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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Queries, Vol. III, Number 83, May
+31, 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, Vol. III, Number 83, May 31, 1851
+ A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists,
+ Antiquaries, Geneologists, etc
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: George Bell
+
+Release Date: July 29, 2011 [EBook #36835]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES AND QUERIES, MAY 31, 1851 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charlene Taylor, Jonathan Ingram and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NOTES AND QUERIES:
+
+A MEDIUM OF INTER-COMMUNICATION
+
+FOR
+
+LITERARY MEN, ARTISTS, ANTIQUARIES, GENEALOGISTS, ETC.
+
+
+"When found, make a note of."--CAPTAIN CUTTLE.
+
+
+VOL. III.--NO. 83--SATURDAY, MAI 31. 1851.
+
+Price Threepence. Stamped Edition 4_d._
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ Page
+
+ On the Proposed Record of Existing Monuments 417
+
+ NOTES:--
+
+ Illustrations of Chaucer, No. VII.: The star Min Al Auwâ 419
+
+ Traditions from remote Periods through few Links, by Rev.
+ Thos. Corser 421
+
+ Dr. Young's Narcissa 422
+
+ Minor Notes:--Curious Epitaph--The Curse of Scotland--The
+ Female Captive--Pictorial Antiquities 422
+
+ QUERIES:--
+
+ English Poems by Constantine Huyghens, by S. W. Singer 423
+
+ The Rev. Mr. Gay, by Edward Tagart 424
+
+ Minor Queries:--Carved Ceiling in Dorsetshire--Publicans'
+ Signs--To a T.--Skeletons at Egyptian Banquet--Gloves--Knapp
+ Family in Norfolk and Suffolk--To learn by "Heart"--Knights--
+ Supposed Inscription in St. Peter's at Rome--Rag Sunday in
+ Sussex--Northege Family--A Kemble Pipe of Tobacco--Durham
+ Sword that killed the Dragon 424
+
+ MINOR QUERIES ANSWERED:--"At Sixes and Sevens"--Swobbers--
+ Handel's Occasional Oratorio--Archbishop Waldeby's
+ Epitaph--Verstegan--Royal Library 425
+
+ REPLIES:--
+
+ Hugh Holland and his Works, by Bolton Corney 427
+
+ The Milesians 428
+
+ The Tanthony 428
+
+ Pilgrims' Road to Canterbury 429
+
+ Replies to Minor Queries:--Shakespeare's Use of
+ "Captious"--Inscription of a Clock--Authors of the Anti-Jacobin
+ Poetry--"Felix, quem faciunt," &c.--Church Bells--Chiming,
+ Tolling, and Pealing--Extraordinary North Briton--Fitzpatrick's
+ Lines of Fox--Ejusdem Farinæ--The Sempecta--"Nulli fraus
+ tuta latebris"--Voltaire, where situated--By the Bye--Bigod de
+ Loges--Knebsend--Mrs. Catherine Barton--Peter Sterry--Wife of
+ James Torre--Ramasse--Four Want Way--Dr. Owen's Works--Bactrian
+ Coins--Baldrocks--Tu Autem--Commoner marrying a Peeress--Ancient
+ Wood Engraving--Vegetating Insects--Prayer at the Healing--M.
+ or N., &c. 430
+
+ MISCELLANEOUS:--
+
+ Notes on Books, Sales, Catalogues, &c. 438
+
+ Books and Odd Volumes wanted 438
+
+ Notices to Correspondents 439
+
+ Advertisements 439
+
+
+
+
+ON THE PROPOSED RECORD OF EXISTING MONUMENTS.
+
+
+ Although disappointed in the hope we had entertained of being, by this
+ time, in a position to announce that some decided steps had been taken
+ to carry out, in a practical manner, the great scheme of preserving a
+ record of our existing Monuments, we are gratified at being enabled to
+ bring under the notice of our readers several communications which
+ show the still increasing interest which is felt upon the subject.
+
+ The first, by Sir Thomas Phillipps, besides some valuable information
+ upon the matter immediately under consideration, contains several very
+ useful suggestions upon other, though kindred points.
+
+In approving of the design mentioned in your "NOTES" by MR. DUNKIN, it
+has surprised me that in no one of the communications which you have
+there printed is any allusion to the multitude of inscriptions already
+collected, and now preserved in the British Museum and other libraries.
+A list of what are already copied should _first_ be made, which would
+considerably abridge the labour of collecting. For instance, the whole
+of Gloucestershire has been preserved by Bigland, and nearly two-thirds
+of these have been printed. I should recommend his plan to be adopted,
+being _multum in parvo_, as to the headstones in the churchyards, and
+the clearest for reference by its alphabetical order of parishes. He
+copies them about 1780; so that now seventy years remain to be obtained.
+His collection would make two, or at most three, volumes folio, by which
+we can form an approximate idea as to the extent for the kingdom, which
+I estimate at one hundred volumes for the forty counties, because some
+of these are very small, and many monuments have been destroyed by the
+barbarous Gothlike conduct of church renovators and builders. (_A
+propos_ of which conduct, I believe they are liable to an _action at
+law_ from the next of kin: at all events, it is sacrilege.) In many
+county histories, _all_ the monuments inside the churches, up to nearly
+the date of the publication, have been printed, as in Nichols's
+_Leicestershire_. I have myself printed the greater part of those for
+Wiltshire; but some are incorrectly printed, not having been collated;
+for I merely printed a few as handbooks to accompany me in my personal
+correcting survey of each church at another time. I have also printed as
+far as letter "E" of Antony à Wood's and Hinton's _Oxfordshire
+Monuments_, of which, I believe, MR. DUNKIN has a MS. copy. Now, it
+would be useless to reprint those which have been printed; consequently
+I should imagine twenty-five or thirty volumes, on Bigland's plan, would
+comprise all the villages; and I should imagine five or ten volumes at
+most would comprise all the capital towns. Allow me here to suggest the
+absolute necessity of taking "Notes" of the residence, parentage, and
+kindred of _every one_ of the families of that vast tide of emigration
+now quitting our shores; and I call Lord Ashley's and Mr. Sidney
+Herbert's attention to it. These poor people will, many of them, become
+rich in half a century; will then probably die without a kindred soul in
+America to possess their wealth; and their next of kin must be sought
+for in the mother land, where, unless some _registered memorial_ of
+their departure and connexions is kept, all traces of their origin may
+be lost for ever. It was the neglect of an act like this which has
+involved the beginning of nations in such profound obscurity. It was the
+neglect of such a register as I here propose, that makes it so difficult
+now for the American to discover the link which actually connected him
+with England. There is a corporate body, long established in this
+country, whose sole occupation is to make such registers; but at present
+they confine themselves to those called gentlemen. Why not make them
+useful as registers of the poor, at a small remuneration for entering
+each family. These poor, or their descendants, will some day become
+gentlemen, and perhaps not ashamed of their ancestry, although they may
+derive it through poverty. How gratified they may feel to be able, by
+means of this proposed registry, clearly to trace themselves to Great
+Britain (once the mistress of half the world), when their now adopted
+country has risen up in her place, and the mother has become subject to
+the daughter.
+
+And then, too, how valuable will Americans and Canadians, Australians
+and New Zealanders, find the proposed _Monumentarium_ of MR. DUNKIN.
+
+ THOS. PHILLIPPS.
+ Middle Hill, April, 1851.
+
+ The next is from a frequent contributor to our pages, and we have
+ selected it for publication from among many which we have received
+ promising assistance in the carrying out of the great scheme, because
+ it shows very strikingly how many of the memorials, which it is the
+ especial object of that scheme to preserve, have disappeared within
+ the last few years.
+
+Your valuable remarks on this head have induced me to send you a few
+observations in the same direction. You have justly said that the means
+by which the object can be accomplished fall into the three distinct
+operations of Collection, Preservation, and Publication. The first will
+require the help of all antiquaries throughout the kingdom who will
+volunteer their services, and of the clergymen resident in country
+parishes. Where possible, it would be well to find a co-operator in
+every county town, who would undertake the collection of all ancient
+memorials in his own district, either by personal inspection, or by the
+aid of the clergy. For this county we have, fortunately, a record of all
+or most of the monuments existing in the time of James I., published in
+Burton's History. Besides the monuments, there are also mentioned the
+coats of arms preserved in the churches. In the useful and voluminous
+world of Nichols, the record is brought down nearly to the commencement
+of the present century. But in late years, many ancient memorials have
+been removed altogether, or displaced. A day or two ago, I found only
+one monument in a village church, where Burton says there were two in
+his time. The chancel of St. Martin's Church, Leicester, a few years
+ago, contained a large number, of which many have been placed elsewhere,
+in order to "improve" the appearance of this part of the edifice. I
+believe a list of the monuments is preserved somewhere. This kind of
+proceeding has been carried on very generally throughout the country
+since the desire for "church restoration" has prevailed, and has led to
+great alterations in the interiors of our old parish churches. I should
+be happy to lend a helping hand in the collections for Leicester and the
+neighbourhood.
+
+ JAYTEE.
+
+ From our next communication, it will be seen that the Scottish
+ Antiquaries, whose zeal and intelligence in the preservation and
+ illustration of objects of national interest, are beyond all praise,
+ are working in the same direction; and although we have not seen the
+ _Origines Parochiales_, we can readily believe in the great value of a
+ work of such a character when undertaken by the Bannatyne Club.
+
+It may interest some of your "Monumental" and "Ecclesiological"
+correspondents to be informed that in 1834 there was collected and
+published by D. Macvean, bookseller, Glasgow, a volume of _Epitaphs and
+Monumental Inscriptions in Scotland_. Also, that there has just been
+published by Lizars, Edinburgh, for the Bannatyne Club, the first volume
+of the _Origines Parochiales Scotiæ_.
+
+The former of these books (_Epitaphs_, &c.) is perhaps of no great
+value, being badly selected and worse arranged; but the latter
+(_Origines_, &c.) seems to be exactly such a work as W. J. D. R. (Vol.
+iii., p. 314.) has in his mind's eye for England.
+
+ Y.
+
+ A correspondent, MERCURII, has also directed our attention to a small
+ volume, published in 1848, by one of the most valued contributors to
+ our own columns, MR. DAWSON TURNER, under the title of _Sepulchral
+ Reminiscences of a Market Town, as afforded by a List of the
+ Interments within the Walls of the Parish Church of St. Nicholas,
+ Great Yarmouth, collected chiefly from Monuments and Gravestones still
+ remaining, June, 1845_. This little volume may be regarded as a public
+ testimony on the part of MR. DAWSON TURNER to the value of the plan
+ under consideration, and there are few antiquaries whose opinions are
+ entitled to greater respect upon this or any other point to which he
+ has devoted his talents and attention. Can we doubt, then, the success
+ of a plan which has met with such general approbation, and is
+ undertaken with so praiseworthy an object,--an object which may well
+ be described in the words which Weever used when stating the motive
+ which led him to undertake the publication of his _Funeral Monuments_,
+ viz., "To check the unsufferable injury, offered as well to the living
+ as to the dead, by breaking down and almost utterly ruinating
+ monuments with their epitaphs, and by erasing, tearing away, and
+ pilfering brazen inscriptions, by which inhumane deformidable act, the
+ honorable memory of many virtuous and noble persons deceased is
+ extinguished, and the true understanding of divers families is so
+ darkened, that the course of their inheritance is thereby partly
+ interrupted."
+
+
+
+
+Notes.
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS OF CHAUCER, NO. VIII.
+
+_The Star Min Al Auwâ._
+
+ "Adam Scrivener, if ever it thee befall Boece, or Troilus, for to
+ write newe, Under thy long locks thou mayst have the scull But, after
+ my making, thou write more trew; So oft a day I mote thy worke renew,
+ It to correct, and eke to rubbe and scrape, And all thorow thy
+ negligence and rape."
+
+ _Chaucer to his own Scrivener._
+
+If, during his own lifetime, and under his own eye, poor Chaucer was so
+sinned against as to provoke this humorous malediction upon the head of
+the delinquent, it cannot be a matter of surprise that, in the various
+hands his text has since passed through, many expressions should have
+been perverted, and certain passages wholly misunderstood. And when we
+find men, of excellent judgment in other respects, proposing, as
+Tyrwhitt did, to alter Chaucer's words to suit their own imperfect
+comprehension of his meaning, it is only reasonable to suspect that
+similar mistakes may have induced early transcribers to alter the text,
+wherever, to their wisdom, it may have seemed expedient.
+
+Now I know of no passage more likely to have been tampered with in this
+way, than those lines of the prologue to the _Persone's Tale_, alluded
+to at the close of my last communication. Because, supposing (which I
+shall afterwards endeavour to prove) that Chaucer really meant to write
+something to this effect: "Thereupon, as we were entering a town, the
+moon's rising, with Min al auwâ in Libra, began to ascend (or to become
+visible),"--and supposing that his mode of expressing this had been,
+
+ "Therewith the mone's exaltacioun,
+ In libra men alawai gan ascende,
+ As we were entrying at a towne's end:"
+
+--in such a case, what can be more probable than that some ignorant
+transcriber, never perhaps dreaming of such a thing as the Arabic name
+of a star, would endeavour _to make sense_ of these, to him, obscure
+words, by converting them into English. The process of transition would
+be easy; "min" or "men" requires little violence to become "mene" (the
+modern "mean" with its many significations), and "al auwâ" (or "alwai,"
+as Chaucer would probably write it) is equally identical with "alway."
+The misplacement of "Libra" might then follow as a seeming necessity;
+and thus the line would assume its present form, leaving the reader to
+understand it, either with Urry, as,
+
+ "I mene Libra, that is, I _refer to_ Libra;"
+
+or with Tyrwhitt:
+
+ "In mene Libra, that is, In _the middle of_ Libra."
+
+Now, to Urry's reading, it may be objected that it makes _the thing
+ascending_ to be Libra, and does not of necessity imply the moon's
+appearance above the horizon. But since the rising of the moon is a
+_visible_ phenomenon, while that of Libra is theoretical, it must have
+been _to the former_ Chaucer was alluding, as to something witnessed by
+the whole party as they
+
+ "Were entrying at a towne's end;"
+
+or otherwise this latter observation would have no meaning.
+
+The objection to Tyrwhitt's reading is of a more technical nature--the
+moon, if in _the middle_ of Libra, _could not_ be above the horizon, in
+the neighbourhood of Canterbury, at four o'clock P. M., in the month of
+April. Tyrwhitt, it is true, would probably smooth away the difficulty
+by charging it as another inconsistency against his author; but I--and I
+hope by this time such readers of "NOTES AND QUERIES" as are interested
+in the subject--have seen too many proofs of Chaucer's competency in
+matters of science, and of his commentator's incompetency, to feel
+disposed to concede to the latter such a convenient method of
+interpretation.
+
+But there is a third objection common to both readings--that they do not
+satisfactorily account for the word "alway;" for although Tyrwhitt
+endeavours to explain it by _continually_, "was _continually_
+ascending," such a phrase is by no means intelligible when applied to a
+single observation.
+
+For myself, I can say that this word "alway" was, from the first, the
+great difficulty with me--and the more I became convinced of the studied
+meaning with which Chaucer chose his other expressions, the less
+satisfied I was with this; and the more convinced I felt that the whole
+line had been corrupted.
+
+In advocating the restoration of the reading which I have already
+suggested as the original meaning of Chaucer, I shall begin by
+establishing the _probability_ of his having intended to mark the moon's
+place by associating her rising with that of a known fixed star--a
+method of noting phenomena frequently resorted to in ancient astronomy.
+For that purpose I shall point out another instance wherein Chaucer
+evidently intended an application of the same method for the purpose of
+indicating a particular position of the heavens; but first it must
+noted, that in alluding to the Zodiac, he always refers _to the signs_,
+never to the constellations--in fact, he does not appear to recognise
+the latter at all! Thus, in that palpable allusion to the precession of
+the equinoxes, in the Frankeleine's Tale--
+
+ "He knew ful wel how fer Alnath was shove
+ From the hed of thilke fixe Aries above:"
+
+--by _the hed of Aries_, Chaucer did not mean the os frontis of the Ram,
+whereon Alnath still shines conspicuously, but the equinoctial point,
+from which Alnath _was shove_ by the extent of a whole sign.
+
+This being premised, I return to the indication of a point in the
+ecliptic by the coincident rising of a star; and I contend that such was
+plainly Chaucer's intention in those lines of the Squire's Tale wherein
+King Cambuscan is described as rising from the feast:--
+
+ "Phebus hath left the angle meridional,
+ And yet ascending was the beste real,
+ The gentle Leon, _with his Aldryan_."
+
+Which means that _the sign_ Leo was then in the horizon--the precise
+degree being marked by the coincident rising of the star Aldryan.
+
+Speght's explanation of "Aldryan," in which he has been copied by Urry
+and Tyrwhitt, is--"a star in the neck of the Lion." What particular star
+he may have meant by this, does not appear; nor am I at present within
+reach of probable sources wherein his authority, if he had any, might be
+searched for and examined; but I have learned to feel such confidence in
+Chaucer's significance of description, that I have no hesitation in
+assuming, until authority for a contrary inference shall be produced,
+that by the star "Aldryan" he meant REGULUS, not the neck, but the
+heart, of the Lion--
+
+1st. Because it is the most remarkable star in the sign Leo.
+
+2nd. Because it was, in Chaucer's time, as it now is, nearly upon the
+line of the ecliptic.
+
+3rd. Because its situation in longitude, about two-thirds in the sign
+Leo, just tallies with Chaucer's expression "_yet_ ascending,"--that is,
+one-third of the sign was still below the horizon.
+
+Let us examine how this interpretation consists with the other
+circumstances of the description. The feste-day of this Cambuscan was
+"The last idus of March"--that is, the 15th of March--"after the
+yere"--that is, after the _equinoctial year_, which had ended three or
+four days previously. Hence the sun was in three degrees of
+Aries--confirmed in Canace's expedition on the following morning, when
+he was "in the Ram foure degrees yronne," and his corresponding right
+ascension was twelve minutes. Now by "the angle meridional" was meant
+the two hours _inequall_ immediately succeeding noon (or while the "1st
+House" of the sun was passing the meridian), and these two hours may, so
+near the equinox, be taken as ordinary hours. Therefore, when "Phebus
+hath left the angle meridional," it was two o'clock P.M., or eight hours
+after sunrise, which, added to twelve minutes, produces eight hours
+twelve minutes as the ascending point of the equinoctial. The ascending
+point of _the ecliptic_ would consequently be twenty degrees in Leo, or
+within less than a degree of the actual place of the star Regulus, which
+in point of fact did rise on the 15th of March, in Chaucer's time,
+almost exactly at two in the afternoon.
+
+Such coincidences as these could not result from mere accident; and,
+whatever may have been Speght's authority for the location of Aldryan, I
+shall never believe that Chaucer would refer to an inferior star when
+the great "Stella Regia" itself was in so remarkable a position for his
+purpose--assuming always, as a matter of course, that he referred his
+phenomena, not to the country or age wherein he laid the action of his
+tale, but to his own.
+
+This, then, is the precedent by which I support the similar, and rather
+startling, interpretation I propose of these obscure words "In mena
+Libra alway."
+
+There are two twin stars, of the same magnitude, and not far apart, each
+of which bears the Arabic title of Min al auwâ; one (β Virginis)
+in the sign Virgo--the other (δ Virginis) in that
+of Libra.
+
+The latter, in the south of England, in Chaucer's time, would rise a few
+minutes before the autumnal equinoctial point, and might be called
+_Libra_ Min al auwâ either from that circumstance, or to distinguish it
+from its namesake in Virgo.
+
+Now on the 18th of April this Libra Min al auwâ would rise in the
+neighbourhood of Canterbury at about half-past three in the afternoon,
+so that by four o'clock it would attain an altitude of about five
+degrees--not more than sufficient to render the moon, supposing it to
+have risen with the star, visible (by daylight) to the pilgrims
+"entrying at a towne's end."
+
+It is very remarkable that the only year, perhaps in the whole of
+Chaucer's lifetime, in which the moon could have arisen with this star
+on the 18th of April, should be the identical year to which Tyrwhitt,
+_reasoning from historical evidence alone_, would fain attribute the
+writing of the _Canterbury Tales_. (Vide Introductory Discourse, note
+3.)
+
+On the 18th of April, 1388, Libra Min al auwâ, and the moon, rose
+together about half-past three P. M. in the neighbourhood of Canterbury;
+and Tyrwhitt, alluding to the writing of the _Canterbury Tales_, "_could
+hardly suppose it was much advanced before 1389!_"
+
+Such a coincidence is more than remarkable--it is convincing: especially
+when we add to it that 1388 "is the very date that, by a slight and
+probable injury to the last figure, might become the _traditional_ one
+of 1383!"
+
+Should my view, therefore, of the true reading of this passage in
+Chaucer be correct, it becomes of infinitely greater interest and
+importance than a mere literal emendation, because it supplies that
+which has always been supposed wanting to the _Canterbury Tales_, viz.,
+some means of identifying the year to which their action ought to be
+attributed. Hitherto, so unlikely has it appeared that Chaucer, who so
+amply furnishes materials for the minor branches of the date, should
+leave the year unnoted, that it has been accounted for in the
+supposition that he reserved it for the unfinished portion of his
+performance. But if we consider the ingenious though somewhat tortuous
+methods resorted to by him to convey some of the other data, it is by no
+means improbable that he might really have devised this circumstance of
+the moon's rising as a means of at least _corroborating_ a date that he
+might intend to record afterwards in more direct terms.
+
+ A. E. B.
+
+P.S.--Since writing the foregoing I have obtained, through the kindness
+of Mr. Thoms, the several readings of the lines commented upon in six
+different MSS. in the British Museum. And I have great satisfaction in
+finding that five out of the six confirm my hypothesis, at least with
+respect to the uncertain spelling of "alway." The readings in respect of
+the two words are these:
+
+ I meene alweye.
+ In mena alway.
+ I mene allweye.
+ In mene allwey.
+ I mene alweie.
+ I mene alwaye.
+
+I acknowledge that, from the first, if I could have discovered a
+probable interpretation of "mene" as an independent word, I should have
+preferred it rather than that of making it a part of the Arabic name,
+because I think that the star is sufficiently identified by the latter
+portion of its name "Al auwâ," and because the preservation of "mene" in
+its proper place in the line would afford a reading much less forced
+than that I was obliged to have recourse to. Now it very singularly
+happens that in "NOTES AND QUERIES" of this day (page 388.) I find, upon
+the authority of A. C. M., that there is an Armorican word "menex" or
+"mene," signifying a summit or boundary. Here is an accidental, though
+most probable, original of the Chaucerian "mene," because the moon's
+place in longitude at the time specified was precisely on the verge or
+boundary of Libra: or even in the sense "summit" the word would be by no
+means inappropriate to the point of a sign in the ecliptic which first
+emerges from the horizon; with such a reading the lines would stand
+thus, which is a very slight change from _their present form_:
+
+ "Then, with the mone's exaltacioun
+ In menez Libra, ALWAI gan ascende,
+ As we were entrying at a towne's end."
+
+Perhaps A. C. M. would be good enough to cite his authorities for the
+word "mene," "menez"--in the signification of "summit" or "margin"--with
+examples, if possible, of its use in these or kindred senses.
+
+And perhaps some Arabic scholar will explain the name "Min al auwâ," and
+show in what way the absence of the prefix "Min" would affect it?
+
+ A. E. B.
+
+
+TRADITIONS FROM REMOTE PERIODS THROUGH FEW LINKS.
+
+In some of your former numbers (Vol. iii., pp. 206. 237. 289.) allusions
+have been made by your correspondents, showing that traditions may come
+down from remote periods through very few links. Having myself seen a
+man whose father lived in the time of Oliver Cromwell, I trust I shall
+be excused for stating some particulars of this fact, which I think will
+be considered by your readers as one of the most remarkable on record.
+In the year 1844 died James Horrocks, a small farmer, who lived at
+Harwood, a short distance from Bolton, in Lancashire, having completed
+his hundredth year. This circumstance, however, was not so remarkable as
+that of his own birth, his father, William Horrocks, having been born in
+1657, one year before the death of Cromwell, and having married in 1741,
+at the advanced age of eight-four, a second wife, a young and buxom
+woman of twenty-six, by whom he had one child, the above James Horrocks,
+born March 14, 1744, and baptized at Bradshaw Chapel, near Bolton.
+
+It is believed that the first wife of William Horrocks had been employed
+in the well-known family of the Chethams, at Castleton Hall, near
+Rochdale (a branch of that of Humphrey Chetham), by whom they were both
+much respected; and soon after the second marriage, he and his youthful
+wife were sent for to Castleton Hall by the Chethams, by whom they were
+treated with much kindness; and the remarkable disparity of years in
+their marriage having no doubt created great interest, a painter was
+employed to take their portraits, which are still in existence, with the
+ages of the parties at the time, and the dates, when taken, painted upon
+them.
+
+I paid the son, James Horrocks, more than one visit, and on the last
+occasion, in company with James Crossley, Esq., of Manchester, the
+Reverend Canon Parkinson, Principal of St. Bees' College, and one or two
+other gentlemen, I took my son with me. It happened to be the very day
+on which he completed his hundredth year, and we found him full of
+cheerfulness and content, expecting several of his descendants to spend
+the day with him. I possess a portrait in crayons of this venerable
+patriarch, taken on that day by a very clever artist, who accompanied us
+on our visit, and which is an extremely faithful likeness of the
+original. Should it please Providence to spare my son to attain to his
+seventieth year, he also will be enabled, in the year 1900, to say that
+he has seen a man whose father lived in the time of Oliver Cromwell;
+thus connecting events, with the intervention of _one_ life only,
+comprehending a period of very nearly two centuries and a half.
+
+P.S. A very interesting narrative of all the facts of this case was
+published in the _Manchester Guardian_ a few years ago, comprising many
+curious particulars not noticed by myself, a copy of which I shall be
+glad to send you, if you think it worthy of insertion in "NOTES AND
+QUERIES."
+
+ THOMAS CORSER.
+ Stand Rectory.
+
+ [We accept with thanks the offer of our valued correspondent.]
+
+
+DR. YOUNG'S NARCISSA.
+
+A pamphlet was recently published at Lyons and Paris, by a Monsieur de
+Terrebasse, intending to prove that the daughter-in-law of Dr. Young, so
+pathetically lamented by him in the _Night Thoughts_ under the poetical
+name of "Narcissa," was not clandestinely buried at Montpellier; that
+Dr. Young did not steal a grave for her from the Roman Catholics of that
+city; and that consequently the celebrated and touching episode in Night
+III. is purely imaginary. This opinion of M. de Terrebasse, first given
+to the world by him in 1832, and now repeated, has been controverted by
+the writer of an article in the _Gazette Médicale_ of Montpellier. The
+tomb, it is said, of Elisabeth Lee, Dr. Young's daughter-in-law, was
+discovered a few years since at Lyons; and M. de Terrebasse endeavours
+to prove, from that circumstance, and from a comparison of facts and
+dates, that this Elisabeth Lee was the "Narcissa" of the poet. Not
+having seen M. de Terrebasse's pamphlet, and being indebted to the
+_Journal des Savants_ for this brief account of it, it seems difficult
+to discover from it how M. de Terrebasse can pretend so summarily to
+invalidate the solemn and touching assertions of the poet, which
+assuredly are anything but flights of fancy.
+
+ "Deny'd the charity of dust to spread
+ O'er dust! a clarity their dogs enjoy,
+ What could I do? what succour? what resource?
+ With pious sacrilege a grave I stole;
+ With impious piety that grave I wrong'd;
+ Short in my duty, coward in my grief!
+ More like her murderer than friend, I crept
+ With soft suspended step, and muffled deep
+ In midnight darkness, whisper'd my last sigh."
+
+ _Night Thoughts; Narcissa._
+
+In the notes to an edition of the _Night Thoughts_, printed in 1798, by
+C. Whittingham, for T. Heptinstall--
+
+ "It appears," it is stated, "by the extract of a letter just printed,
+ that in order to obtain a grave, the Doctor bribed the under gardener,
+ who dug the grave, and let him in by a private door, bearing his
+ beloved daughter, wrapped up in a sheet, upon his shoulder. When he
+ had laid her in this hole he sat down, and, as the man expressed it,
+ 'rained tears.' It appears also, that some time previous to this
+ event, expecting the catastrophe, he had been seen walking solitarily
+ backward in this garden, as if to find the most solitary spot for his
+ purpose."--See _Evang. Mag._, Nov. 1797.
+
+I do not know what authority this letter quoted from the _Evang. Mag._
+may possess.
+
+ J. M.
+ Oxford, May 20.
+
+
+Minor Notes.
+
+_Curious Epitaph._--The following lines are on a stone in Killyleagh
+churchyard. I have a faint recollection of seeing a similarly
+constructed epitaph in Harris's _History of the County of Down_, which
+was perhaps composed by the same person. Is any of your readers
+acquainted with any English inscription in the same style?
+
+ "Mysta, fidelis, amans, colui, docui, relevavi,
+ Numen, oves, inopes, pectore, voce, manu.
+ Laude orbem, splendore polum, cineresque beatos,
+ Fama illustravit, mens colit, urna tenet."
+
+It will easily be seen that the first, fourth, seventh, and tenth words
+are to be read in connexion, as are those that follow these, and those
+next in succession.
+
+The person on whose tomb the lines occur was the Rev. William
+Richardson, who died in 1670, having been minister of Killyleagh for
+twenty-one years. By the way, is not _mysta_ a strange designation for a
+Presbyterian minister? I should think it would be now considered as
+objectionable as _sacerdos_.
+
+ E. H. D. D.
+ Killyleagh, co. Down.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_The Curse of Scotland_ (Vol. i., pp. 61. 90.; Vol. iii., p. 22.).--
+
+ "The queen of clubs is called in Northamptonshire Queen Bess, perhaps,
+ because that queen, history says, was of a swarthy complexion; the
+ four of spades, Ned Stokes, but why I know not; the nine of diamonds,
+ the curse of Scotland, because every ninth monarch of that nation was
+ a bad king to his subjects. I have been told by old people, that this
+ card was so called long before the Rebellion in 1745, and therefore it
+ could not arise from the circumstance of the Duke of Cumberland's
+ sending orders, accidentally written upon the card, the night before
+ the battle of Culloden, for General Campbell to give no quarter."
+
+The above extract from a communication to the _Gentleman's Magazine_ for
+1791, p. 141., is quoted in Mr. Singer's _Researches into the History of
+Playing Cards_, p. 271.; but the reason assigned by the writer does not
+explain why the nine of _diamonds_ should have acquired the name in
+question. The nine of any _other_ suit would be equally applicable.
+
+ L.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_The Female Captive: a Narrative of Facts which happened in Barbary in
+the Year 1756. Written by Herself_, 2 vols. 12mo. Lond., 1769.--Sir
+William Musgrave has written this note in the copy which is now in the
+library at the British Museum:
+
+ "This is a true story. The lady's maiden name was Marsh. She married
+ Mr. Crisp, as related in the narrative. But he having failed in
+ business went to India, where she remained with her father, then agent
+ Victualler at Chatham, during which she wrote and published these
+ little volumes. On her husband's success in India, she went thither to
+ him.
+
+ "The book having, as it is said, been bought up by the lady's friends,
+ is become very scarce."
+
+ Y. S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Pictorial Antiquities._--The following memorandum, in the _autograph_
+of Edward, Earl of Oxford (the Harleian collector), seems worth
+preserving:
+
+ "A picture of Edward IV. on board at Kensington.
+
+ "A whole length of him at St. James's, in a night-gown and black cap.
+
+ "A portrait of his queen in the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford.
+
+ "Jane Shore at Eaton (_sic_).
+
+ "Richard III. at Kensington.
+
+ "Picture of Henry V. and his family at Mr. West's.
+
+ "A picture of Mabuse at St. James's, called Albert Durer.
+
+ "Matthew Paris with miniatures, in the British Museum.
+
+ "William of Wickham's Crozier at Oxford.
+
+ "Greek enamellers in the reign of the two Edwards.
+
+ "An old altar-table at Chiswick; Lord Clifford and his lady kneeling;
+ Consecration of Thomas à Becket at Devonshire House, both by Van
+ Eyck."
+
+ "Froissart illuminated, wherein is a miniature of Richard II., in the
+ Museum."
+
+One might have thought that these notes were made for the use of Horace
+Walpole's _History of Painting_; but their writer, the second Lord
+Oxford, died in June, 1741, long before Walpole could have thought of
+such matters. They perhaps may afford clues to other antiquaries.
+
+ C.
+
+
+
+
+Queries.
+
+
+ENGLISH POEMS BY CONSTANTINE HUYGHENS.
+
+It is probable that some of your friendly correspondents in Holland may
+have it in their power to indicate where the English verses of
+Constantine Huyghens are to be found which he refers to in his _Koren
+Bloemen_, 2de Deel, p. 528. ed. 1672, where he was given Dutch
+translations with the following superscriptions: "Aen Joffw Utricia
+Ogle, uyt mijn Engelsh;" and "Aen Me-Vrouwe Stanhope, met mijn Heilige
+dagen, uyt mijn Engelsh."
+
+Huyghens appears to have had a thorough knowledge of our language, and
+his very interesting volume contains translations of twenty of Dr.
+Donne's poems, very ably rendered, considering the difficulty of the
+task. He refers to this in his address to the reader, and says that an
+illustrious Martyr [Charles I.] many years since had declared that he
+could not have believed that any one could have successfully
+accomplished it. Huyghens confesses that the Latinisms with which our
+language abounds, had given him much to wrestle with; and that it was
+difficult to express in pure Dutch such words as _ecstasy_, _atomy_,
+_influence_, _legacy_, _alloy,_ &c. The first stanza of the song, "Go
+and catch a falling Star," may perhaps be acceptable to some of your
+readers, who may not readily have access to the book:
+
+ "Gaet en vatt een Sterr in 't vallen,
+ Maeckt een' Wortel-mensch[1] met kind,
+ Seght waer men al den tijd die nu verby is vindt,
+ En wie des Duyvels voet geklooft heeft in twee ballen:
+ Leert my Meereminnen hooren,
+ Leert my hoe ick 't boose booren,
+ Van den Nijd ontkommen moet,
+ En wat Wind voor-wind is voor een oprecht gemoed."
+
+ [Footnote 1: Mandrake.]
+
+One more example of his translation, from the epigram on Sir Albertus
+Morton, may be allowed, as it is short:
+
+ "She first deceased; he for a little tried
+ To live without her; liked it not, and died."
+
+ "Sy stierf voor uyt: hy pooghd' haer een' wijl tijds te derven,
+ Maer had geen' sin daer in, en ging oock liggen sterven."
+
+Considering the affinity of the languages, and the frequent and constant
+intercourse with Holland, it is singular that we should have to
+reproach ourselves with such almost total ignorance respecting the
+literature of that country. With the exception of the slight sketch
+given by Dr. Bowring of its poetical literature, an Englishman has no
+work to which he can turn in his own language for information; and Dutch
+books may be sought for in vain in London. The late Mr. Heber when in
+Holland did not neglect its literature, and at the dispersion of his
+library I procured a few valuable Dutch books; among others, the very
+handsome volume which has given rise to this note. It contains much
+interesting matter, and affords a most amiable picture of the mind of
+its distinguished author, who lived to the very advanced age of
+ninety-one. There is a speaking and living portrait of him prefixed,
+from the beautiful graver of Blotelingk, and a view of his chateau of
+Hofwyck, with detailed plans of his garden, &c. He was secretary to
+three successive princes of Nassau, accountant to the Prince of Orange,
+and Lord of Zuylichem; and lived in habits of friendly intercourse with
+almost all the distinguished men who flourished during his long and
+prosperous life. His son is well known to the world of science as the
+inventor of the pendulum.
+
+Translations of three or four of Constantine Huyghens' poems are given
+by Dr. Bowring in his _Batavian Anthology_. And the great Vondel
+pronounces his volume to be--
+
+ "A garden mild of savours sweet,
+ Where Art and Skill and Wisdom meet;
+ Rich in its vast variety
+ Of forms and hues of ev'ry dye."
+
+ S. W. SINGER.
+
+
+THE REV. MR. GAY.
+
+The very interesting notices which you have often given us of the truly
+great and inestimable Locke, induce me to trouble you with an inquiry
+relative to a philosophical writer, who followed in his school, I mean
+the Rev. Mr. Gay, the author of the Dissertation prefixed to Bishop
+Law's translation of King's _Origin of Evil_. It is sufficient evidence
+of the importance of that Dissertation, that it put Hartley upon
+considering and developing the principle of association, into which
+principle he conceived, and endeavoured to prove, that all the phenomena
+of reasoning and affection might be resolved, and of which Laplace
+observes, that it constitutes the whole of what has yet been done in the
+philosophy of the human mind; "la partie réelle de la métaphysique"
+(_Essai Philosophique sur les Probabilités_, p. 224. ed. 1825).
+
+Of this Mr. Gay, I have not yet been able to learn more than that he was
+a clergyman in the West of England; but of what place, of what family,
+where educated, of what manner of life, or what habits of study,
+biographical or topographical reading has hitherto furnished me with
+any information. I should feel greatly indebted to any of your readers
+who would give the clue to what is known or can be known about him. It
+is probably within easy reach, though I have missed it. The ordinary
+biographical dictionaries make no mention of him.
+
+ EDWARD TAGART.
+ North End, Hampstead, May 19. 1851.
+
+
+Minor Queries.
+
+_Carved Ceiling in Dorsetshire._--In the south of Dorsetshire there is a
+house (its name I do not remember) which has a beautifully carved
+ceiling in the hall. This is said to have been sent from Spain by a King
+of Castile, who, being wrecked on this coast, and hospitably entertained
+by the owners of the mansion, took this method of showing his gratitude.
+Can any of your readers inform me what king this was, or refer me to any
+work in which I may find it?
+
+ JERNE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Publicans' Signs._--Will any of your readers inform me whether the
+_signs of publicans_ were allowed to be retained by the same edict which
+condemned those of all other trades?
+
+ ROVERT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To a T._--What is the origin of the phrase; and of that "To fit to a
+T.?" (Query, a "T square" = ad amussim.)
+
+ A. A. D.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Skeletons at Egyptian Banquet._--Where did Jer. Taylor find this
+interpretation of the object of placing a skeleton at the banqueting
+table:--
+
+ "The Egyptians used to serve up a skeleton to their feasts, that
+ the vapours of wine might be restrained with that bunch of myrrh,
+ and the vanities of their eyes chastened by that sad object."
+
+Certainly not in Herodotus, 2. 78.; which savours rather of the
+_Sardanapalian_ spirit: "Eat, drink, and love--the rest's not worth a
+fillip!" Comp. Is. xxii. 13., 1 Cor. xv. 32.
+
+ A. A. D.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Gloves_ (Vol. i., pp. 72. 405.; Vol. ii., p. 4.; Vol. iii., p.
+220.).--Blount, in his _Law Dictionary_, fo. 1670, under the title
+"Capias Utlagatum," observes:
+
+ "At present, in the King's Bench, the _outlawry_ cannot be reversed,
+ unless the defendant appear in person, and, by a present of gloves to
+ the judges, implore and obtains their favour to reverse it."
+
+Perhaps some of your correspondents may be able to state when the
+practice of presenting gloves to the judges on moving to reverse an
+outlawry in the King's Bench was discontinued. The statute 4 & 5 Will.
+and Mar. c. 18., rendered unnecessary a _personal_ appearance in that
+court to reverse an outlawry (except for treason or felony, or where
+special bail was ordered).
+
+ C. H. COOPER.
+ Cambridge, March 24. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Knapp Family in Norfolk and Suffolk._--I should be much obliged to any
+Norfolk or Suffolk antiquary who would give me information as to the
+family of Knapp formerly settled in those counties, especially at
+Ipswich, Tuddenham, and Needham Market in the latter county. My
+inquiries have not discovered any person of the name at present residing
+in any of these places; and my wish is to learn how the name was lost in
+the locality; whether by migration--and if so, when, and to what other
+part of the county; or if in the female line, into what family the last
+heiress of Knapp married; and, as nearly as may be, when either of these
+events occurred?
+
+ G. E. F.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To learn by "Heart."_--Can you give any account of the origin of a very
+common expression both in French and English, _i. e._ "Apprendre _par
+coeur_, to learn _by heart?_" To learn _by memory_ would be
+intelligible.
+
+ A SUBSCRIBER TO YOUR JOURNAL.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Knights._--At some periods of our history the reigning monarch bestowed
+the honour of knighthood, 1306, Edward I.; at other times, those in
+possession of a certain amount of property were compelled to assume the
+order, 1254. Query, Was there any difference in rank between the two
+sorts of knights?
+
+ B. DE. M.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Supposed Inscription in St. Peter's Church, Rome._--When at school in
+France, some twenty years ago, I was informed that the following
+inscription was to be found in some part of St. Peter's Church in Rome:
+
+ "Nunquam amplius super hanc cathedram cantabit Gallus."
+
+It appears that the active part taken by the French in fomenting the
+great schism of the Church during the fourteenth century, when they set
+up and maintained at Avignon a Pope of their own choosing, had generated
+an abhorrence of French interference in the Italian mind; and that, when
+the dissensions were abated by the suspension of the rival Popes, the
+_ultramontane_ cardinals had posted up this inscription to testify their
+desire for the exclusion of French ecclesiastics from the Papal chair.
+In one respect the prediction remains in force to this day; for I
+believe I am correct in saying that no Frenchman has worn the triple
+crown for the last 450 years. But that portion of it which is implied in
+the second meaning of "Gallus," has been woefully belied in our time by
+the forcible occupation of Rome by a French army, on which occasion the
+Gallic cock had all the "crowing" to himself.
+
+I have never had an opportunity of ascertaining the existence of this
+inscription, and shall be obliged to any correspondent of "NOTES AND
+QUERIES" who will afford information on the subject.
+
+ HENRY H. BREEN.
+ St. Lucia, April, 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Rag Sunday in Sussex._--Allow me to ask the explanation of "Rag Sunday"
+in Sussex. I lately saw some young gentlemen going to school at
+Brighton, who had been provided with some fine white handkerchiefs, when
+one observed they would not stand much chance of escape on "Rag Sunday."
+He then told me that each boy, on the Sunday but one preceding the
+holidays, always tore a piece of his shirt or handkerchief off and wore
+it in the button-hole of his jacket as his "rag." When a boy, I remember
+being compelled to do the same when at school at Hailsham in Sussex, and
+all boys objecting had their hats knocked off and trod on.
+
+ H. W. D.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Northege Family._--Can any one tell me the county and parish in which
+the family of Northege were located in the sixteenth century?
+
+ E. H. Y.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_A Kemble Pipe of Tobacco._--In the county of Herefordshire, the people
+call the last or concluding pipe that any one means to smoke at a
+sitting, a _Kemble pipe._ This is said to have originated in a man of
+the name of Kemble, who in the cruel persecution under Queen Mary, being
+condemned for heresy, in his walk of some miles from the prison to the
+stake, amidst a crowd of weeping friends and neighbours, with the
+tranquillity and fortitude of a primitive martyr, _smoked a pipe of
+tobacco_! Is anything known of this Kemble? and where can I find any
+corroboration of the story here told?
+
+ EDWARD F. RIMBAULT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Durham Sword that killed the Dragon._--In the Harleian MS. No. 3783.,
+letter 107., Cosin, in describing to Sancroft some of the ceremonies of
+his reception at Durham, mentions "_the sword that killed the dragon_,"
+as a relic of antiquity introduced on the occasion. I should feel
+obliged, if you, or any of your antiquarian readers, could kindly refer
+me to some tolerably full account of the ceremony alluded to, or throw
+any light upon the meaning of the custom in question, the origin and
+history of the sword, and the tradition connected with it.
+
+ J. SANSOM.
+
+
+Minor Queries Answered.
+
+"_At Sixes and Sevens_" (Vol. iii., p. 118.).--May not this expression
+bear reference to the _points_ in the card-game of piquet?
+
+ G. F. G.
+
+May not this expression have arisen from the passage in Eliphaz's
+discourse to Job?
+
+ "He shall deliver thee is _six_ troubles; yea, in _seven_ there shall
+ no evil touch thee."--Job. v. 19.
+
+ A. M.
+
+Mr. Halliwell, in his _Dictionary of Archaic and Provincial Words_, vol.
+ii. p. 724., thus explains this phrase:
+
+ "The Deity is mentioned in the _Towneley Mysteries_, pp. 97. 118., as
+ He that 'sett alle on seven,' _i. e._, set or appointed everything in
+ seven days. A similar phrase at p. 85. is not so evident. It is
+ explained in the Glossary, 'to set things in, to put them in order;'
+ but it evidently implies, in some cases, an exactly opposite meaning,
+ to set in confusion, to rush to battle, as in the following examples.
+ '_To set the steven_, to agree upon the time and place of meeting
+ previous to some expedition,'--_West and Cumb. Dial._ p. 390. These
+ phrases may be connected with each other. Be this as it may, hence is
+ certainly derived the phrase _to be at sixes and sevens_, to be in
+ great confusion. Herod, in his anger at the wise men, says:
+
+ "'Bot be they past me by, by Mahowne in heven,
+ I shalle, and that in hy, _set alle on sex and seven_;
+ Trow ye a kyng as I wyll suffre thaym to neven
+ Any to have mastry bot myself fulle even.'
+
+ _Towneley Mysteries_, p. 143.
+
+ "'Thus he _settez on sevene_ with his sekyre knyghttez.'
+
+ _Morte Arthure_, MS. Lincoln, f. 76.
+
+ "'The duk swore by gret God of hevene,
+ Wold my hors so evene,
+ Zet wold I _set all one seven_
+ Ffor Myldor the swet!'
+
+ _Degrevant_, 1279.
+
+ "'Old Odcombs odnesse makes not thee uneven,
+ Nor carelesly set all _at six and seven_.'
+
+ Taylor's _Workes_, 1630, ii. 71."
+
+ J. K. R. W.
+
+ [Six and seven make the proverbially unlucky number _thirteen_, and we
+ are inclined to believe that the allusion in this popular phrase is to
+ this combination.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Swobbers._--There is a known story of a clergyman who was recommended
+for a preferment by some great men at court to an archbishop. His Grace
+said, "He had heard that the clergyman used to play at whist and
+_swobbers_; that as to playing now and then a sober game at whist for
+pastime, it might be pardoned; but he could not digest those wicked
+swobbers;" and it was with some pains that my Lord Somers could
+undeceive him. So says Swift, in his _Essay on the Fates of Clergymen_;
+and a note in Sir W. Scott's edition (1824, vol. viii. p 231.) informs
+us that the primate was "Tenison, who, by all contemporary accounts, was
+a very dull man." At the risk of being thought as dull as the
+archbishop, I venture to ask for an explanation of the joke.
+
+ J. C. R.
+
+ [Johnson, under "Swobber" or "Swabber," gives, "1. A sweeper of the
+ deck;" and "2. Four privileged cards that are only incidentally used
+ in betting at the game of whist." He then quotes this passage from
+ Swift, with the difference that he says "clergymen." Were not the
+ cards so called because they "swept the deck" by a sort of
+ "sweep-stakes?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Handel's Occasional Oratorio._--Will DR. RIMBAULT, or some other
+musical correspondent of your journal, enlighten us as to the true
+meaning of the name _Occasional Oratorio_, prefixed to one of Handel's
+compositions, of which no one that I have ever met with has heard more
+than the overture? This composition has become almost universally known
+from the foolish practice which used to prevail of performing it as an
+introduction to _Israel in Egypt_, or any other work to which its
+composer had purposely denied the preliminary of an overture; a practice
+now happily exploded, which seems to have had its origin in a
+misinterpretation of the name; as though Handel had written the overture
+to suit any _occasion_ when one might be needed, instead of, as I am
+rather disposed to believe, having some particular occasion in view for
+which the oratorio was composed.
+
+ E. V.
