving,
+from a wood-block, apparently a century old, representing a bellman, in a
+flowing wig and a three-cornered hat, holding, in his right hand a bell,
+and in his left a javelin and lantern; his dog is behind him.
+
+The verses are:
+
+ 1. Prologue.
+ 2. To the Right Worshipful the Mayor.
+ 3. To the Aldermen.
+ 4. To the Common Councilmen.
+ 5. To the Town Clerk.
+ 6. To the Members for the Town.
+ 7. On the King.
+ 8. On the Queen.
+ 9. On Christmas Day.
+ 10. On New Year's Day.
+ 11. To the Young Men.
+ 12. To the Young Maids.
+ 13. On Charity.
+ 14. On Religion.
+ 15. Epilogue.
+
+This is marked as the 24th sheet; that is, as I suppose, the 24th set of
+verses presented by Mr. Adams.
+
+I have also a similar broadside, "by Isaac Moule, jun., bellman, 1824,"
+being "No. III." of Mr. Moule's performances. The woodcut is of a more
+modern character than Mr. Adams's, and delineates a bellman in a
+three-cornered hat, modern coat, breeches, and stockings, a bell in his
+right hand, and a small dog by his side. The bellman is represented as
+standing in front of the old Shire Hall in Cambridge, having Hobson's
+Conduit on his right.
+
+The subjects of Mr. Moule's verses are similar to those of Mr. Adams, with
+the following variations. He omits verses to the Town Clerk, the Members
+for the Town, the Queen, on Charity, and on Religion, and inserts verses
+"On St. Crispin," and "To my Masters and Mistresses."
+
+The office of bellman in this town was abolished in 1836, and to the
+bellman's verses have succeeded similar effusions from the lamplighters,
+who distribute copies when soliciting Christmas boxes from the inhabitants.
+
+C. H. COOPER.
+
+Cambridge, April 28. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Replies to Minor Queries.
+
+"_God takes those soonest_," &c. (Vol. iii., p. 302.).--In Morwenstow
+churchyard, Cornwall, there is this epitaph on a child:--
+
+ "Those whom God loves die young!
+ They see no evil days,--
+ No falsehood taints their tongue,
+ No wickedness their ways.
+
+ "Baptized, and so made sure,
+ To win their blest abode,--
+ What shall we pray for more?
+ They die, and are with God!"
+
+C. E. H.
+
+The belief expressed in these words is of great antiquity. See the story of
+Cleobis and Biton, in Herod. l. 31., and the verse frown the [Greek: Dis
+exapatôn] of Menander:
+
+ "[Greek: Hon hoi theoi philousin apothnêskei neos]."
+ Meineke, _Fragm. Com. Gr._, vol. iv. p. 105.
+
+L.
+
+I would suggest to T. H. K. that the origin of this line is Menander's
+
+ "[Greek: Hon hoi theoi philousin apothnêskei neos]."
+ Fragm. 128. in Meineke, _Fr. Com. Gr._
+
+imitated by Plautus:
+
+ "Quem di diligunt adulescens moritur."
+ _Bacch._ iv. 7. 18.
+
+whence the English adage,
+
+ "Whom the gods love die young."
+
+Wordsworth's _Excur._, b. i., has this sentiment:
+
+ "O, Sir, the good die first,
+ And those whose hearts are dry as summer dust,
+ Burn to the socket."
+
+C. P. PH****.
+
+ [Several other correspondents have kindly replied to this Query.]
+
+{378}
+
+_Disinterment for Heresy_ (Vol. iii, p. 240.).--Mr. Tracy's will, dated
+10th October, 22d Henry VIII. [1530], is given at length in Hall's
+_Chronicle_ (ed. 1809, p. 796.), where will be found the particulars of the
+case to which ARUN alludes. See also Burnet's _History of the Reformation_
+(ed. 1841, vol. i. pp. 125. 657, 658. 673.), and Strype's _Annals of the
+Reformation_, vol. i. p. 507. Strype states that Mr. Tracy's body was dug
+up and burnt "anno 1532." William Tyndale wrote _Exposition on Mr. Will.
+Tracies Will_, published in 8vo. at Nuremburgh, 1546. (Wood's _Athen.
+Oxon._, vol. i. p. 37.)
+
+C. H. COOPER.
+
+Cambridge, April 2. 1851.
+
+"William Tracy, a worshipful esquire in Gloucestershire, and then dwelling
+at Todington," made a will, which was thought to contain heretical
+sentiments. His executor having brought in this will to be proved two years
+after Tracy's death (in 1532), "the Convocation most cruelly judged that he
+should be taken out of the ground, and burnt as an heretick," which was
+accordingly done; but the chancellor of the diocese of Worcester, to whom
+the commission was sent for the burning, was fined 300_l_. for it by King
+Henry VIII. Such is the story in Fox's _Martyrs_, anno 1532 (vol. ii. p.
+262. ed. 1684, which I have before me).
+
+EXON.
+
+The date and some particulars of the exhumation of the body of W. Tracy,
+Esq., of Toddington Park, ancestor of the present Lord Sudeley, ARUN will
+find in Foxe's _Acts and Monuments_, vol. v. p. 31. ed. 1843, and the note
+in appendix will point out other sources.
+
+NOVUS.
+
+_The Vellum-bound Junius_ (Vol. iii., pp. 262. 307.).--In the Number dated
+April 19, 1851, p. 307., is a request for information relative to the
+"Vellum-bound copy of Junius;" also a reference to the subject in a prior
+number of the "NOTES AND QUERIES." Not being in England, and not having the
+prior numbers, it is not possible to make myself acquainted with the
+subject contained in that reference, but I will endeavour to throw some
+light on the Query in the Number which has been forwarded to me. The writer
+of the _Letters of Junius_ was the secretary of the first Marquis of
+Lansdowne, better known as Lord Shelburne. From his Lordship he obtained
+all the political information necessary for his compositions. The late
+Marquis of Lansdowne possessed the copy bound in vellum (two volumes), with
+many notes on the margin in Lord Shelburne's handwriting; they were kept
+locked up in a beautiful ebony casket bound and ornamented with brass. That
+casket has disappeared, at least so I have been told, and not many years
+ago inquiry was made for it by the present head of that house. Maclean was
+a dark, strong-featured man, who wore his hat slouched over his eyes, and
+generally a large cloak. He often corrected the slips or proofs of his
+letters at Cox's, a well-known printer near Lincoln's Inn, who deemed
+himself bound in honour never to divulge what he knew of that publication,
+and was agitated when once suddenly spoken to on the subject near the door
+of the small room in which the proofs were corrected, and with a high and
+honourable feeling requested never to be again spoken to on the subject.
+The late President of the Royal Academy, Benjamin West, knew Maclean; and
+his son, the late Raphael West, told the writer of these remarks, that when
+a young man he had seen him in the evening at his father's in Newman
+Street, and once heard him repeat a passage in one of the letters which was
+not then published. A more correct and veracious man than Mr. R. West could
+not be. Maclean stammered, and was consequently of no use to Lord Shelburne
+as a debater and supporter in parliament. A place in the East Indies was
+obtained for him, and he sailed in the Aurora frigate for that dependency,
+and was lost in her at the same time with Falconer, the author of the poem
+entitled _The Shipwreck_. The able tract published by Mr. Pickering,
+Piccadilly, would constitute a fair foundation on which to build the
+inquiry.
+
+ÆGROTUS.
+
+_Pursuits of Literature_ (Vol. iii., p. 240.).--I trust that the following
+notes may be useful in assisting your correspondent S. T. D. to ascertain
+"how the author of the _Pursuits of Literature_ became known." The first
+edition of the first part of the _Pursuits of Literature_ appears to have
+been published in quarto, by J. Owen, 168. Piccadilly, in 1794. In a volume
+of pamphlets I have the above bound up with the following:--
+
+ "The Sphinx's Head Broken: or a Poetical Epistle, with notes to THOMAS
+ JAMES M*TH**S, Cl*rk to the Q***n's Tr**s*r*r. Proving him to be the
+ author of the Pursuits of Literature: a Satirical Poem. With occasional
+ Digressions and Remarks. By Andrew Oedipus, an injured Author. London:
+ Printed for J. Bell, No. 148. Oxford Street, opposite New Bond Street,
+ MDCCXCVIII."
+
+This epistle is a very severe castigation for Mathias, whom Oedipus styles
+the "little black jogging man," whose
+
+ "Politics and religion are very well, but he is a detestable pedant,
+ and his head is a lumber-garret of Greek quotations, which he raps out
+ as a juggler does ribbands at a country fair."
+
+And speaking of "Chuckle Bennet," he calls him in a note,
+
+ "A good calf-headed bookseller in Pall Mall, the intimate confidant and
+ crony of little M*th**s, and who, upon Owen's bankruptcy, published
+ Part IV. of _Pursuits of Literature_ himself."
+
+Of Owen, who published Part I., our author says: {379}
+
+ "Hither the sly little fellow got crony Becket to send his satirical
+ trumpery;"
+
+which is further explained in the following note:
+
+ "Becket's back door is in an alley close to his house; here have I
+ often seen little M*th**s jog in and sit upon thorns for fear of being
+ seen, in the back-parlour, chattering matters over with old Numscull.
+ After passing through many hands, the proof sheets at last _very slily_
+ reached little M*th**s that he might revise the learned lumber."
+
+After alluding to several pieces published by Mathias, our unmerciful
+critic adds in another note:
+
+ "It is very remarkable how strongly the characteristic features of
+ identity of authorship are marked in these several pieces; the little
+ man had not even the wit to print them in a different manner, yet
+ strange to tell, few, very few, could smell the he-goat!
+
+ "Who reads thy _hazy weather_ but must swear,
+ 'Tis Thomas James M*th**s to a hair!"
+
+MERCURII.
+
+_Dutch Books_ (Vol. iii., p. 326.).--MARTINUS is probably aware that the
+library of the Fagel family is now a part of the University Library of
+Dublin, and that it contains a very fine collection of Dutch literature, in
+which it is very possible some of the books of which he is in search may be
+found.
+
+The auction catalogue prepared in 1800, when the library was to have been
+sold by auction, had it not been purchased by the University of Dublin, is
+printed, and a copy of it is at his service, if he will inform me through
+you how to send it to him.
+
+This library contains many rare tracts and documents well worthy of Mr.
+Macaulay's attention, if he is about to continue his history of the
+Revolution; but I have not heard whether he has made any inquiry after
+them, or whether he is aware of their existence. There is a curious MS.
+catalogue of them in the possession of the University, which was too
+voluminous to be printed, when the library was about to be sold.
+
+HIBERNICUS.
+
+_Engilbert, Archbishop of Treves_ (Vol. i., p 214.).--There can be no doubt
+that the bishop's reference is incorrect, and the suggestion of T. J. (Vol.
+iii., p. 291.) to consult the reprint of 1840 affords no aid in setting it
+right; for there we find (p. 178.) a note as follows:
+
+ "There was no Engilbert, Archbishop of Treves, nor is there any work in
+ this name in Goldasti."
+
+I have, however, consulted Mr. Bowden's _Life and Pontificate of Gregory
+VII._, in order, if possible, to find a clue; and in a note in vol. ii. p.
+246. of that work is a statement of the hesitation of the Pope on the
+doctrine of the eucharist, with a reference as follows:
+
+ "Vid. _Egilberti_ archiep. Trevir. epist. adv. Greg. VII., in Eccardi
+ Corp. historic. Medii Ævi. t. ii. p. 170."
+
+This reference I have verified, and found in the epistle of Egilbertus the
+passage which, no doubt, Bishop Cosin refers to, and which Mr. Bowden
+cites:
+
+ "En verus pontifex et sacerdos, qui dubitat si illud quod sumatur in
+ dominicâ mensâ sit verum corpus et sanguis Christi!"
+
+So much for that part of the difficulty, but another still remains. Was
+there ever an Egilbertus, or Engilbertus, Archbishop of Treves? To solve
+this question I consulted a list of the Archbishops of Treves in the
+_Bibliothèque Sacrée_ of Richard et Giraud, and I there find the following
+statement:
+
+ "_Engelbert_, grand-prévôt de Passau, fut intrus par la faveur de
+ l'empereur Henri IV., et sacré par des évêques schismatiques. Il mourut
+ en 1101."
+
+TYRO.
+
+Dublin.
+
+_Charles Lamb's Epitaph_ (Vol. iii., p. 322.).--According to Mr. Thorne
+(_Rambles by Rivers_, 1st series, p. 190.) the inscription in the
+churchyard at Edmonton, to the memory of Charles Lamb, was written "by his
+friend, Dr. Carey, the translator of 'Dante.'" Mr. Thorne gives an anecdote
+concerning this inscription which I venture to transcribe, in the
+expectation that it may interest your correspondent MARIA S., and others of
+your numerous readers.
+
+ "We heard a piece of criticism on this inscription that Lamb would have
+ enjoyed. As we were copying it, a couple of canal excavators came
+ across the churchyard, and read it over with great deliberation; when
+ they had finished, one of them said, 'A very fair bit of poetry that;'
+ 'Yes,' replied his companion, 'I'm blest if it isn't as good a bit as
+ any in the churchyard; rather too long, though.'"
+
+By "Dr. Carey," of course, is meant the Rev. Henry Francis Cary, M.A.,
+Vicar of Bromley Abbots, Staffordshire, and Assistant Librarian in the
+British Museum, as he was the translator of "Dante," and an intimate friend
+of Charles Lamb.
+
+C. H. COOPER.
+
+Cambridge, April 28. 1851.
+
+_Charles II. in Wales_ (Vol. iii., p. 263.).--In answer to DAVYDD GAM'S
+Query, it may be observed that I have never heard of the tradition in
+question, nor have I met with any evidence to show that Charles II. was in
+any part of Wales at this period. In "The true Narrative and Relation of
+his most sacred Majesty's Escape from Worcester," _Selection from the
+Harleian Miscellany_, 4to., p. 380., it is stated that the king meditated
+the scheme of crossing into Wales from White Ladies, the house of the
+Penderells, but that "the design was crossed." One of the "Boscobel
+Tracts," at p. 137., treating of the same period, and compiled by the king
+himself in 1680, mentions his {380} intention of making his escape another
+way, which was to get over the Severn into Wales, and so get either to
+Swansea, or some other of the sea towns that he knew had commerce with
+France; beside that he "remembered several honest gentlemen" that were of
+his acquaintance. However, the scheme was abandoned, and the king fled to
+the southward by Madeley, Boscobel, &c., to Cirencester, Bristol, and into
+Dorsetshire, and thence to Brighton, where he embarked for France on the
+15th Oct., 1651.
+
+Lancaiach is still in possession of the Prichard family, descendants of
+Col. Prichard.
+
+There is a tradition that Charles I. slept there on his way from Cardiff
+Castle to Brecon, in 1645, and the tester of the bed in which his Majesty
+slept is stated to have been in the possession of a Cardiff antiquary now
+deceased. The facts of the case appear in the _Iter Carolinum_, printed by
+Peck (_Desiderata Curiosa_). The king stayed at Cardiff from the 29th July
+to the 5th August, 1645, on which day he dined at Llancaiach, and supped at
+Brecon.
+
+J. M. T.
+
+"_Ex Pede Herculem_" (Vol. iii., p. 302.).--The following allusion to the
+foot of Hercules occurs in _Herodotus_, book iv. section 82.:
+
+ "[Greek: Ichnos Hêrakleos phainousi en petrêi eneon, to oike men bêmati
+ andros, esti de to megathos dipêchu, para ton Turên potamon.]"
+
+ ALFRED GATTY.
+
+The origin of this phrase is connected with the following story:--A certain
+Greek (whose name has for the present escaped me, but who must have been
+ready to contribute to the "NOTES AND QUERIES" of his time) was one day
+observed carefully "stepping" over the [Greek: aulos] or footrace-course at
+Olympia; and he gave as a reason for so doing, that when that race-course
+was originally marked out, it was exactly six hundred times as long as
+Hercules' foot (that being the distance Hercules could run without taking
+breath): so that by ascertaining how many times the length of his own foot
+is contained, he would know how much Hercules' foot exceeded his foot in
+length, and might therefrom calculate how much Hercules' stature exceeded
+that of ordinary men of those degenerate days.
+
+J. EASTWOOD.
+
+Ecclesfield.
+
+This proverb does not appear to be of classical origin. Several proverbs of
+a similar meaning are collected in Diogenian, v. 15. The most common is,
+[Greek: ek tôn onuchôn ton leonta], _ex ungue leonem_. The allusion to
+Hercules is probably borrowed from some fable.
+
+L.
+
+_Bucaneers_ (Vol. i., p. 400.).--Your correspondent C. will find an
+interesting account of the Bucaneers in a poem by M. Poirié St. Aurèle,
+entitled _Le Flibustier_, and published by Ambroise Dupont & Co., Paris,
+1827. The Introduction and Notes furnish some curious particulars relative
+to the origin, progress, and dissolution of those once celebrated pirates,
+and to the daring exploits of their principal leaders, Montauban, Grammont,
+Monbars, Vand-Horn, Laurent de Graff, and Sir H. Morgan. The book contains
+many facts which go far to support Bryan Edwards's favourable opinion. I
+may add that the author derives the French word _flibustier_ from the
+English _freebooter_, and the English word _bucaneer_ from the French
+_boucanier_; which latter word is derived from _boucan_, an expression used
+by the Caribs to describe the place where they assembled to make a repast
+of their enemies taken in war.
+
+HENRY H. BREEN.
+
+St. Lucia, March, 1851.
+
+_God's Acre_ (Vol. iii., p. 284.).--By a _Saxon_ phrase, MR. LONGFELLOW
+undoubtedly meant _German_. In Germany _Gottes-acker_ is a name for
+churchyard; and it is to be found in Wachter's _Glossarium Germanicum_, as
+well as in modern dictionaries. It is true there is the other word
+_Kirchhof_, perhaps of more modern date.
+
+ "GOTS-AKER. Cæmeterium. Quasi ager Dei, quia corpora defunctorum
+ fidelium comparantur semini. 1 Cor. xv. 36., observante Keyslero in
+ _Antiq. Septentr._ p. 109."--Wachter's _Gloss. Germanicum_.
+
+Very interesting are also the other allegorical names which have been given
+to the burial-places of the dead. They are enlarged upon in Minshew's
+_Guide to Tongues_, under the head "Churchyard."
+
+ "Cæmeterium (from the Greek), signifying a dormitory or place of sleep.
+ And a Hebrew term (so Minshew says), Beth-chajim, _i. e._ domus
+ viventium, 'The house of the living,' in allusion to the resurrection."
+
+Our matter-of-fact "Church-_yard_ or inclosure" falls dull on the ear and
+mind after any of the above titles.
+
+HERMES.
+
+_God's Acre._--The term _God's Acre_, as applied to a church-garth, would
+seem to designate the consecrated ground set apart as the resting-place of
+His faithful departed, sown with immortal seed (1 Cor. xv. 38.), which
+shall be raised in glory at the great harvest (Matt. xiii. 39.; Rev. xiv.
+15.). The church-yard is "dedicated wholly and only for Christian burial,"
+and "the bishop and ordinary of the diocese, as _God's minister, in God's
+stead accepts it_ as a freewill offering, to be severed from all former
+profane and common uses, to be held as holy ground," and "to be _God's
+storehouse_ for the bodies of His saints there to be interred." See "Bishop
+Andrewes' Form of Consecration of a Churchyard," _Minor Works_, pp.
+328-333., Oxf., 1846.
+
+MACKENZIE WALCOTT, M.A.
+
+{381}
+
+P.S. When was the name of _Poet's Corner_ first attached to the south
+transept of Westminster Abbey?
+
+Jermyn Street.
+
+_Abbot Eustacius_, of whom J. L. (Vol. iii., p. 141.) asks, was the Abbot
+of Flay, and came over from Normandy to England, and preached all through
+this kingdom with much effect in the beginning of John's reign, A. D. 1200,
+as Roger Hovedene tells us, _Annal._, ed. Savile, London, 1596, _fos._ 457.
+_b_, 466. _b._ Wendover (iii. 151.) and Matt. Paris _in anno_, mention him.
+
+D. ROCK.
+
+_Vox Populi Vox Dei_ (Vol. iii., p. 288.) is, I find, a much older proverb
+in England than Edward III.'s reign, for whose coronation sermon it was
+chosen the text, not by Simon Mepham, but Walter Reynolds, as your
+correspondent ST. JOHNS rightly says. Speaking of the way in which St. Odo
+yielded his consent to the Abp. of Canterbury, circ. A. D. 920, William of
+Malmesbury writes: "Recogitans illud proverbium, _Vox populi vox
+Dei_."--_De Gestis Pont._, L. i. fo. 114., ed. Savile.
+
+D. ROCK.
+
+_Francis Moore and his Almanack_ (Vol. iii., p. 263.).--Mr. Knight, in his
+_London_, vol. iii. p. 246., throws a little light on this subject:
+
+ "The renowned Francis Moore seems to have made his first appearance
+ about the end of the seventeenth century. He published a _Kalendarium
+ Ecclesiasticum_ in 1699, and his earliest _Vox Stellarum_ or _Almanac_,
+ as far as we can discover, came out in 1701," &c.
+
+But Mr. Knight is not sure that "Francis Moore" was not a _nom de guerre_,
+although at p. 241. he gives the portrait of the "Physician" from an
+anonymous print, published in 1657.
+
+A. A.
+
+Abridge.
+
+There is an Irish edition published in Drogheda, sold for threepence, and
+_embellished_ with a portrait of Francis Moore. Can Ireland claim this
+worthy? Many farmers and others rely much on the weather prophecies of this
+almanack. A tenant of mine always announces to me triumphantly that "Moore
+is right:" but his triumphs come at very long intervals.
+
+K.
+
+I can answer part of H. P. W.'s Query. Francis Moore's celebrated
+_Almanack_ first appeared in 1698. We have this date upon his own
+confession. Before his _Almanack_ for 1771 is a letter which begins thus:
+
+ "Kind Reader,
+
+ "This being the 73rd year since my Almanack first appeared to the
+ world, and having for several years presented you with observations
+ that have come to pass to the admiration of many, I have likewise
+ presented you with several hieroglyphics," &c.
+
+EDWARD F. RIMBAULT.
+
+That such a personage really did exist there can be little doubt, Bromley
+(in _Engraved Portraits, &c._) gives 1657 as the date of his birth, and
+says that there was a portrait of him by Drapentier _ad vivum_. Lysons
+mentions him as one of the remarkable men who, at different periods,
+resided at Lambeth, and says that his house was in Calcott's Alley, High
+Street, then called Back Lane, where he seems to have enlightened his
+generation in the threefold capacity of astrologer, physician, and
+schoolmaster.
+
+J. C. B.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Miscellaneous.
+
+NOTES ON BOOKS, SALES, CATALOGUES, ETC.
+
+Professor De Morgan has just furnished a new contribution to _L' Art de
+vérifier les Dates_, in the shape of a small but most useful and practical
+book, entitled _The Book of Almanacks, with an Index of Reference, by which
+the Almanack may be found for every year, whether in the Old Style or New,
+from any Epoch Ancient or Modern up to_ A. D. 2000. _With means of finding
+the Day of any New or Full Moon from_ B. C. 2000 _to_ A. D. 2000. An
+example will show, better even than this ample title-page, the great
+utility of this work to the historical enquirer. Walter Scott, speaking of
+the battle of Bannockburn, which was fought on the day of St. John the
+Baptist, June 24, 1314, says,
+
+ "It was a night of lovely June,
+ High rose in cloudless blue the moon."
+
+Now, should the reader be desirous of testing the accuracy of this
+statement, (and how many statements have ere this been tested by the fact
+of the moon's age!), he turns to Professor De Morgan's Index, which at 1314
+gives Epact 3., Dominical Letter F., Number of Almanack 17. Turning to this
+almanack, he finds that the 24th June was on a Monday; from the
+Introduction (p. xiii.) and a very easy calculation, he learns that the
+full moon of June, 1314, would be on the 27th, or within a day, and from a
+more exact method (at p. xiv.), that the full moon was within two hours of
+nine A.M., on the 28th. So that Sir Walter was correct, there being more
+than half moon on the night of which he was speaking. Such an instance as
+the one cited will show how valuable the _Book of Almanacks_ must prove to
+all historical students, and what a ready test it furnishes as to accuracy
+of dates, &c. It must take its place on every shelf beside Sir H. Nicolas'
+_Chronology of History_.
+
+We doubt not that many of our readers share our feeling as to the
+importance of children's books, from the influence they may be destined to
+exercise upon generations yet unborn. To all such we shall be doing
+acceptable service by pointing out Mrs. Alfred Gatty's little volume, _The
+Fairy Godmothers and other Tales_, as one which combines the two essentials
+of good books for children; namely, imagination to attract, and sound
+morals to instruct. Both these requisites will be found in Mrs. Gatty's
+most pleasing collection of tales, which do not require the very clever
+frontispiece by Miss Barker to render the volume an acceptable gift to all
+"good little Masters and Mistresses." {382}
+
+Messrs. Sotheby and Wilkinson (3. Wellington Street, Strand) will commence
+on Monday a six-days' Sale of most interesting Autograph Letters,
+Historical Documents, and original MSS. of distinguished writers, as that
+of _Kenilworth_ in the Autograph of Sir W. Scott, of _Madoc_ in that of
+Southey, unpublished poems by Burns, and _Le Second Manuscrit venu de St.
+Hélène_. One of the most curious Lots is No. 1035, Shakspeare's play of
+_Henry IV._, two parts condensed into one,--a contemporary and unique
+Manuscript, being the only one known to exist of any of the productions by
+the Sweet Bard of Avon. It is presumed to be a playhouse copy with
+corrections in the Autograph of Sir Edward Deering of Surrenden, in Kent,
+(who died in 1644); and, as no printed copy is known to contain the various
+corrections and alterations therein, is supposed to have been so corrected
+for the purposes of private representation, it being well known that
+theatricals formed a portion of the amusements in vogue at that baronet's
+country seat during the early portion of the reign of James I. Our readers
+will remember that the Shakspeare Society showed their sense of its value
+by printing it under the editorship of Mr. Halliwell.
+
+CATALOGUES RECEIVED.--Emerson Charnley's (45. Bigg Market,
+Newcastle-upon-Tyne) Catalogue Part IV. of Books Old and New; W. Brown's
+(46. High Holborn) Catalogue Part LIII. of Valuable Second-hand Books.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BOOKS AND ODD VOLUMES WANTED TO PURCHASE.
+
+ DIANA (ANTONINUS) COMPENDIUM RESOLUTIONEM MORALIUM. Antwerp.-Colon.
+ 1634-57.
+
+ PASSIONAEL EFTE DAT LEVENT DER HEILIGEN. Folio. Basil, 1522.
+
+ CARTARI--LA ROSA D'ORO PONTIFICIA. 4to. Rome, 1681.
+
+ BROEMEL, M. C. H., FEST-TANZEN DER ERSTEN CHRISTEN. Jena, 1705.
+
+ THE COMPLAYNT OF SCOTLAND, edited by Leyden. 8vo. Edin. 1801.
+
+ THOM'S LAYS AND LEGENDS OF VARIOUS NATIONS. Parts I. to VII. 12mo.
+ 1834.
+
+ L'ABBÉ DE SAINT PIERRE, PROJET DE PAIX PERPETUELLE. 3 Vols. 12mo.
+ Utrecht, 1713.
+
+ CHEVALIER RAMSAY, ESSAI DE POLITIQUE, où l'on traite de la Nécessité,
+ de l'Origine, des Droits, des Bornes en des différentes Formes de la
+ Souveraineté, selon les Principes de l'Auteur de Télémaque. 2 Vols.
+ 12mo. La Haye, without date, but printed in 1719.
+
+ The same. Second Edition, under the title "Essai Philosophique sur le
+ Gouvernement Civil, selon les Principes de Fénélon," 12mo. Londres,
+ 1721.
+
+ PULLEN'S ETYMOLOGICAL COMPENDIUM, 8vo.
+
+ COOPER'S (C. P.) ACCOUNT OF PUBLIC RECORDS, 8vo. 1822. Vol. I.
+
+ LINGARD'S HISTORY OF ENGLAND. Sm. 8vo. 1837. Vols. X. XI. XII. XIII.
+
+ MILLER'S (JOHN, OF WORCESTER COLL.) SERMONS. Oxford, 1831 (or about
+ that year).
+
+*** 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.
+
+_Although we have this week again enlarged our paper to twenty-four pages,
+we have been compelled to postpone many interesting articles. Among these
+we may particularise "Illustrations of Chaucer, No. VI.," a valuable paper
+by_ MR. SINGER _on "John Tradescant," and another on the "Tradescent
+Family" by_ MR. PINKERTON; _and many Replies_.
+
+A. X. _The Brussels edition of the_ Biographie Universelle _is in 21 vols.
+Bickers of Leicester Square marks a copy half-bound in 7 vols. at Five
+Guineas._
+
+TRIVIA _and_ A. A. D. _The oft-quoted line_ "TEMPORA MUTANTUR," &c., _is
+from Borbonius_. _See_ "NOTES AND QUERIES," Vol. i., pp. 234. 419.
+
+A. A. D. _is referred to_ p. 357. _of our last Number for an explanation of
+"Mind your Ps and Qs."_
+
+NEMO'S _Query respecting Pope Joan was inserted in_ No. 75. p. 265.; _a
+Reply to it appears in_ No. 77. p. 306.; _and we have several more
+communications to which we hope to give insertion next week_.
+
+REPLIES RECEIVED.--_Ramasse--Prayer at the Healing--M. or N.--Deans Very
+Reverend--Family of the Tradescants--Epitaph on the Countess of
+Pembroke--West Chester--Demosthenes and New Testament--Pope Joan--Handbills
+at Funerals--Ventriloquist Hoax--Solid-hoofed Pigs--Aerial
+Apparitions--Apple-pie Order--Wife of James Torre--Snail-eating--Epigram by
+T. Dunbar._
+
+VOLS. I. _and_ II., _each with very copious Index, may still be had, price_
+9s. 6d. _each_.
+
+NOTES AND QUERIES _may be procured, by order, of all Booksellers and
+Newsvenders. It is published at noon on Friday, so that our country
+Subscribers ought not to experience any difficulty in procuring it
+regularly. Many of the country Booksellers, &c., are, probably, not yet
+aware of this arrangement, which will enable them to receive_ NOTES AND
+QUERIES _in their Saturday parcels_.
+
+_All communications for the Editor of_ NOTES AND QUERIES _should be
+addressed to the care of_ MR. BELL, No. 186. Fleet Street.
+
+ERRATA.--Page 336. l. 4. for "Burkdo_n_" read "Burkdo_u_." (i. e.
+Bourdeaux); p. 341. l. 11. for "la_u_rando" read "la_ce_rando;" and in p.
+352. instead of between the years "1825 and 1850," read "1825 and 1830;"
+and we are requested to add that the churchwardens' account of S. Mary de
+Castro, Leicester, had disappeared from the parish chest long prior to the
+time mentioned.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PRINTING.
+
+A LECTURE, SPEECH, SERMON, OR ORATION, occupying about three quarters of an
+hour in delivery, printed on good paper, in bold clear type: 500 copies,
+3l. 17s. 6d.; 1000 copies, 5l. 10s. 1000 Circulars, Note Size, printed on
+Cream-laid Note Paper, fly leaf, 17s. 6d., 1000 Ditto, on Superfine
+Cream-laid Letter Paper, fly leaf, 1l. 5s.
+
+BATEMAN and HARDWICKE, 38. Carey Street, Lincoln's Inn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+This day is published, fcap. 8vo., price 5s.,
+
+PLEASURES, OBJECTS, and ADVANTAGES of LITERATURE. By the Rev. R. A.
+WILLMOTT, St. Catherine's, Bear Wood, Author of "Jeremy Taylor, a
+Biography."
+
+London: T. BOSWORTH, 215. Regent Street.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+NEW WORK BY PROFESSOR DE MORGAN.
+
+This day, in One Volume, oblong 8vo., price 5s., cloth,
+
+THE BOOK OF ALMANACS; with INDEX, by which the Almanac belonging to any
+Year preceding A. D. 2000 can be found; with means of finding New and Full
+Moons from B. C. 2000 to A. D. 2000. By AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN, Professor of
+Mathematics in University College, London.
+
+The "Book of Almanacs" will enable any one to lay open before him the whole
+Almanac of any past year, of the present year, or of any future year, up to
+A. D. 2000, whether in old style or new, by one consultation of a simple
+Index. This book will be useful to all who ever want an Almanac, past,
+present, or future;--to Clergymen, as a perpetual index to the Sundays and
+Festivals;--to Lawyers in arranging evidence which runs over a long period,
+and to Courts of Law in hearing it;--to Historical and Antiquarian
+Inquirers, in testing statements as to time and date;--to all, in fact, who
+are ever required to interest themselves about time past or future.
+
+TAYLOR, WALTON, and MABERLY, Upper Gower Street, and Ivy Lane, Paternoster
+Row.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Now ready, royal 8vo., pp. 1653. 21s.
+
+A COPIOUS AND CRITICAL LATIN-ENGLISH LEXICON, founded on the larger
+Latin-German Lexicon of DR. WILLIAM FREUND; with Additions and Corrections
+from the Lexicons of Gesner, Facciolati, Scheller, Georges, &c. &c. By
+E. A. ANDREWS, LL.D.
+
+London: SAMPSON LOW, 169. Fleet Street.
+New York: HARPER and BROTHERS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+{383}
+
+[Illustration]
+
+GREAT EXHIBITION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CENTRAL AVENUE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+An Illustrated Priced Catalogue of Church Furniture Contributed by
+
+ GILBERT J. FRENCH,
+ BOLTON, LANCASHIRE,
+
+forwarded Free by Post on application.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Parcels delivered Carriage Free in London, daily.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CATALOGUES OF JOHN RUSSELL SMITH'S LITERARY COLLECTIONS.
+
+1. Parts I. and II. of a Classified Catalogue of 25,000 Ancient and Modern
+Pamphlets.
+
+2. Books on the History and Topography of Great Britain, arranged in
+Counties.
+
+3. Twelve Hundred Books and Pamphlets relating to America.
+
+4. Five Hundred Books relating to the Counties of Kent, Sussex, and Surrey.
+
+5. Ancient Manuscripts, Deeds, Charters, and other Documents relating to
+English Families and Counties.
+
+6. Parts II. and III. for 1851, of Choice, Useful, and Curious Books, in
+most Classes of Literature, containing 1600 articles.
+
+*** Any of the above Catalogues may be had, gratis, on application, or any
+one will be sent by post on receipt of four postage labels to frank it.
+
+4. Old Compton Street, Soho, London.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Just published, 12mo. cloth, 5s.
+
+THE DIALECT AND FOLK-LORE OF NORTHAMPTONSHIRE. A Glossary of
+Northamptonshire Provincialisms, Collection of Fairy-Legends, Popular
+Superstitions, &c. By THOMAS STERNBERG.
+
+ "A skilful attempt to record a local dialect."--_Notes and Queries_,
+ No. 72.
+
+ "Mr Sternberg has evinced a striking and peculiar aptitude for this
+ branch of enquiry."--_Northampton Mercury._
+
+ "The notes on Folk-lore are curious, and worthy
+ consultation."--_Gentleman's Magazine._
+
+J. RUSSELL SMITH, 4. Old Compton Street, Soho, London.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+WESTERN LIFE ASSURANCE AND ANNUITY SOCIETY, 3. Parliament Street, London.
+
+VALUABLE NEW PRINCIPLE.
+
+Payment of premiums may be occasionally suspended without forfeiting the
+policy, on a new and valuable plan, adopted by this society only, as fully
+detailed in the prospectus.
+
+A. SCRATCHLEY, M.A.,
+
+Actuary and Secretary; Author of "Industrial Investment and Emigration;
+being a Second Edition of a Treatise on Benefit Building Societies, &c."
+Price 10s. 6d.
+
+London: J. W. PARKER, West Strand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+COMMITTEE FOR THE REPAIR OF THE TOMB OF GEOFFREY CHAUCER.
+
+JOHN BRUCE, Esq., Treas. S.A., 5, Upper Gloucester Street, Dorset Square.
+
+J. PAYNE COLLIER, Esq., V.P.S.A., Geys House, Maidenhead.
+
+PETER CUNNINGHAM, Esq., F.S.A., Madeley Villas, Kensington.
+
+WILLIAM RICHARD DRAKE, Esq., F.S.A., _Honorary Treasurer_, 46. Parliament
+Street.
+
+THOMAS W. KING, Esq., F.S.A., York Herald, College of Arms, St. Paul's.
+
+SIR FREDERICK MADDEN, K.H., British Museum.
+
+JOHN GOUGH NICHOLS, Esq., F.S.A., 25. Parliament St.
+
+HENRY SHAW, Esq., F.S.A., 37. Southampton Row, Russell Square.
+
+SAMUEL SHEPHERD, Esq., F.S.A., Marlborough Square, Chelsea.
+
+WILLIAM J. THOMS, Esq., F.S.A., _Honorary Secretary_, 25. Holy-Well Street,
+Millbank, Westminster.
+
+THE TOMB OF GEOFFREY CHAUCER IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY stands in need of repair.
+The portrait and the inscriptions have disappeared; the overhanging canopy
+has suffered damage; the table is chipped and broken; the base is fast
+mouldering into irretrievable decay.
+
+Such an announcement is calculated to stir every heart that can respond to
+the claims of poetry, or feel grateful for the delight which it affords to
+every cultivated mind. It summons us, like the sound of a trumpet, "To the
+rescue!" It cannot be that the first and almost the greatest of English
+bards should ever be allowed to want a fitting memorial in our "Poet's
+Corner," or that the monument which was erected by the affectionate respect
+of Nicholas Brigham, nearly three centuries ago, should, in our time, be
+permitted to crumble into dust.
+
+A sum under One Hundred Pounds will effect a perfect repair.
+
+It is thought that there can be no difficulty in raising such a sum, and
+that multitudes of people in various conditions of life, and even in
+distant quarters of the globe, who venerate the name of Chaucer, and have
+derived instruction and delight from his works, will be anxious to
+contribute their mite to the good deed.
+
+The Committee have therefore not thought it right to fix any limit to the
+subscription; they themselves, with the aid of several distinguished
+noblemen and gentlemen, have opened the list with a contribution from each
+of them of Five Shillings, but they will be ready to receive any amount,
+more or less, which those who value poetry and honour Chaucer may be kind
+enough to remit to them.
+
+The design of the Committee is sanctioned by the approval of the Earl of
+Carlisle, the Earl of Ellesmere, the Earl of Shaftesbury, Lord Braybrooke.
+Lord Londesborough, Lord Mahon, the Right Hon. C. W. W. Wynn, and by the
+concurrence of the Dean and Chapter of Westminster.
+
+An account of the sums received and expended will be published when the
+work is completed.
+
+Subscriptions are received by all the members of the Committee, and at the
+Union Bank, Pall Mall East. Post-office orders may be made payable to
+William Richard Drake, Esq., the Treasurer, 46. Parliament Street, at the
+Charing Cross Office.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+{384}
+
+In a few days will be published, in One handsome Volume 8vo., profusely
+Illustrated with Engravings by Jewitt,
+
+Some Account of Domestic Architecture in England;
+
+FROM
+
+THE CONQUEST TO THE END OF THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY.
+
+WITH
+
+NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS OF EXISTING REMAINS FROM ORIGINAL DRAWINGS.
+
+BY T. HUDSON TURNER.
+
+THE TABLE OF CONTENTS OF THIS VOLUME WILL BEST EXPLAIN ITS OBJECT.
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+ The Romans in England--Their Villas and Houses--Ordinary Plan of a
+ Roman House--Method of Building--The Saxons--Their Style of Building;
+ they probably occupied Roman Houses--A Saxon Hall--Houses of Winchester
+ and London in the Saxon Period--Decoration of Buildings--Romanesque
+ Style of Architecture introduced during the Saxon Period--Drawings in
+ Saxon MSS., their Character and Value as Architectural Evidence--The
+ Greek, or Byzantine School; its Influence on Saxon Art--Antiquity of
+ Chimneys; None at Rome in the Fourteenth Century--Character of the
+ Military Buildings of the Saxons--The Castles of Coningsburgh and
+ Bamborough later than the Saxon Period--Arundel, the only Castle said
+ to have been standing in the time of the Confessor--Norman
+ Castles--Domestic Architecture of the Normans--Stone Quarries--Use of
+ Plaster--Bricks and Tiles--Brickmaking, its Antiquity in
+ England--Masons and other Workmen--Glazing--Iron Works in
+ England--Architectural Designs of the Middle Ages, how made--Working
+ Moulds of Masons, &c.
+
+CHAPTER I.--TWELFTH CENTURY.
+
+ General Remarks--Imperfect Character of existing Remains of the Twelfth
+ Century--Materials for the History of Domestic Architecture; their
+ Nature--General Plan of Houses at this Date--Halls--Other Apartments of
+ Ordinary Houses--Bedchamber, Kitchen, Larder, &c.--King's Houses at
+ Clarendon and other Places--Hall, always the Chief Feature of a Norman
+ House--Alexander Necham, his Description of a House--Plan of Norman
+ Halls--Their Roofs--Situation of other Apartments relatively to the
+ Hall--Kitchens--Cooking in the Open Air--Bayeux Tapestry--Remains of a
+ Norman House at Appleton, Berks--Fences, Walls, &c.--Some Norman Houses
+ built in the form of a Parallelogram, and of Two Stories--Boothby
+ Pagnell, Lincolnshire--Christ Church, Hants--Jews' House at
+ Lincoln--Moyses' Hall, Bury St. Edmund's--Staircases, Internal and
+ External--External Norman Stair at Canterbury--Houses at
+ Southampton--Building Materials--Use of Lead for Roofs--English Lead
+ exported to France--Style of Norman Roofs--Metal Work; Hinges, Locks,
+ Nail-heads, &c.--Gloucester celebrated for its Iron
+ Manufactures--External Decoration of
+ Buildings--Windows--Glazing--Fire-places--Kitchens open in the
+ Roof--Hostelry of the Prior of Lewes--Internal Walls
+ Plastered--Furniture of Houses, Tapestry, &c--Floors generally of
+ Wood--Character London Houses in the Twelfth Century--Assize of 1189
+ regulating Buildings in London--Assize of the Year 1212 relating to the
+ same Subject--- Majority of London Houses chiefly of Wood and
+ Thatched--Wages of Workmen--Cookshops on Thames Side--Chimneys not
+ mentioned in the London Assizes, &c.