+
+ [Surely, if there is no _Occasional_ Oratorio to be found, the
+ _Overture_ must mean that it was to be used on _occasion_. Our
+ correspondent does not seem to know the word as it is used by writers
+ of a century ago, for "Occasional Sermons" or services, &c. The
+ question is simply one of fact. _Is_ there an Oratorio? Everybody
+ knows the overture. The writer of this note remembers being horrified,
+ when a freshman, at hearing the fugue break forth in the College
+ Chapel, was pondering in his mind whether it was Drops of Brandy, or
+ the Rondo in the Turnpike-Gate, both then popular tunes.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Archbishop Waldeby's Epitaph._--W. W. KING would be obliged by a
+perfect copy of the inscription on the monumental brass of Archbishop
+Waldeby in Westminster Abbey.
+
+ [The brass is engraved in Harding's _Antiquities of Westminster
+ Abbey_; but it appears that one half of the following inscription,
+ which was formerly round the verge of the brass, has now been torn
+ away:--
+
+ "Hic fuit expertus in quovis jure Robertus,
+ De Waldeby dictus nunc est sub marmore strictus;
+ Sacre Scripture Doctor fuit, et geniture
+ Ingenuus Medicus et plebis semper amicus
+ Presul Adurensis posthoc Archas Dublinensis
+ Hinc Cicestrensis, tandem Primas Eborensis
+ Quarto kalend. Junii migravit cursibus anni
+ Sepultus milleni ter C. septem Nonies quoque deni.
+ Vos precor, Orate quod sint sibi dona beate
+ Cum sanctis vite requiescat et hic sine lite."
+
+ Weever, in his _Funeral Monuments_, quotes the following description
+ of him from a MS. account of the Archbishops of York, in the Cottonian
+ Collection:--
+
+ "Tunc Robertus ordinis fratris Augustini
+ Ascendit in cathedram primatis Paulini,
+ Lingua scientificus sermonis latini
+ Anno primo proximat vite sue fini,
+ De carnis ergastulo presul evocatur
+ Gleba sui corporis Westminstre humatur."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Verstegan._--Will any of the contributors to your valuable miscellany
+be kind enough to inform me if there are any engraved portraits of the
+quaint old antiquary Richard Verstegan, the author of a curious work,
+entitled _A Restitution of Decayed Intelligence_? The portraits may be
+common, but living in the country, and at distance from town, I have no
+friend from whom I can glean the required information. Can my informant
+at the same time acquaint me with the best edition of his work? There
+was one printed at Antwerp in 1605.
+
+ J. S. P. (a Subscriber.)
+
+ [Our correspondent will find a notice of Verstegan's work in page 85.
+ of this volume. The first edition was printed at Antwerp in 1605, and
+ was reprinted at London in 4to. in 1634, and in 8vo. in 1655 and 1673.
+ The first edition is deservedly reckoned the best, as well on account
+ of containing one or more engravings, afterwards omitted, as also for
+ the superiority of the plates, those in the subsequent editions being
+ very indifferent copies. No portrait of the author is noticed either
+ by Granger or Bromley.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Royal Library._--In the new edition of Boswell's _Life of Johnson_
+(published by the proprietors of the _Illustrated London News_), in the
+_National Illustrated Library_, the editor, in reference to the library
+of King George III. (which is generally understood to have been
+presented to the nation by George IV., and which is recorded to have
+been given, in an inscription placed in that magnificent hall), has
+appended the following note:--
+
+ "It has recently transpired that the government of the day bought the
+ library of George IV., just as he was on the eve of concluding a sale
+ of it to the Emperor of Russia."
+
+Can any of your readers inform me if this is correct, and whether the
+nation have really paid for what has always been considered a most
+worthy and munificent present from a monarch to his subjects? I trust to
+hear that the editor has been misinformed.
+
+ J. S. L.
+
+ [The nation certainly never paid one farthing for this munificent
+ present. The Russian Government offered, we believe, to purchase the
+ library; and this is probably the origin of the statement in the note
+ quoted by our correspondent.]
+
+
+
+
+Replies.
+
+
+HUGH HOLLAND AND HIS WORKS.
+
+An accidental circumstance having led me to re-peruse the article
+entitled _Hugh Holland and his works_ (Vol. ii., p. 265.), I feel myself
+called on, as a lover of facts, to notice some of the statements which
+it contains.
+
+1. "He was born at Denbigh in 1558." He was born at Denbigh, but not in
+1558. In 1625 he thus expressed himself:
+
+ "Why was the fatall spinster so vnthrifty?
+ To draw my third four yeares to tell and fifty!"
+
+2. "In 1582 he matriculated at Baliol College, Oxford." He did not quit
+Westminster School till 1589. If he ever pursued his studies at Baliol
+College, it was some ten years afterwards.
+
+3. "About 1590 he succeeded to a fellowship at Trinity College,
+Cambridge." In 1589 he was elected from Westminster to a _scholarship_
+in Trinity College, Cambridge--not to a _fellowship_. At a later period
+of life, he may have succeeded to a fellowship.
+
+4. "Holland published two works: 1. _Monumenta sepulchralia Sancti
+Pauli_, London, 1613, 4to. 2. _A cypress garland_ etc., London, 1625,
+4to." Hugh Holland was not the compiler of the first-named work: the
+initials H. H admit of another interpretation. This, however, is a very
+pardonable oversight. I could give about twenty authorities for
+ascribing the work to Hugh Holland.
+
+5. The dates assigned to the _Monumenta Sancti Pauli_ are "1613, 1616,
+1618, and 1633." Here are three errors in as many lines. The _first_
+edition is dated in 1614. The edition of 1633, which is entitled
+_Ecclesia Sancti Pavli illvstrata_, is the _second_. No other editions
+exist.
+
+6. "Holland also printed a copy of Latin verses before Alexander's
+_Roxana_, 1632." No such work exists. He may have printed verses before
+the _Roxana_ of W. Alabaster, who was his brother-collegian.
+
+The authorities which I have consulted are Fuller, Anthony à Wood, Henry
+Holland, son of the celebrated Philemon Holland, Hugh Holland, and
+Joseph Welch; and in submitting the result of my researches to critical
+examination, I must commend the writer of the article in question for
+his continued efforts to produce new facts, and to explode current
+errors.
+
+Insensible as modern critics may be to the poetical merits of Hugh
+Holland, we find him described by Camden as one of the _most pregnant
+wits_ of those times; and he certainly gave a notable proof of his
+wit--for fame is that which _all hunt after_--in contributing some lines
+to _Mr. William Shakespeares comedies, histories, and tragedies_.
+
+On that account, if on no other, the particulars of his life should be
+inquired into and recorded. His _Cypress garland_, a copy of which I
+possess, is rich in autobiographical anecdote; and I have collected some
+of his fugitive verses, a specimen of which may amuse. As one of the
+shortest, I transcribe the lines which he addressed to Giles Farnaby, a
+musical composer of some eminence, on the publication of his _Canzonets
+to fowre voyces_, A. D. 1598.
+
+ "_M. Hu. Holland to the author._
+
+ I would both sing thy praise, and praise thy singing,
+ That in the winter nowe are both a-springing;
+ But my muse must be stronger,
+ And the daies must be longer.
+ When the sunne's in his hight with ye bright Barnaby,
+ Then should we sing thy praises, gentle Farnaby."
+
+ BOLTON CORNEY.
+
+
+THE MILESIANS.
+
+(Vol. iii., p. 353.)
+
+In reply to W. R. M., who asks for information respecting the round
+towers of Ireland, I beg to refer him to Dr. Petrie's essay on the
+_Ecclesiastical Architecture of Ireland_, in which he will find a full
+discussion of the origin, uses, and history of the round towers.
+
+In reference to the Milesians and other early colonists of Ireland, he
+will find the most authentic ancient traditions in the Irish version of
+the _Historia Britonum of Nennius_, lately published by the Irish
+Archæological Society of Dublin, with a translation and notes, by the
+Rev. J. H. Todd, D.D. The same volume contains also some very curious
+and valuable notes by the Hon. A. Herbert.
+
+What W. R. M. says about the pronunciation of certain names of towns in
+Ireland, as confirming the tradition of a Milesian colony from Spain, is
+a complete mistake. The pronunciation of _gh_ to which he alludes,
+exists only amongst the English (or Anglicised natives) who are unable
+to pronounce the guttural _ch_ or _gh_ of the Celtic Irish, and have
+substituted for it the sound of _h_, or the sound of the Spanish _j_, to
+which W. R. M. refers. Besides this, every philologist knows that the
+present language of Spain had no existence at the period to which the
+Milesian invasion of Ireland must be referred. It is true that on the
+west coast of Ireland some families among the peasantry retain many of
+the characteristic features of modern Spaniards; but this circumstance
+is due to an intercourse with Spain of a much more recent date than the
+Milesian invasion, and is therefore no evidence of that event. It is
+well known that considerable trade with Spain was carried on at Galway
+and other ports of western Connaught, two centuries ago, and that many
+Spanish families settled in Ireland, or intermarried with the natives
+during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
+
+To remove W. R. M.'s mistaken impression that Drogheda, Aghada, &c., are
+names of Spanish origin, it may be well to inform him, first, that the
+_gh_ in such names is not sounded like the Spanish _j_, except, as I
+have said, by--(I was on the point of writing _foreigners_), but I mean
+by those who are unable to pronounce our Celtic guttural aspirates.
+Secondly, that Drogheda, Aghada, &c., are names significant in the Irish
+language and perfectly well understood, and that as now written they are
+not seen in their correct orthography, but in an Anglicised spelling
+intended to represent to English ears the native pronunciation. In the
+last century Drogheda was usually written _Tredagh_ in English; but the
+word in its proper spelling is _Droichet-atha_, the bridge of the ford,
+_trajectum vadi_. There are many places in Ireland named from this word
+_Droichet_, which is no doubt the Latin _trajectum_, the same which
+forms a part of the name of _Utrecht_ (Ultrajectum), and other towns on
+the continent.
+
+The word _Agha_, properly _Achadh_, signifies a _field_, and enters into
+the composition of hundreds of topographical names in Ireland. But in
+every case the _gh_ (or _ch_, as it properly is) is pronounced
+gutturally by the peasantry; the _h_ or Spanish _j_ sound is a modern
+Anglicised corruption.
+
+On the subject of Irish proper names of places and persons a vast body
+of curious and valuable information will be found in the publications of
+the Irish Archæological Society, and also in O'Donovan's splendid
+edition of the _Annals of the Four Masters_.
+
+ HIBERNICUS.
+
+We _mere Irish_ assume to be descended from a Phoenician colony; the
+word _Milesian_ is not Irish, the families so designated being known in
+the Irish language only as "Clonna Gäel" (I spare the English reader the
+_mute_ consonants, which _would rather bother him_ to get his tongue
+round).
+
+Our tradition is, that the leader of the said colony saw Ireland from a
+tower, still said to exist near Corunna; he bore the style of _Mileadle
+Spaniogle_, for which no better translation is offered than "the soldier
+of Spain." His brothers and sons, the chief himself having deceased, are
+said to have conducted the expedition to Ireland; and if your
+correspondent wishes for a full account of their adventures, he should
+consult Keating's _History of Ireland_, which will, at all events,
+afford him some amusement.
+
+As to the round towers, Mr. Petrie's book on _The Ecclesiastical
+Antiquities or Architecture of Ireland_ has set that question at rest.
+He has shown that they are undoubtedly Christian buildings intended as
+_Bell-houses_, which their name in Irish signifies; and further,
+probably, for the safe keeping of the sacred vessels, &c., in time of
+war or tumult. It is unfortunately too certain that agitation was always
+rife in Ireland. On all points connected with Irish antiquities, the
+safest and best reference is to the Secretary of the Royal Irish
+Academy, Dublin. If this answer attract any of your correspondents to
+visit the museum of that establishment, I venture to prophecy that they
+will account themselves well repaid for their trouble, even though they
+should miss visiting the Great Exhibition thereby.
+
+ KERRIENSIS.
+
+
+THE TANTHONY.
+
+(Vol. iii., pp. 105. 229. 308.)
+
+I remember hearing a worthy citizen of Norwich remark, that it was very
+odd there should be three churches in the city called after saints whose
+names began with the letter T. Having been myself resident in that city
+many years, without being aware of this fact, I took the liberty of
+inquiring to which three he alluded; when I was unhesitatingly told,
+"Why, Sain Tandrew's, Sain Taustin's, and Sain Tedmund's, to be sure!"
+Let me then be allowed to repeat ARUN'S question, and to ask, "Why not
+Tanthony for Saint Anthony?"
+
+The same worthy citizen was once sheriff of Norwich, and, as is, or
+haply was, the custom,--for I know not how these matters are managed
+now-a-days,--went forth in civic state to meet the judges of assize.
+When their lordships were seated in the sheriff's carriage, one of them
+charitably observed, "Yours, I believe, is a very ancient city, Mr.
+Sheriff!" to which the latter, a little flurried, no doubt, at being
+thus so pointedly addressed, but in decided accents, replied, "It _was_
+ONCE, my Lord!" And without stopping to consider what was passing in his
+mind when he gave utterance to these somewhat ambiguous words, may we
+not take them up, and ask whether it be not even so, not only as regards
+Norwich, but most of her venerable sister towns as well? Where are their
+quondam glories--their arts and rare inventions--their "thoughts in
+antique words conveyed"--their "boast of heraldry"--their pageantries
+and shows? Where their high-peaked gables--their curiously wrought eaves
+and overhanging galleries--their quaint doorways, so elaborately carved,
+and all their other cunning devices?--"Modern Taste," with finger
+pointed to the newest creation of her plaster genius, triumphantly
+echoes the monosyllable, and answers, "Where?" Well, we are perforce
+content; only with this proviso:--if, fatigued with the tinselled
+superficialities and glossy refinements of the present, we are fain to
+"cast one longing lingering look behind," and chance to light upon some
+worthy illustrative memorial of the literature, the manners, or domestic
+life of the past,--that the spirit of Captain Cuttle's sage advice be
+made our own, and that we forthwith transfer our prize for the critical
+examination of "diving antiquaries" to the conservative pages of "NOTES
+AND QUERIES."
+
+ COWGILL.
+
+_The Tanthony._--Will your correspondent ARUN permit one to refer him to
+an authority for the use of the word "Tanton" for St. Anthony? An
+hospital in York, dedicated to St. Anthony, after the dissolution came
+into the possession of a gild or fraternity of a master and eight
+keepers, who were commonly called "Tanton Pigs." Vide Drake's
+_Eboracum_, p. 315.
+
+ Δ.
+
+_Tanthony Bell at Kimbolton._--"Tanthony" is from St. Anthony. In
+Hampshire the small pig of the litter (in Essex called "the cad") is, or
+once was, called "the Tanthony pig." Pigs were especially under this
+saint's care. The ensign of the order of St. Anthony of Hainault was a
+collar of gold made like a hermit's girdle; at the centre thereof hung
+a crutch and a small bell of gold. St. Anthony is styled, among his
+numerous titles, "Membrorum restitutor," and "Dæmonis fugator:" hence
+the bell.
+
+ "The Egyptians have none but wooden bells, except one brought by the
+ Franks into the monastery of St. Anthony."--Rees' _Cyclopædia_, art.
+ Bell.
+
+I hope ARUN will be satisfied with this connexion of St. Anthony with
+the pig, the crutch, and the bell.
+
+"The staff" in the figure of the saint at Merthyr is, I should think, a
+crutch.
+
+ "The custom of making particular saints tutelars and protectors of one
+ or another species of cattle is still kept up in Spain and other
+ places. They pray to the tutelar when the beast is sick. Thus St.
+ Anthony is for hogs, and we call a poor starved creature a _Tantony_
+ pig."--Salmon's _History of Hertfordshire_, 1728.
+
+ A. HOLT WHITE.
+
+May I venture to observe, in confirmation of ARUN'S suggestion as to the
+origin of this term, that the bell appears to have been a constant
+attribute of St. Anthony, although I have tried in vain to discover any
+allusion to it in his legend?
+
+Frederick von Schlegel, in describing a famous picture by Bramante
+d'Urbino (_Æsthetic and Miscellaneous Works_, p. 78.), mentions St.
+Anthony as "carrying the hermit's little bell;" and Lord Lindsay, in the
+Introduction to his _Letters on Christian Art_ (vol. i. p. 192.), says
+that St. Anthony is known by "the bell and staff, denoting mendicancy."
+If this be the case, the bell at Kimbolton was doubtless intended
+originally to announce the presence of some wayfarer or mendicant.
+Tanthony is a common contraction for St. Anthony, as in the term "a
+Tanthony pig;" and a similar system of contraction was in use amongst
+the troubadours, who put _Na_ for _Donna_; as _Nalombarda_ for _Donna
+Lombarda_.
+
+The bell carried by St. Anthony is sometimes thought to have reference
+to his Temptations; bells being, in the words of Durandus, "the trumpets
+of the eternal king," on hearing which the devils "flee away, as through
+fear." I think, however, that these words apply rather to church bells.
+
+ E. J. M.
+
+
+PILGRIMS' ROAD TO CANTERBURY.
+
+(Vol. ii., pp. 199. 237. 269. 316.)
+
+I think those of your readers who are interested in this Query will feel
+that the replies it has received are not quite satisfactory, and I
+therefore trust you will find some room for the following remarks.
+
+I would beg to ask, can there be any doubt that from Southwark to
+Dartford, and from Rochester to their destination, Chaucer and his
+fellow pilgrims journeyed along the old Roman way, then for many
+centuries the great thoroughfare from London to the south-eastern
+coast, and which for these portions of the route is nearly identical
+with the present turnpike-road? The _Tales_ themselves make it certain
+that the pilgrims started on this ancient way; for when the Host
+interrupts the sermonising of the Reeve, he mentions Deptford and
+Greenwich as being in their route:
+
+ "Say forth thy tale, and tarry not the time,
+ Lo Depeford, and it is half way prime;
+ Lo Greenewich, there many a shrew is in,
+ It were all time thy tale to begin."
+
+Shortly after leaving Dartford the turnpike-road bends to the left,
+reaching Rochester by Gravesend and Gadshill; whilst the Roman way,
+parts of which are still used, was carried to that city by Southfleet,
+and through Cobham Park; and it seems to me that the only question we
+have to solve is, whether Chaucer followed the Roman way throughout, or
+whether between Dartford and Rochester he took the course of what is now
+the turnpike-road. For I cannot but think it very unlikely that, with a
+celebrated road leading almost straight as a line to Canterbury, the
+pilgrims should either go many miles out of their way to seek another,
+as they must have done, or run the risk of losing themselves in a
+"horse-track."
+
+In attempting to determine this point, your readers will remember the
+injunction of Poins:
+
+ "But, my lads, my lads, to-morrow morning by four o'clock early at
+ Gadshill; there are pilgrims going to Canterbury with rich offerings,
+ and traders riding to London with fat purses."--_Henry IV._, Pt. I.
+ Act I. Sc. 2.
+
+And Gadshill the robber tells his fellows:
+
+ "There's money of the king's coming down the hill; 'tis going to the
+ king's exchequer."--Act II. Sc. 2.
+
+Here we learn, not only that in Shakspeare's time the road between
+London and Canterbury was by Gadshill, but also that the tradition was
+that the pilgrims had been accustomed to travel that road. We cannot, I
+think, be far out of the way in concluding this to have been the road
+that Chaucer selected, and thus have the satisfaction of connecting with
+it in an immediate and especial manner the two greatest names in our
+literature; for, if he meant the only other road that seems at all
+likely, he would, near Cobham, pass within two miles of this famed hill.
+Nor can there be much doubt that so loyal a company, following a pious
+custom, would tarry at Rochester, to make their offerings on the shrine
+of St. William; if so, among the many thousands who have trodden the
+steps, now well-nigh worn away, leading to its site, is there one
+individual whose presence here we can recall with more pleasure than
+that of the father of English poetry?
+
+It is evident that the road mentioned by S. H. (Vol. ii., p. 237.) is
+not Chaucer's road; but I can well understand why it should be called
+the "Pilgrims' Road;" nor should I be surprised to learn that other
+roads in Kent are known by the same name, for Chaucer tells us in the
+"Prologue" to the _Tales_ that
+
+ "From every shire's end
+ Of Engle-land to Canterbury they wend:"
+
+and I need scarcely say that these widely scattered pilgrims would not
+all traverse the country by one and the same road, but that they would
+select various routes, according to the different localities from which
+they came. Hence, several roads might be called "Pilgrims' Roads."
+
+From a paper which appeared in the _Athenæum_ in 1842, and has since
+been reprinted in a separate form, the writer of which I take to be
+identical with the reviewer of Buckler's work referred to by MR.
+JACKSON, I think we may gather that what he speaks of as the "Old
+Pilgrims' Road" is the Otford Road noticed by S. H. and M. (2.) Messrs.
+Buckler's tract mentions no wayside chapels in Kent.
+
+It may not be uninteresting to add, that the author of _Cabinet Pictures
+of English Life--Chaucer_ has expressed his firm belief, the grounds for
+which must be sought in his work, that the "Pilgrims' Room" of the
+Tabard, now the Talbot, in Southwark, whence these memorable pilgrims
+set forth, must be at least as old as Chaucer, and that the very gallery
+exists along which Chaucer and the pilgrims walked.
+
+ ARUN.
+
+
+Replies To Minor Queries.
+
+_Shakspeare's Use of "Captious"_ (Vol. ii., p. 354.; Vol. iii., p.
+229.).--As W. F. S. does me the favour to ask my opinion of his notion
+respecting the passage in _All's Well that Ends Well_, I beg to say that
+I am very glad to find he agrees with me in regard to the
+_signification_ of the word "captious;" but that I cannot suppose, with
+him, that Shakspeare wrote _capatious_ in a passage in which the metre
+is regular; for what sort of verse would be--
+
+ "Yet in this _capatious_ and intenible sieve?"
+
+Surely W. F. S. has too good an ear to allow him to fix such a line in
+Shakspeare's text.
+
+ J. S. W.
+ Stockwell, April 3. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Inscription on a Clock_ (Vol. iii., p. 329.).--The words written under
+the curious clock in Exeter Cathedral, about which your correspondent M.
+J. W. HEWETT inquires, and which are, or were, also to be found under
+the clock over the Terrace in the Inner Temple, London, are, in truth, a
+quotation from Martial; and it is singular that a sentiment so truly
+Christian should have escaped from the pen of a Pagan writer:
+
+ "They" (that is, the moments as they pass) "slip by us unheeded, but
+ are noted in the account against us."
+
+What could Chrysostom or Augustine have said stronger or better? The
+whole epigram is so good that I venture to transcribe it.
+
+ "AD MARTIALEM DE AGENDA VITA BEATA.
+
+ "Si tecum mihi, care Martialis,
+ Securis liceat frui diebus,
+ Si disponere tempus otiosum,
+ Et veræ pariter vacare vitæ,
+ Nec nos atria, nec domos potentum,
+ Nec lites tetricas, forumque triste
+ Nôssemus, nec imagines superbas:
+ Sed gestatio, fabulæ, libelli,
+ Campus, porticus, umbra, virgo, thermæ;
+ Hæc essent loca semper, hi labores.
+ Nunc vivit sibi neuter, heu! bonosque
+ Soles effugere atque abire sentit;
+ Qui nobis PEREUNT, ET IMPUTANTUR.
+ Quisquam vivere cum sciat, moratur?"
+
+ Lib. v. ep. 20.
+
+ W.[2]
+
+ [Footnote 2: We are indebted to several other correspondents for
+ similar replies to this Query; and one, A. C. W., remarks that the
+ epigram from which these lines are quoted, is thus translated by
+ Cowley:
+
+ "Now to himself, alas! does neither live,
+ But sees good suns, of which we are to give
+ A strict account, set and march thick away:
+ Knows a man how to live, and does he stay?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Authors of the Anti-Jacobin Poetry_ (Vol. iii., p. 348.).--I knew _all_
+the writers, some of them intimately; and I have no doubt of the general
+accuracy of MR. HAWKIN'S communication. The items marked B are the least
+to be relied on. I do not think Mr. Hammond, then Canning's colleague as
+Under-Secretary of State, wrote a line, certainly not of verse, though
+he no doubt assisted his friend in compiling, and perhaps correcting;
+good offices, which obtained him an honourable _niche_ in the
+counter-satire issued from Brooke's, and preserved from oblivion by
+having been reprinted in the _Anti-Jacobin_ to give more poignancy to
+Canning's reply, "Bard of the borrowed lyre," &c.
+
+The Latin verses "Ipsa mali Hortatrix" were the _sole_ production of
+Lord Wellesley, and he reprinted them a year or two before his death;
+Mr. Frere had no share in them: but, on the other hand, Mr. Frere may
+have been, and I think was, the author of the _translation_, "Parent of
+countless crimes." Lord Wellesley certainly was not; for it was made
+after he had sailed for India.
+
+With regard to Mr. Wright's appropriation of particular passages of the
+longer poems to different authors, it is obviously impossible that it
+should be more than a vague conjecture. I _know_ that both Canning and
+Gifford professed _not_ to be able to make any such distribution; but
+both left on my mind the impression that Canning's share of the "New
+Morality" was so very much the largest as to entitle him to be
+considered its author. Ought not Canning's verses to be collected?
+
+ C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"_Felix, quem faciunt," &c._ (Vol. iii., p. 373.).--Though I cannot
+refer EFFIGIES to the original author of this passage, the following
+parallels may not be unacceptable to him:
+
+ "Felix, quem faciunt aliorum cornua cautum,
+ Sæpe suo, coelebs dixit Acerra, patri."
+
+ Joannis Audoeni, _Epigr_. 147. Lib. i. (nat. circa 1600.)
+
+Again:
+
+ "Felix, quicunque dolore
+ Alterius disces posse carere tuo."
+
+ Tibul. lib. iii. 6. 43.
+
+It is remarkable that the annotator on this passage in the Delphin ed.,
+Paris, 1685, p. 327., quotes the line in question thus: "Consonat illud:
+Felix quem faciunt," &c., _without giving the authority_.
+
+Again:
+
+ "Periculum ex aliis facere, tibi quod ex usu siet."--Ter. _Heaut._ i.
+ 2. 36. (Not 25., as in the Delphin _Index_.)
+
+Again:
+
+ "Feliciter is sapit, qui periculo alieno sapit."
+
+This passage is assigned to Plautus in the _Sylloge_ of Petrus
+Lagnerius, Francf. 1610, p. 312., but I cannot find it in this author.
+
+ C. H. P.
+ Brighton, May 12. 1851.
+
+Perhaps it is hardly an answer to EFFIGIES to tell him that the earliest
+occurrence of this line, with which I am acquainted, is in a rebus
+beneath the device of the Parisian printer, Felix Balligault, about the
+year 1496. Thus:
+
+ "Felix quem faciunt aliena pericula cautum.
+ Felici monumenta die felicia felix
+ Pressit: et hæc vicii dant retinentve nihil."
+
+The device is a fruit-tree, from which a shield is suspended inscribed
+_felix_. Two apes are seated at the foot of the tree. The thought is,
+however, common to the wise and the witty of every age. Menander has it
+thus:--
+
+ "Βλέπων
+ πεπαίδευμ᾽
+ εἰς τὰ τῶν ἄλλων
+ κακά."
+
+And Plautus:
+
+ "Feliciter sapit qui alieno periculum sapit."
+
+Compare Terence, _Heaut._ i. 2. 36.:
+
+ "Periculum et aliis facere, tibi quod ex usu siet."
+
+And Diodorus Siculus, i. ab init.:
+
+ "Καλὸν γὰρ τὸ
+ δύνασθαι τοῖς τῶν
+ ἄλλων ἀγνοήμασι
+ πρὸς διόρθωσιν
+ χρῆσθαι παραδείγμασι."
+
+And Tibullus, lib. iii. eleg. vi.:
+
+ "Felix, quicunque dolore
+ Alterius disces posse carere tuo."
+
+These indications may perhaps put your correspondent in the way of a
+more satisfactory answer to his question.
+
+ S.W. SINGER.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Church Bells_ (Vol. iii., p. 339.).--Should the following extract from
+Mr. Fletcher's _Notes on Nineveh_ have escaped the notice of MR. GATTY,
+it may probably interest him:--
+
+ "During the following (12th) century Dionysius Bar Salibi occupied the
+ (Jacobite) patriarchal throne, a man noted for piety and learning. He
+ composed several works on theological subjects, among which we find a
+ curious disquisition on bells, the invention of which he ascribes to
+ Noah. He mentions that several histories record a command given to
+ that patriarch to strike on the bell with a piece of wood three times
+ a day, in order to summon the workmen to their labour while he was
+ building the ark. And this he seems to consider the origin of church
+ bells, an opinion which, indeed, is common to other Oriental
+ writers."--Vol. ii. p. 212.
+
+ E. H. A.
+
+_Chiming, Tolling, and Pealing_ (Vol. iii., p. 339).--Though the
+following has not, I fear, _canonical_ authority, nor is it of _remote_
+antiquity, still, as they are not lines of yesterday, they may serve as
+one Reply to Mr. GATTY'S late Query on _Chiming, tolling, and
+pealing_:--
+
+ "To call the folk to church in time
+ We _chime_,
+ When joy and mirth are on the wing
+ We _ring_,
+ When we mourn a departed soul
+ We _toll_."
+
+I think it probable (though I have no direct proof of it) that the great
+bell, or tenor, was always RUNG when a sermon was to be _preached_,
+which was not the case when there was to be only prayers. I believe it
+is so at this day at St. Mary's, Oxford; it is very certain that the
+great bell, being so rung, is in some places called the _Sermon_ Bell,
+though I remember two legends on tenor bells, which seem to imply that
+they were intended to call to prayers, viz.:--
+
+ "Come when I call,
+ To serve God all."
+
+ "For Christ, his flock, I aloud do call,
+ To confess their sins, and be pardoned all."
+
+The difference between ringing the tenor (or any bell for prayers), and
+ringing it as a knell, is, that in the latter case the bell is set at
+every pull or stroke, which causes a solemnity in the sound very
+different from that produced by the very reverse mode of ringing it. Oh!
+what language there is in bells. In _ringing_, the bell is swung round;
+in _tolling_, it is swung merely sufficiently for the clapper to strike
+the side. _Chiming_ is when more bells than one are _tolled_ in harmony;
+if this be correct, to _toll_ can be applied only when _one_ bell is
+sounded, and Horne Tooke's definition of the word, from _tollere_, to
+_raise up_, must be wrong (humiliter loquor).
+
+With regard to the present use of the old Sanctus Bell, which is called
+at Ecclesfield _Tom Tinkler_, the same is often called the _Ting Tang_.
+
+ H. T. ELLACOMBE.
+ Clyd St. George.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Extraordinary North Briton_ (Vol. iii., p. 409.).--In answer to the
+inquiries of the reviewer in the _Athenæum_ of May 17, and your
+correspondent, the writer of the _Extraordinary North Briton_ appears to
+have been an individual of the name of William Moore, not, as apparently
+supposed, the poet William Mason. I have, amongst a complete series of
+the London newspapers of the day, a set of the _Extraordinary North
+Briton_, beginning Tuesday (May 10, 1768) and terminating with the 91st
+No. (Saturday, January 27, 1770). Whether it was continued further I do
+not know. The early numbers are published by Staples Steare, 93. Fleet
+Street, and the subsequent ones by T. Peat, 22. Fleet Street, and by
+William Moore, 55., opposite Hatton Garden, Holborn. The second and
+subsequent numbers are entitled, _The Extraordinary North Briton_, by
+W---- M----. In the last three numbers the W---- M---- is altered to
+William Moore, and at the end of each is "London, printed and sold by
+the author, W. Moore, No. 22., near St. Dunstan's Church, Fleet Street."
+In the 90th number is the following advertisement:
+
+ "Mr. Moore thinks it highly incumbent on him to acquaint the public,
+ that Thomas Brayne (who was his shopman all last winter) is now
+ publishing a spurious paper under the same title in Holborn; that they
+ may not be deceived, Mr. Moore's name will be in front of every paper
+ he writes. He begs leave further to add, that Brayne sold several
+ papers last week in his name, and told those who purchased them, that
+ they were wrote by Mr. Moore, and that he published for him. In order
+ that the public may not be deceived by such low artifice, an affidavit
+ of Brayne's proceedings in this respect, will appear in the public
+ papers some time next week."
+
+I have also the papers published by Brayne, which are advertised at the
+end to be "Printed and Published by T. Brayne, No. 55., opposite Hatton
+Garden, Holborn."
+
+I have referred to No. 4, for Friday, June 3, 1768, addressed to Lord
+Mansfield, noticed in the _Athenæum_; but, with all due respect to the
+opinion of the reviewer, I cannot see the slightest similitude to the
+style of Junius. It appears to me to be a very feeble performance, and
+by a very inferior person. Indeed, the entire series of the
+_Extraordinary North Briton_ seems poor and flat when compared with its
+predecessor, the original and famous _North Briton_.
+
+The attempt to show Mason to be Junius is amusing and ingenious; but the
+reviewer has evidently failed in persuading himself, and therefore,
+amidst the many startling improbabilities by which such an attempt is
+encompassed, is scarcely likely to gain many converts to such a theory.
+
+ JAMES CROSSLEY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Fitzpatrick's Lines on Fox._--MR. MARKLAND, in your 78th Number (p.
+334.), asks the true reading of the third line.--The word should be
+"mind," not "course."
+
+The lines are under the engraved bust of Fox, prefixed to the edition,
+in elephant folio, of his _History of the early Part of the Reign of
+James II._, and the word there given is "course." In my copy of that
+work is inserted a letter from Miller, the publisher, to a deceased
+friend of mine, who was an original subscriber at "Five Guineas,
+boards!"
+
+That letter, so far as is material, is as follows:--
+
+ "The error in the engraving of the writing was certainly a very bad
+ one, and not to be remedied, but it is a satisfaction to me that it
+ was Lord Holland's mistake and not mine. I have his lordship's
+ original writing of the four lines to clear myself. W. Miller,
+ Albemarle Street, June 6, 1808."
+
+ Q. D.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Ejusdem Farinæ_ (Vol. iii., p. 278.).--This phrase was used in a
+disparaging sense long before the time of the "scholastic doctors and
+casuists of the middle ages," as may appear from Persius, v. 115-117.,
+where he is showing that an elevation in rank does not necessarily
+produce a more elevated tone of mind; and says to an imaginary upstart:
+
+ "Sin tu, cum fueris _nostræ_ paulò antè _farinæ_,
+ Pelliculam veterem retines, et fronte politus
+ Astutam vapido servas sub pectore vulpem," &c.
+
+It is needless to add that the metaphor is taken from loaves made from
+the "_same batch_" of flour, where, if one be bad, all the others must
+be equally so.
+
+ J. EASTWOOD.
+ Ecclesfield Hall.
+
+Stephens, in his _Thesaurus_, under the head of "Farinæ," states--
+
+ "Proverbiales locutiones sunt, Ejusdem Farinæ, Nostræ farinæ,"
+
+but makes no allusion to its being a term expressive of baseness and
+disparagement. Nor does it seem to be so used by Persius in v. 115. of
+his 5th Satire:
+
+ "Si tu, cum fueris nostræ paulò antè farinæ."
+
+We employ a somewhat similar expression, when we say, "both of the same
+kidney."
+
+ C. I. R.
+
+This expression may be traced beyond "the scholastic doctors and
+casuists of the middle ages." Erasmus, in his _Adagia_, says,--
+
+ "Ejusdem farinæ dicuntur, inter quos est indiscreta similitudo. Quod
+ enim aqua ad aquam collata, idem ad farinam farinæ. Persius in 5
+ Satyr.
+
+ "'Nostræ paulò antè farinæ,
+ Pelliculam veterem retines.'"
+
+And again, on the proverb "Omnia idem pulvis," he says,--
+
+ "Quin nobis omnia idem, quod aiunt, pulvis: alludens ad defunctorum
+ cineres, inter quos nibil apparet discriminis. Confine illi quod alio
+ demonstravimus proverbio, ejusdem farinæ. Siquidem antiqui farinam
+ pollinem vocabant."
+
+Is. Casaubon, in a note on the above passage of Persius, says,--
+
+ "Proverbium Latinum ad notandum similitudinem, 'est ejusdem farinæ,'
+ proprie locum habet in panibus."
+
+Though the expression is generally, if not always, used disparagingly,
+as the corresponding expressions "birds of a feather" and "of the same
+kidney," yet I should doubt whether the term "farinæ" is itself
+expressive of baseness, any more than "feather" or "kidney." By the way,
+what is the origin of the latter of the above expressions?
+
+ E. S. T. T.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_The Sempecta_ (Vol. iii., pp. 328. 357.).--I have to return many thanks
+to DR. MAITLAND for his kindness in so promptly answering my Query. The
+reference to Martene has enabled me to find the poem in question. It is
+in Martene and Durand's _Thesaurus novus Anecdotorum_, Paris, 1717; and
+will be found in vol. iii. col. 1333. The poem forms caput iii. of the
+second book of the _Historia Monasterii Villariensis in Brabantiâ,
+ordinis Cisterciensis_ (a title which shows the monastery to which the
+old soldier-monk belonged instead of Croyland), and is headed "Incipit
+vita beati Franconis." I think there are few of your readers who will
+not thank me for calling their attention to it, if they will take the
+trouble to refer to Martene's work.
+
+ H. R. LUARD.
+ Trin. Coll. May 5.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"_Nulli fraus tuta latebris_" (Vol. iii., p. 323.) will be found in
+_Camerar. Emblem._, cent. ii. 40.
+
+ Q. Q.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Voltaire--where situated_ (Vol. iii., p. 329.).--If the Querist will
+look to the _Critical Essays of an Octogenarian_, by J. R. (the learned,
+venerable, and respected James Roche, Esq., of Cork), he will find, at
+p. 11. vol. i., that there is no such place, the word "Voltaire" being
+merely a transposition of the name of the party assuming it as a
+designation. Thus, he was called _Arouet Le Jeune_. Transpose the
+letters of _Arouet L. J._, and allowing _j_, _u_ and _i_, _v_ to be used
+for each other, you have _Voltaire_.
+
+ K.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_By the Bye_ (Vol. ii., p. 424.; Vol. iii., p. 109.).--In further
+illustration of this phrase, I would advert to the practice of declaring
+by the bye, which prevailed in the superior courts of common law, before
+the Uniformity of Process Act (2 Will. IV., c. 39.). The following
+extract from Burton's _Exchequer Practice_, 1791, vol. i. p. 149., will
+sufficiently explain this happily obsolete matter:--
+
+ "By the old rules it is ordered, 'That upon every defendant's
+ appearance, the plaintiff may put in as many declarations as he will
+ against every such defendant, provided they all be put in at one and
+ the same time.' If there be more than one declaration delivered at the
+ same time against the same defendant, every additional declaration so
+ delivered is called delivering the declaration by the bye."
+
+In the King's Bench, in certain cases, any other plaintiff could declare
+by the bye against the defendant, and that even before the original
+plaintiffs had declared. See Crompton's _Practice Common-placed_, 2nd
+ed., 1783, vol. i. p. 100.
+
+_The Doctor_ (in chap. cx.) says--
+
+ "By the bye, which is the same thing, in common parlance, as by the
+ way, though critically there may seem to be a difference; for by the
+ bye might seem to denote a collateral remark, and by the way a direct
+ one."
+
+By the bye, what a pity it is there is no Index to _The Doctor_.
+
+ C. H. COOPER.
+ Cambridge, March 24, 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Bigod de Loges_ (Vol. iii., p. 306.).--There is an error, perhaps a
+clerical one, in M. J. T.'s statement, that "Bigod, whose name was
+attached to the charter of foundation of St. Werburgh's Abbey, is
+elsewhere, according to Ormerod, called Robert."
+
+The remark is by Leycester, not Ormerod, and the purport is exactly the
+converse. To the words "Signum Roberti de Loges" is added, "alii Bigot
+de Loges hic legunt." Vide _Monasticon_, pars I., pp. 200. 202.
+
+This passage will be found in Leycester's _Antiquities_, p. 111.,
+reprinted in _Hist. Chesh._, vol. i. p. 13. But Leycester's
+_Prolegomena_ is the heading, and the initials "P. L." are appended to
+the note.
+
+ LANCASTRIENSIS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Knebsend or Nebsend, co. York_ (Vol. iii., p. 263.).--A part of
+Sheffield is called Neepsend, which is probably the place inquired after
+by J. N. C., especially as the ordinary pronunciation of it is
+_Nep_send.
+
+ J. EASTWOOD.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Mrs. Catherine Barton_ (Vol. iii., p. 328.).--Your correspondent will
+find all that is known in Sir David Brewster's _Life of Newton_, and
+will see (p. 323.) that her maiden name must have been either Smith,
+Pilkington, or Barton itself.
+
+ M.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Peter Sterry_ (Vol. iii., p. 38.).--In the title-page to his sermon,
+preached before the Parliament, Nov. 1, 1649 (Lond. 1650, 4to.), Sterry
+is called "sometime Fellow of Emanuel College, Cambridge; now a Preacher
+of the Gospel in London." Some account of him may be seen in Burnet's
+_History of his own Time_; and in the _Memoirs of Edmund Ludlow_. Wood
+says that Peter Sterry was notorious "for keeping on that side which had
+proved trump" (_Athenæ_, iii. 197., edit. Bliss).
+
+ EDWARD F. RIMBAULT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Wife of James Torre_ (Vol. iii., p. 329.).--In reply to MR. PEACOCK'S
+Query I beg to inform him that the lady's name was Elizabeth, youngest
+of the four daughters and co-heiresses of William Lincolne, D.D., of
+Bottesford, and by her Mr. Torre had several children, all of whom died
+young except Jane, who married, in 1701, the Rev. Thomas Hassel. This is
+taken from Burke's _Dictionary of Landed Gentry_, vol. ii, M to Z,
+published by Colburn, London, 1847, where the Torre pedigree can be
+seen, but no other mention of the _Lincolne_ family is there made. There
+are seven different coats of arms and crests under the name _Lincolne_
+in Burke's _Armory of England, Scotland, and Ireland_, published by
+Churton in 1843. This is all I can find at present.
+
+ J. N. C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Ramasse_ (Vol. iii., p. 347.).--One word to complete MR. WAY'S
+explanation. This style of sliding down the slopes of the Alps is called
+a _ramasse_, because the guides are ready below to _ramasser_, that is,
+to _pick up_, the travellers who are thus sent down.
+
+ C.
+
+This word is by no means obsolete in France, in the acceptation of "a
+sledge." In addition to the instances given from Barré and Roquefort by
+MR. ALBERT WAY, in his instructive note on the "Pilgrymage of Syr R.
+Guylforde, Knyght," I find in Napoléon Landais' _Dictionnaire général et
+grammatical des Dictionnaires Français_," the following explanation:--
+
+ "RAMASSE, chaise à porteurs, traîneau pour descendre des montagnes où
+ il y a de la neige: _descendre une montagne dans une ramasse_."
+
+He also says, in defining the meaning of the verb "ramasser:"
+
+ "Traîner dans une _ramasse: on le ramassa pendant deux heures; quand
+ il fut sur la montagne, il se fit ramasser_."
+
+The late Mr. Tarver, in his _Dictionnaire Phraséologique Royal_, has
+also the following:
+
+ "RAMASSE, s. f. (t. de voyageur), sledge.
+ "_On le ramassa_, they conveyed him in a sledge.
+ "RAMASSEUR, a man who drives a sledge."
+
+ D. C.
+ St. John's Wood, May 4. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Four Want Way_ (Vol. iii., p. 168.).--Halliwell describes the word
+"want" as meaning in Essex a cross-road. It is still used here as
+denoting a place where four roads meet, and called "a four want way." I
+always fancied it meant a wont way, _via solita_; but I have no
+authority for the etymology.
+
+ BRAYBROOKE.
+ Audley End.
+
+ ["Went" is used in Chaucer in the sense of "way," "passage,"
+ "turning," or road: thus, in _Troilus and Creseide_, iii. 788., he
+ speaks of a "a privie went," and v. 605., "And up and doun there made
+ he many a went;" and in the _House of Fame_:
+
+ "And in a forrest as they went,
+ At the tourning of a went."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Dr. Owen's Works_ (Vol. i., p. 276.).--The editor of the _Works of John
+Owen_ is informed, that in the valuable library of George Offor, Esq.,
+of Hackney, will be found a thick volume in manuscript of unpublished
+_Sermons on the Fifty-third Chapter of Isaiah_, in the Doctor's own
+hand-writing, and apparently prepared for publication. The same library
+also contains two scarce pieces by Dr. Owen, which it is thought have
+never been reprinted: 1. _The Stedfastness of Promises, and the
+Sinfulness of Staggering_, opened in a sermon preached at Margaret's, in
+Westminster, before the Parliament, Feb. 28, 1649, being a Day set apart
+for Solemn Humiliation throughout the Nation. By John Owen, Minister of
+the Gospel. London, 1650. 4to. pp. 54.--2. _God's Work in Founding Zion,
+and his People's Duty thereupon._ A Sermon preached in the Abbey Church
+at Westminster, at the opening of the Parliament, Sept. 17, 1656. By
+John Owen, a Servant of Jesus Christ in the Work of the Gospel. Oxford,
+1656. 4to. pp. 48.
+
+ J. Y.
+ Hoxton.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Bactrian Coins_ (Vol. iii., p. 353.).--Has your correspondent read the
+book by Masson _On the Coins, &c. of Afghanistan_, published by
+Professor H. H. Wilson? There are also references to authorities in
+Humphreys _On Ancient Coins and Medals_.
+
+ C. B.
+
+_Bactria._--BLOWEN will find some trustworthy information respecting
+Bactria in Professor Lassen's _Indische Alterthumskunde_, Zweiter Band,
+pp. 277. et seq. Bonn, 1849; and a list of authorities on the
+Græco-Bactrian coins in the same work, pp. 282. 283. (notes).
+
+ C. H.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Baldrocks_ (Vol. iii., p. 328.).--On looking over a vestry book
+belonging to South Lynn in this town, commencing at 1605, and ending in
+1677, I find some Churchwardens' Accounts, and amongst them the two
+following entries, which may, I trust, assist "A CHURCHWARDEN," and lead
+to an elucidation of this word:--
+
+ "1610.
+ "Janua. 17. ffor a _balledrick_ to ye great Bell, xxi_d._
+
+ "1618.
+ "Novemb. 22. Item. for mendine of ye _baldericke_ for ye foore
+ bell, vj_d._"
+
+From these entries it seems that the "baldrock" was something attached
+to the great bell.
+
+In most of the recent English Dictionaries the word is applied to
+furniture, and to a belt or girdle. But in a Latin Dictionary published
+at Cambridge in 1693, I find in the Anglo-Latin part the following:--
+
+ English. A bawdrick of a bell clapper.
+ Latin. Ropali corrigia.
+
+And the English of "Ropali Corrigia" seems (notwithstanding the English
+version given with it) to be "_pieces of leather_," or "_thongs of
+leather_" to the bell clapper, but for what purpose used I do not know.
+
+ JOHN NURSE CHADWICK.
+
+P.S. The word "corrigia" is taken from the word "corium," a skin of
+leather.
+
+ [Were not these leather coverings?--that for the rope, to prevent its
+ cutting the ringer's hands (as we constantly see), and also to prevent
+ his hand slipping; and that for the clapper, to muffle it--straps of
+ leather girded round them.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Tu Autem_ (Vol. iii., pp. 265. 308.).--The "Tu Autem," still remembered
+at Oxford and Cambridge, and yet lingering at the public dinners of the
+canons of Durham, is the last fragment of what was once a daily, or at
+least an almost daily, religious form or service at those ancient
+places; and it is rather strange that such a fragment should have
+remained so long in the collegiate and cathedral refectory without
+having preserved any remembrance of its real origin and meaning. If
+Bishop Hendren or Father Holdfast would forego their favourite pursuits
+for a few minutes, and look into your interesting and improving
+miscellany, they might inform you that in the Romish Breviary--which, no
+doubt, has preserved many ancient religious services--there is a form
+entitled _Benedictio mensæ_. As the generality of your readers may not
+have the Breviary at hand, I send you so much of the service as may
+suffice for the present purpose.
+
+ "BENEDICTIO MENSÆ.
+
+ "_Ante prandium Sacerdos benedicturus mensam, incipit_, Benedicite,
+ _et alii repetunt_, Benedicite. _Deinde dicit_ Oculi omnium, _et alii
+ prosequuntur_. In te sperant, Domine, et tu das escam illorum in
+ tempore opportuno" &c. &c. Then "Gloria Patri" &c., and "Pater noster"
+ &c. &c.
+
+ "_Posteà Sacerdos dicit_:
+
+ "Oremus.
+
+ "Benedic Domine nos, et hæc tua dona, quæ de tua largitate sumus
+ sumpturi. Per Christum Dominum nostrum. Amen.
+
+ "_Deinde Lector._ Jube Domine benedicere. _Benedictio._ Mensæ
+ coelestis participes faciat nos Rex æternæ gloriæ. Amen.
+
+ "_Post prandium aguntur gratiæ hoc modo. Dicto à Lectore_, Tu autem
+ Domine miserere nobis. Deo gratias, _omnes surgunt_.
+
+ "_Sacerdos incipit._ Confiteantur tibi Domine omnia opera tua. Et
+ Sancti tui benedicant tibi. Gloria Patri, &c.
+
+ "_Posteà Sacerdos absolutè dicat_: _A_gimus tibi gratias, omnipotens
+ Deus, pro universis beneficiis tuis, &c.
+
+ "_Deinde alternatim dicitur Psalmus._ Miserere mei Deus.
+
+ "_Vel Psalmus 116._" (in our version, 117.), &c. &c. &c.
+
+The service then proceeds with very much repetition. The performance of
+the whole would probably occupy twenty minutes.
+
+I must note that there are variations in the service depending upon the
+season, &c. &c.
+
+I have indicated the _rubric_ of the Breviary by _Italics_.
+
+ J. YALC.
+ Preston, Lanc.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Commoner marrying a Peeress_ (Vol. ii., p. 230.).--Your correspondent
+L. R. N. inquires whether there is any decision subsequent to that in
+the reign of Henry VIII. on the claim to the Taylboys barony, respecting
+the right of a Commoner marrying a peeress to assume her title and
+dignity, he having issue male by her. In reply I beg to inform him that
+there appears to have been one on the claim of Richard Bertie, in 1580,
+to the Barony of Willoughby, in right of his wife Catherine Duchess of
+Suffolk, as tenant by the curtesy, which was rejected, and Peregrine
+Bertie her son was admitted in the lifetime of his father. It seems,
+however, from the want of modern instances, as also by the elevation of
+ladies to the rank of peeresses, with remainders to their children, thus
+enabling the issue to sit in the lifetime of the father, that the
+prevailing notion is against curtesy in titles of honour. This subject
+will be found treated at some length in Cruise's _Digest_, vol. iii. pp.
+187, 188. 198. ed. 1818.
+
+ O. S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Ancient Wood Engraving_ (Vol. iii., p. 277.).--The subject of THE
+HERMIT OF HOLYPORT'S question is an engraving of the "Pinax" of Cebes, a
+Theban philosopher who wrote circa A. M. 3600, and who, in his
+allegorical work of that name, described human life under the guise of a
+picture.
+
+This information is for the HERMIT'S especial benefit, as I suppose it
+will be old news to most of your correspondents.
+
+I have an old Dutch edition of the "Pinax" (Gerard de Jager, 1683),
+bound in vellum, with the _Enchiridion_ and other works of Epictetus;
+the frontispiece of which is the fellow to the Hermit's engraving.
+
+ F. I.
+ Bradford.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Vegetating Insects_ (Vol. iii., p. 166.).--As the Query of MR. MANLEY
+in No. 70. has not been answered, I beg to say that Vegetating Insects
+are not uncommon both in New South Wales and New Zealand. The insect is
+the caterpillar of a large brown moth, and in New South Wales is
+sometimes found six inches long, buried in the ground, and the plant
+above ground about the same length: the top, expanded like a flower, has
+a brown velvety texture. In New Zealand the _plant_ is different, being
+a single stem from six to ten inches high: its apex, when in a state of
+fructification, resembles the club-headed bulrush in miniature. When
+newly dug up, and divided longitudinally, the intestinal canal is
+distinctly visible, and frequently the hairs, legs, and mandibles.
+Vegetation invariably proceeds from the nape of the neck; from which it
+may be inferred, that the insect, in crawling to the place where it
+inhumes itself, prior to its metamorphosis, while burrowing in the light
+vegetable soil, gets some of the minute seeds of the fungus between the
+scales of its neck, from which in its sickening state it is unable to
+free itself, and which consequently, being nourished by the warmth and
+moisture of the insect's body then lying motionless, vegetates, and not
+only impedes the process of change in the chrysalis, but likewise
+occasions the death of the insect. The New South Wales specimen is
+called "Sphæria Innominata," that of New Zealand "Sphæria Robertsii;"
+both named, I believe, by Sir W. J. Hooker. In some specimens of the New
+Zealand kind now before me, the _bodies_ of the insects are in their
+normal state, but the legs, &c., are gone.
+
+Both specimens are figured and described in the _Tasmanian Journal_,
+vol. i. No. 4.
+
+ VIATOR.
+
+ Chatham.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Prayer at the Healing_ (Vol. iii., p. 352.).--N. E. R. inquires whether
+this prayer found a place in the prayer-books printed at Oxford or
+Cambridge.
+
+I have it before me in the folio Book of Common Prayer, "Oxford, printed
+by John Baskett, Printer to the King's Most Excellent Majesty, and to
+the University, MDCCXV." It is placed between the form of prayer for
+Aug. 1. (the King's Accession) and the King's Declaration preceding the
+Articles.
+
+This form differs from that given by Sparrow, in his _Collection_, edit.
+1684, p. 165., as follows:--
+
+Sparrow gives _two_ Gospels: Mark, xvi. 14., St. John, i. 1., the
+imposition of the King's hands taking place at the words "_they shall
+lay_," &c. in the reading of the first, and the gold being placed at
+reading the words "_that light_" in the second.
+
+In Baskett's form, the _first_ Gospel only is used, with the collect
+"_Prevent us, O Lord_," before it.
+
+In Baskett's form, the supplicatory versicles and Lord's Prayer, which
+agree in their own order with the earlier form, _follow_ this first
+Gospel, and _precede the imposition and the suspension of the gold_,
+during which (it is directed) the chaplain that officiates, _turning
+himself to his Majesty_, shall say these words following:
+
+ "God give a blessing to this work, and grant that these sick persons,
+ on whom the king lays his hands, may recover through Jesus Christ our
+ Lord."
+
+This does _not_ appear in Sparrow's form of 1684, _neither_ does the
+following address, at the close, by the "chaplain, _standing with his
+face towards them that come to be healed_."
+
+ "The Almighty God, who is a most strong tower to all them that put
+ their trust in Him, to whom all things in heaven, in earth, and under
+ the earth do bow and obey, be now and evermore your defence, and make
+ you know and feel that there is none other Name under heaven given to
+ man, in whom, and through whom, you may receive health and salvation,
+ but only the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, Amen."
+
+Objectionable as the ceremony was, there can be no doubt that a much
+more Protestant character was given to it by these alterations.
+
+ LANCASTRIENSIS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_M. or N._ (Vol. i., p. 415.; Vol. ii., p. 61.; Vol. iii., p.
+323.).--With reference to the initials or letters M. and N. found in the
+Catechism and the Marriage Service of our Common Prayer Book, it has
+struck me that a fancy of mine may satisfy some of those who wish to
+find more than a mere caprice in the selection of them.
+
+It is remarkable that in the Catechism we read N. or M., while in the
+service for Matrimony M. is for the man, N. for the woman.
+
+I have imagined long ago that "N. or M." may mean "_n_omen viri; aut
+_m_ulieris:" that M. may stand for "maritus" in the other place, and N.
+for "nupta."
+
+ TYRO ETYMOLOGICUS.
+
+N. stands (as it constantly did in MS.) for "nomen" or name; M. for N.
+N., "nomina" or names. You will observe that in black letter the forms
+of N and M are so very similar that by an easy contraction double N
+would pass into M, and thus the contracted form N. N. for "nomina" might
+have come into M. Corroborating this is the fact that the answer to What
+is your name? stands thus: Answer N. or M., and not M. or N.
+
+ J. F. T.
+
+P.S. Throughout the Matrimonial Service I observe M. attached to the
+man's name, but N. to the woman's.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Dancing Trenchmore_ (Vol. iii., p. 89.).--Your correspondent S. G. asks
+the meaning of this phrase? _Trenchmore_ was a very popular dance in the
+sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The earliest mention I find of it
+occurs in 1564, and the latest in 1728. The figure and the musical notes
+may be seen in the fifth and later editions of _The Dancing Master_. See
+also Chappell's _National English Airs_, vol. ii. p. 181., where some
+amusing quotations concerning its popularity are given. _Trenchmore_
+(the meaning of which we have to seek) was, however, more particularly
+the name of the _dance_ than the tune. The _dance_, in fact, was
+performed to _various_ tunes. In proof of this I give the following
+quotation from Taylor the water-poet's _Navy of Land Ships_, 1627:
+
+ "Nimble-heel'd mariners (like so many dancers) capring in the pompes
+ and vanities of this sinful world, sometimes a Morisco, or
+ _Trenchmore_ of forty miles long, to the tune of _Dusty my deare_,
+ _Dirty come thou to me_, _Dun out of the mire_, or _I waile in woe and
+ plunge in paine_: all these dances have no other musicke."
+
+ EDWARD F. RIMBAULT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Demosthenes and New Testament_ (Vol. iii., p. 350.).--If your
+correspondent C. H. P. had referred to the _Critici Sacri_, he would
+have found his questions answered. With regard to the quotation from
+Acts xvii. 21., I beg to inform him that Drusius makes the same
+reference, but generally only, as Pricæus; while Grotius gives the
+passages with particular references, in the same manner as Lagnerius. As
+to the passage from St. Matthew xiii. 14., he would have found, had he
+consulted the _Critici Sacri_, that Grotius quotes the same passage from
+Demosthenes as Pricæus; but, as far as I can see, they are the only
+commentators in that work who observed the parallel passages. However,
+the fact of its being "employed as an established proverb by Demosthenes
+having been generally overlooked," as C. H. P. supposes, is not quite
+correct, as it is mentioned in the brief notes in Dr. Burton's _Greek
+Testament_, Oxon., 1831.
+
+ H. C. K.
+ ---- Rectory, Hereford, May 3. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Roman Catholic Church_ (Vol. iii., pp. 168. 409.).--E. H. A. will find
+the information which he requires in the _Notizie per l'anno_ 1851. It
+is a very small annual published at Rome _by authority_. Its price
+cannot exceed 4_s._ or 5_s._
+
+ F.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Yankee, Derivation of_ (Vol. iii., p. 260.).--In Webster's _American
+Dictionary_, and in the _Imperial Dictionary, English, Technological,
+and Scientific_, J. M. will see the etymology of Yankee, which M.
+Philarète Charles supposes not to be given in any work American or
+English.
+
+ NORTHMAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_English French_ (Vol. iii., p. 346.).--I take the liberty to inform C.
+W. B., for the justification of my countrymen, as well as of his own,
+that the _Guide to Amsterdam_ was probably written by a British subject
+born between the tropics, and will point out, not by way of reprisals,
+but as a curiosity of the same sort, an example of French-English to be
+found in a book just published by Whittaker and Co., entitled _What's
+What in 1851_? Let any one who understands French try to read the
+article, p. 69., headed "Qu'êst que, qu'êst que la veritable luxure en
+se promenant," and if he can guess at the meaning of the writer, no
+foreign-English I ever met with will ever give him trouble.
+
+ G. L. KEPPER.
+ Amsterdam, May 10. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Deans, when styled Very Reverend_ (Vol. iii., p. 352.).--I cannot
+answer this question, but I can supply a trace, if not a clue. I find in
+a long series of old almanacks that the list of deans is invariably
+given as _the Reverend_ the dean down to 1803 inclusive. I unluckily
+have not those for the three next years, but in that for 1807 I find
+"_the very Reverend_ the dean."
+
+ C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Duchess of Buckingham_ (Vol. iii., p. 281.).--There is one circumstance
+omitted by P. C. S. S., in his remarks upon the Duchess of Buckingham,
+which explains why _a Phipps_, on being called to the peerage, chose the
+titles of Mulgrave and Normanby.
+
+By her second husband--the Duke of Buckingham and Normanby--she had one
+son, who succeeded to the title and estates; but, dying unmarried during
+his mother's lifetime, _bequeathed to her all the Mulgrave and Normanby
+property_. Her daughter (by her first marriage with James Annesley,
+third Earl of Anglesey) was then the wife of Mr. W. Phipps, son of Sir
+Constantine Phipps, Lord Chancellor of Ireland: to their issue,
+Constantine Phipps, first Lord Mulgrave, the Duchess _left by will these
+estates_; thus founding her grandson's fortune, although she did not
+live to see him created the first Baron Mulgrave.
+
+The Sheffield Buckingham family, although extinct in the male line, is
+represented in the female branch by the Sheffield Dicksons; Mrs.
+Dickson, the widow of Major Dickson, of the Life-Guards, being in direct
+descent from the Lady Catherine Darnley's husband, by another wife.
+
+ A. B.
+ Redland, April 13.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Swearing by the Peacock_ (Vol. iii., p. 70.).--Swearing in the presence
+of a peacock, referred to by T. J., from Dr. Lingard's _History of
+England_, time of Edward I., is, with the ceremony observed at the Feast
+of the Peacock, in the thirteenth century, related at full by Mr. Knight
+in his _Old England_, pp. 311. and 312.; and the representation of the
+Feast from the Bran of Robert Braunche, in the choir of St. Margaret's
+Church at Lynn (a mayor of Lynn), who died October 15, 1364, is given
+fig. 1088.
+
+ BLOWEN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Howe Family_ (Vol. iii., p. 353.).--Your correspondent who asks what
+was the connexion of the Howes with the royal family, will find in
+Walpole's _Reminiscences_ (ch. ii.) that Charlotte Viscountess Howe, the
+mother of Captain Howe, afterwards the celebrated admiral, and of
+General Sir William Howe, was the daughter of George I. by Madame
+Kelmansegge, Countess of Platen, created in England Countess of
+Darlington.
+
+ C.
+
+
+
+
+Miscellaneous.
+
+
+NOTES ON BOOKS, SALES, CATALOGUES, ETC.
+
+Dr. Gregory, Professor of Chemistry at the University of Edinburgh, and
+the translator of Reichenbach's _Researches on Magnetism_, has just
+published a volume destined, we believe, to excite considerable
+attention, both from the nature of its subject and the position of the
+writer. It is entitled _Letters to a Candid Inquirer on Animal
+Magnetism_, and in the first Part, after describing the phenomena, and
+their application to medical purposes, and to the explanation of much
+that is obscure in what is called Magic or Witchcraft, "a great part of
+which appears to have rested on a knowledge of these phenomena possessed
+by a few in an ignorant age," Dr Gregory suggests, not as a fully
+developed theory, but simply as a conceivable idea, an explanation of
+the _modus operandi_ in magnetic phenomena, especially in clairvoyance.
+The basis of this explanation is the existence of that universally
+diffused power or influence, the existence of which, in Dr. Gregory's
+opinion, Reichenbach has demonstrated. The second Part consists of a
+large and startling collection of mostly unpublished cases; and Dr.
+Gregory expresses his conviction that if the evidence is fairly studied,
+it will be impossible to believe that the alleged facts are the result
+of imposture or of delusion; or to resist the conviction, which
+investigation will confirm, that the essential facts, however apparently
+marvellous, are yet true, and have been faithfully reported. These cases
+are indeed most extraordinary, and would, at first sight, seem more
+fitted to fill our Folk Lore columns than to become the subject of
+scientific enquiry; and most readers, we believe, will rise from their
+perusal with an inclination to admit that there are more things true
+than are dreamt of in their philosophy--some with an anxious doubt
+whether these "arts" are not as "forbidden" as they are "curious."
+
+The Society of Arts have opened a reading-room for the gratuitous use of
+foreign visitors to London during the Great Exhibition. Our readers will
+be doing a kindness to their friends from the Continent by making them
+acquainted with this act of liberality and good feeling on the part of
+the Society of Arts.
+
+Messrs. Puttick and Simpson (191. Piccadilly) will sell on Wednesday and
+Thursday next a curious and valuable Library, rich more especially in
+the department of voyages and travels, and including a collection of
+very rare works relating to America.
+
+CATALOGUES RECEIVED.--B. Quaritch's (16. Castle Street, Leicester
+Square) Cheap Book Circular No. 29. of Books in all Languages.--C.
+Hamilton's (22. Anderson's Buildings, City Road) Interesting Catalogue
+No. 43. of Cheap Tracts, Law and Miscellaneous Manuscripts, &c.--J.
+Miller's (43. Chandos Street) Catalogue No. 23. of Books Old and New.
+
+
+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.
+
+ THOMS' 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 et 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).
+
+ WHARTON'S ANGLIA SACRA. Vol. II.
+
+ PHEBUS (Gaston, Conte de Foix), Livre du deduyt de la Chasse.
+
+ TURNER'S SACRED HISTORY. 3 vols. demy 8vo.
+
+ KNIGHT'S PICTORIAL HISTORY OF ENGLAND. Vol. IV. Commencing from
+ Abdication of James II.
+
+ LORD DOVER'S LIFE OF FREDERICK THE GREAT. 8vo. 1832. Vol. II.
+
+ LADIES' DIARY FOR 1825 AND 1826.
+
+ CHRISTIAN'S COUNSELS, &C., WITH THE SEPARATISTS' SCHISM, by Richard
+ Bernard, of Worksop or Batcombe, 1608.
+
+ Any early Copies of Tyndale the Reformer's WORKS.
+
+ LIFE OF DR. RICHARD FIELD, 2 Vols. 8vo. London. 1716-17.
+
+ FAIRFAX'S TASSO, Singer's Edit. Large paper, uncut.
+
+ CRESPET, PERE. Deux Livres de la Haine de Satan et des Malins Esprits
+ contre l'Homme. 8vo. Paris, 1590.
+
+ JACQUIER, N. FLAGELLUM DÆMONUM V. HÆRETICORUM FASCINARIORUM, &c. 8vo.
+ Francfurt, 1581.
+
+ [Star symbol] 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 again enlarged our paper to 24 pages, we are
+ compelled to request the indulgence of our correspondents for omitting
+ many highly interesting communications._
+
+P. J. F. G. _The communication referred to does not appear to have
+reached us._
+
+T. T. W. _Received with thanks. Will be used as soon as possible._
+
+T. E. H. _who suggests that by way of hastening the period when we shall
+be justified in permanently enlarging our Paper to 24 pages, we should
+forward to those correspondents who will circulate them copies of our_
+Prospectus, _for them to enclose to such of their friends as they think
+likely from their love of literature to become Subscribers to_ "NOTES
+AND QUERIES," _is thanked for his valuable suggestion, which we shall be
+most ready to adopt. If therefore_, T. E. H., _or any other friend able
+and willing so to promote our circulation, will say how Prospectuses may
+be addressed to them, they shall be sent by return of Post._
+
+MERCURII _will find his Query respecting Matthew's_ Mediterranean
+Passage _in our 74th Number_, p. 210. _This correspondent is assured
+that our paper is_ regularly _published at noon on Friday,--and that the
+London agent of his bookseller is deceiving him if he reports it as_
+"not out." _If his bookseller will try another agent for a week or two,
+he will find no difficulty in getting_ "NOTES AND QUERIES" _in time for
+the Yarmouth readers on Saturday._
+
+REPLIES RECEIVED.--_Barker the Panoramist--Redwing's
+Nest--Prenzie--Legend in Frettenham Church--White Rose--Image of both
+Churches--Vineyards--Eisell--Statistics of Roman Catholic
+Church--Robertson of Muirtown--Omen at Marriage--Old London Bellman--On
+Passage in "Measure for Measure"--Sewell--Penn Family--Court Dress--Noli
+me tangere--School of the Heart--Lay of Last Minstrel--Cachcope
+Bell--Baron Munchausen--To Three Queries by Nemo, &c., by C. P. P. (who
+is thanked for corrections)--The Tradescants--Meaning of
+Mosaic--Portugal--Genealogy of European Sovereigns._
+
+ VOLS. I. _and_ II., _each with very copious Index, may still be had,
+ price 9_s._ 6_d._ 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.
+
+
+ACROSS THE ATLANTIC.
+
+ Now ready, small 8vo., cloth, price 5_s._
+
+ =ACROSS THE ATLANTIC.= By the Author of "Sketches of Cantabs."
+
+ "A smart volume, full of clever observations about America and the
+ Americans, and the contrasts of trans-Atlantic and cis-Atlantic
+ life."--_John Bull._
+
+ "It is sensible as well as witty, accurate as well as facetious, and
+ deserves to be popular."--_Morning Post._
+
+ London: EARLE, 67. Castle Street, Oxford Street.
+
+
+=THE GENERAL LAND DRAINAGE AND IMPROVEMENT COMPANY.=
+
+ Incorporated by Act of Parliament, 12 and 13 Vict. c. 91.
+
+ DIRECTORS.
+
+ HENRY KER SEVMER, Esq., M.P., Hanford, Dorset, Chairman.
+ JOHN VILLIERS SHELLEY, Esq., Maresfield Park, Sussex,
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+
+ This Company is empowered to execute--
+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
+
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+ REV. S. R. MAITLAND, DD. F.R.S. F.S.A. Sometime Librarian to the late
+ Archbishop of Canterbury, and Keeper of the MSS. at Lambeth.
+
+ "One of the most valuable and interesting pamphlets we ever
+ read."--_Morning Herald._
+
+ "This publication, which promises to be the commencement of a larger
+ work, will well repay serious perusal."--_Ir. Eccl. Journ._
+
+ "A small pamphlet in which he throws a startling light on the
+ practices of modern Mesmerism."--_Nottingham Journal._
+
+ "Dr. Maitland, we consider, has here brought Mesmerism to the
+ 'touchstone of truth,' to the test of the standard of right or wrong.
+ We thank him for this first instalment of his inquiry, and hope that
+ he will not long delay the remaining portions."--_London Medical
+ Gazette._
+
+ "The Enquiries are extremely curious, we should indeed say important.
+ That relating to the Witch of Endor is one of the most successful we
+ ever read. We cannot enter into particulars in this brief notice; but
+ we would strongly recommend the pamphlet even to those who care
+ nothing about Mesmerism, or _angry_ (for it has come to this at last)
+ with the subject."--_Dublin Evening Post._
+
+ "We recommend its general perusal as being really an endeavour, by one
+ whose position gives him the best facilities, to ascertain the genuine
+ character of Mesmerism, which is so much disputed."--_Woolmer's Exeter
+ Gazette._
+
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+ =A TREATISE OF EQUIVOCATION.= Wherein is largely discussed the
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+ being demanded upon his Oath whether a Prieste were in such a place,
+ may (notwithstanding his perfect knowledge to the contrary) without
+ Perjury, and securely in conscience, answer No; with this secret
+ meaning reserved in his mynde, That he was not there so that any man
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+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Queries, Vol. III, Number
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Queries, Vol. III, Number 83, May
+31, 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, Vol. III, Number 83, May 31, 1851
+ A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists,
+ Antiquaries, Geneologists, etc
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: George Bell
+
+Release Date: July 29, 2011 [EBook #36835]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES AND QUERIES, MAY 31, 1851 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charlene Taylor, Jonathan Ingram and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NOTES AND QUERIES:
+
+A MEDIUM OF INTER-COMMUNICATION
+
+FOR
+
+LITERARY MEN, ARTISTS, ANTIQUARIES, GENEALOGISTS, ETC.
+
+
+"When found, make a note of."--CAPTAIN CUTTLE.
+
+
+VOL. III.--NO. 83--SATURDAY, MAI 31. 1851.
+
+Price Threepence. Stamped Edition 4_d._
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+
+ Page
+
+ On the Proposed Record of Existing Monuments 417
+
+ NOTES:--
+
+ Illustrations of Chaucer, No. VII.: The star Min Al Auwâ 419
+
+ Traditions from remote Periods through few Links, by Rev.
+ Thos. Corser 421
+
+ Dr. Young's Narcissa 422
+
+ Minor Notes:--Curious Epitaph--The Curse of Scotland--The
+ Female Captive--Pictorial Antiquities 422
+
+ QUERIES:--
+
+ English Poems by Constantine Huyghens, by S. W. Singer 423
+
+ The Rev. Mr. Gay, by Edward Tagart 424
+
+ Minor Queries:--Carved Ceiling in Dorsetshire--Publicans'
+ Signs--To a T.--Skeletons at Egyptian Banquet--Gloves--Knapp
+ Family in Norfolk and Suffolk--To learn by "Heart"--Knights--
+ Supposed Inscription in St. Peter's at Rome--Rag Sunday in
+ Sussex--Northege Family--A Kemble Pipe of Tobacco--Durham
+ Sword that killed the Dragon 424
+
+ MINOR QUERIES ANSWERED:--"At Sixes and Sevens"--Swobbers--
+ Handel's Occasional Oratorio--Archbishop Waldeby's
+ Epitaph--Verstegan--Royal Library 425
+
+ REPLIES:--
+
+ Hugh Holland and his Works, by Bolton Corney 427
+
+ The Milesians 428
+
+ The Tanthony 428
+
+ Pilgrims' Road to Canterbury 429
+
+ Replies to Minor Queries:--Shakespeare's Use of
+ "Captious"--Inscription of a Clock--Authors of the Anti-Jacobin
+ Poetry--"Felix, quem faciunt," &c.--Church Bells--Chiming,
+ Tolling, and Pealing--Extraordinary North Briton--Fitzpatrick's
+ Lines of Fox--Ejusdem Farinæ--The Sempecta--"Nulli fraus
+ tuta latebris"--Voltaire, where situated--By the Bye--Bigod de
+ Loges--Knebsend--Mrs. Catherine Barton--Peter Sterry--Wife of
+ James Torre--Ramasse--Four Want Way--Dr. Owen's Works--Bactrian
+ Coins--Baldrocks--Tu Autem--Commoner marrying a Peeress--Ancient
+ Wood Engraving--Vegetating Insects--Prayer at the Healing--M.
+ or N., &c. 430
+
+ MISCELLANEOUS:--
+
+ Notes on Books, Sales, Catalogues, &c. 438
+
+ Books and Odd Volumes wanted 438
+
+ Notices to Correspondents 439
+
+ Advertisements 439
+
+
+
+
+ON THE PROPOSED RECORD OF EXISTING MONUMENTS.
+
+
+ Although disappointed in the hope we had entertained of being, by this
+ time, in a position to announce that some decided steps had been taken
+ to carry out, in a practical manner, the great scheme of preserving a
+ record of our existing Monuments, we are gratified at being enabled to
+ bring under the notice of our readers several communications which
+ show the still increasing interest which is felt upon the subject.
+
+ The first, by Sir Thomas Phillipps, besides some valuable information
+ upon the matter immediately under consideration, contains several very
+ useful suggestions upon other, though kindred points.
+
+In approving of the design mentioned in your "NOTES" by MR. DUNKIN, it
+has surprised me that in no one of the communications which you have
+there printed is any allusion to the multitude of inscriptions already
+collected, and now preserved in the British Museum and other libraries.
+A list of what are already copied should _first_ be made, which would
+considerably abridge the labour of collecting. For instance, the whole
+of Gloucestershire has been preserved by Bigland, and nearly two-thirds
+of these have been printed. I should recommend his plan to be adopted,
+being _multum in parvo_, as to the headstones in the churchyards, and
+the clearest for reference by its alphabetical order of parishes. He
+copies them about 1780; so that now seventy years remain to be obtained.
+His collection would make two, or at most three, volumes folio, by which
+we can form an approximate idea as to the extent for the kingdom, which
+I estimate at one hundred volumes for the forty counties, because some
+of these are very small, and many monuments have been destroyed by the
+barbarous Gothlike conduct of church renovators and builders. (_A
+propos_ of which conduct, I believe they are liable to an _action at
+law_ from the next of kin: at all events, it is sacrilege.) In many
+county histories, _all_ the monuments inside the churches, up to nearly
+the date of the publication, have been printed, as in Nichols's
+_Leicestershire_. I have myself printed the greater part of those for
+Wiltshire; but some are incorrectly printed, not having been collated;
+for I merely printed a few as handbooks to accompany me in my personal
+correcting survey of each church at another time. I have also printed as
+far as letter "E" of Antony à Wood's and Hinton's _Oxfordshire
+Monuments_, of which, I believe, MR. DUNKIN has a MS. copy. Now, it
+would be useless to reprint those which have been printed; consequently
+I should imagine twenty-five or thirty volumes, on Bigland's plan, would
+comprise all the villages; and I should imagine five or ten volumes at
+most would comprise all the capital towns. Allow me here to suggest the
+absolute necessity of taking "Notes" of the residence, parentage, and
+kindred of _every one_ of the families of that vast tide of emigration
+now quitting our shores; and I call Lord Ashley's and Mr. Sidney
+Herbert's attention to it. These poor people will, many of them, become
+rich in half a century; will then probably die without a kindred soul in
+America to possess their wealth; and their next of kin must be sought
+for in the mother land, where, unless some _registered memorial_ of
+their departure and connexions is kept, all traces of their origin may
+be lost for ever. It was the neglect of an act like this which has
+involved the beginning of nations in such profound obscurity. It was the
+neglect of such a register as I here propose, that makes it so difficult
+now for the American to discover the link which actually connected him
+with England. There is a corporate body, long established in this
+country, whose sole occupation is to make such registers; but at present
+they confine themselves to those called gentlemen. Why not make them
+useful as registers of the poor, at a small remuneration for entering
+each family. These poor, or their descendants, will some day become
+gentlemen, and perhaps not ashamed of their ancestry, although they may
+derive it through poverty. How gratified they may feel to be able, by
+means of this proposed registry, clearly to trace themselves to Great
+Britain (once the mistress of half the world), when their now adopted
+country has risen up in her place, and the mother has become subject to
+the daughter.
+
+And then, too, how valuable will Americans and Canadians, Australians
+and New Zealanders, find the proposed _Monumentarium_ of MR. DUNKIN.
+
+ THOS. PHILLIPPS.
+ Middle Hill, April, 1851.
+
+ The next is from a frequent contributor to our pages, and we have
+ selected it for publication from among many which we have received
+ promising assistance in the carrying out of the great scheme, because
+ it shows very strikingly how many of the memorials, which it is the
+ especial object of that scheme to preserve, have disappeared within
+ the last few years.
+
+Your valuable remarks on this head have induced me to send you a few
+observations in the same direction. You have justly said that the means
+by which the object can be accomplished fall into the three distinct
+operations of Collection, Preservation, and Publication. The first will
+require the help of all antiquaries throughout the kingdom who will
+volunteer their services, and of the clergymen resident in country
+parishes. Where possible, it would be well to find a co-operator in
+every county town, who would undertake the collection of all ancient
+memorials in his own district, either by personal inspection, or by the
+aid of the clergy. For this county we have, fortunately, a record of
+all or most of the monuments existing in the time of James I., published
+in Burton's History. Besides the monuments, there are also mentioned the
+coats of arms preserved in the churches. In the useful and voluminous
+world of Nichols, the record is brought down nearly to the commencement
+of the present century. But in late years, many ancient memorials have
+been removed altogether, or displaced. A day or two ago, I found only
+one monument in a village church, where Burton says there were two in
+his time. The chancel of St. Martin's Church, Leicester, a few years
+ago, contained a large number, of which many have been placed elsewhere,
+in order to "improve" the appearance of this part of the edifice. I
+believe a list of the monuments is preserved somewhere. This kind of
+proceeding has been carried on very generally throughout the country
+since the desire for "church restoration" has prevailed, and has led to
+great alterations in the interiors of our old parish churches. I should
+be happy to lend a helping hand in the collections for Leicester and the
+neighbourhood.
+
+ JAYTEE.
+
+ From our next communication, it will be seen that the Scottish
+ Antiquaries, whose zeal and intelligence in the preservation and
+ illustration of objects of national interest, are beyond all praise,
+ are working in the same direction; and although we have not seen the
+ _Origines Parochiales_, we can readily believe in the great value of a
+ work of such a character when undertaken by the Bannatyne Club.
+
+It may interest some of your "Monumental" and "Ecclesiological"
+correspondents to be informed that in 1834 there was collected and
+published by D. Macvean, bookseller, Glasgow, a volume of _Epitaphs and
+Monumental Inscriptions in Scotland_. Also, that there has just been
+published by Lizars, Edinburgh, for the Bannatyne Club, the first volume
+of the _Origines Parochiales Scotiæ_.
+
+The former of these books (_Epitaphs_, &c.) is perhaps of no great
+value, being badly selected and worse arranged; but the latter
+(_Origines_, &c.) seems to be exactly such a work as W. J. D. R. (Vol.
+iii., p. 314.) has in his mind's eye for England.
+
+ Y.
+
+ A correspondent, MERCURII, has also directed our attention to a small
+ volume, published in 1848, by one of the most valued contributors to
+ our own columns, MR. DAWSON TURNER, under the title of _Sepulchral
+ Reminiscences of a Market Town, as afforded by a List of the
+ Interments within the Walls of the Parish Church of St. Nicholas,
+ Great Yarmouth, collected chiefly from Monuments and Gravestones still
+ remaining, June, 1845_. This little volume may be regarded as a public
+ testimony on the part of MR. DAWSON TURNER to the value of the plan
+ under consideration, and there are few antiquaries whose opinions are
+ entitled to greater respect upon this or any other point to which he
+ has devoted his talents and attention. Can we doubt, then, the success
+ of a plan which has met with such general approbation, and is
+ undertaken with so praiseworthy an object,--an object which may well
+ be described in the words which Weever used when stating the motive
+ which led him to undertake the publication of his _Funeral Monuments_,
+ viz., "To check the unsufferable injury, offered as well to the living
+ as to the dead, by breaking down and almost utterly ruinating
+ monuments with their epitaphs, and by erasing, tearing away, and
+ pilfering brazen inscriptions, by which inhumane deformidable act, the
+ honorable memory of many virtuous and noble persons deceased is
+ extinguished, and the true understanding of divers families is so
+ darkened, that the course of their inheritance is thereby partly
+ interrupted."
+
+
+
+
+Notes.
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS OF CHAUCER, NO. VIII.
+
+_The Star Min Al Auwâ._
+
+ "Adam Scrivener, if ever it thee befall Boece, or Troilus, for to
+ write newe, Under thy long locks thou mayst have the scull But, after
+ my making, thou write more trew; So oft a day I mote thy worke renew,
+ It to correct, and eke to rubbe and scrape, And all thorow thy
+ negligence and rape."
+
+ _Chaucer to his own Scrivener._
+
+If, during his own lifetime, and under his own eye, poor Chaucer was so
+sinned against as to provoke this humorous malediction upon the head of
+the delinquent, it cannot be a matter of surprise that, in the various
+hands his text has since passed through, many expressions should have
+been perverted, and certain passages wholly misunderstood. And when we
+find men, of excellent judgment in other respects, proposing, as
+Tyrwhitt did, to alter Chaucer's words to suit their own imperfect
+comprehension of his meaning, it is only reasonable to suspect that
+similar mistakes may have induced early transcribers to alter the text,
+wherever, to their wisdom, it may have seemed expedient.
+
+Now I know of no passage more likely to have been tampered with in this
+way, than those lines of the prologue to the _Persone's Tale_, alluded
+to at the close of my last communication. Because, supposing (which I
+shall afterwards endeavour to prove) that Chaucer really meant to write
+something to this effect: "Thereupon, as we were entering a town, the
+moon's rising, with Min al auwâ in Libra, began to ascend (or to become
+visible),"--and supposing that his mode of expressing this had been,
+
+ "Therewith the mone's exaltacioun,
+ In libra men alawai gan ascende,
+ As we were entrying at a towne's end:"
+
+--in such a case, what can be more probable than that some ignorant
+transcriber, never perhaps dreaming of such a thing as the Arabic name
+of a star, would endeavour _to make sense_ of these, to him, obscure
+words, by converting them into English. The process of transition would
+be easy; "min" or "men" requires little violence to become "mene" (the
+modern "mean" with its many significations), and "al auwâ" (or "alwai,"
+as Chaucer would probably write it) is equally identical with "alway."
+The misplacement of "Libra" might then follow as a seeming necessity;
+and thus the line would assume its present form, leaving the reader to
+understand it, either with Urry, as,
+
+ "I mene Libra, that is, I _refer to_ Libra;"
+
+or with Tyrwhitt:
+
+ "In mene Libra, that is, In _the middle of_ Libra."
+
+Now, to Urry's reading, it may be objected that it makes _the thing
+ascending_ to be Libra, and does not of necessity imply the moon's
+appearance above the horizon. But since the rising of the moon is a
+_visible_ phenomenon, while that of Libra is theoretical, it must have
+been _to the former_ Chaucer was alluding, as to something witnessed by
+the whole party as they
+
+ "Were entrying at a towne's end;"
+
+or otherwise this latter observation would have no meaning.
+
+The objection to Tyrwhitt's reading is of a more technical nature--the
+moon, if in _the middle_ of Libra, _could not_ be above the horizon, in
+the neighbourhood of Canterbury, at four o'clock P. M., in the month of
+April. Tyrwhitt, it is true, would probably smooth away the difficulty
+by charging it as another inconsistency against his author; but I--and I
+hope by this time such readers of "NOTES AND QUERIES" as are interested
+in the subject--have seen too many proofs of Chaucer's competency in
+matters of science, and of his commentator's incompetency, to feel
+disposed to concede to the latter such a convenient method of
+interpretation.
+
+But there is a third objection common to both readings--that they do not
+satisfactorily account for the word "alway;" for although Tyrwhitt
+endeavours to explain it by _continually_, "was _continually_
+ascending," such a phrase is by no means intelligible when applied to a
+single observation.
+
+For myself, I can say that this word "alway" was, from the first, the
+great difficulty with me--and the more I became convinced of the studied
+meaning with which Chaucer chose his other expressions, the less
+satisfied I was with this; and the more convinced I felt that the whole
+line had been corrupted.
+
+In advocating the restoration of the reading which I have already
+suggested as the original meaning of Chaucer, I shall begin by
+establishing the _probability_ of his having intended to mark the moon's
+place by associating her rising with that of a known fixed star--a
+method of noting phenomena frequently resorted to in ancient astronomy.
+For that purpose I shall point out another instance wherein Chaucer
+evidently intended an application of the same method for the purpose of
+indicating a particular position of the heavens; but first it must
+noted, that in alluding to the Zodiac, he always refers _to the signs_,
+never to the constellations--in fact, he does not appear to recognise
+the latter at all! Thus, in that palpable allusion to the precession of
+the equinoxes, in the Frankeleine's Tale--
+
+ "He knew ful wel how fer Alnath was shove
+ From the hed of thilke fixe Aries above:"
+
+--by _the hed of Aries_, Chaucer did not mean the os frontis of the Ram,
+whereon Alnath still shines conspicuously, but the equinoctial point,
+from which Alnath _was shove_ by the extent of a whole sign.
+
+This being premised, I return to the indication of a point in the
+ecliptic by the coincident rising of a star; and I contend that such was
+plainly Chaucer's intention in those lines of the Squire's Tale wherein
+King Cambuscan is described as rising from the feast:--
+
+ "Phebus hath left the angle meridional,
+ And yet ascending was the beste real,
+ The gentle Leon, _with his Aldryan_."
+
+Which means that _the sign_ Leo was then in the horizon--the precise
+degree being marked by the coincident rising of the star Aldryan.
+
+Speght's explanation of "Aldryan," in which he has been copied by Urry
+and Tyrwhitt, is--"a star in the neck of the Lion." What particular star
+he may have meant by this, does not appear; nor am I at present within
+reach of probable sources wherein his authority, if he had any, might be
+searched for and examined; but I have learned to feel such confidence in
+Chaucer's significance of description, that I have no hesitation in
+assuming, until authority for a contrary inference shall be produced,
+that by the star "Aldryan" he meant REGULUS, not the neck, but the
+heart, of the Lion--
+
+1st. Because it is the most remarkable star in the sign Leo.
+
+2nd. Because it was, in Chaucer's time, as it now is, nearly upon the
+line of the ecliptic.
+
+3rd. Because its situation in longitude, about two-thirds in the sign
+Leo, just tallies with Chaucer's expression "_yet_ ascending,"--that is,
+one-third of the sign was still below the horizon.
+
+Let us examine how this interpretation consists with the other
+circumstances of the description. The feste-day of this Cambuscan was
+"The last idus of March"--that is, the 15th of March--"after the
+yere"--that is, after the _equinoctial year_, which had ended three or
+four days previously. Hence the sun was in three degrees of
+Aries--confirmed in Canace's expedition on the following morning, when
+he was "in the Ram foure degrees yronne," and his corresponding right
+ascension was twelve minutes. Now by "the angle meridional" was meant
+the two hours _inequall_ immediately succeeding noon (or while the "1st
+House" of the sun was passing the meridian), and these two hours may, so
+near the equinox, be taken as ordinary hours. Therefore, when "Phebus
+hath left the angle meridional," it was two o'clock P.M., or eight hours
+after sunrise, which, added to twelve minutes, produces eight hours
+twelve minutes as the ascending point of the equinoctial. The ascending
+point of _the ecliptic_ would consequently be twenty degrees in Leo, or
+within less than a degree of the actual place of the star Regulus, which
+in point of fact did rise on the 15th of March, in Chaucer's time,
+almost exactly at two in the afternoon.
+
+Such coincidences as these could not result from mere accident; and,
+whatever may have been Speght's authority for the location of Aldryan, I
+shall never believe that Chaucer would refer to an inferior star when
+the great "Stella Regia" itself was in so remarkable a position for his
+purpose--assuming always, as a matter of course, that he referred his
+phenomena, not to the country or age wherein he laid the action of his
+tale, but to his own.
+
+This, then, is the precedent by which I support the similar, and rather
+startling, interpretation I propose of these obscure words "In mena
+Libra alway."
+
+There are two twin stars, of the same magnitude, and not far apart, each
+of which bears the Arabic title of Min al auwâ; one ([Greek: beta]
+Virginis) in the sign Virgo--the other ([Greek: delta] Virginis) in that
+of Libra.
+
+The latter, in the south of England, in Chaucer's time, would rise a few
+minutes before the autumnal equinoctial point, and might be called
+_Libra_ Min al auwâ either from that circumstance, or to distinguish it
+from its namesake in Virgo.
+
+Now on the 18th of April this Libra Min al auwâ would rise in the
+neighbourhood of Canterbury at about half-past three in the afternoon,
+so that by four o'clock it would attain an altitude of about five
+degrees--not more than sufficient to render the moon, supposing it to
+have risen with the star, visible (by daylight) to the pilgrims
+"entrying at a towne's end."
+
+It is very remarkable that the only year, perhaps in the whole of
+Chaucer's lifetime, in which the moon could have arisen with this star
+on the 18th of April, should be the identical year to which Tyrwhitt,
+_reasoning from historical evidence alone_, would fain attribute the
+writing of the _Canterbury Tales_. (Vide Introductory Discourse, note
+3.)
+
+On the 18th of April, 1388, Libra Min al auwâ, and the moon, rose
+together about half-past three P. M. in the neighbourhood of Canterbury;
+and Tyrwhitt, alluding to the writing of the _Canterbury Tales_, "_could
+hardly suppose it was much advanced before 1389!_"
+
+Such a coincidence is more than remarkable--it is convincing: especially
+when we add to it that 1388 "is the very date that, by a slight and
+probable injury to the last figure, might become the _traditional_ one
+of 1383!"
+
+Should my view, therefore, of the true reading of this passage in
+Chaucer be correct, it becomes of infinitely greater interest and
+importance than a mere literal emendation, because it supplies that
+which has always been supposed wanting to the _Canterbury Tales_, viz.,
+some means of identifying the year to which their action ought to be
+attributed. Hitherto, so unlikely has it appeared that Chaucer, who so
+amply furnishes materials for the minor branches of the date, should
+leave the year unnoted, that it has been accounted for in the
+supposition that he reserved it for the unfinished portion of his
+performance. But if we consider the ingenious though somewhat tortuous
+methods resorted to by him to convey some of the other data, it is by no
+means improbable that he might really have devised this circumstance of
+the moon's rising as a means of at least _corroborating_ a date that he
+might intend to record afterwards in more direct terms.
+
+ A. E. B.
+
+P.S.--Since writing the foregoing I have obtained, through the kindness
+of Mr. Thoms, the several readings of the lines commented upon in six
+different MSS. in the British Museum. And I have great satisfaction in
+finding that five out of the six confirm my hypothesis, at least with
+respect to the uncertain spelling of "alway." The readings in respect of
+the two words are these:
+
+ I meene alweye.
+ In mena alway.
+ I mene allweye.
+ In mene allwey.
+ I mene alweie.
+ I mene alwaye.
+
+I acknowledge that, from the first, if I could have discovered a
+probable interpretation of "mene" as an independent word, I should have
+preferred it rather than that of making it a part of the Arabic name,
+because I think that the star is sufficiently identified by the latter
+portion of its name "Al auwâ," and because the preservation of "mene" in
+its proper place in the line would afford a reading much less forced
+than that I was obliged to have recourse to. Now it very singularly
+happens that in "NOTES AND QUERIES" of this day (page 388.) I find, upon
+the authority of A. C. M., that there is an Armorican word "menex" or
+"mene," signifying a summit or boundary. Here is an accidental, though
+most probable, original of the Chaucerian "mene," because the moon's
+place in longitude at the time specified was precisely on the verge or
+boundary of Libra: or even in the sense "summit" the word would be by no
+means inappropriate to the point of a sign in the ecliptic which first
+emerges from the horizon; with such a reading the lines would stand
+thus, which is a very slight change from _their present form_:
+
+ "Then, with the mone's exaltacioun
+ In menez Libra, ALWAI gan ascende,
+ As we were entrying at a towne's end."
+
+Perhaps A. C. M. would be good enough to cite his authorities for the
+word "mene," "menez"--in the signification of "summit" or "margin"--with
+examples, if possible, of its use in these or kindred senses.
+
+And perhaps some Arabic scholar will explain the name "Min al auwâ," and
+show in what way the absence of the prefix "Min" would affect it?
+
+ A. E. B.
+
+
+TRADITIONS FROM REMOTE PERIODS THROUGH FEW LINKS.
+
+In some of your former numbers (Vol. iii., pp. 206. 237. 289.) allusions
+have been made by your correspondents, showing that traditions may come
+down from remote periods through very few links. Having myself seen a
+man whose father lived in the time of Oliver Cromwell, I trust I shall
+be excused for stating some particulars of this fact, which I think will
+be considered by your readers as one of the most remarkable on record.
+In the year 1844 died James Horrocks, a small farmer, who lived at
+Harwood, a short distance from Bolton, in Lancashire, having completed
+his hundredth year. This circumstance, however, was not so remarkable as
+that of his own birth, his father, William Horrocks, having been born in
+1657, one year before the death of Cromwell, and having married in 1741,
+at the advanced age of eight-four, a second wife, a young and buxom
+woman of twenty-six, by whom he had one child, the above James Horrocks,
+born March 14, 1744, and baptized at Bradshaw Chapel, near Bolton.