+
+CHAPTER II.--EXISTING REMAINS.
+
+ Oakham Castle, Rutlandshire--The King's House, Southampton--Minster,
+ Isle of Thanet--Christ Church, Hants--Manor-house at Appleton--Sutton
+ Courtney, Berks--St. Mary's Guild, and Jews' Houses,
+ Lincoln--Staircase, Canterbury--Warnford, Hants--Fountain's
+ Abbey--Priory, Dover--Moyses' Hall, Bury St. Edmund's--Hostelry of the
+ Prior of Lewes, Southwark--Boothby Pagnell, Lincolnshire--Barnack,
+ Northamptonshire--School of Pythagoras, Cambridge--Notes on Remains of
+ Early Domestic Architecture in France.
+
+CHAPTER III.--THIRTEENTH CENTURY.
+
+ General Remarks--Hall at Winchester--Reign of Henry III. remarkable for
+ the Progress of Architecture--Condition of Norman Castles in the
+ Thirteenth Century--Plan of Manor-houses at this Date--House built for
+ Edward I. at Woolmer, Hants--Description of House at Toddington, by M.
+ Paris--Meaning of term _Palatium_--Longthorpe, Stoke-Say Castle--West
+ Deane, Sussex--Aydon Castle--Little Wenham Hall--Two Halls at
+ Westminster, temp Henry III.--Temporary Buildings erected at
+ Westminster for the Coronation of Edward I.--Private Hospitality in
+ this Century--Kitchens--Wardrobes--Influence of Feudal Manners on
+ Domestic Architecture--Building Materials--Wood extensively
+ used--Manor-house of Timber engraved on a Personal Seal--Extensive Use
+ of Plaster--Roofs of the Thirteenth Century--Windows--Glass and
+ Glazing--Digression on the History of Glass-making in England--No Glass
+ made in England until the Fifteenth Century--Wooden Lattices,
+ Fenestrals, &c.--Fire-places and Chimneys--Mantels--Staircases,
+ External and Internal--Internal Decoration of
+ Houses--Wainscote--Polychrome--Artists of the Time of Henry III.; their
+ Style--Their Names--Spurs, Screens, &c.--Tapestry not used in Private
+ Dwellings in the Thirteenth Century. Flooring--Tiles--Baths Cameræ
+ Privatæ--Conduits and Drains--Houses in Towns--Parisian Houses--Other
+ Foreign Examples--Furniture--Carpets--General State of England in the
+ Thirteenth Century--State of Towns--London and Winchester
+ compared--Travelling--Hackneymen--Inns--State of Trade in
+ England--Agriculture--Remarks on Horticulture.
+
+CHAPTER IV.--THIRTEENTH CENTURY.--EXISTING REMAINS.
+
+ Aydon Castle, Northumberland--Godmersham, Kent--Little Wenham Hall,
+ Suffolk--Longthorpe, near Peterborough--Charney Basset, Berks--Master's
+ House, St. John's Hospital, Northampton--Stoke-Say Castle,
+ Shropshire--Coggs, Oxfordshire--Cottesford, Oxfordshire--Parsonage
+ House, West Tarring, Sussex--Archdeacon's House,
+ Peterborough--Crowhurst, Sussex--Bishop's Palace, Wells--Woodcroft
+ Castle, Northamptonshire--Old Rectory House, West Deane, Sussex--Acton
+ Burnell, Shropshire--Somerton Castle, Lincolnshire--Old Soar, Kent--The
+ King's Hall at Winchester--The Priory, Winchester--Stranger's Hall,
+ Winchester--House at Oakham, known as Flore's House--Thame,
+ Oxfordshire--Chipping-Norton, Oxfordshire--Middleton Cheney,
+ Oxfordshire--Sutton Courtney, Berkshire.
+
+CHAPTER V.--HISTORICAL ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+Extracts from the Liberate Rolls of Henry III., 1229-1259, relating to the
+following places:--
+
+ Bridgenorth -- Brigstock -- Brill -- Bristol -- Canterbury -- Clarendon
+ -- Cliff -- Clipstone -- Corfe Castle -- Dover -- Dublin -- Evereswell
+ -- Feckenham -- Freemantle -- Geddington -- Gillingham -- Gloucester --
+ Guildford -- Havering -- Hereford -- Hertford -- Kennington --
+ Litchfield -- London, (Tower) -- Ely House -- Ludgershall --
+ Marlborough -- Newcastle -- Northampton -- Nottingham -- Oxford --
+ Rochester -- Sherbourn -- Silverstone -- Westminster -- Winchester --
+ Windsor -- Woodstock.
+
+SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES OF FOREIGN EXAMPLES.
+
+ General Remarks -- Treves -- Laon -- Ratisbon -- Gondorf -- Metz --
+ Toulouse -- Laon -- Brée -- Coucy -- Carden -- Tours -- Angers --
+ Fontevrault, (Kitchen) -- Perigueux -- St. Emilion -- Mont St. Michel
+ -- Beauvais.
+
+APPENDIX OF DOCUMENTS.
+
+OXFORD: JOHN HENRY PARKER; AND 377. STRAND, LONDON.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Printed by THOMAS CLARK SHAW, of No. 8. New Street Square, at No. 5. New
+Street Square, in the Parish of St. Brid in the City of London; and
+published by GEORGE BELL, of No. 186. Fleet Street, in the Parish of St.
+Dunstan the West, in the City of London, Publisher, at No. 186. Fleet
+Street aforesaid.--Saturday, May 10. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Corrections made to printed original.
+
+page 366, "Knew William of Deloraine" - 'Delorane' in original.
+
+page 370, "At the end of a postscript" - 'postcript' in original.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Queries, Number 80, May 10,
+1851, by Various
+
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+
+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's Notes and Queries, Number 80, May 10, 1851, 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 80, May 10, 1851
+ A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists,
+ Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: May 23, 2010 [EBook #32495]
+
+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
+http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
+generously made available by The Internet Library of Early
+Journals.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="10" style="background-color: #ccccff;">
+<tr>
+<td style="width:25%; vertical-align:top">
+Transcriber's note:
+</td>
+<td>
+A few typographical errors have been corrected. They
+appear in the text <span class="correction" title="explanation will pop up">like this</span>, and the
+explanation will appear when the mouse pointer is moved over the marked
+passage.
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<p><!-- Page 361 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page361"></a>{361}</span></p>
+
+<h1>NOTES AND QUERIES:</h1>
+
+<h2>A MEDIUM OF INTER-COMMUNICATION FOR LITERARY MEN, ARTISTS, ANTIQUARIES,
+GENEALOGISTS, ETC.</h2>
+
+<h3><b>"When found, make a note of."</b>&mdash;<span class="sc">Captain Cuttle</span>.</h3>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+<table width="100%" class="nomar" summary="masthead" title="masthead">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left; width:25%">
+ <p><b>No. 80.</b></p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:center; width:50%">
+ <p><b><span class="sc">Saturday, May 10. 1851.</span></b></p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right; width:25%">
+ <p><b>Price Threepence<br />Stamped Edition 4<i>d.</i></b></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+
+<table width="100%" class="nomar" summary="Contents" title="Contents">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left; width:94%">
+ <p>CONTENTS.</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right; width:5%">
+ <p>Page</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>The Great Exhibition, Notes and Queries, and Chaucer's Prophetic
+ View of the Crystal Palace</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><a href="#page361">361</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p><span class="sc">Notes</span>:&mdash;</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>On "The Lay of the Last Minstrel"</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><a href="#page364">364</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Poems discovered among the Papers of Sir Kenelm Digby</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><a href="#page367">367</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Folk-Lore:&mdash;The Christmas
+ Thorn&mdash;Milk-maids&mdash;Disease cured by Sheep&mdash;Sacramental
+ Wine&mdash;"Nettle in Dock out"</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><a href="#page367">367</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Metropolitan Improvements, by R. J. King</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><a href="#page368">368</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Minor Notes:&mdash;Meaning of Luncheon&mdash;Charade upon Nothing
+ translated&mdash;Giving the Lie&mdash;Anachronisms of
+ Painters&mdash;Spenser's Faerie Queene&mdash;Prayer of Mary Queen of
+ Scots&mdash;A small Instance of Warren Hastings'
+ Magnanimity&mdash;Richard Baxter&mdash;Registry of Dissenting
+ Baptisms in Churches</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><a href="#page369">369</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p><span class="sc">Queries</span>:&mdash;</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Notes and Queries relating to Scandinavia, by W. E. C. Nourse</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><a href="#page370">370</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>The Rotation of the Earth, by Robert Snow</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><a href="#page371">371</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Minor Queries:&mdash;William ap Jevan's
+ Descendants&mdash;"Geographers on Afric's Downs"&mdash;Irish
+ Brigade&mdash;Passage in Oldham&mdash;Mont-de-Piété&mdash;Poem upon
+ the Grave&mdash;When self-striking Clocks first
+ invented&mdash;Clarkson's Richmond&mdash;Sir Francis Windebank's
+ elder Son&mdash;Incised Slab&mdash;Etymology of Balsall&mdash;St.
+ Olave's Churches&mdash;Sabbatical and Jubilee Years of the
+ Jews&mdash;Arms of the Isle of Man&mdash;Doctrine of the
+ Resurrection&mdash;National Debts&mdash;Leicester's Commonwealth</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><a href="#page372">372</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p><span class="sc">Replies</span>:&mdash;</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Histoire des Sévarambes</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><a href="#page374">374</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Was there an "Outer Temple" in the Possession of the Knights
+ Templars or Knights of St. John? by Peter Cunningham</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><a href="#page375">375</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Obeism, by H. H. Breen</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><a href="#page376">376</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>San Marino</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><a href="#page376">376</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>The Bellman and his History, by C. H. Cooper</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><a href="#page377">377</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Replies to Minor Queries:&mdash;"God takes those soonest,"
+ &amp;c.&mdash;Disinterment for Heresy&mdash;The Vellum-bound
+ Junius&mdash;Pursuits of Literature&mdash;Dutch
+ Books&mdash;Engilbert, Archbishop of Treves&mdash;Charles Lamb's
+ Epitaph&mdash;Charles II. in Wales&mdash;"Ex Pede
+ Herculem"&mdash;God's Acre&mdash;Abbot Eustacius&mdash;Vox Populi Vox
+ Dei&mdash;Francis Moore and his Almanack</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><a href="#page377">377</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p><span class="sc">Miscellaneous</span>:&mdash;</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Notes on Books, Sales, Catalogues, &amp;c.</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><a href="#page381">381</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Books and Odd Volumes wanted</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><a href="#page382">382</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Notices to Correspondents</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><a href="#page382">382</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:left">
+ <p>Advertisements</p>
+ </td>
+ <td class="nspcsingle" style="text-align:right">
+ <p><a href="#page382">382</a></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h3>THE GREAT EXHIBITION, NOTES AND QUERIES, AND
+CHAUCER'S PROPHETIC VIEW OF THE CRYSTAL PALACE.</h3>
+
+ <p>The first of May, eighteen hundred and fifty-one, will be remembered
+ in the Calendar for centuries after those who witnessed its glories shall
+ have passed away. Its memory will endure with our language; and the
+ Macaulays and Hallams of the time to come will add brilliancy to their
+ pages by recounting the gorgeous yet touching ceremonial of this great
+ Apotheosis of Peace. Peace has occasionally received some foretaste of
+ that day's glory; but only at times, when the sense of its value had been
+ purchased by the horrors which accompany even the most glorious warfare.
+ But never until the reign of Victoria were its blessings thus recognised
+ and thus celebrated, after they had been uninterruptedly enjoyed for
+ upwards of a quarter of a century. Who then, among the thousands
+ assembled around our Sovereign in that eventful scene, but felt his joy
+ heightened by gratitude, that his lot had been cast in these happy
+ days.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a proud day for Queen Victoria, for her Illustrious Consort,
+ for all who had had "art or part" in the great work so happily conceived,
+ so admirably executed. And we would add (even at the risk of reminding
+ our readers of Dennis' energetic claim, "That's my Thunder!") that it was
+ also a proud day for all who, like ourselves, desire to promote
+ intercommunication between men of the same pursuits,&mdash;to bring them
+ together in a spirit, not of envious rivalry, but of generous
+ emulation,&mdash;to make their powers, faculties, and genius subservient
+ to the common welfare of mankind. In our humble way we have striven
+ earnestly to perform our share in this great mission; and although in the
+ Crystal Palace cottons may take the place of comments, steam-engines of
+ Shakspeare, the palpable creations of the sculptor of the super-sensual
+ imaginings of the poet, the real of the ideal,&mdash;still the <span
+ class="scac">GREAT EXHIBITION OF THE INDUSTRY OF ALL NATIONS</span> is,
+ in more senses than one, merely a <span class="scac">MONSTER NUMBER
+ OF</span> "<span class="sc">Notes and Queries</span>." So palpable,
+ indeed, is this similarity, that, if the long-talked-of <i>Order of Civil
+ Merit</i> should be instituted, (and certainly there was never a more
+ fitting moment than the present for so honouring the cultivators of the
+ peaceful arts), we make no doubt that "<span class="sc">Notes and
+ Queries</span>" will not be forgotten. Should our prophecy be fulfilled,
+ we need scarcely remind our readers of Captain Cuttle's injunction and
+ our Motto. <!-- Page 362 --><span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page362"></a>{362}</span></p>
+
+ <p>And here, talking of prophecy, we would, first reminding our readers
+ how, in the olden time, the Poet and the Prophet were looked upon as
+ identical, call their attention to the following vision of our Queen in
+ her Crystal Palace, which met the eye when in "fine phrensy rolling" of
+ the Father of English Poetry, as he has recorded in his <i>House of
+ Fame</i>. Had Chaucer attended the opening of the Exhibition as "<i>Our
+ own Reporter</i>," could his description have been more exact?</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2"><span class="scac">THE TEMPLE Y-MADE OF GLAS.</span></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p><i>A Prevision by Dan Chaucer</i>, <span class="scac">A.D.</span> 1380.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Now hearken every manir man</p>
+ <p>That English understandè can,</p>
+ <p>And listeth to my dreme to here,</p>
+ <p>For nowe at erst shall ye lere:</p>
+ <p>O thought, that wrote al that I met</p>
+ <p>And in the tresorie it set</p>
+ <p>Of my braine, nowe shall men see</p>
+ <p>If any vertue in thee bee</p>
+ <p>To tellen al my dreme aright</p>
+ <p>Nowe kithe thy engine and thy might!</p>
+ <p>&nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp;</p>
+ <p class="i1">But, as I slept, me mette I was</p>
+ <p>Within a temple ymade of glas,</p>
+ <p>In which there were mo images</p>
+ <p>Of gold, standing in sundry stages,</p>
+ <p>Sette in mo rich tabernacles,</p>
+ <p>And with perrie mo pinnacles,</p>
+ <p>And mo curious portraitures,</p>
+ <p>And queint manner of figures</p>
+ <p>Of gold worke, than I saw ever.</p>
+ <p class="i1">But all the men that been on live</p>
+ <p>Ne han the conning to descrive</p>
+ <p>The beaute of that ilke place,</p>
+ <p>Ne couden casten no compace</p>
+ <p>Soch another for to make,</p>
+ <p>That might of beauty be his make;</p>
+ <p>Ne so wonderly ywrought,</p>
+ <p>That it astonieth yet my thought,</p>
+ <p>And maketh all my witte to swinke</p>
+ <p>On this castel for to thinke,</p>
+ <p>So that the wondir great beautie</p>
+ <p>Caste, crafte, and curiositie,</p>
+ <p>Ne can I not to you devise,</p>
+ <p>My witte ne may not me suffise;</p>
+ <p>But nathelesse all the substaunce</p>
+ <p>I have yet in my remembraunce,</p>
+ <p>For why? Me thoughtin, by saint Gile,</p>
+ <p>All was of stone of berile,</p>
+ <p>Bothe the castel and the toure,</p>
+ <p>And eke the hall, and every boure;</p>
+ <p>Without peeces or joynings,</p>
+ <p>But many subtell compassings,</p>
+ <p>As barbicans and pinnacles,</p>
+ <p>Imageries and tabernacles;</p>
+ <p>I saw, and ful eke of windowes</p>
+ <p>As flakes fallen in great snowes;</p>
+ <p>And eke in each of the pinnacles</p>
+ <p>Weren sundry habitacles.</p>
+ <p class="i1">When I had seene all this sight</p>
+ <p>In this noble temple thus,</p>
+ <p>Hey, Lord, thought I, that madest us,</p>
+ <p>Yet never saw I such noblesse</p>
+ <p>Of images, nor such richesse</p>
+ <p>As I see graven in this church,</p>
+ <p>But nought wote I who did them worche,</p>
+ <p class="i1">Yet certaine as I further passe,</p>
+ <p>I wol you all the shape devise.</p>
+ <p>Yet I ententive was to see,</p>
+ <p>And for to poren wondre low,</p>
+ <p>If I could anywise yknow</p>
+ <p>What manner stone this castel was:</p>
+ <p>For it was like a limed glas,</p>
+ <p>But that it shone full more clere,</p>
+ <p>But of what congeled matere</p>
+ <p>It was, I n' iste redely,</p>
+ <p>But at the last espied I,</p>
+ <p>And found that it was every dele</p>
+ <p>A thing of yse and not of stele:</p>
+ <p>Thought I, "<i>By Saint Thomas of Kent,</i></p>
+ <p><i>This were a feeble foundement</i></p>
+ <p><i>To builden on a place so hie;</i></p>
+ <p><i>He ought him little to glorifie</i></p>
+ <p><i>That hereon bilte, God so me save.</i>"</p>
+ <p class="i1">But, Lord, so faire it was to shewe,</p>
+ <p>For it was all with gold behewe:</p>
+ <p>Lo, how should I now tell all this,</p>
+ <p>Ne of the hall eke what need is?</p>
+ <p>But in I went, and that anone,</p>
+ <p>There met I crying many one</p>
+ <p>"A larges, a larges, hold up well!</p>
+ <p>God save the Lady of this pell!</p>
+ <p>Our owne gentill Lady Fame</p>
+ <p>And hem that willen to have a name."</p>
+ <p>For in this lustie and rich place</p>
+ <p>All on hie above a deis</p>
+ <p>Satte in a see imperiall</p>
+ <p>That made was of rubie royall</p>
+ <p>A feminine creature</p>
+ <p>That never formed by nature</p>
+ <p>Was soche another one I saie:</p>
+ <p>For alderfirst, soth to saie,</p>
+ <p>Me thought that she was so lite</p>
+ <p>That the length of a cubite</p>
+ <p>Was lenger than she seemed to be;</p>
+ <p>&nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp;</p>
+ <p>Tho was I ware at the last</p>
+ <p>As mine eyen gan up cast</p>
+ <p>That this ilke noble queene</p>
+ <p>On her shoulders gan sustene</p>
+ <p>Both the armes and the name</p>
+ <p>Of tho that had large fame.</p>
+ <p class="i1">And thus found I sitting this goddesse</p>
+ <p>In noble honour and richesse</p>
+ <p>Of which I stinte a while now</p>
+ <p>Other thing to tellen you.</p>
+<!-- Page 363 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page363"></a>{363}</span>
+ <p class="i1">But Lord the perrie and the richesse,</p>
+ <p>I saw sitting on the goddesse,</p>
+ <p>And the heavenly melodie</p>
+ <p>Of songes full of armonie</p>
+ <p>I heard about her trone ysong</p>
+ <p>That all the palais wall rong.</p>
+ <p class="i1">Tho saw I standen hem behind</p>
+ <p>A farre from hem, all by hemselve</p>
+ <p>Many a thousand times twelve,</p>
+ <p>That made loud minstralcies,</p>
+ <p>In conemuse and shalmies,</p>
+ <p>And many another pipe,</p>
+ <p>That craftely began to pipe.</p>
+ <p>And Pursevauntes and Heraudes</p>
+ <p>That crien riche folkes laudes,</p>
+ <p>It weren, all and every man</p>
+ <p>Of hem, as I you tellen can,</p>
+ <p>Had on him throwe a vesture</p>
+ <p>Which men clepe a coate armure.</p>
+ <p class="i1">Then saw I in anothir place,</p>
+ <p>Standing in a large space,</p>
+ <p>Of hem that maken bloudy soun,</p>
+ <p>In trumpet, beme, and clarioun.</p>
+ <p class="i1">Then saw I stande on thother side</p>
+ <p>Streight downe to the doores wide,</p>
+ <p>From the deis many a pillere</p>
+ <p>Of metall, that shone not full clere,</p>
+ <p>But though ther were of no richesse</p>
+ <p>Yet were they made for great noblesse.</p>
+ <p class="i1">There saw I, and knew by name</p>
+ <p>That by such art done, men have fame.</p>
+ <p class="i1">There saw I Coll Tragetour</p>
+ <p>Upon a table of sicamour</p>
+ <p>Play an uncouth thing to tell,</p>
+ <p>I saw him carry a wind-mell</p>
+ <p>Under a walnote shale.</p>
+ <p class="i1">Then saw I sitting in other sees,</p>
+ <p>Playing upon sundrie other glees,</p>
+ <p>Of which I n' ill as now not rime,</p>
+ <p>For ease of you and losse of time,</p>
+ <p>For time ylost, this know ye,</p>
+ <p>By no way may recovered be.</p>
+ <p class="i1">What should I make longer tale?</p>
+ <p>Of all the people that I sey</p>
+ <p>I could not tell till domisdey.</p>
+ <p class="i1">Then gan I loke about and see</p>
+ <p>That there came entring into the hall</p>
+ <p>A right great company withall,</p>
+ <p>And that of sondry regions</p>
+ <p>Of all kind of condicions</p>
+ <p>That dwelle in yearth under the Moone,</p>
+ <p>Poore and riche; and all so soone</p>
+ <p>As they were come into the hall</p>
+ <p>They gan on knees doune to fall</p>
+ <p>Before this ilke noble queene.</p>
+ <p>"<i>Madame,</i>" sayd they, "<i>we bee</i></p>
+ <p><i>Folke that here besechen thee</i></p>
+ <p><i>That thou graunt us now good fame,</i></p>
+ <p><i>And let our workes have good name;</i></p>
+ <p><i>In full recompensacioun</i></p>
+ <p><i>Of good worke, give us good renoun.</i>"</p>
+ <p class="i1">And some of hem she graunted sone,</p>
+ <p class="i1">And some she warned well and faire,</p>
+ <p class="i1">And some she graunted the <i>contraire</i>.</p>
+ <p>Now certainly I ne wist how,</p>
+ <p>Ne where that Fame dwelled or now,</p>
+ <p>Ne eke of her descripcion,</p>
+ <p>Ne also her condicion,</p>
+ <p>Ne the order of her <i>dome</i></p>
+ <p>Knew I not till I hider come.</p>
+ <p>&nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; * &nbsp;</p>
+ <p class="i1">At the last I saw a man,</p>
+ <p>Which that I nought ne can,</p>
+ <p>But he semed for to bee,</p>
+ <p>A man of great auctoritie</p>
+ <p class="i1">And therewithall I abraide,</p>
+ <p>Out of my slepe halfe afraide,</p>
+ <p>Remembring well what I had sene,</p>
+ <p>And how hie and farre I had bene</p>
+ <p>In my gost, and had great wonder</p>
+ <p>Of that the God of thonder</p>
+ <p>Had let me knowen, and began to write</p>
+ <p>Like as you have herd me endite,</p>
+ <p>Wherefore to study and rede alway,</p>
+ <p>I purpose to do day by day.</p>
+ <p class="i1">Thus in dreaming and in game,</p>
+ <p>Endeth this litell booke of Fame.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>We are indebted for this interesting communication to our
+ correspondent A.&nbsp;E.&nbsp;B., whose admirable <span class="sc">Illustrations of
+ Chaucer</span> in our columns have given so much pleasure to the admirers
+ of the old poet. Our correspondent has sent it to us in the hope that it
+ may be made available in helping forward the good work of restoring
+ Chaucer's tomb. We trust it will. The Committee who have undertaken that
+ task could, doubtless, raise the hundred pounds required, by asking those
+ who have already come forward to help them, to change their Crown
+ subscriptions into Pounds. With a right feeling for what is due to the
+ poet, they prefer, however, accomplishing the end they have in view by
+ small contributions from the admiring many, rather than by larger
+ contributions from the few. As we doubt not we number among the readers
+ of "<span class="sc">Notes and Queries</span>" many admirers of</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2hg3">"Old Dan Chaucer, in whose gentle spright,</p>
+ <p>The pure well-head of poetry did dwell,"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>to them we appeal, that the monument which was erected by the
+ affectionate respect of Nicholas Brigham, nearly three centuries ago, may
+ not in our time be permitted to crumble into dust; reminding them, in
+ Chaucer's own beautiful language,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"That they are gentle who do gentle dedes."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p><!-- Page 364 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page364"></a>{364}</span></p>
+
+<h2>NOTES.</h2>
+
+<h3>ON "THE LAY OF THE LAST MINSTREL."</h3>
+
+ <p>I resume the subject commenced in the comments on "a Passage in
+ <i>Marmion</i>," printed in No. 72., March 15, 1851; and I here propose
+ to consider the groundwork and mechanism of the most original, though not
+ quite the first production of Scott's muse, <i>The Lay of the Last
+ Minstrel</i>. In the Introduction prefixed to this poem, nearly thirty
+ years after its publication, Sir Walter Scott informs the world that the
+ young Countess of Dalkeith, much interested and delighted with the wild
+ Border tradition of the goblin called "Gilpin Horner" (which is given at
+ length in the notes appended to the poem), enjoined on him the task of
+ composing a ballad on the subject:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"And thus" (says Sir Walter) "the goblin story <i>objected to by
+ several critics as an excrescence upon the poem</i>, was, in fact, the
+ occasion of its being written."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>Yes, and more than this; for, strange as it may appear to those who
+ have not critically and minutely attempted to unravel the very artful and
+ complicated plot of this singular poem, the Goblin Page is, as it were,
+ the key-note to the whole composition, the agent through whose
+ instrumentality the fortunes of the house of Branksome are built up anew
+ by the pacification of ancient feud, and the union of the fair Margaret
+ with Henry of Cranstoun. Yet, so deeply veiled is the plot, and so
+ intricately contrived the machinery, that I question if this fact be
+ apparent to one reader out of a thousand; and assuredly it has never been
+ presented to my view by any one of the critics with whose comments I have
+ become acquainted.</p>
+
+ <p>The Aristarchus of the <i>Edinburgh Review</i>, Mr. Jeffrey, who
+ forsooth thought fit to regard the new and original creations of a mighty
+ and inventive genius "as a misapplication, in some degree, of very
+ extraordinary talents," and "conceived it his duty to make one strong
+ effort to bring back <i>the great apostle of this (literary) heresy to
+ the wholesome creed of his instructor</i>," seems not to have penetrated
+ one inch below the surface. In his opinion "the Goblin Page is the
+ capital deformity of the poem," "<i>a perpetual burden</i> to the poet
+ and to the readers," "an undignified and improbable fiction, which
+ excites neither terror, admiration, nor astonishment, but needlessly
+ debases the strain of the whole work, and excites at once our incredulity
+ and contempt."</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps so, to the purblind vision of a pedantic formalist; but,
+ nevertheless, <i>The Lay of the Last Minstrel</i>, that poem, whose
+ varied imagery and vivid originality, combined with all its other
+ beauties, have been, and ever will be, the delight and admiration of its
+ readers, could not exist without this so-called "capital deformity." This
+ I shall undertake to demonstrate, and in so doing to prove the "capital
+ absurdity" of such criticism as I have cited.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us therefore begin with the beginning. The widowed Lady of
+ Branksome, brooding over the outrage which had deprived her husband of
+ life, meditates only vengeance upon all the parties concerned in this
+ affray. The lovely Lady Margaret wept in wild despair, for her lover had
+ stood in arms against her father's clan:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"And well she knew, her mother dread,</p>
+ <p>Before Lord Cranstoun she should wed,</p>
+ <p>Would see her on her dying bed."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The first Canto of the poem contains that singular episode,
+ when&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"(The Ladye) sits in secret bower</p>
+ <p>In old Lord David's western tower,</p>
+ <p>And listens to a heavy sound</p>
+ <p>That moans the mossy turrets round," &amp;c.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"From the sound of Teviot's tide</p>
+ <p>Chafing with the mountain side,</p>
+ <p class="i6">&amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+ <p class="i1">The Ladye knew it well!</p>
+ <p>It was the Spirit of the Flood that spoke,</p>
+ <p class="i1">And he called on the Spirit of the Fell."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>And when the River Spirit asks concerning the fair Margaret, who had
+ mingled her tears with his stream:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"What shall be the maiden's fate?</p>
+ <p>Who shall be the maiden's mate?"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>the Mountain Spirit replies, that, amid the clouds and mist which veil
+ the stars,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i1hg3">"Ill may I read their high decree:</p>
+ <p>But no kind influence deign they shower</p>
+ <p>On Teviot's tide and Branksome's tower,</p>
+ <p class="i1">Till <i>pride be quelled</i>, and <i>love be free</i>."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>I must here transcribe the following Section xviii.:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"The unearthly voices ceased,</p>
+ <p class="i1">And the heavy sound was still;</p>
+ <p>It died on the river's breast,</p>
+ <p class="i1">It died on the side of the hill.</p>
+ <p>But round Lord David's tower,</p>
+ <p class="i1">The sound still floated near,</p>
+ <p>For it rung in the Ladye's bower,</p>
+ <p class="i1">And it rung in the Ladye's ear,</p>
+ <p>She raised her stately head,</p>
+ <p class="i1">And her heart throbbed high with pride:</p>
+ <p class="hg1">'Your mountains shall bend,</p>
+ <p>And your streams ascend,</p>
+ <p class="i1">Ere Margaret be our foeman's bride!'"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In pursuance of this stern resolution, "the Ladye sought the lofty
+ hall" where her retainers were assembled:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"And from amid the armed train</p>
+ <p>She called to her William of Deloraine."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>She then gives him the commission, well remembered by every reader, to
+ proceed on that night to Melrose Abbey to unclose the grave of Michael
+ <!-- Page 365 --><span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page365"></a>{365}</span>Scott, and to rifle it of the magical
+ volume which was accessible only on St. Michael's night, at the precise
+ moment when the rays of the moon should throw the reflexion of the red
+ cross emblazoned in the eastern oriel upon the wizard's monumental
+ stone,&mdash;expecting that the possession of this "Book of Might" would
+ enable her to direct the destiny of her daughter according to the
+ dictates of her own imperious nature. "Dîs aliter visum." Fate and <span
+ class="sc">Michael Scott</span> had willed it otherwise. And here I must
+ beg my readers to take notice that this far-famed wizard, Michael Scott,
+ although dead and buried, is supposed still to exert his influence from
+ the world of spirits as the guardian genius of the house of Buccleuch;
+ and he had been beforehand with the Ladye of Branksome in providing Henry
+ of Cranstoun with one of his familiar spirits, in the shape of the Goblin
+ Page, <i>by whose agency alone</i> (however unconscious the subordinate
+ agent may be) a chain of events is linked together which results in the
+ union of the two lovers. After this parenthesis I resume the thread of
+ the narrative.</p>
+
+ <p>Deloraine rides to Melrose in the night, presents himself to the Monk
+ of St. Mary's aisle, opens the sepulchre of the wizard, and presumes to
+ take</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"From the cold hand the Mighty Book,"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>in spite of the <i>ominous frown</i> which darkened the countenance of
+ the dead. He remounts his steed and wends his way homeward</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i6hg3">"As the dawn of day</p>
+ <p>Began to brighten Cheviot gray;"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>while the aged monk, having performed the last duty allotted to him in
+ his earthly pilgrimage, retired to his cell and breathed his last in
+ prayer and penitence before the cross.</p>
+
+ <p>Ere Deloraine could reach his journey's end, he encounters a feudal
+ foeman in the person of Lord Cranstoun, attended by his Goblin Page, who
+ is here first introduced to the reader. A conflict takes place, and
+ Deloraine being struck down wounded and senseless, is left by his
+ adversary to the charge of this elf, who in stripping off his corslet
+ espied the "Mighty Book." With the curiosity of an imp he opens the
+ iron-clasped volume by smearing the cover with the blood of the knight,
+ and reads <span class="scac">ONE SPELL</span>, <i>and one alone, by
+ permission</i>; for</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"He had not read another spell,</p>
+ <p>When on his cheek a buffet fell,</p>
+ <p>So fierce, it stretched him on the plain</p>
+ <p>Beside the wounded Deloraine.</p>
+ <p>From the ground he rose dismayed,</p>
+ <p>And shook his huge and matted head;</p>
+ <p>One word he muttered, and no more,</p>
+ <p class="hg1">'Man of age, thou smitest sore!'</p>
+ <p class="i6">&amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+ <p>Now, if you ask who gave the stroke,</p>
+ <p>I cannot tell, so mot I thrive&mdash;</p>
+ <p><i>It was not given by man alive.</i>"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>But he had read sufficient for the purposes of his mission, and we
+ shall see how he applies the knowledge so marvellously acquired.</p>
+
+ <p>By the glamour of this spell he was empowered to make one thing assume
+ the form of another.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"It had much of glamour might,</p>
+ <p>Could make a ladye seem a knight;</p>
+ <p>The cobwebs on a dungeon wall,</p>
+ <p>Seem tapestry in a lordly hall,"</p>
+ <p class="i6">&amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The first use he makes of his power is to convey the wounded knight,
+ laid across his weary horse, into Branksome Hall</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Before the beards of the warders all;</p>
+ <p>And each did after swear and say,</p>
+ <p>There only passed a wain of hay."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Having deposited him at the door of the Ladye's bower, he repasses the
+ outer court, and finding the young chief at play, entices him into the
+ woods under the guise <i>to him</i> of a "comrade gay."</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Though on the drawbridge, the warders stout,</p>
+ <p>Saw a terrier and a lurcher passing out;"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>and, leading him far away "o'er bank and fell," well nigh frightens
+ the fair boy to death by resuming his own elvish shape.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Could he have had his pleasure wilde,</p>
+ <p>He had crippled the joints of the noble child;</p>
+ <p class="i6">&amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+ <p>But his awful mother he had in dread,</p>
+ <p><i>And also his power was limited</i>,"</p>
+ <p class="i6">&amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Here let me observe that all this contrivance is essential to the
+ conduct of the narrative, and if we simply grant the postulate which a
+ legendary minstrel has a right to demand, to wit, the potency of magic
+ spells to effect such delusions (pictoribus atque Poetis <i>Quidlibet
+ audendi</i> semper fuit æqua potestas), all the remainder of the
+ narrative is easy, natural, and probable. This contrivance is necessary,
+ because, in the first place, if it had been known to the warders that
+ William of Deloraine had been brought into the castle wounded almost unto
+ death, he could not be supposed capable of engaging Richard Musgrave in
+ single combat two days afterwards; nor, in the second place, would the
+ young chief have been permitted to stroll out unattended from the guarded
+ precincts.</p>
+
+ <p>To proceed: the boy thus bewildered in the forest falls into the lands
+ of an English forayer, and is by him conveyed to Lord Dacre, at that time
+ one of the Wardens of the Marches, by whom he is detained as a hostage,
+ and carried along with the English troops, then advancing towards
+ Branksome under the command of the Lord Wardens in person.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"(But) though the child was led away,</p>
+ <p>In Branksome still he seemed to stay,</p>
+ <p>For so the Dwarf his part did play."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+<p><!-- Page 366 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page366"></a>{366}</span></p>
+
+ <p>And there, according to his own malicious nature, played likewise a
+ score of monkey tricks, all of which, grotesque and "<i>undignified</i>"!
+ as they may be, yet most ingeniously divert the mind of the reader from
+ the real errand and mission of this supernatural being.</p>
+
+ <p>Shortly afterwards, on his exhibiting symptoms of cowardice at the
+ expected contest, he is conveyed from the castle by the Ladye's order,
+ and speedily rejoins his lord, after the infliction of a severe
+ chastisement from the arm of Wat Tinlinn. He then procures Cranstoun's
+ admission within the walls of Branksome (where the whole clan Scott was
+ assembling at the tidings of the English Raid) by the same
+ spell&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Which to his lord he did impart,</p>
+ <p>And made him seem, by glamour art,</p>
+ <p class="i1">A knight from hermitage."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>And on the following day, as Deloraine did not appear in the lists
+ ready to engage in the appointed duel with Richard Musgrave, we are
+ told,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Meantime, full anxious was the Dame,</p>
+ <p>For now arose disputed claim,</p>
+ <p>Of who should fight for Deloraine,</p>
+ <p class="hg1">'Twixt Harden and 'twixt Thirtlestaine,</p>
+ <p class="i6">&amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+ <p>But yet, not long the strife&mdash;for, lo!</p>
+ <p>Himself the Knight of Deloraine,</p>
+ <p>Strong, as it seemed, and free from pain,</p>
+ <p class="i1">In armour sheathed from top to toe,</p>
+ <p>Appeared, and craved the combat due;</p>
+ <p>The Dame her charm successful knew,</p>
+ <p>And the fierce chiefs their claims withdrew."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The conflict takes place, and ends in favour of the Scottish knight;
+ when the following scene occurs:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"As if exhausted in the fight,</p>
+ <p>Or musing o'er the piteous sight,</p>
+ <p class="i1">The silent victor stands:</p>
+ <p>His beaver did he not unclasp,</p>
+ <p>Marked not the shouts, felt not the grasp</p>
+ <p class="i1">Of gratulating hands.</p>
+ <p>When lo! strange cries of wild surprise,</p>
+ <p>Mingled with seeming terror rise</p>
+ <p class="i1">Among the Scottish bands,</p>
+ <p>And all, amid the thronged array,</p>
+ <p>In panic haste gave open way</p>
+ <p>To a half-naked ghastly man,</p>
+ <p>Who downward from the castle ran;</p>
+ <p>He crossed the barriers at a bound,</p>
+ <p class="i1">And wild and haggard looked around,</p>
+ <p class="i2">As dizzy, and in pain;</p>
+ <p class="i1">And all, upon the armed ground</p>
+ <p class="i2">Knew William of <span class="correction" title="Original reads `Delorane'.">Deloraine</span>!</p>
+ <p>Each ladye sprung from seat with speed,</p>
+ <p>Vaulted each marshal from his steed;</p>
+ <p class="i1hg1">'And who art thou,' they cried,</p>
+ <p class="hg1">'Who hast this battle fought and won?'</p>
+ <p>His plumed helm was soon undone&mdash;</p>
+ <p class="i1hg1">'Cranstoun of Teviotside!</p>
+ <p>For this fair prize I've fought and won,'</p>
+ <p>And to the Ladye led her son."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Then is described the struggle that takes place in the maternal
+ breast:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"And how the clan united prayed</p>
+ <p class="i1">The Ladye would the feud forego,</p>
+ <p>And deign to bless the nuptial hour</p>
+ <p>Of Cranstoun's Lord and Teviot's Flower.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i6"><span class="scac">XXVI.</span></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"She looked to river, looked to hill,</p>
+ <p class="i1">Thought on the Spirit's prophecy,</p>
+ <p>Then broke her silence stern and still,</p>
+ <p class="i1hg1">'Not you, <i>but Fate</i>, has vanquished me;</p>
+ <p><i>Their influence kindly stars may shower</i></p>
+ <p>On Teviot's tide and Branksome's tower,</p>
+ <p class="i1">For pride <i>is</i> quelled, and love <i>is</i> free.'"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The mission of the elf is now accomplished, his last special service
+ having been to steal the armour of William of Deloraine "while slept the
+ knight," and thus to enable his master to personate that warrior.</p>
+
+ <p>It may be remarked that hitherto there is no direct evidence that the
+ Page was sent by Michael Scott. That evidence is reserved for the moment
+ of his final disappearance.</p>
+
+ <p>On the same evening, after the celebration of the nuptials, a
+ mysterious and intense blackness enveloped the assembled company in
+ Branksome Hall.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i1hg3">"A secret horror checked the feast,</p>
+ <p>And chilled the soul of every guest;</p>
+ <p>Even the high Dame stood half aghast,</p>
+ <p>She knew some evil in the blast;</p>
+ <p>The elvish Page fell to the ground,</p>
+ <p>And, shuddering, muttered, 'Found! found! found!'</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i6"><span class="scac">XXV.</span></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Then sudden through the darkened air,</p>
+ <p class="i1">A flash of lightning came,</p>
+ <p>So broad, so bright, so red the glare,</p>
+ <p class="i1">The castle seemed on flame,</p>
+ <p class="i6">&amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+ <p>Full through the guests' bedazzled band</p>
+ <p>Resistless flashed the levin-brand,</p>
+ <p>And filled the hall with smouldering smoke,</p>
+ <p>As on the elvish Page it broke,</p>
+ <p class="i6">&amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+ <p>When ended was the dreadful roar,</p>
+ <p>The elvish Dwarf was seen no more.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i6"><span class="scac">XXVI.</span></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Some heard a voice in Branksome Hall,</p>
+ <p>Some saw a sight, not seen by all;</p>
+ <p>That dreadful voice was heard by some</p>
+ <p>Cry, with loud summons, 'Gylbin, come!'</p>
+ <p class="i1">And on the spot where burst the brand,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Just where the Page had flung him down,</p>
+ <p class="i1">Some saw an arm, and some a hand,</p>
+ <p class="i2">And some the waving of a gown:</p>
+ <p>The guests in silence prayed and shook,</p>
+ <p>And terror dimmed each lofty look,</p>
+ <p>But none of all the astonished train</p>
+ <p><i>Was so dismayed as Deloraine,</i></p>
+ <p class="i6">&amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+<!-- Page 367 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page367"></a>{367}</span>
+ <p>At length, by fits, he darkly told,</p>
+ <p>With broken hint, and shuddering cold,</p>
+ <p class="i1">That he had seen, right certainly,</p>
+ <p><i>A shape with amice wrapped around,</i></p>
+ <p><i>With a wrought Spanish baldric bound,</i></p>
+ <p class="i1"><i>Like a pilgrim from beyond the sea,</i></p>
+ <p>And knew&mdash;but how it mattered not&mdash;</p>
+ <p><span class="sc">It was the wizard, Michael Scott.</span>"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>After this final consummation, it is amusing to notice a slight
+ "incuria" on the part of the poet, which I wonder has never been
+ corrected in the later editions. Having described the nuptial ceremony of
+ Cranstoun and Margaret in the early part of the last Canto, he says in
+ Section xxviii.,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Nought of the bridal <i>will</i> I tell,</p>
+ <p>Which <i>after</i> in short space befell,"</p>
+ <p class="i6">&amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>I think I have now succeeded in proving that the Goblin Page, so far
+ from being a mere "<i>intruder</i>" into this glorious poem&mdash;so far
+ from being a mere after-thought, or interpolation, to "suit the taste of
+ the cottagers of the Border," as Mr. Jeffrey "suspects,"&mdash;is the
+ essential instrument for constructing the machinery of the plot. We have,
+ indeed, the author's word that it formed the foundation of the poem. My
+ readers will therefore form their own estimate of the value of Mr.