+
+It is believed that the first wife of William Horrocks had been employed
+in the well-known family of the Chethams, at Castleton Hall, near
+Rochdale (a branch of that of Humphrey Chetham), by whom they were both
+much respected; and soon after the second marriage, he and his youthful
+wife were sent for to Castleton Hall by the Chethams, by whom they were
+treated with much kindness; and the remarkable disparity of years in
+their marriage having no doubt created great interest, a painter was
+employed to take their portraits, which are still in existence, with the
+ages of the parties at the time, and the dates, when taken, painted upon
+them.
+
+I paid the son, James Horrocks, more than one visit, and on the last
+occasion, in company with James Crossley, Esq., of Manchester, the
+Reverend Canon Parkinson, Principal of St. Bees' College, and one or two
+other gentlemen, I took my son with me. It happened to be the very day
+on which he completed his hundredth year, and we found him full of
+cheerfulness and content, expecting several of his descendants to spend
+the day with him. I possess a portrait in crayons of this venerable
+patriarch, taken on that day by a very clever artist, who accompanied us
+on our visit, and which is an extremely faithful likeness of the
+original. Should it please Providence to spare my son to attain to his
+seventieth year, he also will be enabled, in the year 1900, to say that
+he has seen a man whose father lived in the time of Oliver Cromwell;
+thus connecting events, with the intervention of _one_ life only,
+comprehending a period of very nearly two centuries and a half.
+
+P.S. A very interesting narrative of all the facts of this case was
+published in the _Manchester Guardian_ a few years ago, comprising many
+curious particulars not noticed by myself, a copy of which I shall be
+glad to send you, if you think it worthy of insertion in "NOTES AND
+QUERIES."
+
+ THOMAS CORSER.
+ Stand Rectory.
+
+ [We accept with thanks the offer of our valued correspondent.]
+
+
+DR. YOUNG'S NARCISSA.
+
+A pamphlet was recently published at Lyons and Paris, by a Monsieur de
+Terrebasse, intending to prove that the daughter-in-law of Dr. Young, so
+pathetically lamented by him in the _Night Thoughts_ under the poetical
+name of "Narcissa," was not clandestinely buried at Montpellier; that
+Dr. Young did not steal a grave for her from the Roman Catholics of that
+city; and that consequently the celebrated and touching episode in Night
+III. is purely imaginary. This opinion of M. de Terrebasse, first given
+to the world by him in 1832, and now repeated, has been controverted by
+the writer of an article in the _Gazette Médicale_ of Montpellier. The
+tomb, it is said, of Elisabeth Lee, Dr. Young's daughter-in-law, was
+discovered a few years since at Lyons; and M. de Terrebasse endeavours
+to prove, from that circumstance, and from a comparison of facts and
+dates, that this Elisabeth Lee was the "Narcissa" of the poet. Not
+having seen M. de Terrebasse's pamphlet, and being indebted to the
+_Journal des Savants_ for this brief account of it, it seems difficult
+to discover from it how M. de Terrebasse can pretend so summarily to
+invalidate the solemn and touching assertions of the poet, which
+assuredly are anything but flights of fancy.
+
+ "Deny'd the charity of dust to spread
+ O'er dust! a clarity their dogs enjoy,
+ What could I do? what succour? what resource?
+ With pious sacrilege a grave I stole;
+ With impious piety that grave I wrong'd;
+ Short in my duty, coward in my grief!
+ More like her murderer than friend, I crept
+ With soft suspended step, and muffled deep
+ In midnight darkness, whisper'd my last sigh."
+
+ _Night Thoughts; Narcissa._
+
+In the notes to an edition of the _Night Thoughts_, printed in 1798, by
+C. Whittingham, for T. Heptinstall--
+
+ "It appears," it is stated, "by the extract of a letter just printed,
+ that in order to obtain a grave, the Doctor bribed the under gardener,
+ who dug the grave, and let him in by a private door, bearing his
+ beloved daughter, wrapped up in a sheet, upon his shoulder. When he
+ had laid her in this hole he sat down, and, as the man expressed it,
+ 'rained tears.' It appears also, that some time previous to this
+ event, expecting the catastrophe, he had been seen walking solitarily
+ backward in this garden, as if to find the most solitary spot for his
+ purpose."--See _Evang. Mag._, Nov. 1797.
+
+I do not know what authority this letter quoted from the _Evang. Mag._
+may possess.
+
+ J. M.
+ Oxford, May 20.
+
+
+Minor Notes.
+
+_Curious Epitaph._--The following lines are on a stone in Killyleagh
+churchyard. I have a faint recollection of seeing a similarly
+constructed epitaph in Harris's _History of the County of Down_, which
+was perhaps composed by the same person. Is any of your readers
+acquainted with any English inscription in the same style?
+
+ "Mysta, fidelis, amans, colui, docui, relevavi,
+ Numen, oves, inopes, pectore, voce, manu.
+ Laude orbem, splendore polum, cineresque beatos,
+ Fama illustravit, mens colit, urna tenet."
+
+It will easily be seen that the first, fourth, seventh, and tenth words
+are to be read in connexion, as are those that follow these, and those
+next in succession.
+
+The person on whose tomb the lines occur was the Rev. William
+Richardson, who died in 1670, having been minister of Killyleagh for
+twenty-one years. By the way, is not _mysta_ a strange designation for a
+Presbyterian minister? I should think it would be now considered as
+objectionable as _sacerdos_.
+
+ E. H. D. D.
+ Killyleagh, co. Down.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_The Curse of Scotland_ (Vol. i., pp. 61. 90.; Vol. iii., p. 22.).--
+
+ "The queen of clubs is called in Northamptonshire Queen Bess, perhaps,
+ because that queen, history says, was of a swarthy complexion; the
+ four of spades, Ned Stokes, but why I know not; the nine of diamonds,
+ the curse of Scotland, because every ninth monarch of that nation was
+ a bad king to his subjects. I have been told by old people, that this
+ card was so called long before the Rebellion in 1745, and therefore it
+ could not arise from the circumstance of the Duke of Cumberland's
+ sending orders, accidentally written upon the card, the night before
+ the battle of Culloden, for General Campbell to give no quarter."
+
+The above extract from a communication to the _Gentleman's Magazine_ for
+1791, p. 141., is quoted in Mr. Singer's _Researches into the History of
+Playing Cards_, p. 271.; but the reason assigned by the writer does not
+explain why the nine of _diamonds_ should have acquired the name in
+question. The nine of any _other_ suit would be equally applicable.
+
+ L.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_The Female Captive: a Narrative of Facts which happened in Barbary in
+the Year 1756. Written by Herself_, 2 vols. 12mo. Lond., 1769.--Sir
+William Musgrave has written this note in the copy which is now in the
+library at the British Museum:
+
+ "This is a true story. The lady's maiden name was Marsh. She married
+ Mr. Crisp, as related in the narrative. But he having failed in
+ business went to India, where she remained with her father, then agent
+ Victualler at Chatham, during which she wrote and published these
+ little volumes. On her husband's success in India, she went thither to
+ him.
+
+ "The book having, as it is said, been bought up by the lady's friends,
+ is become very scarce."
+
+ Y. S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Pictorial Antiquities._--The following memorandum, in the _autograph_
+of Edward, Earl of Oxford (the Harleian collector), seems worth
+preserving:
+
+ "A picture of Edward IV. on board at Kensington.
+
+ "A whole length of him at St. James's, in a night-gown and black cap.
+
+ "A portrait of his queen in the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford.
+
+ "Jane Shore at Eaton (_sic_).
+
+ "Richard III. at Kensington.
+
+ "Picture of Henry V. and his family at Mr. West's.
+
+ "A picture of Mabuse at St. James's, called Albert Durer.
+
+ "Matthew Paris with miniatures, in the British Museum.
+
+ "William of Wickham's Crozier at Oxford.
+
+ "Greek enamellers in the reign of the two Edwards.
+
+ "An old altar-table at Chiswick; Lord Clifford and his lady kneeling;
+ Consecration of Thomas à Becket at Devonshire House, both by Van
+ Eyck."
+
+ "Froissart illuminated, wherein is a miniature of Richard II., in the
+ Museum."
+
+One might have thought that these notes were made for the use of Horace
+Walpole's _History of Painting_; but their writer, the second Lord
+Oxford, died in June, 1741, long before Walpole could have thought of
+such matters. They perhaps may afford clues to other antiquaries.
+
+ C.
+
+
+
+
+Queries.
+
+
+ENGLISH POEMS BY CONSTANTINE HUYGHENS.
+
+It is probable that some of your friendly correspondents in Holland may
+have it in their power to indicate where the English verses of
+Constantine Huyghens are to be found which he refers to in his _Koren
+Bloemen_, 2de Deel, p. 528. ed. 1672, where he was given Dutch
+translations with the following superscriptions: "Aen Joffw Utricia
+Ogle, uyt mijn Engelsh;" and "Aen Me-Vrouwe Stanhope, met mijn Heilige
+dagen, uyt mijn Engelsh."
+
+Huyghens appears to have had a thorough knowledge of our language, and
+his very interesting volume contains translations of twenty of Dr.
+Donne's poems, very ably rendered, considering the difficulty of the
+task. He refers to this in his address to the reader, and says that an
+illustrious Martyr [Charles I.] many years since had declared that he
+could not have believed that any one could have successfully
+accomplished it. Huyghens confesses that the Latinisms with which our
+language abounds, had given him much to wrestle with; and that it was
+difficult to express in pure Dutch such words as _ecstasy_, _atomy_,
+_influence_, _legacy_, _alloy,_ &c. The first stanza of the song, "Go
+and catch a falling Star," may perhaps be acceptable to some of your
+readers, who may not readily have access to the book:
+
+ "Gaet en vatt een Sterr in 't vallen,
+ Maeckt een' Wortel-mensch[1] met kind,
+ Seght waer men al den tijd die nu verby is vindt,
+ En wie des Duyvels voet geklooft heeft in twee ballen:
+ Leert my Meereminnen hooren,
+ Leert my hoe ick 't boose booren,
+ Van den Nijd ontkommen moet,
+ En wat Wind voor-wind is voor een oprecht gemoed."
+
+ [Footnote 1: Mandrake.]
+
+One more example of his translation, from the epigram on Sir Albertus
+Morton, may be allowed, as it is short:
+
+ "She first deceased; he for a little tried
+ To live without her; liked it not, and died."
+
+ "Sy stierf voor uyt: hy pooghd' haer een' wijl tijds te derven,
+ Maer had geen' sin daer in, en ging oock liggen sterven."
+
+Considering the affinity of the languages, and the frequent and constant
+intercourse with Holland, it is singular that we should have to
+reproach ourselves with such almost total ignorance respecting the
+literature of that country. With the exception of the slight sketch
+given by Dr. Bowring of its poetical literature, an Englishman has no
+work to which he can turn in his own language for information; and Dutch
+books may be sought for in vain in London. The late Mr. Heber when in
+Holland did not neglect its literature, and at the dispersion of his
+library I procured a few valuable Dutch books; among others, the very
+handsome volume which has given rise to this note. It contains much
+interesting matter, and affords a most amiable picture of the mind of
+its distinguished author, who lived to the very advanced age of
+ninety-one. There is a speaking and living portrait of him prefixed,
+from the beautiful graver of Blotelingk, and a view of his chateau of
+Hofwyck, with detailed plans of his garden, &c. He was secretary to
+three successive princes of Nassau, accountant to the Prince of Orange,
+and Lord of Zuylichem; and lived in habits of friendly intercourse with
+almost all the distinguished men who flourished during his long and
+prosperous life. His son is well known to the world of science as the
+inventor of the pendulum.
+
+Translations of three or four of Constantine Huyghens' poems are given
+by Dr. Bowring in his _Batavian Anthology_. And the great Vondel
+pronounces his volume to be--
+
+ "A garden mild of savours sweet,
+ Where Art and Skill and Wisdom meet;
+ Rich in its vast variety
+ Of forms and hues of ev'ry dye."
+
+ S. W. SINGER.
+
+
+THE REV. MR. GAY.
+
+The very interesting notices which you have often given us of the truly
+great and inestimable Locke, induce me to trouble you with an inquiry
+relative to a philosophical writer, who followed in his school, I mean
+the Rev. Mr. Gay, the author of the Dissertation prefixed to Bishop
+Law's translation of King's _Origin of Evil_. It is sufficient evidence
+of the importance of that Dissertation, that it put Hartley upon
+considering and developing the principle of association, into which
+principle he conceived, and endeavoured to prove, that all the phenomena
+of reasoning and affection might be resolved, and of which Laplace
+observes, that it constitutes the whole of what has yet been done in the
+philosophy of the human mind; "la partie réelle de la métaphysique"
+(_Essai Philosophique sur les Probabilités_, p. 224. ed. 1825).
+
+Of this Mr. Gay, I have not yet been able to learn more than that he was
+a clergyman in the West of England; but of what place, of what family,
+where educated, of what manner of life, or what habits of study,
+biographical or topographical reading has hitherto furnished me with
+any information. I should feel greatly indebted to any of your readers
+who would give the clue to what is known or can be known about him. It
+is probably within easy reach, though I have missed it. The ordinary
+biographical dictionaries make no mention of him.
+
+ EDWARD TAGART.
+ North End, Hampstead, May 19. 1851.
+
+
+Minor Queries.
+
+_Carved Ceiling in Dorsetshire._--In the south of Dorsetshire there is a
+house (its name I do not remember) which has a beautifully carved
+ceiling in the hall. This is said to have been sent from Spain by a King
+of Castile, who, being wrecked on this coast, and hospitably entertained
+by the owners of the mansion, took this method of showing his gratitude.
+Can any of your readers inform me what king this was, or refer me to any
+work in which I may find it?
+
+ JERNE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Publicans' Signs._--Will any of your readers inform me whether the
+_signs of publicans_ were allowed to be retained by the same edict which
+condemned those of all other trades?
+
+ ROVERT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To a T._--What is the origin of the phrase; and of that "To fit to a
+T.?" (Query, a "T square" = ad amussim.)
+
+ A. A. D.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Skeletons at Egyptian Banquet._--Where did Jer. Taylor find this
+interpretation of the object of placing a skeleton at the banqueting
+table:--
+
+ "The Egyptians used to serve up a skeleton to their feasts, that
+ the vapours of wine might be restrained with that bunch of myrrh,
+ and the vanities of their eyes chastened by that sad object."
+
+Certainly not in Herodotus, 2. 78.; which savours rather of the
+_Sardanapalian_ spirit: "Eat, drink, and love--the rest's not worth a
+fillip!" Comp. Is. xxii. 13., 1 Cor. xv. 32.
+
+ A. A. D.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Gloves_ (Vol. i., pp. 72. 405.; Vol. ii., p. 4.; Vol. iii., p.
+220.).--Blount, in his _Law Dictionary_, fo. 1670, under the title
+"Capias Utlagatum," observes:
+
+ "At present, in the King's Bench, the _outlawry_ cannot be reversed,
+ unless the defendant appear in person, and, by a present of gloves to
+ the judges, implore and obtains their favour to reverse it."
+
+Perhaps some of your correspondents may be able to state when the
+practice of presenting gloves to the judges on moving to reverse an
+outlawry in the King's Bench was discontinued. The statute 4 & 5 Will.
+and Mar. c. 18., rendered unnecessary a _personal_ appearance in that
+court to reverse an outlawry (except for treason or felony, or where
+special bail was ordered).
+
+ C. H. COOPER.
+ Cambridge, March 24. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Knapp Family in Norfolk and Suffolk._--I should be much obliged to any
+Norfolk or Suffolk antiquary who would give me information as to the
+family of Knapp formerly settled in those counties, especially at
+Ipswich, Tuddenham, and Needham Market in the latter county. My
+inquiries have not discovered any person of the name at present residing
+in any of these places; and my wish is to learn how the name was lost in
+the locality; whether by migration--and if so, when, and to what other
+part of the county; or if in the female line, into what family the last
+heiress of Knapp married; and, as nearly as may be, when either of these
+events occurred?
+
+ G. E. F.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To learn by "Heart."_--Can you give any account of the origin of a very
+common expression both in French and English, _i. e._ "Apprendre _par
+coeur_, to learn _by heart?_" To learn _by memory_ would be
+intelligible.
+
+ A SUBSCRIBER TO YOUR JOURNAL.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Knights._--At some periods of our history the reigning monarch bestowed
+the honour of knighthood, 1306, Edward I.; at other times, those in
+possession of a certain amount of property were compelled to assume the
+order, 1254. Query, Was there any difference in rank between the two
+sorts of knights?
+
+ B. DE. M.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Supposed Inscription in St. Peter's Church, Rome._--When at school in
+France, some twenty years ago, I was informed that the following
+inscription was to be found in some part of St. Peter's Church in Rome:
+
+ "Nunquam amplius super hanc cathedram cantabit Gallus."
+
+It appears that the active part taken by the French in fomenting the
+great schism of the Church during the fourteenth century, when they set
+up and maintained at Avignon a Pope of their own choosing, had generated
+an abhorrence of French interference in the Italian mind; and that, when
+the dissensions were abated by the suspension of the rival Popes, the
+_ultramontane_ cardinals had posted up this inscription to testify their
+desire for the exclusion of French ecclesiastics from the Papal chair.
+In one respect the prediction remains in force to this day; for I
+believe I am correct in saying that no Frenchman has worn the triple
+crown for the last 450 years. But that portion of it which is implied in
+the second meaning of "Gallus," has been woefully belied in our time by
+the forcible occupation of Rome by a French army, on which occasion the
+Gallic cock had all the "crowing" to himself.
+
+I have never had an opportunity of ascertaining the existence of this
+inscription, and shall be obliged to any correspondent of "NOTES AND
+QUERIES" who will afford information on the subject.
+
+ HENRY H. BREEN.
+ St. Lucia, April, 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Rag Sunday in Sussex._--Allow me to ask the explanation of "Rag Sunday"
+in Sussex. I lately saw some young gentlemen going to school at
+Brighton, who had been provided with some fine white handkerchiefs, when
+one observed they would not stand much chance of escape on "Rag Sunday."
+He then told me that each boy, on the Sunday but one preceding the
+holidays, always tore a piece of his shirt or handkerchief off and wore
+it in the button-hole of his jacket as his "rag." When a boy, I remember
+being compelled to do the same when at school at Hailsham in Sussex, and
+all boys objecting had their hats knocked off and trod on.
+
+ H. W. D.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Northege Family._--Can any one tell me the county and parish in which
+the family of Northege were located in the sixteenth century?
+
+ E. H. Y.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_A Kemble Pipe of Tobacco._--In the county of Herefordshire, the people
+call the last or concluding pipe that any one means to smoke at a
+sitting, a _Kemble pipe._ This is said to have originated in a man of
+the name of Kemble, who in the cruel persecution under Queen Mary, being
+condemned for heresy, in his walk of some miles from the prison to the
+stake, amidst a crowd of weeping friends and neighbours, with the
+tranquillity and fortitude of a primitive martyr, _smoked a pipe of
+tobacco_! Is anything known of this Kemble? and where can I find any
+corroboration of the story here told?
+
+ EDWARD F. RIMBAULT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Durham Sword that killed the Dragon._--In the Harleian MS. No. 3783.,
+letter 107., Cosin, in describing to Sancroft some of the ceremonies of
+his reception at Durham, mentions "_the sword that killed the dragon_,"
+as a relic of antiquity introduced on the occasion. I should feel
+obliged, if you, or any of your antiquarian readers, could kindly refer
+me to some tolerably full account of the ceremony alluded to, or throw
+any light upon the meaning of the custom in question, the origin and
+history of the sword, and the tradition connected with it.
+
+ J. SANSOM.
+
+
+Minor Queries Answered.
+
+"_At Sixes and Sevens_" (Vol. iii., p. 118.).--May not this expression
+bear reference to the _points_ in the card-game of piquet?
+
+ G. F. G.
+
+May not this expression have arisen from the passage in Eliphaz's
+discourse to Job?
+
+ "He shall deliver thee is _six_ troubles; yea, in _seven_ there shall
+ no evil touch thee."--Job. v. 19.
+
+ A. M.
+
+Mr. Halliwell, in his _Dictionary of Archaic and Provincial Words_, vol.
+ii. p. 724., thus explains this phrase:
+
+ "The Deity is mentioned in the _Towneley Mysteries_, pp. 97. 118., as
+ He that 'sett alle on seven,' _i. e._, set or appointed everything in
+ seven days. A similar phrase at p. 85. is not so evident. It is
+ explained in the Glossary, 'to set things in, to put them in order;'
+ but it evidently implies, in some cases, an exactly opposite meaning,
+ to set in confusion, to rush to battle, as in the following examples.
+ '_To set the steven_, to agree upon the time and place of meeting
+ previous to some expedition,'--_West and Cumb. Dial._ p. 390. These
+ phrases may be connected with each other. Be this as it may, hence is
+ certainly derived the phrase _to be at sixes and sevens_, to be in
+ great confusion. Herod, in his anger at the wise men, says:
+
+ "'Bot be they past me by, by Mahowne in heven,
+ I shalle, and that in hy, _set alle on sex and seven_;
+ Trow ye a kyng as I wyll suffre thaym to neven
+ Any to have mastry bot myself fulle even.'
+
+ _Towneley Mysteries_, p. 143.
+
+ "'Thus he _settez on sevene_ with his sekyre knyghttez.'
+
+ _Morte Arthure_, MS. Lincoln, f. 76.
+
+ "'The duk swore by gret God of hevene,
+ Wold my hors so evene,
+ Zet wold I _set all one seven_
+ Ffor Myldor the swet!'
+
+ _Degrevant_, 1279.
+
+ "'Old Odcombs odnesse makes not thee uneven,
+ Nor carelesly set all _at six and seven_.'
+
+ Taylor's _Workes_, 1630, ii. 71."
+
+ J. K. R. W.
+
+ [Six and seven make the proverbially unlucky number _thirteen_, and we
+ are inclined to believe that the allusion in this popular phrase is to
+ this combination.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Swobbers._--There is a known story of a clergyman who was recommended
+for a preferment by some great men at court to an archbishop. His Grace
+said, "He had heard that the clergyman used to play at whist and
+_swobbers_; that as to playing now and then a sober game at whist for
+pastime, it might be pardoned; but he could not digest those wicked
+swobbers;" and it was with some pains that my Lord Somers could
+undeceive him. So says Swift, in his _Essay on the Fates of Clergymen_;
+and a note in Sir W. Scott's edition (1824, vol. viii. p 231.) informs
+us that the primate was "Tenison, who, by all contemporary accounts, was
+a very dull man." At the risk of being thought as dull as the
+archbishop, I venture to ask for an explanation of the joke.
+
+ J. C. R.
+
+ [Johnson, under "Swobber" or "Swabber," gives, "1. A sweeper of the
+ deck;" and "2. Four privileged cards that are only incidentally used
+ in betting at the game of whist." He then quotes this passage from
+ Swift, with the difference that he says "clergymen." Were not the
+ cards so called because they "swept the deck" by a sort of
+ "sweep-stakes?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Handel's Occasional Oratorio._--Will DR. RIMBAULT, or some other
+musical correspondent of your journal, enlighten us as to the true
+meaning of the name _Occasional Oratorio_, prefixed to one of Handel's
+compositions, of which no one that I have ever met with has heard more
+than the overture? This composition has become almost universally known
+from the foolish practice which used to prevail of performing it as an
+introduction to _Israel in Egypt_, or any other work to which its
+composer had purposely denied the preliminary of an overture; a practice
+now happily exploded, which seems to have had its origin in a
+misinterpretation of the name; as though Handel had written the overture
+to suit any _occasion_ when one might be needed, instead of, as I am
+rather disposed to believe, having some particular occasion in view for
+which the oratorio was composed.
+
+ E. V.
+
+ [Surely, if there is no _Occasional_ Oratorio to be found, the
+ _Overture_ must mean that it was to be used on _occasion_. Our
+ correspondent does not seem to know the word as it is used by writers
+ of a century ago, for "Occasional Sermons" or services, &c. The
+ question is simply one of fact. _Is_ there an Oratorio? Everybody
+ knows the overture. The writer of this note remembers being horrified,
+ when a freshman, at hearing the fugue break forth in the College
+ Chapel, was pondering in his mind whether it was Drops of Brandy, or
+ the Rondo in the Turnpike-Gate, both then popular tunes.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Archbishop Waldeby's Epitaph._--W. W. KING would be obliged by a
+perfect copy of the inscription on the monumental brass of Archbishop
+Waldeby in Westminster Abbey.
+
+ [The brass is engraved in Harding's _Antiquities of Westminster
+ Abbey_; but it appears that one half of the following inscription,
+ which was formerly round the verge of the brass, has now been torn
+ away:--
+
+ "Hic fuit expertus in quovis jure Robertus,
+ De Waldeby dictus nunc est sub marmore strictus;
+ Sacre Scripture Doctor fuit, et geniture
+ Ingenuus Medicus et plebis semper amicus
+ Presul Adurensis posthoc Archas Dublinensis
+ Hinc Cicestrensis, tandem Primas Eborensis
+ Quarto kalend. Junii migravit cursibus anni
+ Sepultus milleni ter C. septem Nonies quoque deni.
+ Vos precor, Orate quod sint sibi dona beate
+ Cum sanctis vite requiescat et hic sine lite."
+
+ Weever, in his _Funeral Monuments_, quotes the following description
+ of him from a MS. account of the Archbishops of York, in the Cottonian
+ Collection:--
+
+ "Tunc Robertus ordinis fratris Augustini
+ Ascendit in cathedram primatis Paulini,
+ Lingua scientificus sermonis latini
+ Anno primo proximat vite sue fini,
+ De carnis ergastulo presul evocatur
+ Gleba sui corporis Westminstre humatur."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Verstegan._--Will any of the contributors to your valuable miscellany
+be kind enough to inform me if there are any engraved portraits of the
+quaint old antiquary Richard Verstegan, the author of a curious work,
+entitled _A Restitution of Decayed Intelligence_? The portraits may be
+common, but living in the country, and at distance from town, I have no
+friend from whom I can glean the required information. Can my informant
+at the same time acquaint me with the best edition of his work? There
+was one printed at Antwerp in 1605.
+
+ J. S. P. (a Subscriber.)
+
+ [Our correspondent will find a notice of Verstegan's work in page 85.
+ of this volume. The first edition was printed at Antwerp in 1605, and
+ was reprinted at London in 4to. in 1634, and in 8vo. in 1655 and 1673.
+ The first edition is deservedly reckoned the best, as well on account
+ of containing one or more engravings, afterwards omitted, as also for
+ the superiority of the plates, those in the subsequent editions being
+ very indifferent copies. No portrait of the author is noticed either
+ by Granger or Bromley.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Royal Library._--In the new edition of Boswell's _Life of Johnson_
+(published by the proprietors of the _Illustrated London News_), in the
+_National Illustrated Library_, the editor, in reference to the library
+of King George III. (which is generally understood to have been
+presented to the nation by George IV., and which is recorded to have
+been given, in an inscription placed in that magnificent hall), has
+appended the following note:--
+
+ "It has recently transpired that the government of the day bought the
+ library of George IV., just as he was on the eve of concluding a sale
+ of it to the Emperor of Russia."
+
+Can any of your readers inform me if this is correct, and whether the
+nation have really paid for what has always been considered a most
+worthy and munificent present from a monarch to his subjects? I trust to
+hear that the editor has been misinformed.
+
+ J. S. L.
+
+ [The nation certainly never paid one farthing for this munificent
+ present. The Russian Government offered, we believe, to purchase the
+ library; and this is probably the origin of the statement in the note
+ quoted by our correspondent.]
+
+
+
+
+Replies.
+
+
+HUGH HOLLAND AND HIS WORKS.
+
+An accidental circumstance having led me to re-peruse the article
+entitled _Hugh Holland and his works_ (Vol. ii., p. 265.), I feel myself
+called on, as a lover of facts, to notice some of the statements which
+it contains.
+
+1. "He was born at Denbigh in 1558." He was born at Denbigh, but not in
+1558. In 1625 he thus expressed himself:
+
+ "Why was the fatall spinster so vnthrifty?
+ To draw my third four yeares to tell and fifty!"
+
+2. "In 1582 he matriculated at Baliol College, Oxford." He did not quit
+Westminster School till 1589. If he ever pursued his studies at Baliol
+College, it was some ten years afterwards.
+
+3. "About 1590 he succeeded to a fellowship at Trinity College,
+Cambridge." In 1589 he was elected from Westminster to a _scholarship_
+in Trinity College, Cambridge--not to a _fellowship_. At a later period
+of life, he may have succeeded to a fellowship.
+
+4. "Holland published two works: 1. _Monumenta sepulchralia Sancti
+Pauli_, London, 1613, 4to. 2. _A cypress garland_ etc., London, 1625,
+4to." Hugh Holland was not the compiler of the first-named work: the
+initials H. H admit of another interpretation. This, however, is a very
+pardonable oversight. I could give about twenty authorities for
+ascribing the work to Hugh Holland.
+
+5. The dates assigned to the _Monumenta Sancti Pauli_ are "1613, 1616,
+1618, and 1633." Here are three errors in as many lines. The _first_
+edition is dated in 1614. The edition of 1633, which is entitled
+_Ecclesia Sancti Pavli illvstrata_, is the _second_. No other editions
+exist.
+
+6. "Holland also printed a copy of Latin verses before Alexander's
+_Roxana_, 1632." No such work exists. He may have printed verses before
+the _Roxana_ of W. Alabaster, who was his brother-collegian.
+
+The authorities which I have consulted are Fuller, Anthony à Wood, Henry
+Holland, son of the celebrated Philemon Holland, Hugh Holland, and
+Joseph Welch; and in submitting the result of my researches to critical
+examination, I must commend the writer of the article in question for
+his continued efforts to produce new facts, and to explode current
+errors.
+
+Insensible as modern critics may be to the poetical merits of Hugh
+Holland, we find him described by Camden as one of the _most pregnant
+wits_ of those times; and he certainly gave a notable proof of his
+wit--for fame is that which _all hunt after_--in contributing some lines
+to _Mr. William Shakespeares comedies, histories, and tragedies_.
+
+On that account, if on no other, the particulars of his life should be
+inquired into and recorded. His _Cypress garland_, a copy of which I
+possess, is rich in autobiographical anecdote; and I have collected some
+of his fugitive verses, a specimen of which may amuse. As one of the
+shortest, I transcribe the lines which he addressed to Giles Farnaby, a
+musical composer of some eminence, on the publication of his _Canzonets
+to fowre voyces_, A. D. 1598.
+
+ "_M. Hu. Holland to the author._
+
+ I would both sing thy praise, and praise thy singing,
+ That in the winter nowe are both a-springing;
+ But my muse must be stronger,
+ And the daies must be longer.
+ When the sunne's in his hight with ye bright Barnaby,
+ Then should we sing thy praises, gentle Farnaby."
+
+ BOLTON CORNEY.
+
+
+THE MILESIANS.
+
+(Vol. iii., p. 353.)
+
+In reply to W. R. M., who asks for information respecting the round
+towers of Ireland, I beg to refer him to Dr. Petrie's essay on the
+_Ecclesiastical Architecture of Ireland_, in which he will find a full
+discussion of the origin, uses, and history of the round towers.
+
+In reference to the Milesians and other early colonists of Ireland, he
+will find the most authentic ancient traditions in the Irish version of
+the _Historia Britonum of Nennius_, lately published by the Irish
+Archæological Society of Dublin, with a translation and notes, by the
+Rev. J. H. Todd, D.D. The same volume contains also some very curious
+and valuable notes by the Hon. A. Herbert.
+
+What W. R. M. says about the pronunciation of certain names of towns in
+Ireland, as confirming the tradition of a Milesian colony from Spain, is
+a complete mistake. The pronunciation of _gh_ to which he alludes,
+exists only amongst the English (or Anglicised natives) who are unable
+to pronounce the guttural _ch_ or _gh_ of the Celtic Irish, and have
+substituted for it the sound of _h_, or the sound of the Spanish _j_, to
+which W. R. M. refers. Besides this, every philologist knows that the
+present language of Spain had no existence at the period to which the
+Milesian invasion of Ireland must be referred. It is true that on the
+west coast of Ireland some families among the peasantry retain many of
+the characteristic features of modern Spaniards; but this circumstance
+is due to an intercourse with Spain of a much more recent date than the
+Milesian invasion, and is therefore no evidence of that event. It is
+well known that considerable trade with Spain was carried on at Galway
+and other ports of western Connaught, two centuries ago, and that many
+Spanish families settled in Ireland, or intermarried with the natives
+during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
+
+To remove W. R. M.'s mistaken impression that Drogheda, Aghada, &c., are
+names of Spanish origin, it may be well to inform him, first, that the
+_gh_ in such names is not sounded like the Spanish _j_, except, as I
+have said, by--(I was on the point of writing _foreigners_), but I mean
+by those who are unable to pronounce our Celtic guttural aspirates.
+Secondly, that Drogheda, Aghada, &c., are names significant in the Irish
+language and perfectly well understood, and that as now written they are
+not seen in their correct orthography, but in an Anglicised spelling
+intended to represent to English ears the native pronunciation. In the
+last century Drogheda was usually written _Tredagh_ in English; but the
+word in its proper spelling is _Droichet-atha_, the bridge of the ford,
+_trajectum vadi_. There are many places in Ireland named from this word
+_Droichet_, which is no doubt the Latin _trajectum_, the same which
+forms a part of the name of _Utrecht_ (Ultrajectum), and other towns on
+the continent.
+
+The word _Agha_, properly _Achadh_, signifies a _field_, and enters into
+the composition of hundreds of topographical names in Ireland. But in
+every case the _gh_ (or _ch_, as it properly is) is pronounced
+gutturally by the peasantry; the _h_ or Spanish _j_ sound is a modern
+Anglicised corruption.
+
+On the subject of Irish proper names of places and persons a vast body
+of curious and valuable information will be found in the publications of
+the Irish Archæological Society, and also in O'Donovan's splendid
+edition of the _Annals of the Four Masters_.
+
+ HIBERNICUS.
+
+We _mere Irish_ assume to be descended from a Phoenician colony; the
+word _Milesian_ is not Irish, the families so designated being known in
+the Irish language only as "Clonna Gäel" (I spare the English reader the
+_mute_ consonants, which _would rather bother him_ to get his tongue
+round).
+
+Our tradition is, that the leader of the said colony saw Ireland from a
+tower, still said to exist near Corunna; he bore the style of _Mileadle
+Spaniogle_, for which no better translation is offered than "the soldier
+of Spain." His brothers and sons, the chief himself having deceased, are
+said to have conducted the expedition to Ireland; and if your
+correspondent wishes for a full account of their adventures, he should
+consult Keating's _History of Ireland_, which will, at all events,
+afford him some amusement.
+
+As to the round towers, Mr. Petrie's book on _The Ecclesiastical
+Antiquities or Architecture of Ireland_ has set that question at rest.
+He has shown that they are undoubtedly Christian buildings intended as
+_Bell-houses_, which their name in Irish signifies; and further,
+probably, for the safe keeping of the sacred vessels, &c., in time of
+war or tumult. It is unfortunately too certain that agitation was always
+rife in Ireland. On all points connected with Irish antiquities, the
+safest and best reference is to the Secretary of the Royal Irish
+Academy, Dublin. If this answer attract any of your correspondents to
+visit the museum of that establishment, I venture to prophecy that they
+will account themselves well repaid for their trouble, even though they
+should miss visiting the Great Exhibition thereby.
+
+ KERRIENSIS.
+
+
+THE TANTHONY.
+
+(Vol. iii., pp. 105. 229. 308.)
+
+I remember hearing a worthy citizen of Norwich remark, that it was very
+odd there should be three churches in the city called after saints whose
+names began with the letter T. Having been myself resident in that city
+many years, without being aware of this fact, I took the liberty of
+inquiring to which three he alluded; when I was unhesitatingly told,
+"Why, Sain Tandrew's, Sain Taustin's, and Sain Tedmund's, to be sure!"
+Let me then be allowed to repeat ARUN'S question, and to ask, "Why not
+Tanthony for Saint Anthony?"
+
+The same worthy citizen was once sheriff of Norwich, and, as is, or
+haply was, the custom,--for I know not how these matters are managed
+now-a-days,--went forth in civic state to meet the judges of assize.
+When their lordships were seated in the sheriff's carriage, one of them
+charitably observed, "Yours, I believe, is a very ancient city, Mr.
+Sheriff!" to which the latter, a little flurried, no doubt, at being
+thus so pointedly addressed, but in decided accents, replied, "It _was_
+ONCE, my Lord!" And without stopping to consider what was passing in his
+mind when he gave utterance to these somewhat ambiguous words, may we
+not take them up, and ask whether it be not even so, not only as regards
+Norwich, but most of her venerable sister towns as well? Where are their
+quondam glories--their arts and rare inventions--their "thoughts in
+antique words conveyed"--their "boast of heraldry"--their pageantries
+and shows? Where their high-peaked gables--their curiously wrought eaves
+and overhanging galleries--their quaint doorways, so elaborately carved,
+and all their other cunning devices?--"Modern Taste," with finger
+pointed to the newest creation of her plaster genius, triumphantly
+echoes the monosyllable, and answers, "Where?" Well, we are perforce
+content; only with this proviso:--if, fatigued with the tinselled
+superficialities and glossy refinements of the present, we are fain to
+"cast one longing lingering look behind," and chance to light upon some
+worthy illustrative memorial of the literature, the manners, or domestic
+life of the past,--that the spirit of Captain Cuttle's sage advice be
+made our own, and that we forthwith transfer our prize for the critical
+examination of "diving antiquaries" to the conservative pages of "NOTES
+AND QUERIES."
+
+ COWGILL.
+
+_The Tanthony._--Will your correspondent ARUN permit one to refer him to
+an authority for the use of the word "Tanton" for St. Anthony? An
+hospital in York, dedicated to St. Anthony, after the dissolution came
+into the possession of a gild or fraternity of a master and eight
+keepers, who were commonly called "Tanton Pigs." Vide Drake's
+_Eboracum_, p. 315.
+
+ [Greek: D].
+
+_Tanthony Bell at Kimbolton._--"Tanthony" is from St. Anthony. In
+Hampshire the small pig of the litter (in Essex called "the cad") is, or
+once was, called "the Tanthony pig." Pigs were especially under this
+saint's care. The ensign of the order of St. Anthony of Hainault was a
+collar of gold made like a hermit's girdle; at the centre thereof hung
+a crutch and a small bell of gold. St. Anthony is styled, among his
+numerous titles, "Membrorum restitutor," and "Dæmonis fugator:" hence
+the bell.
+
+ "The Egyptians have none but wooden bells, except one brought by the
+ Franks into the monastery of St. Anthony."--Rees' _Cyclopædia_, art.
+ Bell.
+
+I hope ARUN will be satisfied with this connexion of St. Anthony with
+the pig, the crutch, and the bell.
+
+"The staff" in the figure of the saint at Merthyr is, I should think, a
+crutch.
+
+ "The custom of making particular saints tutelars and protectors of one
+ or another species of cattle is still kept up in Spain and other
+ places. They pray to the tutelar when the beast is sick. Thus St.
+ Anthony is for hogs, and we call a poor starved creature a _Tantony_
+ pig."--Salmon's _History of Hertfordshire_, 1728.
+
+ A. HOLT WHITE.
+
+May I venture to observe, in confirmation of ARUN'S suggestion as to the
+origin of this term, that the bell appears to have been a constant
+attribute of St. Anthony, although I have tried in vain to discover any
+allusion to it in his legend?
+
+Frederick von Schlegel, in describing a famous picture by Bramante
+d'Urbino (_Æsthetic and Miscellaneous Works_, p. 78.), mentions St.
+Anthony as "carrying the hermit's little bell;" and Lord Lindsay, in the
+Introduction to his _Letters on Christian Art_ (vol. i. p. 192.), says
+that St. Anthony is known by "the bell and staff, denoting mendicancy."
+If this be the case, the bell at Kimbolton was doubtless intended
+originally to announce the presence of some wayfarer or mendicant.
+Tanthony is a common contraction for St. Anthony, as in the term "a
+Tanthony pig;" and a similar system of contraction was in use amongst
+the troubadours, who put _Na_ for _Donna_; as _Nalombarda_ for _Donna
+Lombarda_.
+
+The bell carried by St. Anthony is sometimes thought to have reference
+to his Temptations; bells being, in the words of Durandus, "the trumpets
+of the eternal king," on hearing which the devils "flee away, as through
+fear." I think, however, that these words apply rather to church bells.
+
+ E. J. M.
+
+
+PILGRIMS' ROAD TO CANTERBURY.
+
+(Vol. ii., pp. 199. 237. 269. 316.)
+
+I think those of your readers who are interested in this Query will feel
+that the replies it has received are not quite satisfactory, and I
+therefore trust you will find some room for the following remarks.
+
+I would beg to ask, can there be any doubt that from Southwark to
+Dartford, and from Rochester to their destination, Chaucer and his
+fellow pilgrims journeyed along the old Roman way, then for many
+centuries the great thoroughfare from London to the south-eastern
+coast, and which for these portions of the route is nearly identical
+with the present turnpike-road? The _Tales_ themselves make it certain
+that the pilgrims started on this ancient way; for when the Host
+interrupts the sermonising of the Reeve, he mentions Deptford and
+Greenwich as being in their route:
+
+ "Say forth thy tale, and tarry not the time,
+ Lo Depeford, and it is half way prime;
+ Lo Greenewich, there many a shrew is in,
+ It were all time thy tale to begin."
+
+Shortly after leaving Dartford the turnpike-road bends to the left,
+reaching Rochester by Gravesend and Gadshill; whilst the Roman way,
+parts of which are still used, was carried to that city by Southfleet,
+and through Cobham Park; and it seems to me that the only question we
+have to solve is, whether Chaucer followed the Roman way throughout, or
+whether between Dartford and Rochester he took the course of what is now
+the turnpike-road. For I cannot but think it very unlikely that, with a
+celebrated road leading almost straight as a line to Canterbury, the
+pilgrims should either go many miles out of their way to seek another,
+as they must have done, or run the risk of losing themselves in a
+"horse-track."
+
+In attempting to determine this point, your readers will remember the
+injunction of Poins:
+
+ "But, my lads, my lads, to-morrow morning by four o'clock early at
+ Gadshill; there are pilgrims going to Canterbury with rich offerings,
+ and traders riding to London with fat purses."--_Henry IV._, Pt. I.
+ Act I. Sc. 2.
+
+And Gadshill the robber tells his fellows:
+
+ "There's money of the king's coming down the hill; 'tis going to the
+ king's exchequer."--Act II. Sc. 2.
+
+Here we learn, not only that in Shakspeare's time the road between
+London and Canterbury was by Gadshill, but also that the tradition was
+that the pilgrims had been accustomed to travel that road. We cannot, I
+think, be far out of the way in concluding this to have been the road
+that Chaucer selected, and thus have the satisfaction of connecting with
+it in an immediate and especial manner the two greatest names in our
+literature; for, if he meant the only other road that seems at all
+likely, he would, near Cobham, pass within two miles of this famed hill.
+Nor can there be much doubt that so loyal a company, following a pious
+custom, would tarry at Rochester, to make their offerings on the shrine
+of St. William; if so, among the many thousands who have trodden the
+steps, now well-nigh worn away, leading to its site, is there one
+individual whose presence here we can recall with more pleasure than
+that of the father of English poetry?
+
+It is evident that the road mentioned by S. H. (Vol. ii., p. 237.) is
+not Chaucer's road; but I can well understand why it should be called
+the "Pilgrims' Road;" nor should I be surprised to learn that other
+roads in Kent are known by the same name, for Chaucer tells us in the
+"Prologue" to the _Tales_ that
+
+ "From every shire's end
+ Of Engle-land to Canterbury they wend:"
+
+and I need scarcely say that these widely scattered pilgrims would not
+all traverse the country by one and the same road, but that they would
+select various routes, according to the different localities from which
+they came. Hence, several roads might be called "Pilgrims' Roads."
+
+From a paper which appeared in the _Athenæum_ in 1842, and has since
+been reprinted in a separate form, the writer of which I take to be
+identical with the reviewer of Buckler's work referred to by MR.
+JACKSON, I think we may gather that what he speaks of as the "Old
+Pilgrims' Road" is the Otford Road noticed by S. H. and M. (2.) Messrs.
+Buckler's tract mentions no wayside chapels in Kent.
+
+It may not be uninteresting to add, that the author of _Cabinet Pictures
+of English Life--Chaucer_ has expressed his firm belief, the grounds for
+which must be sought in his work, that the "Pilgrims' Room" of the
+Tabard, now the Talbot, in Southwark, whence these memorable pilgrims
+set forth, must be at least as old as Chaucer, and that the very gallery
+exists along which Chaucer and the pilgrims walked.
+
+ ARUN.
+
+
+Replies To Minor Queries.
+
+_Shakspeare's Use of "Captious"_ (Vol. ii., p. 354.; Vol. iii., p.
+229.).--As W. F. S. does me the favour to ask my opinion of his notion
+respecting the passage in _All's Well that Ends Well_, I beg to say that
+I am very glad to find he agrees with me in regard to the
+_signification_ of the word "captious;" but that I cannot suppose, with
+him, that Shakspeare wrote _capatious_ in a passage in which the metre
+is regular; for what sort of verse would be--
+
+ "Yet in this _capatious_ and intenible sieve?"
+
+Surely W. F. S. has too good an ear to allow him to fix such a line in
+Shakspeare's text.
+
+ J. S. W.
+ Stockwell, April 3. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Inscription on a Clock_ (Vol. iii., p. 329.).--The words written under
+the curious clock in Exeter Cathedral, about which your correspondent M.
+J. W. HEWETT inquires, and which are, or were, also to be found under
+the clock over the Terrace in the Inner Temple, London, are, in truth, a
+quotation from Martial; and it is singular that a sentiment so truly
+Christian should have escaped from the pen of a Pagan writer:
+
+ "They" (that is, the moments as they pass) "slip by us unheeded, but
+ are noted in the account against us."
+
+What could Chrysostom or Augustine have said stronger or better? The
+whole epigram is so good that I venture to transcribe it.
+
+ "AD MARTIALEM DE AGENDA VITA BEATA.
+
+ "Si tecum mihi, care Martialis,
+ Securis liceat frui diebus,
+ Si disponere tempus otiosum,
+ Et veræ pariter vacare vitæ,
+ Nec nos atria, nec domos potentum,
+ Nec lites tetricas, forumque triste
+ Nôssemus, nec imagines superbas:
+ Sed gestatio, fabulæ, libelli,
+ Campus, porticus, umbra, virgo, thermæ;
+ Hæc essent loca semper, hi labores.
+ Nunc vivit sibi neuter, heu! bonosque
+ Soles effugere atque abire sentit;
+ Qui nobis PEREUNT, ET IMPUTANTUR.
+ Quisquam vivere cum sciat, moratur?"
+
+ Lib. v. ep. 20.
+
+ W.[2]
+
+ [Footnote 2: We are indebted to several other correspondents for
+ similar replies to this Query; and one, A. C. W., remarks that the
+ epigram from which these lines are quoted, is thus translated by
+ Cowley:
+
+ "Now to himself, alas! does neither live,
+ But sees good suns, of which we are to give
+ A strict account, set and march thick away:
+ Knows a man how to live, and does he stay?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Authors of the Anti-Jacobin Poetry_ (Vol. iii., p. 348.).--I knew _all_
+the writers, some of them intimately; and I have no doubt of the general
+accuracy of MR. HAWKIN'S communication. The items marked B are the least
+to be relied on. I do not think Mr. Hammond, then Canning's colleague as
+Under-Secretary of State, wrote a line, certainly not of verse, though
+he no doubt assisted his friend in compiling, and perhaps correcting;
+good offices, which obtained him an honourable _niche_ in the
+counter-satire issued from Brooke's, and preserved from oblivion by
+having been reprinted in the _Anti-Jacobin_ to give more poignancy to
+Canning's reply, "Bard of the borrowed lyre," &c.
+
+The Latin verses "Ipsa mali Hortatrix" were the _sole_ production of
+Lord Wellesley, and he reprinted them a year or two before his death;
+Mr. Frere had no share in them: but, on the other hand, Mr. Frere may
+have been, and I think was, the author of the _translation_, "Parent of
+countless crimes." Lord Wellesley certainly was not; for it was made
+after he had sailed for India.
+
+With regard to Mr. Wright's appropriation of particular passages of the
+longer poems to different authors, it is obviously impossible that it
+should be more than a vague conjecture. I _know_ that both Canning and
+Gifford professed _not_ to be able to make any such distribution; but
+both left on my mind the impression that Canning's share of the "New
+Morality" was so very much the largest as to entitle him to be
+considered its author. Ought not Canning's verses to be collected?
+
+ C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"_Felix, quem faciunt," &c._ (Vol. iii., p. 373.).--Though I cannot
+refer EFFIGIES to the original author of this passage, the following
+parallels may not be unacceptable to him:
+
+ "Felix, quem faciunt aliorum cornua cautum,
+ Sæpe suo, coelebs dixit Acerra, patri."
+
+ Joannis Audoeni, _Epigr_. 147. Lib. i. (nat. circa 1600.)
+
+Again:
+
+ "Felix, quicunque dolore
+ Alterius disces posse carere tuo."
+
+ Tibul. lib. iii. 6. 43.
+
+It is remarkable that the annotator on this passage in the Delphin ed.,
+Paris, 1685, p. 327., quotes the line in question thus: "Consonat illud:
+Felix quem faciunt," &c., _without giving the authority_.
+
+Again:
+
+ "Periculum ex aliis facere, tibi quod ex usu siet."--Ter. _Heaut._ i.
+ 2. 36. (Not 25., as in the Delphin _Index_.)
+
+Again:
+
+ "Feliciter is sapit, qui periculo alieno sapit."
+
+This passage is assigned to Plautus in the _Sylloge_ of Petrus
+Lagnerius, Francf. 1610, p. 312., but I cannot find it in this author.
+
+ C. H. P.
+ Brighton, May 12. 1851.
+
+Perhaps it is hardly an answer to EFFIGIES to tell him that the earliest
+occurrence of this line, with which I am acquainted, is in a rebus
+beneath the device of the Parisian printer, Felix Balligault, about the
+year 1496. Thus:
+
+ "Felix quem faciunt aliena pericula cautum.
+ Felici monumenta die felicia felix
+ Pressit: et hæc vicii dant retinentve nihil."
+
+The device is a fruit-tree, from which a shield is suspended inscribed
+_felix_. Two apes are seated at the foot of the tree. The thought is,
+however, common to the wise and the witty of every age. Menander has it
+thus:--
+
+ [Greek: "Blepôn pepaideum eis ta tôn allôn kaka."]
+
+And Plautus:
+
+ "Feliciter sapit qui alieno periculum sapit."
+
+Compare Terence, _Heaut._ i. 2. 36.:
+
+ "Periculum et aliis facere, tibi quod ex usu siet."
+
+And Diodorus Siculus, i. ab init.:
+
+ [Greek: "Kalon gar to dunasthai tois tôn allôn agnoêmasi pros
+ diorthôsin chrêsthai paradeigmasi."]
+
+And Tibullus, lib. iii. eleg. vi.:
+
+ "Felix, quicunque dolore
+ Alterius disces posse carere tuo."
+
+These indications may perhaps put your correspondent in the way of a
+more satisfactory answer to his question.
+
+ S.W. SINGER.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Church Bells_ (Vol. iii., p. 339.).--Should the following extract from
+Mr. Fletcher's _Notes on Nineveh_ have escaped the notice of MR. GATTY,
+it may probably interest him:--
+
+ "During the following (12th) century Dionysius Bar Salibi occupied the
+ (Jacobite) patriarchal throne, a man noted for piety and learning. He
+ composed several works on theological subjects, among which we find a
+ curious disquisition on bells, the invention of which he ascribes to
+ Noah. He mentions that several histories record a command given to
+ that patriarch to strike on the bell with a piece of wood three times
+ a day, in order to summon the workmen to their labour while he was
+ building the ark. And this he seems to consider the origin of church
+ bells, an opinion which, indeed, is common to other Oriental
+ writers."--Vol. ii. p. 212.
+
+ E. H. A.
+
+_Chiming, Tolling, and Pealing_ (Vol. iii., p. 339).--Though the
+following has not, I fear, _canonical_ authority, nor is it of _remote_
+antiquity, still, as they are not lines of yesterday, they may serve as
+one Reply to Mr. GATTY'S late Query on _Chiming, tolling, and
+pealing_:--
+
+ "To call the folk to church in time
+ We _chime_,
+ When joy and mirth are on the wing
+ We _ring_,
+ When we mourn a departed soul
+ We _toll_."
+
+I think it probable (though I have no direct proof of it) that the great
+bell, or tenor, was always RUNG when a sermon was to be _preached_,
+which was not the case when there was to be only prayers. I believe it
+is so at this day at St. Mary's, Oxford; it is very certain that the
+great bell, being so rung, is in some places called the _Sermon_ Bell,
+though I remember two legends on tenor bells, which seem to imply that
+they were intended to call to prayers, viz.:--
+
+ "Come when I call,
+ To serve God all."
+
+ "For Christ, his flock, I aloud do call,
+ To confess their sins, and be pardoned all."
+
+The difference between ringing the tenor (or any bell for prayers), and
+ringing it as a knell, is, that in the latter case the bell is set at
+every pull or stroke, which causes a solemnity in the sound very
+different from that produced by the very reverse mode of ringing it. Oh!
+what language there is in bells. In _ringing_, the bell is swung round;
+in _tolling_, it is swung merely sufficiently for the clapper to strike
+the side. _Chiming_ is when more bells than one are _tolled_ in harmony;
+if this be correct, to _toll_ can be applied only when _one_ bell is
+sounded, and Horne Tooke's definition of the word, from _tollere_, to
+_raise up_, must be wrong (humiliter loquor).
+
+With regard to the present use of the old Sanctus Bell, which is called
+at Ecclesfield _Tom Tinkler_, the same is often called the _Ting Tang_.
+
+ H. T. ELLACOMBE.
+ Clyd St. George.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Extraordinary North Briton_ (Vol. iii., p. 409.).--In answer to the
+inquiries of the reviewer in the _Athenæum_ of May 17, and your
+correspondent, the writer of the _Extraordinary North Briton_ appears to
+have been an individual of the name of William Moore, not, as apparently
+supposed, the poet William Mason. I have, amongst a complete series of
+the London newspapers of the day, a set of the _Extraordinary North
+Briton_, beginning Tuesday (May 10, 1768) and terminating with the 91st
+No. (Saturday, January 27, 1770). Whether it was continued further I do
+not know. The early numbers are published by Staples Steare, 93. Fleet
+Street, and the subsequent ones by T. Peat, 22. Fleet Street, and by
+William Moore, 55., opposite Hatton Garden, Holborn. The second and
+subsequent numbers are entitled, _The Extraordinary North Briton_, by
+W---- M----. In the last three numbers the W---- M---- is altered to
+William Moore, and at the end of each is "London, printed and sold by
+the author, W. Moore, No. 22., near St. Dunstan's Church, Fleet Street."
+In the 90th number is the following advertisement:
+
+ "Mr. Moore thinks it highly incumbent on him to acquaint the public,
+ that Thomas Brayne (who was his shopman all last winter) is now
+ publishing a spurious paper under the same title in Holborn; that they
+ may not be deceived, Mr. Moore's name will be in front of every paper
+ he writes. He begs leave further to add, that Brayne sold several
+ papers last week in his name, and told those who purchased them, that
+ they were wrote by Mr. Moore, and that he published for him. In order
+ that the public may not be deceived by such low artifice, an affidavit
+ of Brayne's proceedings in this respect, will appear in the public
+ papers some time next week."
+
+I have also the papers published by Brayne, which are advertised at the
+end to be "Printed and Published by T. Brayne, No. 55., opposite Hatton
+Garden, Holborn."
+
+I have referred to No. 4, for Friday, June 3, 1768, addressed to Lord
+Mansfield, noticed in the _Athenæum_; but, with all due respect to the
+opinion of the reviewer, I cannot see the slightest similitude to the
+style of Junius. It appears to me to be a very feeble performance, and
+by a very inferior person. Indeed, the entire series of the
+_Extraordinary North Briton_ seems poor and flat when compared with its
+predecessor, the original and famous _North Briton_.
+
+The attempt to show Mason to be Junius is amusing and ingenious; but the
+reviewer has evidently failed in persuading himself, and therefore,
+amidst the many startling improbabilities by which such an attempt is
+encompassed, is scarcely likely to gain many converts to such a theory.
+
+ JAMES CROSSLEY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Fitzpatrick's Lines on Fox._--MR. MARKLAND, in your 78th Number (p.
+334.), asks the true reading of the third line.--The word should be
+"mind," not "course."
+
+The lines are under the engraved bust of Fox, prefixed to the edition,
+in elephant folio, of his _History of the early Part of the Reign of
+James II._, and the word there given is "course." In my copy of that
+work is inserted a letter from Miller, the publisher, to a deceased
+friend of mine, who was an original subscriber at "Five Guineas,
+boards!"
+
+That letter, so far as is material, is as follows:--
+
+ "The error in the engraving of the writing was certainly a very bad
+ one, and not to be remedied, but it is a satisfaction to me that it
+ was Lord Holland's mistake and not mine. I have his lordship's
+ original writing of the four lines to clear myself. W. Miller,
+ Albemarle Street, June 6, 1808."
+
+ Q. D.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Ejusdem Farinæ_ (Vol. iii., p. 278.).--This phrase was used in a
+disparaging sense long before the time of the "scholastic doctors and
+casuists of the middle ages," as may appear from Persius, v. 115-117.,
+where he is showing that an elevation in rank does not necessarily
+produce a more elevated tone of mind; and says to an imaginary upstart:
+
+ "Sin tu, cum fueris _nostræ_ paulò antè _farinæ_,
+ Pelliculam veterem retines, et fronte politus
+ Astutam vapido servas sub pectore vulpem," &c.
+
+It is needless to add that the metaphor is taken from loaves made from
+the "_same batch_" of flour, where, if one be bad, all the others must
+be equally so.
+
+ J. EASTWOOD.
+ Ecclesfield Hall.
+
+Stephens, in his _Thesaurus_, under the head of "Farinæ," states--
+
+ "Proverbiales locutiones sunt, Ejusdem Farinæ, Nostræ farinæ,"
+
+but makes no allusion to its being a term expressive of baseness and
+disparagement. Nor does it seem to be so used by Persius in v. 115. of
+his 5th Satire:
+
+ "Si tu, cum fueris nostræ paulò antè farinæ."
+
+We employ a somewhat similar expression, when we say, "both of the same
+kidney."
+
+ C. I. R.
+
+This expression may be traced beyond "the scholastic doctors and
+casuists of the middle ages." Erasmus, in his _Adagia_, says,--
+
+ "Ejusdem farinæ dicuntur, inter quos est indiscreta similitudo. Quod
+ enim aqua ad aquam collata, idem ad farinam farinæ. Persius in 5
+ Satyr.
+
+ "'Nostræ paulò antè farinæ,
+ Pelliculam veterem retines.'"
+
+And again, on the proverb "Omnia idem pulvis," he says,--
+
+ "Quin nobis omnia idem, quod aiunt, pulvis: alludens ad defunctorum
+ cineres, inter quos nibil apparet discriminis. Confine illi quod alio
+ demonstravimus proverbio, ejusdem farinæ. Siquidem antiqui farinam
+ pollinem vocabant."
+
+Is. Casaubon, in a note on the above passage of Persius, says,--
+
+ "Proverbium Latinum ad notandum similitudinem, 'est ejusdem farinæ,'
+ proprie locum habet in panibus."
+
+Though the expression is generally, if not always, used disparagingly,
+as the corresponding expressions "birds of a feather" and "of the same
+kidney," yet I should doubt whether the term "farinæ" is itself
+expressive of baseness, any more than "feather" or "kidney." By the way,
+what is the origin of the latter of the above expressions?
+
+ E. S. T. T.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_The Sempecta_ (Vol. iii., pp. 328. 357.).--I have to return many thanks
+to DR. MAITLAND for his kindness in so promptly answering my Query. The
+reference to Martene has enabled me to find the poem in question. It is
+in Martene and Durand's _Thesaurus novus Anecdotorum_, Paris, 1717; and
+will be found in vol. iii. col. 1333. The poem forms caput iii. of the
+second book of the _Historia Monasterii Villariensis in Brabantiâ,
+ordinis Cisterciensis_ (a title which shows the monastery to which the
+old soldier-monk belonged instead of Croyland), and is headed "Incipit
+vita beati Franconis." I think there are few of your readers who will
+not thank me for calling their attention to it, if they will take the
+trouble to refer to Martene's work.
+
+ H. R. LUARD.
+ Trin. Coll. May 5.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"_Nulli fraus tuta latebris_" (Vol. iii., p. 323.) will be found in
+_Camerar. Emblem._, cent. ii. 40.
+
+ Q. Q.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Voltaire--where situated_ (Vol. iii., p. 329.).--If the Querist will
+look to the _Critical Essays of an Octogenarian_, by J. R. (the learned,
+venerable, and respected James Roche, Esq., of Cork), he will find, at
+p. 11. vol. i., that there is no such place, the word "Voltaire" being
+merely a transposition of the name of the party assuming it as a
+designation. Thus, he was called _Arouet Le Jeune_. Transpose the
+letters of _Arouet L. J._, and allowing _j_, _u_ and _i_, _v_ to be used
+for each other, you have _Voltaire_.
+
+ K.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_By the Bye_ (Vol. ii., p. 424.; Vol. iii., p. 109.).--In further
+illustration of this phrase, I would advert to the practice of declaring
+by the bye, which prevailed in the superior courts of common law, before
+the Uniformity of Process Act (2 Will. IV., c. 39.). The following
+extract from Burton's _Exchequer Practice_, 1791, vol. i. p. 149., will
+sufficiently explain this happily obsolete matter:--
+
+ "By the old rules it is ordered, 'That upon every defendant's
+ appearance, the plaintiff may put in as many declarations as he will
+ against every such defendant, provided they all be put in at one and
+ the same time.' If there be more than one declaration delivered at the
+ same time against the same defendant, every additional declaration so
+ delivered is called delivering the declaration by the bye."
+
+In the King's Bench, in certain cases, any other plaintiff could declare
+by the bye against the defendant, and that even before the original
+plaintiffs had declared. See Crompton's _Practice Common-placed_, 2nd
+ed., 1783, vol. i. p. 100.
+
+_The Doctor_ (in chap. cx.) says--
+
+ "By the bye, which is the same thing, in common parlance, as by the
+ way, though critically there may seem to be a difference; for by the
+ bye might seem to denote a collateral remark, and by the way a direct
+ one."
+
+By the bye, what a pity it is there is no Index to _The Doctor_.
+
+ C. H. COOPER.
+ Cambridge, March 24, 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Bigod de Loges_ (Vol. iii., p. 306.).--There is an error, perhaps a
+clerical one, in M. J. T.'s statement, that "Bigod, whose name was
+attached to the charter of foundation of St. Werburgh's Abbey, is
+elsewhere, according to Ormerod, called Robert."
+
+The remark is by Leycester, not Ormerod, and the purport is exactly the
+converse. To the words "Signum Roberti de Loges" is added, "alii Bigot
+de Loges hic legunt." Vide _Monasticon_, pars I., pp. 200. 202.
+
+This passage will be found in Leycester's _Antiquities_, p. 111.,
+reprinted in _Hist. Chesh._, vol. i. p. 13. But Leycester's
+_Prolegomena_ is the heading, and the initials "P. L." are appended to
+the note.
+
+ LANCASTRIENSIS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Knebsend or Nebsend, co. York_ (Vol. iii., p. 263.).--A part of
+Sheffield is called Neepsend, which is probably the place inquired after
+by J. N. C., especially as the ordinary pronunciation of it is
+_Nep_send.
+
+ J. EASTWOOD.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Mrs. Catherine Barton_ (Vol. iii., p. 328.).--Your correspondent will
+find all that is known in Sir David Brewster's _Life of Newton_, and
+will see (p. 323.) that her maiden name must have been either Smith,
+Pilkington, or Barton itself.
+
+ M.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Peter Sterry_ (Vol. iii., p. 38.).--In the title-page to his sermon,
+preached before the Parliament, Nov. 1, 1649 (Lond. 1650, 4to.), Sterry
+is called "sometime Fellow of Emanuel College, Cambridge; now a Preacher
+of the Gospel in London." Some account of him may be seen in Burnet's
+_History of his own Time_; and in the _Memoirs of Edmund Ludlow_. Wood
+says that Peter Sterry was notorious "for keeping on that side which had
+proved trump" (_Athenæ_, iii. 197., edit. Bliss).
+
+ EDWARD F. RIMBAULT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Wife of James Torre_ (Vol. iii., p. 329.).--In reply to MR. PEACOCK'S
+Query I beg to inform him that the lady's name was Elizabeth, youngest
+of the four daughters and co-heiresses of William Lincolne, D.D., of
+Bottesford, and by her Mr. Torre had several children, all of whom died
+young except Jane, who married, in 1701, the Rev. Thomas Hassel. This is
+taken from Burke's _Dictionary of Landed Gentry_, vol. ii, M to Z,
+published by Colburn, London, 1847, where the Torre pedigree can be
+seen, but no other mention of the _Lincolne_ family is there made. There
+are seven different coats of arms and crests under the name _Lincolne_
+in Burke's _Armory of England, Scotland, and Ireland_, published by
+Churton in 1843. This is all I can find at present.
+
+ J. N. C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Ramasse_ (Vol. iii., p. 347.).--One word to complete MR. WAY'S
+explanation. This style of sliding down the slopes of the Alps is called
+a _ramasse_, because the guides are ready below to _ramasser_, that is,
+to _pick up_, the travellers who are thus sent down.
+
+ C.
+
+This word is by no means obsolete in France, in the acceptation of "a
+sledge." In addition to the instances given from Barré and Roquefort by
+MR. ALBERT WAY, in his instructive note on the "Pilgrymage of Syr R.
+Guylforde, Knyght," I find in Napoléon Landais' _Dictionnaire général et
+grammatical des Dictionnaires Français_," the following explanation:--
+
+ "RAMASSE, chaise à porteurs, traîneau pour descendre des montagnes où
+ il y a de la neige: _descendre une montagne dans une ramasse_."
+
+He also says, in defining the meaning of the verb "ramasser:"
+
+ "Traîner dans une _ramasse: on le ramassa pendant deux heures; quand
+ il fut sur la montagne, il se fit ramasser_."
+
+The late Mr. Tarver, in his _Dictionnaire Phraséologique Royal_, has
+also the following:
+
+ "RAMASSE, s. f. (t. de voyageur), sledge.
+ "_On le ramassa_, they conveyed him in a sledge.
+ "RAMASSEUR, a man who drives a sledge."
+
+ D. C.
+ St. John's Wood, May 4. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Four Want Way_ (Vol. iii., p. 168.).--Halliwell describes the word
+"want" as meaning in Essex a cross-road. It is still used here as
+denoting a place where four roads meet, and called "a four want way." I
+always fancied it meant a wont way, _via solita_; but I have no
+authority for the etymology.
+
+ BRAYBROOKE.
+ Audley End.
+
+ ["Went" is used in Chaucer in the sense of "way," "passage,"
+ "turning," or road: thus, in _Troilus and Creseide_, iii. 788., he
+ speaks of a "a privie went," and v. 605., "And up and doun there made
+ he many a went;" and in the _House of Fame_:
+
+ "And in a forrest as they went,
+ At the tourning of a went."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Dr. Owen's Works_ (Vol. i., p. 276.).--The editor of the _Works of John
+Owen_ is informed, that in the valuable library of George Offor, Esq.,
+of Hackney, will be found a thick volume in manuscript of unpublished
+_Sermons on the Fifty-third Chapter of Isaiah_, in the Doctor's own
+hand-writing, and apparently prepared for publication. The same library
+also contains two scarce pieces by Dr. Owen, which it is thought have
+never been reprinted: 1. _The Stedfastness of Promises, and the
+Sinfulness of Staggering_, opened in a sermon preached at Margaret's, in
+Westminster, before the Parliament, Feb. 28, 1649, being a Day set apart
+for Solemn Humiliation throughout the Nation. By John Owen, Minister of
+the Gospel. London, 1650. 4to. pp. 54.--2. _God's Work in Founding Zion,
+and his People's Duty thereupon._ A Sermon preached in the Abbey Church
+at Westminster, at the opening of the Parliament, Sept. 17, 1656. By
+John Owen, a Servant of Jesus Christ in the Work of the Gospel. Oxford,
+1656. 4to. pp. 48.
+
+ J. Y.
+ Hoxton.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Bactrian Coins_ (Vol. iii., p. 353.).--Has your correspondent read the
+book by Masson _On the Coins, &c. of Afghanistan_, published by
+Professor H. H. Wilson? There are also references to authorities in
+Humphreys _On Ancient Coins and Medals_.
+
+ C. B.
+
+_Bactria._--BLOWEN will find some trustworthy information respecting
+Bactria in Professor Lassen's _Indische Alterthumskunde_, Zweiter Band,
+pp. 277. et seq. Bonn, 1849; and a list of authorities on the
+Græco-Bactrian coins in the same work, pp. 282. 283. (notes).
+
+ C. H.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Baldrocks_ (Vol. iii., p. 328.).--On looking over a vestry book
+belonging to South Lynn in this town, commencing at 1605, and ending in
+1677, I find some Churchwardens' Accounts, and amongst them the two
+following entries, which may, I trust, assist "A CHURCHWARDEN," and lead
+to an elucidation of this word:--
+
+ "1610.
+ "Janua. 17. ffor a _balledrick_ to ye great Bell, xxi_d._
+
+ "1618.
+ "Novemb. 22. Item. for mendine of ye _baldericke_ for ye foore
+ bell, vj_d._"
+
+From these entries it seems that the "baldrock" was something attached
+to the great bell.
+
+In most of the recent English Dictionaries the word is applied to
+furniture, and to a belt or girdle. But in a Latin Dictionary published
+at Cambridge in 1693, I find in the Anglo-Latin part the following:--
+
+ English. A bawdrick of a bell clapper.
+ Latin. Ropali corrigia.
+
+And the English of "Ropali Corrigia" seems (notwithstanding the English
+version given with it) to be "_pieces of leather_," or "_thongs of
+leather_" to the bell clapper, but for what purpose used I do not know.
+
+ JOHN NURSE CHADWICK.
+
+P.S. The word "corrigia" is taken from the word "corium," a skin of
+leather.
+
+ [Were not these leather coverings?--that for the rope, to prevent its
+ cutting the ringer's hands (as we constantly see), and also to prevent
+ his hand slipping; and that for the clapper, to muffle it--straps of
+ leather girded round them.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Tu Autem_ (Vol. iii., pp. 265. 308.).--The "Tu Autem," still remembered
+at Oxford and Cambridge, and yet lingering at the public dinners of the
+canons of Durham, is the last fragment of what was once a daily, or at
+least an almost daily, religious form or service at those ancient
+places; and it is rather strange that such a fragment should have
+remained so long in the collegiate and cathedral refectory without
+having preserved any remembrance of its real origin and meaning. If
+Bishop Hendren or Father Holdfast would forego their favourite pursuits
+for a few minutes, and look into your interesting and improving
+miscellany, they might inform you that in the Romish Breviary--which, no
+doubt, has preserved many ancient religious services--there is a form
+entitled _Benedictio mensæ_. As the generality of your readers may not
+have the Breviary at hand, I send you so much of the service as may
+suffice for the present purpose.
+
+ "BENEDICTIO MENSÆ.
+
+ "_Ante prandium Sacerdos benedicturus mensam, incipit_, Benedicite,
+ _et alii repetunt_, Benedicite. _Deinde dicit_ Oculi omnium, _et alii
+ prosequuntur_. In te sperant, Domine, et tu das escam illorum in
+ tempore opportuno" &c. &c. Then "Gloria Patri" &c., and "Pater noster"
+ &c. &c.
+
+ "_Posteà Sacerdos dicit_:
+
+ "Oremus.
+
+ "Benedic Domine nos, et hæc tua dona, quæ de tua largitate sumus
+ sumpturi. Per Christum Dominum nostrum. Amen.
+
+ "_Deinde Lector._ Jube Domine benedicere. _Benedictio._ Mensæ
+ coelestis participes faciat nos Rex æternæ gloriæ. Amen.
+
+ "_Post prandium aguntur gratiæ hoc modo. Dicto à Lectore_, Tu autem
+ Domine miserere nobis. Deo gratias, _omnes surgunt_.
+
+ "_Sacerdos incipit._ Confiteantur tibi Domine omnia opera tua. Et
+ Sancti tui benedicant tibi. Gloria Patri, &c.
+
+ "_Posteà Sacerdos absolutè dicat_: _A_gimus tibi gratias, omnipotens
+ Deus, pro universis beneficiis tuis, &c.
+
+ "_Deinde alternatim dicitur Psalmus._ Miserere mei Deus.
+
+ "_Vel Psalmus 116._" (in our version, 117.), &c. &c. &c.
+
+The service then proceeds with very much repetition. The performance of
+the whole would probably occupy twenty minutes.
+
+I must note that there are variations in the service depending upon the
+season, &c. &c.
+
+I have indicated the _rubric_ of the Breviary by _Italics_.
+
+ J. YALC.
+ Preston, Lanc.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Commoner marrying a Peeress_ (Vol. ii., p. 230.).--Your correspondent
+L. R. N. inquires whether there is any decision subsequent to that in
+the reign of Henry VIII. on the claim to the Taylboys barony, respecting
+the right of a Commoner marrying a peeress to assume her title and
+dignity, he having issue male by her. In reply I beg to inform him that
+there appears to have been one on the claim of Richard Bertie, in 1580,
+to the Barony of Willoughby, in right of his wife Catherine Duchess of
+Suffolk, as tenant by the curtesy, which was rejected, and Peregrine
+Bertie her son was admitted in the lifetime of his father. It seems,
+however, from the want of modern instances, as also by the elevation of
+ladies to the rank of peeresses, with remainders to their children, thus
+enabling the issue to sit in the lifetime of the father, that the
+prevailing notion is against curtesy in titles of honour. This subject
+will be found treated at some length in Cruise's _Digest_, vol. iii. pp.
+187, 188. 198. ed. 1818.
+
+ O. S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Ancient Wood Engraving_ (Vol. iii., p. 277.).--The subject of THE
+HERMIT OF HOLYPORT'S question is an engraving of the "Pinax" of Cebes, a
+Theban philosopher who wrote circa A. M. 3600, and who, in his
+allegorical work of that name, described human life under the guise of a
+picture.
+
+This information is for the HERMIT'S especial benefit, as I suppose it
+will be old news to most of your correspondents.
+
+I have an old Dutch edition of the "Pinax" (Gerard de Jager, 1683),
+bound in vellum, with the _Enchiridion_ and other works of Epictetus;
+the frontispiece of which is the fellow to the Hermit's engraving.
+
+ F. I.
+ Bradford.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Vegetating Insects_ (Vol. iii., p. 166.).--As the Query of MR. MANLEY
+in No. 70. has not been answered, I beg to say that Vegetating Insects
+are not uncommon both in New South Wales and New Zealand. The insect is
+the caterpillar of a large brown moth, and in New South Wales is
+sometimes found six inches long, buried in the ground, and the plant
+above ground about the same length: the top, expanded like a flower, has
+a brown velvety texture. In New Zealand the _plant_ is different, being
+a single stem from six to ten inches high: its apex, when in a state of
+fructification, resembles the club-headed bulrush in miniature. When
+newly dug up, and divided longitudinally, the intestinal canal is
+distinctly visible, and frequently the hairs, legs, and mandibles.
+Vegetation invariably proceeds from the nape of the neck; from which it
+may be inferred, that the insect, in crawling to the place where it
+inhumes itself, prior to its metamorphosis, while burrowing in the light
+vegetable soil, gets some of the minute seeds of the fungus between the
+scales of its neck, from which in its sickening state it is unable to
+free itself, and which consequently, being nourished by the warmth and
+moisture of the insect's body then lying motionless, vegetates, and not
+only impedes the process of change in the chrysalis, but likewise
+occasions the death of the insect. The New South Wales specimen is
+called "Sphæria Innominata," that of New Zealand "Sphæria Robertsii;"
+both named, I believe, by Sir W. J. Hooker. In some specimens of the New
+Zealand kind now before me, the _bodies_ of the insects are in their
+normal state, but the legs, &c., are gone.
+
+Both specimens are figured and described in the _Tasmanian Journal_,
+vol. i. No. 4.
+
+ VIATOR.
+
+ Chatham.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Prayer at the Healing_ (Vol. iii., p. 352.).--N. E. R. inquires whether
+this prayer found a place in the prayer-books printed at Oxford or
+Cambridge.
+
+I have it before me in the folio Book of Common Prayer, "Oxford, printed
+by John Baskett, Printer to the King's Most Excellent Majesty, and to
+the University, MDCCXV." It is placed between the form of prayer for
+Aug. 1. (the King's Accession) and the King's Declaration preceding the
+Articles.
+
+This form differs from that given by Sparrow, in his _Collection_, edit.
+1684, p. 165., as follows:--
+
+Sparrow gives _two_ Gospels: Mark, xvi. 14., St. John, i. 1., the
+imposition of the King's hands taking place at the words "_they shall
+lay_," &c. in the reading of the first, and the gold being placed at
+reading the words "_that light_" in the second.
+
+In Baskett's form, the _first_ Gospel only is used, with the collect
+"_Prevent us, O Lord_," before it.
+
+In Baskett's form, the supplicatory versicles and Lord's Prayer, which
+agree in their own order with the earlier form, _follow_ this first
+Gospel, and _precede the imposition and the suspension of the gold_,
+during which (it is directed) the chaplain that officiates, _turning
+himself to his Majesty_, shall say these words following:
+
+ "God give a blessing to this work, and grant that these sick persons,
+ on whom the king lays his hands, may recover through Jesus Christ our
+ Lord."
+
+This does _not_ appear in Sparrow's form of 1684, _neither_ does the
+following address, at the close, by the "chaplain, _standing with his
+face towards them that come to be healed_."
+
+ "The Almighty God, who is a most strong tower to all them that put
+ their trust in Him, to whom all things in heaven, in earth, and under
+ the earth do bow and obey, be now and evermore your defence, and make
+ you know and feel that there is none other Name under heaven given to
+ man, in whom, and through whom, you may receive health and salvation,
+ but only the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, Amen."
+
+Objectionable as the ceremony was, there can be no doubt that a much
+more Protestant character was given to it by these alterations.
+
+ LANCASTRIENSIS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_M. or N._ (Vol. i., p. 415.; Vol. ii., p. 61.; Vol. iii., p.
+323.).--With reference to the initials or letters M. and N. found in the
+Catechism and the Marriage Service of our Common Prayer Book, it has
+struck me that a fancy of mine may satisfy some of those who wish to
+find more than a mere caprice in the selection of them.
+
+It is remarkable that in the Catechism we read N. or M., while in the
+service for Matrimony M. is for the man, N. for the woman.
+
+I have imagined long ago that "N. or M." may mean "_n_omen viri; aut
+_m_ulieris:" that M. may stand for "maritus" in the other place, and N.
+for "nupta."
+
+ TYRO ETYMOLOGICUS.
+
+N. stands (as it constantly did in MS.) for "nomen" or name; M. for N.
+N., "nomina" or names. You will observe that in black letter the forms
+of N and M are so very similar that by an easy contraction double N
+would pass into M, and thus the contracted form N. N. for "nomina" might
+have come into M. Corroborating this is the fact that the answer to What
+is your name? stands thus: Answer N. or M., and not M. or N.
+
+ J. F. T.
+
+P.S. Throughout the Matrimonial Service I observe M. attached to the
+man's name, but N. to the woman's.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Dancing Trenchmore_ (Vol. iii., p. 89.).--Your correspondent S. G. asks
+the meaning of this phrase? _Trenchmore_ was a very popular dance in the
+sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The earliest mention I find of it
+occurs in 1564, and the latest in 1728. The figure and the musical notes
+may be seen in the fifth and later editions of _The Dancing Master_. See
+also Chappell's _National English Airs_, vol. ii. p. 181., where some
+amusing quotations concerning its popularity are given. _Trenchmore_
+(the meaning of which we have to seek) was, however, more particularly
+the name of the _dance_ than the tune. The _dance_, in fact, was
+performed to _various_ tunes. In proof of this I give the following
+quotation from Taylor the water-poet's _Navy of Land Ships_, 1627:
+
+ "Nimble-heel'd mariners (like so many dancers) capring in the pompes
+ and vanities of this sinful world, sometimes a Morisco, or
+ _Trenchmore_ of forty miles long, to the tune of _Dusty my deare_,
+ _Dirty come thou to me_, _Dun out of the mire_, or _I waile in woe and
+ plunge in paine_: all these dances have no other musicke."
+
+ EDWARD F. RIMBAULT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Demosthenes and New Testament_ (Vol. iii., p. 350.).--If your
+correspondent C. H. P. had referred to the _Critici Sacri_, he would
+have found his questions answered. With regard to the quotation from
+Acts xvii. 21., I beg to inform him that Drusius makes the same
+reference, but generally only, as Pricæus; while Grotius gives the
+passages with particular references, in the same manner as Lagnerius. As
+to the passage from St. Matthew xiii. 14., he would have found, had he
+consulted the _Critici Sacri_, that Grotius quotes the same passage from
+Demosthenes as Pricæus; but, as far as I can see, they are the only
+commentators in that work who observed the parallel passages. However,
+the fact of its being "employed as an established proverb by Demosthenes
+having been generally overlooked," as C. H. P. supposes, is not quite
+correct, as it is mentioned in the brief notes in Dr. Burton's _Greek
+Testament_, Oxon., 1831.
+
+ H. C. K.
+ ---- Rectory, Hereford, May 3. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Roman Catholic Church_ (Vol. iii., pp. 168. 409.).--E. H. A. will find
+the information which he requires in the _Notizie per l'anno_ 1851. It
+is a very small annual published at Rome _by authority_. Its price
+cannot exceed 4_s._ or 5_s._
+
+ F.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Yankee, Derivation of_ (Vol. iii., p. 260.).--In Webster's _American
+Dictionary_, and in the _Imperial Dictionary, English, Technological,
+and Scientific_, J. M. will see the etymology of Yankee, which M.
+Philarète Charles supposes not to be given in any work American or
+English.
+
+ NORTHMAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_English French_ (Vol. iii., p. 346.).--I take the liberty to inform C.
+W. B., for the justification of my countrymen, as well as of his own,
+that the _Guide to Amsterdam_ was probably written by a British subject
+born between the tropics, and will point out, not by way of reprisals,
+but as a curiosity of the same sort, an example of French-English to be
+found in a book just published by Whittaker and Co., entitled _What's
+What in 1851_? Let any one who understands French try to read the
+article, p. 69., headed "Qu'êst que, qu'êst que la veritable luxure en
+se promenant," and if he can guess at the meaning of the writer, no
+foreign-English I ever met with will ever give him trouble.
+
+ G. L. KEPPER.
+ Amsterdam, May 10. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Deans, when styled Very Reverend_ (Vol. iii., p. 352.).--I cannot
+answer this question, but I can supply a trace, if not a clue. I find in
+a long series of old almanacks that the list of deans is invariably
+given as _the Reverend_ the dean down to 1803 inclusive. I unluckily
+have not those for the three next years, but in that for 1807 I find
+"_the very Reverend_ the dean."
+
+ C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Duchess of Buckingham_ (Vol. iii., p. 281.).--There is one circumstance
+omitted by P. C. S. S., in his remarks upon the Duchess of Buckingham,
+which explains why _a Phipps_, on being called to the peerage, chose the
+titles of Mulgrave and Normanby.
+
+By her second husband--the Duke of Buckingham and Normanby--she had one
+son, who succeeded to the title and estates; but, dying unmarried during
+his mother's lifetime, _bequeathed to her all the Mulgrave and Normanby
+property_. Her daughter (by her first marriage with James Annesley,
+third Earl of Anglesey) was then the wife of Mr. W. Phipps, son of Sir
+Constantine Phipps, Lord Chancellor of Ireland: to their issue,
+Constantine Phipps, first Lord Mulgrave, the Duchess _left by will these
+estates_; thus founding her grandson's fortune, although she did not
+live to see him created the first Baron Mulgrave.
+
+The Sheffield Buckingham family, although extinct in the male line, is
+represented in the female branch by the Sheffield Dicksons; Mrs.
+Dickson, the widow of Major Dickson, of the Life-Guards, being in direct
+descent from the Lady Catherine Darnley's husband, by another wife.
+
+ A. B.
+ Redland, April 13.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Swearing by the Peacock_ (Vol. iii., p. 70.).--Swearing in the presence
+of a peacock, referred to by T. J., from Dr. Lingard's _History of
+England_, time of Edward I., is, with the ceremony observed at the Feast
+of the Peacock, in the thirteenth century, related at full by Mr. Knight
+in his _Old England_, pp. 311. and 312.; and the representation of the
+Feast from the Bran of Robert Braunche, in the choir of St. Margaret's
+Church at Lynn (a mayor of Lynn), who died October 15, 1364, is given
+fig. 1088.
+
+ BLOWEN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Howe Family_ (Vol. iii., p. 353.).--Your correspondent who asks what
+was the connexion of the Howes with the royal family, will find in
+Walpole's _Reminiscences_ (ch. ii.) that Charlotte Viscountess Howe, the
+mother of Captain Howe, afterwards the celebrated admiral, and of
+General Sir William Howe, was the daughter of George I. by Madame
+Kelmansegge, Countess of Platen, created in England Countess of
+Darlington.
+
+ C.
+
+
+
+
+Miscellaneous.
+
+
+NOTES ON BOOKS, SALES, CATALOGUES, ETC.
+
+Dr. Gregory, Professor of Chemistry at the University of Edinburgh, and
+the translator of Reichenbach's _Researches on Magnetism_, has just
+published a volume destined, we believe, to excite considerable
+attention, both from the nature of its subject and the position of the
+writer. It is entitled _Letters to a Candid Inquirer on Animal
+Magnetism_, and in the first Part, after describing the phenomena, and
+their application to medical purposes, and to the explanation of much
+that is obscure in what is called Magic or Witchcraft, "a great part of
+which appears to have rested on a knowledge of these phenomena possessed
+by a few in an ignorant age," Dr Gregory suggests, not as a fully
+developed theory, but simply as a conceivable idea, an explanation of
+the _modus operandi_ in magnetic phenomena, especially in clairvoyance.
+The basis of this explanation is the existence of that universally
+diffused power or influence, the existence of which, in Dr. Gregory's
+opinion, Reichenbach has demonstrated. The second Part consists of a
+large and startling collection of mostly unpublished cases; and Dr.
+Gregory expresses his conviction that if the evidence is fairly studied,
+it will be impossible to believe that the alleged facts are the result
+of imposture or of delusion; or to resist the conviction, which
+investigation will confirm, that the essential facts, however apparently
+marvellous, are yet true, and have been faithfully reported. These cases
+are indeed most extraordinary, and would, at first sight, seem more
+fitted to fill our Folk Lore columns than to become the subject of
+scientific enquiry; and most readers, we believe, will rise from their
+perusal with an inclination to admit that there are more things true
+than are dreamt of in their philosophy--some with an anxious doubt
+whether these "arts" are not as "forbidden" as they are "curious."
+
+The Society of Arts have opened a reading-room for the gratuitous use of
+foreign visitors to London during the Great Exhibition. Our readers will
+be doing a kindness to their friends from the Continent by making them
+acquainted with this act of liberality and good feeling on the part of
+the Society of Arts.
+
+Messrs. Puttick and Simpson (191. Piccadilly) will sell on Wednesday and
+Thursday next a curious and valuable Library, rich more especially in
+the department of voyages and travels, and including a collection of
+very rare works relating to America.
+
+CATALOGUES RECEIVED.--B. Quaritch's (16. Castle Street, Leicester
+Square) Cheap Book Circular No. 29. of Books in all Languages.--C.
+Hamilton's (22. Anderson's Buildings, City Road) Interesting Catalogue
+No. 43. of Cheap Tracts, Law and Miscellaneous Manuscripts, &c.--J.
+Miller's (43. Chandos Street) Catalogue No. 23. of Books Old and New.
+
+
+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.
+
+ THOMS' 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 et 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).
+
+ WHARTON'S ANGLIA SACRA. Vol. II.
+
+ PHEBUS (Gaston, Conte de Foix), Livre du deduyt de la Chasse.
+
+ TURNER'S SACRED HISTORY. 3 vols. demy 8vo.
+
+ KNIGHT'S PICTORIAL HISTORY OF ENGLAND. Vol. IV. Commencing from
+ Abdication of James II.
+
+ LORD DOVER'S LIFE OF FREDERICK THE GREAT. 8vo. 1832. Vol. II.
+
+ LADIES' DIARY FOR 1825 AND 1826.
+
+ CHRISTIAN'S COUNSELS, &C., WITH THE SEPARATISTS' SCHISM, by Richard
+ Bernard, of Worksop or Batcombe, 1608.
+
+ Any early Copies of Tyndale the Reformer's WORKS.
+
+ LIFE OF DR. RICHARD FIELD, 2 Vols. 8vo. London. 1716-17.
+
+ FAIRFAX'S TASSO, Singer's Edit. Large paper, uncut.
+
+ CRESPET, PERE. Deux Livres de la Haine de Satan et des Malins Esprits
+ contre l'Homme. 8vo. Paris, 1590.
+
+ JACQUIER, N. FLAGELLUM DÆMONUM V. HÆRETICORUM FASCINARIORUM, &c. 8vo.
+ Francfurt, 1581.
+
+ [Star symbol] 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 again enlarged our paper to 24 pages, we are
+ compelled to request the indulgence of our correspondents for omitting
+ many highly interesting communications._
+
+P. J. F. G. _The communication referred to does not appear to have
+reached us._
+
+T. T. W. _Received with thanks. Will be used as soon as possible._
+
+T. E. H. _who suggests that by way of hastening the period when we shall
+be justified in permanently enlarging our Paper to 24 pages, we should
+forward to those correspondents who will circulate them copies of our_
+Prospectus, _for them to enclose to such of their friends as they think
+likely from their love of literature to become Subscribers to_ "NOTES
+AND QUERIES," _is thanked for his valuable suggestion, which we shall be
+most ready to adopt. If therefore_, T. E. H., _or any other friend able
+and willing so to promote our circulation, will say how Prospectuses may
+be addressed to them, they shall be sent by return of Post._
+
+MERCURII _will find his Query respecting Matthew's_ Mediterranean
+Passage _in our 74th Number_, p. 210. _This correspondent is assured
+that our paper is_ regularly _published at noon on Friday,--and that the
+London agent of his bookseller is deceiving him if he reports it as_
+"not out." _If his bookseller will try another agent for a week or two,
+he will find no difficulty in getting_ "NOTES AND QUERIES" _in time for
+the Yarmouth readers on Saturday._
+
+REPLIES RECEIVED.--_Barker the Panoramist--Redwing's
+Nest--Prenzie--Legend in Frettenham Church--White Rose--Image of both
+Churches--Vineyards--Eisell--Statistics of Roman Catholic
+Church--Robertson of Muirtown--Omen at Marriage--Old London Bellman--On
+Passage in "Measure for Measure"--Sewell--Penn Family--Court Dress--Noli
+me tangere--School of the Heart--Lay of Last Minstrel--Cachcope
+Bell--Baron Munchausen--To Three Queries by Nemo, &c., by C. P. P. (who
+is thanked for corrections)--The Tradescants--Meaning of
+Mosaic--Portugal--Genealogy of European Sovereigns._
+
+ VOLS. I. _and_ II., _each with very copious Index, may still be had,
+ price 9_s._ 6_d._ 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.
+
+
+ACROSS THE ATLANTIC.
+
+ Now ready, small 8vo., cloth, price 5_s._
+
+ =ACROSS THE ATLANTIC.= By the Author of "Sketches of Cantabs."
+
+ "A smart volume, full of clever observations about America and the
+ Americans, and the contrasts of trans-Atlantic and cis-Atlantic
+ life."--_John Bull._
+
+ "It is sensible as well as witty, accurate as well as facetious, and
+ deserves to be popular."--_Morning Post._
+
+ London: EARLE, 67. Castle Street, Oxford Street.
+
+
+=THE GENERAL LAND DRAINAGE AND IMPROVEMENT COMPANY.=
+
+ Incorporated by Act of Parliament, 12 and 13 Vict. c. 91.
+
+ DIRECTORS.
+
+ HENRY KER SEVMER, Esq., M.P., Hanford, Dorset, Chairman.
+ JOHN VILLIERS SHELLEY, Esq., Maresfield Park, Sussex,
+ Deputy-Chairman.
+ John Chevallier Cobbold, Esq., M.P., Ipswich.
+ William Cubitt, Esq., Great George Street, Westminster.
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+ Thomas Edward Dicey, Esq., Claybrook Hall, Lutterworth.
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+ Colonel George Alexander Reid, M.P., Bulstrode Park, Bucks.
+ William Tite, Esq., F.R.S., Lowndes Square, London.
+ William Wilshere, Esq., The Frythe, Welwyn, Herts.
+
+ This Company is empowered to execute--
+
+ 1. All works of Drainage (including Outfalls through adjoining
+ Estates), Irrigation, Reclaiming, Enclosing, and otherwise improving
+ Land.
+
+ 2. To erect Farm Homesteads, and other Buildings necessary for the
+ cultivation of Land.
+
+ 3. To execute Improvements, under Contract, with Commissioners of
+ Sewers, Local Boards of Health, Corporations, Trustees, and other
+ Public Bodies.
+
+ 4. To purchase Lands capable of Improvement, and fettered by
+ Restrictions of Entail; and having executed the necessary Works, to
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+
+ Owners of Entailed Estates, Trustees, Mortgagees, Corporations,
+ Incumbents, Life Tenants, and other Persons having only limited
+ interests, may obtain the use of the Company's Powers to carry out
+ every kind of permanent Improvement, either by the Application of
+ their own or the Company's Funds, secured by a yearly Charge on the
+ Property Improved.
+
+ Proposals for the Execution of Works to be addressed to
+
+ WILLIAM CLIFFORD, Secretary. Offices, 52. Parliament Street,
+ Westminster.
+
+
+Price 2_s._ 6_d._; by Post 3_s._
+
+ =ILLUSTRATIONS AND ENQUIRIES RELATING TO MESMERISM.= Part I. By the
+ REV. S. R. MAITLAND, DD. F.R.S. F.S.A. Sometime Librarian to the late
+ Archbishop of Canterbury, and Keeper of the MSS. at Lambeth.
+
+ "One of the most valuable and interesting pamphlets we ever
+ read."--_Morning Herald._
+
+ "This publication, which promises to be the commencement of a larger
+ work, will well repay serious perusal."--_Ir. Eccl. Journ._
+
+ "A small pamphlet in which he throws a startling light on the
+ practices of modern Mesmerism."--_Nottingham Journal._
+
+ "Dr. Maitland, we consider, has here brought Mesmerism to the
+ 'touchstone of truth,' to the test of the standard of right or wrong.
+ We thank him for this first instalment of his inquiry, and hope that
+ he will not long delay the remaining portions."--_London Medical
+ Gazette._
+
+ "The Enquiries are extremely curious, we should indeed say important.