+ Jeffrey's criticisms, couched as they are in no very considerate, much
+ less complimentary phraseology. I cannot but admire the "douce vengeance"
+ of the gentle-spirited subject of his rebukes, who has contented himself
+ with printing these worthless sentences of an undiscerning critic along
+ with the text of his poems in the last edition,&mdash;there to remain a
+ standing memorial of the wisdom of that resolution adhered to throughout
+ the life of the accomplished author, who tells us,</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"That he from the first determined, that without shutting his ears to
+ the voice of true criticism, he would pay no regard to that which assumed
+ the form of satire."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>In point of fact, Sir Walter had no very exalted opinion of the
+ <i>genus</i> Critic; and I could give one or two anecdotes, which I heard
+ from his own lips, strongly reminding one of the old fable of the painter
+ who pleased nobody and everybody.</p>
+
+ <p>In conclusion, I beg leave to observe, that in these "Notes" I do not
+ presume to underrate, in any degree, Mr. Jeffrey's acknowledged powers of
+ criticism. He and Scott have alike passed away from the stage of which
+ they were long the ornaments in their respective spheres; but I must
+ consider that in the passages here cited, <i>as well as in many
+ others</i>, he has proved himself either incompetent or unwilling to
+ appreciate the originality, the power, and, above all, the invention of
+ Sir Walter Scott's genius.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">A Borderer.</span></p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<h3>POEMS DISCOVERED AMONG THE PAPERS OF SIR
+KENELM DIGBY.</h3>
+
+ <p>Since I last wrote to you on the subject of these poems, I have
+ discovered the remaining portions of Ben Jonson's poem on the Lady
+ Venetia: I have therefore no doubt now that my MS. is a genuine
+ autograph; and if so, not only this, but the "Houreglasse," which was
+ inserted in your 63rd No., is Ben Jonson's. This last has, I think, never
+ been published; nor have I ever seen in print the followings lines, which
+ are written in the same hand and on the same paper as the "Houreglasse."
+ They were probably written after Lady Venetia's death.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"You wormes (my rivals), whiles she was alive,</p>
+ <p>How many thousands were there that did strive</p>
+ <p>To have your freedome? for theyr sakes forbeare,</p>
+ <p>Unseemely holes in her soft skin to wear,</p>
+ <p>But if you must (as what worme can abstaine?)</p>
+ <p>Taste of her tender body, yet refraine</p>
+ <p>With your disordered eatings to deface her,</p>
+ <p>And feed yourselves so as you most may grace her.</p>
+ <p>First through her eartippes, see you work a paire</p>
+ <p>Of holes, which, as the moyst enclosed <i>ayre</i> [<i>air</i>]</p>
+ <p>Turnes into water, may the cold droppes take,</p>
+ <p>And in her eares a payre of jewels make.</p>
+ <p>That done, upon her bosome make your feaste,</p>
+ <p>Where on a crosse carve Jesus in her brest.</p>
+ <p>Have you not yet enough of that soft skinne,</p>
+ <p>The touch of which, in times past, might have bin</p>
+ <p>Enough to ransome many a thousande soule</p>
+ <p>Captiv'd to love? then hence your bodies roule</p>
+ <p>A little higher; where I would you have</p>
+ <p>This epitaph upon her forehead grave;</p>
+ <p>Living, she was fayre, yong, and full of witt;</p>
+ <p>Dead, all her faults are in her forehead writt."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>If I am wrong in supposing this never to have been printed, I shall
+ feel much obliged by one of your correspondents informing me of the
+ fact.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">H. A. B.</p>
+
+ <p class="address">Trin. Col. Cambridge.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<h3>FOLK LORE.</h3>
+
+ <p><i>The Christmas Thorn.</i>&mdash;In my neighbourhood (near
+ Bridgewater) the Christmas thorn blossoms on the 6th of January
+ (Twelfth-day), and on this day only. The villagers in whose gardens it
+ grows, and indeed many others, verily believe that this fact pronounces
+ the truth of this being the day of Christ's birth.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">S. S. B.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Milk-maids in 1753.</i>&mdash;To Folk-lore may be added the
+ following short extract from Read's <i>Weekly Journal</i>, May 5,
+ 1733:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"On May-Day the Milk-Maids who serve the Court, danced Minuets and
+ Rigadoons before the Royal Family, at St. James's House, with great
+ applause."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p class="author">Y. S.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Diseases cured by Sheep</i> (Vol. iii., p. 320.).&mdash;The
+ attempted cure of consumption, or some <!-- Page 368 --><span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page368"></a>{368}</span>complaints, by walking
+ among a flock of sheep, is not new. The present Archbishop of Dublin was
+ recommended it, or practised it at least, when young. For pulmonary
+ complaints the principle was perhaps the same as that of following a
+ plough, sleeping in a room over a cowhouse, breathing the diluted smoke
+ of a limekiln, that is, the inhaling of carbonic acid, all practised
+ about the end of the last century, when the knowledge of the gases was
+ the favourite branch of chemistry.</p>
+
+ <p>A friend of mine formerly met Dr. Beddoes riding up Park Street in
+ Bristol almost concealed by a vast bladder tied to his horse's mouth. He
+ said he was trying an experiment with oxygen on a broken-winded horse.
+ Afterwards, finding that oxygen did not answer, he very wisely tried the
+ gas most opposite to it in nature.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">C. B.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Sacramental Wine</i> (Vol. iii., p. 320.).&mdash;This idea is a
+ relic of Roman Catholic times. In Ireland a weakly child is frequently
+ brought to the altar rails, and the priest officiating at mass requested
+ to allow it to drink from the chalice of what is termed <i>the
+ ablution</i>, that is, the wine and water with which the chalice is
+ <i>rinsed</i> after the priest has taken the communion, and which
+ ablution ordinarily is taken by the priest. <i>Here</i> the efficacy is
+ ascribed to the cup having just before contained the blood of Our Lord. I
+ have heard it seriously recommended in a case of hooping-cough. Your
+ correspondent <span class="sc">Mr. Buckman</span> does not give
+ sufficient credit for common sense to the believers in some portion of
+ folk lore. Red wine is considered tonic, and justly, as it contains a
+ greater proportion of <i>turmic</i> than white. The yellow bark of the
+ barberry contains an essential tonic ingredient, as the Jesuit's bark
+ does <i>quinine</i>, or that of the willow <i>salicine</i>. Nettle juice
+ is well known as a purifier of the blood; and the navelwort, like
+ Euphrosia, which is properly called <i>Eyebright</i>, is as likely to
+ have had its name from its proved efficacy as a simple, as from any
+ fancied likeness to the region affected. The old monks were shrewd
+ herbalists. They were generally the physicians of their neighbourhood,
+ and the names and uses of the simples used by them survive the ruin of
+ the monasteries and the expulsion of their tenants.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Kerriensis.</span></p>
+
+ <p>"<i>Nettle in Dock out</i>" (Vol. iii., pp. 133. 201. 205.).&mdash;I
+ can assure A.&nbsp;E.&nbsp;B. that in the days of my childhood, long before I had
+ ever heard of Chaucer, I used invariably, when I was stung with nettles,
+ to rub the part affected with a dock-leaf or stalk, and repeat,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Nettle out, dock in."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>This charm is so common in Huntingdonshire at this day that it seems
+ to come to children almost instinctively. None of them can tell where
+ they first heard it, any more than why they use it.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Arun.</span></p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<h3>METROPOLITAN IMPROVEMENTS.</h3>
+
+ <p>The following passage from a sermon preached at Paul's Cross, March
+ 26, 1620, by John King, Bishop of London, refers in a curious manner to
+ many improvements and alterations which have either been already effected
+ in our own time, or are still in contemplation. The sermon was "on
+ behalfe of Paule's Church," then in a ruinous condition; and was
+ delivered in the presence of James himself, who suggested the preacher's
+ text, Psal. cii. 13, 14.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"So had my manner ever beene aforetime," says the Bishop, "to open the
+ volume of this Booke, and goe through the fields of the Old and New
+ Testament, plucking and rubbing such eares of corne therein as I best
+ liked, makings, choice (I meane) of my text, and buckling myself to my
+ task at myne owne discretion; but now I am girt and tied to a Scripture
+ by him, who as he hath most right to command, so best skill to direct and
+ appoint the best service I can."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>After an elaborate laudation of England, and of London as the "gem and
+ eye," which has</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"the body of the King, the morning and midday influence of that
+ glorious sun; other parts having but the evening.... <i>O fortunati
+ nimium</i>; you have the finest flowre of the wheat, and purest bloud of
+ the grape, that is, the choice of His blessed Word hath God given unto
+ you; and great is the companie of the preachers"&mdash;</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>the Bishop proceeds thus:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"Not to weary mine eyes with wandering and roving after private, but
+ to fixe upon publicke alone,&mdash;when I behold that forrest of masts
+ upon your river for trafficke, and that more than miraculous bridge,
+ which is the <i>communis terminus</i>, to joyne the two bankes of that
+ river; your Royall Exchange for merchants, your Halls for Companies, your
+ gates for defence, your markets for victuall, your aqueducts for water,
+ your granaries for provision, your Hospitalls for the poore, your
+ Bridewells for the idle, your Chamber for orphans, and your Churches for
+ holy assemblies; I cannot denie them to be magnificent workes, and your
+ Citty to deserve the name of an Augustious and majesticall Citty; to cast
+ into the reckoning those of later edition, the beautifying of your fields
+ without, and pitching your Smithfield within, new gates, new waterworkes,
+ and the like, which have been consecrated by you to the dayes of his
+ Majestie's happy reigne: and I hope the cleansing of the River, which is
+ the <i>vena porta</i> to your Citty, will follow in good time. But after
+ all these, as Christ to the young man in the Gospell, which had done all
+ and more, <i>Unum tibi deest, si vis perfectus esse, vade, vende</i>; so
+ may I say to you. There is yet one thing wanting unto you, if you will be
+ perfit,&mdash;perfit this church: not by parting from <i>all</i>, but
+ somewhat, not to the poore, but to God himselfe. This Church is your Sion
+ indeed, other are but <i>Synagogues</i>, this your <i>Jerusalem the
+ mother to them all</i>, other but daughters brought up at her knees; this
+ the Cathedrall, other but Parochiall Churches; this the <i>Bethel</i> for
+ the daily and constant service of God, other have their intermissions,
+ this the common to you all, and to this <i>doe <!-- Page 369 --><span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page369"></a>{369}</span>your tribes ascend</i>
+ in their greatest solemnities; others appropriated to several
+ Congregations, this the standart in the high rode of gaze; others are
+ more retired, this the mirrour and marke of strangers, other have but
+ their side lookes; finally, this unto you, as <i>S. Peters in the
+ Vatican</i> at Rome, <i>S. Marks</i> at Venice, and that of <i>Diana</i>
+ at Ephesus, and this at Jerusalem of the Jewes; or if there be any other
+ of glory and fame in the Christian world, which they most joy in."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Richard John King.</span></p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h2>Minor Notes.</h2>
+
+ <p><i>Meaning of Luncheon.</i>&mdash;Our familiar name of <i>luncheon</i>
+ is derived from the daily meal of the Spaniards at eleven o'clock, termed
+ <i>once</i> or <i>l'once</i> (pronounced <i>l'onchey</i>).&mdash;From
+ Ford's <i>Gatherings in Spain</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">A. L.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Charade upon Nothing translated.</i>&mdash;In your No. for July a
+ correspondent asks who was the author of the very quaint charade upon
+ "Nothing:"</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Me, the contented man desires,</p>
+ <p>The poor man has, the rich requires,</p>
+ <p>The miser gives, the spendthrift saves,</p>
+ <p>And all must carry to their graves."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Possibly he may not object to read, without troubling himself as to
+ the authorship of, the subjoined translation:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Me, qui sorte sua contentus vixerit, optat,</p>
+ <p class="i1">Et quum pauper habet, dives habere velit;</p>
+ <p>Spargit avarus opum, servat sibi prodigus æris,</p>
+ <p class="i1">Secum post fati funera quisque feret."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Effigies.</span></p>
+
+ <p><i>Giving the Lie.</i>&mdash;The great affront of giving the lie arose
+ from the phrase "Thou liest," in the oath taken by the defendant in
+ judicial combats before engaging, when charged with any crime by the
+ plaintiff, and Francis I. of France, to make current his giving the lie
+ to the Emperor Charles V., first stamped it with infamy by saying, in a
+ solemn Assembly, that "he was no honest man that would bear the lie."</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Blowen.</span></p>
+
+ <p><i>Anachronisms of Painters.</i>&mdash;An amusing list is given in
+ D'Israeli's <i>Curiosities of Literature</i> (edit. 1839, p. 131.). The
+ following are additional:</p>
+
+ <p>At Hagley Park, Worcestershire, the seat of Lord Lyttleton, is a
+ painting by Varotari, a pupil of Paul Veronese, of Christ and the Woman
+ taken in Adultery. One of the Jewish elders present wears spectacles.</p>
+
+ <p>At Kedleston, Derbyshire, the seat of Lord Scarsdale, is a painting by
+ Rembrandt, Daniel interpreting Belsazzar's Dream. Daniel's head is
+ covered with a peruke of considerable magnitude.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">J. E.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Spenser's Faerie Queene.</i>&mdash;The following brief notes may
+ perhaps prove interesting:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>1. Spenser gives us a hint of the annoyances to which Shakspeare and
+ Burbage may have been subject:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"All suddenly they heard a troublous noise,</p>
+ <p class="i1">That seemed some perilous tumult to design,</p>
+ <p>Confused with women's cries and shorts of boys,</p>
+ <p>Such as the troubled theatres oft-times annoys."&mdash;B. IV. iii. 37.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>2. Spenser's solitary pun occurs in book iv. canto viii. verse
+ 31.:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"But when the world wox old, it wox <i>war-old</i>,</p>
+ <p>Whereof it hight."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>3. Cleanliness does not appear to have been a virtue much in vogue in
+ the "glorious days of good Queen Bess." Spenser (book iv. canto xi. verse
+ 47.) speaks of</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Her silver feet, fair washed against this day,"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p><i>i. e.</i> for a special day of rejoicing.</p>
+
+ <p>4. An instance of the compound epithets so much used by Chapman in his
+ translation of Homer, is found in Spenser's description of the
+ sea-nymphs, book iv. canto xi. verse 50.:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i12hg3">"Eione well-in-age,</p>
+ <p>And seeming-still-to-smile Glauconome."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="author">J. H. C.</p>
+
+ <p class="address">Adelaide, South Australia.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Prayer of Mary Queen of Scots.</i>&mdash;The incorrect arrangement,
+ in Seward's <i>Anecdotes</i>, of the following beautiful lines, said to
+ be composed by Mary Queen of Scots, and repeated immediately before her
+ execution, and a diffuse paraphrase subjoined, in which all their
+ tenderness is lost by destroying their brevity and simplicity, may
+ justify another arrangement, and an attempt to preserve their simple and
+ tender character in fewer words and a different measure:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="nobctr" summary="Prayer of Mary Queen of Scots." title="Prayer of Mary Queen of Scots.">
+<tr><td class="hspcsingle" style="vertical-align:top"> "O Domine Deus,<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; Speravi in Te,<br />
+O mi care Jesu,<br />
+Nunc libera me:<br />
+In dura catena,<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; Desidero Te.<br />
+Languendo, gemendo,&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; <br />
+Et genu flectendo,<br />
+Adoro, imploro,<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; Ut liberes me.
+
+</td><td class="hspcsingle" style="vertical-align:top"> O Lord, my God,<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; I have trusted in Thee:<br />
+My Jesu beloved,<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; Me presently free:<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; In cruel chains,<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; In penal pains,<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; I long for Thee,<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; I moan, I groan,<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; I bend my knee;<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; I adore, I implore,<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Me presently free."
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+ <p>Can any of your correspondents inform me where these lines first
+ appear? on what authority they are ascribed to Mary Queen of Scots? and
+ also who mentions their having been repeated immediately before her
+ execution?</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Alexander Pytts Falconer.</span></p>
+
+ <p class="address">Beeton-Christchurch, Hants.</p>
+
+ <p><i>A small Instance of Warren Hastings' Magnanimity.</i>&mdash;During
+ the latter years of his life, Warren Hastings was in the habit of
+ visiting General D'Oyley in the New Forest; and thus he became <!-- Page
+ 370 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page370"></a>{370}</span>acquainted
+ with the Rev. W. Gilpin, vicar of Boldre, and author of <i>Forest
+ Scenery</i>, &amp;c. Mr. Gilpin's custom was to receive morning visitors,
+ who sat and enjoyed his agreeable conversation; and Warren Hastings, when
+ staying in the neighbourhood, often resorted to the Boldre Parsonage. It
+ happened, one Sunday, that Mr. Gilpin preached a sermon on the character
+ of Felix, which commenced in words like these:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"Felix was a bad man, and a bad governor. He took away another man's
+ wife and lived with her; and he behaved with extortion and cruelty in the
+ province over which he ruled."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>Other particulars followed equally in accordance with the popular
+ charges against the late Governor-General of India, who, to the
+ preacher's dismay, was unexpectedly discovered sitting in the D'Oyley
+ pew. Mr. Gilpin concluded that he then saw the last of his "great"
+ friend. But, not so: on the following morning Warren Hastings came, with
+ his usual pleasant manner, for a chat with the vicar, and of course made
+ no allusion to the sermon.</p>
+
+ <p>This was told me by a late valued friend, who was a nephew and curate
+ of Mr. Gilpin; and I am not aware that the anecdote has been put on
+ record.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Alfred Gatty.</span></p>
+
+ <p class="address">Ecclesfield.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Richard Baxter.</i>&mdash;In the long list of Richard Baxter's
+ works, one is entitled, <i>An unsavoury Volume of Mr. Jo. Crawford's
+ anatomized: or, a Nosegay of the choicest Flowers in that Garden,
+ presented to Mr. Joseph Caryl, by Richard Baxter</i>. 8vo., Lond.
+ 1654.</p>
+
+ <p>At the end of a <span class="correction" title="Original reads `postcript'."
+ >postscript</span> to this tract, the following sentence is
+ subjoined:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"Whatsoever hath escaped me in these writings that is against
+ meekness, peace, and brotherly love, let it be all unsaid, and hereby
+ revoked; and I desire the pardon of it from God and Man.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Richard Baxter.</span>"</p>
+
+ <p>Baxter's literary career was not the least extraordinary part of his
+ history. Orme's life of him says, that the catalogue of his works
+ contains nearly a hundred and sixty-eight distinct publications. A list
+ of no less than one hundred and seven is given at the end of his
+ <i>Compassionate Counsel to all Young Men</i>, 8vo., Lond. 1682.</p>
+
+ <p>Baxter's most popular treatises, as the world knows, were his <i>Call
+ to the Unconverted</i>, and his <i>Saint's Everlasting Rest</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">H. E.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Registry of Dissenting Baptisms in Churches.</i>&mdash;A fact came
+ to my knowledge some time since, which seems worthy of having <i>a note
+ of it</i> made, and recorded in your journal. On looking over the
+ registry of baptisms administered in the meeting-house of an ancient
+ city, I was struck by the occurrence of four names, which I had seen
+ entered in a genealogy as from the baptismal registry of one of its
+ parish churches. This appeared to me so strange, that I examined the
+ parish registry in order to verify it; and I found that the baptisms were
+ actually recorded as on the same days in both registries. Of course, the
+ father, having had his child baptized by the dissenting minister,
+ prevailed on the clergyman of his parish church to register it.</p>
+
+ <p>Whether this was a common custom at the time when it took place
+ (1715-21) I have no means of knowing. As a fee was probably charged for
+ the registration, it was not likely to be asked for in all instances;
+ and, no doubt, when it was asked for, many clergymen would consider it
+ inconsistent with their duty to grant it.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">D. X.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h2>Queries.</h2>
+
+<h3>NOTES AND QUERIES RELATING TO SCANDINAVIA.</h3>
+
+ <p>Can any of your readers furnish a list of the different editions of
+ <i>Olaus Magnus</i>? I have lately met with a curious one entitled
+ <i>Historia delle Gente et della Natura delle Cose Settentrionali, da
+ Olao Magno Gotho Arcivescovo di Vpsala nel Regno di Suezia e Gozia,
+ descritta in XXII Libri. Tradotta in Lingua Toscana. In Vinegia,
+ 1565.</i> This edition, in folio, contains a very interesting old map of
+ Scandinavia, and a profusion of little cuts or engravings, representing
+ men, animals, gods, mountains, weapons, religious rites, natural wonders,
+ and everything relating to the people and the country that could be
+ conceived or gathered together. Is there any English translation of Olaus
+ Magnus?</p>
+
+ <p>Is there any English translation of Jornandes' <i>Histoire Générale
+ des Goths</i>? It is full of curious matter. The French edition of 1603
+ gives the following accounts of the midnight sun:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"Diverses nations ne laissent pas d'habiter ces contrées" (Scanzia or
+ Scandinavia). "Ptolomée en nomme sept principales. Celle qui s'appelle
+ Adogit, et qui est la plus reculée vers le Nord, voit (dit on) durant
+ l'Esté le Soleil rouler l'horizon quarante jours sans se coucher; mais
+ aussi pendant l'Hyver, elle est privée de sa lumière un pareil espace de
+ temps, payant ainsi par le long ennui que lui cause l'absence de cet
+ Astre, la joye que sa longue présence lui avoit fait ressentir."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>There is a little old book called <i>Histoire des Intrigues Galantes
+ de la Reine Christine de Suède et de sa Cour, pendant son sejour à Rome.
+ A Amsterdam</i>, 1697. It opens thus:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"Rome, qui est le centre de la religion, est aussi le Théâtre des plus
+ belles Comédies du Monde:"</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>and after giving various accounts, personal and incidental, of her
+ mercurial majesty, and of her pilgrimage to Rome, recites the following
+ epigram on her first intrigue there, which, to give due precedence to the
+ church, happened to be with a Cardinal, named Azolin:&mdash; <!-- Page
+ 371 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page371"></a>{371}</span></p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Mais Azolin dans Rome</p>
+ <p>Sceut charmer ses ennuis,</p>
+ <p>Elle eût sans ce grand homme</p>
+ <p>Passé de tristes nuits;"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>adding:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"Dans ce peu de paroles Mr. de Coulanges [its author] dit beaucoup de
+ choses, et fait comprendre l'intrigue du Cardinal avec la Reine."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>I can find no account of this Reverend Cardinal. Who was he (if
+ anybody), and what is his history? And who was the author of these odd
+ memoirs of the Swedish Queen?</p>
+
+ <p>At page 228. of "<span class="sc">Notes and Queries</span>" I see
+ mention of an English translation of <i>Danish</i> ballads by Mr. Borrow.
+ Is there any translation of <i>Norwegian</i> ballads? Many of them are
+ very beautiful and characteristic, and well worthy of an able rendering
+ into our own language, if there were any one to undertake it. There is
+ also much beauty in the Norwegian national music, of which a pretty but
+ limited collection, the <i>Norske Field-Melodier</i>, arranged by
+ Lindeman, is published at Christiania.</p>
+
+ <p>What is the best method of reaching Iceland? and what <i>really
+ good</i> books have been published on that country within the last twenty
+ years?</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">William E. C. Nourse.</span></p>
+
+ <p class="address">London, April 22. 1851.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<h3>THE ROTATION OF THE EARTH.</h3>
+
+ <p>Query, Has Mons. Foucault's pendulum experiment been as yet clearly
+ enunciated? and do I understand it aright, when I conceive it is intended
+ to show the existence of a certain uniform <i>rotation in azimuth of the
+ horizon</i>, but different for different latitudes; which rotation, if
+ made out to exist, is acquired solely in virtue of the uniform diurnal
+ rotation (15° hourly) in right ascension of the equator, identical in all
+ latitudes.</p>
+
+ <p>A pendulum, manifestly, can only be suspended vertically, and can only
+ vibrate in a vertical plane; and surely can only be conceived, in the
+ course of the experiment, to be referred to the <i>horizon</i>, that
+ great circle of the heavenly sphere to which all vertical circles are
+ referred.</p>
+
+ <p>A spectator at the north pole has the pole of the heavens coincident
+ with his zenith; and there, all declination circles are also vertical
+ circles; and there, the equator coincides with the horizon; whereby the
+ whole effect of the rotation of the earth there (15° hourly) may be
+ conceived to be given to the <i>horizon</i>: whilst, at the equator, the
+ horizon is perpendicular to the equator, which therefore gives no such
+ rotation at all to the horizon. Simple inspection of a celestial globe
+ will illustrate this. Considering the matter thus, at the pole the
+ rotation of the <i>horizon</i> is 15° hourly, and at the equator is 0, or
+ nothing. But the sine of the latitude (=90°) at the pole is unity, or 1;
+ and the sine of the latitude (=0°) at the equator is 0. Therefore, at
+ these two extremes, the expression 15° × sin. lat. actually does give the
+ amount of <i>hourly apparent rotation of the horizon</i>; namely, 15° at
+ one place, and 0° at the other. Now, as I understand the experiment, as
+ given in the public prints, it is asserted that the same expression of
+ 15° × sin. lat. will give the <i>rotation of the horizon</i> in
+ intermediate latitudes; of which rotation I subjoin a table calculated
+ for the purpose.</p>
+
+<table class="allbctr" summary="Rotation of the horizon." title="Rotation of the horizon.">
+<tr><td class="allb" style="text-align:center">
+Degrees<br />
+of<br />
+Latitude
+</td><td class="allb" style="text-align:center">
+Natural<br />
+Values of<br />
+Sine of the<br />
+Latitude.
+</td><td class="allb" style="text-align:center">
+Value of 15° × Sin.<br />
+Lat., or apparent<br />
+<i>hourly</i> Amount of<br />
+Rotation of <i>Horizon</i>,<br />
+in Degrees and<br />
+Decimals.
+</td><td class="allb" style="text-align:center">
+Apparent corre-<br />
+sponding Times of<br />
+<i>Horizon</i>, performing<br />
+one Rotation of<br />
+360°, in Hours and<br />
+Decimals.
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> ° &nbsp; </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> ° &nbsp; &nbsp; </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> h &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 0 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 0.000 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 0.00 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> Infinite time. </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 1 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 0.017 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 0.26 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 1371.0 &nbsp; </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 2 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 0.035 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 0.53 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 682.1 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 3 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 0.053 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 0.79 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 458.5 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 4 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 0.070 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 1.05 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 342.6 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 5 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 0.087 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 1.31 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 255.4 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 6 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 0.104 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 1.57 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 229.6 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 7 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 0.122 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 1.83 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 169.9 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 8 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 0.139 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 2.09 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 172.5 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 9 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 0.156 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 2.35 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 153.4 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 10 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 0.173 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 2.60 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 138.1 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 20 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 0.342 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 5.13 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 70.2 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 30 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 0.500 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 7.50 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 48.0 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 40 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 0.643 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 9.64 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 37.3 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 50 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 0.766 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 11.49 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 31.3 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 60 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 0.866 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 13.00 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 27.7 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 70 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 0.940 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 14.09 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 25.5 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 80 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 0.985 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 14.77 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 24.4 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 90 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 1.000 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> 15.00 </td><td class="vertb" style="text-align:center"> &nbsp; 24.0 </td></tr>
+</table>
+
+ <p>Now this is the point which, it should seem, ought to be the business
+ of experimenters to establish; it being proposed, as we are informed, to
+ swing, in different latitudes, freely suspended pendulums, over
+ horizontal dials, or circular tables, properly graduated, similarly to
+ the horizons of common globes; and to note the <i>apparent</i> variation
+ of the plane of oscillation of the pendulums with respect to the
+ graduated dials; these latter serving as representatives of the horizon.
+ For the hypothesis is (as I understand it), that the pendulums will
+ continue to swing each of them severally in one invariable vertical plane
+ fixed in free space, whilst the horizontal dials beneath, by their
+ rotation, will slip away, as it were, and turn round in <i>azimuth</i>,
+ from under the planes of the pendulums.</p>
+
+ <p>It should seem to be imperative on those who wish to put this
+ experiment to proof, to give all possible attention to the precautions
+ suggested in the excellent paper that appeared on the subject, on
+ Saturday, April 19, in the <i>Literary Gazette</i>, copied also into the
+ <i>Morning Post</i> of Monday the 21st. To my mind, the experiment is
+ beset with practical difficulties; but even should the matter <!-- Page
+ 372 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page372"></a>{372}</span>be
+ satisfactorily made out to those best capable of judging, I cannot
+ readily conceive of an experiment less likely than the above to carry
+ conviction to the minds of the wholly unlearned of the rotation of the
+ earth.</p>
+
+ <p>I perceive that B.A.C., in the <i>Times</i> of April 24, avows his
+ determined scepticism as to the virtue of the experiment.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Robert Snow.</span></p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h2>MINOR QUERIES.</h2>
+
+ <p><i>William ap Jevan's Descendants.</i>&mdash;In Burke's <i>Landed
+ Gentry</i>, p. 1465., mention is made of William ap Jevan, "an attendant
+ upon Jasper Duke of Bedford, and afterwards upon Hen. VII.;" and of a
+ son, Morgan Williams, ancestor of the Cromwells. Will some correspondent
+ oblige by giving a reference to where any account may be met with of any
+ other son, or children, to such William ap Jevan, and his or their
+ descendants?</p>
+
+ <p class="author">W. P. A.</p>
+
+ <p>"<i>Geographers on Afric Downs.</i>"&mdash;Can any of your
+ correspondents tell me where these lines are to be found?&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"So geographers on Afric downs,</p>
+ <p>Plant elephants instead of towns."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>They sound Hudibrastic, but I cannot find them in <i>Hudibras</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">A. S.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Irish Brigade.</i>&mdash;Can any of your correspondents furnish any
+ account of what were called "The Capitulations of the Irish Brigades?"
+ These <i>Capitulations</i> (to prevent mistakes) were simply the
+ agreements under which foreign regiments entered the French service. The
+ Swiss regiments had their special "capitulations" until 1830, when they
+ ceased to be employed in France. They appear to have differed in almost
+ every regiment of the Irish brigade; the privileges of some being greater
+ than those of others. One was common to all, namely, the right of
+ <i>trial</i> by their officers or comrades solely, and according to the
+ laws of their own country.</p>
+
+ <p>Also, is there any history of the brigades published? I have heard
+ that a Colonel Dromgoole published one. Can any information be afforded
+ on that head?</p>
+
+ <p class="author">K.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Passage in Oldham.</i>&mdash;The following lines, on the virtues of
+ "impudence," occur in that exquisite satirist, Oldham, described by
+ Dryden as "too little and too lately known:"</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Get that great gift and talent, impudence,</p>
+ <p>Accomplish'd mankind's highest excellence:</p>
+ <p class="hg1">'Tis that alone prefers, alone makes great,</p>
+ <p>Confers alone wealth, titles, and estate;</p>
+ <p>Gains place at court, can make a fool a peer;</p>
+ <p>An ass a bishop; can vil'st blockhead rear</p>
+ <p>To wear red hats, and sit in porph'ry chair:</p>
+ <p class="hg1">'Tis learning, parts, and skill, and wit, and sense,</p>
+ <p>Worth, merit, honour, virtue, innocence."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>I quote this passage chiefly with reference to the "porphyry chair,"
+ and with the view of ascertaining whether the allusion has been explained
+ in any edition of Oldham's Poems. Does the expression refer to any
+ established use of such chairs by the wearers of "red hats?" or is it
+ intended merely to convey a general idea of the sumptuousness and
+ splendour of their style of living?</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Henry H. Breen.</span></p>
+
+ <p class="address">St. Lucia, March, 1851.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mont-de-Piété.</i>-Can any of your readers furnish information as
+ to the connexion between these words and the thing which they are used to
+ denote? Mrs. Jameson says, in her <i>Legends of the Monastic Orders</i>,
+ p. 307.:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"Another attribute of St. Bernardin's of Siena, is the
+ <i>Monte-di-Pietà</i>, a little green hill composed of three mounds, and
+ on the top either a cross or a standard, on which is the figure of the
+ dead Saviour, usually called in Italy a <i>Pietà</i>. St. B. is said to
+ have been the founder of the charitable institutions still called in
+ France <i>Monts-de-Piété</i>, originally for the purpose of lending to
+ the poor small sums on trifling pledges&mdash;what we should now call a
+ loan society,&mdash;and which, in their commencement, were purely
+ disinterested and beneficial. In every city which he visited as a
+ preacher, he founded a Monte-di-Pietà; and before his death, these
+ institutions had spread all over Italy and through a great part of
+ France."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>It is added in a note:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"Although the figures holding the M. di P. are, in Italian prints and
+ pictures, styled 'San Bernardino da Siena,' there is reason to presume
+ that the honour is at least shared by another worthy of the same order,
+ 'Il Beato Bernardino da Feltri,' a celebrated preacher at the end of the
+ fifteenth century. Mention is made of his preaching against the Jews and
+ usurers, on the miseries of the poor, and on the necessity of having a
+ <i>Monte-di-Pietà</i> at Florence, in a sermon delivered in the church of
+ Santa Croce in the year 1488."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>On p. 308. is a representation of the Monte-di-Pietà, borne in the
+ saint's hand. I need not specify the points on which the foregoing
+ extract still leaves information to be desired.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">W. B. H.</p>
+
+ <p class="address">Manchester.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Poem upon the Grave.</i>&mdash;A. D. would be obliged by being
+ informed where to find a poem upon The Grave. Two voices speak in it,
+ and, it commences&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"How peaceful the grave; its quiet how deep!</p>
+ <p>Its zephyrs breathe calmly, and soft is its sleep,</p>
+ <p>And flowerets perfume it with ether."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The second voice replies&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"How lonesome the grave; how deserted and drear," &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p><i>Clocks: when self-striking Clocks first invented.</i>&mdash;In
+ Bolingbroke's <i>Letters on the Study of History</i> <!-- Page 373
+ --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page373"></a>{373}</span>(Letter IV.),
+ I read the following passage in relation to a certain person:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"His reason had not the merit of common mechanism. When you press a
+ watch or pull a clock, they answer your question with precision; for they
+ repeat exactly the hour of the day, and tell you neither more nor less
+ than you desire to know."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>I believe this work was written about 1711. Can you tell me when the
+ self-striking clock was invented, and by whom?</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Jingo.</span></p>
+
+ <p><i>Clarkson's "Richmond."</i>&mdash;Can any of your readers inform me
+ who is in possession of the papers of the late Mr. Clarkson, the
+ historian of Richmond, in Yorkshire? I wish to know what were the ancient
+ documents, or other sources, from which the learned author ascertained
+ some facts stated in his valuable work. To whom should I apply on the
+ subject?</p>
+
+ <p class="author">D. Q.</p>
+
+ <p><i>"Felix quem faciunt," &amp;c.</i>&mdash;I wish you could tell me
+ where I can find this line:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Felix quem faciunt aliena pericula cautum."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Effigies.</span></p>
+
+ <p class="address">Whitehall.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Sir Francis Windebank's elder Son.</i>&mdash;Sir Francis Windebank,
+ "of treacherous memory," it is well known, died at Paris in September,
+ 1646. He had two sons; what became of Thomas, the <i>elder</i>? Francis,
+ the <i>second</i>, was a colonel in the royal army: he was tried for
+ cowardice in surrendering Blechingdon House, in Oxfordshire, to Oliver
+ Cromwell without a blow; and being found guilty, was shot at Broken
+ Hayes, near Oxford, in April, 1645. I am anxious to make out the fate of
+ his elder brother.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Edward F. Rimbault.</span></p>
+
+ <p><i>Incised Slab.</i>&mdash;I have a large incised slab in my church,
+ with the figures of a man (Richard Grenewey) and his wife upon it, with
+ the date 1473. Following the date, and filling up the remainder of the
+ line of the inscription, is the figure of a cock in a fighting attitude.
+ Can any of your readers enlighten me on the subject?</p>
+
+ <p class="author">H. C. K.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Etymology of Balsall.</i>&mdash;Will you allow me to ask some of
+ your readers to give me the etymology of <i>Balsall</i>? It occurs
+ frequently about here, as Balsall Temple, B. Street, B. Grange, B.