+ That relating to the Witch of Endor is one of the most successful we
+ ever read. We cannot enter into particulars in this brief notice; but
+ we would strongly recommend the pamphlet even to those who care
+ nothing about Mesmerism, or _angry_ (for it has come to this at last)
+ with the subject."--_Dublin Evening Post._
+
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+ =A TREATISE OF EQUIVOCATION.= Wherein is largely discussed the
+ question whether a Catholicke or any other person before a magistrate,
+ being demanded upon his Oath whether a Prieste were in such a place,
+ may (notwithstanding his perfect knowledge to the contrary) without
+ Perjury, and securely in conscience, answer No; with this secret
+ meaning reserved in his mynde, That he was not there so that any man
+ is bounde to detect it. Edited from the Original Manuscript in the
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+
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+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Queries, Vol. III, Number
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Queries, Vol. III, Number 83, May
+31, 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, Vol. III, Number 83, May 31, 1851
+ A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists,
+ Antiquaries, Geneologists, etc
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: George Bell
+
+Release Date: July 29, 2011 [EBook #36835]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES AND QUERIES, MAY 31, 1851 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charlene Taylor, Jonathan Ingram and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<h1>
+<span id="idno">Vol. III.&mdash;No. 83.</span>
+<span>NOTES <small>AND</small> QUERIES:</span>
+<span id="id1"> A MEDIUM OF INTER-COMMUNICATION</span>
+<span id="id2"> FOR</span>
+<span id="id3"> LITERARY MEN, ARTISTS, ANTIQUARIES, GENEALOGISTS, ETC.</span>
+</h1>
+
+<div class="center1">
+<p class="noindent"><b>"When found, make a note of."</b>&mdash;C<small>APTAIN</small> C<small>UTTLE</small>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="center1">
+<p class="noindent"><small>VOL. III.&mdash;NO. 83.</small><br />
+<small>SATURDAY, MAY 31. 1851.</small><br />
+<small>Price Threepence.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Stamped Edition 4<i>d.</i></small></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="tnbox1">
+<p class="noindent">Transcribers' note: Although we verify the correctness of the links to other issues of the "Notes &amp; Queries"
+ at the time of posting, these links may not work, for various reasons, for various people, at various times.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<h2><span>CONTENTS.</span></h2>
+
+
+<div class="toc">
+<p class="ind"> On the Proposed Record of Existing Monuments <a href="#PROPOSED" title="Go to page 417">417</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="larger">N<span class="smcap lowercase">OTES</span>:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="toc">
+
+<p class="ind"> Illustrations of Chaucer, No. VII.: The star Min Al
+ Auwâ <a href="#Notes1" title="Go to page 419">419</a></p>
+
+<p class="ind">Traditions from remote Periods through few Links, by
+ Rev. Thos. Corser <a href="#TRADITIONS1" title="Go to page 421">421</a></p>
+
+<p class="ind">Dr. Young's Narcissa <a href="#YOUNG1" title="Go to page 422">422</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="toc">
+<p class="ind">Minor Notes:&mdash; Curious Epitaph&mdash;The Curse of Scotland&mdash;The
+ Female Captive&mdash;Pictorial Antiquities <a href="#Notes2" title="Go to page 422">422</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="larger">Q<span class="smcap lowercase">UERIES</span>:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="toc">
+
+<p class="ind"> English Poems by Constantine Huyghens, by S. W.
+ Singer <a href="#Queries1" title="Go to page 423">423</a></p>
+
+<p class="ind"> The Rev. Mr. Gay, by Edward Tagart <a href="#REV1" title="Go to page424">424</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="toc">
+<p class="ind">Minor Queries:&mdash; Carved Ceiling in Dorsetshire&mdash;Publicans'
+ Signs&mdash;To a T.&mdash;Skeletons at Egyptian Banquet&mdash;Gloves&mdash;Knapp
+ Family in Norfolk and Suffolk&mdash;To
+ learn by "Heart"&mdash;Knights&mdash;Supposed Inscription
+ in St. Peter's at Rome&mdash;Rag Sunday in
+ Sussex&mdash;Northege Family&mdash;A Kemble Pipe of Tobacco&mdash;Durham
+ Sword that killed the Dragon <a href="#Minor2" title="Go to page424">424</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="toc">
+<p class="ind">M<span class="smcap lowercase">INOR</span> Q<span class="smcap lowercase">UERIES</span> A<span class="smcap lowercase">NSWERED</span>:&mdash;"At Sixes and
+ Sevens"&mdash;Swobbers&mdash;Handel's Occasional Oratorio&mdash;Archbishop
+ Waldeby's Epitaph&mdash;Verstegan&mdash;Royal Library <a href="#Minor3" title="Go to page425">425</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="larger">R<span class="smcap lowercase">EPLIES</span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="toc">
+
+<p class="ind">Hugh Holland and his Works, by Bolton Corney <a href="#Replies1" title="Go to page 427">427</a></p>
+
+<p class="ind"> The Milesians <a href="#MILESIANS1" title="Go to page 428">428</a></p>
+
+<p class="ind">The Tanthony <a href="#TANTHONY1" title="Go to page 428">428</a></p>
+
+<p class="ind">Pilgrims' Road to Canterbury <a href="#PILGRIMS1" title="Go to page 429"> 429</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="toc">
+<p class="ind">Replies to Minor Queries:&mdash;Shakespeare's Use of
+ "Captious"&mdash;Inscription of a Clock&mdash;Authors of the Anti-Jacobin
+ Poetry&mdash;"Felix, quem faciunt," &amp;c.&mdash;Church
+ Bells&mdash;Chiming, Tolling, and Pealing&mdash;Extraordinary
+ North Briton&mdash;Fitzpatrick's Lines of Fox&mdash;Ejusdem
+ Farinæ&mdash;The Sempecta&mdash;"Nulli fraus tuta latebris"&mdash;Voltaire,
+ where situated&mdash;By the Bye&mdash;Bigod de
+ Loges&mdash;Knebsend&mdash;Mrs. Catherine Barton&mdash;Peter
+ Sterry&mdash;Wife of James Torre&mdash;Ramasse&mdash;Four
+ Want Way&mdash;Dr. Owen's Works&mdash;Bactrian
+ Coins&mdash;Baldrocks&mdash;Tu Autem&mdash;Commoner marrying a
+ Peeress&mdash;Ancient Wood Engraving&mdash;Vegetating
+ Insects&mdash;Prayer at the Healing&mdash;M. or N., &amp;c. <a href="#Replies2" title="Go to page 430">430</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="larger">M<span class="smcap lowercase">ISCELLANEOUS</span>:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="toc">
+
+<p class="ind">Notes on Books, Sales, Catalogues, &amp;c. <a href="#Miscellaneous1" title="Go to page 438">438</a></p>
+
+<p class="ind"> Books and Odd Volumes wanted <a href="#ODD1" title="Go to page 438">438</a></p>
+
+<p class="ind"> Notices to Correspondents <a href="#Notices1" title="Go to page 439">439</a></p>
+
+<p class="ind">Advertisements <a href="#ACROSS1" title="Go to page 439">439</a></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><span>ON THE <a id="PROPOSED"></a>PROPOSED RECORD OF EXISTING MONUMENTS.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p class="blockquot"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page417"></a>[417]</span> Although disappointed in the hope we had entertained of being, by this
+time, in a position to announce that some decided steps had been taken
+to carry out, in a practical manner, the great scheme of preserving a
+record of our existing Monuments, we are gratified at being enabled to
+bring under the notice of our readers several communications which show
+the still increasing interest which is felt upon the subject.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot"> The first, by Sir Thomas Phillipps, besides some valuable
+information upon the matter immediately under consideration, contains
+several very useful suggestions upon other, though kindred points.</p>
+
+
+<p>In approving of the design mentioned in your "Notes" by M<span class="smcap lowercase">R</span>. D<span class="smcap lowercase">UNKIN</span>,
+ it has surprised me that in no one of the communications which you
+ have there printed is any allusion to the multitude of inscriptions
+ already collected, and now preserved in the British Museum and
+ other libraries. A list of what are already copied should <i>first</i>
+ be made, which would considerably abridge the labour of collecting.
+ For instance, the whole of Gloucestershire has been preserved by
+ Bigland, and nearly two-thirds of these have been printed. I should
+ recommend his plan to be adopted, being <i>multum in parvo</i>, as to
+ the headstones in the churchyards, and the clearest for reference
+ by its alphabetical order of parishes. He copies them about 1780;
+ so that now seventy years remain to be obtained. His collection
+ would make two, or at most three, volumes folio, by which we can
+ form an approximate idea as to the extent for the kingdom, which I
+ estimate at one hundred volumes for the forty counties, because
+ some of these are very small, and many monuments have been
+ destroyed by the barbarous Gothlike conduct of church renovators
+ and builders. (<i>A propos</i> of which conduct, I believe they are
+ liable to an <i>action at law</i> from the next of kin: at all events,
+ it is sacrilege.) In many county histories, <i>all</i> the monuments
+ inside the churches, up to nearly the date of the publication, have
+ been printed, as in Nichols's <i>Leicestershire</i>. I have myself
+ printed the greater part of those for Wiltshire; but some are
+ incorrectly printed, not having been collated; for I merely printed
+ a few as handbooks to accompany me in my personal correcting survey
+ of each church at another time. I have also printed as far as
+ letter "E" of Antony à Wood's and Hinton's <i>Oxfordshire Monuments</i>,
+ of which, I believe, M<span class="smcap lowercase">R</span>. D<span class="smcap lowercase">UNKIN</span> has a MS. copy. Now, it would be
+ useless to reprint those which have been printed; consequently I
+ should imagine twenty-five or thirty volumes, on Bigland's plan,
+ would comprise all the villages; and I should imagine five or ten
+ volumes at<span class="pagenum" id="page418">[418]</span> most would comprise all the capital towns. Allow
+ me here to suggest the absolute necessity of taking "Notes" of the
+ residence, parentage, and kindred of <i>every one</i> of the families of
+ that vast tide of emigration now quitting our shores; and I call
+ Lord Ashley's and Mr. Sidney Herbert's attention to it. These poor
+ people will, many of them, become rich in half a century; will then
+ probably die without a kindred soul in America to possess their
+ wealth; and their next of kin must be sought for in the mother
+ land, where, unless some <i>registered memorial</i> of their departure
+ and connexions is kept, all traces of their origin may be lost for
+ ever. It was the neglect of an act like this which has involved the
+ beginning of nations in such profound obscurity. It was the neglect
+ of such a register as I here propose, that makes it so difficult
+ now for the American to discover the link which actually connected
+ him with England. There is a corporate body, long established in
+ this country, whose sole occupation is to make such registers; but
+ at present they confine themselves to those called gentlemen. Why
+ not make them useful as registers of the poor, at a small
+ remuneration for entering each family. These poor, or their
+ descendants, will some day become gentlemen, and perhaps not
+ ashamed of their ancestry, although they may derive it through
+ poverty. How gratified they may feel to be able, by means of this
+ proposed registry, clearly to trace themselves to Great Britain
+ (once the mistress of half the world), when their now adopted
+ country has risen up in her place, and the mother has become
+ subject to the daughter.</p>
+
+<p> And then, too, how valuable will Americans and Canadians,
+ Australians and New Zealanders, find the proposed <i>Monumentarium</i>
+ of M<span class="smcap lowercase">R</span>. D<span class="smcap lowercase">UNKIN</span>.</p>
+
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> T<span class="smcap lowercase">HOS</span>. P<span class="smcap lowercase">HILLIPPS</span>.<br />
+ Middle Hill, April, 1851.</p></div>
+
+<p class="blockquot">The next is from a frequent contributor to our pages, and we have
+ selected it for publication from among many which we have received
+ promising assistance in the carrying out of the great scheme, because it
+ shows very strikingly how many of the memorials, which it is the
+ especial object of that scheme to preserve, have disappeared within the
+ last few years.</p>
+
+
+ <p> Your valuable remarks on this head have induced me to send you a
+ few observations in the same direction. You have justly said that
+ the means by which the object can be accomplished fall into the
+ three distinct operations of Collection, Preservation, and
+ Publication. The first will require the help of all antiquaries
+ throughout the kingdom who will volunteer their services, and of
+ the clergymen resident in country parishes. Where possible, it
+ would be well to find a co-operator in every county town, who would
+ undertake the collection of all ancient memorials in his own
+ district, either by personal inspection, or by the aid of the
+ clergy. For this county we have, fortunately, a record of
+ all or most of the monuments existing in the time of James I.,
+ published in Burton's History. Besides the monuments, there are
+ also mentioned the coats of arms preserved in the churches. In the
+ useful and voluminous world of Nichols, the record is brought down
+ nearly to the commencement of the present century. But in late
+ years, many ancient memorials have been removed altogether, or
+ displaced. A day or two ago, I found only one monument in a village
+ church, where Burton says there were two in his time. The chancel
+ of St. Martin's Church, Leicester, a few years ago, contained a
+ large number, of which many have been placed elsewhere, in order to
+ "improve" the appearance of this part of the edifice. I believe a
+ list of the monuments is preserved somewhere. This kind of
+ proceeding has been carried on very generally throughout the
+ country since the desire for "church restoration" has prevailed,
+ and has led to great alterations in the interiors of our old parish
+churches. I should be happy to lend a helping hand in the
+ collections for Leicester and the neighbourhood.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p>J<span class="smcap lowercase">AYTEE</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+<p class="blockquot"> From our next communication, it will be seen that the Scottish
+ Antiquaries, whose zeal and intelligence in the preservation and
+ illustration of objects of national interest, are beyond all praise, are
+ working in the same direction; and although we have not seen the
+ <i>Origines Parochiales</i>, we can readily believe in the great value of a
+ work of such a character when undertaken by the Bannatyne Club.</p>
+
+
+<p> It may interest some of your "Monumental" and "Ecclesiological"
+ correspondents to be informed that in 1834 there was collected and
+ published by D. Macvean, bookseller, Glasgow, a volume of <i>Epitaphs
+ and Monumental Inscriptions in Scotland</i>. Also, that there has just
+ been published by Lizars, Edinburgh, for the Bannatyne Club, the
+ first volume of the <i>Origines Parochiales Scotiæ</i>.</p>
+
+<p> The former of these books (<i>Epitaphs</i>, &amp;c.) is perhaps of no great
+ value, being badly selected and worse arranged; but the latter
+ (<i>Origines</i>, &amp;c.) seems to be exactly such a work as W. J. D. R.
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. III., p. 314." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26898/26898-h/26898-h.htm#page313">Vol. iii., p. 314.</a>) has in his mind's eye for England.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> Y.</p></div>
+
+<p class="blockquot"> A correspondent, M<span class="smcap lowercase">ERCURII</span>, has also directed our attention to a small
+ volume, published in 1848, by one of the most valued contributors to our
+ own columns, M<span class="smcap lowercase">R</span>. D<span class="smcap lowercase">AWSON</span> T<span class="smcap lowercase">URNER</span>, under the title of <i>Sepulchral
+ Reminiscences of a Market Town, as afforded by a List of the Interments
+within the Walls of the Parish Church of St. Nicholas, Great Yarmouth,
+collected chiefly from Monuments and Gravestones still remaining, June,
+1845</i>. This little volume may be regarded as a public testimony
+<span class="pagenum" id="page419">[419]</span> on the part of M<span class="smcap lowercase">R</span>. D<span class="smcap lowercase">AWSON</span> T<span class="smcap lowercase">URNER</span> to the value of the plan under
+consideration, and there are few antiquaries whose opinions are entitled
+to greater respect upon this or any other point to which he has devoted
+his talents and attention. Can we doubt, then, the success of a plan
+which has met with such general approbation, and is undertaken with so
+praiseworthy an object,&mdash;an object which may well be described in the
+words which Weever used when stating the motive which led him to
+undertake the publication of his <i>Funeral Monuments</i>, viz., "To check
+the unsufferable injury, offered as well to the living as to the dead,
+by breaking down and almost utterly ruinating monuments with their
+epitaphs, and by erasing, tearing away, and pilfering brazen
+inscriptions, by which inhumane deformidable act, the honorable memory
+of many virtuous and noble persons deceased is extinguished, and the
+true understanding of divers families is so darkened, that the course of
+their inheritance is thereby partly interrupted."</p>
+
+
+<h2><span class="bl"><a id="Notes1"></a>Notes.</span></h2>
+
+<h3><span>ILLUSTRATIONS OF CHAUCER, NO. VIII.</span></h3>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<p><i>The Star Min Al Auwâ.</i></p>
+<p>"Adam Scrivener, if ever it thee befall</p>
+<p>Boece, or Troilus, for to write newe,</p>
+<p>Under thy long locks thou mayst have the scull</p>
+<p> But, after my making, thou write more trew;</p>
+<p>So oft a day I mote thy worke renew,</p>
+<p>It to correct, and eke to rubbe and scrape,</p>
+<p>And all thorow thy negligence and rape."</p>
+<p class="author"> <i><small>Chaucer to his own Scrivener</small>.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>If, during his own lifetime, and under his own eye, poor Chaucer was so
+sinned against as to provoke this humorous malediction upon the head of
+the delinquent, it cannot be a matter of surprise that, in the various
+hands his text has since passed through, many expressions should have
+been perverted, and certain passages wholly misunderstood. And when we
+find men, of excellent judgment in other respects, proposing, as
+Tyrwhitt did, to alter Chaucer's words to suit their own imperfect
+comprehension of his meaning, it is only reasonable to suspect that
+similar mistakes may have induced early transcribers to alter the text,
+wherever, to their wisdom, it may have seemed expedient.</p>
+
+<p>Now I know of no passage more likely to have been tampered with in this
+way, than those lines of the prologue to the <i>Persone's Tale</i>, alluded
+to at the close of my last communication. Because, supposing (which I
+shall afterwards endeavour to prove) that Chaucer really meant to write
+something to this effect: "Thereupon, as we were entering a town, the
+moon's rising, with Min al auwâ in Libra, began to ascend (or to become
+visible),"&mdash;and supposing that his mode of expressing this had been,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"Therewith the mone's exaltacioun,</p>
+<p> In libra men alawai gan ascende,</p>
+ <p> As we were entrying at a towne's end:"</p></div>
+
+<p class="noindent">&mdash;in such a case, what can be more probable than that some ignorant
+transcriber, never perhaps dreaming of such a thing as the Arabic name
+of a star, would endeavour <i>to make sense</i> of these, to him, obscure
+words, by converting them into English. The process of transition would
+be easy; "min" or "men" requires little violence to become "mene" (the
+modern "mean" with its many significations), and "al auwâ" (or "alwai,"
+as Chaucer would probably write it) is equally identical with "alway."
+The misplacement of "Libra" might then follow as a seeming necessity;
+and thus the line would assume its present form, leaving the reader to
+understand it, either with Urry, as,</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<p> "I mene Libra, that is, I <i>refer to</i> Libra;"</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noindent">or with Tyrwhitt:</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<p> "In mene Libra, that is, In <i>the middle of</i> Libra."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Now, to Urry's reading, it may be objected that it makes <i>the thing
+ascending</i> to be Libra, and does not of necessity imply the moon's
+appearance above the horizon. But since the rising of the moon is a
+<i>visible</i> phenomenon, while that of Libra is theoretical, it must have
+been <i>to the former</i> Chaucer was alluding, as to something witnessed by
+the whole party as they</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p> "Were entrying at a towne's end;"</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noindent">or otherwise this latter observation would have no meaning.</p>
+
+<p>The objection to Tyrwhitt's reading is of a more technical nature&mdash;the
+moon, if in <i>the middle</i> of Libra, <i>could not</i> be above the horizon, in
+the neighbourhood of Canterbury, at four o'clock P. M., in the month of
+April. Tyrwhitt, it is true, would probably smooth away the difficulty
+by charging it as another inconsistency against his author; but I&mdash;and I
+hope by this time such readers of
+as are interested
+in the subject&mdash;have seen too many proofs of Chaucer's competency in
+matters of science, and of his commentator's incompetency, to feel
+disposed to concede to the latter such a convenient method of
+interpretation.</p>
+
+<p>But there is a third objection common to both readings&mdash;that they do not
+satisfactorily account for the word "alway;" for although Tyrwhitt
+endeavours to explain it by <i>continually</i>, "was <i>continually</i>
+ascending," such a phrase is by no means intelligible when applied to a
+single observation.</p>
+
+<p>For myself, I can say that this word "alway" was, from the first, the
+great difficulty with me&mdash;and the more I became convinced of the studied
+meaning with which Chaucer chose his other expressions, the less
+satisfied I was with this; and the<span class="pagenum" id="page420">[420]</span> more convinced I felt that the
+whole line had been corrupted.</p>
+
+<p>In advocating the restoration of the reading which I have already
+suggested as the original meaning of Chaucer, I shall begin by
+establishing the <i>probability</i> of his having intended to mark the moon's
+place by associating her rising with that of a known fixed star&mdash;a
+method of noting phenomena frequently resorted to in ancient astronomy.
+For that purpose I shall point out another instance wherein Chaucer
+evidently intended an application of the same method for the purpose of
+indicating a particular position of the heavens; but first it must
+noted, that in alluding to the Zodiac, he always refers <i>to the signs</i>,
+never to the constellations&mdash;in fact, he does not appear to recognise
+the latter at all! Thus, in that palpable allusion to the precession of
+the equinoxes, in the Frankeleine's Tale&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p> "He knew ful wel how fer Alnath was shove</p>
+<p>From the hed of thilke fixe Aries above:"</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noindent">&mdash;by <i>the hed of Aries</i>, Chaucer did not mean the os frontis of the Ram,
+whereon Alnath still shines conspicuously, but the equinoctial point,
+from which Alnath <i>was shove</i> by the extent of a whole sign.</p>
+
+<p>This being premised, I return to the indication of a point in the
+ecliptic by the coincident rising of a star; and I contend that such was
+plainly Chaucer's intention in those lines of the Squire's Tale wherein
+King Cambuscan is described as rising from the feast:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"Phebus hath left the angle meridional,</p>
+<p>And yet ascending was the beste real,</p>
+<p> The gentle Leon, <i>with his Aldryan</i>."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noindent">Which means that <i>the sign</i> Leo was then in the horizon&mdash;the precise
+degree being marked by the coincident rising of the star Aldryan.</p>
+
+<p>Speght's explanation of "Aldryan," in which he has been copied by Urry
+and Tyrwhitt, is&mdash;"a star in the neck of the Lion." What particular star
+he may have meant by this, does not appear; nor am I at present within
+reach of probable sources wherein his authority, if he had any, might be
+searched for and examined; but I have learned to feel such confidence in
+Chaucer's significance of description, that I have no hesitation in
+assuming, until authority for a contrary inference shall be produced,
+that by the star "Aldryan" he meant REGULUS, not the neck, but the
+heart, of the Lion&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>1st. Because it is the most remarkable star in the sign Leo.</p>
+
+<p>2nd. Because it was, in Chaucer's time, as it now is, nearly upon the
+line of the ecliptic.</p>
+
+<p>3rd. Because its situation in longitude, about two-thirds in the sign
+Leo, just tallies with Chaucer's expression "<i>yet</i> ascending,"&mdash;that is,
+one-third of the sign was still below the horizon.</p>
+
+<p>Let us examine how this interpretation consists with the other
+circumstances of the description. The feste-day of this Cambuscan was
+"The last idus of March"&mdash;that is, the 15th of March&mdash;"after the
+yere"&mdash;that is, after the <i>equinoctial year</i>, which had ended three or
+four days previously. Hence the sun was in three degrees of
+Aries&mdash;confirmed in Canace's expedition on the following morning, when
+he was "in the Ram foure degrees yronne," and his corresponding right
+ascension was twelve minutes. Now by "the angle meridional" was meant
+the two hours <i>inequall</i> immediately succeeding noon (or while the "1st
+House" of the sun was passing the meridian), and these two hours may, so
+near the equinox, be taken as ordinary hours. Therefore, when "Phebus
+hath left the angle meridional," it was two o'clock P.M., or eight hours
+after sunrise, which, added to twelve minutes, produces eight hours
+twelve minutes as the ascending point of the equinoctial. The ascending
+point of <i>the ecliptic</i> would consequently be twenty degrees in Leo, or
+within less than a degree of the actual place of the star Regulus, which
+in point of fact did rise on the 15th of March, in Chaucer's time,
+almost exactly at two in the afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>Such coincidences as these could not result from mere accident; and,
+whatever may have been Speght's authority for the location of Aldryan, I
+shall never believe that Chaucer would refer to an inferior star when
+the great "Stella Regia" itself was in so remarkable a position for his
+purpose&mdash;assuming always, as a matter of course, that he referred his
+phenomena, not to the country or age wherein he laid the action of his
+tale, but to his own.</p>
+
+<p>This, then, is the precedent by which I support the similar, and rather
+startling, interpretation I propose of these obscure words "In mena
+Libra alway."</p>
+
+<p>There are two twin stars, of the same magnitude, and not far apart, each
+of which bears the Arabic title of Min al auwâ; one (<ins title='Greek: beta'>&#946;</ins> Virginis) in the
+ sign Virgo&mdash;the other (<ins title='Greek: delta'>&#948;</ins> Virginis) in that of Libra.</p>
+
+<p>The latter, in the south of England, in Chaucer's time, would rise a few
+minutes before the autumnal equinoctial point, and might be called
+<i>Libra</i> Min al auwâ either from that circumstance, or to distinguish it
+from its namesake in Virgo.</p>
+
+<p>Now on the 18th of April this Libra Min al auwâ would rise in the
+neighbourhood of Canterbury at about half-past three in the afternoon,
+so that by four o'clock it would attain an altitude of about five
+degrees&mdash;not more than sufficient to render the moon, supposing it to
+have risen with the star, visible (by daylight) to the pilgrims
+"entrying at a towne's end."</p>
+
+<p>It is very remarkable that the only year, perhaps in the whole of
+Chaucer's lifetime, in which the<span class="pagenum" id="page421">[421]</span>
+ moon could have arisen with this
+star on the 18th of April, should be the identical year to which
+Tyrwhitt, <i>reasoning from historical evidence alone</i>, would fain
+attribute the writing of the <i>Canterbury Tales</i>. (Vide Introductory
+Discourse, note 3.)</p>
+
+<p>On the 18th of April, 1388, Libra Min al auwâ, and the moon, rose
+together about half-past three P. M. in the neighbourhood of Canterbury;
+and Tyrwhitt, alluding to the writing of the <i>Canterbury Tales</i>, "<i>could
+hardly suppose it was much advanced before 1389!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Such a coincidence is more than remarkable&mdash;it is convincing: especially
+when we add to it that 1388 "is the very date that, by a slight and
+probable injury to the last figure, might become the <i>traditional</i> one
+of 1383!"</p>
+
+<p>Should my view, therefore, of the true reading of this passage in
+Chaucer be correct, it becomes of infinitely greater interest and
+importance than a mere literal emendation, because it supplies that
+which has always been supposed wanting to the <i>Canterbury Tales</i>, viz.,
+some means of identifying the year to which their action ought to be
+attributed. Hitherto, so unlikely has it appeared that Chaucer, who so
+amply furnishes materials for the minor branches of the date, should
+leave the year unnoted, that it has been accounted for in the
+supposition that he reserved it for the unfinished portion of his
+performance. But if we consider the ingenious though somewhat tortuous
+methods resorted to by him to convey some of the other data, it is by no
+means improbable that he might really have devised this circumstance of
+the moon's rising as a means of at least <i>corroborating</i> a date that he
+might intend to record afterwards in more direct terms.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> A. E. B.</p></div>
+
+<p>P.S.&mdash;Since writing the foregoing I have obtained, through the kindness
+of Mr. Thoms, the several readings of the lines commented upon in six
+different MSS. in the British Museum. And I have great satisfaction in
+finding that five out of the six confirm my hypothesis, at least with
+respect to the uncertain spelling of "alway." The readings in respect of
+the two words are these:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p> I meene alweye.</p>
+<p> In mena alway.</p>
+<p> I mene allweye.</p>
+<p> In mene allwey.</p>
+<p> I mene alweie.</p>
+<p> I mene alwaye.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>I acknowledge that, from the first, if I could have discovered a
+probable interpretation of "mene" as an independent word, I should have
+preferred it rather than that of making it a part of the Arabic name,
+because I think that the star is sufficiently identified by the latter
+portion of its name "Al auwâ," and because the preservation of "mene" in
+its proper place in the line would afford a reading much less
+forced than that I was obliged to have recourse to. Now it very
+singularly happens that in "N<span class="smcap lowercase">OTES AND</span> Q<span class="smcap lowercase">UERIES</span>"
+of this day (page 388.) I
+find, upon the authority of A. C. M., that there is an Armorican word
+"menex" or "mene," signifying a summit or boundary. Here is an
+accidental, though most probable, original of the Chaucerian "mene,"
+because the moon's place in longitude at the time specified was
+precisely on the verge or boundary of Libra: or even in the sense
+"summit" the word would be by no means inappropriate to the point of a
+sign in the ecliptic which first emerges from the horizon; with such a
+reading the lines would stand thus, which is a very slight change from
+<i>their present form</i>:</p>
+
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"Then, with the mone's exaltacioun</p>
+<p>In menez Libra, A<span class="smcap lowercase">LWAI</span> gan ascende,</p>
+<p> As we were entrying at a towne's end."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Perhaps A. C. M. would be good enough to cite his authorities for the
+word "mene," "menez"&mdash;in the signification of "summit" or "margin"&mdash;with
+examples, if possible, of its use in these or kindred senses.</p>
+
+<p>And perhaps some Arabic scholar will explain the name "Min al auwâ," and
+show in what way the absence of the prefix "Min" would affect it?</p>
+
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p>A. E. B.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3><span><a id="TRADITIONS1"></a>TRADITIONS FROM REMOTE PERIODS THROUGH FEW LINKS.</span></h3>
+
+<p>In some of your former numbers
+(<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 206." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/23212/23212-h/23212-h.htm#page206">Vol. iii., pp. 206.</a>;
+ <a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 237." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/23282/23282-h/23282-h.htm#page237">237.</a>;
+ <a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 289." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26896/26896-h/26896-h.htm#page289">289.</a>) allusions
+have been made by your correspondents, showing that traditions may come
+down from remote periods through very few links. Having myself seen a
+man whose father lived in the time of Oliver Cromwell, I trust I shall
+be excused for stating some particulars of this fact, which I think will
+be considered by your readers as one of the most remarkable on record.
+In the year 1844 died James Horrocks, a small farmer, who lived at
+Harwood, a short distance from Bolton, in Lancashire, having completed
+his hundredth year. This circumstance, however, was not so remarkable as
+that of his own birth, his father, William Horrocks, having been born in
+1657, one year before the death of Cromwell, and having married in 1741,
+at the advanced age of eight-four, a second wife, a young and buxom
+woman of twenty-six, by whom he had one child, the above James Horrocks,
+born March 14, 1744, and baptized at Bradshaw Chapel, near Bolton.</p>
+
+<p>It is believed that the first wife of William Horrocks had been employed
+in the well-known family of the Chethams, at Castleton Hall, near
+Rochdale (a branch of that of Humphrey Chetham), by whom they were both
+much respected; and soon after the second marriage, he and his
+youthful<span class="pagenum" id="page422">[422]</span> wife
+ were sent for to Castleton Hall by the Chethams, by
+whom they were treated with much kindness; and the remarkable disparity
+of years in their marriage having no doubt created great interest, a
+painter was employed to take their portraits, which are still in
+existence, with the ages of the parties at the time, and the dates, when
+taken, painted upon them.</p>
+
+<p>I paid the son, James Horrocks, more than one visit, and on the last
+occasion, in company with James Crossley, Esq., of Manchester, the
+Reverend Canon Parkinson, Principal of St. Bees' College, and one or two
+other gentlemen, I took my son with me. It happened to be the very day
+on which he completed his hundredth year, and we found him full of
+cheerfulness and content, expecting several of his descendants to spend
+the day with him. I possess a portrait in crayons of this venerable
+patriarch, taken on that day by a very clever artist, who accompanied us
+on our visit, and which is an extremely faithful likeness of the
+original. Should it please Providence to spare my son to attain to his
+seventieth year, he also will be enabled, in the year 1900, to say that
+he has seen a man whose father lived in the time of Oliver Cromwell;
+thus connecting events, with the intervention of <i>one</i> life only,
+comprehending a period of very nearly two centuries and a half.</p>
+
+<p>P.S. A very interesting narrative of all the facts of this case was
+published in the <i>Manchester Guardian</i> a few years ago, comprising many
+curious particulars not noticed by myself, a copy of which I shall be
+glad to send you, if you think it worthy of insertion in
+"N<span class="smcap lowercase">OTES AND</span> Q<span class="smcap lowercase">UERIES</span>".</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> T<span class="smcap lowercase">HOMAS</span> C<span class="smcap lowercase">ORSER</span>.<br />
+ Stand Rectory.</p></div>
+
+
+<p class="blockquot">[We accept with thanks the offer of our valued correspondent.]</p>
+
+
+<h3><span>DR. <a id="YOUNG1"></a>YOUNG'S NARCISSA.</span></h3>
+
+<p>A pamphlet was recently published at Lyons and Paris, by a Monsieur de
+Terrebasse, intending to prove that the daughter-in-law of Dr. Young, so
+pathetically lamented by him in the <i>Night Thoughts</i> under the poetical
+name of "Narcissa," was not clandestinely buried at Montpellier; that
+Dr. Young did not steal a grave for her from the Roman Catholics of that
+city; and that consequently the celebrated and touching episode in Night
+III. is purely imaginary. This opinion of M. de Terrebasse, first given
+to the world by him in 1832, and now repeated, has been controverted by
+the writer of an article in the <i>Gazette Médicale</i> of Montpellier. The
+tomb, it is said, of Elisabeth Lee, Dr. Young's daughter-in-law, was
+discovered a few years since at Lyons; and M. de Terrebasse endeavours
+to prove, from that circumstance, and from a comparison of facts and
+dates, that this Elisabeth Lee was the "Narcissa" of the poet.
+Not having seen M. de Terrebasse's pamphlet, and being indebted to the
+<i>Journal des Savants</i> for this brief account of it, it seems difficult
+to discover from it how M. de Terrebasse can pretend so summarily to
+invalidate the solemn and touching assertions of the poet, which
+assuredly are anything but flights of fancy.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"Deny'd the charity of dust to spread</p>
+<p>O'er dust! a clarity their dogs enjoy,</p>
+<p>What could I do? what succour? what resource?</p>
+<p>With pious sacrilege a grave I stole;</p>
+<p>With impious piety that grave I wrong'd;</p>
+<p>Short in my duty, coward in my grief!</p>
+<p>More like her murderer than friend, I crept</p>
+<p>With soft suspended step, and muffled deep</p>
+<p>In midnight darkness, whisper'd my last sigh."</p>
+
+<p class="author"> <i>Night Thoughts; Narcissa.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>In the notes to an edition of the <i>Night Thoughts</i>, printed in 1798, by
+C. Whittingham, for T. Heptinstall&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "It appears," it is stated, "by the extract of a letter just
+ printed, that in order to obtain a grave, the Doctor bribed the
+ under gardener, who dug the grave, and let him in by a private
+ door, bearing his beloved daughter, wrapped up in a sheet, upon his
+ shoulder. When he had laid her in this hole he sat down, and, as
+ the man expressed it, 'rained tears.' It appears also, that some
+ time previous to this event, expecting the catastrophe, he had been
+ seen walking solitarily backward in this garden, as if to find the
+ most solitary spot for his purpose."&mdash;See <i>Evang. Mag.</i>, Nov. 1797.</p>
+
+<p>I do not know what authority this letter quoted from the <i>Evang. Mag.</i>
+may possess.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> J. M.<br />
+ Oxford, May 20.</p></div>
+
+
+<h3><span class="bl">Minor <a id="Notes2"></a>Notes.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="minor1"><i>Curious Epitaph.</i>&mdash;The following lines are on a stone in Killyleagh
+churchyard. I have a faint recollection of seeing a similarly
+constructed epitaph in Harris's <i>History of the County of Down</i>, which
+was perhaps composed by the same person. Is any of your readers
+acquainted with any English inscription in the same style?</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<p>"Mysta, fidelis, amans, colui, docui, relevavi,</p>
+<p class="i1">Numen, oves, inopes, pectore, voce, manu.</p>
+<p>Laude orbem, splendore polum, cineresque beatos,</p>
+<p class="i1">Fama illustravit, mens colit, urna tenet."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>It will easily be seen that the first, fourth, seventh, and tenth words
+are to be read in connexion, as are those that follow these, and those
+next in succession.</p>
+
+<p>The person on whose tomb the lines occur was the Rev. William
+Richardson, who died in 1670, having been minister of Killyleagh for
+twenty-one years. By the way, is not <i>mysta</i> a strange designation for a
+Presbyterian minister? I should think it would be now considered as
+objectionable as <i>sacerdos</i>.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p>E. H. D. D.<br />
+ Killyleagh, Co. Down.</p></div>
+
+
+<p class="minor"><span class="pagenum" id="page423">[423]</span>
+<i>The Curse of Scotland</i>
+(<a title="Go to Vol. i., p. 61." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/13513/13513-h/13513-h.htm#page61">Vol. i., pp. 61.</a>
+<a title="Go to Vol. i., p. 90." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/13550/13550-h/13550-h.htm#page90">90.</a>;
+<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 22." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/15639/15639-h/15639-h.htm#page22">Vol. iii., p. 22.</a>).&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "The queen of clubs is called in Northamptonshire Queen Bess,
+ perhaps, because that queen, history says, was of a swarthy
+ complexion; the four of spades, Ned Stokes, but why I know not; the
+ nine of diamonds, the curse of Scotland, because every ninth
+ monarch of that nation was a bad king to his subjects. I have been
+ told by old people, that this card was so called long before the
+ Rebellion in 1745, and therefore it could not arise from the
+ circumstance of the Duke of Cumberland's sending orders,
+ accidentally written upon the card, the night before the battle of
+ Culloden, for General Campbell to give no quarter."</p>
+
+<p>The above extract from a communication to the <i>Gentleman's Magazine</i> for
+1791, p. 141., is quoted in Mr. Singer's <i>Researches into the History of
+Playing Cards</i>, p. 271.; but the reason assigned by the writer does not
+explain why the nine of <i>diamonds</i> should have acquired the name in
+question. The nine of any <i>other</i> suit would be equally applicable.</p>
+
+<div class="boxsig"> <p> L.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>The Female Captive: a Narrative of Facts which happened in Barbary in
+the Year 1756. Written by Herself</i>, 2 vols. 12mo. Lond., 1769.&mdash;Sir
+William Musgrave has written this note in the copy which is now in the
+library at the British Museum:</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "This is a true story. The lady's maiden name was Marsh. She
+ married Mr. Crisp, as related in the narrative. But he having
+ failed in business went to India, where she remained with her
+ father, then agent Victualler at Chatham, during which she wrote
+ and published these little volumes. On her husband's success in
+ India, she went thither to him.</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot">"The book having, as it is said, been bought up by the lady's
+ friends, is become very scarce."</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> Y. S.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Pictorial Antiquities.</i>&mdash;The following memorandum, in the <i>autograph</i>
+of Edward, Earl of Oxford (the Harleian collector), seems worth
+preserving:</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+
+<p> "A picture of Edward IV. on board at Kensington.</p>
+
+<p> "A whole length of him at St. James's, in a night-gown and black cap.</p>
+
+<p> "A portrait of his queen in the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford.</p>
+
+<p> "Jane Shore at Eaton (<i>sic</i>).</p>
+
+<p> "Richard III. at Kensington.</p>
+
+<p>"Picture of Henry V. and his family at Mr. West's.</p>
+
+<p> "A picture of Mabuse at St. James's, called Albert Durer.</p>
+
+<p>"Matthew Paris with miniatures, in the British Museum.</p>
+
+<p>"William of Wickham's Crozier at Oxford.</p>
+
+<p>"Greek enamellers in the reign of the two Edwards.</p>
+
+<p>"An old altar-table at Chiswick; Lord Clifford and his lady
+ kneeling; Consecration of Thomas à Becket at Devonshire House, both
+ by Van Eyck."</p>
+
+<p>"Froissart illuminated, wherein is a miniature of Richard II., in
+ the Museum."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>One might have thought that these notes were made for the use of
+Horace Walpole's <i>History of Painting</i>; but their writer, the second
+Lord Oxford, died in June, 1741, long before Walpole could have thought
+of such matters. They perhaps may afford clues to other antiquaries.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> C.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2><span class="bl">Queries<a id="Queries1"></a>.</span></h2>
+
+
+<h3><span>ENGLISH POEMS BY CONSTANTINE HUYGHENS.</span></h3>
+
+<p>It is probable that some of your friendly correspondents in Holland may
+have it in their power to indicate where the English verses of
+Constantine Huyghens are to be found which he refers to in his <i>Koren
+Bloemen</i>, 2<span class="topnum">de</span> Deel, p. 528. ed. 1672, where he was given Dutch
+translations with the following superscriptions: "Aen Joff<span class="topnum">w</span> Utricia
+Ogle, uyt mijn Engelsh;" and "Aen Me-Vrouwe Stanhope, met mijn Heilige
+dagen, uyt mijn Engelsh."</p>
+
+<p>Huyghens appears to have had a thorough knowledge of our language, and
+his very interesting volume contains translations of twenty of Dr.
+Donne's poems, very ably rendered, considering the difficulty of the
+task. He refers to this in his address to the reader, and says that an
+illustrious Martyr [Charles I.] many years since had declared that he
+could not have believed that any one could have successfully
+accomplished it. Huyghens confesses that the Latinisms with which our
+language abounds, had given him much to wrestle with; and that it was
+difficult to express in pure Dutch such words as <i>ecstasy</i>, <i>atomy</i>,
+<i>influence</i>, <i>legacy</i>, <i>alloy,</i> &amp;c. The first stanza of the song, "Go
+and catch a falling Star," may perhaps be acceptable to some of your
+readers, who may not readily have access to the book:</p>
+
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p class="i3">"Gaet en vatt een Sterr in 't vallen,</p>
+<p class="i3">Maeckt <a id="een1"></a>een' Wortel-mensch<span class="topnum"><a href="#fn1" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 1.">[1]</a></span> met kind,</p>
+<p>Seght waer men al den tijd die nu verby is vindt,</p>
+<p>En wie des Duyvels voet geklooft heeft in twee ballen:</p>
+<p class="i3">Leert my Meereminnen hooren,</p>
+<p class="i3">Leert my hoe ick 't boose booren,</p>
+<p class="i3">Van den Nijd ontkommen moet,</p>
+<p>En wat Wind voor-wind is voor een oprecht gemoed."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="fn1"></a><a title="Return to text." href="#een1" class="label">[1]</a> Mandrake.</p>
+
+<p>One more example of his translation, from the epigram on Sir Albertus
+Morton, may be allowed, as it is short:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p class="i3"> "She first deceased; he for a little tried</p>
+<p class="i3"> To live without her; liked it not, and died."</p>
+<br />
+<p> "Sy stierf voor uyt: hy pooghd' haer een' wijl tijds te derven,</p>
+<p>Maer had geen' sin daer in, en ging oock liggen sterven."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Considering the affinity of the languages, and the frequent and constant
+intercourse with Holland, it<span class="pagenum" id="page424">[424]</span> is singular that we should have to
+reproach ourselves with such almost total ignorance respecting the
+literature of that country. With the exception of the slight sketch
+given by Dr. Bowring of its poetical literature, an Englishman has no
+work to which he can turn in his own language for information; and Dutch
+books may be sought for in vain in London. The late Mr. Heber when in
+Holland did not neglect its literature, and at the dispersion of his
+library I procured a few valuable Dutch books; among others, the very
+handsome volume which has given rise to this note. It contains much
+interesting matter, and affords a most amiable picture of the mind of
+its distinguished author, who lived to the very advanced age of
+ninety-one. There is a speaking and living portrait of him prefixed,
+from the beautiful graver of Blotelingk, and a view of his chateau of
+Hofwyck, with detailed plans of his garden, &amp;c. He was secretary to
+three successive princes of Nassau, accountant to the Prince of Orange,
+and Lord of Zuylichem; and lived in habits of friendly intercourse with
+almost all the distinguished men who flourished during his long and
+prosperous life. His son is well known to the world of science as the
+inventor of the pendulum.</p>
+
+<p>Translations of three or four of Constantine Huyghens' poems are given
+by Dr. Bowring in his <i>Batavian Anthology</i>. And the great Vondel
+pronounces his volume to be&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"A garden mild of savours sweet,</p>
+<p> Where Art and Skill and Wisdom meet;</p>
+<p> Rich in its vast variety</p>
+<p>Of forms and hues of ev'ry dye."</p>
+</div>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> S. W. S<span class="smcap lowercase">INGER</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+<h3><span>THE <a id="REV1"></a>REV. MR. GAY.</span></h3>
+
+<p>The very interesting notices which you have often given us of the truly
+great and inestimable Locke, induce me to trouble you with an inquiry
+relative to a philosophical writer, who followed in his school, I mean
+the Rev. Mr. Gay, the author of the Dissertation prefixed to Bishop
+Law's translation of King's <i>Origin of Evil</i>. It is sufficient evidence
+of the importance of that Dissertation, that it put Hartley upon
+considering and developing the principle of association, into which
+principle he conceived, and endeavoured to prove, that all the phenomena
+of reasoning and affection might be resolved, and of which Laplace
+observes, that it constitutes the whole of what has yet been done in the
+philosophy of the human mind; "la partie réelle de la métaphysique"
+(<i>Essai Philosophique sur les Probabilités</i>, p. 224. ed. 1825).</p>
+
+<p>Of this Mr. Gay, I have not yet been able to learn more than that he was
+a clergyman in the West of England; but of what place, of what family,
+where educated, of what manner of life, or what habits of study,
+biographical or topographical reading has hitherto furnished me
+with any information. I should feel greatly indebted to any of your
+readers who would give the clue to what is known or can be known about
+him. It is probably within easy reach, though I have missed it. The
+ordinary biographical dictionaries make no mention of him.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p>E<span class="smcap lowercase">DWARD</span> T<span class="smcap lowercase">AGART</span>.<br />
+ North End, Hampstead, May 19. 1851.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3><span class="bl"><a id="Minor2"></a>Minor Queries.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="minor1"><i>Carved Ceiling in Dorsetshire.</i>&mdash;In the south of Dorsetshire there is a
+house (its name I do not remember) which has a beautifully carved
+ceiling in the hall. This is said to have been sent from Spain by a King
+of Castile, who, being wrecked on this coast, and hospitably entertained
+by the owners of the mansion, took this method of showing his gratitude.
+Can any of your readers inform me what king this was, or refer me to any
+work in which I may find it?</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> J<span class="smcap lowercase">ERNE</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Publicans' Signs.</i>&mdash;Will any of your readers inform me whether the
+<i>signs of publicans</i> were allowed to be retained by the same edict which
+condemned those of all other trades?</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> R<span class="smcap lowercase">OVERT</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>To a T.</i>&mdash;What is the origin of the phrase; and of that "To fit to a
+T.?" (Query, a "T square" = ad amussim.)</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> A. A. D.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Skeletons at Egyptian Banquet.</i>&mdash;Where did Jer. Taylor find this
+interpretation of the object of placing a skeleton at the banqueting
+table:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "The Egyptians used to serve up a skeleton to their feasts, that
+ the vapours of wine might be restrained with that bunch of myrrh,
+ and the vanities of their eyes chastened by that sad object."</p>
+
+<p>Certainly not in Herodotus, 2. 78.; which savours rather of the
+<i>Sardanapalian</i> spirit: "Eat, drink, and love&mdash;the rest's not worth a
+fillip!" Comp. Is. xxii. 13., 1 Cor. xv. 32.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p>A. A. D.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Gloves</i>
+(<a title="Go to Vol. i., p. 72." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/11636/11636-h/11636-h.htm#NOTES9">Vol. i., pp. 72.</a>
+ <a title="Go to Vol. i., p. 405." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/13747/13747-h/13747-h.htm#page405">405.</a>;
+<a title="Go to Vol. ii., p. 4." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/12589/12589-h/12589-h.htm#page4">Vol. ii., p. 4.</a>;
+<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 220." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/23225/23225-h/23225-h.htm#page220">Vol. iii., p. 220.</a>).&mdash;Blount,
+ in his <i>Law Dictionary</i>, fo. 1670, under the title
+"Capias Utlagatum," observes:</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "At present, in the King's Bench, the <i>outlawry</i> cannot be
+ reversed, unless the defendant appear in person, and, by a present
+ of gloves to the judges, implore and obtains their favour to
+ reverse it."</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps some of your correspondents may be able to state when the
+practice of presenting gloves to the judges on moving to reverse an
+outlawry in the King's Bench was discontinued. The statute 4 &amp; 5 Will.
+and Mar. c. 18., rendered unnecessary a <i>personal</i> appearance in that
+court to reverse an outlawry (except for treason or felony, or where
+special bail was ordered).</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p>C. H. C<span class="smcap lowercase">OOPER</span>.<br />
+ Cambridge, March 24. 1851.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Knapp Family in Norfolk and Suffolk.</i>&mdash;I should be much obliged to any
+Norfolk or Suffolk antiquary who<span class="pagenum" id="page425">[425]</span>
+ would give me information as to
+the family of Knapp formerly settled in those counties, especially at
+Ipswich, Tuddenham, and Needham Market in the latter county. My
+inquiries have not discovered any person of the name at present residing
+in any of these places; and my wish is to learn how the name was lost in
+the locality; whether by migration&mdash;and if so, when, and to what other
+part of the county; or if in the female line, into what family the last
+heiress of Knapp married; and, as nearly as may be, when either of these
+events occurred?</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> G. E. F.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>To learn by "Heart."</i>&mdash;Can you give any account of the origin of a very
+common expression both in French and English, <i>i. e.</i> "Apprendre <i>par
+c&oelig;ur</i>, to learn <i>by heart?</i>" To learn <i>by memory</i> would be
+intelligible.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> A S<span class="smcap lowercase">UBSCRIBER TO YOUR</span> J<span class="smcap lowercase">OURNAL</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Knights.</i>&mdash;At some periods of our history the reigning monarch bestowed
+the honour of knighthood, 1306, Edward I.; at other times, those in
+possession of a certain amount of property were compelled to assume the
+order, 1254. Query, Was there any difference in rank between the two
+sorts of knights?</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> B. D<span class="smcap lowercase">E</span>. M.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Supposed Inscription in St. Peter's Church, Rome.</i>&mdash;When at school in
+France, some twenty years ago, I was informed that the following
+inscription was to be found in some part of St. Peter's Church in Rome:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p> "Nunquam amplius super hanc cathedram cantabit Gallus."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>It appears that the active part taken by the French in fomenting the
+great schism of the Church during the fourteenth century, when they set
+up and maintained at Avignon a Pope of their own choosing, had generated
+an abhorrence of French interference in the Italian mind; and that, when
+the dissensions were abated by the suspension of the rival Popes, the
+<i>ultramontane</i> cardinals had posted up this inscription to testify their
+desire for the exclusion of French ecclesiastics from the Papal chair.
+In one respect the prediction remains in force to this day; for I
+believe I am correct in saying that no Frenchman has worn the triple
+crown for the last 450 years. But that portion of it which is implied in
+the second meaning of "Gallus," has been woefully belied in our time by
+the forcible occupation of Rome by a French army, on which occasion the
+Gallic cock had all the "crowing" to himself.</p>
+
+<p>I have never had an opportunity of ascertaining the existence of this
+inscription, and shall be obliged to any correspondent of
+"N<span class="smcap lowercase">OTES AND</span> Q<span class="smcap lowercase">UERIES</span>" who will afford information on the subject.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p>H<span class="smcap lowercase">ENRY</span> H. B<span class="smcap lowercase">REEN</span>.<br />
+ St. Lucia, April, 1851.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Rag Sunday in Sussex.</i>&mdash;Allow me to ask the explanation of "Rag Sunday"
+in Sussex. I lately saw some young gentlemen going to school at
+Brighton, who had been provided with some fine white handkerchiefs, when
+one observed they would not stand much chance of escape on "Rag Sunday."
+He then told me that each boy, on the Sunday but one preceding the
+holidays, always tore a piece of his shirt or handkerchief off and wore
+it in the button-hole of his jacket as his "rag." When a boy, I remember
+being compelled to do the same when at school at Hailsham in Sussex, and
+all boys objecting had their hats knocked off and trod on.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> H. W. D.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Northege Family.</i>&mdash;Can any one tell me the county and parish in which
+the family of Northege were located in the sixteenth century?</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> E. H. Y.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>A Kemble Pipe of Tobacco.</i>&mdash;In the county of Herefordshire, the people
+call the last or concluding pipe that any one means to smoke at a
+sitting, a <i>Kemble pipe.</i> This is said to have originated in a man of
+the name of Kemble, who in the cruel persecution under Queen Mary, being
+condemned for heresy, in his walk of some miles from the prison to the
+stake, amidst a crowd of weeping friends and neighbours, with the
+tranquillity and fortitude of a primitive martyr, <i>smoked a pipe of
+tobacco</i>! Is anything known of this Kemble? and where can I find any
+corroboration of the story here told?</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p>E<span class="smcap lowercase">DWARD</span> F. R<span class="smcap lowercase">IMBAULT</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Durham Sword that killed the Dragon.</i>&mdash;In the Harleian MS. No. 3783.,
+letter 107., Cosin, in describing to Sancroft some of the ceremonies of
+his reception at Durham, mentions "<i>the sword that killed the dragon</i>,"
+as a relic of antiquity introduced on the occasion. I should feel
+obliged, if you, or any of your antiquarian readers, could kindly refer
+me to some tolerably full account of the ceremony alluded to, or throw
+any light upon the meaning of the custom in question, the origin and
+history of the sword, and the tradition connected with it.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> J. S<span class="smcap lowercase">ANSOM</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+<h3><span class="bl"><a id="Minor3"></a>Minor Queries Answered.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="minor1"><i>"At Sixes and Sevens"</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 118." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/22639/22639-h/22639-h.htm#page118">Vol. iii., p. 118.</a>).&mdash;May not this expression
+bear reference to the <i>points</i> in the card-game of piquet?</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> G. F. G.</p></div>
+
+<p>May not this expression have arisen from the passage in Eliphaz's
+discourse to Job?</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "He shall deliver thee is <i>six</i> troubles; yea, in <i>seven</i> there
+ shall no evil touch thee."&mdash;Job. v. 19.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> A. M.</p></div>
+
+<p>Mr. Halliwell, in his <i>Dictionary of Archaic and Provincial Words</i>, vol.
+ii. p. 724., thus explains this phrase:</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot">"The Deity is mentioned in the <i>Towneley Mysteries</i>, pp. 97. 118.,
+ as He that 'sett alle on seven,' <i>i. e.</i>, set or appointed
+ everything in seven days. A similar phrase at p. 85. is not so
+ evident. It is explained in the Glossary, 'to<span class="pagenum" id="page426">[426]</span> set things in,
+ to put them in order;' but it evidently implies, in some cases, an
+ exactly opposite meaning, to set in confusion, to rush to battle,
+ as in the following examples. '<i>To set the steven</i>, to agree upon
+ the time and place of meeting previous to some expedition,'&mdash;<i>West
+ and Cumb. Dial.</i> p. 390. These phrases may be connected with each
+ other. Be this as it may, hence is certainly derived the phrase <i>to
+ be at sixes and sevens</i>, to be in great confusion. Herod, in his
+ anger at the wise men, says:</p>
+
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"'Bot be they past me by, by Mahowne in heven,</p>
+<p> I shalle, and that in hy, <i>set alle on sex and seven</i>;</p>
+<p>Trow ye a kyng as I wyll suffre thaym to neven</p>
+<p>Any to have mastry bot myself fulle even.'</p>
+
+ <p class="author"> <i>Towneley Mysteries</i>, p.&nbsp;143.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p> "'Thus he <i>settez on sevene</i> with his sekyre knyghttez.'</p>
+
+ <p class="author"> <i>Morte Arthure</i>, MS. Lincoln, f.&nbsp;76.</p>
+</div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"'The duk swore by gret God of hevene,</p>
+<p>Wold my hors so evene,</p>
+<p>Zet wold I <i>set all one seven</i></p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ffor Myldor the swet!'</p>
+
+ <p class="author"><i>Degrevant</i>, 1279.</p>
+</div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p> "'Old Odcombs odnesse makes not thee uneven,</p>
+<p> Nor carelesly set all <i>at six and seven</i>.'</p>
+
+ <p class="author">Taylor's <i>Workes</i>, 1630, ii.&nbsp;71."</p>
+</div>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> J.&nbsp;K.&nbsp;R.&nbsp;W.</p></div>
+
+<p class="blockquot"> [Six and seven make the proverbially unlucky number <i>thirteen</i>, and
+ we are inclined to believe that the allusion in this popular phrase
+ is to this combination.]</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Swobbers.</i>&mdash;There is a known story of a clergyman who was recommended
+for a preferment by some great men at court to an archbishop. His Grace
+said, "He had heard that the clergyman used to play at whist and
+<i>swobbers</i>; that as to playing now and then a sober game at whist for
+pastime, it might be pardoned; but he could not digest those wicked
+swobbers;" and it was with some pains that my Lord Somers could
+undeceive him. So says Swift, in his <i>Essay on the Fates of Clergymen</i>;
+and a note in Sir W. Scott's edition (1824, vol. viii. p 231.) informs
+us that the primate was "Tenison, who, by all contemporary accounts, was
+a very dull man." At the risk of being thought as dull as the
+archbishop, I venture to ask for an explanation of the joke.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> J. C. R.</p></div>
+
+<p class="blockquot"> [Johnson, under "Swobber" or "Swabber," gives, "1. A sweeper of the
+ deck;" and "2. Four privileged cards that are only incidentally
+ used in betting at the game of whist." He then quotes this passage
+ from Swift, with the difference that he says "clergymen." Were not
+ the cards so called because they "swept the deck" by a sort of
+ "sweep-stakes?"]</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Handel's Occasional Oratorio.</i>&mdash;Will D<span class="smcap lowercase">R</span>. R<span class="smcap lowercase">IMBAULT</span>, or some other
+musical correspondent of your journal, enlighten us as to the true
+meaning of the name <i>Occasional Oratorio</i>, prefixed to one of Handel's
+compositions, of which no one that I have ever met with has heard more
+than the overture? This composition has become almost universally
+known from the foolish practice which used to prevail of performing it
+as an introduction to <i>Israel in Egypt</i>, or any other work to which its
+composer had purposely denied the preliminary of an overture; a practice
+now happily exploded, which seems to have had its origin in a
+misinterpretation of the name; as though Handel had written the overture
+to suit any <i>occasion</i> when one might be needed, instead of, as I am
+rather disposed to believe, having some particular occasion in view for
+which the oratorio was composed.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> E. V.</p></div>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> [Surely, if there is no <i>Occasional</i> Oratorio to be found, the
+ <i>Overture</i> must mean that it was to be used on <i>occasion</i>. Our
+ correspondent does not seem to know the word as it is used by
+ writers of a century ago, for "Occasional Sermons" or services, &amp;c.
+ The question is simply one of fact. <i>Is</i> there an Oratorio?
+ Everybody knows the overture. The writer of this note remembers
+ being horrified, when a freshman, at hearing the fugue break forth
+ in the College Chapel, was pondering in his mind whether it was
+ Drops of Brandy, or the Rondo in the Turnpike-Gate, both then
+ popular tunes.]</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Archbishop Waldeby's Epitaph.</i>&mdash;W. W. K<span class="smcap lowercase">ING</span> would be obliged by a
+perfect copy of the inscription on the monumental brass of Archbishop
+Waldeby in Westminster Abbey.</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot">[The brass is engraved in Harding's <i>Antiquities of Westminster
+ Abbey</i>; but it appears that one half of the following inscription,
+ which was formerly round the verge of the brass, has now been torn
+ away:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p> "Hic fuit expertus in quovis jure Robertus,</p>
+<p>De Waldeby dictus nunc est sub marmore strictus;</p>
+<p> Sacre Scripture Doctor fuit, et geniture</p>
+<p>Ingenuus Medicus et plebis semper amicus</p>
+<p>Presul Adurensis posthoc Archas Dublinensis</p>
+<p> Hinc Cicestrensis, tandem Primas Eborensis</p>
+<p> Quarto kalend. Junii migravit cursibus anni</p>
+<p>Sepultus milleni ter C. septem Nonies quoque deni.</p>
+<p> Vos precor, Orate quod sint sibi dona beate</p>
+<p> Cum sanctis vite requiescat et hic sine lite."</p></div>
+
+<p class="blockquot">Weever, in his <i>Funeral Monuments</i>, quotes the following
+ description of him from a MS. account of the Archbishops of York,
+ in the Cottonian Collection:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p> "Tunc Robertus ordinis fratris Augustini</p>
+<p>Ascendit in cathedram primatis Paulini,</p>
+<p> Lingua scientificus sermonis latini</p>
+<p> Anno primo proximat vite sue fini,</p>
+<p> De carnis ergastulo presul evocatur</p>
+<p>Gleba sui corporis Westminstre humatur."]</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Verstegan.</i>&mdash;Will any of the contributors to your valuable miscellany
+be kind enough to inform me if there are any engraved portraits of the
+quaint old antiquary Richard Verstegan, the author of a curious work,
+entitled <i>A Restitution of Decayed Intelligence</i>? The portraits may be
+common, but living in the country, and at distance from town, I have no
+friend from whom I can glean the required information. Can my informant
+at the same<span class="pagenum" id="page427">[427]</span> time acquaint me with the best edition of his work?
+There was one printed at Antwerp in 1605.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> J. S. P. (a Subscriber.)</p></div>
+
+<p class="blockquot"> [Our correspondent will find a notice of Verstegan's work in page
+ 85. of this volume. The first edition was printed at Antwerp in
+ 1605, and was reprinted at London in 4to. in 1634, and in 8vo. in
+ 1655 and 1673. The first edition is deservedly reckoned the best,
+ as well on account of containing one or more engravings, afterwards
+ omitted, as also for the superiority of the plates, those in the
+ subsequent editions being very indifferent copies. No portrait of
+ the author is noticed either by Granger or Bromley.]</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Royal Library.</i>&mdash;In the new edition of Boswell's <i>Life of Johnson</i>
+(published by the proprietors of the <i>Illustrated London News</i>), in the
+<i>National Illustrated Library</i>, the editor, in reference to the library
+of King George III. (which is generally understood to have been
+presented to the nation by George IV., and which is recorded to have
+been given, in an inscription placed in that magnificent hall), has
+appended the following note:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "It has recently transpired that the government of the day bought
+ the library of George IV., just as he was on the eve of concluding
+ a sale of it to the Emperor of Russia."</p>
+
+<p>Can any of your readers inform me if this is correct, and whether the
+nation have really paid for what has always been considered a most
+worthy and munificent present from a monarch to his subjects? I trust to
+hear that the editor has been misinformed.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> J. S. L.</p></div>
+
+ <p class="blockquot">[The nation certainly never paid one farthing for this munificent
+ present. The Russian Government offered, we believe, to purchase
+ the library; and this is probably the origin of the statement in
+ the note quoted by our correspondent.]</p>
+
+
+
+<h2><span class="bl"><a id="Replies1"></a>Replies.</span></h2>
+
+
+<h3><span>HUGH HOLLAND AND HIS WORKS.</span></h3>
+
+<p>An accidental circumstance having led me to re-peruse the article
+entitled <i>Hugh Holland and his works</i>
+(<a title="Go to Vol. ii., p. 265." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/13936/13936-h/13936-h.htm#page265">Vol. ii., p. 265.</a>),
+ I feel myself
+called on, as a lover of facts, to notice some of the statements which
+it contains.</p>
+
+<p>1. "He was born at Denbigh in 1558." He was born at Denbigh, but not in
+1558. In 1625 he thus expressed himself:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p> "Why was the fatall spinster so vnthrifty?</p>
+<p> To draw my third four yeares to tell and fifty!"</p></div>
+
+<p>2. "In 1582 he matriculated at Baliol College, Oxford." He did not quit
+Westminster School till 1589. If he ever pursued his studies at Baliol
+College, it was some ten years afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>3. "About 1590 he succeeded to a fellowship at Trinity College,
+Cambridge." In 1589 he was elected from Westminster to a <i>scholarship</i>
+in Trinity College, Cambridge&mdash;not to a <i>fellowship</i>. At a later
+period of life, he may have succeeded to a fellowship.</p>
+
+<p>4. "Holland published two works: 1. <i>Monumenta sepulchralia Sancti
+Pauli</i>, London, 1613, 4to. 2. <i>A cypress garland</i> etc., London, 1625,
+4to." Hugh Holland was not the compiler of the first-named work: the
+initials H. H admit of another interpretation. This, however, is a very
+pardonable oversight. I could give about twenty authorities for
+ascribing the work to Hugh Holland.</p>
+
+<p>5. The dates assigned to the <i>Monumenta Sancti Pauli</i> are "1613, 1616,
+1618, and 1633." Here are three errors in as many lines. The <i>first</i>
+edition is dated in 1614. The edition of 1633, which is entitled
+<i>Ecclesia Sancti Pavli illvstrata</i>, is the <i>second</i>. No other editions
+exist.</p>
+
+<p>6. "Holland also printed a copy of Latin verses before Alexander's
+<i>Roxana</i>, 1632." No such work exists. He may have printed verses before
+the <i>Roxana</i> of W. Alabaster, who was his brother-collegian.</p>
+
+<p>The authorities which I have consulted are Fuller, Anthony à Wood, Henry
+Holland, son of the celebrated Philemon Holland, Hugh Holland, and
+Joseph Welch; and in submitting the result of my researches to critical
+examination, I must commend the writer of the article in question for
+his continued efforts to produce new facts, and to explode current
+errors.</p>
+
+<p>Insensible as modern critics may be to the poetical merits of Hugh
+Holland, we find him described by Camden as one of the <i>most pregnant
+wits</i> of those times; and he certainly gave a notable proof of his
+wit&mdash;for fame is that which <i>all hunt after</i>&mdash;in contributing some lines
+to <i>Mr. William Shakespeares comedies, histories, and tragedies</i>.</p>
+
+<p>On that account, if on no other, the particulars of his life should be
+inquired into and recorded. His <i>Cypress garland</i>, a copy of which I
+possess, is rich in autobiographical anecdote; and I have collected some
+of his fugitive verses, a specimen of which may amuse. As one of the
+shortest, I transcribe the lines which he addressed to Giles Farnaby, a
+musical composer of some eminence, on the publication of his <i>Canzonets
+to fowre voyces</i>, A. D. 1598.</p>
+
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"<i>M. Hu. Holland to the author.</i></p>
+
+<p> I would both sing thy praise, and praise thy singing,</p>
+<p>That in the winter nowe are both a-springing;</p>
+<p class="i3">But my muse must be stronger,</p>
+<p class="i3">And the daies must be longer.</p>
+<p>When the sunne's in his hight with y<span class="topnum">e</span> bright Barnaby,</p>
+<p>Then<span class="pagenum" id="page428">[428]</span> should we sing thy praises, gentle Farnaby."</p>
+</div>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> B<span class="smcap lowercase">OLTON</span> C<span class="smcap lowercase">ORNEY</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h3><span>THE <a id="MILESIANS1"></a>MILESIANS.</span></h3>
+<p class="center3">
+(<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 353." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26899/26899-h/26899-h.htm#page353">Vol. iii., p. 353.</a>)</p>
+
+<p>In reply to W. R. M., who asks for information respecting the
+round towers of Ireland, I beg to refer him to Dr. Petrie's essay on the
+<i>Ecclesiastical Architecture of Ireland</i>, in which he will find a full
+discussion of the origin, uses, and history of the round towers.</p>
+
+<p>In reference to the Milesians and other early colonists of Ireland, he
+will find the most authentic ancient traditions in the Irish version of
+the <i>Historia Britonum of Nennius</i>, lately published by the Irish
+Archæological Society of Dublin, with a translation and notes, by the
+Rev. J. H. Todd, D.D. The same volume contains also some very curious
+and valuable notes by the Hon. A. Herbert.</p>
+
+<p>What W. R. M. says about the pronunciation of certain names of towns in
+Ireland, as confirming the tradition of a Milesian colony from Spain, is
+a complete mistake. The pronunciation of <i>gh</i> to which he alludes,
+exists only amongst the English (or Anglicised natives) who are unable
+to pronounce the guttural <i>ch</i> or <i>gh</i> of the Celtic Irish, and have
+substituted for it the sound of <i>h</i>, or the sound of the Spanish <i>j</i>, to
+which W. R. M. refers. Besides this, every philologist knows that the
+present language of Spain had no existence at the period to which the
+Milesian invasion of Ireland must be referred. It is true that on the
+west coast of Ireland some families among the peasantry retain many of
+the characteristic features of modern Spaniards; but this circumstance
+is due to an intercourse with Spain of a much more recent date than the
+Milesian invasion, and is therefore no evidence of that event. It is
+well known that considerable trade with Spain was carried on at Galway
+and other ports of western Connaught, two centuries ago, and that many
+Spanish families settled in Ireland, or intermarried with the natives
+during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.</p>
+
+<p>To remove W. R. M.'s mistaken impression that Drogheda, Aghada, &amp;c., are
+names of Spanish origin, it may be well to inform him, first, that the
+<i>gh</i> in such names is not sounded like the Spanish <i>j</i>, except, as I
+have said, by&mdash;(I was on the point of writing <i>foreigners</i>), but I mean
+by those who are unable to pronounce our Celtic guttural aspirates.
+Secondly, that Drogheda, Aghada, &amp;c., are names significant in the Irish
+language and perfectly well understood, and that as now written they are
+not seen in their correct orthography, but in an Anglicised spelling
+intended to represent to English ears the native pronunciation. In the
+last century Drogheda was usually written <i>Tredagh</i> in English; but the
+word in its proper spelling is <i>Droichet-atha</i>, the bridge of the ford,
+<i>trajectum vadi</i>. There are many places in Ireland named from this word
+<i>Droichet</i>, which is no doubt the Latin <i>trajectum</i>, the same which
+forms a part of the name of <i>Utrecht</i> (Ultrajectum), and other
+towns on the continent.</p>
+
+<p>The word <i>Agha</i>, properly <i>Achadh</i>, signifies a <i>field</i>, and enters into
+the composition of hundreds of topographical names in Ireland. But in
+every case the <i>gh</i> (or <i>ch</i>, as it properly is) is pronounced
+gutturally by the peasantry; the <i>h</i> or Spanish <i>j</i> sound is a modern
+Anglicised corruption.</p>
+
+<p>On the subject of Irish proper names of places and persons a vast body
+of curious and valuable information will be found in the publications of
+the Irish Archæological Society, and also in O'Donovan's splendid
+edition of the <i>Annals of the Four Masters</i>.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> H<span class="smcap lowercase">IBERNICUS</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p>We <i>mere Irish</i> assume to be descended from a Ph&oelig;nician colony; the
+word <i>Milesian</i> is not Irish, the families so designated being known in
+the Irish language only as "Clonna Gäel" (I spare the English reader the
+<i>mute</i> consonants, which <i>would rather bother him</i> to get his tongue
+round).</p>
+
+<p>Our tradition is, that the leader of the said colony saw Ireland from a
+tower, still said to exist near Corunna; he bore the style of <i>Mileadle
+Spaniogle</i>, for which no better translation is offered than "the soldier
+of Spain." His brothers and sons, the chief himself having deceased, are
+said to have conducted the expedition to Ireland; and if your
+correspondent wishes for a full account of their adventures, he should
+consult Keating's <i>History of Ireland</i>, which will, at all events,
+afford him some amusement.</p>
+
+<p>As to the round towers, Mr. Petrie's book on <i>The Ecclesiastical
+Antiquities or Architecture of Ireland</i> has set that question at rest.
+He has shown that they are undoubtedly Christian buildings intended as
+<i>Bell-houses</i>, which their name in Irish signifies; and further,
+probably, for the safe keeping of the sacred vessels, &amp;c., in time of
+war or tumult. It is unfortunately too certain that agitation was always
+rife in Ireland. On all points connected with Irish antiquities, the
+safest and best reference is to the Secretary of the Royal Irish
+Academy, Dublin. If this answer attract any of your correspondents to
+visit the museum of that establishment, I venture to prophecy that they
+will account themselves well repaid for their trouble, even though they
+should miss visiting the Great Exhibition thereby.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> K<span class="smcap lowercase">ERRIENSIS</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+<h3><span>THE <a id="TANTHONY1"></a>TANTHONY.</span></h3>
+<p class="center3">
+(<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 105." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/22625/22625-h/22625-h.htm#page105">Vol. iii., pp. 105.</a>
+ <a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 229." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/23225/23225-h/23225-h.htm#page229">229.</a>
+ <a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 308." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26897/26897-h/26897-h.htm#page308">308.</a>)</p>
+
+<p>I remember hearing a worthy citizen of Norwich remark, that it was very
+odd there should be three churches in the city called after saints whose
+names began with the letter T. Having been myself resident in that city
+many years, without<span class="pagenum" id="page429">[429]</span> being aware of this fact, I took the liberty
+of inquiring to which three he alluded; when I was unhesitatingly told,
+"Why, Sain Tandrew's, Sain Taustin's, and Sain Tedmund's, to be sure!"
+Let me then be allowed to repeat A<span class="smcap lowercase">RUN</span>'<span class="smcap lowercase">S</span> question, and to ask, "Why not
+Tanthony for Saint Anthony?"</p>
+
+<p>The same worthy citizen was once sheriff of Norwich, and, as is, or
+haply was, the custom,&mdash;for I know not how these matters are managed
+now-a-days,&mdash;went forth in civic state to meet the judges of assize.
+When their lordships were seated in the sheriff's carriage, one of them
+charitably observed, "Yours, I believe, is a very ancient city, Mr.
+Sheriff!" to which the latter, a little flurried, no doubt, at being
+thus so pointedly addressed, but in decided accents, replied, "It <i>was</i>
+<span class="smcap lowercase">ONCE</span>, my Lord!" And without stopping to consider what was passing in his
+mind when he gave utterance to these somewhat ambiguous words, may we
+not take them up, and ask whether it be not even so, not only as regards
+Norwich, but most of her venerable sister towns as well? Where are their
+quondam glories&mdash;their arts and rare inventions&mdash;their "thoughts in
+antique words conveyed"&mdash;their "boast of heraldry"&mdash;their pageantries
+and shows? Where their high-peaked gables&mdash;their curiously wrought eaves
+and overhanging galleries&mdash;their quaint doorways, so elaborately carved,
+and all their other cunning devices?&mdash;"Modern Taste," with finger
+pointed to the newest creation of her plaster genius, triumphantly
+echoes the monosyllable, and answers, "Where?" Well, we are perforce
+content; only with this proviso:&mdash;if, fatigued with the tinselled
+superficialities and glossy refinements of the present, we are fain to
+"cast one longing lingering look behind," and chance to light upon some
+worthy illustrative memorial of the literature, the manners, or domestic
+life of the past,&mdash;that the spirit of Captain Cuttle's sage advice be
+made our own, and that we forthwith transfer our prize for the critical
+examination of "diving antiquaries" to the conservative pages of
+"N<span class="smcap lowercase">OTES AND</span> Q<span class="smcap lowercase">UERIES</span>".</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p>C<span class="smcap lowercase">OWGILL</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p><i>The Tanthony.</i>&mdash;Will your correspondent A<span class="smcap lowercase">RUN</span> permit one to refer him to
+an authority for the use of the word "Tanton" for St. Anthony? An
+hospital in York, dedicated to St. Anthony, after the dissolution came
+into the possession of a gild or fraternity of a master and eight
+keepers, who were commonly called "Tanton Pigs." Vide Drake's
+<i>Eboracum</i>, p. 315.</p>
+
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> <ins title='Greek: D'>&#916;</ins>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p><i>Tanthony Bell at Kimbolton.</i>&mdash;"Tanthony" is from St. Anthony. In
+Hampshire the small pig of the litter (in Essex called "the cad") is, or
+once was, called "the Tanthony pig." Pigs were especially under this
+saint's care. The ensign of the order of St. Anthony of Hainault was a
+collar of gold made like a hermit's girdle; at the centre thereof
+hung a crutch and a small bell of gold. St. Anthony is styled, among his
+numerous titles, "Membrorum restitutor," and "Dæmonis fugator:" hence
+the bell.</p>
+
+
+ <p class="blockquot">"The Egyptians have none but wooden bells, except one brought by
+ the Franks into the monastery of St. Anthony."&mdash;Rees' <i>Cyclopædia</i>,
+ art. Bell.</p>
+
+<p>I hope A<span class="smcap lowercase">RUN</span> will be satisfied with this connexion of St. Anthony with
+the pig, the crutch, and the bell.</p>
+
+<p>"The staff" in the figure of the saint at Merthyr is, I should think, a
+crutch.</p>
+
+
+ <p class="blockquot">"The custom of making particular saints tutelars and protectors of
+ one or another species of cattle is still kept up in Spain and
+ other places. They pray to the tutelar when the beast is sick. Thus
+ St. Anthony is for hogs, and we call a poor starved creature a
+ <i>Tantony</i> pig."&mdash;Salmon's <i>History of Hertfordshire</i>, 1728.</p>
+
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> A. H<span class="smcap lowercase">OLT</span> W<span class="smcap lowercase">HITE</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>May I venture to observe, in confirmation of A<span class="smcap lowercase">RUN</span>'<span class="smcap lowercase">S</span> suggestion as to the
+origin of this term, that the bell appears to have been a constant
+attribute of St. Anthony, although I have tried in vain to discover any
+allusion to it in his legend?</p>
+
+<p>Frederick von Schlegel, in describing a famous picture by Bramante
+d'Urbino (<i>Æsthetic and Miscellaneous Works</i>, p. 78.), mentions St.
+Anthony as "carrying the hermit's little bell;" and Lord Lindsay, in the
+Introduction to his <i>Letters on Christian Art</i> (vol. i. p. 192.), says
+that St. Anthony is known by "the bell and staff, denoting mendicancy."
+If this be the case, the bell at Kimbolton was doubtless intended
+originally to announce the presence of some wayfarer or mendicant.
+Tanthony is a common contraction for St. Anthony, as in the term "a
+Tanthony pig;" and a similar system of contraction was in use amongst
+the troubadours, who put <i>Na</i> for <i>Donna</i>; as <i>Nalombarda</i> for <i>Donna
+Lombarda</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The bell carried by St. Anthony is sometimes thought to have reference
+to his Temptations; bells being, in the words of Durandus, "the trumpets
+of the eternal king," on hearing which the devils "flee away, as through
+fear." I think, however, that these words apply rather to church bells.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> E. J. M.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3><span><a id="PILGRIMS1"></a>PILGRIMS' ROAD TO CANTERBURY.</span></h3>
+<p class="center3">
+(<a title="Go to Vol. ii., p. 199." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/13406/13406-h/13406-h.htm#page199">Vol. ii., pp. 199.</a>
+ <a title="Go to Vol. ii., p. 237." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/13427/13427-h/13427-h.htm#page237">237.</a>
+ <a title="Go to Vol. ii., p. 269." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/13936/13936-h/13936-h.htm#page269">269.</a>
+ <a title="Go to Vol. ii., p. 316." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/13551/13551-h/13551-h.htm#page316">316.</a>)</p>
+
+<p>I think those of your readers who are interested in this Query will feel
+that the replies it has received are not quite satisfactory, and I
+therefore trust you will find some room for the following remarks.</p>
+
+<p>I would beg to ask, can there be any doubt that from Southwark to
+Dartford, and from Rochester to their destination, Chaucer and his
+fellow pilgrims journeyed along the old Roman way, then for many
+centuries the great thoroughfare from<span class="pagenum" id="page430">[430]</span> London to the south-eastern
+coast, and which for these portions of the route is nearly identical
+with the present turnpike-road? The <i>Tales</i> themselves make it certain
+that the pilgrims started on this ancient way; for when the Host
+interrupts the sermonising of the Reeve, he mentions Deptford and
+Greenwich as being in their route:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"Say forth thy tale, and tarry not the time,</p>
+<p>Lo Depeford, and it is half way prime;</p>
+<p>Lo Greenewich, there many a shrew is in,</p>
+<p>It were all time thy tale to begin."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Shortly after leaving Dartford the turnpike-road bends to the left,
+reaching Rochester by Gravesend and Gadshill; whilst the Roman way,
+parts of which are still used, was carried to that city by Southfleet,
+and through Cobham Park; and it seems to me that the only question we
+have to solve is, whether Chaucer followed the Roman way throughout, or
+whether between Dartford and Rochester he took the course of what is now
+the turnpike-road. For I cannot but think it very unlikely that, with a
+celebrated road leading almost straight as a line to Canterbury, the
+pilgrims should either go many miles out of their way to seek another,
+as they must have done, or run the risk of losing themselves in a
+"horse-track."</p>
+
+<p>In attempting to determine this point, your readers will remember the
+injunction of Poins:</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "But, my lads, my lads, to-morrow morning by four o'clock early at
+ Gadshill; there are pilgrims going to Canterbury with rich
+ offerings, and traders riding to London with fat purses."&mdash;<i>Henry
+ IV.</i>, Pt. I. Act I. Sc. 2.</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">And Gadshill the robber tells his fellows:</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot">"There's money of the king's coming down the hill; 'tis going to
+ the king's exchequer."&mdash;Act II. Sc. 2.</p>
+
+<p>Here we learn, not only that in Shakspeare's time the road between
+London and Canterbury was by Gadshill, but also that the tradition was
+that the pilgrims had been accustomed to travel that road. We cannot, I
+think, be far out of the way in concluding this to have been the road
+that Chaucer selected, and thus have the satisfaction of connecting with
+it in an immediate and especial manner the two greatest names in our
+literature; for, if he meant the only other road that seems at all
+likely, he would, near Cobham, pass within two miles of this famed hill.
+Nor can there be much doubt that so loyal a company, following a pious
+custom, would tarry at Rochester, to make their offerings on the shrine
+of St. William; if so, among the many thousands who have trodden the
+steps, now well-nigh worn away, leading to its site, is there one
+individual whose presence here we can recall with more pleasure than
+that of the father of English poetry?</p>
+
+<p>It is evident that the road mentioned by S. H.
+(<a title="Go to Vol. ii., p. 237." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/13427/13427-h/13427-h.htm#page237">Vol. ii., p. 237.</a>) is
+not Chaucer's road; but I can well understand why it should be called
+the "Pilgrims' Road;" nor should I be surprised to learn that
+other roads in Kent are known by the same name, for Chaucer tells us in
+the "Prologue" to the <i>Tales</i> that</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p class="i9">"From every shire's end</p>
+<p class="i4">Of Engle-land to Canterbury they wend:"</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noindent">and I need scarcely say that these widely scattered pilgrims would not
+all traverse the country by one and the same road, but that they would
+select various routes, according to the different localities from which
+they came. Hence, several roads might be called "Pilgrims' Roads."</p>
+
+<p>From a paper which appeared in the <i>Athenæum</i> in 1842, and has since
+been reprinted in a separate form, the writer of which I take to be
+identical with the reviewer of Buckler's work referred to by M<span class="smcap lowercase">R</span>.
+J<span class="smcap lowercase">ACKSON</span>, I think we may gather that what he speaks of as the "Old
+Pilgrims' Road" is the Otford Road noticed by S. H. and M. (2.) Messrs.
+Buckler's tract mentions no wayside chapels in Kent.</p>
+
+<p>It may not be uninteresting to add, that the author of <i>Cabinet Pictures
+of English Life&mdash;Chaucer</i> has expressed his firm belief, the grounds for
+which must be sought in his work, that the "Pilgrims' Room" of the
+Tabard, now the Talbot, in Southwark, whence these memorable pilgrims
+set forth, must be at least as old as Chaucer, and that the very gallery
+exists along which Chaucer and the pilgrims walked.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> A<span class="smcap lowercase">RUN</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<h3><span class="bl"><a id="Replies2"></a>Replies to Minor Queries.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="minor1"><i>Shakspeare's Use of "Captious"</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. ii., p. 354." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/22624/22624-h/22624-h.htm#page354">Vol. ii., p. 354.</a>;
+<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 229." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/23225/23225-h/23225-h.htm#page229">Vol. iii., p. 229.</a>).&mdash;As
+ W. F. S. does me the favour to ask my opinion of his notion
+respecting the passage in <i>All's Well that Ends Well</i>, I beg to say that
+I am very glad to find he agrees with me in regard to the
+<i>signification</i> of the word "captious;" but that I cannot suppose, with
+him, that Shakspeare wrote <i>capatious</i> in a passage in which the metre
+is regular; for what sort of verse would be&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p> "Yet in this <i>capatious</i> and intenible sieve?"</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">Surely W. F. S. has too good an ear to allow him to fix such a line in
+Shakspeare's text.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p>J. S. W.<br />
+ Stockwell, April 3. 1851.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Inscription on a Clock</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 329." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26898/26898-h/26898-h.htm#page329">Vol. iii., p. 329.</a>).&mdash;The words written under
+the curious clock in Exeter Cathedral, about which your correspondent M.
+J. W. H<span class="smcap lowercase">EWETT</span> inquires, and which are, or were, also to be found under
+the clock over the Terrace in the Inner Temple, London, are, in truth, a
+quotation from Martial; and it is singular that a sentiment so truly
+Christian should have escaped from the pen of a Pagan writer:</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "They" (that is, the moments as they pass) "slip by us unheeded,
+ but are noted in the account against us."</p>
+
+<p>What could Chrysostom or Augustine have said stronger<span class="pagenum" id="page431">[431]</span> or better?
+The whole epigram is so good that I venture to transcribe it.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"<span class="smcap lowercase">AD MARTIALEM DE AGENDA VITA BEATA</span>.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="poem">
+<p>"Si tecum mihi, care Martialis,</p>
+<p>Securis liceat frui diebus,</p>
+<p>Si disponere tempus otiosum,</p>
+<p>Et veræ pariter vacare vitæ,</p>
+<p>Nec nos atria, nec domos potentum,</p>
+<p>Nec lites tetricas, forumque triste</p>
+<p>Nôssemus, nec imagines superbas:</p>
+<p>Sed gestatio, fabulæ, libelli,</p>
+<p>Campus, porticus, umbra, virgo, thermæ;</p>
+<p>Hæc essent loca semper, hi labores.</p>
+<p>Nunc vivit sibi neuter, heu! bonosque</p>
+<p>Soles effugere atque abire sentit;</p>
+<p>Qui nobis <span class="smcap lowercase">PEREUNT</span>, <span class="smcap lowercase">ET IMPUTANTUR</span>.</p>
+<p>Quisquam vivere cum sciat, moratur?"</p>
+
+ <p class="author">&nbsp;&nbsp;Lib. v. ep. 20.</p></div>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p><a id="W2"></a>W.<span class="topnum"><a title="Go to footnote 2." href="#We2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a id="We2"></a><a title="Return to text." href="#W2" class="label">[2]</a> We are indebted to several other correspondents for
+ similar replies to this Query; and one, A. C. W., remarks that the
+ epigram from which these lines are quoted, is thus translated by
+ Cowley:</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<p>"Now to himself, alas! does neither live,</p>
+<p>But sees good suns, of which we are to give</p>
+<p>A strict account, set and march thick away:</p>
+<p>Knows a man how to live, and does he stay?"</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Authors of the Anti-Jacobin Poetry</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 348." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26899/26899-h/26899-h.htm#page348">Vol. iii., p. 348.</a>).&mdash;I knew <i>all</i>
+the writers, some of them intimately; and I have no doubt of the general
+accuracy of M<span class="smcap lowercase">R</span>. <span class="smcap lowercase">HAWKIN</span>'<span class="smcap lowercase">S</span> communication. The items marked B are the least
+to be relied on. I do not think Mr. Hammond, then Canning's colleague as
+Under-Secretary of State, wrote a line, certainly not of verse, though
+he no doubt assisted his friend in compiling, and perhaps correcting;
+good offices, which obtained him an honourable <i>niche</i> in the
+counter-satire issued from Brooke's, and preserved from oblivion by
+having been reprinted in the <i>Anti-Jacobin</i> to give more poignancy to
+Canning's reply, "Bard of the borrowed lyre," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>The Latin verses "Ipsa mali Hortatrix" were the <i>sole</i> production of
+Lord Wellesley, and he reprinted them a year or two before his death;
+Mr. Frere had no share in them: but, on the other hand, Mr. Frere may
+have been, and I think was, the author of the <i>translation</i>, "Parent of
+countless crimes." Lord Wellesley certainly was not; for it was made
+after he had sailed for India.</p>
+
+<p>With regard to Mr. Wright's appropriation of particular passages of the
+longer poems to different authors, it is obviously impossible that it
+should be more than a vague conjecture. I <i>know</i> that both Canning and
+Gifford professed <i>not</i> to be able to make any such distribution; but
+both left on my mind the impression that Canning's share of the "New
+Morality" was so very much the largest as to entitle him to be
+considered its author. Ought not Canning's verses to be collected?</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> C.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>"Felix, quem faciunt," &amp;c.</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 373." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/32495/32495-h/32495-h.htm#page373">Vol. iii., p. 373.</a>).&mdash;Though I
+cannot refer E<span class="smcap lowercase">FFIGIES</span> to the original author of this passage, the
+following parallels may not be unacceptable to him:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"Felix, quem faciunt aliorum cornua cautum,</p>
+<p>Sæpe suo, c&oelig;lebs dixit Acerra, patri."</p>
+<br />
+ <p class="author">Joannis Audoeni, <i>Epigr</i>.&nbsp;147. Lib.&nbsp;i. (nat. circa 1600.)</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Again:</p>
+
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"Felix, quicunque dolore</p>
+<p>Alterius disces posse carere tuo."</p>
+<br />
+<p class="author">Tibul. lib.&nbsp;iii.&nbsp;6.&nbsp;43.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>It is remarkable that the annotator on this passage in the Delphin ed.,
+Paris, 1685, p. 327., quotes the line in question thus: "Consonat illud:
+Felix quem faciunt," &amp;c., <i>without giving the authority</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Again:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"Periculum ex aliis facere, tibi quod ex usu siet."&mdash;</p>
+<br />
+<p class="author">Ter. <i>Heaut.</i> i.&nbsp;2.&nbsp;36. (Not&nbsp;25., as in the Delphin <i>Index</i>.)</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Again:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"Feliciter is sapit, qui periculo alieno sapit."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>This passage is assigned to Plautus in the <i>Sylloge</i> of Petrus
+Lagnerius, Francf. 1610, p. 312., but I cannot find it in this author.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig">C. H. P.<br />
+ Brighton, May 12. 1851.</div>
+
+
+<p>Perhaps it is hardly an answer to E<span class="smcap lowercase">FFIGIES</span> to tell him that the earliest
+occurrence of this line, with which I am acquainted, is in a rebus
+beneath the device of the Parisian printer, Felix Balligault, about the
+year 1496. Thus:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"Felix quem faciunt aliena pericula cautum.</p>
+<p>Felici monumenta die felicia felix</p>
+ <p>Pressit: et hæc vicii dant retinentve nihil."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The device is a fruit-tree, from which a shield is suspended inscribed
+<i>felix</i>. Two apes are seated at the foot of the tree. The thought is,
+however, common to the wise and the witty of every age. Menander has it
+thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"<b><ins title='Greek: Blepôn pepaideum eis ta tôn allôn kaka.'>&#914;&#955;&#8051;&#960;&#969;&#957;
+ &#960;&#949;&#960;&#945;&#8055;&#948;&#949;&#965;&#956;&#8125;
+&#949;&#7984;&#962; &#964;&#8048; &#964;&#8182;&#957; &#7940;&#955;&#955;&#969;&#957; &#954;&#945;&#954;&#8049;.</ins></b>"</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>And Plautus:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"Feliciter sapit qui alieno periculum sapit."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Compare Terence, <i>Heaut.</i> i. 2. 36.:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p> "Periculum et aliis facere, tibi quod ex usu siet."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>And Diodorus Siculus, i. ab init.:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"<b><ins title='Greek: Kalon gar to dunasthai tois tôn allôn agnoêmasi pros diorthôsin chrêsthai
+ paradeigmasi.'>&#922;&#945;&#955;&#8056;&#957; &#947;&#8048;&#961; &#964;&#8056; &#948;&#8059;&#957;&#945;&#963;&#952;&#945;&#953;
+&#964;&#959;&#8150;&#962; &#964;&#8182;&#957; &#7940;&#955;&#955;&#969;&#957; &#7936;&#947;&#957;&#959;&#8053;&#956;&#945;&#963;&#953;
+&#960;&#961;&#8056;&#962; &#948;&#953;&#8057;&#961;&#952;&#969;&#963;&#953;&#957; &#967;&#961;&#8134;&#963;&#952;&#945;&#953;
+&#960;&#945;&#961;&#945;&#948;&#949;&#8055;&#947;&#956;&#945;&#963;&#953;.</ins></b>"</p></div>
+
+<p>And Tibullus, lib. iii. eleg. vi.:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"Felix, quicunque dolore</p>
+ <p class="noindent">Alterius disces posse carere tuo."</p></div>
+
+<p>These indications may perhaps put your correspondent in the way of a
+more satisfactory answer to his question.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> S.W. S<span class="smcap lowercase">INGER</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Church Bells</i>
+(<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 339." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26898/26898-h/26898-h.htm#page339">Vol. iii., p. 339.</a>).&mdash;Should the following extract from
+Mr. Fletcher's <i>Notes on Nineveh</i> have escaped the notice of M<span class="smcap lowercase">R</span>. G<span class="smcap lowercase">ATTY</span>,
+it may probably interest him:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot">"During<span class="pagenum" id="page432">[432]</span> the following (12th) century Dionysius Bar Salibi
+ occupied the (Jacobite) patriarchal throne, a man noted for piety
+ and learning. He composed several works on theological subjects,
+ among which we find a curious disquisition on bells, the invention
+ of which he ascribes to Noah. He mentions that several histories
+ record a command given to that patriarch to strike on the bell with
+ a piece of wood three times a day, in order to summon the workmen
+ to their labour while he was building the ark. And this he seems to
+ consider the origin of church bells, an opinion which, indeed, is
+ common to other Oriental writers."&mdash;Vol. ii. p. 212.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> E. H. A.</p></div>
+
+<p><i>Chiming, Tolling, and Pealing</i>
+(<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 339." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26898/26898-h/26898-h.htm#page339">Vol. iii., p. 339.</a>).&mdash;Though the
+following has not, I fear, <i>canonical</i> authority, nor is it of <i>remote</i>
+antiquity, still, as they are not lines of yesterday, they may serve as
+one Reply to M<span class="smcap lowercase">R</span>. G<span class="smcap lowercase">ATTY</span>'<span class="smcap lowercase">S</span> late Query on <i>Chiming, tolling, and
+pealing</i>:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"To call the folk to church in time</p>
+ <p class="i9"> We <i>chime</i>,</p>
+<p>When joy and mirth are on the wing</p>
+ <p class="i9"> We <i>ring</i>,</p>
+<p>When we mourn a departed soul</p>
+ <p class="i9">We <i>toll</i>."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>I think it probable (though I have no direct proof of it) that the great
+bell, or tenor, was always <span class="smcap lowercase">RUNG</span> when a sermon was to be <i>preached</i>,
+which was not the case when there was to be only prayers. I believe it
+is so at this day at St. Mary's, Oxford; it is very certain that the
+great bell, being so rung, is in some places called the <i>Sermon</i> Bell,
+though I remember two legends on tenor bells, which seem to imply that
+they were intended to call to prayers, viz.:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"Come when I call,</p>
+<p>To serve God all."</p>
+<br />
+<p>"For Christ, his flock, I aloud do call,</p>
+<p>To confess their sins, and be pardoned all."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The difference between ringing the tenor (or any bell for prayers), and
+ringing it as a knell, is, that in the latter case the bell is set at
+every pull or stroke, which causes a solemnity in the sound very
+different from that produced by the very reverse mode of ringing it. Oh!