+ Common, and near Birmingham is Balsall Heath. It is not to be confounded
+ with Beausall Common, which also is near this place.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">F. R.</p>
+
+ <p class="address">Kenilworth.</p>
+
+ <p><i>St. Olave's Churches.</i>&mdash;In the <i>Calendar of the Anglican
+ Church</i>, Parker, Oxford, 1851, at pp. 267. and 313., it is stated that
+ Saint Olave helped King Ethelred to dislodge the Danes from London and
+ Southwark, by destroying London Bridge; and that, in gratitude for this
+ service, the churches at each end of the bridge are dedicated to
+ him;&mdash;on the Southwark side, St. Olave's, Tooley Street, is; but was
+ there ever a church on the London side, bearing the same name?&mdash;The
+ nearest one to the bridge is St. Olave's, Hart Street; but that is surely
+ too distant to be called "at the end of the bridge."</p>
+
+ <p class="author">E. N. W.</p>
+
+ <p class="address">Southwark, April 21. 1851.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Sabbatical and Jubilee Years of the Jews.</i>&mdash;As the solution
+ of many interesting topics in connexion with Jewish history is yet
+ dependent on the <i>period</i> of the institution of the Sabbatical and
+ Jubilee years, the following observations will not perhaps be deemed
+ unworthy of a "nook" in your columns. A spark may blaze! I therefore
+ throw it out to be fanned into a more brilliant light by those of your
+ readers whose studies peculiarly fit them to inquire more searchingly
+ into the subject. The Jews, it has been remarked by various writers, were
+ ignorant of <i>astronomy</i>. Both, however, the Sabbatical and Jubilee
+ years have been, as I conceive and will endeavour to show, founded on
+ astronomical observation, commemorative of no particular event in Jewish
+ history, but simply that of the moon's revolutions; for instance, with
+ reference to the <i>Sabbatical</i> year, allowing for a difference of
+ four days and a half, which occurs <i>annually</i> in the time of the
+ moon's position on the equator, it would require, in order to realise a
+ number corresponding to the days (29) employed by the moon in her
+ synodical revolution round the earth, a period to elapse of little less
+ than six years and a half: thus exhibiting the Jews' <i>seventh</i> or
+ <i>Sabbatical year</i>, or year of rest. This result, besides being
+ instructive and commemorative of the moon's menstrual course, is at the
+ same time indicative, as each Sabbatical year rolls past, of the approach
+ of the "<i>finisher of the Seven Sabbaths of years</i>," or year of
+ Jubilee, so designated from its being to the chosen people of God, under
+ the Jewish dispensation, a year of "freedom and redemption," in
+ commemoration of the moon's <i>complete</i> revolution, viz., her return
+ to a certain position at the precise time at which she set out therefrom,
+ an event which takes place but once in <i>fifty years</i>: in other
+ words, if the moon be on the equator, say, on the first day of February,
+ and calculating twenty-nine days to the month, or twelve lunations to the
+ year, a cycle of fifty years, or "seven Sabbaths of years," must elapse
+ ere she will again be in that position on the same day.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Hipparchus.</span></p>
+
+ <p class="address">Limehouse, March 31. 1851.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Arms of Isle of Man.</i>&mdash;The arms of the Isle of Man are
+ gules, three legs conjoined in the fess point, &amp;c. &amp;c. or. These
+ arms were stamped on the old halfpence of the island, and we may well
+ call them the current coin.</p>
+
+ <p>In an old edition of the <i>Mythology of Natalis</i> <!-- Page 374
+ --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page374"></a>{374}</span><i>Comus</i>,
+ Patavii, 1637, small 4to., at page 278., I find an Icon of Triptolemus
+ sent by Ceres in a chariot drawn by serpents, hovering in the clouds over
+ what I suppose to be Sicily, or Trinacria; and on a representation of a
+ city below the chariot occurs the very same form of coin, the three legs
+ conjoined, with the addition of three ears of corn.</p>
+
+ <p>This seems to me to be a curious coincidence.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Merviniensis.</span></p>
+
+ <p><i>Doctrine of the Resurrection.</i>&mdash;Can any of your readers
+ inform me of any traces of the doctrine of the Resurrection to be found
+ in authors anterior to the Christian era? The following passage from
+ Diogenes Laertius is quoted in St. John's <i>Manners and Customs of
+ Ancient Greece</i>, vol. i. p. 355.:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"<span title="Kai anabiôsesthai, kata tous Magous, phêsi (theopompos), tous anthrôpous, kai esesthai athanatous." class="grk"
+ >&Kappa;&alpha;&#x1F76;
+ &#x1F00;&nu;&alpha;&beta;&iota;&#x1F7D;&sigma;&epsilon;&sigma;&theta;&alpha;&iota;,
+ &kappa;&alpha;&tau;&#x1F70; &tau;&omicron;&#x1F7A;&sigmaf;
+ &Mu;&#x1F71;&gamma;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigmaf;, &phi;&eta;&sigma;&#x1F76;
+ (&theta;&epsilon;&omicron;&pi;&omicron;&mu;&pi;&omicron;&sigmaf;),
+ &tau;&omicron;&#x1F7A;&sigmaf;
+ &#x1F00;&nu;&theta;&rho;&#x1F7D;&pi;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigmaf;,
+ &kappa;&alpha;&#x1F76;
+ &#x1F14;&sigma;&epsilon;&sigma;&theta;&alpha;&iota;
+ &#x1F00;&theta;&alpha;&nu;&#x1F71;&tau;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigmaf;.</span>"</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>How far does the statement in this passage involve the idea of a
+ <i>bodily</i> resurrection? I fancy the doctrine is not countenanced by
+ any of the apparitions in the poetical Hades of Virgil, or of other
+ poets.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Zeteticus.</span></p>
+
+ <p><i>National Debts.</i>&mdash;Is there any published work descriptive
+ of the origin of the foundation of a "National Debt" in Florence so early
+ as the year 1344, when the state, owing a sum of money, created a "Mount
+ or Bank," the shares in which were transferable, like our stocks? It is
+ not mentioned in Niccolo Machiavelli's <i>History of Florence</i>; but I
+ have a note of the fact, without a reference to the authority. Is there
+ any precedent prior to the foundation of our National Debt?</p>
+
+ <p class="author">F. E. M.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Leicester's Commonwealth.</i>&mdash;Are the real authors of
+ <i>Leicester's Commonwealth</i>, and the poetical tract generally found
+ with it, <i>Leicester's Ghost</i>, known? According to Dodd's <i>Church
+ History</i>, the first is <i>erroneously</i> attributed to Robert Parsons
+ the Jesuit.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Edward F. Rimbault.</span></p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h2>Replies.</h2>
+
+<h3>HISTOIRE DES SÉVARAMBES.</h3>
+
+<p class="cenhead">(Vol. iii., pp. 4. 72. 147.)</p>
+
+ <p>The History of the Sevarites, in the original English edition,
+ consists of two parts: the first published in 1675, in 114 pages, small
+ 12mo., without a preface; the second published in 1679, in 140 pages,
+ with a preface of six pages. The French version of this work is much
+ altered and enlarged. The title is changed into <i>Histoire des
+ Sévarambes</i>, the "Sevarites" being dropped. There is a preface of
+ fifteen pages, containing a supposed letter from Thomas Skinner, dated
+ Bruges, Oct. 28, 1672. The work is divided into five parts, three of
+ which are in the first, and two in the second volume of the Amsterdam
+ edition of 1716. These five parts are together more than twice as bulky
+ as the two parts of the English work. There is no copy of the original
+ French edition of 1677-9 described by Marchand, in any English public
+ library; but if there is a copy in the French national library, any of
+ your bibliographical correspondents at Paris could easily ascertain
+ whether (as is probably the case) the Amsterdam edition is a mere reprint
+ from the original Paris edition.</p>
+
+ <p>The French version of this work is not only much enlarged, but it
+ differs in the names and incidents, and is fuller in the account of the
+ institutions and customs of the imaginary state. The English edition of
+ 1738 (1 vol. 8vo.) is a literal translation from the French version,
+ though it does not purport to be a translation. It may be doubted whether
+ the translator was aware of the existence of the English publication of
+ 1675-9. The German translation was published in 1680; the Dutch
+ translation in 1682: both these appear to have been taken from the
+ French.</p>
+
+ <p>Morhof (<i>Polyhistor.</i>, vol. i. p. 74.), who inserts this work
+ among the <i>libri damnati</i>, and dwells upon its deistical character,
+ refers to the French version; and though he knew that the book had
+ originally appeared in English, he probably was not aware of the
+ difference between the two versions. A note added by his first editor,
+ Moller, states that Morhof often told his friends that he believed Isaac
+ Vossius to have been the author of the work. Isaac Vossius was in England
+ from 1670 until his death, which took place at Windsor, February 21,
+ 1689. His residence in England, combined with the known laxity of his
+ religious opinions, doubtless suggested to Morhof the conjecture that he
+ wrote this freethinking Utopia. There is, however, no external evidence
+ to support this conjecture, or to show that it had any better foundation
+ than the conjecture that Bishop Berkeley wrote <i>Gaudentio di Lucca</i>.
+ The University of Leyden purchased the library of Isaac Vossius for
+ 36,000 florins. If it is still preserved at Leyden, a search among his
+ books might ascertain whether there is among them any copy of the English
+ or French editions of this work, and whether they contain any written
+ remark by their former possessor. Moreover, it is to be observed that the
+ system of natural religion is for the first time developed in the French
+ edition; and this was the part which chiefly gave the book its celebrity:
+ whereas, the supposition of Morhof implies that the English and French
+ versions are identical.</p>
+
+ <p>Heumann, in his <i>Schediasma de Libris Anonymis et Pseudonymis</i>
+ (Jena, 1711), p. 161. (reprinted in Mylius, <i>Bibliotheca Anon. et
+ Pseudon.</i>, Hamburg, 1740, vol. i. pp. 170-6.) has an article on the
+ <i>Histoire des Sévarambes</i>. It is there stated that "Messieurs de
+ Portroyal" superintended the French translation of the work; but no
+ authority is given for the statement. Christian Thomasius, <!-- Page 375
+ --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page375"></a>{375}</span>in his
+ <i>Monthly Review</i> of November 1689, attributed the work to D'Allais
+ (or Vairasse). He alleged three reasons for this belief: 1. The rumour
+ current in France; 2. The fact that Allais sold the book, as well as his
+ French grammar; 3. That a comparison of the two works, in respect of
+ style and character of mind, renders it most probable that both are by
+ the same author. The testimony of Thomasius is important, as the date of
+ its publication is only ten years posterior to the publication of the
+ last part of the French version.</p>
+
+ <p>Leclerc, in a review of the <i>Schediasma</i> of Heumann, in the
+ <i>Bibliothèque Choisie</i>, published in 1712 (tom. xxv. p. 402., with
+ an addendum, tom. xxvi. p. 460.), attests positively that Vairasse was
+ the author of the work in question. He says that Vairasse (or, as he
+ spells the name, Veiras) took the name of D'Allais in order to sell his
+ book. He had this fact from persons well acquainted with Vairasse. He
+ likewise mentions that Vairasse was well known to Locke, who gave Leclerc
+ an account of his birthplace. Leclerc adds that he was acquainted with a
+ person to whom Vairasse wished to dedicate his book (viz. the <i>Histoire
+ des Sévarambes</i>), <i>and who possessed a copy of it, with a species of
+ dedication, written in his hand</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>This testimony is so distinct and circumstantial, as to leave no
+ reasonable doubt as to the connexion of Vairasse with the French version.
+ The difficulty as to the authorship of the English version still,
+ however, remains considerable. The extensive alterations introduced in
+ the French edition certainly render it probable that <i>two</i> different
+ writers were concerned in the work. The words of Leclerc respecting the
+ information received from Locke are somewhat ambiguous; but they do not
+ necessarily imply that Locke knew anything as to the connexion of
+ Vairasse with the book, though they are not inconsistent with this
+ meaning. Locke had doubtless become acquainted with Vairasse during his
+ residence in England. Considering the length of time which Vairasse
+ passed in England, and the eminence of the persons with whom he is said
+ to have had relations (viz. the Duke of York, Lord Clarendon, and Locke),
+ it is singular that no mention of him should be discoverable in any
+ English book.</p>
+
+ <p>The error, that the work in question was written by Algernon Sidney,
+ appears to have arisen from a confusion with the name of Captain Siden,
+ the imaginary traveller. Fabricius (<i>Bibliograph. Antiq.</i>, c. xiv.
+ §16. p. 491.) mentions Sidney and Vairasse as the two most probable
+ claimants to the authorship.</p>
+
+ <p>Hume, in his <i>Essay on Polygamy and Divorces</i>, refers to the
+ <i>History of the Sevarambians</i>, and calls it an "agreeable
+ romance."</p>
+
+ <p class="author">L.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<h3>WAS THERE AN "OUTER TEMPLE" IN THE POSSESSION
+OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS OR KNIGHTS
+OF ST. JOHN?&mdash;(Vol. iii., p. 325.)</h3>
+
+ <p>I have great pleasure in complying with the very proper request of
+ <span class="sc">Mr. Foss</span>, and give my authority at once for
+ stating in the <i>Hand-book for London</i> that the so-called "Outer
+ Temple" was a part of the Fleet Street possession of the Knights Templars
+ or Knights of St. John, or was in any manner comprehended within the New
+ Temple property of Fleet Street and Temple Bar. My authority is Sir
+ George Buc, whose minute and valuable account of the universities of
+ England is dedicated to Sir Edward Coke. Buc's words are
+ these:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"After this suppression and condemnation of the Templers, their house
+ here in Fleete Street came to the handes and occupation of diuers Lordes.
+ For our Antiquaries and Chronologers say, that after this suppression Sir
+ Thomas Plantagenet Earl of Lancaster (and Cousin to the King then
+ raigning) had it, but beeing after attainted of treason, hee enjoyed it
+ but a short time.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then next Hugh Spencer Earle of Glocester got into it, but he also
+ was soone after attainted, and executed for Treason. After him Andomare
+ de Valence, a nobleman of the great house of Lusignan, and Earle of
+ Pembrooke, was lodged in it for a while. But this house was '<i>Equus
+ Seianus</i>' to them all: and (as here it appeareth) was ordayned by God
+ for other better uses, and whereunto now it serueth. After all these
+ noble tenants and occupants were thus exturbed, dead, and gone, then
+ certaine of the reuerend, ancient professours of the Lawes, in the raign
+ of King Edward the Third, obtained a very large or (as I might say) a
+ perpetuall Lease of this Temple, or (as it must bee understood) of two
+ parts thereof distinguished by the names of the Middle Temple and the
+ Inner Temple, from the foresayd Ioannites.... But the other third part,
+ called the Outward Temple, Doctor Stapleton, Bishop of Exceter, had
+ gotten in the raign of the former King, Edward the Second, and conuerted
+ it to a house for him and his successors, Bishops of Exceter ... of whom
+ the late Earle of Essex purchased it, and it is now called Essex house:
+ hauing first beene (as I haue sayd) a part of the Templers' house, and in
+ regard of the scituation thereof, without the Barre, was called the
+ Outward or Utter Temple, as the others, for the like causes, were called
+ the Middle Temple and the Inner Temple."&mdash;Sir George Buc, in
+ <i>Stow</i> by Howes, ed. 1631, p. 1068.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>This seems decisive, if Buc is to be relied on, as I think he is. But
+ new facts, such as <span class="sc">Mr. Foss's</span> researches and
+ <span class="sc">Mr. Burtt's</span> diligence are likely to bring to
+ light, may upset Buc's statement altogether.</p>
+
+ <p>I must join <span class="sc">Mr. Foss</span> in his wish to ascertain
+ <i>when</i> the names Inner Temple and Middle Temple were first made use
+ of, with a further Query, which I should be glad to have settled,
+ <i>when</i> the See of Exeter first obtained the site of the so-called
+ <!-- Page 376 --><span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page376"></a>{376}</span>"Outer Temple?" Stapleton, by whom it was
+ <i>perhaps</i> obtained, was Bishop of Exeter from 1307 to 1326.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Peter Cunningham.</span></p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<h3>OBEISM.</h3>
+
+<p class="cenhead">(Vol. iii., p. 59.)</p>
+
+ <p>In reply to F. H., I beg leave to state that Obeism is not in itself a
+ religion, except in the sense in which Burke says that "superstition is
+ the religion of feeble minds." It is a belief, real or pretended, in the
+ efficacy of certain spells and incantations, and is to the uneducated
+ negro what sorcery was to our unenlightened forefathers. This
+ superstition is known in St. Lucia by the name of <i>Kembois</i>. It is
+ still extensively practised in the West Indies, but there is no reason to
+ suppose that it is rapidly gaining ground. F.&nbsp;H. will find ample
+ information on the subject in Père Labat's <i>Nouveau Voyage aux Isles
+ françaises de l'Amérique</i>, tome ii. p. 59., and tome iv. pp. 447. 499.
+ and 506., edition of 1742; in Bryan Edwards' <i>History of the West
+ Indies</i>, vol. ii. ch. iii., 5th edition (London, 1819); and in Dr.
+ R.&nbsp;R. Madden's <i>Residence in the West Indies</i>, vol. ii. letter 27.
+ Perhaps the following particulars from Bryan Edwards (who says he is
+ indebted for them to a Mr. Long) on the etymology of <i>obeah</i>, may be
+ acceptable to some of your readers:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"The term <i>obeah</i>, <i>obiah</i>, or <i>obia</i>, (for it is
+ variously written,) we conceive to be the adjective, and <i>obe</i> or
+ <i>obi</i>, the noun substantive; and that by the word
+ <i>obia</i>&mdash;men or women&mdash;is meant those who practise
+ <i>obi</i>. The origin of the term we should consider as of no
+ importance, in our answer to the question proposed, if, in search of it,
+ we were not led to disquisitions that are highly gratifying to curiosity.
+ From the learned Mr. Bryant's commentary upon the word <i>oph</i>, we
+ obtain a very probable etymology of the term. 'A serpent, in the Egyptian
+ language, was called <i>ob</i> or <i>aub</i>.' '<i>Obion</i> is still the
+ Egyptian name for a serpent.' 'Moses, in the name of God, forbids the
+ Israelites ever to inquire of the demon <i>Ob</i>, which is translated in
+ our Bible, charmer or wizard, divinator aut sorcilegus.' 'The woman at
+ Endor is called <i>oub</i> or <i>ob</i>, translated Pythonissa; and
+ <i>oubaois</i> (he cites from <i>Horus Apollo</i>) was the name of the
+ Basilisk or Royal Serpent, emblem of the sun, and an ancient oracular
+ deity of Africa.'"</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>One of your correspondents has formed a substantive from <i>obe</i> by
+ the addition of <i>ism</i>, and another from <i>obeah</i> by the same
+ process; but it will be seen by the above quotation that there is no
+ necessity for that obtrusive termination, the superstitious practice in
+ question being already sufficiently described by the word <i>obe</i> or
+ <i>obi</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Henry H. Breen.</span></p>
+
+ <p class="address">St. Lucia, March, 1851.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<h3>SAN MARINO.</h3>
+
+<p class="cenhead">(Vol. iii., p. 321.)</p>
+
+ <p>On the death of Sigismondo Pandolfo Malatesta, without legitimate male
+ issue, in October, 1468, Pope Paul II. declared Rimini and his other
+ fiefs to have reverted to the Holy See. In the spring of the following
+ year the Pontiff proceeded, with the assistance of the Venetians, to
+ enforce his claim, and threatened the Republicans of San Marino with his
+ vengeance if they did not aid him and his allies in gaining possession of
+ Rimini, which Roberto Malatesta, one of the illegitimate sons of
+ Sigismondo Pandolfo, had seized by stratagem.</p>
+
+ <p>By advice of their faithful friend Federigo, Count of Urbino, who was
+ at the head of the opposite league, comprising the King of Naples, the
+ Duke of Milan, and the Florentines, the San-Marinese forwarded the Papal
+ mandate to Florence, and requested through their ambassador, one Ser
+ Bartolomeo, the support of that Republic. Several letters appear to have
+ been sent in answer to their applications, and the one communicated by
+ <span class="sc">Mr. Sydney Smirke</span> is characterised by Melchiarre
+ Delfico (<i>Memorie storiche della Repubblica di San Marino.</i>
+ Capolago, 1842, 8vo. p. 229.) as</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"Del tutto didattica e parenetica intorno alla libertà, di cui i
+ Fiorentini facevano gran vanto, mentre erano quasi alla vigilia di
+ perderla intieramente."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>San Marino was not attacked during the campaign, which terminated on
+ the 30th of August of the same year (1469) with the battle of Vergiano,
+ in which Alessandro Sforza, the commander of the Papal forces, was
+ signally defeated by Federigo.</p>
+
+ <p>San Marino has never, so far as I have been able to ascertain,
+ undergone the calamity of a siege, and its inhabitants have
+ uninterruptedly enjoyed the blessing of self-government from the
+ foundation of the Republic in the third or fourth century to the present
+ time, with the exception of the few months of 1503, during which the
+ infamous Cesare Borgia forced them to accept a Podestà of his own
+ nomination. Various causes have contributed to this lengthened
+ independence; but it may be stated that, in the fifteenth and sixteenth
+ centuries, the San Marinese owed it no less to their own patriotism,
+ courage, prudence, and good faith, than to the disinterested protection
+ of the Counts and Dukes of Urbino, whose history has been so ably written
+ by Mr. Dennistoun, in his recently published memoirs of that chivalrous
+ race.</p>
+
+ <p>The privileges of the Republic were confirmed on the 12th of February,
+ 1797, by Napoleon Buonaparte, who offered to enlarge its
+ territory,&mdash;a boon which its citizens were wise enough to decline;
+ thinking, perhaps, with Montesquieu, that&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"Il est de la nature d'une république qu'elle n'ait qu'un petit
+ territoire: sans cela, elle ne peut guère subsister."&mdash;<i>Esprit des
+ Lois</i>, liv. viii. chap. 16.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>Your readers will find some notices of San <!-- Page 377 --><span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page377"></a>{377}</span>Marino in Addison's
+ <i>Remarks on several Parts of Italy</i>; Aristotle's <i>Politics</i>,
+ translated by Gillies, lib. ii. Appendix.</p>
+
+ <p>Its lofty and isolated situation has supplied Jean Paul with a simile
+ in his <i>Unsichtbare Loge</i>:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"Alle andre Wissenschaften theilen sich jetzt in eine Universal
+ Monarchie über alle Leser: aber die Alten sitzen mit ihren wenigen
+ philologischen Lehnsleuten einsam auf einem S.
+ Marino-Felsen."&mdash;<i>Jean Paul's</i> Werke (Berlin, 1840, 8vo.), vol.
+ i. p. 125.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>In the first line of the letter, "ved<i>a</i>to" should be
+ ved<i>u</i>to; and in the seventh line, "difender<i>ai</i>"
+ difender<i>vi</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">F. C. B.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<h3>THE BELLMAN AND HIS HISTORY.</h3>
+
+<p class="cenhead">(Vol. iii., p. 324.)</p>
+
+ <p>The Bellman's songs may be found in the <i>Bellman's Treasury,
+ containing above a Hundred several Verses, fitted for all Humours and
+ Fancies, and suited to all Times and Seasons</i>. London: 8vo. 1707.
+ Extracts from this book are given in Hone's <i>Every Day Book</i>, vol.
+ ii. p. 1594.</p>
+
+ <p>I have now before me a broadside thus entitled: "A copy of verses,
+ humbly presented to the Right Worshipful the Mayor, Aldermen, and Common
+ Councilmen, and the rest of my worthy Masters and Mistresses, dwelling in
+ Cambridge. By Thomas Adams, Bellman, 1810." There is a large engraving,
+ from a wood-block, apparently a century old, representing a bellman, in a
+ flowing wig and a three-cornered hat, holding, in his right hand a bell,
+ and in his left a javelin and lantern; his dog is behind him.</p>
+
+ <p>The verses are:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp; 1. Prologue.</p>
+ <p>&nbsp; 2. To the Right Worshipful the Mayor.</p>
+ <p>&nbsp; 3. To the Aldermen.</p>
+ <p>&nbsp; 4. To the Common Councilmen.</p>
+ <p>&nbsp; 5. To the Town Clerk.</p>
+ <p>&nbsp; 6. To the Members for the Town.</p>
+ <p>&nbsp; 7. On the King.</p>
+ <p>&nbsp; 8. On the Queen.</p>
+ <p>&nbsp; 9. On Christmas Day.</p>
+ <p>10. On New Year's Day.</p>
+ <p>11. To the Young Men.</p>
+ <p>12. To the Young Maids.</p>
+ <p>13. On Charity.</p>
+ <p>14. On Religion.</p>
+ <p>15. Epilogue.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>This is marked as the 24th sheet; that is, as I suppose, the 24th set
+ of verses presented by Mr. Adams.</p>
+
+ <p>I have also a similar broadside, "by Isaac Moule, jun., bellman,
+ 1824," being "No. III." of Mr. Moule's performances. The woodcut is of a
+ more modern character than Mr. Adams's, and delineates a bellman in a
+ three-cornered hat, modern coat, breeches, and stockings, a bell in his
+ right hand, and a small dog by his side. The bellman is represented as
+ standing in front of the old Shire Hall in Cambridge, having Hobson's
+ Conduit on his right.</p>
+
+ <p>The subjects of Mr. Moule's verses are similar to those of Mr. Adams,
+ with the following variations. He omits verses to the Town Clerk, the
+ Members for the Town, the Queen, on Charity, and on Religion, and inserts
+ verses "On St. Crispin," and "To my Masters and Mistresses."</p>
+
+ <p>The office of bellman in this town was abolished in 1836, and to the
+ bellman's verses have succeeded similar effusions from the lamplighters,
+ who distribute copies when soliciting Christmas boxes from the
+ inhabitants.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">C. H. Cooper.</span></p>
+
+ <p class="address">Cambridge, April 28. 1851.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h2>Replies to Minor Queries.</h2>
+
+ <p>"<i>God takes those soonest</i>," &amp;c. (Vol. iii., p.
+ 302.).&mdash;In Morwenstow churchyard, Cornwall, there is this epitaph on
+ a child:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Those whom God loves die young!</p>
+ <p class="i1">They see no evil days,&mdash;</p>
+ <p>No falsehood taints their tongue,</p>
+ <p class="i1">No wickedness their ways.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Baptized, and so made sure,</p>
+ <p class="i1">To win their blest abode,&mdash;</p>
+ <p>What shall we pray for more?</p>
+ <p class="i1">They die, and are with God!"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="author">C. E. H.</p>
+
+ <p>The belief expressed in these words is of great antiquity. See the
+ story of Cleobis and Biton, in Herod. l. 31., and the verse frown the
+ <span title="Dis exapatôn" class="grk">&Delta;&#x1F76;&sigmaf;
+ &#x1F10;&xi;&alpha;&pi;&alpha;&tau;&#x1FF6;&nu;</span> of Menander:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"<span title="Hon hoi theoi philousin apothnêskei neos" class="grk">&#x1F4B;&nu; &omicron;&#x1F31; &theta;&epsilon;&omicron;&#x1F76; &phi;&iota;&lambda;&omicron;&#x1FE6;&sigma;&iota;&nu; &#x1F00;&pi;&omicron;&theta;&nu;&#x1F75;&sigma;&kappa;&epsilon;&iota; &nu;&#x1F73;&omicron;&sigmaf;</span>."</p>
+ <p>Meineke, <i>Fragm. Com. Gr.</i>, vol. iv. p. 105.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="author">L.</p>
+
+ <p>I would suggest to T. H. K. that the origin of this line is
+ Menander's</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"<span title="Hon hoi theoi philousin apothnêskei neos" class="grk">&#x1F4B;&nu; &omicron;&#x1F31; &theta;&epsilon;&omicron;&#x1F76; &phi;&iota;&lambda;&omicron;&#x1FE6;&sigma;&iota;&nu; &#x1F00;&pi;&omicron;&theta;&nu;&#x1F75;&sigma;&kappa;&epsilon;&iota; &nu;&#x1F73;&omicron;&sigmaf;</span>."</p>
+ <p class="i2">Fragm. 128. in Meineke, <i>Fr. Com. Gr.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>imitated by Plautus:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Quem di diligunt adulescens moritur."</p>
+ <p class="i8"><i>Bacch.</i> iv. 7. 18.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>whence the English adage,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Whom the gods love die young."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Wordsworth's <i>Excur.</i>, b. i., has this sentiment:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i6hg3">"O, Sir, the good die first,</p>
+ <p>And those whose hearts are dry as summer dust,</p>
+ <p>Burn to the socket."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">C. P. Ph****.</span></p>
+
+<div class="note">
+ <p>[Several other correspondents have kindly replied to this Query.]</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p><!-- Page 378 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page378"></a>{378}</span></p>
+
+ <p><i>Disinterment for Heresy</i> (Vol. iii, p. 240.).&mdash;Mr. Tracy's
+ will, dated 10th October, 22d Henry VIII. [1530], is given at length in
+ Hall's <i>Chronicle</i> (ed. 1809, p. 796.), where will be found the
+ particulars of the case to which <span class="sc">Arun</span> alludes.
+ See also Burnet's <i>History of the Reformation</i> (ed. 1841, vol. i.
+ pp. 125. 657, 658. 673.), and Strype's <i>Annals of the Reformation</i>,
+ vol. i. p. 507. Strype states that Mr. Tracy's body was dug up and burnt
+ "anno 1532." William Tyndale wrote <i>Exposition on Mr. Will. Tracies
+ Will</i>, published in 8vo. at Nuremburgh, 1546. (Wood's <i>Athen.
+ Oxon.</i>, vol. i. p. 37.)</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">C. H. Cooper.</span></p>
+
+ <p class="address">Cambridge, April 2. 1851.</p>
+
+ <p>"William Tracy, a worshipful esquire in Gloucestershire, and then
+ dwelling at Todington," made a will, which was thought to contain
+ heretical sentiments. His executor having brought in this will to be
+ proved two years after Tracy's death (in 1532), "the Convocation most
+ cruelly judged that he should be taken out of the ground, and burnt as an
+ heretick," which was accordingly done; but the chancellor of the diocese
+ of Worcester, to whom the commission was sent for the burning, was fined
+ 300<i>l</i>. for it by King Henry VIII. Such is the story in Fox's
+ <i>Martyrs</i>, anno 1532 (vol. ii. p. 262. ed. 1684, which I have before
+ me).</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Exon.</span></p>
+
+ <p>The date and some particulars of the exhumation of the body of W.
+ Tracy, Esq., of Toddington Park, ancestor of the present Lord Sudeley,
+ <span class="sc">Arun</span> will find in Foxe's <i>Acts and
+ Monuments</i>, vol. v. p. 31. ed. 1843, and the note in appendix will
+ point out other sources.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Novus.</span></p>
+
+ <p><i>The Vellum-bound Junius</i> (Vol. iii., pp. 262. 307.).&mdash;In
+ the Number dated April 19, 1851, p. 307., is a request for information
+ relative to the "Vellum-bound copy of Junius;" also a reference to the
+ subject in a prior number of the "<span class="sc">Notes and
+ Queries</span>." Not being in England, and not having the prior numbers,
+ it is not possible to make myself acquainted with the subject contained
+ in that reference, but I will endeavour to throw some light on the Query
+ in the Number which has been forwarded to me. The writer of the
+ <i>Letters of Junius</i> was the secretary of the first Marquis of
+ Lansdowne, better known as Lord Shelburne. From his Lordship he obtained
+ all the political information necessary for his compositions. The late
+ Marquis of Lansdowne possessed the copy bound in vellum (two volumes),
+ with many notes on the margin in Lord Shelburne's handwriting; they were
+ kept locked up in a beautiful ebony casket bound and ornamented with
+ brass. That casket has disappeared, at least so I have been told, and not
+ many years ago inquiry was made for it by the present head of that house.
+ Maclean was a dark, strong-featured man, who wore his hat slouched over
+ his eyes, and generally a large cloak. He often corrected the slips or
+ proofs of his letters at Cox's, a well-known printer near Lincoln's Inn,
+ who deemed himself bound in honour never to divulge what he knew of that
+ publication, and was agitated when once suddenly spoken to on the subject
+ near the door of the small room in which the proofs were corrected, and
+ with a high and honourable feeling requested never to be again spoken to
+ on the subject. The late President of the Royal Academy, Benjamin West,
+ knew Maclean; and his son, the late Raphael West, told the writer of
+ these remarks, that when a young man he had seen him in the evening at
+ his father's in Newman Street, and once heard him repeat a passage in one
+ of the letters which was not then published. A more correct and veracious
+ man than Mr. R. West could not be. Maclean stammered, and was
+ consequently of no use to Lord Shelburne as a debater and supporter in
+ parliament. A place in the East Indies was obtained for him, and he
+ sailed in the Aurora frigate for that dependency, and was lost in her at
+ the same time with Falconer, the author of the poem entitled <i>The
+ Shipwreck</i>. The able tract published by Mr. Pickering, Piccadilly,
+ would constitute a fair foundation on which to build the inquiry.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Ægrotus.</span></p>
+
+ <p><i>Pursuits of Literature</i> (Vol. iii., p. 240.).&mdash;I trust that
+ the following notes may be useful in assisting your correspondent
+ S.&nbsp;T.&nbsp;D. to ascertain "how the author of the <i>Pursuits of
+ Literature</i> became known." The first edition of the first part of the
+ <i>Pursuits of Literature</i> appears to have been published in quarto,
+ by J. Owen, 168. Piccadilly, in 1794. In a volume of pamphlets I have the
+ above bound up with the following:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"The Sphinx's Head Broken: or a Poetical Epistle, with notes to <span
+ class="sc">Thomas James M*th**s</span>, Cl*rk to the Q***n's Tr**s*r*r.
+ Proving him to be the author of the Pursuits of Literature: a Satirical
+ Poem. With occasional Digressions and Remarks. By Andrew &OElig;dipus, an
+ injured Author. London: Printed for J. Bell, No. 148. Oxford Street,
+ opposite New Bond Street, <span class="scac">MDCCXCVIII</span>."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>This epistle is a very severe castigation for Mathias, whom
+ &OElig;dipus styles the "little black jogging man," whose</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"Politics and religion are very well, but he is a detestable pedant,
+ and his head is a lumber-garret of Greek quotations, which he raps out as
+ a juggler does ribbands at a country fair."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>And speaking of "Chuckle Bennet," he calls him in a note,</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"A good calf-headed bookseller in Pall Mall, the intimate confidant
+ and crony of little M*th**s, and who, upon Owen's bankruptcy, published
+ Part IV. of <i>Pursuits of Literature</i> himself."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>Of Owen, who published Part I., our author says: <!-- Page 379
+ --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page379"></a>{379}</span></p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"Hither the sly little fellow got crony Becket to send his satirical
+ trumpery;"</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>which is further explained in the following note:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"Becket's back door is in an alley close to his house; here have I
+ often seen little M*th**s jog in and sit upon thorns for fear of being
+ seen, in the back-parlour, chattering matters over with old Numscull.
+ After passing through many hands, the proof sheets at last <i>very
+ slily</i> reached little M*th**s that he might revise the learned
+ lumber."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>After alluding to several pieces published by Mathias, our unmerciful
+ critic adds in another note:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"It is very remarkable how strongly the characteristic features of
+ identity of authorship are marked in these several pieces; the little man
+ had not even the wit to print them in a different manner, yet strange to
+ tell, few, very few, could smell the he-goat!</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Who reads thy <i>hazy weather</i> but must swear,</p>
+ <p class="hg1">'Tis Thomas James M*th**s to a hair!"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Mercurii.</span></p>
+
+ <p><i>Dutch Books</i> (Vol. iii., p. 326.).&mdash;<span
+ class="sc">Martinus</span> is probably aware that the library of the
+ Fagel family is now a part of the University Library of Dublin, and that
+ it contains a very fine collection of Dutch literature, in which it is
+ very possible some of the books of which he is in search may be
+ found.</p>
+
+ <p>The auction catalogue prepared in 1800, when the library was to have
+ been sold by auction, had it not been purchased by the University of
+ Dublin, is printed, and a copy of it is at his service, if he will inform
+ me through you how to send it to him.</p>
+
+ <p>This library contains many rare tracts and documents well worthy of
+ Mr. Macaulay's attention, if he is about to continue his history of the
+ Revolution; but I have not heard whether he has made any inquiry after
+ them, or whether he is aware of their existence. There is a curious MS.
+ catalogue of them in the possession of the University, which was too
+ voluminous to be printed, when the library was about to be sold.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Hibernicus.</span></p>
+
+ <p><i>Engilbert, Archbishop of Treves</i> (Vol. i., p 214.).&mdash;There
+ can be no doubt that the bishop's reference is incorrect, and the
+ suggestion of T.&nbsp;J. (Vol. iii., p. 291.) to consult the reprint of 1840
+ affords no aid in setting it right; for there we find (p. 178.) a note as
+ follows:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"There was no Engilbert, Archbishop of Treves, nor is there any work
+ in this name in Goldasti."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>I have, however, consulted Mr. Bowden's <i>Life and Pontificate of
+ Gregory VII.</i>, in order, if possible, to find a clue; and in a note in
+ vol. ii. p. 246. of that work is a statement of the hesitation of the
+ Pope on the doctrine of the eucharist, with a reference as follows:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"Vid. <i>Egilberti</i> archiep. Trevir. epist. adv. Greg. VII., in
+ Eccardi Corp. historic. Medii Ævi. t. ii. p. 170."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>This reference I have verified, and found in the epistle of Egilbertus
+ the passage which, no doubt, Bishop Cosin refers to, and which Mr. Bowden
+ cites:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"En verus pontifex et sacerdos, qui dubitat si illud quod sumatur in
+ dominicâ mensâ sit verum corpus et sanguis Christi!"</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>So much for that part of the difficulty, but another still remains.
+ Was there ever an Egilbertus, or Engilbertus, Archbishop of Treves? To
+ solve this question I consulted a list of the Archbishops of Treves in
+ the <i>Bibliothèque Sacrée</i> of Richard et Giraud, and I there find the
+ following statement:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"<i>Engelbert</i>, grand-prévôt de Passau, fut intrus par la faveur de
+ l'empereur Henri IV., et sacré par des évêques schismatiques. Il mourut
+ en 1101."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Tyro.</span></p>
+
+ <p class="address">Dublin.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Charles Lamb's Epitaph</i> (Vol. iii., p. 322.).&mdash;According to
+ Mr. Thorne (<i>Rambles by Rivers</i>, 1st series, p. 190.) the
+ inscription in the churchyard at Edmonton, to the memory of Charles Lamb,
+ was written "by his friend, Dr. Carey, the translator of 'Dante.'" Mr.
+ Thorne gives an anecdote concerning this inscription which I venture to
+ transcribe, in the expectation that it may interest your correspondent
+ <span class="sc">Maria S.</span>, and others of your numerous
+ readers.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"We heard a piece of criticism on this inscription that Lamb would
+ have enjoyed. As we were copying it, a couple of canal excavators came
+ across the churchyard, and read it over with great deliberation; when
+ they had finished, one of them said, 'A very fair bit of poetry that;'
+ 'Yes,' replied his companion, 'I'm blest if it isn't as good a bit as any
+ in the churchyard; rather too long, though.'"</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>By "Dr. Carey," of course, is meant the Rev. Henry Francis Cary, M.A.,
+ Vicar of Bromley Abbots, Staffordshire, and Assistant Librarian in the
+ British Museum, as he was the translator of "Dante," and an intimate
+ friend of Charles Lamb.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">C. H. Cooper.</span></p>
+
+ <p class="address">Cambridge, April 28. 1851.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Charles II. in Wales</i> (Vol. iii., p. 263.).&mdash;In answer to
+ <span class="sc">Davydd Gam's</span> Query, it may be observed that I
+ have never heard of the tradition in question, nor have I met with any
+ evidence to show that Charles II. was in any part of Wales at this
+ period. In "The true Narrative and Relation of his most sacred Majesty's
+ Escape from Worcester," <i>Selection from the Harleian Miscellany</i>,
+ 4to., p. 380., it is stated that the king meditated the scheme of
+ crossing into Wales from White Ladies, the house of the Penderells, but
+ that "the design was crossed." One of the "Boscobel Tracts," at p. 137.,
+ treating of the same period, and compiled by the king himself in 1680,
+ mentions his <!-- Page 380 --><span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page380"></a>{380}</span>intention of making his escape another
+ way, which was to get over the Severn into Wales, and so get either to
+ Swansea, or some other of the sea towns that he knew had commerce with
+ France; beside that he "remembered several honest gentlemen" that were of
+ his acquaintance. However, the scheme was abandoned, and the king fled to
+ the southward by Madeley, Boscobel, &amp;c., to Cirencester, Bristol, and
+ into Dorsetshire, and thence to Brighton, where he embarked for France on
+ the 15th Oct., 1651.</p>
+
+ <p>Lancaiach is still in possession of the Prichard family, descendants
+ of Col. Prichard.</p>
+
+ <p>There is a tradition that Charles I. slept there on his way from
+ Cardiff Castle to Brecon, in 1645, and the tester of the bed in which his
+ Majesty slept is stated to have been in the possession of a Cardiff
+ antiquary now deceased. The facts of the case appear in the <i>Iter
+ Carolinum</i>, printed by Peck (<i>Desiderata Curiosa</i>). The king
+ stayed at Cardiff from the 29th July to the 5th August, 1645, on which
+ day he dined at Llancaiach, and supped at Brecon.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">J. M. T.</p>
+
+ <p>"<i>Ex Pede Herculem</i>" (Vol. iii., p. 302.).&mdash;The following
+ allusion to the foot of Hercules occurs in <i>Herodotus</i>, book iv.
+ section 82.:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"<span title="Ichnos Hêrakleos phainousi en petrêi eneon, to oike men bêmati andros, esti de to megathos dipêchu, para ton Turên potamon." class="grk"
+ >&#x1F3C;&chi;&nu;&omicron;&sigmaf;
+ &#x1F29;&rho;&alpha;&kappa;&lambda;&#x1F73;&omicron;&sigmaf;
+ &phi;&alpha;&#x1F77;&nu;&omicron;&upsilon;&sigma;&iota; &#x1F10;&nu;
+ &pi;&#x1F73;&tau;&rho;&#x1FC3; &#x1F10;&nu;&epsilon;&#x1F78;&nu;,
+ &tau;&#x1F78; &omicron;&iota;&kappa;&epsilon; &mu;&#x1F72;&nu;
+ &beta;&#x1F75;&mu;&alpha;&tau;&iota;
+ &#x1F00;&nu;&delta;&rho;&#x1F78;&sigmaf;, &#x1F14;&sigma;&tau;&iota;
+ &delta;&#x1F72; &tau;&#x1F78;
+ &mu;&#x1F73;&gamma;&alpha;&theta;&omicron;&sigmaf;
+ &delta;&#x1F77;&pi;&eta;&chi;&upsilon;, &pi;&alpha;&rho;&#x1F70;
+ &tau;&#x1F78;&nu; &Tau;&#x1F7B;&rho;&eta;&nu;
+ &pi;&omicron;&tau;&alpha;&mu;&#x1F78;&nu;.</span>"</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p><span class="sc">Alfred Gatty.</span></p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The origin of this phrase is connected with the following
+ story:&mdash;A certain Greek (whose name has for the present escaped me,
+ but who must have been ready to contribute to the "<span class="sc">Notes
+ and Queries</span>" of his time) was one day observed carefully
+ "stepping" over the <span title="aulos" class="grk"
+ >&alpha;&#x1F50;&lambda;&#x1F79;&sigmaf;</span> or footrace-course at
+ Olympia; and he gave as a reason for so doing, that when that race-course
+ was originally marked out, it was exactly six hundred times as long as
+ Hercules' foot (that being the distance Hercules could run without taking
+ breath): so that by ascertaining how many times the length of his own
+ foot is contained, he would know how much Hercules' foot exceeded his
+ foot in length, and might therefrom calculate how much Hercules' stature
+ exceeded that of ordinary men of those degenerate days.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">J. Eastwood.</span></p>
+
+ <p class="address">Ecclesfield.</p>
+
+ <p>This proverb does not appear to be of classical origin. Several
+ proverbs of a similar meaning are collected in Diogenian, v. 15. The most
+ common is, <span title="ek tôn onuchôn ton leonta" class="grk"
+ >&#x1F10;&kappa; &tau;&#x1FF6;&nu; &#x1F40;&nu;&#x1F7B;&chi;&omega;&nu;
+ &tau;&#x1F78;&nu; &lambda;&#x1F73;&omicron;&nu;&tau;&alpha;</span>, <i>ex
+ ungue leonem</i>. The allusion to Hercules is probably borrowed from some
+ fable.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">L.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Bucaneers</i> (Vol. i., p. 400.).&mdash;Your correspondent C. will
+ find an interesting account of the Bucaneers in a poem by M. Poirié St.
+ Aurèle, entitled <i>Le Flibustier</i>, and published by Ambroise Dupont
+ &amp; Co., Paris, 1827. The Introduction and Notes furnish some curious
+ particulars relative to the origin, progress, and dissolution of those
+ once celebrated pirates, and to the daring exploits of their principal
+ leaders, Montauban, Grammont, Monbars, Vand-Horn, Laurent de Graff, and
+ Sir H. Morgan. The book contains many facts which go far to support Bryan
+ Edwards's favourable opinion. I may add that the author derives the
+ French word <i>flibustier</i> from the English <i>freebooter</i>, and the
+ English word <i>bucaneer</i> from the French <i>boucanier</i>; which
+ latter word is derived from <i>boucan</i>, an expression used by the
+ Caribs to describe the place where they assembled to make a repast of
+ their enemies taken in war.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Henry H. Breen.</span></p>
+
+ <p class="address">St. Lucia, March, 1851.</p>
+
+ <p><i>God's Acre</i> (Vol. iii., p. 284.).&mdash;By a <i>Saxon</i>
+ phrase, <span class="sc">Mr. Longfellow</span> undoubtedly meant
+ <i>German</i>. In Germany <i>Gottes-acker</i> is a name for churchyard;
+ and it is to be found in Wachter's <i>Glossarium Germanicum</i>, as well
+ as in modern dictionaries. It is true there is the other word
+ <i>Kirchhof</i>, perhaps of more modern date.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"<b>Gots-aker.</b> Cæmeterium. Quasi ager Dei, quia corpora
+ defunctorum fidelium comparantur semini. 1 Cor. xv. 36., observante
+ Keyslero in <i>Antiq. Septentr.</i> p. 109."&mdash;Wachter's <i>Gloss.
+ Germanicum</i>.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>Very interesting are also the other allegorical names which have been
+ given to the burial-places of the dead. They are enlarged upon in
+ Minshew's <i>Guide to Tongues</i>, under the head "Churchyard."</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"Cæmeterium (from the Greek), signifying a dormitory or place of
+ sleep. And a Hebrew term (so Minshew says), Beth-chajim, <i>i. e.</i>
+ domus viventium, 'The house of the living,' in allusion to the
+ resurrection."</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>Our matter-of-fact "Church-<i>yard</i> or inclosure" falls dull on the
+ ear and mind after any of the above titles.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Hermes.</span></p>
+
+ <p><i>God's Acre.</i>&mdash;The term <i>God's Acre</i>, as applied to a
+ church-garth, would seem to designate the consecrated ground set apart as
+ the resting-place of His faithful departed, sown with immortal seed (1
+ Cor. xv. 38.), which shall be raised in glory at the great harvest (Matt.
+ xiii. 39.; Rev. xiv. 15.). The church-yard is "dedicated wholly and only
+ for Christian burial," and "the bishop and ordinary of the diocese, as
+ <i>God's minister, in God's stead accepts it</i> as a freewill offering,
+ to be severed from all former profane and common uses, to be held as holy
+ ground," and "to be <i>God's storehouse</i> for the bodies of His saints
+ there to be interred." See "Bishop Andrewes' Form of Consecration of a
+ Churchyard," <i>Minor Works</i>, pp. 328-333., Oxf., 1846.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Mackenzie Walcott, M.A.</span></p>
+
+<p><!-- Page 381 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page381"></a>{381}</span></p>
+
+ <p>P.S. When was the name of <i>Poet's Corner</i> first attached to the
+ south transept of Westminster Abbey?</p>
+
+ <p class="address">Jermyn Street.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Abbot Eustacius</i>, of whom J. L. (Vol. iii., p. 141.) asks, was
+ the Abbot of Flay, and came over from Normandy to England, and preached
+ all through this kingdom with much effect in the beginning of John's
+ reign, <span class="scac">A.&nbsp;D.</span> 1200, as Roger Hovedene tells us,
+ <i>Annal.</i>, ed. Savile, London, 1596, <i>fos.</i> 457. <i>b</i>, 466.
+ <i>b.</i> Wendover (iii. 151.) and Matt. Paris <i>in anno</i>, mention
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">D. Rock.</span></p>
+
+ <p><i>Vox Populi Vox Dei</i> (Vol. iii., p. 288.) is, I find, a much
+ older proverb in England than Edward III.'s reign, for whose coronation
+ sermon it was chosen the text, not by Simon Mepham, but Walter Reynolds,
+ as your correspondent <span class="sc">St. Johns</span> rightly says.
+ Speaking of the way in which St. Odo yielded his consent to the Abp. of
+ Canterbury, circ. <span class="scac">A.&nbsp;D.</span> 920, William of
+ Malmesbury writes: "Recogitans illud proverbium, <i>Vox populi vox
+ Dei</i>."&mdash;<i>De Gestis Pont.</i>, L. i. fo. 114., ed. Savile.</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">D. Rock.</span></p>
+
+ <p><i>Francis Moore and his Almanack</i> (Vol. iii., p. 263.).&mdash;Mr.
+ Knight, in his <i>London</i>, vol. iii. p. 246., throws a little light on
+ this subject:</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"The renowned Francis Moore seems to have made his first appearance
+ about the end of the seventeenth century. He published a <i>Kalendarium
+ Ecclesiasticum</i> in 1699, and his earliest <i>Vox Stellarum</i> or
+ <i>Almanac</i>, as far as we can discover, came out in 1701," &amp;c.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>But Mr. Knight is not sure that "Francis Moore" was not a <i>nom de
+ guerre</i>, although at p. 241. he gives the portrait of the "Physician"
+ from an anonymous print, published in 1657.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">A. A.</p>
+
+ <p class="address">Abridge.</p>
+
+ <p>There is an Irish edition published in Drogheda, sold for threepence,
+ and <i>embellished</i> with a portrait of Francis Moore. Can Ireland
+ claim this worthy? Many farmers and others rely much on the weather
+ prophecies of this almanack. A tenant of mine always announces to me
+ triumphantly that "Moore is right:" but his triumphs come at very long
+ intervals.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">K.</p>
+
+ <p>I can answer part of H. P. W.'s Query. Francis Moore's celebrated
+ <i>Almanack</i> first appeared in 1698. We have this date upon his own
+ confession. Before his <i>Almanack</i> for 1771 is a letter which begins
+ thus:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"Kind Reader,</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"This being the 73rd year since my Almanack first appeared to the
+ world, and having for several years presented you with observations that
+ have come to pass to the admiration of many, I have likewise presented
+ you with several hieroglyphics," &amp;c.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p class="author"><span class="sc">Edward F. Rimbault.</span></p>
+
+ <p>That such a personage really did exist there can be little doubt,
+ Bromley (in <i>Engraved Portraits, &amp;c.</i>) gives 1657 as the date of
+ his birth, and says that there was a portrait of him by Drapentier <i>ad
+ vivum</i>. Lysons mentions him as one of the remarkable men who, at
+ different periods, resided at Lambeth, and says that his house was in
+ Calcott's Alley, High Street, then called Back Lane, where he seems to
+ have enlightened his generation in the threefold capacity of astrologer,
+ physician, and schoolmaster.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">J. C. B.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h2>Miscellaneous.</h2>
+
+<h3>NOTES ON BOOKS, SALES, CATALOGUES, ETC.</h3>
+
+ <p>Professor De Morgan has just furnished a new contribution to <i>L' Art
+ de vérifier les Dates</i>, in the shape of a small but most useful and
+ practical book, entitled <i>The Book of Almanacks, with an Index of
+ Reference, by which the Almanack may be found for every year, whether in
+ the Old Style or New, from any Epoch Ancient or Modern up to</i> <span
+ class="scac">A.&nbsp;D.</span> 2000. <i>With means of finding the Day of any
+ New or Full Moon from</i> <span class="scac">B.&nbsp;C.</span> 2000 <i>to</i>
+ <span class="scac">A.&nbsp;D.</span> 2000. An example will show, better even
+ than this ample title-page, the great utility of this work to the
+ historical enquirer. Walter Scott, speaking of the battle of Bannockburn,
+ which was fought on the day of St. John the Baptist, June 24, 1314,
+ says,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="hg3">"It was a night of lovely June,</p>
+ <p>High rose in cloudless blue the moon."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Now, should the reader be desirous of testing the accuracy of this
+ statement, (and how many statements have ere this been tested by the fact
+ of the moon's age!), he turns to Professor De Morgan's Index, which at
+ 1314 gives Epact 3., Dominical Letter F., Number of Almanack 17. Turning
+ to this almanack, he finds that the 24th June was on a Monday; from the
+ Introduction (p. xiii.) and a very easy calculation, he learns that the
+ full moon of June, 1314, would be on the 27th, or within a day, and from
+ a more exact method (at p. xiv.), that the full moon was within two hours
+ of nine A.M., on the 28th. So that Sir Walter was correct, there being
+ more than half moon on the night of which he was speaking. Such an
+ instance as the one cited will show how valuable the <i>Book of
+ Almanacks</i> must prove to all historical students, and what a ready
+ test it furnishes as to accuracy of dates, &amp;c. It must take its place
+ on every shelf beside Sir H. Nicolas' <i>Chronology of History</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>We doubt not that many of our readers share our feeling as to the
+ importance of children's books, from the influence they may be destined
+ to exercise upon generations yet unborn. To all such we shall be doing
+ acceptable service by pointing out Mrs. Alfred Gatty's little volume,
+ <i>The Fairy Godmothers and other Tales</i>, as one which combines the
+ two essentials of good books for children; namely, imagination to
+ attract, and sound morals to instruct. Both these requisites will be
+ found in Mrs. Gatty's most pleasing collection of tales, which do not
+ require the very clever frontispiece by Miss Barker to render the volume
+ an acceptable gift to all "good little Masters and Mistresses." <!-- Page
+ 382 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page382"></a>{382}</span></p>
+
+ <p>Messrs. Sotheby and Wilkinson (3. Wellington Street, Strand) will
+ commence on Monday a six-days' Sale of most interesting Autograph
+ Letters, Historical Documents, and original MSS. of distinguished
+ writers, as that of <i>Kenilworth</i> in the Autograph of Sir W. Scott,
+ of <i>Madoc</i> in that of Southey, unpublished poems by Burns, and <i>Le
+ Second Manuscrit venu de St. Hélène</i>. One of the most curious Lots is
+ No. 1035, Shakspeare's play of <i>Henry IV.</i>, two parts condensed into
+ one,&mdash;a contemporary and unique Manuscript, being the only one known
+ to exist of any of the productions by the Sweet Bard of Avon. It is
+ presumed to be a playhouse copy with corrections in the Autograph of Sir
+ Edward Deering of Surrenden, in Kent, (who died in 1644); and, as no
+ printed copy is known to contain the various corrections and alterations
+ therein, is supposed to have been so corrected for the purposes of
+ private representation, it being well known that theatricals formed a
+ portion of the amusements in vogue at that baronet's country seat during
+ the early portion of the reign of James I. Our readers will remember that
+ the Shakspeare Society showed their sense of its value by printing it
+ under the editorship of Mr. Halliwell.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Catalogues Received.</span>&mdash;Emerson Charnley's
+ (45. Bigg Market, Newcastle-upon-Tyne) Catalogue Part IV. of Books Old
+ and New; W. Brown's (46. High Holborn) Catalogue Part LIII. of Valuable
+ Second-hand Books.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h3>BOOKS AND ODD VOLUMES WANTED TO PURCHASE.</h3>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Diana (Antoninus) Compendium Resolutionem
+ Moralium.</span> Antwerp.-Colon. 1634-57.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Passionael efte dat Levent der Heiligen.</span>
+ Folio. Basil, 1522.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Cartari&mdash;La Rosa d'Oro Pontificia.</span> 4to.
+ Rome, 1681.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Broemel, M. C. H., Fest-Tanzen der Ersten
+ Christen.</span> Jena, 1705.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">The Complaynt of Scotland</span>, edited by Leyden.
+ 8vo. Edin. 1801.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Thom's Lays and Legends of various Nations.</span>
+ Parts I. to VII. 12mo. 1834.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">L'Abbé de Saint Pierre, Projet de Paix
+ Perpetuelle.</span> 3 Vols. 12mo. Utrecht, 1713.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Chevalier Ramsay, Essai de Politique</span>, où l'on
+ traite de la Nécessité, de l'Origine, des Droits, des Bornes en des
+ différentes Formes de la Souveraineté, selon les Principes de l'Auteur de
+ Télémaque. 2 Vols. 12mo. La Haye, without date, but printed in 1719.</p>
+
+ <p>The same. Second Edition, under the title "Essai Philosophique sur le
+ Gouvernement Civil, selon les Principes de Fénélon," 12mo. Londres,
+ 1721.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Pullen's Etymological Compendium</span>, 8vo.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Cooper's (C. P.) Account of Public Records</span>,
+ 8vo. 1822. Vol. I.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Lingard's History of England.</span> Sm. 8vo. 1837.
+ Vols. X. XI. XII. XIII.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Miller's (John, of Worcester Coll.) Sermons.</span>
+ Oxford, 1831 (or about that year).</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <p>*** Letters, stating particulars and lowest price, carriage free, to
+ be sent to <span class="sc">Mr. Bell</span>, Publisher of "NOTES AND
+ QUERIES," 186. Fleet Street.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h2>Notices to Correspondents.</h2>
+
+ <p><i>Although we have this week again enlarged our paper to twenty-four
+ pages, we have been compelled to postpone many interesting articles.
+ Among these we may particularise "Illustrations of Chaucer, No. VI.," a
+ valuable paper by</i> <span class="sc">Mr. Singer</span> <i>on "John
+ Tradescant," and another on the "Tradescent Family" by</i> <span
+ class="sc">Mr. Pinkerton</span>; <i>and many Replies</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>A. X. <i>The Brussels edition of the</i> Biographie Universelle <i>is
+ in 21 vols. Bickers of Leicester Square marks a copy half-bound in 7
+ vols. at Five Guineas.</i></p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Trivia</span> <i>and</i> A. A. D. <i>The oft-quoted
+ line</i> "<span class="sc">Tempora Mutantur</span>," &amp;c., <i>is from
+ Borbonius</i>. <i>See</i> "<span class="sc">Notes and Queries</span>,"
+ Vol. i., pp. 234. 419.</p>
+
+ <p>A. A. D. <i>is referred to</i> p. 357. <i>of our last Number for an
+ explanation of "Mind your Ps and Qs."</i></p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Nemo's</span> <i>Query respecting Pope Joan was
+ inserted in</i> No. 75. p. 265.; <i>a Reply to it appears in</i> No. 77.
+ p. 306.; <i>and we have several more communications to which we hope to
+ give insertion next week</i>.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Replies
+ Received.</span>&mdash;<i>Ramasse&mdash;Prayer at the Healing&mdash;M. or
+ N.&mdash;Deans Very Reverend&mdash;Family of the
+ Tradescants&mdash;Epitaph on the Countess of Pembroke&mdash;West
+ Chester&mdash;Demosthenes and New Testament&mdash;Pope
+ Joan&mdash;Handbills at Funerals&mdash;Ventriloquist
+ Hoax&mdash;Solid-hoofed Pigs&mdash;Aerial Apparitions&mdash;Apple-pie
+ Order&mdash;Wife of James Torre&mdash;Snail-eating&mdash;Epigram by T.
+ Dunbar.</i></p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Vols.</span> I. <i>and</i> II., <i>each with very
+ copious Index, may still be had, price</i> 9<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
+ <i>each</i>.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Notes and Queries</span> <i>may be procured, by
+ order, of all Booksellers and Newsvenders. It is published at noon on
+ Friday, so that our country Subscribers ought not to experience any
+ difficulty in procuring it regularly. Many of the country Booksellers,
+ &amp;c., are, probably, not yet aware of this arrangement, which will
+ enable them to receive</i> <span class="sc">Notes and Queries</span>
+ <i>in their Saturday parcels</i>.</p>
+
+ <p><i>All communications for the Editor of</i> <span class="sc">Notes and
+ Queries</span> <i>should be addressed to the care of</i> <span
+ class="sc">Mr. Bell</span>, No. 186. Fleet Street.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Errata.</span>&mdash;Page 336. l. 4. for
+ "Burkdo<i>n</i>" read "Burkdo<i>u</i>." (i. e. Bourdeaux); p. 341. l. 11.
+ for "la<i>u</i>rando" read "la<i>ce</i>rando;" and in p. 352. instead of
+ between the years "1825 and 1850," read "1825 and 1830;" and we are
+ requested to add that the churchwardens' account of S. Mary de Castro,
+ Leicester, had disappeared from the parish chest long prior to the time
+ mentioned.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p class="cenhead">PRINTING.</p>
+
+ <p>A LECTURE, SPEECH, SERMON, OR ORATION, occupying about three quarters
+ of an hour in delivery, printed on good paper, in bold clear type: 500
+ copies, 3<i>l.</i> 17<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; 1000 copies, 5<i>l.</i>
+ 10<i>s.</i> 1000 Circulars, Note Size, printed on Cream-laid Note Paper,
+ fly leaf, 17<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, 1000 Ditto, on Superfine Cream-laid
+ Letter Paper, fly leaf, 1<i>l.</i> 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="cenhead"><span class="sc">Bateman</span> and <span class="sc">Hardwicke</span>, 38. Carey Street, Lincoln's Inn.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p class="cenhead">This day is published, fcap. 8vo., price 5<i>s.</i>,</p>
+
+ <p>PLEASURES, OBJECTS, and ADVANTAGES of LITERATURE. By the Rev. <span
+ class="sc">R. A. Willmott</span>, St. Catherine's, Bear Wood, Author of
+ "Jeremy Taylor, a Biography."</p>
+
+<p class="cenhead">London: <span class="sc">T. Bosworth</span>, 215. Regent Street.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p class="cenhead">NEW WORK BY PROFESSOR DE MORGAN.</p>
+
+<p class="cenhead">This day, in One Volume, oblong 8vo., price 5<i>s.</i>, cloth,</p>
+
+ <p>THE BOOK OF ALMANACS; with INDEX, by which the Almanac belonging to
+ any Year preceding <span class="scac">A.&nbsp;D.</span> 2000 can be found;
+ with means of finding New and Full Moons from <span
+ class="scac">B.&nbsp;C.</span> 2000 to <span class="scac">A.&nbsp;D.</span> 2000.
+ By <span class="sc">Augustus De Morgan</span>, Professor of Mathematics
+ in University College, London.</p>
+
+ <p>The "Book of Almanacs" will enable any one to lay open before him the
+ whole Almanac of any past year, of the present year, or of any future
+ year, up to <span class="scac">A.&nbsp;D.</span> 2000, whether in old style or
+ new, by one consultation of a simple Index. This book will be useful to
+ all who ever want an Almanac, past, present, or future;&mdash;to
+ Clergymen, as a perpetual index to the Sundays and Festivals;&mdash;to
+ Lawyers in arranging evidence which runs over a long period, and to
+ Courts of Law in hearing it;&mdash;to Historical and Antiquarian
+ Inquirers, in testing statements as to time and date;&mdash;to all, in
+ fact, who are ever required to interest themselves about time past or
+ future.</p>
+
+<p class="cenhead"><span class="sc">Taylor</span>, <span class="sc">Walton</span>, and <span class="sc">Maberly</span>, Upper Gower Street, and Ivy
+Lane, Paternoster Row.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p class="cenhead">Now ready, royal 8vo., pp. 1653. 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+ <p>A COPIOUS AND CRITICAL LATIN-ENGLISH LEXICON, founded on the larger
+ Latin-German Lexicon of <span class="sc">Dr. William Freund</span>; with
+ Additions and Corrections from the Lexicons of Gesner, Facciolati,
+ Scheller, Georges, &amp;c. &amp;c. By <span class="sc">E.&nbsp;A.
+ Andrews</span>, LL.D.</p>
+
+<p class="cenhead">London: <span class="sc">Sampson Low</span>, 169. Fleet Street.<br />
+New York: <span class="sc">Harper</span> and <span class="sc">Brothers</span>.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p><!-- Page 383 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page383"></a>{383}</span></p>
+
+<table>
+<tr><td valign="top">
+
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:80%;">
+ <a href="images/french.png"><img style="width:100%" src="images/french.png"
+ alt="Gilbert French manufacturer's plate" title="Gilbert French manufacturer's plate" /></a>
+ </div>
+</td><td>
+
+<h2>GREAT EXHIBITION.</h2>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<h3>CENTRAL AVENUE.</h3>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>An Illustrated Priced Catalogue of Church Furniture Contributed by</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>GILBERT J. FRENCH,</p>
+ <p><span class="sc">Bolton, Lancashire,</span></p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>forwarded Free by Post on application.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Parcels delivered Carriage Free in London, daily.</p>
+
+</td></tr></table>
+
+<div style="clear: both"></div>
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p class="cenhead">CATALOGUES OF JOHN RUSSELL
+SMITH'S LITERARY COLLECTIONS.</p>
+
+ <p>1. Parts I. and II. of a Classified Catalogue of 25,000 Ancient and
+ Modern Pamphlets.</p>
+
+ <p>2. Books on the History and Topography of Great Britain, arranged in
+ Counties.</p>
+
+ <p>3. Twelve Hundred Books and Pamphlets relating to America.</p>
+
+ <p>4. Five Hundred Books relating to the Counties of Kent, Sussex, and
+ Surrey.</p>
+
+ <p>5. Ancient Manuscripts, Deeds, Charters, and other Documents relating
+ to English Families and Counties.</p>
+
+ <p>6. Parts II. and III. for 1851, of Choice, Useful, and Curious Books,
+ in most Classes of Literature, containing 1600 articles.</p>
+
+ <p>*** Any of the above Catalogues may be had, gratis, on application, or
+ any one will be sent by post on receipt of four postage labels to frank
+ it.</p>
+
+<p class="cenhead">4. Old Compton Street, Soho, London.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p class="cenhead">Just published, 12mo. cloth, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+ <p>THE DIALECT AND FOLK-LORE OF NORTHAMPTONSHIRE. A Glossary of
+ Northamptonshire Provincialisms, Collection of Fairy-Legends, Popular
+ Superstitions, &amp;c. By <span class="sc">Thomas Sternberg</span>.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"A skilful attempt to record a local dialect."&mdash;<i>Notes and
+ Queries</i>, No. 72.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"Mr Sternberg has evinced a striking and peculiar aptitude for this
+ branch of enquiry."&mdash;<i>Northampton Mercury.</i></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>"The notes on Folk-lore are curious, and worthy
+ consultation."&mdash;<i>Gentleman's Magazine.</i></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p class="cenhead"><span class="sc">J. Russell Smith</span>, 4. Old Compton Street, Soho, London.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p class="cenhead">WESTERN LIFE ASSURANCE AND
+ANNUITY SOCIETY, 3. Parliament Street, London.</p>
+
+<p class="cenhead">VALUABLE NEW PRINCIPLE.</p>
+
+ <p>Payment of premiums may be occasionally suspended without forfeiting
+ the policy, on a new and valuable plan, adopted by this society only, as
+ fully detailed in the prospectus.</p>
+
+<p class="cenhead"><span class="sc">A. Scratchley, M.A.</span>,</p>
+
+ <p>Actuary and Secretary; Author of "Industrial Investment and
+ Emigration; being a Second Edition of a Treatise on Benefit Building
+ Societies, &amp;c." Price 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="cenhead">London: <span class="sc">J. W. Parker</span>, West Strand.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:30%;">
+ <a href="images/tomb.png"><img style="width:100%" src="images/tomb.png"
+ alt="Chaucer's Tomb" title="Chaucer's Tomb" /></a>
+ </div>
+<h3>COMMITTEE FOR THE REPAIR
+OF THE
+TOMB OF GEOFFREY CHAUCER.</h3>
+
+ <p>JOHN BRUCE, Esq., Treas. S.A., 5, Upper Gloucester Street, Dorset
+ Square.</p>
+
+ <p>J. PAYNE COLLIER, Esq., V.P.S.A., Geys House, Maidenhead.</p>
+
+ <p>PETER CUNNINGHAM, Esq., F.S.A., Madeley Villas, Kensington.</p>
+
+ <p>WILLIAM RICHARD DRAKE, Esq., F.S.A., <i>Honorary Treasurer</i>, 46.
+ Parliament Street.</p>
+
+ <p>THOMAS W. KING, Esq., F.S.A., York Herald, College of Arms, St.
+ Paul's.</p>
+
+ <p>SIR FREDERICK MADDEN, K.H., British Museum.</p>
+
+ <p>JOHN GOUGH NICHOLS, Esq., F.S.A., 25. Parliament St.</p>
+
+ <p>HENRY SHAW, Esq., F.S.A., 37. Southampton Row, Russell Square.</p>
+
+ <p>SAMUEL SHEPHERD, Esq., F.S.A., Marlborough Square, Chelsea.</p>
+
+ <p>WILLIAM J. THOMS, Esq., F.S.A., <i>Honorary Secretary</i>, 25.
+ Holy-Well Street, Millbank, Westminster.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">The Tomb of Geoffrey Chaucer in Westminster
+ Abbey</span> stands in need of repair. The portrait and the inscriptions
+ have disappeared; the overhanging canopy has suffered damage; the table
+ is chipped and broken; the base is fast mouldering into irretrievable
+ decay.</p>
+
+ <p>Such an announcement is calculated to stir every heart that can
+ respond to the claims of poetry, or feel grateful for the delight which
+ it affords to every cultivated mind. It summons us, like the sound of a
+ trumpet, "To the rescue!" It cannot be that the first and almost the
+ greatest of English bards should ever be allowed to want a fitting
+ memorial in our "Poet's Corner," or that the monument which was erected
+ by the affectionate respect of Nicholas Brigham, nearly three centuries
+ ago, should, in our time, be permitted to crumble into dust.</p>
+
+ <p>A sum under One Hundred Pounds will effect a perfect repair.</p>
+
+ <p>It is thought that there can be no difficulty in raising such a sum,
+ and that multitudes of people in various conditions of life, and even in
+ distant quarters of the globe, who venerate the name of Chaucer, and have
+ derived instruction and delight from his works, will be anxious to
+ contribute their mite to the good deed.</p>
+
+ <p>The Committee have therefore not thought it right to fix any limit to
+ the subscription; they themselves, with the aid of several distinguished
+ noblemen and gentlemen, have opened the list with a contribution from
+ each of them of Five Shillings, but they will be ready to receive any
+ amount, more or less, which those who value poetry and honour Chaucer may
+ be kind enough to remit to them.</p>
+
+ <p>The design of the Committee is sanctioned by the approval of the Earl
+ of Carlisle, the Earl of Ellesmere, the Earl of Shaftesbury, Lord
+ Braybrooke. Lord Londesborough, Lord Mahon, the Right Hon. C.&nbsp;W.&nbsp;W. Wynn,
+ and by the concurrence of the Dean and Chapter of Westminster.</p>
+
+ <p>An account of the sums received and expended will be published when
+ the work is completed.</p>
+
+ <p>Subscriptions are received by all the members of the Committee, and at
+ the Union Bank, Pall Mall East. Post-office orders may be made payable to
+ William Richard Drake, Esq., the Treasurer, 46. Parliament Street, at the
+ Charing Cross Office.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p><!-- Page 384 --><span class="pagenum"><a name="page384"></a>{384}</span></p>
+
+<p class="cenhead">In a few days will be published, in One handsome Volume 8vo., profusely Illustrated with Engravings by Jewitt,</p>
+
+<p class="cenhead">Some Account of Domestic Architecture in England;</p>
+
+<p class="cenhead">FROM</p>
+
+<p class="cenhead">THE CONQUEST TO THE END OF THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY.</p>
+
+<p class="cenhead">WITH</p>
+
+<p class="cenhead">NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS OF EXISTING REMAINS FROM ORIGINAL DRAWINGS.</p>
+
+<p class="cenhead">BY T. HUDSON TURNER.</p>
+
+<p class="cenhead"><b>The Table of Contents of this Volume will best explain its Object.</b></p>
+
+<p class="cenhead">INTRODUCTION.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>The Romans in England&mdash;Their Villas and Houses&mdash;Ordinary
+ Plan of a Roman House&mdash;Method of Building&mdash;The
+ Saxons&mdash;Their Style of Building; they probably occupied Roman
+ Houses&mdash;A Saxon Hall&mdash;Houses of Winchester and London in the
+ Saxon Period&mdash;Decoration of Buildings&mdash;Romanesque Style of
+ Architecture introduced during the Saxon Period&mdash;Drawings in Saxon
+ MSS., their Character and Value as Architectural Evidence&mdash;The
+ Greek, or Byzantine School; its Influence on Saxon Art&mdash;Antiquity of
+ Chimneys; None at Rome in the Fourteenth Century&mdash;Character of the
+ Military Buildings of the Saxons&mdash;The Castles of Coningsburgh and
+ Bamborough later than the Saxon Period&mdash;Arundel, the only Castle
+ said to have been standing in the time of the Confessor&mdash;Norman
+ Castles&mdash;Domestic Architecture of the Normans&mdash;Stone
+ Quarries&mdash;Use of Plaster&mdash;Bricks and Tiles&mdash;Brickmaking,
+ its Antiquity in England&mdash;Masons and other
+ Workmen&mdash;Glazing&mdash;Iron Works in England&mdash;Architectural
+ Designs of the Middle Ages, how made&mdash;Working Moulds of Masons,
+ &amp;c.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p class="cenhead">CHAPTER I.&mdash;TWELFTH CENTURY.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>General Remarks&mdash;Imperfect Character of existing Remains of the
+ Twelfth Century&mdash;Materials for the History of Domestic Architecture;
+ their Nature&mdash;General Plan of Houses at this
+ Date&mdash;Halls&mdash;Other Apartments of Ordinary
+ Houses&mdash;Bedchamber, Kitchen, Larder, &amp;c.&mdash;King's Houses at
+ Clarendon and other Places&mdash;Hall, always the Chief Feature of a
+ Norman House&mdash;Alexander Necham, his Description of a
+ House&mdash;Plan of Norman Halls&mdash;Their Roofs&mdash;Situation of
+ other Apartments relatively to the Hall&mdash;Kitchens&mdash;Cooking in
+ the Open Air&mdash;Bayeux Tapestry&mdash;Remains of a Norman House at
+ Appleton, Berks&mdash;Fences, Walls, &amp;c.&mdash;Some Norman Houses
+ built in the form of a Parallelogram, and of Two Stories&mdash;Boothby
+ Pagnell, Lincolnshire&mdash;Christ Church, Hants&mdash;Jews' House at
+ Lincoln&mdash;Moyses' Hall, Bury St. Edmund's&mdash;Staircases, Internal
+ and External&mdash;External Norman Stair at Canterbury&mdash;Houses at
+ Southampton&mdash;Building Materials&mdash;Use of Lead for
+ Roofs&mdash;English Lead exported to France&mdash;Style of Norman
+ Roofs&mdash;Metal Work; Hinges, Locks, Nail-heads,
+ &amp;c.&mdash;Gloucester celebrated for its Iron
+ Manufactures&mdash;External Decoration of
+ Buildings&mdash;Windows&mdash;Glazing&mdash;Fire-places&mdash;Kitchens
+ open in the Roof&mdash;Hostelry of the Prior of Lewes&mdash;Internal
+ Walls Plastered&mdash;Furniture of Houses, Tapestry, &amp;c&mdash;Floors
+ generally of Wood&mdash;Character London Houses in the Twelfth
+ Century&mdash;Assize of 1189 regulating Buildings in London&mdash;Assize
+ of the Year 1212 relating to the same Subject&mdash;- Majority of London
+ Houses chiefly of Wood and Thatched&mdash;Wages of
+ Workmen&mdash;Cookshops on Thames Side&mdash;Chimneys not mentioned in
+ the London Assizes, &amp;c.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p class="cenhead">CHAPTER II.&mdash;EXISTING REMAINS.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>Oakham Castle, Rutlandshire&mdash;The King's House,
+ Southampton&mdash;Minster, Isle of Thanet&mdash;Christ Church,
+ Hants&mdash;Manor-house at Appleton&mdash;Sutton Courtney,
+ Berks&mdash;St. Mary's Guild, and Jews' Houses, Lincoln&mdash;Staircase,
+ Canterbury&mdash;Warnford, Hants&mdash;Fountain's Abbey&mdash;Priory,
+ Dover&mdash;Moyses' Hall, Bury St. Edmund's&mdash;Hostelry of the Prior
+ of Lewes, Southwark&mdash;Boothby Pagnell, Lincolnshire&mdash;Barnack,
+ Northamptonshire&mdash;School of Pythagoras, Cambridge&mdash;Notes on
+ Remains of Early Domestic Architecture in France.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p class="cenhead">CHAPTER III.&mdash;THIRTEENTH CENTURY.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>General Remarks&mdash;Hall at Winchester&mdash;Reign of Henry III.
+ remarkable for the Progress of Architecture&mdash;Condition of Norman
+ Castles in the Thirteenth Century&mdash;Plan of Manor-houses at this
+ Date&mdash;House built for Edward I. at Woolmer, Hants&mdash;Description
+ of House at Toddington, by M. Paris&mdash;Meaning of term
+ <i>Palatium</i>&mdash;Longthorpe, Stoke-Say Castle&mdash;West Deane,
+ Sussex&mdash;Aydon Castle&mdash;Little Wenham Hall&mdash;Two Halls at
+ Westminster, temp Henry III.&mdash;Temporary Buildings erected at
+ Westminster for the Coronation of Edward I.&mdash;Private Hospitality in
+ this Century&mdash;Kitchens&mdash;Wardrobes&mdash;Influence of Feudal
+ Manners on Domestic Architecture&mdash;Building Materials&mdash;Wood
+ extensively used&mdash;Manor-house of Timber engraved on a Personal
+ Seal&mdash;Extensive Use of Plaster&mdash;Roofs of the Thirteenth
+ Century&mdash;Windows&mdash;Glass and Glazing&mdash;Digression on the
+ History of Glass-making in England&mdash;No Glass made in England until
+ the Fifteenth Century&mdash;Wooden Lattices, Fenestrals,
+ &amp;c.&mdash;Fire-places and Chimneys&mdash;Mantels&mdash;Staircases,
+ External and Internal&mdash;Internal Decoration of
+ Houses&mdash;Wainscote&mdash;Polychrome&mdash;Artists of the Time of
+ Henry III.; their Style&mdash;Their Names&mdash;Spurs, Screens,
+ &amp;c.&mdash;Tapestry not used in Private Dwellings in the Thirteenth
+ Century. Flooring&mdash;Tiles&mdash;Baths Cameræ Privatæ&mdash;Conduits
+ and Drains&mdash;Houses in Towns&mdash;Parisian Houses&mdash;Other
+ Foreign Examples&mdash;Furniture&mdash;Carpets&mdash;General State of
+ England in the Thirteenth Century&mdash;State of Towns&mdash;London and
+ Winchester
+ compared&mdash;Travelling&mdash;Hackneymen&mdash;Inns&mdash;State of
+ Trade in England&mdash;Agriculture&mdash;Remarks on Horticulture.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p class="cenhead">CHAPTER IV.&mdash;THIRTEENTH CENTURY.&mdash;EXISTING
+REMAINS.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>Aydon Castle, Northumberland&mdash;Godmersham, Kent&mdash;Little
+ Wenham Hall, Suffolk&mdash;Longthorpe, near Peterborough&mdash;Charney
+ Basset, Berks&mdash;Master's House, St. John's Hospital,
+ Northampton&mdash;Stoke-Say Castle, Shropshire&mdash;Coggs,
+ Oxfordshire&mdash;Cottesford, Oxfordshire&mdash;Parsonage House, West
+ Tarring, Sussex&mdash;Archdeacon's House, Peterborough&mdash;Crowhurst,
+ Sussex&mdash;Bishop's Palace, Wells&mdash;Woodcroft Castle,
+ Northamptonshire&mdash;Old Rectory House, West Deane, Sussex&mdash;Acton
+ Burnell, Shropshire&mdash;Somerton Castle, Lincolnshire&mdash;Old Soar,
+ Kent&mdash;The King's Hall at Winchester&mdash;The Priory,
+ Winchester&mdash;Stranger's Hall, Winchester&mdash;House at Oakham, known
+ as Flore's House&mdash;Thame, Oxfordshire&mdash;Chipping-Norton,
+ Oxfordshire&mdash;Middleton Cheney, Oxfordshire&mdash;Sutton Courtney,
+ Berkshire.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p class="cenhead">CHAPTER V.&mdash;HISTORICAL ILLUSTRATIONS.</p>
+
+ <p>Extracts from the Liberate Rolls of Henry III., 1229-1259, relating to
+ the following places:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>Bridgenorth &mdash; Brigstock &mdash; Brill &mdash; Bristol &mdash;
+ Canterbury &mdash; Clarendon &mdash; Cliff &mdash; Clipstone &mdash;
+ Corfe Castle &mdash; Dover &mdash; Dublin &mdash; Evereswell &mdash;
+ Feckenham &mdash; Freemantle &mdash; Geddington &mdash; Gillingham
+ &mdash; Gloucester &mdash; Guildford &mdash; Havering &mdash; Hereford
+ &mdash; Hertford &mdash; Kennington &mdash; Litchfield &mdash; London,
+ (Tower) &mdash; Ely House &mdash; Ludgershall &mdash; Marlborough &mdash;
+ Newcastle &mdash; Northampton &mdash; Nottingham &mdash; Oxford &mdash;
+ Rochester &mdash; Sherbourn &mdash; Silverstone &mdash; Westminster
+ &mdash; Winchester &mdash; Windsor &mdash; Woodstock.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p class="cenhead">SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES OF FOREIGN EXAMPLES.</p>
+
+<blockquote class="b1n">
+
+ <p>General Remarks &mdash; Treves &mdash; Laon &mdash; Ratisbon &mdash;
+ Gondorf &mdash; Metz &mdash; Toulouse &mdash; Laon &mdash; Brée &mdash;
+ Coucy &mdash; Carden &mdash; Tours &mdash; Angers &mdash; Fontevrault,
+ (Kitchen) &mdash; Perigueux &mdash; St. Emilion &mdash; Mont St. Michel
+ &mdash; Beauvais.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p class="cenhead">APPENDIX OF DOCUMENTS.</p>
+
+<p class="cenhead">OXFORD: JOHN HENRY PARKER; AND 377. STRAND, LONDON.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+ <p>Printed by <span class="sc">Thomas Clark Shaw</span>, of No. 8. New
+ Street Square, at No. 5. New Street Square, in the Parish of St. Brid 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 the West, in the
+ City of London, Publisher, at No. 186. Fleet Street
+ aforesaid.&mdash;Saturday, May 10. 1851.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Queries, Number 80, May 10,
+1851, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES AND QUERIES ***
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg's Notes and Queries, Number 80, May 10, 1851, 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 80, May 10, 1851
+ A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists,
+ Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: May 23, 2010 [EBook #32495]
+
+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
+http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
+generously made available by The Internet Library of Early
+Journals.)
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note: A few typographical errors have been corrected: they
+are listed at the end of the text.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+{361} NOTES AND QUERIES:
+
+A MEDIUM OF INTER-COMMUNICATION FOR LITERARY MEN, ARTISTS, ANTIQUARIES,
+GENEALOGISTS, ETC.
+
+"When found, make a note of."--CAPTAIN CUTTLE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+No. 80.]
+SATURDAY, MAY 10. 1851..
+[Price Threepence. Stamped Edition 4d.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ Page
+
+ The Great Exhibition, Notes and Queries, and Chaucer's
+ Prophetic View of the Crystal Palace 361
+
+ NOTES:--
+ On "The Lay of the Last Minstrel" 364
+
+ Poems discovered among the Papers of Sir Kenelm
+ Digby 367
+
+ Folk-Lore:--The Christmas Thorn--Milk-maids--Disease
+ cured by Sheep--Sacramental Wine--"Nettle in Dock out" 367
+
+ Metropolitan Improvements, by R. J. King 368
+
+ Minor Notes:--Meaning of Luncheon--Charade upon
+ Nothing translated--Giving the Lie--Anachronisms
+ of Painters--Spenser's Faerie Queene--Prayer of
+ Mary Queen of Scots--A small Instance of Warren
+ Hastings' Magnanimity--Richard Baxter--Registry
+ of Dissenting Baptisms in Churches 369
+
+ QUERIES:--
+ Notes and Queries relating to Scandinavia, by W. E. C.
+ Nourse 370
+
+ The Rotation of the Earth, by Robert Snow 371
+
+ Minor Queries:--William ap Jevan's Descendants--
+ "Geographers on Afric's Downs"--Irish Brigade--Passage
+ in Oldham--Mont-de-Piete--Poem upon the Grave--When
+ self-striking Clocks first invented--Clarkson's
+ Richmond--Sir Francis Windebank's elder Son--Incised
+ Slab--Etymology of Balsall--St. Olave's Churches--
+ Sabbatical and Jubilee Years of the Jews--Arms of the
+ Isle of Man--Doctrine of the Resurrection--National
+ Debts--Leicester's Commonwealth 372
+
+ REPLIES:--
+ Histoire des Sevarambes 374
+
+ Was there an "Outer Temple" in the Possession of the
+ Knights Templars or Knights of St. John? by Peter
+ Cunningham 375
+
+ Obeism, by H. H. Breen 376
+
+ San Marino 376
+
+ The Bellman and his History, by C. H. Cooper 377
+
+ Replies to Minor Queries:--"God takes those soonest,"
+ &c.--Disinterment for Heresy--The Vellum-bound
+ Junius--Pursuits of Literature--Dutch Books--Engilbert,
+ Archbishop of Treves--Charles Lamb's
+ Epitaph--Charles II. in Wales--"Ex Pede Herculem"--God's
+ Acre--Abbot Eustacius--Vox Populi
+ Vox Dei--Francis Moore and his Almanack 377
+
+ MISCELLANEOUS:--
+ Notes on Books, Sales, Catalogues, &c. 381
+
+ Books and Odd Volumes wanted 382
+
+ Notices to Correspondents 382
+
+ Advertisements 382
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE GREAT EXHIBITION, NOTES AND QUERIES, AND CHAUCER'S PROPHETIC VIEW OF
+THE CRYSTAL PALACE.
+
+The first of May, eighteen hundred and fifty-one, will be remembered in the
+Calendar for centuries after those who witnessed its glories shall have
+passed away. Its memory will endure with our language; and the Macaulays
+and Hallams of the time to come will add brilliancy to their pages by
+recounting the gorgeous yet touching ceremonial of this great Apotheosis of
+Peace. Peace has occasionally received some foretaste of that day's glory;
+but only at times, when the sense of its value had been purchased by the
+horrors which accompany even the most glorious warfare. But never until the
+reign of Victoria were its blessings thus recognised and thus celebrated,
+after they had been uninterruptedly enjoyed for upwards of a quarter of a
+century. Who then, among the thousands assembled around our Sovereign in
+that eventful scene, but felt his joy heightened by gratitude, that his lot
+had been cast in these happy days.
+
+It was a proud day for Queen Victoria, for her Illustrious Consort, for all
+who had had "art or part" in the great work so happily conceived, so
+admirably executed. And we would add (even at the risk of reminding our
+readers of Dennis' energetic claim, "That's my Thunder!") that it was also
+a proud day for all who, like ourselves, desire to promote
+intercommunication between men of the same pursuits,--to bring them
+together in a spirit, not of envious rivalry, but of generous
+emulation,--to make their powers, faculties, and genius subservient to the
+common welfare of mankind. In our humble way we have striven earnestly to
+perform our share in this great mission; and although in the Crystal Palace
+cottons may take the place of comments, steam-engines of Shakspeare, the
+palpable creations of the sculptor of the super-sensual imaginings of the
+poet, the real of the ideal,--still the GREAT EXHIBITION OF THE INDUSTRY OF
+ALL NATIONS is, in more senses than one, merely a MONSTER NUMBER OF "NOTES
+AND QUERIES." So palpable, indeed, is this similarity, that, if the
+long-talked-of _Order of Civil Merit_ should be instituted, (and certainly
+there was never a more fitting moment than the present for so honouring the
+cultivators of the peaceful arts), we make no doubt that "NOTES AND
+QUERIES" will not be forgotten. Should our prophecy be fulfilled, we need
+scarcely remind our readers of Captain Cuttle's injunction and our Motto.
+{362}
+
+And here, talking of prophecy, we would, first reminding our readers how,
+in the olden time, the Poet and the Prophet were looked upon as identical,
+call their attention to the following vision of our Queen in her Crystal
+Palace, which met the eye when in "fine phrensy rolling" of the Father of
+English Poetry, as he has recorded in his _House of Fame_. Had Chaucer
+attended the opening of the Exhibition as "_Our own Reporter_," could his
+description have been more exact?
+
+ THE TEMPLE Y-MADE OF GLAS.
+
+ _A Prevision by Dan Chaucer_, A.D. 1380.
+
+ Now hearken every manir man
+ That English understande can,
+ And listeth to my dreme to here,
+ For nowe at erst shall ye lere:
+ O thought, that wrote al that I met
+ And in the tresorie it set
+ Of my braine, nowe shall men see
+ If any vertue in thee bee
+ To tellen al my dreme aright
+ Nowe kithe thy engine and thy might!
+ * * * * * *
+ But, as I slept, me mette I was
+ Within a temple ymade of glas,
+ In which there were mo images
+ Of gold, standing in sundry stages,
+ Sette in mo rich tabernacles,
+ And with perrie mo pinnacles,
+ And mo curious portraitures,
+ And queint manner of figures
+ Of gold worke, than I saw ever.
+ But all the men that been on live
+ Ne han the conning to descrive
+ The beaute of that ilke place,
+ Ne couden casten no compace
+ Soch another for to make,
+ That might of beauty be his make;
+ Ne so wonderly ywrought,
+ That it astonieth yet my thought,
+ And maketh all my witte to swinke
+ On this castel for to thinke,
+ So that the wondir great beautie
+ Caste, crafte, and curiositie,
+ Ne can I not to you devise,
+ My witte ne may not me suffise;
+ But nathelesse all the substaunce
+ I have yet in my remembraunce,
+ For why? Me thoughtin, by saint Gile,
+ All was of stone of berile,
+ Bothe the castel and the toure,
+ And eke the hall, and every boure;
+ Without peeces or joynings,
+ But many subtell compassings,
+ As barbicans and pinnacles,
+ Imageries and tabernacles;
+ I saw, and ful eke of windowes
+ As flakes fallen in great snowes;
+ And eke in each of the pinnacles
+ Weren sundry habitacles.
+ When I had seene all this sight
+ In this noble temple thus,
+ Hey, Lord, thought I, that madest us,
+ Yet never saw I such noblesse
+ Of images, nor such richesse
+ As I see graven in this church,
+ But nought wote I who did them worche,
+ Yet certaine as I further passe,
+ I wol you all the shape devise.
+ Yet I ententive was to see,
+ And for to poren wondre low,
+ If I could anywise yknow
+ What manner stone this castel was:
+ For it was like a limed glas,
+ But that it shone full more clere,
+ But of what congeled matere
+ It was, I n' iste redely,
+ But at the last espied I,
+ And found that it was every dele
+ A thing of yse and not of stele:
+ Thought I, "_By Saint Thomas of Kent,_
+ _This were a feeble foundement_
+ _To builden on a place so hie;_
+ _He ought him little to glorifie_
+ _That hereon bilte, God so me save._"
+ But, Lord, so faire it was to shewe,
+ For it was all with gold behewe:
+ Lo, how should I now tell all this,
+ Ne of the hall eke what need is?
+ But in I went, and that anone,
+ There met I crying many one
+ "A larges, a larges, hold up well!
+ God save the Lady of this pell!
+ Our owne gentill Lady Fame
+ And hem that willen to have a name."
+ For in this lustie and rich place
+ All on hie above a deis
+ Satte in a see imperiall
+ That made was of rubie royall
+ A feminine creature
+ That never formed by nature
+ Was soche another one I saie:
+ For alderfirst, soth to saie,
+ Me thought that she was so lite
+ That the length of a cubite
+ Was lenger than she seemed to be;
+ * * * * * *
+ Tho was I ware at the last
+ As mine eyen gan up cast
+ That this ilke noble queene
+ On her shoulders gan sustene
+ Both the armes and the name
+ Of tho that had large fame.
+ And thus found I sitting this goddesse
+ In noble honour and richesse
+ Of which I stinte a while now
+ Other thing to tellen you.
+ {363}
+ But Lord the perrie and the richesse,
+ I saw sitting on the goddesse,
+ And the heavenly melodie
+ Of songes full of armonie
+ I heard about her trone ysong
+ That all the palais wall rong.
+ Tho saw I standen hem behind
+ A farre from hem, all by hemselve
+ Many a thousand times twelve,
+ That made loud minstralcies,
+ In conemuse and shalmies,
+ And many another pipe,
+ That craftely began to pipe.
+ And Pursevauntes and Heraudes
+ That crien riche folkes laudes,
+ It weren, all and every man
+ Of hem, as I you tellen can,
+ Had on him throwe a vesture
+ Which men clepe a coate armure.
+ Then saw I in anothir place,
+ Standing in a large space,
+ Of hem that maken bloudy soun,
+ In trumpet, beme, and clarioun.
+ Then saw I stande on thother side
+ Streight downe to the doores wide,
+ From the deis many a pillere
+ Of metall, that shone not full clere,
+ But though ther were of no richesse
+ Yet were they made for great noblesse.
+ There saw I, and knew by name
+ That by such art done, men have fame.
+ There saw I Coll Tragetour
+ Upon a table of sicamour
+ Play an uncouth thing to tell,
+ I saw him carry a wind-mell
+ Under a walnote shale.
+ Then saw I sitting in other sees,
+ Playing upon sundrie other glees,
+ Of which I n' ill as now not rime,
+ For ease of you and losse of time,
+ For time ylost, this know ye,
+ By no way may recovered be.
+ What should I make longer tale?
+ Of all the people that I sey
+ I could not tell till domisdey.
+ Then gan I loke about and see
+ That there came entring into the hall
+ A right great company withall,
+ And that of sondry regions
+ Of all kind of condicions
+ That dwelle in yearth under the Moone,
+ Poore and riche; and all so soone
+ As they were come into the hall
+ They gan on knees doune to fall
+ Before this ilke noble queene.
+ "_Madame,_" sayd they, "_we bee_
+ _Folke that here besechen thee_
+ _That thou graunt us now good fame,_
+ _And let our workes have good name;_
+ _In full recompensacioun_
+ _Of good worke, give us good renoun._"
+ And some of hem she graunted sone,
+ And some she warned well and faire,
+ And some she graunted the _contraire_.
+ Now certainly I ne wist how,
+ Ne where that Fame dwelled or now,
+ Ne eke of her descripcion,
+ Ne also her condicion,
+ Ne the order of her _dome_
+ Knew I not till I hider come.
+ * * * * * *
+ At the last I saw a man,
+ Which that I nought ne can,
+ But he semed for to bee,
+ A man of great auctoritie
+ And therewithall I abraide,
+ Out of my slepe halfe afraide,
+ Remembring well what I had sene,
+ And how hie and farre I had bene
+ In my gost, and had great wonder
+ Of that the God of thonder
+ Had let me knowen, and began to write
+ Like as you have herd me endite,
+ Wherefore to study and rede alway,
+ I purpose to do day by day.
+ Thus in dreaming and in game,
+ Endeth this litell booke of Fame.
+
+We are indebted for this interesting communication to our correspondent
+A. E. B., whose admirable ILLUSTRATIONS OF CHAUCER in our columns have
+given so much pleasure to the admirers of the old poet. Our correspondent
+has sent it to us in the hope that it may be made available in helping
+forward the good work of restoring Chaucer's tomb. We trust it will. The
+Committee who have undertaken that task could, doubtless, raise the hundred
+pounds required, by asking those who have already come forward to help
+them, to change their Crown subscriptions into Pounds. With a right feeling
+for what is due to the poet, they prefer, however, accomplishing the end
+they have in view by small contributions from the admiring many, rather
+than by larger contributions from the few. As we doubt not we number among
+the readers of "NOTES AND QUERIES" many admirers of
+
+ "Old Dan Chaucer, in whose gentle spright,
+ The pure well-head of poetry did dwell,"
+
+to them we appeal, that the monument which was erected by the affectionate
+respect of Nicholas Brigham, nearly three centuries ago, may not in our
+time be permitted to crumble into dust; reminding them, in Chaucer's own
+beautiful language,
+
+ "That they are gentle who do gentle dedes."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+{364}
+
+NOTES.
+
+ON "THE LAY OF THE LAST MINSTREL."
+
+I resume the subject commenced in the comments on "a Passage in _Marmion_,"
+printed in No. 72., March 15, 1851; and I here propose to consider the
+groundwork and mechanism of the most original, though not quite the first
+production of Scott's muse, _The Lay of the Last Minstrel_. In the
+Introduction prefixed to this poem, nearly thirty years after its
+publication, Sir Walter Scott informs the world that the young Countess of
+Dalkeith, much interested and delighted with the wild Border tradition of
+the goblin called "Gilpin Horner" (which is given at length in the notes
+appended to the poem), enjoined on him the task of composing a ballad on
+the subject:
+
+ "And thus" (says Sir Walter) "the goblin story _objected to by several
+ critics as an excrescence upon the poem_, was, in fact, the occasion of
+ its being written."
+
+Yes, and more than this; for, strange as it may appear to those who have
+not critically and minutely attempted to unravel the very artful and
+complicated plot of this singular poem, the Goblin Page is, as it were, the
+key-note to the whole composition, the agent through whose instrumentality
+the fortunes of the house of Branksome are built up anew by the
+pacification of ancient feud, and the union of the fair Margaret with Henry
+of Cranstoun. Yet, so deeply veiled is the plot, and so intricately
+contrived the machinery, that I question if this fact be apparent to one
+reader out of a thousand; and assuredly it has never been presented to my
+view by any one of the critics with whose comments I have become
+acquainted.
+
+The Aristarchus of the _Edinburgh Review_, Mr. Jeffrey, who forsooth
+thought fit to regard the new and original creations of a mighty and
+inventive genius "as a misapplication, in some degree, of very
+extraordinary talents," and "conceived it his duty to make one strong
+effort to bring back _the great apostle of this (literary) heresy to the
+wholesome creed of his instructor_," seems not to have penetrated one inch
+below the surface. In his opinion "the Goblin Page is the capital deformity
+of the poem," "_a perpetual burden_ to the poet and to the readers," "an
+undignified and improbable fiction, which excites neither terror,
+admiration, nor astonishment, but needlessly debases the strain of the
+whole work, and excites at once our incredulity and contempt."
+
+Perhaps so, to the purblind vision of a pedantic formalist; but,
+nevertheless, _The Lay of the Last Minstrel_, that poem, whose varied
+imagery and vivid originality, combined with all its other beauties, have
+been, and ever will be, the delight and admiration of its readers, could
+not exist without this so-called "capital deformity." This I shall
+undertake to demonstrate, and in so doing to prove the "capital absurdity"
+of such criticism as I have cited.
+
+Let us therefore begin with the beginning. The widowed Lady of Branksome,
+brooding over the outrage which had deprived her husband of life, meditates
+only vengeance upon all the parties concerned in this affray. The lovely
+Lady Margaret wept in wild despair, for her lover had stood in arms against
+her father's clan:
+
+ "And well she knew, her mother dread,
+ Before Lord Cranstoun she should wed,
+ Would see her on her dying bed."
+
+The first Canto of the poem contains that singular episode, when--
+
+ "(The Ladye) sits in secret bower
+ In old Lord David's western tower,
+ And listens to a heavy sound
+ That moans the mossy turrets round," &c.
+
+ "From the sound of Teviot's tide
+ Chafing with the mountain side,
+ &c. &c.
+ The Ladye knew it well!
+ It was the Spirit of the Flood that spoke,
+ And he called on the Spirit of the Fell."
+
+And when the River Spirit asks concerning the fair Margaret, who had
+mingled her tears with his stream:
+
+ "What shall be the maiden's fate?
+ Who shall be the maiden's mate?"
+
+the Mountain Spirit replies, that, amid the clouds and mist which veil the
+stars,--
+
+ "Ill may I read their high decree:
+ But no kind influence deign they shower
+ On Teviot's tide and Branksome's tower,
+ Till _pride be quelled_, and _love be free_."
+
+I must here transcribe the following Section xviii.:
+
+ "The unearthly voices ceased,
+ And the heavy sound was still;
+ It died on the river's breast,
+ It died on the side of the hill.
+ But round Lord David's tower,
+ The sound still floated near,
+ For it rung in the Ladye's bower,
+ And it rung in the Ladye's ear,
+ She raised her stately head,
+ And her heart throbbed high with pride:
+ 'Your mountains shall bend,
+ And your streams ascend,
+ Ere Margaret be our foeman's bride!'"
+
+In pursuance of this stern resolution, "the Ladye sought the lofty hall"
+where her retainers were assembled:
+
+ "And from amid the armed train
+ She called to her William of Deloraine."
+
+She then gives him the commission, well remembered by every reader, to
+proceed on that night to Melrose Abbey to unclose the grave of Michael
+{365} Scott, and to rifle it of the magical volume which was accessible
+only on St. Michael's night, at the precise moment when the rays of the
+moon should throw the reflexion of the red cross emblazoned in the eastern
+oriel upon the wizard's monumental stone,--expecting that the possession of
+this "Book of Might" would enable her to direct the destiny of her daughter
+according to the dictates of her own imperious nature. "Dis aliter visum."
+Fate and MICHAEL SCOTT had willed it otherwise. And here I must beg my
+readers to take notice that this far-famed wizard, Michael Scott, although
+dead and buried, is supposed still to exert his influence from the world of
+spirits as the guardian genius of the house of Buccleuch; and he had been
+beforehand with the Ladye of Branksome in providing Henry of Cranstoun with
+one of his familiar spirits, in the shape of the Goblin Page, _by whose
+agency alone_ (however unconscious the subordinate agent may be) a chain of
+events is linked together which results in the union of the two lovers.
+After this parenthesis I resume the thread of the narrative.
+
+Deloraine rides to Melrose in the night, presents himself to the Monk of
+St. Mary's aisle, opens the sepulchre of the wizard, and presumes to take
+
+ "From the cold hand the Mighty Book,"
+
+in spite of the _ominous frown_ which darkened the countenance of the dead.
+He remounts his steed and wends his way homeward
+
+ "As the dawn of day
+ Began to brighten Cheviot gray;"
+
+while the aged monk, having performed the last duty allotted to him in his
+earthly pilgrimage, retired to his cell and breathed his last in prayer and
+penitence before the cross.
+
+Ere Deloraine could reach his journey's end, he encounters a feudal foeman
+in the person of Lord Cranstoun, attended by his Goblin Page, who is here
+first introduced to the reader. A conflict takes place, and Deloraine being
+struck down wounded and senseless, is left by his adversary to the charge
+of this elf, who in stripping off his corslet espied the "Mighty Book."
+With the curiosity of an imp he opens the iron-clasped volume by smearing
+the cover with the blood of the knight, and reads ONE SPELL, _and one
+alone, by permission_; for
+
+ "He had not read another spell,
+ When on his cheek a buffet fell,
+ So fierce, it stretched him on the plain
+ Beside the wounded Deloraine.
+ From the ground he rose dismayed,
+ And shook his huge and matted head;
+ One word he muttered, and no more,
+ 'Man of age, thou smitest sore!'
+ &c. &c.
+ Now, if you ask who gave the stroke,
+ I cannot tell, so mot I thrive--
+ _It was not given by man alive._"
+
+But he had read sufficient for the purposes of his mission, and we shall
+see how he applies the knowledge so marvellously acquired.
+
+By the glamour of this spell he was empowered to make one thing assume the
+form of another.
+
+ "It had much of glamour might,
+ Could make a ladye seem a knight;
+ The cobwebs on a dungeon wall,
+ Seem tapestry in a lordly hall,"
+ &c. &c.
+
+The first use he makes of his power is to convey the wounded knight, laid
+across his weary horse, into Branksome Hall
+
+ "Before the beards of the warders all;
+ And each did after swear and say,
+ There only passed a wain of hay."
+
+Having deposited him at the door of the Ladye's bower, he repasses the
+outer court, and finding the young chief at play, entices him into the
+woods under the guise _to him_ of a "comrade gay."
+
+ "Though on the drawbridge, the warders stout,
+ Saw a terrier and a lurcher passing out;"
+
+and, leading him far away "o'er bank and fell," well nigh frightens the
+fair boy to death by resuming his own elvish shape.
+
+ "Could he have had his pleasure wilde,
+ He had crippled the joints of the noble child;
+ &c. &c.
+ But his awful mother he had in dread,
+ _And also his power was limited_,"
+ &c. &c.
+
+Here let me observe that all this contrivance is essential to the conduct
+of the narrative, and if we simply grant the postulate which a legendary
+minstrel has a right to demand, to wit, the potency of magic spells to
+effect such delusions (pictoribus atque Poetis _Quidlibet audendi_ semper
+fuit aequa potestas), all the remainder of the narrative is easy, natural,
+and probable. This contrivance is necessary, because, in the first place,
+if it had been known to the warders that William of Deloraine had been
+brought into the castle wounded almost unto death, he could not be supposed
+capable of engaging Richard Musgrave in single combat two days afterwards;
+nor, in the second place, would the young chief have been permitted to
+stroll out unattended from the guarded precincts.
+
+To proceed: the boy thus bewildered in the forest falls into the lands of
+an English forayer, and is by him conveyed to Lord Dacre, at that time one
+of the Wardens of the Marches, by whom he is detained as a hostage, and
+carried along with the English troops, then advancing towards Branksome
+under the command of the Lord Wardens in person.
+
+ "(But) though the child was led away,
+ In Branksome still he seemed to stay,
+ For so the Dwarf his part did play."
+
+{366} And there, according to his own malicious nature, played likewise a
+score of monkey tricks, all of which, grotesque and "_undignified_"! as
+they may be, yet most ingeniously divert the mind of the reader from the
+real errand and mission of this supernatural being.
+
+Shortly afterwards, on his exhibiting symptoms of cowardice at the expected
+contest, he is conveyed from the castle by the Ladye's order, and speedily
+rejoins his lord, after the infliction of a severe chastisement from the
+arm of Wat Tinlinn. He then procures Cranstoun's admission within the walls
+of Branksome (where the whole clan Scott was assembling at the tidings of
+the English Raid) by the same spell--
+
+ "Which to his lord he did impart,
+ And made him seem, by glamour art,
+ A knight from hermitage."
+
+And on the following day, as Deloraine did not appear in the lists ready to
+engage in the appointed duel with Richard Musgrave, we are told,--
+
+ "Meantime, full anxious was the Dame,
+ For now arose disputed claim,
+ Of who should fight for Deloraine,
+ 'Twixt Harden and 'twixt Thirtlestaine,
+ &c. &c.
+ But yet, not long the strife--for, lo!
+ Himself the Knight of Deloraine,
+ Strong, as it seemed, and free from pain,
+ In armour sheathed from top to toe,
+ Appeared, and craved the combat due;
+ The Dame her charm successful knew,
+ And the fierce chiefs their claims withdrew."
+
+The conflict takes place, and ends in favour of the Scottish knight; when
+the following scene occurs:
+
+ "As if exhausted in the fight,
+ Or musing o'er the piteous sight,
+ The silent victor stands:
+ His beaver did he not unclasp,
+ Marked not the shouts, felt not the grasp
+ Of gratulating hands.
+ When lo! strange cries of wild surprise,
+ Mingled with seeming terror rise
+ Among the Scottish bands,
+ And all, amid the thronged array,
+ In panic haste gave open way
+ To a half-naked ghastly man,
+ Who downward from the castle ran;
+ He crossed the barriers at a bound,
+ And wild and haggard looked around,
+ As dizzy, and in pain;
+ And all, upon the armed ground
+ Knew William of Deloraine!
+ Each ladye sprung from seat with speed,
+ Vaulted each marshal from his steed;
+ 'And who art thou,' they cried,
+ 'Who hast this battle fought and won?'
+ His plumed helm was soon undone--
+ 'Cranstoun of Teviotside!
+ For this fair prize I've fought and won,'
+ And to the Ladye led her son."
+
+Then is described the struggle that takes place in the maternal breast:
+
+ "And how the clan united prayed
+ The Ladye would the feud forego,
+ And deign to bless the nuptial hour
+ Of Cranstoun's Lord and Teviot's Flower.
+
+ XXVI.
+
+ "She looked to river, looked to hill,
+ Thought on the Spirit's prophecy,
+ Then broke her silence stern and still,
+ 'Not you, _but Fate_, has vanquished me;
+ _Their influence kindly stars may shower_
+ On Teviot's tide and Branksome's tower,
+ For pride _is_ quelled, and love _is_ free.'"
+
+The mission of the elf is now accomplished, his last special service having
+been to steal the armour of William of Deloraine "while slept the knight,"
+and thus to enable his master to personate that warrior.
+
+It may be remarked that hitherto there is no direct evidence that the Page
+was sent by Michael Scott. That evidence is reserved for the moment of his
+final disappearance.
+
+On the same evening, after the celebration of the nuptials, a mysterious
+and intense blackness enveloped the assembled company in Branksome Hall.
+
+ "A secret horror checked the feast,
+ And chilled the soul of every guest;
+ Even the high Dame stood half aghast,
+ She knew some evil in the blast;
+ The elvish Page fell to the ground,
+ And, shuddering, muttered, 'Found! found! found!'
+
+ XXV.
+
+ "Then sudden through the darkened air,
+ A flash of lightning came,
+ So broad, so bright, so red the glare,
+ The castle seemed on flame,
+ &c. &c.
+ Full through the guests' bedazzled band
+ Resistless flashed the levin-brand,
+ And filled the hall with smouldering smoke,
+ As on the elvish Page it broke,
+ &c. &c.
+ When ended was the dreadful roar,
+ The elvish Dwarf was seen no more.
+
+ XXVI.
+
+ "Some heard a voice in Branksome Hall,
+ Some saw a sight, not seen by all;
+ That dreadful voice was heard by some
+ Cry, with loud summons, 'Gylbin, come!'
+ And on the spot where burst the brand,
+ Just where the Page had flung him down,
+ Some saw an arm, and some a hand,
+ And some the waving of a gown:
+ The guests in silence prayed and shook,
+ And terror dimmed each lofty look,
+ But none of all the astonished train
+ _Was so dismayed as Deloraine,_
+ &c. &c.
+ {367}
+ At length, by fits, he darkly told,
+ With broken hint, and shuddering cold,
+ That he had seen, right certainly,
+ _A shape with amice wrapped around,_
+ _With a wrought Spanish baldric bound,_
+ _Like a pilgrim from beyond the sea,_
+ And knew--but how it mattered not--
+ IT WAS THE WIZARD, MICHAEL SCOTT."
+
+After this final consummation, it is amusing to notice a slight "incuria"
+on the part of the poet, which I wonder has never been corrected in the
+later editions. Having described the nuptial ceremony of Cranstoun and
+Margaret in the early part of the last Canto, he says in Section xxviii.,
+
+ "Nought of the bridal _will_ I tell,
+ Which _after_ in short space befell,"
+ &c. &c.
+
+I think I have now succeeded in proving that the Goblin Page, so far from
+being a mere "_intruder_" into this glorious poem--so far from being a mere
+after-thought, or interpolation, to "suit the taste of the cottagers of the
+Border," as Mr. Jeffrey "suspects,"--is the essential instrument for
+constructing the machinery of the plot. We have, indeed, the author's word
+that it formed the foundation of the poem. My readers will therefore form
+their own estimate of the value of Mr. Jeffrey's criticisms, couched as
+they are in no very considerate, much less complimentary phraseology. I
+cannot but admire the "douce vengeance" of the gentle-spirited subject of
+his rebukes, who has contented himself with printing these worthless
+sentences of an undiscerning critic along with the text of his poems in the
+last edition,--there to remain a standing memorial of the wisdom of that
+resolution adhered to throughout the life of the accomplished author, who
+tells us,
+
+ "That he from the first determined, that without shutting his ears to
+ the voice of true criticism, he would pay no regard to that which
+ assumed the form of satire."
+
+In point of fact, Sir Walter had no very exalted opinion of the _genus_
+Critic; and I could give one or two anecdotes, which I heard from his own
+lips, strongly reminding one of the old fable of the painter who pleased
+nobody and everybody.
+
+In conclusion, I beg leave to observe, that in these "Notes" I do not
+presume to underrate, in any degree, Mr. Jeffrey's acknowledged powers of
+criticism. He and Scott have alike passed away from the stage of which they
+were long the ornaments in their respective spheres; but I must consider
+that in the passages here cited, _as well as in many others_, he has proved
+himself either incompetent or unwilling to appreciate the originality, the
+power, and, above all, the invention of Sir Walter Scott's genius.
+
+A BORDERER.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+POEMS DISCOVERED AMONG THE PAPERS OF SIR KENELM DIGBY.
+
+Since I last wrote to you on the subject of these poems, I have discovered
+the remaining portions of Ben Jonson's poem on the Lady Venetia: I have
+therefore no doubt now that my MS. is a genuine autograph; and if so, not
+only this, but the "Houreglasse," which was inserted in your 63rd No., is
+Ben Jonson's. This last has, I think, never been published; nor have I ever
+seen in print the followings lines, which are written in the same hand and
+on the same paper as the "Houreglasse." They were probably written after
+Lady Venetia's death.
+
+ "You wormes (my rivals), whiles she was alive,
+ How many thousands were there that did strive
+ To have your freedome? for theyr sakes forbeare,
+ Unseemely holes in her soft skin to wear,
+ But if you must (as what worme can abstaine?)
+ Taste of her tender body, yet refraine
+ With your disordered eatings to deface her,
+ And feed yourselves so as you most may grace her.
+ First through her eartippes, see you work a paire
+ Of holes, which, as the moyst enclosed _ayre_ [_air_]
+ Turnes into water, may the cold droppes take,
+ And in her eares a payre of jewels make.
+ That done, upon her bosome make your feaste,
+ Where on a crosse carve Jesus in her brest.
+ Have you not yet enough of that soft skinne,
+ The touch of which, in times past, might have bin
+ Enough to ransome many a thousande soule
+ Captiv'd to love? then hence your bodies roule
+ A little higher; where I would you have
+ This epitaph upon her forehead grave;
+ Living, she was fayre, yong, and full of witt;
+ Dead, all her faults are in her forehead writt."
+
+If I am wrong in supposing this never to have been printed, I shall feel
+much obliged by one of your correspondents informing me of the fact.
+
+H. A. B.
+
+Trin. Col. Cambridge.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FOLK LORE.
+
+_The Christmas Thorn._--In my neighbourhood (near Bridgewater) the
+Christmas thorn blossoms on the 6th of January (Twelfth-day), and on this
+day only. The villagers in whose gardens it grows, and indeed many others,
+verily believe that this fact pronounces the truth of this being the day of
+Christ's birth.
+
+S. S. B.
+
+_Milk-maids in 1753._--To Folk-lore may be added the following short
+extract from Read's _Weekly Journal_, May 5, 1733:
+
+ "On May-Day the Milk-Maids who serve the Court, danced Minuets and
+ Rigadoons before the Royal Family, at St. James's House, with great
+ applause."
+
+Y. S.
+
+_Diseases cured by Sheep_ (Vol. iii., p. 320.).--The attempted cure of
+consumption, or some {368} complaints, by walking among a flock of sheep,
+is not new. The present Archbishop of Dublin was recommended it, or
+practised it at least, when young. For pulmonary complaints the principle
+was perhaps the same as that of following a plough, sleeping in a room over
+a cowhouse, breathing the diluted smoke of a limekiln, that is, the
+inhaling of carbonic acid, all practised about the end of the last century,
+when the knowledge of the gases was the favourite branch of chemistry.
+
+A friend of mine formerly met Dr. Beddoes riding up Park Street in Bristol
+almost concealed by a vast bladder tied to his horse's mouth. He said he
+was trying an experiment with oxygen on a broken-winded horse. Afterwards,
+finding that oxygen did not answer, he very wisely tried the gas most
+opposite to it in nature.
+
+C. B.
+
+_Sacramental Wine_ (Vol. iii., p. 320.).--This idea is a relic of Roman
+Catholic times. In Ireland a weakly child is frequently brought to the
+altar rails, and the priest officiating at mass requested to allow it to
+drink from the chalice of what is termed _the ablution_, that is, the wine
+and water with which the chalice is _rinsed_ after the priest has taken the
+communion, and which ablution ordinarily is taken by the priest. _Here_ the
+efficacy is ascribed to the cup having just before contained the blood of
+Our Lord. I have heard it seriously recommended in a case of hooping-cough.
+Your correspondent MR. BUCKMAN does not give sufficient credit for common
+sense to the believers in some portion of folk lore. Red wine is considered
+tonic, and justly, as it contains a greater proportion of _turmic_ than
+white. The yellow bark of the barberry contains an essential tonic
+ingredient, as the Jesuit's bark does _quinine_, or that of the willow
+_salicine_. Nettle juice is well known as a purifier of the blood; and the
+navelwort, like Euphrosia, which is properly called _Eyebright_, is as
+likely to have had its name from its proved efficacy as a simple, as from
+any fancied likeness to the region affected. The old monks were shrewd
+herbalists. They were generally the physicians of their neighbourhood, and
+the names and uses of the simples used by them survive the ruin of the
+monasteries and the expulsion of their tenants.
+
+KERRIENSIS.
+
+"_Nettle in Dock out_" (Vol. iii., pp. 133. 201. 205.).--I can assure
+A. E. B. that in the days of my childhood, long before I had ever heard of
+Chaucer, I used invariably, when I was stung with nettles, to rub the part
+affected with a dock-leaf or stalk, and repeat,
+
+ "Nettle out, dock in."
+
+This charm is so common in Huntingdonshire at this day that it seems to
+come to children almost instinctively. None of them can tell where they
+first heard it, any more than why they use it.
+
+ARUN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+METROPOLITAN IMPROVEMENTS.
+
+The following passage from a sermon preached at Paul's Cross, March 26,
+1620, by John King, Bishop of London, refers in a curious manner to many
+improvements and alterations which have either been already effected in our
+own time, or are still in contemplation. The sermon was "on behalfe of
+Paule's Church," then in a ruinous condition; and was delivered in the
+presence of James himself, who suggested the preacher's text, Psal. cii.
+13, 14.
+
+ "So had my manner ever beene aforetime," says the Bishop, "to open the
+ volume of this Booke, and goe through the fields of the Old and New
+ Testament, plucking and rubbing such eares of corne therein as I best
+ liked, makings, choice (I meane) of my text, and buckling myself to my
+ task at myne owne discretion; but now I am girt and tied to a Scripture
+ by him, who as he hath most right to command, so best skill to direct
+ and appoint the best service I can."
+
+After an elaborate laudation of England, and of London as the "gem and
+eye," which has
+
+ "the body of the King, the morning and midday influence of that
+ glorious sun; other parts having but the evening.... _O fortunati
+ nimium_; you have the finest flowre of the wheat, and purest bloud of
+ the grape, that is, the choice of His blessed Word hath God given unto
+ you; and great is the companie of the preachers"--
+
+the Bishop proceeds thus:
+
+ "Not to weary mine eyes with wandering and roving after private, but to
+ fixe upon publicke alone,--when I behold that forrest of masts upon
+ your river for trafficke, and that more than miraculous bridge, which
+ is the _communis terminus_, to joyne the two bankes of that river; your
+ Royall Exchange for merchants, your Halls for Companies, your gates for
+ defence, your markets for victuall, your aqueducts for water, your
+ granaries for provision, your Hospitalls for the poore, your Bridewells
+ for the idle, your Chamber for orphans, and your Churches for holy
+ assemblies; I cannot denie them to be magnificent workes, and your
+ Citty to deserve the name of an Augustious and majesticall Citty; to
+ cast into the reckoning those of later edition, the beautifying of your
+ fields without, and pitching your Smithfield within, new gates, new
+ waterworkes, and the like, which have been consecrated by you to the
+ dayes of his Majestie's happy reigne: and I hope the cleansing of the
+ River, which is the _vena porta_ to your Citty, will follow in good
+ time. But after all these, as Christ to the young man in the Gospell,
+ which had done all and more, _Unum tibi deest, si vis perfectus esse,
+ vade, vende_; so may I say to you. There is yet one thing wanting unto
+ you, if you will be perfit,--perfit this church: not by parting from
+ _all_, but somewhat, not to the poore, but to God himselfe. This Church
+ is your Sion indeed, other are but _Synagogues_, this your _Jerusalem
+ the mother to them all_, other but daughters brought up at her knees;
+ this the Cathedrall, other but Parochiall Churches; this the _Bethel_
+ for the daily and constant service of God, other have their
+ intermissions, this the common to you all, and to this _doe {369} your
+ tribes ascend_ in their greatest solemnities; others appropriated to
+ several Congregations, this the standart in the high rode of gaze;
+ others are more retired, this the mirrour and marke of strangers, other
+ have but their side lookes; finally, this unto you, as _S. Peters in
+ the Vatican_ at Rome, _S. Marks_ at Venice, and that of _Diana_ at
+ Ephesus, and this at Jerusalem of the Jewes; or if there be any other
+ of glory and fame in the Christian world, which they most joy in."
+
+RICHARD JOHN KING.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Minor Notes.
+
+_Meaning of Luncheon._--Our familiar name of _luncheon_ is derived from the
+daily meal of the Spaniards at eleven o'clock, termed _once_ or _l'once_
+(pronounced _l'onchey_).--From Ford's _Gatherings in Spain_.
+
+A. L.
+
+_Charade upon Nothing translated._--In your No. for July a correspondent
+asks who was the author of the very quaint charade upon "Nothing:"
+
+ "Me, the contented man desires,
+ The poor man has, the rich requires,
+ The miser gives, the spendthrift saves,
+ And all must carry to their graves."
+
+Possibly he may not object to read, without troubling himself as to the
+authorship of, the subjoined translation:
+
+ "Me, qui sorte sua contentus vixerit, optat,
+ Et quum pauper habet, dives habere velit;
+ Spargit avarus opum, servat sibi prodigus aeris,
+ Secum post fati funera quisque feret."
+
+EFFIGIES.
+
+_Giving the Lie._--The great affront of giving the lie arose from the
+phrase "Thou liest," in the oath taken by the defendant in judicial combats
+before engaging, when charged with any crime by the plaintiff, and Francis
+I. of France, to make current his giving the lie to the Emperor Charles V.,
+first stamped it with infamy by saying, in a solemn Assembly, that "he was
+no honest man that would bear the lie."
+
+BLOWEN.
+
+_Anachronisms of Painters._--An amusing list is given in D'Israeli's
+_Curiosities of Literature_ (edit. 1839, p. 131.). The following are
+additional:
+
+At Hagley Park, Worcestershire, the seat of Lord Lyttleton, is a painting
+by Varotari, a pupil of Paul Veronese, of Christ and the Woman taken in
+Adultery. One of the Jewish elders present wears spectacles.
+
+At Kedleston, Derbyshire, the seat of Lord Scarsdale, is a painting by
+Rembrandt, Daniel interpreting Belsazzar's Dream. Daniel's head is covered
+with a peruke of considerable magnitude.
+
+J. E.
+
+_Spenser's Faerie Queene._--The following brief notes may perhaps prove
+interesting:--
+
+1. Spenser gives us a hint of the annoyances to which Shakspeare and
+Burbage may have been subject:--
+
+ "All suddenly they heard a troublous noise,
+ That seemed some perilous tumult to design,
+ Confused with women's cries and shorts of boys,
+ Such as the troubled theatres oft-times annoys."--B. IV. iii. 37.
+
+2. Spenser's solitary pun occurs in book iv. canto viii. verse 31.:
+
+ "But when the world wox old, it wox _war-old_,
+ Whereof it hight."
+
+3. Cleanliness does not appear to have been a virtue much in vogue in the
+"glorious days of good Queen Bess." Spenser (book iv. canto xi. verse 47.)
+speaks of
+
+ "Her silver feet, fair washed against this day,"
+
+_i. e._ for a special day of rejoicing.
+
+4. An instance of the compound epithets so much used by Chapman in his
+translation of Homer, is found in Spenser's description of the sea-nymphs,
+book iv. canto xi. verse 50.:
+
+ "Eione well-in-age,
+ And seeming-still-to-smile Glauconome."
+
+J. H. C.
+
+Adelaide, South Australia.
+
+_Prayer of Mary Queen of Scots._--The incorrect arrangement, in Seward's
+_Anecdotes_, of the following beautiful lines, said to be composed by Mary
+Queen of Scots, and repeated immediately before her execution, and a
+diffuse paraphrase subjoined, in which all their tenderness is lost by
+destroying their brevity and simplicity, may justify another arrangement,
+and an attempt to preserve their simple and tender character in fewer words
+and a different measure:--
+
+ "O Domine Deus, O Lord, my God,
+ Speravi in Te, I have trusted in Thee:
+ O mi care Jesu, My Jesu beloved,
+ Nunc libera me: Me presently free:
+ In dura catena, In cruel chains,
+ Desidero Te. In penal pains,
+ Languendo, gemendo, I long for Thee,
+ Et genu flectendo, I moan, I groan,
+ Adoro, imploro, I bend my knee;
+ Ut liberes me. I adore, I implore,
+ Me presently free."
+
+Can any of your correspondents inform me where these lines first appear? on
+what authority they are ascribed to Mary Queen of Scots? and also who
+mentions their having been repeated immediately before her execution?
+
+ALEXANDER PYTTS FALCONER.
+
+Beeton-Christchurch, Hants.
+
+_A small Instance of Warren Hastings' Magnanimity._--During the latter
+years of his life, Warren Hastings was in the habit of visiting General
+D'Oyley in the New Forest; and thus he became {370} acquainted with the
+Rev. W. Gilpin, vicar of Boldre, and author of _Forest Scenery_, &c. Mr.
+Gilpin's custom was to receive morning visitors, who sat and enjoyed his
+agreeable conversation; and Warren Hastings, when staying in the
+neighbourhood, often resorted to the Boldre Parsonage. It happened, one
+Sunday, that Mr. Gilpin preached a sermon on the character of Felix, which
+commenced in words like these:
+
+ "Felix was a bad man, and a bad governor. He took away another man's
+ wife and lived with her; and he behaved with extortion and cruelty in
+ the province over which he ruled."
+
+Other particulars followed equally in accordance with the popular charges
+against the late Governor-General of India, who, to the preacher's dismay,
+was unexpectedly discovered sitting in the D'Oyley pew. Mr. Gilpin
+concluded that he then saw the last of his "great" friend. But, not so: on
+the following morning Warren Hastings came, with his usual pleasant manner,
+for a chat with the vicar, and of course made no allusion to the sermon.
+
+This was told me by a late valued friend, who was a nephew and curate of
+Mr. Gilpin; and I am not aware that the anecdote has been put on record.
+
+ALFRED GATTY.
+
+Ecclesfield.
+
+_Richard Baxter._--In the long list of Richard Baxter's works, one is
+entitled, _An unsavoury Volume of Mr. Jo. Crawford's anatomized: or, a
+Nosegay of the choicest Flowers in that Garden, presented to Mr. Joseph
+Caryl, by Richard Baxter_. 8vo., Lond. 1654.
+
+At the end of a postscript to this tract, the following sentence is
+subjoined:
+
+ "Whatsoever hath escaped me in these writings that is against meekness,
+ peace, and brotherly love, let it be all unsaid, and hereby revoked;
+ and I desire the pardon of it from God and Man.
+
+RICHARD BAXTER."
+
+Baxter's literary career was not the least extraordinary part of his
+history. Orme's life of him says, that the catalogue of his works contains
+nearly a hundred and sixty-eight distinct publications. A list of no less
+than one hundred and seven is given at the end of his _Compassionate
+Counsel to all Young Men_, 8vo., Lond. 1682.
+
+Baxter's most popular treatises, as the world knows, were his _Call to the
+Unconverted_, and his _Saint's Everlasting Rest_.
+
+H. E.
+
+_Registry of Dissenting Baptisms in Churches._--A fact came to my knowledge
+some time since, which seems worthy of having _a note of it_ made, and
+recorded in your journal. On looking over the registry of baptisms
+administered in the meeting-house of an ancient city, I was struck by the
+occurrence of four names, which I had seen entered in a genealogy as from
+the baptismal registry of one of its parish churches. This appeared to me
+so strange, that I examined the parish registry in order to verify it; and
+I found that the baptisms were actually recorded as on the same days in
+both registries. Of course, the father, having had his child baptized by
+the dissenting minister, prevailed on the clergyman of his parish church to
+register it.
+
+Whether this was a common custom at the time when it took place (1715-21) I
+have no means of knowing. As a fee was probably charged for the
+registration, it was not likely to be asked for in all instances; and, no
+doubt, when it was asked for, many clergymen would consider it inconsistent
+with their duty to grant it.
+
+D. X.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Queries.
+
+NOTES AND QUERIES RELATING TO SCANDINAVIA.
+
+Can any of your readers furnish a list of the different editions of _Olaus
+Magnus_? I have lately met with a curious one entitled _Historia delle
+Gente et della Natura delle Cose Settentrionali, da Olao Magno Gotho
+Arcivescovo di Vpsala nel Regno di Suezia e Gozia, descritta in XXII Libri.
+Tradotta in Lingua Toscana. In Vinegia, 1565._ This edition, in folio,
+contains a very interesting old map of Scandinavia, and a profusion of
+little cuts or engravings, representing men, animals, gods, mountains,
+weapons, religious rites, natural wonders, and everything relating to the
+people and the country that could be conceived or gathered together. Is
+there any English translation of Olaus Magnus?
+
+Is there any English translation of Jornandes' _Histoire Generale des
+Goths_? It is full of curious matter. The French edition of 1603 gives the
+following accounts of the midnight sun:--
+
+ "Diverses nations ne laissent pas d'habiter ces contrees" (Scanzia or
+ Scandinavia). "Ptolomee en nomme sept principales. Celle qui s'appelle
+ Adogit, et qui est la plus reculee vers le Nord, voit (dit on) durant
+ l'Este le Soleil rouler l'horizon quarante jours sans se coucher; mais
+ aussi pendant l'Hyver, elle est privee de sa lumiere un pareil espace
+ de temps, payant ainsi par le long ennui que lui cause l'absence de cet
+ Astre, la joye que sa longue presence lui avoit fait ressentir."
+
+There is a little old book called _Histoire des Intrigues Galantes de la
+Reine Christine de Suede et de sa Cour, pendant son sejour a Rome. A
+Amsterdam_, 1697. It opens thus:
+
+ "Rome, qui est le centre de la religion, est aussi le Theatre des plus
+ belles Comedies du Monde:"
+
+and after giving various accounts, personal and incidental, of her
+mercurial majesty, and of her pilgrimage to Rome, recites the following
+epigram on her first intrigue there, which, to give due precedence to the
+church, happened to be with a Cardinal, named Azolin:-- {371}
+
+ "Mais Azolin dans Rome
+ Sceut charmer ses ennuis,
+ Elle eut sans ce grand homme
+ Passe de tristes nuits;"
+
+adding:
+
+ "Dans ce peu de paroles Mr. de Coulanges [its author] dit beaucoup de
+ choses, et fait comprendre l'intrigue du Cardinal avec la Reine."
+
+I can find no account of this Reverend Cardinal. Who was he (if anybody),
+and what is his history? And who was the author of these odd memoirs of the
+Swedish Queen?
+
+At page 228. of "NOTES AND QUERIES" I see mention of an English translation
+of _Danish_ ballads by Mr. Borrow. Is there any translation of _Norwegian_
+ballads? Many of them are very beautiful and characteristic, and well
+worthy of an able rendering into our own language, if there were any one to
+undertake it. There is also much beauty in the Norwegian national music, of
+which a pretty but limited collection, the _Norske Field-Melodier_,
+arranged by Lindeman, is published at Christiania.
+
+What is the best method of reaching Iceland? and what _really good_ books
+have been published on that country within the last twenty years?
+
+WILLIAM E. C. NOURSE.
+
+London, April 22. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ROTATION OF THE EARTH.
+
+Query, Has Mons. Foucault's pendulum experiment been as yet clearly
+enunciated? and do I understand it aright, when I conceive it is intended
+to show the existence of a certain uniform _rotation in azimuth of the
+horizon_, but different for different latitudes; which rotation, if made
+out to exist, is acquired solely in virtue of the uniform diurnal rotation
+(15deg hourly) in right ascension of the equator, identical in all
+latitudes.
+
+A pendulum, manifestly, can only be suspended vertically, and can only
+vibrate in a vertical plane; and surely can only be conceived, in the
+course of the experiment, to be referred to the _horizon_, that great
+circle of the heavenly sphere to which all vertical circles are referred.
+
+A spectator at the north pole has the pole of the heavens coincident with
+his zenith; and there, all declination circles are also vertical circles;
+and there, the equator coincides with the horizon; whereby the whole effect
+of the rotation of the earth there (15deg hourly) may be conceived to be
+given to the _horizon_: whilst, at the equator, the horizon is
+perpendicular to the equator, which therefore gives no such rotation at all
+to the horizon. Simple inspection of a celestial globe will illustrate
+this. Considering the matter thus, at the pole the rotation of the
+_horizon_ is 15deg hourly, and at the equator is 0, or nothing. But the
+sine of the latitude (=90deg) at the pole is unity, or 1; and the sine of
+the latitude (=0deg) at the equator is 0. Therefore, at these two extremes,
+the expression 15deg x sin. lat. actually does give the amount of _hourly
+apparent rotation of the horizon_; namely, 15deg at one place, and 0deg at
+the other. Now, as I understand the experiment, as given in the public
+prints, it is asserted that the same expression of 15deg x sin. lat. will
+give the _rotation of the horizon_ in intermediate latitudes; of which
+rotation I subjoin a table calculated for the purpose.
+
+ +-----------+-------------+-----------------------+---------------------+
+ | | | Value of | Apparent |
+ | | Natural | 15deg x Sin. Lat., | corresponding |
+ | Degrees | Values of | or apparent | Times of _Horizon_, |
+ | of | Sine of the | _hourly_ Amount of | performing |
+ | Latitude. | Latitude. | Rotation of | one Rotation |
+ | | | _Horizon_, in Degrees | of 360deg, in Hours |
+ | | | and Decimals. | and Decimals. |
+ +-----------+-------------+-----------------------+---------------------+
+ | deg | | deg | h |
+ | 0 | 0.000 | 0.00 | Infinite time. |
+ | 1 | 0.017 | 0.26 | 1371.0 |
+ | 2 | 0.035 | 0.53 | 682.1 |
+ | 3 | 0.053 | 0.79 | 458.5 |
+ | 4 | 0.070 | 1.05 | 342.6 |
+ | 5 | 0.087 | 1.31 | 255.4 |
+ | 6 | 0.104 | 1.57 | 229.6 |
+ | 7 | 0.122 | 1.83 | 169.9 |
+ | 8 | 0.139 | 2.09 | 172.5 |
+ | 9 | 0.156 | 2.35 | 153.4 |
+ | 10 | 0.173 | 2.60 | 138.1 |
+ | 20 | 0.342 | 5.13 | 70.2 |
+ | 30 | 0.500 | 7.50 | 48.0 |
+ | 40 | 0.643 | 9.64 | 37.3 |
+ | 50 | 0.766 | 11.49 | 31.3 |
+ | 60 | 0.866 | 13.00 | 27.7 |
+ | 70 | 0.940 | 14.09 | 25.5 |
+ | 80 | 0.985 | 14.77 | 24.4 |
+ | 90 | 1.000 | 15.00 | 24.0 |
+ +-----------+-------------+-----------------------+---------------------+
+
+Now this is the point which, it should seem, ought to be the business of
+experimenters to establish; it being proposed, as we are informed, to
+swing, in different latitudes, freely suspended pendulums, over horizontal
+dials, or circular tables, properly graduated, similarly to the horizons of
+common globes; and to note the _apparent_ variation of the plane of
+oscillation of the pendulums with respect to the graduated dials; these
+latter serving as representatives of the horizon. For the hypothesis is (as
+I understand it), that the pendulums will continue to swing each of them
+severally in one invariable vertical plane fixed in free space, whilst the
+horizontal dials beneath, by their rotation, will slip away, as it were,
+and turn round in _azimuth_, from under the planes of the pendulums.
+
+It should seem to be imperative on those who wish to put this experiment to
+proof, to give all possible attention to the precautions suggested in the
+excellent paper that appeared on the subject, on Saturday, April 19, in the
+_Literary Gazette_, copied also into the _Morning Post_ of Monday the 21st.
+To my mind, the experiment is beset with practical difficulties; but even
+should the matter {372} be satisfactorily made out to those best capable of
+judging, I cannot readily conceive of an experiment less likely than the
+above to carry conviction to the minds of the wholly unlearned of the
+rotation of the earth.
+
+I perceive that B.A.C., in the _Times_ of April 24, avows his determined
+scepticism as to the virtue of the experiment.
+
+ROBERT SNOW.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MINOR QUERIES.
+
+_William ap Jevan's Descendants._--In Burke's _Landed Gentry_, p. 1465.,
+mention is made of William ap Jevan, "an attendant upon Jasper Duke of
+Bedford, and afterwards upon Hen. VII.;" and of a son, Morgan Williams,
+ancestor of the Cromwells. Will some correspondent oblige by giving a
+reference to where any account may be met with of any other son, or
+children, to such William ap Jevan, and his or their descendants?
+
+W. P. A.
+
+"_Geographers on Afric Downs._"--Can any of your correspondents tell me
+where these lines are to be found?--
+
+ "So geographers on Afric downs,
+ Plant elephants instead of towns."
+
+They sound Hudibrastic, but I cannot find them in _Hudibras_.
+
+A. S.
+
+_Irish Brigade._--Can any of your correspondents furnish any account of
+what were called "The Capitulations of the Irish Brigades?" These
+_Capitulations_ (to prevent mistakes) were simply the agreements under
+which foreign regiments entered the French service. The Swiss regiments had
+their special "capitulations" until 1830, when they ceased to be employed
+in France. They appear to have differed in almost every regiment of the
+Irish brigade; the privileges of some being greater than those of others.
+One was common to all, namely, the right of _trial_ by their officers or
+comrades solely, and according to the laws of their own country.
+
+Also, is there any history of the brigades published? I have heard that a
+Colonel Dromgoole published one. Can any information be afforded on that
+head?
+
+K.
+
+_Passage in Oldham._--The following lines, on the virtues of "impudence,"
+occur in that exquisite satirist, Oldham, described by Dryden as "too
+little and too lately known:"
+
+ "Get that great gift and talent, impudence,
+ Accomplish'd mankind's highest excellence:
+ 'Tis that alone prefers, alone makes great,
+ Confers alone wealth, titles, and estate;
+ Gains place at court, can make a fool a peer;
+ An ass a bishop; can vil'st blockhead rear
+ To wear red hats, and sit in porph'ry chair:
+ 'Tis learning, parts, and skill, and wit, and sense,
+ Worth, merit, honour, virtue, innocence."
+
+I quote this passage chiefly with reference to the "porphyry chair," and
+with the view of ascertaining whether the allusion has been explained in
+any edition of Oldham's Poems. Does the expression refer to any established
+use of such chairs by the wearers of "red hats?" or is it intended merely
+to convey a general idea of the sumptuousness and splendour of their style
+of living?
+
+HENRY H. BREEN.
+
+St. Lucia, March, 1851.
+
+_Mont-de-Piete._-Can any of your readers furnish information as to the
+connexion between these words and the thing which they are used to denote?
+Mrs. Jameson says, in her _Legends of the Monastic Orders_, p. 307.:
+
+ "Another attribute of St. Bernardin's of Siena, is the
+ _Monte-di-Pieta_, a little green hill composed of three mounds, and on
+ the top either a cross or a standard, on which is the figure of the
+ dead Saviour, usually called in Italy a _Pieta_. St. B. is said to have
+ been the founder of the charitable institutions still called in France
+ _Monts-de-Piete_, originally for the purpose of lending to the poor
+ small sums on trifling pledges--what we should now call a loan
+ society,--and which, in their commencement, were purely disinterested
+ and beneficial. In every city which he visited as a preacher, he
+ founded a Monte-di-Pieta; and before his death, these institutions had
+ spread all over Italy and through a great part of France."
+
+It is added in a note:
+
+ "Although the figures holding the M. di P. are, in Italian prints and
+ pictures, styled 'San Bernardino da Siena,' there is reason to presume
+ that the honour is at least shared by another worthy of the same order,
+ 'Il Beato Bernardino da Feltri,' a celebrated preacher at the end of
+ the fifteenth century. Mention is made of his preaching against the
+ Jews and usurers, on the miseries of the poor, and on the necessity of
+ having a _Monte-di-Pieta_ at Florence, in a sermon delivered in the
+ church of Santa Croce in the year 1488."
+
+On p. 308. is a representation of the Monte-di-Pieta, borne in the saint's
+hand. I need not specify the points on which the foregoing extract still
+leaves information to be desired.
+
+W. B. H.
+
+Manchester.
+
+_Poem upon the Grave._--A. D. would be obliged by being informed where to
+find a poem upon The Grave. Two voices speak in it, and, it commences--
+
+ "How peaceful the grave; its quiet how deep!
+ Its zephyrs breathe calmly, and soft is its sleep,
+ And flowerets perfume it with ether."
+
+The second voice replies--
+
+ "How lonesome the grave; how deserted and drear," &c. &c.
+
+_Clocks: when self-striking Clocks first invented._--In Bolingbroke's
+_Letters on the Study of History_ {373} (Letter IV.), I read the following
+passage in relation to a certain person:
+
+ "His reason had not the merit of common mechanism. When you press a
+ watch or pull a clock, they answer your question with precision; for
+ they repeat exactly the hour of the day, and tell you neither more nor
+ less than you desire to know."
+
+I believe this work was written about 1711. Can you tell me when the
+self-striking clock was invented, and by whom?
+
+JINGO.
+
+_Clarkson's "Richmond."_--Can any of your readers inform me who is in
+possession of the papers of the late Mr. Clarkson, the historian of
+Richmond, in Yorkshire? I wish to know what were the ancient documents, or
+other sources, from which the learned author ascertained some facts stated
+in his valuable work. To whom should I apply on the subject?
+
+D. Q.
+
+_"Felix quem faciunt," &c._--I wish you could tell me where I can find this
+line:
+
+ "Felix quem faciunt aliena pericula cautum."
+
+EFFIGIES.
+
+Whitehall.
+
+_Sir Francis Windebank's elder Son._--Sir Francis Windebank, "of
+treacherous memory," it is well known, died at Paris in September, 1646. He
+had two sons; what became of Thomas, the _elder_? Francis, the _second_,
+was a colonel in the royal army: he was tried for cowardice in surrendering
+Blechingdon House, in Oxfordshire, to Oliver Cromwell without a blow; and
+being found guilty, was shot at Broken Hayes, near Oxford, in April, 1645.
+I am anxious to make out the fate of his elder brother.
+
+EDWARD F. RIMBAULT.
+
+_Incised Slab._--I have a large incised slab in my church, with the figures
+of a man (Richard Grenewey) and his wife upon it, with the date 1473.
+Following the date, and filling up the remainder of the line of the
+inscription, is the figure of a cock in a fighting attitude. Can any of
+your readers enlighten me on the subject?
+
+H. C. K.
+
+_Etymology of Balsall._--Will you allow me to ask some of your readers to
+give me the etymology of _Balsall_? It occurs frequently about here, as
+Balsall Temple, B. Street, B. Grange, B. Common, and near Birmingham is
+Balsall Heath. It is not to be confounded with Beausall Common, which also
+is near this place.
+
+F. R.
+
+Kenilworth.
+
+_St. Olave's Churches._--In the _Calendar of the Anglican Church_, Parker,
+Oxford, 1851, at pp. 267. and 313., it is stated that Saint Olave helped
+King Ethelred to dislodge the Danes from London and Southwark, by
+destroying London Bridge; and that, in gratitude for this service, the
+churches at each end of the bridge are dedicated to him;--on the Southwark
+side, St. Olave's, Tooley Street, is; but was there ever a church on the
+London side, bearing the same name?--The nearest one to the bridge is St.
+Olave's, Hart Street; but that is surely too distant to be called "at the
+end of the bridge."
+
+E. N. W.
+
+Southwark, April 21. 1851.
+
+_Sabbatical and Jubilee Years of the Jews._--As the solution of many
+interesting topics in connexion with Jewish history is yet dependent on the
+_period_ of the institution of the Sabbatical and Jubilee years, the
+following observations will not perhaps be deemed unworthy of a "nook" in
+your columns. A spark may blaze! I therefore throw it out to be fanned into
+a more brilliant light by those of your readers whose studies peculiarly
+fit them to inquire more searchingly into the subject. The Jews, it has
+been remarked by various writers, were ignorant of _astronomy_. Both,
+however, the Sabbatical and Jubilee years have been, as I conceive and will
+endeavour to show, founded on astronomical observation, commemorative of no
+particular event in Jewish history, but simply that of the moon's
+revolutions; for instance, with reference to the _Sabbatical_ year,
+allowing for a difference of four days and a half, which occurs _annually_
+in the time of the moon's position on the equator, it would require, in
+order to realise a number corresponding to the days (29) employed by the
+moon in her synodical revolution round the earth, a period to elapse of
+little less than six years and a half: thus exhibiting the Jews' _seventh_
+or _Sabbatical year_, or year of rest. This result, besides being
+instructive and commemorative of the moon's menstrual course, is at the
+same time indicative, as each Sabbatical year rolls past, of the approach
+of the "_finisher of the Seven Sabbaths of years_," or year of Jubilee, so
+designated from its being to the chosen people of God, under the Jewish
+dispensation, a year of "freedom and redemption," in commemoration of the
+moon's _complete_ revolution, viz., her return to a certain position at the
+precise time at which she set out therefrom, an event which takes place but
+once in _fifty years_: in other words, if the moon be on the equator, say,
+on the first day of February, and calculating twenty-nine days to the
+month, or twelve lunations to the year, a cycle of fifty years, or "seven
+Sabbaths of years," must elapse ere she will again be in that position on
+the same day.
+
+HIPPARCHUS.
+
+Limehouse, March 31. 1851.
+
+_Arms of Isle of Man._--The arms of the Isle of Man are gules, three legs
+conjoined in the fess point, &c. &c. or. These arms were stamped on the old
+halfpence of the island, and we may well call them the current coin.
+
+In an old edition of the _Mythology of Natalis_ {374} _Comus_, Patavii,
+1637, small 4to., at page 278., I find an Icon of Triptolemus sent by Ceres
+in a chariot drawn by serpents, hovering in the clouds over what I suppose
+to be Sicily, or Trinacria; and on a representation of a city below the
+chariot occurs the very same form of coin, the three legs conjoined, with
+the addition of three ears of corn.
+
+This seems to me to be a curious coincidence.
+
+MERVINIENSIS.
+
+_Doctrine of the Resurrection._--Can any of your readers inform me of any
+traces of the doctrine of the Resurrection to be found in authors anterior
+to the Christian era? The following passage from Diogenes Laertius is
+quoted in St. John's _Manners and Customs of Ancient Greece_, vol. i. p.
+355.:
+
+ "[Greek: Kai anabiosesthai, kata tous Magous, phesi (theopompos), tous
+ anthropous, kai esesthai athanatous.]"
+
+How far does the statement in this passage involve the idea of a _bodily_
+resurrection? I fancy the doctrine is not countenanced by any of the
+apparitions in the poetical Hades of Virgil, or of other poets.
+
+ZETETICUS.
+
+_National Debts._--Is there any published work descriptive of the origin of
+the foundation of a "National Debt" in Florence so early as the year 1344,
+when the state, owing a sum of money, created a "Mount or Bank," the shares
+in which were transferable, like our stocks? It is not mentioned in Niccolo
+Machiavelli's _History of Florence_; but I have a note of the fact, without
+a reference to the authority. Is there any precedent prior to the
+foundation of our National Debt?
+
+F. E. M.
+
+_Leicester's Commonwealth._--Are the real authors of _Leicester's
+Commonwealth_, and the poetical tract generally found with it, _Leicester's
+Ghost_, known? According to Dodd's _Church History_, the first is
+_erroneously_ attributed to Robert Parsons the Jesuit.
+
+EDWARD F. RIMBAULT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Replies.
+
+HISTOIRE DES SEVARAMBES.
+
+(Vol. iii., pp. 4. 72. 147.)
+
+The History of the Sevarites, in the original English edition, consists of
+two parts: the first published in 1675, in 114 pages, small 12mo., without
+a preface; the second published in 1679, in 140 pages, with a preface of
+six pages. The French version of this work is much altered and enlarged.
+The title is changed into _Histoire des Sevarambes_, the "Sevarites" being
+dropped. There is a preface of fifteen pages, containing a supposed letter
+from Thomas Skinner, dated Bruges, Oct. 28, 1672. The work is divided into
+five parts, three of which are in the first, and two in the second volume
+of the Amsterdam edition of 1716. These five parts are together more than
+twice as bulky as the two parts of the English work. There is no copy of
+the original French edition of 1677-9 described by Marchand, in any English
+public library; but if there is a copy in the French national library, any
+of your bibliographical correspondents at Paris could easily ascertain
+whether (as is probably the case) the Amsterdam edition is a mere reprint
+from the original Paris edition.
+
+The French version of this work is not only much enlarged, but it differs
+in the names and incidents, and is fuller in the account of the
+institutions and customs of the imaginary state. The English edition of
+1738 (1 vol. 8vo.) is a literal translation from the French version, though
+it does not purport to be a translation. It may be doubted whether the
+translator was aware of the existence of the English publication of 1675-9.
+The German translation was published in 1680; the Dutch translation in
+1682: both these appear to have been taken from the French.
+
+Morhof (_Polyhistor._, vol. i. p. 74.), who inserts this work among the
+_libri damnati_, and dwells upon its deistical character, refers to the
+French version; and though he knew that the book had originally appeared in
+English, he probably was not aware of the difference between the two
+versions. A note added by his first editor, Moller, states that Morhof
+often told his friends that he believed Isaac Vossius to have been the
+author of the work. Isaac Vossius was in England from 1670 until his death,
+which took place at Windsor, February 21, 1689. His residence in England,
+combined with the known laxity of his religious opinions, doubtless
+suggested to Morhof the conjecture that he wrote this freethinking Utopia.
+There is, however, no external evidence to support this conjecture, or to
+show that it had any better foundation than the conjecture that Bishop
+Berkeley wrote _Gaudentio di Lucca_. The University of Leyden purchased the
+library of Isaac Vossius for 36,000 florins. If it is still preserved at
+Leyden, a search among his books might ascertain whether there is among
+them any copy of the English or French editions of this work, and whether
+they contain any written remark by their former possessor. Moreover, it is
+to be observed that the system of natural religion is for the first time
+developed in the French edition; and this was the part which chiefly gave
+the book its celebrity: whereas, the supposition of Morhof implies that the
+English and French versions are identical.
+
+Heumann, in his _Schediasma de Libris Anonymis et Pseudonymis_ (Jena,
+1711), p. 161. (reprinted in Mylius, _Bibliotheca Anon. et Pseudon._,
+Hamburg, 1740, vol. i. pp. 170-6.) has an article on the _Histoire des
+Sevarambes_. It is there stated that "Messieurs de Portroyal" superintended
+the French translation of the work; but no authority is given for the
+statement. Christian Thomasius, {375} in his _Monthly Review_ of November
+1689, attributed the work to D'Allais (or Vairasse). He alleged three
+reasons for this belief: 1. The rumour current in France; 2. The fact that
+Allais sold the book, as well as his French grammar; 3. That a comparison
+of the two works, in respect of style and character of mind, renders it
+most probable that both are by the same author. The testimony of Thomasius
+is important, as the date of its publication is only ten years posterior to
+the publication of the last part of the French version.
+
+Leclerc, in a review of the _Schediasma_ of Heumann, in the _Bibliotheque
+Choisie_, published in 1712 (tom. xxv. p. 402., with an addendum, tom.
+xxvi. p. 460.), attests positively that Vairasse was the author of the work
+in question. He says that Vairasse (or, as he spells the name, Veiras) took
+the name of D'Allais in order to sell his book. He had this fact from
+persons well acquainted with Vairasse. He likewise mentions that Vairasse
+was well known to Locke, who gave Leclerc an account of his birthplace.
+Leclerc adds that he was acquainted with a person to whom Vairasse wished
+to dedicate his book (viz. the _Histoire des Sevarambes_), _and who
+possessed a copy of it, with a species of dedication, written in his hand_.
+
+This testimony is so distinct and circumstantial, as to leave no reasonable
+doubt as to the connexion of Vairasse with the French version. The
+difficulty as to the authorship of the English version still, however,
+remains considerable. The extensive alterations introduced in the French
+edition certainly render it probable that _two_ different writers were
+concerned in the work. The words of Leclerc respecting the information
+received from Locke are somewhat ambiguous; but they do not necessarily
+imply that Locke knew anything as to the connexion of Vairasse with the
+book, though they are not inconsistent with this meaning. Locke had
+doubtless become acquainted with Vairasse during his residence in England.
+Considering the length of time which Vairasse passed in England, and the
+eminence of the persons with whom he is said to have had relations (viz.
+the Duke of York, Lord Clarendon, and Locke), it is singular that no
+mention of him should be discoverable in any English book.
+
+The error, that the work in question was written by Algernon Sidney,
+appears to have arisen from a confusion with the name of Captain Siden, the
+imaginary traveller. Fabricius (_Bibliograph. Antiq._, c. xiv. s.16. p.
+491.) mentions Sidney and Vairasse as the two most probable claimants to
+the authorship.
+
+Hume, in his _Essay on Polygamy and Divorces_, refers to the _History of
+the Sevarambians_, and calls it an "agreeable romance."
+
+L.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WAS THERE AN "OUTER TEMPLE" IN THE POSSESSION OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS OR
+KNIGHTS OF ST. JOHN?--(Vol. iii., p. 325.)
+
+I have great pleasure in complying with the very proper request of MR.
+FOSS, and give my authority at once for stating in the _Hand-book for
+London_ that the so-called "Outer Temple" was a part of the Fleet Street
+possession of the Knights Templars or Knights of St. John, or was in any
+manner comprehended within the New Temple property of Fleet Street and
+Temple Bar. My authority is Sir George Buc, whose minute and valuable
+account of the universities of England is dedicated to Sir Edward Coke.
+Buc's words are these:--
+
+ "After this suppression and condemnation of the Templers, their house
+ here in Fleete Street came to the handes and occupation of diuers
+ Lordes. For our Antiquaries and Chronologers say, that after this
+ suppression Sir Thomas Plantagenet Earl of Lancaster (and Cousin to the
+ King then raigning) had it, but beeing after attainted of treason, hee
+ enjoyed it but a short time.
+
+ "Then next Hugh Spencer Earle of Glocester got into it, but he also was
+ soone after attainted, and executed for Treason. After him Andomare de
+ Valence, a nobleman of the great house of Lusignan, and Earle of
+ Pembrooke, was lodged in it for a while. But this house was '_Equus
+ Seianus_' to them all: and (as here it appeareth) was ordayned by God
+ for other better uses, and whereunto now it serueth. After all these
+ noble tenants and occupants were thus exturbed, dead, and gone, then
+ certaine of the reuerend, ancient professours of the Lawes, in the
+ raign of King Edward the Third, obtained a very large or (as I might
+ say) a perpetuall Lease of this Temple, or (as it must bee understood)
+ of two parts thereof distinguished by the names of the Middle Temple
+ and the Inner Temple, from the foresayd Ioannites.... But the other
+ third part, called the Outward Temple, Doctor Stapleton, Bishop of
+ Exceter, had gotten in the raign of the former King, Edward the Second,
+ and conuerted it to a house for him and his successors, Bishops of
+ Exceter ... of whom the late Earle of Essex purchased it, and it is now
+ called Essex house: hauing first beene (as I haue sayd) a part of the
+ Templers' house, and in regard of the scituation thereof, without the
+ Barre, was called the Outward or Utter Temple, as the others, for the
+ like causes, were called the Middle Temple and the Inner Temple."--Sir
+ George Buc, in _Stow_ by Howes, ed. 1631, p. 1068.
+
+This seems decisive, if Buc is to be relied on, as I think he is. But new
+facts, such as MR. FOSS'S researches and MR. BURTT'S diligence are likely
+to bring to light, may upset Buc's statement altogether.
+
+I must join MR. FOSS in his wish to ascertain _when_ the names Inner Temple
+and Middle Temple were first made use of, with a further Query, which I
+should be glad to have settled, _when_ the See of Exeter first obtained the
+site of the so-called {376} "Outer Temple?" Stapleton, by whom it was
+_perhaps_ obtained, was Bishop of Exeter from 1307 to 1326.
+
+PETER CUNNINGHAM.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OBEISM.
+
+(Vol. iii., p. 59.)
+
+In reply to F. H., I beg leave to state that Obeism is not in itself a
+religion, except in the sense in which Burke says that "superstition is the
+religion of feeble minds." It is a belief, real or pretended, in the
+efficacy of certain spells and incantations, and is to the uneducated negro
+what sorcery was to our unenlightened forefathers. This superstition is
+known in St. Lucia by the name of _Kembois_. It is still extensively
+practised in the West Indies, but there is no reason to suppose that it is
+rapidly gaining ground. F. H. will find ample information on the subject in
+Pere Labat's _Nouveau Voyage aux Isles francaises de l'Amerique_, tome ii.
+p. 59., and tome iv. pp. 447. 499. and 506., edition of 1742; in Bryan
+Edwards' _History of the West Indies_, vol. ii. ch. iii., 5th edition
+(London, 1819); and in Dr. R. R. Madden's _Residence in the West Indies_,
+vol. ii. letter 27. Perhaps the following particulars from Bryan Edwards
+(who says he is indebted for them to a Mr. Long) on the etymology of
+_obeah_, may be acceptable to some of your readers:--
+
+ "The term _obeah_, _obiah_, or _obia_, (for it is variously written,)
+ we conceive to be the adjective, and _obe_ or _obi_, the noun
+ substantive; and that by the word _obia_--men or women--is meant those
+ who practise _obi_. The origin of the term we should consider as of no
+ importance, in our answer to the question proposed, if, in search of
+ it, we were not led to disquisitions that are highly gratifying to
+ curiosity. From the learned Mr. Bryant's commentary upon the word
+ _oph_, we obtain a very probable etymology of the term. 'A serpent, in
+ the Egyptian language, was called _ob_ or _aub_.' '_Obion_ is still the
+ Egyptian name for a serpent.' 'Moses, in the name of God, forbids the
+ Israelites ever to inquire of the demon _Ob_, which is translated in
+ our Bible, charmer or wizard, divinator aut sorcilegus.' 'The woman at
+ Endor is called _oub_ or _ob_, translated Pythonissa; and _oubaois_ (he
+ cites from _Horus Apollo_) was the name of the Basilisk or Royal
+ Serpent, emblem of the sun, and an ancient oracular deity of Africa.'"
+
+One of your correspondents has formed a substantive from _obe_ by the
+addition of _ism_, and another from _obeah_ by the same process; but it
+will be seen by the above quotation that there is no necessity for that
+obtrusive termination, the superstitious practice in question being already
+sufficiently described by the word _obe_ or _obi_.
+
+HENRY H. BREEN.
+
+St. Lucia, March, 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAN MARINO.
+
+(Vol. iii., p. 321.)
+
+On the death of Sigismondo Pandolfo Malatesta, without legitimate male
+issue, in October, 1468, Pope Paul II. declared Rimini and his other fiefs
+to have reverted to the Holy See. In the spring of the following year the
+Pontiff proceeded, with the assistance of the Venetians, to enforce his
+claim, and threatened the Republicans of San Marino with his vengeance if
+they did not aid him and his allies in gaining possession of Rimini, which
+Roberto Malatesta, one of the illegitimate sons of Sigismondo Pandolfo, had
+seized by stratagem.
+
+By advice of their faithful friend Federigo, Count of Urbino, who was at
+the head of the opposite league, comprising the King of Naples, the Duke of
+Milan, and the Florentines, the San-Marinese forwarded the Papal mandate to
+Florence, and requested through their ambassador, one Ser Bartolomeo, the
+support of that Republic. Several letters appear to have been sent in
+answer to their applications, and the one communicated by MR. SYDNEY SMIRKE
+is characterised by Melchiarre Delfico (_Memorie storiche della Repubblica
+di San Marino._ Capolago, 1842, 8vo. p. 229.) as
+
+ "Del tutto didattica e parenetica intorno alla liberta, di cui i
+ Fiorentini facevano gran vanto, mentre erano quasi alla vigilia di
+ perderla intieramente."
+
+San Marino was not attacked during the campaign, which terminated on the
+30th of August of the same year (1469) with the battle of Vergiano, in
+which Alessandro Sforza, the commander of the Papal forces, was signally
+defeated by Federigo.
+
+San Marino has never, so far as I have been able to ascertain, undergone
+the calamity of a siege, and its inhabitants have uninterruptedly enjoyed
+the blessing of self-government from the foundation of the Republic in the
+third or fourth century to the present time, with the exception of the few
+months of 1503, during which the infamous Cesare Borgia forced them to
+accept a Podesta of his own nomination. Various causes have contributed to
+this lengthened independence; but it may be stated that, in the fifteenth
+and sixteenth centuries, the San Marinese owed it no less to their own
+patriotism, courage, prudence, and good faith, than to the disinterested
+protection of the Counts and Dukes of Urbino, whose history has been so
+ably written by Mr. Dennistoun, in his recently published memoirs of that
+chivalrous race.
+
+The privileges of the Republic were confirmed on the 12th of February,
+1797, by Napoleon Buonaparte, who offered to enlarge its territory,--a boon
+which its citizens were wise enough to decline; thinking, perhaps, with
+Montesquieu, that--
+
+ "Il est de la nature d'une republique qu'elle n'ait qu'un petit
+ territoire: sans cela, elle ne peut guere subsister."--_Esprit des
+ Lois_, liv. viii. chap. 16.
+
+Your readers will find some notices of San {377} Marino in Addison's
+_Remarks on several Parts of Italy_; Aristotle's _Politics_, translated by
+Gillies, lib. ii. Appendix.
+
+Its lofty and isolated situation has supplied Jean Paul with a simile in
+his _Unsichtbare Loge_:
+
+ "Alle andre Wissenschaften theilen sich jetzt in eine Universal
+ Monarchie ueber alle Leser: aber die Alten sitzen mit ihren wenigen
+ philologischen Lehnsleuten einsam auf einem S. Marino-Felsen."--_Jean
+ Paul's_ Werke (Berlin, 1840, 8vo.), vol. i. p. 125.
+
+In the first line of the letter, "ved_a_to" should be ved_u_to; and in the
+seventh line, "difender_ai_" difender_vi_.
+
+F. C. B.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BELLMAN AND HIS HISTORY.
+
+(Vol. iii., p. 324.)
+
+The Bellman's songs may be found in the _Bellman's Treasury, containing
+above a Hundred several Verses, fitted for all Humours and Fancies, and
+suited to all Times and Seasons_. London: 8vo. 1707. Extracts from this
+book are given in Hone's _Every Day Book_, vol. ii. p. 1594.
+
+I have now before me a broadside thus entitled: "A copy of verses, humbly
+presented to the Right Worshipful the Mayor, Aldermen, and Common
+Councilmen, and the rest of my worthy Masters and Mistresses, dwelling in
+Cambridge. By Thomas Adams, Bellman, 1810." There is a large engraving,
+from a wood-block, apparently a century old, representing a bellman, in a
+flowing wig and a three-cornered hat, holding, in his right hand a bell,
+and in his left a javelin and lantern; his dog is behind him.
+
+The verses are:
+
+ 1. Prologue.
+ 2. To the Right Worshipful the Mayor.
+ 3. To the Aldermen.
+ 4. To the Common Councilmen.
+ 5. To the Town Clerk.
+ 6. To the Members for the Town.
+ 7. On the King.
+ 8. On the Queen.
+ 9. On Christmas Day.
+ 10. On New Year's Day.
+ 11. To the Young Men.
+ 12. To the Young Maids.
+ 13. On Charity.
+ 14. On Religion.
+ 15. Epilogue.
+
+This is marked as the 24th sheet; that is, as I suppose, the 24th set of
+verses presented by Mr. Adams.
+
+I have also a similar broadside, "by Isaac Moule, jun., bellman, 1824,"
+being "No. III." of Mr. Moule's performances. The woodcut is of a more
+modern character than Mr. Adams's, and delineates a bellman in a
+three-cornered hat, modern coat, breeches, and stockings, a bell in his
+right hand, and a small dog by his side. The bellman is represented as
+standing in front of the old Shire Hall in Cambridge, having Hobson's
+Conduit on his right.
+
+The subjects of Mr. Moule's verses are similar to those of Mr. Adams, with
+the following variations. He omits verses to the Town Clerk, the Members
+for the Town, the Queen, on Charity, and on Religion, and inserts verses
+"On St. Crispin," and "To my Masters and Mistresses."
+
+The office of bellman in this town was abolished in 1836, and to the
+bellman's verses have succeeded similar effusions from the lamplighters,
+who distribute copies when soliciting Christmas boxes from the inhabitants.
+
+C. H. COOPER.
+
+Cambridge, April 28. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Replies to Minor Queries.
+
+"_God takes those soonest_," &c. (Vol. iii., p. 302.).--In Morwenstow
+churchyard, Cornwall, there is this epitaph on a child:--
+
+ "Those whom God loves die young!
+ They see no evil days,--
+ No falsehood taints their tongue,
+ No wickedness their ways.
+
+ "Baptized, and so made sure,
+ To win their blest abode,--
+ What shall we pray for more?
+ They die, and are with God!"
+
+C. E. H.
+
+The belief expressed in these words is of great antiquity. See the story of
+Cleobis and Biton, in Herod. l. 31., and the verse frown the [Greek: Dis
+exapaton] of Menander:
+
+ "[Greek: Hon hoi theoi philousin apothneskei neos]."
+ Meineke, _Fragm. Com. Gr._, vol. iv. p. 105.
+
+L.
+
+I would suggest to T. H. K. that the origin of this line is Menander's
+
+ "[Greek: Hon hoi theoi philousin apothneskei neos]."
+ Fragm. 128. in Meineke, _Fr. Com. Gr._
+
+imitated by Plautus:
+
+ "Quem di diligunt adulescens moritur."
+ _Bacch._ iv. 7. 18.
+
+whence the English adage,
+
+ "Whom the gods love die young."
+
+Wordsworth's _Excur._, b. i., has this sentiment:
+
+ "O, Sir, the good die first,
+ And those whose hearts are dry as summer dust,
+ Burn to the socket."
+
+C. P. PH****.
+
+ [Several other correspondents have kindly replied to this Query.]
+
+{378}
+
+_Disinterment for Heresy_ (Vol. iii, p. 240.).--Mr. Tracy's will, dated
+10th October, 22d Henry VIII. [1530], is given at length in Hall's
+_Chronicle_ (ed. 1809, p. 796.), where will be found the particulars of the
+case to which ARUN alludes. See also Burnet's _History of the Reformation_
+(ed. 1841, vol. i. pp. 125. 657, 658. 673.), and Strype's _Annals of the
+Reformation_, vol. i. p. 507. Strype states that Mr. Tracy's body was dug
+up and burnt "anno 1532." William Tyndale wrote _Exposition on Mr. Will.
+Tracies Will_, published in 8vo. at Nuremburgh, 1546. (Wood's _Athen.
+Oxon._, vol. i. p. 37.)
+
+C. H. COOPER.
+
+Cambridge, April 2. 1851.
+
+"William Tracy, a worshipful esquire in Gloucestershire, and then dwelling
+at Todington," made a will, which was thought to contain heretical
+sentiments. His executor having brought in this will to be proved two years
+after Tracy's death (in 1532), "the Convocation most cruelly judged that he
+should be taken out of the ground, and burnt as an heretick," which was
+accordingly done; but the chancellor of the diocese of Worcester, to whom
+the commission was sent for the burning, was fined 300_l_. for it by King
+Henry VIII. Such is the story in Fox's _Martyrs_, anno 1532 (vol. ii. p.
+262. ed. 1684, which I have before me).
+
+EXON.
+
+The date and some particulars of the exhumation of the body of W. Tracy,
+Esq., of Toddington Park, ancestor of the present Lord Sudeley, ARUN will
+find in Foxe's _Acts and Monuments_, vol. v. p. 31. ed. 1843, and the note
+in appendix will point out other sources.
+
+NOVUS.
+
+_The Vellum-bound Junius_ (Vol. iii., pp. 262. 307.).--In the Number dated
+April 19, 1851, p. 307., is a request for information relative to the
+"Vellum-bound copy of Junius;" also a reference to the subject in a prior
+number of the "NOTES AND QUERIES." Not being in England, and not having the
+prior numbers, it is not possible to make myself acquainted with the
+subject contained in that reference, but I will endeavour to throw some
+light on the Query in the Number which has been forwarded to me. The writer
+of the _Letters of Junius_ was the secretary of the first Marquis of
+Lansdowne, better known as Lord Shelburne. From his Lordship he obtained
+all the political information necessary for his compositions. The late
+Marquis of Lansdowne possessed the copy bound in vellum (two volumes), with
+many notes on the margin in Lord Shelburne's handwriting; they were kept
+locked up in a beautiful ebony casket bound and ornamented with brass. That
+casket has disappeared, at least so I have been told, and not many years
+ago inquiry was made for it by the present head of that house. Maclean was
+a dark, strong-featured man, who wore his hat slouched over his eyes, and
+generally a large cloak. He often corrected the slips or proofs of his
+letters at Cox's, a well-known printer near Lincoln's Inn, who deemed
+himself bound in honour never to divulge what he knew of that publication,
+and was agitated when once suddenly spoken to on the subject near the door
+of the small room in which the proofs were corrected, and with a high and
+honourable feeling requested never to be again spoken to on the subject.
+The late President of the Royal Academy, Benjamin West, knew Maclean; and
+his son, the late Raphael West, told the writer of these remarks, that when
+a young man he had seen him in the evening at his father's in Newman
+Street, and once heard him repeat a passage in one of the letters which was
+not then published. A more correct and veracious man than Mr. R. West could
+not be. Maclean stammered, and was consequently of no use to Lord Shelburne
+as a debater and supporter in parliament. A place in the East Indies was
+obtained for him, and he sailed in the Aurora frigate for that dependency,
+and was lost in her at the same time with Falconer, the author of the poem
+entitled _The Shipwreck_. The able tract published by Mr. Pickering,
+Piccadilly, would constitute a fair foundation on which to build the
+inquiry.
+
+AEGROTUS.
+
+_Pursuits of Literature_ (Vol. iii., p. 240.).--I trust that the following
+notes may be useful in assisting your correspondent S. T. D. to ascertain
+"how the author of the _Pursuits of Literature_ became known." The first
+edition of the first part of the _Pursuits of Literature_ appears to have
+been published in quarto, by J. Owen, 168. Piccadilly, in 1794. In a volume
+of pamphlets I have the above bound up with the following:--
+
+ "The Sphinx's Head Broken: or a Poetical Epistle, with notes to THOMAS
+ JAMES M*TH**S, Cl*rk to the Q***n's Tr**s*r*r. Proving him to be the
+ author of the Pursuits of Literature: a Satirical Poem. With occasional
+ Digressions and Remarks. By Andrew Oedipus, an injured Author. London:
+ Printed for J. Bell, No. 148. Oxford Street, opposite New Bond Street,
+ MDCCXCVIII."
+
+This epistle is a very severe castigation for Mathias, whom Oedipus styles
+the "little black jogging man," whose
+
+ "Politics and religion are very well, but he is a detestable pedant,
+ and his head is a lumber-garret of Greek quotations, which he raps out
+ as a juggler does ribbands at a country fair."
+
+And speaking of "Chuckle Bennet," he calls him in a note,
+
+ "A good calf-headed bookseller in Pall Mall, the intimate confidant and
+ crony of little M*th**s, and who, upon Owen's bankruptcy, published
+ Part IV. of _Pursuits of Literature_ himself."
+
+Of Owen, who published Part I., our author says: {379}
+
+ "Hither the sly little fellow got crony Becket to send his satirical
+ trumpery;"
+
+which is further explained in the following note:
+
+ "Becket's back door is in an alley close to his house; here have I
+ often seen little M*th**s jog in and sit upon thorns for fear of being
+ seen, in the back-parlour, chattering matters over with old Numscull.
+ After passing through many hands, the proof sheets at last _very slily_
+ reached little M*th**s that he might revise the learned lumber."
+
+After alluding to several pieces published by Mathias, our unmerciful
+critic adds in another note:
+
+ "It is very remarkable how strongly the characteristic features of
+ identity of authorship are marked in these several pieces; the little
+ man had not even the wit to print them in a different manner, yet
+ strange to tell, few, very few, could smell the he-goat!
+
+ "Who reads thy _hazy weather_ but must swear,
+ 'Tis Thomas James M*th**s to a hair!"
+
+MERCURII.
+
+_Dutch Books_ (Vol. iii., p. 326.).--MARTINUS is probably aware that the
+library of the Fagel family is now a part of the University Library of
+Dublin, and that it contains a very fine collection of Dutch literature, in
+which it is very possible some of the books of which he is in search may be
+found.
+
+The auction catalogue prepared in 1800, when the library was to have been
+sold by auction, had it not been purchased by the University of Dublin, is
+printed, and a copy of it is at his service, if he will inform me through
+you how to send it to him.
+
+This library contains many rare tracts and documents well worthy of Mr.
+Macaulay's attention, if he is about to continue his history of the
+Revolution; but I have not heard whether he has made any inquiry after
+them, or whether he is aware of their existence. There is a curious MS.
+catalogue of them in the possession of the University, which was too
+voluminous to be printed, when the library was about to be sold.
+
+HIBERNICUS.
+
+_Engilbert, Archbishop of Treves_ (Vol. i., p 214.).--There can be no doubt
+that the bishop's reference is incorrect, and the suggestion of T. J. (Vol.
+iii., p. 291.) to consult the reprint of 1840 affords no aid in setting it
+right; for there we find (p. 178.) a note as follows:
+
+ "There was no Engilbert, Archbishop of Treves, nor is there any work in
+ this name in Goldasti."
+
+I have, however, consulted Mr. Bowden's _Life and Pontificate of Gregory
+VII._, in order, if possible, to find a clue; and in a note in vol. ii. p.
+246. of that work is a statement of the hesitation of the Pope on the
+doctrine of the eucharist, with a reference as follows:
+
+ "Vid. _Egilberti_ archiep. Trevir. epist. adv. Greg. VII., in Eccardi
+ Corp. historic. Medii Aevi. t. ii. p. 170."
+
+This reference I have verified, and found in the epistle of Egilbertus the
+passage which, no doubt, Bishop Cosin refers to, and which Mr. Bowden
+cites:
+
+ "En verus pontifex et sacerdos, qui dubitat si illud quod sumatur in
+ dominica mensa sit verum corpus et sanguis Christi!"
+
+So much for that part of the difficulty, but another still remains. Was
+there ever an Egilbertus, or Engilbertus, Archbishop of Treves? To solve
+this question I consulted a list of the Archbishops of Treves in the
+_Bibliotheque Sacree_ of Richard et Giraud, and I there find the following
+statement:
+
+ "_Engelbert_, grand-prevot de Passau, fut intrus par la faveur de
+ l'empereur Henri IV., et sacre par des eveques schismatiques. Il mourut
+ en 1101."
+
+TYRO.
+
+Dublin.
+
+_Charles Lamb's Epitaph_ (Vol. iii., p. 322.).--According to Mr. Thorne
+(_Rambles by Rivers_, 1st series, p. 190.) the inscription in the
+churchyard at Edmonton, to the memory of Charles Lamb, was written "by his
+friend, Dr. Carey, the translator of 'Dante.'" Mr. Thorne gives an anecdote
+concerning this inscription which I venture to transcribe, in the
+expectation that it may interest your correspondent MARIA S., and others of
+your numerous readers.
+
+ "We heard a piece of criticism on this inscription that Lamb would have
+ enjoyed. As we were copying it, a couple of canal excavators came
+ across the churchyard, and read it over with great deliberation; when
+ they had finished, one of them said, 'A very fair bit of poetry that;'
+ 'Yes,' replied his companion, 'I'm blest if it isn't as good a bit as
+ any in the churchyard; rather too long, though.'"
+
+By "Dr. Carey," of course, is meant the Rev. Henry Francis Cary, M.A.,
+Vicar of Bromley Abbots, Staffordshire, and Assistant Librarian in the
+British Museum, as he was the translator of "Dante," and an intimate friend
+of Charles Lamb.
+
+C. H. COOPER.
+
+Cambridge, April 28. 1851.
+
+_Charles II. in Wales_ (Vol. iii., p. 263.).--In answer to DAVYDD GAM'S
+Query, it may be observed that I have never heard of the tradition in
+question, nor have I met with any evidence to show that Charles II. was in
+any part of Wales at this period. In "The true Narrative and Relation of
+his most sacred Majesty's Escape from Worcester," _Selection from the
+Harleian Miscellany_, 4to., p. 380., it is stated that the king meditated
+the scheme of crossing into Wales from White Ladies, the house of the
+Penderells, but that "the design was crossed." One of the "Boscobel
+Tracts," at p. 137., treating of the same period, and compiled by the king
+himself in 1680, mentions his {380} intention of making his escape another
+way, which was to get over the Severn into Wales, and so get either to
+Swansea, or some other of the sea towns that he knew had commerce with
+France; beside that he "remembered several honest gentlemen" that were of
+his acquaintance. However, the scheme was abandoned, and the king fled to
+the southward by Madeley, Boscobel, &c., to Cirencester, Bristol, and into
+Dorsetshire, and thence to Brighton, where he embarked for France on the
+15th Oct., 1651.
+
+Lancaiach is still in possession of the Prichard family, descendants of
+Col. Prichard.
+
+There is a tradition that Charles I. slept there on his way from Cardiff
+Castle to Brecon, in 1645, and the tester of the bed in which his Majesty
+slept is stated to have been in the possession of a Cardiff antiquary now
+deceased. The facts of the case appear in the _Iter Carolinum_, printed by
+Peck (_Desiderata Curiosa_). The king stayed at Cardiff from the 29th July
+to the 5th August, 1645, on which day he dined at Llancaiach, and supped at
+Brecon.
+
+J. M. T.
+
+"_Ex Pede Herculem_" (Vol. iii., p. 302.).--The following allusion to the
+foot of Hercules occurs in _Herodotus_, book iv. section 82.:
+
+ "[Greek: Ichnos Herakleos phainousi en petrei eneon, to oike men bemati
+ andros, esti de to megathos dipechu, para ton Turen potamon.]"
+
+ ALFRED GATTY.
+
+The origin of this phrase is connected with the following story:--A certain
+Greek (whose name has for the present escaped me, but who must have been
+ready to contribute to the "NOTES AND QUERIES" of his time) was one day
+observed carefully "stepping" over the [Greek: aulos] or footrace-course at
+Olympia; and he gave as a reason for so doing, that when that race-course
+was originally marked out, it was exactly six hundred times as long as
+Hercules' foot (that being the distance Hercules could run without taking
+breath): so that by ascertaining how many times the length of his own foot
+is contained, he would know how much Hercules' foot exceeded his foot in
+length, and might therefrom calculate how much Hercules' stature exceeded
+that of ordinary men of those degenerate days.
+
+J. EASTWOOD.
+
+Ecclesfield.
+
+This proverb does not appear to be of classical origin. Several proverbs of
+a similar meaning are collected in Diogenian, v. 15. The most common is,
+[Greek: ek ton onuchon ton leonta], _ex ungue leonem_. The allusion to
+Hercules is probably borrowed from some fable.
+
+L.
+
+_Bucaneers_ (Vol. i., p. 400.).--Your correspondent C. will find an
+interesting account of the Bucaneers in a poem by M. Poirie St. Aurele,
+entitled _Le Flibustier_, and published by Ambroise Dupont & Co., Paris,
+1827. The Introduction and Notes furnish some curious particulars relative
+to the origin, progress, and dissolution of those once celebrated pirates,
+and to the daring exploits of their principal leaders, Montauban, Grammont,
+Monbars, Vand-Horn, Laurent de Graff, and Sir H. Morgan. The book contains
+many facts which go far to support Bryan Edwards's favourable opinion. I
+may add that the author derives the French word _flibustier_ from the
+English _freebooter_, and the English word _bucaneer_ from the French
+_boucanier_; which latter word is derived from _boucan_, an expression used
+by the Caribs to describe the place where they assembled to make a repast
+of their enemies taken in war.
+
+HENRY H. BREEN.
+
+St. Lucia, March, 1851.
+
+_God's Acre_ (Vol. iii., p. 284.).--By a _Saxon_ phrase, MR. LONGFELLOW
+undoubtedly meant _German_. In Germany _Gottes-acker_ is a name for
+churchyard; and it is to be found in Wachter's _Glossarium Germanicum_, as
+well as in modern dictionaries. It is true there is the other word
+_Kirchhof_, perhaps of more modern date.
+
+ "GOTS-AKER. Caemeterium. Quasi ager Dei, quia corpora defunctorum
+ fidelium comparantur semini. 1 Cor. xv. 36., observante Keyslero in
+ _Antiq. Septentr._ p. 109."--Wachter's _Gloss. Germanicum_.
+
+Very interesting are also the other allegorical names which have been given
+to the burial-places of the dead. They are enlarged upon in Minshew's
+_Guide to Tongues_, under the head "Churchyard."
+
+ "Caemeterium (from the Greek), signifying a dormitory or place of
+ sleep. And a Hebrew term (so Minshew says), Beth-chajim, _i. e._ domus
+ viventium, 'The house of the living,' in allusion to the resurrection."
+
+Our matter-of-fact "Church-_yard_ or inclosure" falls dull on the ear and
+mind after any of the above titles.
+
+HERMES.
+
+_God's Acre._--The term _God's Acre_, as applied to a church-garth, would
+seem to designate the consecrated ground set apart as the resting-place of
+His faithful departed, sown with immortal seed (1 Cor. xv. 38.), which
+shall be raised in glory at the great harvest (Matt. xiii. 39.; Rev. xiv.
+15.). The church-yard is "dedicated wholly and only for Christian burial,"
+and "the bishop and ordinary of the diocese, as _God's minister, in God's
+stead accepts it_ as a freewill offering, to be severed from all former
+profane and common uses, to be held as holy ground," and "to be _God's
+storehouse_ for the bodies of His saints there to be interred." See "Bishop
+Andrewes' Form of Consecration of a Churchyard," _Minor Works_, pp.
+328-333., Oxf., 1846.
+
+MACKENZIE WALCOTT, M.A.
+
+{381}
+
+P.S. When was the name of _Poet's Corner_ first attached to the south
+transept of Westminster Abbey?
+
+Jermyn Street.
+
+_Abbot Eustacius_, of whom J. L. (Vol. iii., p. 141.) asks, was the Abbot
+of Flay, and came over from Normandy to England, and preached all through
+this kingdom with much effect in the beginning of John's reign, A. D. 1200,
+as Roger Hovedene tells us, _Annal._, ed. Savile, London, 1596, _fos._ 457.
+_b_, 466. _b._ Wendover (iii. 151.) and Matt. Paris _in anno_, mention him.
+
+D. ROCK.
+
+_Vox Populi Vox Dei_ (Vol. iii., p. 288.) is, I find, a much older proverb
+in England than Edward III.'s reign, for whose coronation sermon it was
+chosen the text, not by Simon Mepham, but Walter Reynolds, as your
+correspondent ST. JOHNS rightly says. Speaking of the way in which St. Odo
+yielded his consent to the Abp. of Canterbury, circ. A. D. 920, William of
+Malmesbury writes: "Recogitans illud proverbium, _Vox populi vox
+Dei_."--_De Gestis Pont._, L. i. fo. 114., ed. Savile.
+
+D. ROCK.
+
+_Francis Moore and his Almanack_ (Vol. iii., p. 263.).--Mr. Knight, in his
+_London_, vol. iii. p. 246., throws a little light on this subject:
+
+ "The renowned Francis Moore seems to have made his first appearance
+ about the end of the seventeenth century. He published a _Kalendarium
+ Ecclesiasticum_ in 1699, and his earliest _Vox Stellarum_ or _Almanac_,
+ as far as we can discover, came out in 1701," &c.
+
+But Mr. Knight is not sure that "Francis Moore" was not a _nom de guerre_,
+although at p. 241. he gives the portrait of the "Physician" from an
+anonymous print, published in 1657.
+
+A. A.
+
+Abridge.
+
+There is an Irish edition published in Drogheda, sold for threepence, and
+_embellished_ with a portrait of Francis Moore. Can Ireland claim this
+worthy? Many farmers and others rely much on the weather prophecies of this
+almanack. A tenant of mine always announces to me triumphantly that "Moore
+is right:" but his triumphs come at very long intervals.
+
+K.
+
+I can answer part of H. P. W.'s Query. Francis Moore's celebrated
+_Almanack_ first appeared in 1698. We have this date upon his own
+confession. Before his _Almanack_ for 1771 is a letter which begins thus:
+
+ "Kind Reader,
+
+ "This being the 73rd year since my Almanack first appeared to the
+ world, and having for several years presented you with observations
+ that have come to pass to the admiration of many, I have likewise
+ presented you with several hieroglyphics," &c.
+
+EDWARD F. RIMBAULT.
+
+That such a personage really did exist there can be little doubt, Bromley
+(in _Engraved Portraits, &c._) gives 1657 as the date of his birth, and
+says that there was a portrait of him by Drapentier _ad vivum_. Lysons
+mentions him as one of the remarkable men who, at different periods,
+resided at Lambeth, and says that his house was in Calcott's Alley, High
+Street, then called Back Lane, where he seems to have enlightened his
+generation in the threefold capacity of astrologer, physician, and
+schoolmaster.
+
+J. C. B.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Miscellaneous.
+
+NOTES ON BOOKS, SALES, CATALOGUES, ETC.
+
+Professor De Morgan has just furnished a new contribution to _L' Art de
+verifier les Dates_, in the shape of a small but most useful and practical
+book, entitled _The Book of Almanacks, with an Index of Reference, by which
+the Almanack may be found for every year, whether in the Old Style or New,
+from any Epoch Ancient or Modern up to_ A. D. 2000. _With means of finding
+the Day of any New or Full Moon from_ B. C. 2000 _to_ A. D. 2000. An
+example will show, better even than this ample title-page, the great
+utility of this work to the historical enquirer. Walter Scott, speaking of
+the battle of Bannockburn, which was fought on the day of St. John the
+Baptist, June 24, 1314, says,
+
+ "It was a night of lovely June,
+ High rose in cloudless blue the moon."
+
+Now, should the reader be desirous of testing the accuracy of this
+statement, (and how many statements have ere this been tested by the fact
+of the moon's age!), he turns to Professor De Morgan's Index, which at 1314
+gives Epact 3., Dominical Letter F., Number of Almanack 17. Turning to this
+almanack, he finds that the 24th June was on a Monday; from the
+Introduction (p. xiii.) and a very easy calculation, he learns that the
+full moon of June, 1314, would be on the 27th, or within a day, and from a
+more exact method (at p. xiv.), that the full moon was within two hours of
+nine A.M., on the 28th. So that Sir Walter was correct, there being more
+than half moon on the night of which he was speaking. Such an instance as
+the one cited will show how valuable the _Book of Almanacks_ must prove to
+all historical students, and what a ready test it furnishes as to accuracy
+of dates, &c. It must take its place on every shelf beside Sir H. Nicolas'
+_Chronology of History_.
+
+We doubt not that many of our readers share our feeling as to the
+importance of children's books, from the influence they may be destined to
+exercise upon generations yet unborn. To all such we shall be doing
+acceptable service by pointing out Mrs. Alfred Gatty's little volume, _The
+Fairy Godmothers and other Tales_, as one which combines the two essentials
+of good books for children; namely, imagination to attract, and sound
+morals to instruct. Both these requisites will be found in Mrs. Gatty's
+most pleasing collection of tales, which do not require the very clever
+frontispiece by Miss Barker to render the volume an acceptable gift to all
+"good little Masters and Mistresses." {382}
+
+Messrs. Sotheby and Wilkinson (3. Wellington Street, Strand) will commence
+on Monday a six-days' Sale of most interesting Autograph Letters,
+Historical Documents, and original MSS. of distinguished writers, as that
+of _Kenilworth_ in the Autograph of Sir W. Scott, of _Madoc_ in that of
+Southey, unpublished poems by Burns, and _Le Second Manuscrit venu de St.
+Helene_. One of the most curious Lots is No. 1035, Shakspeare's play of
+_Henry IV._, two parts condensed into one,--a contemporary and unique
+Manuscript, being the only one known to exist of any of the productions by
+the Sweet Bard of Avon. It is presumed to be a playhouse copy with
+corrections in the Autograph of Sir Edward Deering of Surrenden, in Kent,
+(who died in 1644); and, as no printed copy is known to contain the various
+corrections and alterations therein, is supposed to have been so corrected
+for the purposes of private representation, it being well known that
+theatricals formed a portion of the amusements in vogue at that baronet's
+country seat during the early portion of the reign of James I. Our readers
+will remember that the Shakspeare Society showed their sense of its value
+by printing it under the editorship of Mr. Halliwell.
+
+CATALOGUES RECEIVED.--Emerson Charnley's (45. Bigg Market,
+Newcastle-upon-Tyne) Catalogue Part IV. of Books Old and New; W. Brown's
+(46. High Holborn) Catalogue Part LIII. of Valuable Second-hand Books.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BOOKS AND ODD VOLUMES WANTED TO PURCHASE.
+
+ DIANA (ANTONINUS) COMPENDIUM RESOLUTIONEM MORALIUM. Antwerp.-Colon.
+ 1634-57.
+
+ PASSIONAEL EFTE DAT LEVENT DER HEILIGEN. Folio. Basil, 1522.
+
+ CARTARI--LA ROSA D'ORO PONTIFICIA. 4to. Rome, 1681.
+
+ BROEMEL, M. C. H., FEST-TANZEN DER ERSTEN CHRISTEN. Jena, 1705.
+
+ THE COMPLAYNT OF SCOTLAND, edited by Leyden. 8vo. Edin. 1801.
+
+ THOM'S LAYS AND LEGENDS OF VARIOUS NATIONS. Parts I. to VII. 12mo.
+ 1834.
+
+ L'ABBE DE SAINT PIERRE, PROJET DE PAIX PERPETUELLE. 3 Vols. 12mo.
+ Utrecht, 1713.
+
+ CHEVALIER RAMSAY, ESSAI DE POLITIQUE, ou l'on traite de la Necessite,
+ de l'Origine, des Droits, des Bornes en des differentes Formes de la
+ Souverainete, selon les Principes de l'Auteur de Telemaque. 2 Vols.
+ 12mo. La Haye, without date, but printed in 1719.
+
+ The same. Second Edition, under the title "Essai Philosophique sur le
+ Gouvernement Civil, selon les Principes de Fenelon," 12mo. Londres,
+ 1721.
+
+ PULLEN'S ETYMOLOGICAL COMPENDIUM, 8vo.
+
+ COOPER'S (C. P.) ACCOUNT OF PUBLIC RECORDS, 8vo. 1822. Vol. I.
+
+ LINGARD'S HISTORY OF ENGLAND. Sm. 8vo. 1837. Vols. X. XI. XII. XIII.
+
+ MILLER'S (JOHN, OF WORCESTER COLL.) SERMONS. Oxford, 1831 (or about
+ that year).
+
+*** 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.
+
+_Although we have this week again enlarged our paper to twenty-four pages,
+we have been compelled to postpone many interesting articles. Among these
+we may particularise "Illustrations of Chaucer, No. VI.," a valuable paper
+by_ MR. SINGER _on "John Tradescant," and another on the "Tradescent
+Family" by_ MR. PINKERTON; _and many Replies_.
+
+A. X. _The Brussels edition of the_ Biographie Universelle _is in 21 vols.
+Bickers of Leicester Square marks a copy half-bound in 7 vols. at Five
+Guineas._
+
+TRIVIA _and_ A. A. D. _The oft-quoted line_ "TEMPORA MUTANTUR," &c., _is
+from Borbonius_. _See_ "NOTES AND QUERIES," Vol. i., pp. 234. 419.
+
+A. A. D. _is referred to_ p. 357. _of our last Number for an explanation of
+"Mind your Ps and Qs."_
+
+NEMO'S _Query respecting Pope Joan was inserted in_ No. 75. p. 265.; _a
+Reply to it appears in_ No. 77. p. 306.; _and we have several more
+communications to which we hope to give insertion next week_.
+
+REPLIES RECEIVED.--_Ramasse--Prayer at the Healing--M. or N.--Deans Very
+Reverend--Family of the Tradescants--Epitaph on the Countess of
+Pembroke--West Chester--Demosthenes and New Testament--Pope Joan--Handbills
+at Funerals--Ventriloquist Hoax--Solid-hoofed Pigs--Aerial
+Apparitions--Apple-pie Order--Wife of James Torre--Snail-eating--Epigram by
+T. Dunbar._
+
+VOLS. I. _and_ II., _each with very copious Index, may still be had, price_
+9s. 6d. _each_.
+
+NOTES AND QUERIES _may be procured, by order, of all Booksellers and
+Newsvenders. It is published at noon on Friday, so that our country
+Subscribers ought not to experience any difficulty in procuring it
+regularly. Many of the country Booksellers, &c., are, probably, not yet
+aware of this arrangement, which will enable them to receive_ NOTES AND
+QUERIES _in their Saturday parcels_.
+
+_All communications for the Editor of_ NOTES AND QUERIES _should be
+addressed to the care of_ MR. BELL, No. 186. Fleet Street.
+
+ERRATA.--Page 336. l. 4. for "Burkdo_n_" read "Burkdo_u_." (i. e.
+Bourdeaux); p. 341. l. 11. for "la_u_rando" read "la_ce_rando;" and in p.
+352. instead of between the years "1825 and 1850," read "1825 and 1830;"
+and we are requested to add that the churchwardens' account of S. Mary de
+Castro, Leicester, had disappeared from the parish chest long prior to the
+time mentioned.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PRINTING.
+
+A LECTURE, SPEECH, SERMON, OR ORATION, occupying about three quarters of an
+hour in delivery, printed on good paper, in bold clear type: 500 copies,
+3l. 17s. 6d.; 1000 copies, 5l. 10s. 1000 Circulars, Note Size, printed on
+Cream-laid Note Paper, fly leaf, 17s. 6d., 1000 Ditto, on Superfine
+Cream-laid Letter Paper, fly leaf, 1l. 5s.
+
+BATEMAN and HARDWICKE, 38. Carey Street, Lincoln's Inn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+This day is published, fcap. 8vo., price 5s.,
+
+PLEASURES, OBJECTS, and ADVANTAGES of LITERATURE. By the Rev. R. A.
+WILLMOTT, St. Catherine's, Bear Wood, Author of "Jeremy Taylor, a
+Biography."
+
+London: T. BOSWORTH, 215. Regent Street.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+NEW WORK BY PROFESSOR DE MORGAN.
+
+This day, in One Volume, oblong 8vo., price 5s., cloth,
+
+THE BOOK OF ALMANACS; with INDEX, by which the Almanac belonging to any
+Year preceding A. D. 2000 can be found; with means of finding New and Full
+Moons from B. C. 2000 to A. D. 2000. By AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN, Professor of
+Mathematics in University College, London.
+
+The "Book of Almanacs" will enable any one to lay open before him the whole
+Almanac of any past year, of the present year, or of any future year, up to
+A. D. 2000, whether in old style or new, by one consultation of a simple
+Index. This book will be useful to all who ever want an Almanac, past,
+present, or future;--to Clergymen, as a perpetual index to the Sundays and
+Festivals;--to Lawyers in arranging evidence which runs over a long period,
+and to Courts of Law in hearing it;--to Historical and Antiquarian
+Inquirers, in testing statements as to time and date;--to all, in fact, who
+are ever required to interest themselves about time past or future.
+
+TAYLOR, WALTON, and MABERLY, Upper Gower Street, and Ivy Lane, Paternoster
+Row.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Now ready, royal 8vo., pp. 1653. 21s.
+
+A COPIOUS AND CRITICAL LATIN-ENGLISH LEXICON, founded on the larger
+Latin-German Lexicon of DR. WILLIAM FREUND; with Additions and Corrections
+from the Lexicons of Gesner, Facciolati, Scheller, Georges, &c. &c. By
+E. A. ANDREWS, LL.D.
+
+London: SAMPSON LOW, 169. Fleet Street.
+New York: HARPER and BROTHERS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+{383}
+
+[Illustration]
+
+GREAT EXHIBITION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CENTRAL AVENUE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+An Illustrated Priced Catalogue of Church Furniture Contributed by
+
+ GILBERT J. FRENCH,
+ BOLTON, LANCASHIRE,
+
+forwarded Free by Post on application.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Parcels delivered Carriage Free in London, daily.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CATALOGUES OF JOHN RUSSELL SMITH'S LITERARY COLLECTIONS.
+
+1. Parts I. and II. of a Classified Catalogue of 25,000 Ancient and Modern
+Pamphlets.
+
+2. Books on the History and Topography of Great Britain, arranged in
+Counties.
+
+3. Twelve Hundred Books and Pamphlets relating to America.
+
+4. Five Hundred Books relating to the Counties of Kent, Sussex, and Surrey.
+
+5. Ancient Manuscripts, Deeds, Charters, and other Documents relating to
+English Families and Counties.
+
+6. Parts II. and III. for 1851, of Choice, Useful, and Curious Books, in
+most Classes of Literature, containing 1600 articles.
+
+*** Any of the above Catalogues may be had, gratis, on application, or any
+one will be sent by post on receipt of four postage labels to frank it.
+
+4. Old Compton Street, Soho, London.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Just published, 12mo. cloth, 5s.
+
+THE DIALECT AND FOLK-LORE OF NORTHAMPTONSHIRE. A Glossary of
+Northamptonshire Provincialisms, Collection of Fairy-Legends, Popular
+Superstitions, &c. By THOMAS STERNBERG.
+
+ "A skilful attempt to record a local dialect."--_Notes and Queries_,
+ No. 72.
+
+ "Mr Sternberg has evinced a striking and peculiar aptitude for this
+ branch of enquiry."--_Northampton Mercury._
+
+ "The notes on Folk-lore are curious, and worthy
+ consultation."--_Gentleman's Magazine._
+
+J. RUSSELL SMITH, 4. Old Compton Street, Soho, London.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+WESTERN LIFE ASSURANCE AND ANNUITY SOCIETY, 3. Parliament Street, London.
+
+VALUABLE NEW PRINCIPLE.
+
+Payment of premiums may be occasionally suspended without forfeiting the
+policy, on a new and valuable plan, adopted by this society only, as fully
+detailed in the prospectus.
+
+A. SCRATCHLEY, M.A.,
+
+Actuary and Secretary; Author of "Industrial Investment and Emigration;
+being a Second Edition of a Treatise on Benefit Building Societies, &c."
+Price 10s. 6d.
+
+London: J. W. PARKER, West Strand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+COMMITTEE FOR THE REPAIR OF THE TOMB OF GEOFFREY CHAUCER.
+
+JOHN BRUCE, Esq., Treas. S.A., 5, Upper Gloucester Street, Dorset Square.
+
+J. PAYNE COLLIER, Esq., V.P.S.A., Geys House, Maidenhead.
+
+PETER CUNNINGHAM, Esq., F.S.A., Madeley Villas, Kensington.
+
+WILLIAM RICHARD DRAKE, Esq., F.S.A., _Honorary Treasurer_, 46. Parliament
+Street.
+
+THOMAS W. KING, Esq., F.S.A., York Herald, College of Arms, St. Paul's.
+
+SIR FREDERICK MADDEN, K.H., British Museum.
+
+JOHN GOUGH NICHOLS, Esq., F.S.A., 25. Parliament St.
+
+HENRY SHAW, Esq., F.S.A., 37. Southampton Row, Russell Square.
+
+SAMUEL SHEPHERD, Esq., F.S.A., Marlborough Square, Chelsea.
+
+WILLIAM J. THOMS, Esq., F.S.A., _Honorary Secretary_, 25. Holy-Well Street,
+Millbank, Westminster.
+
+THE TOMB OF GEOFFREY CHAUCER IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY stands in need of repair.
+The portrait and the inscriptions have disappeared; the overhanging canopy
+has suffered damage; the table is chipped and broken; the base is fast
+mouldering into irretrievable decay.
+
+Such an announcement is calculated to stir every heart that can respond to
+the claims of poetry, or feel grateful for the delight which it affords to
+every cultivated mind. It summons us, like the sound of a trumpet, "To the
+rescue!" It cannot be that the first and almost the greatest of English
+bards should ever be allowed to want a fitting memorial in our "Poet's
+Corner," or that the monument which was erected by the affectionate respect
+of Nicholas Brigham, nearly three centuries ago, should, in our time, be
+permitted to crumble into dust.
+
+A sum under One Hundred Pounds will effect a perfect repair.
+
+It is thought that there can be no difficulty in raising such a sum, and
+that multitudes of people in various conditions of life, and even in
+distant quarters of the globe, who venerate the name of Chaucer, and have
+derived instruction and delight from his works, will be anxious to
+contribute their mite to the good deed.
+
+The Committee have therefore not thought it right to fix any limit to the
+subscription; they themselves, with the aid of several distinguished
+noblemen and gentlemen, have opened the list with a contribution from each
+of them of Five Shillings, but they will be ready to receive any amount,
+more or less, which those who value poetry and honour Chaucer may be kind
+enough to remit to them.
+
+The design of the Committee is sanctioned by the approval of the Earl of
+Carlisle, the Earl of Ellesmere, the Earl of Shaftesbury, Lord Braybrooke.
+Lord Londesborough, Lord Mahon, the Right Hon. C. W. W. Wynn, and by the
+concurrence of the Dean and Chapter of Westminster.
+
+An account of the sums received and expended will be published when the
+work is completed.
+
+Subscriptions are received by all the members of the Committee, and at the
+Union Bank, Pall Mall East. Post-office orders may be made payable to
+William Richard Drake, Esq., the Treasurer, 46. Parliament Street, at the
+Charing Cross Office.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+{384}
+
+In a few days will be published, in One handsome Volume 8vo., profusely
+Illustrated with Engravings by Jewitt,
+
+Some Account of Domestic Architecture in England;
+
+FROM
+
+THE CONQUEST TO THE END OF THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY.
+
+WITH
+
+NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS OF EXISTING REMAINS FROM ORIGINAL DRAWINGS.
+
+BY T. HUDSON TURNER.
+
+THE TABLE OF CONTENTS OF THIS VOLUME WILL BEST EXPLAIN ITS OBJECT.
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+ The Romans in England--Their Villas and Houses--Ordinary Plan of a
+ Roman House--Method of Building--The Saxons--Their Style of Building;
+ they probably occupied Roman Houses--A Saxon Hall--Houses of Winchester
+ and London in the Saxon Period--Decoration of Buildings--Romanesque
+ Style of Architecture introduced during the Saxon Period--Drawings in
+ Saxon MSS., their Character and Value as Architectural Evidence--The
+ Greek, or Byzantine School; its Influence on Saxon Art--Antiquity of
+ Chimneys; None at Rome in the Fourteenth Century--Character of the
+ Military Buildings of the Saxons--The Castles of Coningsburgh and
+ Bamborough later than the Saxon Period--Arundel, the only Castle said
+ to have been standing in the time of the Confessor--Norman
+ Castles--Domestic Architecture of the Normans--Stone Quarries--Use of
+ Plaster--Bricks and Tiles--Brickmaking, its Antiquity in
+ England--Masons and other Workmen--Glazing--Iron Works in
+ England--Architectural Designs of the Middle Ages, how made--Working
+ Moulds of Masons, &c.
+
+CHAPTER I.--TWELFTH CENTURY.
+
+ General Remarks--Imperfect Character of existing Remains of the Twelfth
+ Century--Materials for the History of Domestic Architecture; their
+ Nature--General Plan of Houses at this Date--Halls--Other Apartments of
+ Ordinary Houses--Bedchamber, Kitchen, Larder, &c.--King's Houses at
+ Clarendon and other Places--Hall, always the Chief Feature of a Norman
+ House--Alexander Necham, his Description of a House--Plan of Norman
+ Halls--Their Roofs--Situation of other Apartments relatively to the
+ Hall--Kitchens--Cooking in the Open Air--Bayeux Tapestry--Remains of a
+ Norman House at Appleton, Berks--Fences, Walls, &c.--Some Norman Houses
+ built in the form of a Parallelogram, and of Two Stories--Boothby
+ Pagnell, Lincolnshire--Christ Church, Hants--Jews' House at
+ Lincoln--Moyses' Hall, Bury St. Edmund's--Staircases, Internal and
+ External--External Norman Stair at Canterbury--Houses at
+ Southampton--Building Materials--Use of Lead for Roofs--English Lead
+ exported to France--Style of Norman Roofs--Metal Work; Hinges, Locks,
+ Nail-heads, &c.--Gloucester celebrated for its Iron
+ Manufactures--External Decoration of
+ Buildings--Windows--Glazing--Fire-places--Kitchens open in the
+ Roof--Hostelry of the Prior of Lewes--Internal Walls
+ Plastered--Furniture of Houses, Tapestry, &c--Floors generally of
+ Wood--Character London Houses in the Twelfth Century--Assize of 1189
+ regulating Buildings in London--Assize of the Year 1212 relating to the
+ same Subject--- Majority of London Houses chiefly of Wood and
+ Thatched--Wages of Workmen--Cookshops on Thames Side--Chimneys not
+ mentioned in the London Assizes, &c.
+
+CHAPTER II.--EXISTING REMAINS.
+
+ Oakham Castle, Rutlandshire--The King's House, Southampton--Minster,
+ Isle of Thanet--Christ Church, Hants--Manor-house at Appleton--Sutton
+ Courtney, Berks--St. Mary's Guild, and Jews' Houses,
+ Lincoln--Staircase, Canterbury--Warnford, Hants--Fountain's
+ Abbey--Priory, Dover--Moyses' Hall, Bury St. Edmund's--Hostelry of the
+ Prior of Lewes, Southwark--Boothby Pagnell, Lincolnshire--Barnack,
+ Northamptonshire--School of Pythagoras, Cambridge--Notes on Remains of
+ Early Domestic Architecture in France.
+
+CHAPTER III.--THIRTEENTH CENTURY.
+
+ General Remarks--Hall at Winchester--Reign of Henry III. remarkable for
+ the Progress of Architecture--Condition of Norman Castles in the
+ Thirteenth Century--Plan of Manor-houses at this Date--House built for
+ Edward I. at Woolmer, Hants--Description of House at Toddington, by M.
+ Paris--Meaning of term _Palatium_--Longthorpe, Stoke-Say Castle--West
+ Deane, Sussex--Aydon Castle--Little Wenham Hall--Two Halls at
+ Westminster, temp Henry III.--Temporary Buildings erected at
+ Westminster for the Coronation of Edward I.--Private Hospitality in
+ this Century--Kitchens--Wardrobes--Influence of Feudal Manners on
+ Domestic Architecture--Building Materials--Wood extensively
+ used--Manor-house of Timber engraved on a Personal Seal--Extensive Use
+ of Plaster--Roofs of the Thirteenth Century--Windows--Glass and
+ Glazing--Digression on the History of Glass-making in England--No Glass
+ made in England until the Fifteenth Century--Wooden Lattices,
+ Fenestrals, &c.--Fire-places and Chimneys--Mantels--Staircases,
+ External and Internal--Internal Decoration of
+ Houses--Wainscote--Polychrome--Artists of the Time of Henry III.; their
+ Style--Their Names--Spurs, Screens, &c.--Tapestry not used in Private
+ Dwellings in the Thirteenth Century. Flooring--Tiles--Baths Camerae
+ Privatae--Conduits and Drains--Houses in Towns--Parisian Houses--Other
+ Foreign Examples--Furniture--Carpets--General State of England in the
+ Thirteenth Century--State of Towns--London and Winchester
+ compared--Travelling--Hackneymen--Inns--State of Trade in
+ England--Agriculture--Remarks on Horticulture.
+
+CHAPTER IV.--THIRTEENTH CENTURY.--EXISTING REMAINS.
+
+ Aydon Castle, Northumberland--Godmersham, Kent--Little Wenham Hall,
+ Suffolk--Longthorpe, near Peterborough--Charney Basset, Berks--Master's
+ House, St. John's Hospital, Northampton--Stoke-Say Castle,
+ Shropshire--Coggs, Oxfordshire--Cottesford, Oxfordshire--Parsonage
+ House, West Tarring, Sussex--Archdeacon's House,
+ Peterborough--Crowhurst, Sussex--Bishop's Palace, Wells--Woodcroft
+ Castle, Northamptonshire--Old Rectory House, West Deane, Sussex--Acton
+ Burnell, Shropshire--Somerton Castle, Lincolnshire--Old Soar, Kent--The
+ King's Hall at Winchester--The Priory, Winchester--Stranger's Hall,
+ Winchester--House at Oakham, known as Flore's House--Thame,
+ Oxfordshire--Chipping-Norton, Oxfordshire--Middleton Cheney,
+ Oxfordshire--Sutton Courtney, Berkshire.
+
+CHAPTER V.--HISTORICAL ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+Extracts from the Liberate Rolls of Henry III., 1229-1259, relating to the
+following places:--
+
+ Bridgenorth -- Brigstock -- Brill -- Bristol -- Canterbury -- Clarendon
+ -- Cliff -- Clipstone -- Corfe Castle -- Dover -- Dublin -- Evereswell
+ -- Feckenham -- Freemantle -- Geddington -- Gillingham -- Gloucester --
+ Guildford -- Havering -- Hereford -- Hertford -- Kennington --
+ Litchfield -- London, (Tower) -- Ely House -- Ludgershall --
+ Marlborough -- Newcastle -- Northampton -- Nottingham -- Oxford --
+ Rochester -- Sherbourn -- Silverstone -- Westminster -- Winchester --
+ Windsor -- Woodstock.
+
+SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES OF FOREIGN EXAMPLES.
+
+ General Remarks -- Treves -- Laon -- Ratisbon -- Gondorf -- Metz --
+ Toulouse -- Laon -- Bree -- Coucy -- Carden -- Tours -- Angers --
+ Fontevrault, (Kitchen) -- Perigueux -- St. Emilion -- Mont St. Michel
+ -- Beauvais.
+
+APPENDIX OF DOCUMENTS.
+
+OXFORD: JOHN HENRY PARKER; AND 377. STRAND, LONDON.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Printed by THOMAS CLARK SHAW, of No. 8. New Street Square, at No. 5. New
+Street Square, in the Parish of St. Brid in the City of London; and
+published by GEORGE BELL, of No. 186. Fleet Street, in the Parish of St.
+Dunstan the West, in the City of London, Publisher, at No. 186. Fleet
+Street aforesaid.--Saturday, May 10. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Corrections made to printed original.
+
+page 366, "Knew William of Deloraine" - 'Delorane' in original.
+
+page 370, "At the end of a postscript" - 'postcript' in original.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Queries, Number 80, May 10,
+1851, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES AND QUERIES ***
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