+what language there is in bells. In <i>ringing</i>, the bell is swung round;
+in <i>tolling</i>, it is swung merely sufficiently for the clapper to strike
+the side. <i>Chiming</i> is when more bells than one are <i>tolled</i> in harmony;
+if this be correct, to <i>toll</i> can be applied only when <i>one</i> bell is
+sounded, and Horne Tooke's definition of the word, from <i>tollere</i>, to
+<i>raise up</i>, must be wrong (humiliter loquor).</p>
+
+<p>With regard to the present use of the old Sanctus Bell, which is called
+at Ecclesfield <i>Tom Tinkler</i>, the same is often called the <i>Ting Tang</i>.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p>H. T. E<span class="smcap lowercase">LLACOMBE</span>.<br />
+ Clyd St. George.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Extraordinary North
+ Briton</i>
+(<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 409." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/28311/28311-h/28311-h.htm#page409">Vol. iii., p. 409.</a>).&mdash;In answer to
+the inquiries of the reviewer in the <i>Athenæum</i> of May 17, and your
+correspondent, the writer of the <i>Extraordinary North Briton</i> appears to
+have been an individual of the name of William Moore, not, as apparently
+supposed, the poet William Mason. I have, amongst a complete series of
+the London newspapers of the day, a set of the <i>Extraordinary North
+Briton</i>, beginning Tuesday (May 10, 1768) and terminating with the 91st
+No. (Saturday, January 27, 1770). Whether it was continued further I do
+not know. The early numbers are published by Staples Steare, 93. Fleet
+Street, and the subsequent ones by T. Peat, 22. Fleet Street, and by
+William Moore, 55., opposite Hatton Garden, Holborn. The second and
+subsequent numbers are entitled, <i>The Extraordinary North Briton</i>, by
+W&mdash;&mdash; M&mdash;&mdash;. In the last three numbers the W&mdash;&mdash; M&mdash;&mdash; is altered to
+William Moore, and at the end of each is "London, printed and sold by
+the author, W. Moore, No. 22., near St. Dunstan's Church, Fleet Street."
+In the 90th number is the following advertisement:</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "Mr. Moore thinks it highly incumbent on him to acquaint the
+ public, that Thomas Brayne (who was his shopman all last winter) is
+ now publishing a spurious paper under the same title in Holborn;
+ that they may not be deceived, Mr. Moore's name will be in front of
+ every paper he writes. He begs leave further to add, that Brayne
+ sold several papers last week in his name, and told those who
+ purchased them, that they were wrote by Mr. Moore, and that he
+ published for him. In order that the public may not be deceived by
+ such low artifice, an affidavit of Brayne's proceedings in this
+ respect, will appear in the public papers some time next week."</p>
+
+<p>I have also the papers published by Brayne, which are advertised at the
+end to be "Printed and Published by T. Brayne, No. 55., opposite Hatton
+Garden, Holborn."</p>
+
+<p>I have referred to No. 4, for Friday, June 3, 1768, addressed to Lord
+Mansfield, noticed in the <i>Athenæum</i>; but, with all due respect to the
+opinion of the reviewer, I cannot see the slightest similitude to the
+style of Junius. It appears to me to be a very feeble performance, and
+by a very inferior person. Indeed, the entire series of the
+<i>Extraordinary North Briton</i> seems poor and flat when compared with its
+predecessor, the original and famous <i>North Briton</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The attempt to show Mason to be Junius is amusing and ingenious; but the
+reviewer has evidently failed in persuading himself, and therefore,
+amidst the many startling improbabilities by which such an attempt is
+encompassed, is scarcely likely to gain many converts to such a theory.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> J<span class="smcap lowercase">AMES</span> C<span class="smcap lowercase">ROSSLEY</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Fitzpatrick's Lines on Fox.</i>&mdash;M<span class="smcap lowercase">R</span>. M<span class="smcap lowercase">ARKLAND</span>, in your
+<a title="Go to Vol. iii., Number 78, p. 334." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26898/26898-h/26898-h.htm#page334">78th Number (p. 334.</a>), asks the
+ true reading of<span class="pagenum" id="page433">[433]</span> the third line.&mdash;The word should
+be "mind," not "course."</p>
+
+<p>The lines are under the engraved bust of Fox, prefixed to the edition,
+in elephant folio, of his <i>History of the early Part of the Reign of
+James II.</i>, and the word there given is "course." In my copy of that
+work is inserted a letter from Miller, the publisher, to a deceased
+friend of mine, who was an original subscriber at "Five Guineas,
+boards!"</p>
+
+<p>That letter, so far as is material, is as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot">"The error in the engraving of the writing was certainly a very bad
+ one, and not to be remedied, but it is a satisfaction to me that it
+ was Lord Holland's mistake and not mine. I have his lordship's
+ original writing of the four lines to clear myself. W. Miller,
+ Albemarle Street, June 6, 1808."</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> Q. D.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Ejusdem
+ Farinæ</i>
+(<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 278." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26896/26896-h/26896-h.htm#page278">Vol. iii., p. 278.</a>.).&mdash;This phrase was used in a
+disparaging sense long before the time of the "scholastic doctors and
+casuists of the middle ages," as may appear from Persius, v. 115-117.,
+where he is showing that an elevation in rank does not necessarily
+produce a more elevated tone of mind; and says to an imaginary upstart:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"Sin tu, cum fueris <i>nostræ</i> paulò antè <i>farinæ</i>,</p>
+<p>Pelliculam veterem retines, et fronte politus</p>
+<p>Astutam vapido servas sub pectore vulpem," &amp;c.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>It is needless to add that the metaphor is taken from loaves made from
+the "<i>same batch</i>" of flour, where, if one be bad, all the others must
+be equally so.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p>J. E<span class="smcap lowercase">ASTWOOD</span>.<br />
+ Ecclesfield Hall.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>Stephens, in his <i>Thesaurus</i>, under the head of "Farinæ," states&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "Proverbiales locutiones sunt, Ejusdem Farinæ, Nostræ farinæ,"</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">but makes no allusion to its being a term expressive of baseness and
+disparagement. Nor does it seem to be so used by Persius in v. 115. of
+his 5th Satire:</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "Si tu, cum fueris nostræ paulò antè farinæ."</p>
+
+<p>We employ a somewhat similar expression, when we say, "both of the same
+kidney."</p>
+
+<div class="boxsig"> <p> C. I. R.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>This expression may be traced beyond "the scholastic doctors and
+casuists of the middle ages." Erasmus, in his <i>Adagia</i>, says,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "Ejusdem farinæ dicuntur, inter quos est indiscreta similitudo.
+ Quod enim aqua ad aquam collata, idem ad farinam farinæ. Persius in
+ 5 Satyr.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p class="i4">"'Nostræ paulò antè farinæ,</p>
+<p>Pelliculam veterem retines.'"</p></div>
+
+<p class="noindent">And again, on the proverb "Omnia idem pulvis," he says,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "Quin nobis omnia idem, quod aiunt, pulvis: alludens ad defunctorum
+ cineres, inter quos nibil apparet discriminis. Confine illi quod
+ alio demonstravimus proverbio, ejusdem farinæ. Siquidem
+ antiqui farinam pollinem vocabant."</p>
+
+<p>Is. Casaubon, in a note on the above passage of Persius, says,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "Proverbium Latinum ad notandum similitudinem, 'est ejusdem
+ farinæ,' proprie locum habet in panibus."</p>
+
+<p>Though the expression is generally, if not always, used disparagingly,
+as the corresponding expressions "birds of a feather" and "of the same
+kidney," yet I should doubt whether the term "farinæ" is itself
+expressive of baseness, any more than "feather" or "kidney." By the way,
+what is the origin of the latter of the above expressions?</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> E. S. T. T.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>The
+ Sempecta</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 328." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26898/26898-h/26898-h.htm#page328">Vol. iii., pp. 328.</a>
+<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 357." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26899/26899-h/26899-h.htm#page357">357.</a>.)&mdash;I have to return many thanks
+to D<span class="smcap lowercase">R</span>. M<span class="smcap lowercase">AITLAND</span> for his kindness in so promptly answering my Query. The
+reference to Martene has enabled me to find the poem in question. It is
+in Martene and Durand's <i>Thesaurus novus Anecdotorum</i>, Paris, 1717; and
+will be found in vol. iii. col. 1333. The poem forms caput iii. of the
+second book of the <i>Historia Monasterii Villariensis in Brabantiâ,
+ordinis Cisterciensis</i> (a title which shows the monastery to which the
+old soldier-monk belonged instead of Croyland), and is headed "Incipit
+vita beati Franconis." I think there are few of your readers who will
+not thank me for calling their attention to it, if they will take the
+trouble to refer to Martene's work.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p>H. R. L<span class="smcap lowercase">UARD</span>.<br />
+ Trin. Coll. May 5.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>"Nulli fraus tuta
+ latebris"</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 323." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26898/26898-h/26898-h.htm#page323">Vol. iii., p. 323.</a>)
+will be found in <i>Camerar. Emblem.</i>, cent. ii. 40.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> Q. Q.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Voltaire&mdash;where
+ situated</i>
+(<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 329." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26898/26898-h/26898-h.htm#page329">Vol. iii., p. 329.</a>).&mdash;If the Querist will
+look to the <i>Critical Essays of an Octogenarian</i>, by J. R. (the learned,
+venerable, and respected James Roche, Esq., of Cork), he will find, at
+p. 11. vol. i., that there is no such place, the word "Voltaire" being
+merely a transposition of the name of the party assuming it as a
+designation. Thus, he was called <i>Arouet Le Jeune</i>. Transpose the
+letters of <i>Arouet L. J.</i>, and allowing <i>j</i>, <i>u</i> and <i>i</i>, <i>v</i> to be used
+for each other, you have <i>Voltaire</i>.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> K.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>By
+ the Bye</i>
+(<a title="Go to Vol. ii., p. 424." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/15354/15354-h/15354-h.htm#page424">Vol. ii., p. 424.</a>;
+ <a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 109." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/22625/22625-h/22625-h.htm#page109"> Vol. iii., p. 109.</a>).&mdash;In further
+illustration of this phrase, I would advert to the practice of declaring
+by the bye, which prevailed in the superior courts of common law, before
+the Uniformity of Process Act (2 Will. IV., c. 39.). The following
+extract from Burton's <i>Exchequer Practice</i>, 1791, vol. i. p. 149., will
+sufficiently explain this happily obsolete matter:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot">"By the old rules it is ordered, 'That upon every defendant's
+ appearance, the plaintiff may put in as many declarations as he
+ will against every such defendant, provided they all be put in at
+ one and the same time.' If there be more than one declaration
+ delivered at the same time against the same defendant, every
+ additional<span class="pagenum" id="page434">[434]</span> declaration so delivered is called delivering the
+ declaration by the bye."</p>
+
+<p>In the King's Bench, in certain cases, any other plaintiff could declare
+by the bye against the defendant, and that even before the original
+plaintiffs had declared. See Crompton's <i>Practice Common-placed</i>, 2nd
+ed., 1783, vol. i. p. 100.</p>
+
+<p><i>The Doctor</i> (in chap. cx.) says&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "By the bye, which is the same thing, in common parlance, as by the
+ way, though critically there may seem to be a difference; for by
+ the bye might seem to denote a collateral remark, and by the way a
+ direct one."</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">By the bye, what a pity it is there is no Index to <i>The Doctor</i>.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p>C. H. C<span class="smcap lowercase">OOPER</span>.<br />
+ Cambridge, March 24, 1851.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Bigod
+ de Loges</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 306." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26897/26897-h/26897-h.htm#page306">Vol. iii., p. 306.</a>).&mdash;There is an error, perhaps a
+clerical one, in M. J. T.'s statement, that "Bigod, whose name was
+attached to the charter of foundation of St. Werburgh's Abbey, is
+elsewhere, according to Ormerod, called Robert."</p>
+
+<p>The remark is by Leycester, not Ormerod, and the purport is exactly the
+converse. To the words "Signum Roberti de Loges" is added, "alii Bigot
+de Loges hic legunt." Vide <i>Monasticon</i>, pars I., pp. 200. 202.</p>
+
+<p>This passage will be found in Leycester's <i>Antiquities</i>, p. 111.,
+reprinted in <i>Hist. Chesh.</i>, vol. i. p. 13. But Leycester's
+<i>Prolegomena</i> is the heading, and the initials "P. L." are appended to
+the note.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p>L<span class="smcap lowercase">ANCASTRIENSIS</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Knebsend
+ or Nebsend, co. York</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 263." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/23402/23402-h/23402-h.htm#page263">Vol. iii., p. 263.</a>).&mdash;A part of
+Sheffield is called Neepsend, which is probably the place inquired after
+by J. N. C., especially as the ordinary pronunciation of it is
+<i>Nep</i>send.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p>J. E<span class="smcap lowercase">ASTWOOD</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Mrs. Catherine Barton</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 328." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26898/26898-h/26898-h.htm#page328">Vol. iii., p. 328.</a>).&mdash;Your correspondent will
+find all that is known in Sir David Brewster's <i>Life of Newton</i>, and
+will see (p. 323.) that her maiden name must have been either Smith,
+Pilkington, or Barton itself.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> M.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Peter Sterry</i>
+(<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 38." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/15640/15640-h/15640-h.htm#page38">Vol. iii., p. 38.</a>).&mdash;In the title-page to his sermon,
+preached before the Parliament, Nov. 1, 1649 (Lond. 1650, 4to.), Sterry
+is called "sometime Fellow of Emanuel College, Cambridge; now a Preacher
+of the Gospel in London." Some account of him may be seen in Burnet's
+<i>History of his own Time</i>; and in the <i>Memoirs of Edmund Ludlow</i>. Wood
+says that Peter Sterry was notorious "for keeping on that side which had
+proved trump" (<i>Athenæ</i>, iii. 197., edit. Bliss).</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p>E<span class="smcap lowercase">DWARD</span> F. R<span class="smcap lowercase">IMBAULT</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Wife of James Torre</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 329." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26898/26898-h/26898-h.htm#page329">Vol. iii., p. 329.</a>).&mdash;In reply to M<span class="smcap lowercase">R</span>. P<span class="smcap lowercase">EACOCK</span>'<span class="smcap lowercase">S</span>
+Query I beg to inform him that the lady's name was Elizabeth, youngest
+of the four daughters and co-heiresses of William Lincolne, D.D.,
+of Bottesford, and by her Mr. Torre had several children, all of
+whom died young except Jane, who married, in 1701, the Rev. Thomas
+Hassel. This is taken from Burke's <i>Dictionary of Landed Gentry</i>, vol.
+ii, M to Z, published by Colburn, London, 1847, where the Torre pedigree
+can be seen, but no other mention of the <i>Lincolne</i> family is there
+made. There are seven different coats of arms and crests under the name
+<i>Lincolne</i> in Burke's <i>Armory of England, Scotland, and Ireland</i>,
+published by Churton in 1843. This is all I can find at present.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> J. N. C.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Ramasse</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 347." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26899/26899-h/26899-h.htm#page347">Vol. iii., p. 347.</a>).&mdash;One word to complete M<span class="smcap lowercase">R</span>. W<span class="smcap lowercase">AY</span>'<span class="smcap lowercase">S</span>
+explanation. This style of sliding down the slopes of the Alps is called
+a <i>ramasse</i>, because the guides are ready below to <i>ramasser</i>, that is,
+to <i>pick up</i>, the travellers who are thus sent down.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> C.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>This word is by no means obsolete in France, in the acceptation of "a
+sledge." In addition to the instances given from Barré and Roquefort by
+M<span class="smcap lowercase">R</span>. A<span class="smcap lowercase">LBERT</span> W<span class="smcap lowercase">AY</span>, in his instructive note on the "Pilgrymage of Syr R.
+Guylforde, Knyght," I find in Napoléon Landais' <i>Dictionnaire général et
+grammatical des Dictionnaires Français</i>," the following explanation:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot">"R<span class="smcap lowercase">AMASSE</span>, chaise à porteurs, traîneau pour descendre des montagnes
+ où il y a de la neige: <i>descendre une montagne dans une ramasse</i>."</p>
+
+<p>He also says, in defining the meaning of the verb "ramasser:"</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "Traîner dans une <i>ramasse: on le ramassa pendant deux heures;
+ quand il fut sur la montagne, il se fit ramasser</i>."</p>
+
+<p>The late Mr. Tarver, in his <i>Dictionnaire Phraséologique Royal</i>, has
+also the following:</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot">"R<span class="smcap lowercase">AMASSE</span>, s. f. (t. de voyageur), sledge.</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "<i>On le ramassa</i>, they conveyed him in a sledge.</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot">"R<span class="smcap lowercase">AMASSEUR</span>, a man who drives a sledge."</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p>D. C.<br />
+ St. John's Wood, May 4. 1851.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Four Want Way</i>
+(<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 168." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/23204/23204-h/23204-h.htm#page168">Vol. iii., p. 168.</a>).&mdash;Halliwell describes the word
+"want" as meaning in Essex a cross-road. It is still used here as
+denoting a place where four roads meet, and called "a four want way." I
+always fancied it meant a wont way, <i>via solita</i>; but I have no
+authority for the etymology.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p>B<span class="smcap lowercase">RAYBROOKE</span>.<br />
+ Audley End.</p></div>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> ["Went" is used in Chaucer in the sense of "way," "passage,"
+ "turning," or road: thus, in <i>Troilus and Creseide</i>, iii. 788., he
+ speaks of a "a privie went," and v. 605., "And up and doun there
+ made he many a went;" and in the <i>House of Fame</i>:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+<p>"And in a forrest as they went,</p>
+<p>At the tourning of a went."]</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Dr. Owen's Works</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. i., p. 276." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/13544/13544-h/13544-h.htm#page276">Vol. i., p. 276.</a>)<span class="pagenum" id="page435">[435]</span>.&mdash;The editor of the <i>Works
+of John Owen</i> is informed, that in the valuable library of George Offor,
+Esq., of Hackney, will be found a thick volume in manuscript of
+unpublished <i>Sermons on the Fifty-third Chapter of Isaiah</i>, in the
+Doctor's own hand-writing, and apparently prepared for publication. The
+same library also contains two scarce pieces by Dr. Owen, which it is
+thought have never been reprinted: 1. <i>The Stedfastness of Promises, and
+the Sinfulness of Staggering</i>, opened in a sermon preached at
+Margaret's, in Westminster, before the Parliament, Feb. 28, 1649, being
+a Day set apart for Solemn Humiliation throughout the Nation. By John
+Owen, Minister of the Gospel. London, 1650. 4to. pp. 54.&mdash;2. <i>God's Work
+in Founding Zion, and his People's Duty thereupon.</i> A Sermon preached in
+the Abbey Church at Westminster, at the opening of the Parliament, Sept.
+17, 1656. By John Owen, a Servant of Jesus Christ in the Work of the
+Gospel. Oxford, 1656. 4to. pp. 48.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p>J. Y.<br />
+ Hoxton.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Bactrian Coins</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 353." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26899/26899-h/26899-h.htm#page353">Vol. iii., p. 353.</a>).&mdash;Has your correspondent read the
+book by Masson <i>On the Coins, &amp;c. of Afghanistan</i>, published by
+Professor H. H. Wilson? There are also references to authorities in
+Humphreys <i>On Ancient Coins and Medals</i>.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> C. B.</p></div>
+
+
+<p><i>Bactria.</i>&mdash;B<span class="smcap lowercase">LOWEN</span> will find some trustworthy information respecting
+Bactria in Professor Lassen's <i>Indische Alterthumskunde</i>, Zweiter Band,
+pp. 277. et seq. Bonn, 1849; and a list of authorities on the
+Græco-Bactrian coins in the same work, pp. 282. 283. (notes).</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> C. H.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Baldrocks</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 328." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26898/26898-h/26898-h.htm#page328">Vol. iii., p. 328.</a>).&mdash;On looking over a vestry book
+belonging to South Lynn in this town, commencing at 1605, and ending in
+1677, I find some Churchwardens' Accounts, and amongst them the two
+following entries, which may, I trust, assist "A C<span class="smcap lowercase">HURCHWARDEN</span>," and lead
+to an elucidation of this word:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">
+ "1610.<br />
+
+ "Janua. 17. ffo<span class="topnum">r</span> a <i>balledrick</i> to
+ y<span class="topnum">e</span> great Bell, xxi<i>d.</i><br />
+
+ "1618.<br />
+
+ "Novemb. 22. Item. fo<span class="topnum">r</span> mendine
+ of y<span class="topnum">e</span> <i>baldericke</i> for y<span class="topnum">e</span>
+ foore bell, vj<i>d.</i>"</p>
+
+
+<p>From these entries it seems that the "baldrock" was something attached
+to the great bell.</p>
+
+<p>In most of the recent English Dictionaries the word is applied to
+furniture, and to a belt or girdle. But in a Latin Dictionary published
+at Cambridge in 1693, I find in the Anglo-Latin part the following:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> English. A bawdrick of a bell clapper.<br />
+ Latin. Ropali corrigia.</p>
+
+<p>And the English of "Ropali Corrigia" seems (notwithstanding the English
+version given with it) to be "<i>pieces of leather</i>," or "<i>thongs
+of leather</i>" to the bell clapper, but for what purpose used I do not
+know.</p>
+
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> J<span class="smcap lowercase">OHN</span> N<span class="smcap lowercase">URSE</span> C<span class="smcap lowercase">HADWICK</span>.</p></div>
+
+<p>P.S. The word "corrigia" is taken from the word "corium," a skin of
+leather.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot"> [Were not these leather coverings?&mdash;that for the rope, to prevent
+ its cutting the ringer's hands (as we constantly see), and also to
+ prevent his hand slipping; and that for the clapper, to muffle
+ it&mdash;straps of leather girded round them.]</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Tu Autem</i>
+(<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 265." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/23402/23402-h/23402-h.htm#page265">Vol. iii., pp. 265.</a>
+<a title="Go to Vol. iii., pp. 308." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26897/26897-h/26897-h.htm#page308">308.</a>).&mdash;The
+ "Tu Autem," still remembered
+at Oxford and Cambridge, and yet lingering at the public dinners of the
+canons of Durham, is the last fragment of what was once a daily, or at
+least an almost daily, religious form or service at those ancient
+places; and it is rather strange that such a fragment should have
+remained so long in the collegiate and cathedral refectory without
+having preserved any remembrance of its real origin and meaning. If
+Bishop Hendren or Father Holdfast would forego their favourite pursuits
+for a few minutes, and look into your interesting and improving
+miscellany, they might inform you that in the Romish Breviary&mdash;which, no
+doubt, has preserved many ancient religious services&mdash;there is a form
+entitled <i>Benedictio mensæ</i>. As the generality of your readers may not
+have the Breviary at hand, I send you so much of the service as may
+suffice for the present purpose.</p>
+
+ <p class="center">"<span class="smcap lowercase">BENEDICTIO MENSÆ</span>.</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot">"<i>Ante prandium Sacerdos benedicturus mensam, incipit</i>, Benedicite,
+ <i>et alii repetunt</i>, Benedicite. <i>Deinde dicit</i> Oculi omnium, <i>et
+ alii prosequuntur</i>. In te sperant, Domine, et tu das escam illorum
+ in tempore opportuno" &amp;c. &amp;c. Then "Gloria Patri" &amp;c., and "Pater
+ noster" &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+
+ <p class="center"> "<i>Posteà Sacerdos dicit</i>:</p>
+
+ <p class="center"> "Oremus.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot"> "Benedic Domine nos, et hæc tua dona, quæ de tua largitate sumus
+ sumpturi. Per Christum Dominum nostrum. Amen.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot"> "<i>Deinde Lector.</i> Jube Domine benedicere. <i>Benedictio.</i> Mensæ
+ c&oelig;lestis participes faciat nos Rex æternæ gloriæ. Amen.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"<i>Post prandium aguntur gratiæ hoc modo. Dicto à Lectore</i>, Tu autem
+ Domine miserere nobis. Deo gratias, <i>omnes surgunt</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"<i>Sacerdos incipit.</i> Confiteantur tibi Domine omnia opera tua. Et
+ Sancti tui benedicant tibi. Gloria Patri, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"<i>Posteà Sacerdos absolutè dicat</i>: <i>A</i>gimus tibi gratias,
+ omnipotens Deus, pro universis beneficiis tuis, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot"> "<i>Deinde alternatim dicitur Psalmus.</i> Miserere mei Deus.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"<i>Vel Psalmus 116.</i>" (in our version, 117.), &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>The service then proceeds with very much repetition. The performance of
+the whole would probably occupy twenty minutes.</p>
+
+<p>I must<span class="pagenum" id="page436">[436]</span> note that there are variations in the service depending
+upon the season, &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>I have indicated the <i>rubric</i> of the Breviary by <i>Italics</i>.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> J. Y<span class="smcap lowercase">ALC</span>.<br />
+ Preston, Lanc.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Commoner
+ marrying a Peeress</i>
+(<a title="Go to Vol. ii., p. 230." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/13427/13427-h/13427-h.htm#page230">Vol. ii., p. 230.</a>).&mdash;Your correspondent
+L. R. N. inquires whether there is any decision subsequent to that in
+the reign of Henry VIII. on the claim to the Taylboys barony, respecting
+the right of a Commoner marrying a peeress to assume her title and
+dignity, he having issue male by her. In reply I beg to inform him that
+there appears to have been one on the claim of Richard Bertie, in 1580,
+to the Barony of Willoughby, in right of his wife Catherine Duchess of
+Suffolk, as tenant by the curtesy, which was rejected, and Peregrine
+Bertie her son was admitted in the lifetime of his father. It seems,
+however, from the want of modern instances, as also by the elevation of
+ladies to the rank of peeresses, with remainders to their children, thus
+enabling the issue to sit in the lifetime of the father, that the
+prevailing notion is against curtesy in titles of honour. This subject
+will be found treated at some length in Cruise's <i>Digest</i>, vol. iii. pp.
+187, 188. 198. ed. 1818.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> O. S.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Ancient Wood Engraving</i>
+(<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 277." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26896/26896-h/26896-h.htm#page277">Vol. iii., p. 277.</a>).&mdash;The
+ subject of T<span class="smcap lowercase">HE</span>
+H<span class="smcap lowercase">ERMIT OF</span> H<span class="smcap lowercase">OLYPORT</span>'<span class="smcap lowercase">S</span> question is an engraving of the "Pinax" of Cebes, a
+Theban philosopher who wrote circa A. M. 3600, and who, in his
+allegorical work of that name, described human life under the guise of a
+picture.</p>
+
+<p>This information is for the H<span class="smcap lowercase">ERMIT</span>'<span class="smcap lowercase">S</span> especial benefit, as I suppose it
+will be old news to most of your correspondents.</p>
+
+<p>I have an old Dutch edition of the "Pinax" (Gerard de Jager, 1683),
+bound in vellum, with the <i>Enchiridion</i> and other works of Epictetus;
+the frontispiece of which is the fellow to the Hermit's engraving.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> F. I.<br />
+ Bradford.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Vegetating Insects</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 166." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/23204/23204-h/23204-h.htm#page166">Vol. iii., p. 166.</a>).&mdash;As the Query of M<span class="smcap lowercase">R</span>. M<span class="smcap lowercase">ANLEY</span>
+in No. 70. has not been answered, I beg to say that Vegetating Insects
+are not uncommon both in New South Wales and New Zealand. The insect is
+the caterpillar of a large brown moth, and in New South Wales is
+sometimes found six inches long, buried in the ground, and the plant
+above ground about the same length: the top, expanded like a flower, has
+a brown velvety texture. In New Zealand the <i>plant</i> is different, being
+a single stem from six to ten inches high: its apex, when in a state of
+fructification, resembles the club-headed bulrush in miniature. When
+newly dug up, and divided longitudinally, the intestinal canal is
+distinctly visible, and frequently the hairs, legs, and mandibles.
+Vegetation invariably proceeds from the nape of the neck; from
+which it may be inferred, that the insect, in crawling to the place
+where it inhumes itself, prior to its metamorphosis, while burrowing in
+the light vegetable soil, gets some of the minute seeds of the fungus
+between the scales of its neck, from which in its sickening state it is
+unable to free itself, and which consequently, being nourished by the
+warmth and moisture of the insect's body then lying motionless,
+vegetates, and not only impedes the process of change in the chrysalis,
+but likewise occasions the death of the insect. The New South Wales
+specimen is called "Sphæria Innominata," that of New Zealand "Sphæria
+Robertsii;" both named, I believe, by Sir W. J. Hooker. In some
+specimens of the New Zealand kind now before me, the <i>bodies</i> of the
+insects are in their normal state, but the legs, &amp;c., are gone.</p>
+
+<p>Both specimens are figured and described in the <i>Tasmanian Journal</i>,
+vol. i. No. 4.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> V<span class="smcap lowercase">IATOR</span>.<br />
+ Chatham.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Prayer at the Healing</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 352." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26899/26899-h/26899-h.htm#page352">Vol. iii., p. 352.</a>).&mdash;N. E. R. inquires whether
+this prayer found a place in the prayer-books printed at Oxford or
+Cambridge.</p>
+
+<p>I have it before me in the folio Book of Common Prayer, "Oxford, printed
+by John Baskett, Printer to the King's Most Excellent Majesty, and to
+the University, MDCCXV." It is placed between the form of prayer for
+Aug. 1. (the King's Accession) and the King's Declaration preceding the
+Articles.</p>
+
+<p>This form differs from that given by Sparrow, in his <i>Collection</i>, edit.
+1684, p. 165., as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Sparrow gives <i>two</i> Gospels: Mark, xvi. 14., St. John, i. 1., the
+imposition of the King's hands taking place at the words "<i>they shall
+lay</i>," &amp;c. in the reading of the first, and the gold being placed at
+reading the words "<i>that light</i>" in the second.</p>
+
+<p>In Baskett's form, the <i>first</i> Gospel only is used, with the collect
+"<i>Prevent us, O Lord</i>," before it.</p>
+
+<p>In Baskett's form, the supplicatory versicles and Lord's Prayer, which
+agree in their own order with the earlier form, <i>follow</i> this first
+Gospel, and <i>precede the imposition and the suspension of the gold</i>,
+during which (it is directed) the chaplain that officiates, <i>turning
+himself to his Majesty</i>, shall say these words following:</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "God give a blessing to this work, and grant that these sick
+ persons, on whom the king lays his hands, may recover through Jesus
+ Christ our Lord."</p>
+
+<p>This does <i>not</i> appear in Sparrow's form of 1684, <i>neither</i> does the
+following address, at the close, by the "chaplain, <i>standing with his
+face towards them that come to be healed</i>."</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "The Almighty God, who is a most strong tower to all them that put
+ their trust in Him, to whom all things in heaven, in earth, and
+ under the earth do bow and obey, be now and evermore your defence,
+ and make<span class="pagenum" id="page437">[437]</span> you know and feel that there is none other Name
+ under heaven given to man, in whom, and through whom, you may
+ receive health and salvation, but only the name of our Lord Jesus
+ Christ, Amen."</p>
+
+<p>Objectionable as the ceremony was, there can be no doubt that a much
+more Protestant character was given to it by these alterations.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p>L<span class="smcap lowercase">ANCASTRIENSIS</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>M. or N.</i>
+(<a title="Go to Vol. i., p. 415." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/13822/13822-h/13822-h.htm#page415">Vol. i., p. 415.</a>;
+ <a title="Go to Vol. ii., p. 61." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/22127/22127-h/22127-h.htm#page61">Vol. ii., p. 61.</a>;
+ <a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 323." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26898/26898-h/26898-h.htm#page323">Vol. iii., p. 323.</a>).&mdash;With
+ reference to the initials or letters M. and N. found in the
+Catechism and the Marriage Service of our Common Prayer Book, it has
+struck me that a fancy of mine may satisfy some of those who wish to
+find more than a mere caprice in the selection of them.</p>
+
+<p>It is remarkable that in the Catechism we read N. or M., while in the
+service for Matrimony M. is for the man, N. for the woman.</p>
+
+<p>I have imagined long ago that "N. or M." may mean "<i>n</i>omen viri; aut
+<i>m</i>ulieris:" that M. may stand for "maritus" in the other place, and N.
+for "nupta."</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> T<span class="smcap lowercase">YRO</span> E<span class="smcap lowercase">TYMOLOGICUS</span>.</p></div>
+
+<p>N. stands (as it constantly did in MS.) for "nomen" or name; M. for N.
+N., "nomina" or names. You will observe that in black letter the forms
+of N and M are so very similar that by an easy contraction double N
+would pass into M, and thus the contracted form N. N. for "nomina" might
+have come into M. Corroborating this is the fact that the answer to What
+is your name? stands thus: Answer N. or M., and not M. or N.</p>
+
+
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> J. F. T.</p></div>
+
+<p>P.S. Throughout the Matrimonial Service I observe M. attached to the
+man's name, but N. to the woman's.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Dancing Trenchmore</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 89." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/22339/22339-h/22339-h.htm#page89">Vol. iii., p. 89.</a>).&mdash;Your
+ correspondent S. G. asks
+the meaning of this phrase? <i>Trenchmore</i> was a very popular dance in the
+sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The earliest mention I find of it
+occurs in 1564, and the latest in 1728. The figure and the musical notes
+may be seen in the fifth and later editions of <i>The Dancing Master</i>. See
+also Chappell's <i>National English Airs</i>, vol. ii. p. 181., where some
+amusing quotations concerning its popularity are given. <i>Trenchmore</i>
+(the meaning of which we have to seek) was, however, more particularly
+the name of the <i>dance</i> than the tune. The <i>dance</i>, in fact, was
+performed to <i>various</i> tunes. In proof of this I give the following
+quotation from Taylor the water-poet's <i>Navy of Land Ships</i>, 1627:</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot">"Nimble-heel'd mariners (like so many dancers) capring in the
+ pompes and vanities of this sinful world, sometimes a Morisco, or
+ <i>Trenchmore</i> of forty miles long, to the tune of <i>Dusty my deare</i>,
+ <i>Dirty come thou to me</i>, <i>Dun out of the mire</i>, or <i>I waile in woe
+ and plunge in paine</i>: all these dances have no other musicke."</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> E<span class="smcap lowercase">DWARD</span> F. R<span class="smcap lowercase">IMBAULT</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Demosthenes and New Testament</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 350." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26899/26899-h/26899-h.htm#page350">Vol. iii., p. 350.</a>).&mdash;If
+ your
+correspondent C. H. P. had referred to the <i>Critici Sacri</i>, he would
+have found his questions answered. With regard to the quotation from
+Acts xvii. 21., I beg to inform him that Drusius makes the same
+reference, but generally only, as Pricæus; while Grotius gives the
+passages with particular references, in the same manner as Lagnerius. As
+to the passage from St. Matthew xiii. 14., he would have found, had he
+consulted the <i>Critici Sacri</i>, that Grotius quotes the same passage from
+Demosthenes as Pricæus; but, as far as I can see, they are the only
+commentators in that work who observed the parallel passages. However,
+the fact of its being "employed as an established proverb by Demosthenes
+having been generally overlooked," as C. H. P. supposes, is not quite
+correct, as it is mentioned in the brief notes in Dr. Burton's <i>Greek
+Testament</i>, Oxon., 1831.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p>H. C. K.<br />
+ &mdash;&mdash; Rectory, Hereford, May 3. 1851.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Roman Catholic Church</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 168." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/23204/23204-h/23204-h.htm#page168">Vol. iii., pp. 168.</a>
+<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 409." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/28311/28311-h/28311-h.htm#page409">409.</a>.).&mdash;E. H. A. will find
+the information which he requires in the <i>Notizie per l'anno</i> 1851. It
+is a very small annual published at Rome <i>by authority</i>. Its price
+cannot exceed 4<i>s.</i> or 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p>F.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Yankee, Derivation of</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 260." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/23402/23402-h/23402-h.htm#page260">Vol. iii., p. 260.</a>).&mdash;In
+ Webster's <i>American
+Dictionary</i>, and in the <i>Imperial Dictionary, English, Technological,
+and Scientific</i>, J. M. will see the etymology of Yankee, which M.
+Philarète Charles supposes not to be given in any work American or
+English.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p>N<span class="smcap lowercase">ORTHMAN</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>English French</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 346." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26899/26899-h/26899-h.htm#page346">Vol. iii., p. 346.</a>).&mdash;I take
+ the liberty to inform C.
+W. B., for the justification of my countrymen, as well as of his own,
+that the <i>Guide to Amsterdam</i> was probably written by a British subject
+born between the tropics, and will point out, not by way of reprisals,
+but as a curiosity of the same sort, an example of French-English to be
+found in a book just published by Whittaker and Co., entitled <i>What's
+What in 1851</i>? Let any one who understands French try to read the
+article, p. 69., headed "Qu'êst que, qu'êst que la veritable luxure en
+se promenant," and if he can guess at the meaning of the writer, no
+foreign-English I ever met with will ever give him trouble.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p>G. L. K<span class="smcap lowercase">EPPER</span>.<br />
+ Amsterdam, May 10. 1851.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Deans, when styled Very Reverend</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 352." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26899/26899-h/26899-h.htm#page352">Vol. iii., p. 352.</a>).&mdash;I cannot
+answer this question, but I can supply a trace, if not a clue. I find in
+a long series of old almanacks that the list of deans is invariably
+given as <i>the Reverend</i> the dean down to 1803 inclusive. I unluckily
+have not those for the three next years, but in that for 1807 I find
+"<i>the very Reverend</i> the dean."</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> C.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><span class="pagenum" id="page438">[438]</span> <i>Duchess of Buckingham</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 281." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26896/26896-h/26896-h.htm#page281">Vol. iii., p. 281.</a>).&mdash;There is one
+circumstance omitted by P. C. S. S., in his remarks upon the Duchess of
+Buckingham, which explains why <i>a Phipps</i>, on being called to the
+peerage, chose the titles of Mulgrave and Normanby.</p>
+
+<p>By her second husband&mdash;the Duke of Buckingham and Normanby&mdash;she had one
+son, who succeeded to the title and estates; but, dying unmarried during
+his mother's lifetime, <i>bequeathed to her all the Mulgrave and Normanby
+property</i>. Her daughter (by her first marriage with James Annesley,
+third Earl of Anglesey) was then the wife of Mr. W. Phipps, son of Sir
+Constantine Phipps, Lord Chancellor of Ireland: to their issue,
+Constantine Phipps, first Lord Mulgrave, the Duchess <i>left by will these
+estates</i>; thus founding her grandson's fortune, although she did not
+live to see him created the first Baron Mulgrave.</p>
+
+<p>The Sheffield Buckingham family, although extinct in the male line, is
+represented in the female branch by the Sheffield Dicksons; Mrs.
+Dickson, the widow of Major Dickson, of the Life-Guards, being in direct
+descent from the Lady Catherine Darnley's husband, by another wife.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p> A. B.<br />
+ Redland, April 13.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Swearing by the Peacock</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 70." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/15641/15641-h/15641-h.htm#page70">Vol. iii., p. 70.</a>).&mdash;Swearing
+ in the presence
+of a peacock, referred to by T. J., from Dr. Lingard's <i>History of
+England</i>, time of Edward I., is, with the ceremony observed at the Feast
+of the Peacock, in the thirteenth century, related at full by Mr. Knight
+in his <i>Old England</i>, pp. 311. and 312.; and the representation of the
+Feast from the Bran of Robert Braunche, in the choir of St. Margaret's
+Church at Lynn (a mayor of Lynn), who died October 15, 1364, is given
+fig. 1088.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"> <p>B<span class="smcap lowercase">LOWEN</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="minor"><i>Howe Family</i>
+ (<a title="Go to Vol. iii., p. 353." href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26899/26899-h/26899-h.htm#page353">Vol. iii., p. 353.</a>).&mdash;Your
+ correspondent who asks what
+was the connexion of the Howes with the royal family, will find in
+Walpole's <i>Reminiscences</i> (ch. ii.) that Charlotte Viscountess Howe, the
+mother of Captain Howe, afterwards the celebrated admiral, and of
+General Sir William Howe, was the daughter of George I. by Madame
+Kelmansegge, Countess of Platen, created in England Countess of
+Darlington.</p>
+
+ <div class="boxsig"><p> C.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2><span class="bl"><a id="Miscellaneous1"></a>Miscellaneous.</span></h2>
+
+
+<h3><span>NOTES ON BOOKS, SALES, CATALOGUES, ETC.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="minor1">Dr. Gregory, Professor of Chemistry at the University of Edinburgh, and
+the translator of Reichenbach's <i>Researches on Magnetism</i>, has just
+published a volume destined, we believe, to excite considerable
+attention, both from the nature of its subject and the position of the
+writer. It is entitled <i>Letters to a Candid Inquirer on Animal
+Magnetism</i>, and in the first Part, after describing the phenomena, and
+their application to medical purposes, and to the explanation of
+much that is obscure in what is called Magic or Witchcraft, "a
+great part of which appears to have rested on a knowledge of these
+phenomena possessed by a few in an ignorant age," Dr Gregory suggests,
+not as a fully developed theory, but simply as a conceivable idea, an
+explanation of the <i>modus operandi</i> in magnetic phenomena, especially in
+clairvoyance. The basis of this explanation is the existence of that
+universally diffused power or influence, the existence of which, in Dr.
+Gregory's opinion, Reichenbach has demonstrated. The second Part
+consists of a large and startling collection of mostly unpublished
+cases; and Dr. Gregory expresses his conviction that if the evidence is
+fairly studied, it will be impossible to believe that the alleged facts
+are the result of imposture or of delusion; or to resist the conviction,
+which investigation will confirm, that the essential facts, however
+apparently marvellous, are yet true, and have been faithfully reported.
+These cases are indeed most extraordinary, and would, at first sight,
+seem more fitted to fill our Folk Lore columns than to become the
+subject of scientific enquiry; and most readers, we believe, will rise
+from their perusal with an inclination to admit that there are more
+things true than are dreamt of in their philosophy&mdash;some with an anxious
+doubt whether these "arts" are not as "forbidden" as they are "curious."</p>
+
+<p class="minor1">The Society of Arts have opened a reading-room for the gratuitous use of
+foreign visitors to London during the Great Exhibition. Our readers will
+be doing a kindness to their friends from the Continent by making them
+acquainted with this act of liberality and good feeling on the part of
+the Society of Arts.</p>
+
+<p class="minor1">Messrs. Puttick and Simpson (191. Piccadilly) will sell on Wednesday and
+Thursday next a curious and valuable Library, rich more especially in
+the department of voyages and travels, and including a collection of
+very rare works relating to America.</p>
+
+<p class="minor1">C<span class="smcap lowercase">ATALOGUES</span> R<span class="smcap lowercase">ECEIVED</span>.&mdash;B. Quaritch's (16. Castle Street, Leicester
+Square) Cheap Book Circular No. 29. of Books in all Languages; C.
+Hamilton's (22. Anderson's Buildings, City Road) Interesting Catalogue
+No. 43. of Cheap Tracts, Law and Miscellaneous Manuscripts, &amp;c.; J.
+Miller's (43. Chandos Street) Catalogue No. 23. of Books Old and New.</p>
+
+
+
+<h3><span class="larger">BOOKS AND <a id="ODD1"></a>ODD VOLUMES</span>
+<span>WANTED TO PURCHASE.</span></h3>
+
+ <p class="ind">D<span class="smcap lowercase">IANA</span> (A<span class="smcap lowercase">NTONINUS</span>) C<span class="smcap lowercase">OMPENDIUM</span> R<span class="smcap lowercase">ESOLUTIONEM</span> M<span class="smcap lowercase">ORALIUM</span>. Antwerp.-Colon.
+ 1634-57.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind">P<span class="smcap lowercase">ASSIONAEL EFTE DAT</span> L<span class="smcap lowercase">EVENT DER</span> H<span class="smcap lowercase">EILIGEN</span>. Folio. Basil, 1522.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind">C<span class="smcap lowercase">ARTARI</span>&mdash;L<span class="smcap lowercase">A</span> R<span class="smcap lowercase">OSA</span> D'O<span class="smcap lowercase">RO</span> P<span class="smcap lowercase">ONTIFICIA</span>. 4to. Rome, 1681.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind">B<span class="smcap lowercase">ROEMEL</span>, M. C. H., F<span class="smcap lowercase">EST</span>-T<span class="smcap lowercase">ANZEN DER</span> E<span class="smcap lowercase">RSTEN</span> C<span class="smcap lowercase">HRISTEN</span>. Jena, 1705.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind"> T<span class="smcap lowercase">HE</span> C<span class="smcap lowercase">OMPLAYNT</span> OF S<span class="smcap lowercase">COTLAND</span>, edited by Leyden. 8vo. Edin. 1801.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind">T<span class="smcap lowercase">HOMS</span>' L<span class="smcap lowercase">AYS AND</span> L<span class="smcap lowercase">EGENDS OF VARIOUS</span> N<span class="smcap lowercase">ATIONS</span>. Parts I. to VII. 12mo.
+ 1834.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind"> L'A<span class="smcap lowercase">BBÉ DE</span> S<span class="smcap lowercase">AINT</span> P<span class="smcap lowercase">IERRE</span>, P<span class="smcap lowercase">ROJET DE</span> P<span class="smcap lowercase">AIX</span> P<span class="smcap lowercase">ERPETUELLE</span>. 3 Vols. 12mo.
+ Utrecht, 1713.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind">C<span class="smcap lowercase">HEVALIER</span> R<span class="smcap lowercase">AMSAY</span>, E<span class="smcap lowercase">SSAI DE</span> P<span class="smcap lowercase">OLITIQUE</span>, où l'on traite de la
+ Nécessité de l'Origine, des Droits des Bornes et 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 class="ind">The same. Second Edition, under the title "Essai Philosophique sur
+ le Gouvernement Civil, selon les Principes de Fénélon," 12mo.
+ Londres, 1721.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind">P<span class="smcap lowercase">ULLEN'S</span> E<span class="smcap lowercase">TYMOLOGICAL</span> C<span class="smcap lowercase">OMPENDIUM</span>, 8vo.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind">C<span class="smcap lowercase">OOPER'S</span> (C. P.) A<span class="smcap lowercase">CCOUNT OF</span> P<span class="smcap lowercase">UBLIC</span> R<span class="smcap lowercase">ECORDS</span>, 8vo. 1822. Vol I.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind"> L<span class="smcap lowercase">INGARD'S</span> H<span class="smcap lowercase">ISTORY OF</span> E<span class="smcap lowercase">NGLAND</span>. Sm.<span class="pagenum" id="page439">[439]</span> 8vo. 1837. Vols. X. XI.
+ XII. XIII.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind">M<span class="smcap lowercase">ILLER'S</span> (J<span class="smcap lowercase">OHN, OF</span> W<span class="smcap lowercase">ORCESTER</span> C<span class="smcap lowercase">OLL</span>.) S<span class="smcap lowercase">ERMONS</span>. Oxford, 1831 (or about
+ that year).</p>
+
+ <p class="ind">W<span class="smcap lowercase">HARTON'S</span> A<span class="smcap lowercase">NGLIA</span> S<span class="smcap lowercase">ACRA</span>. Vol. II.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind">P<span class="smcap lowercase">HEBUS</span> (Gaston, Conte de Foix), Livre du deduyt de la Chasse.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind"> T<span class="smcap lowercase">URNER'S</span> S<span class="smcap lowercase">ACRED</span> H<span class="smcap lowercase">ISTORY</span>. 3 vols. demy 8vo.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind"> K<span class="smcap lowercase">NIGHT'S</span> P<span class="smcap lowercase">ICTORIAL</span> H<span class="smcap lowercase">ISTORY OF</span> E<span class="smcap lowercase">NGLAND</span>. Vol. IV. Commencing from
+ Abdication of James II.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind">L<span class="smcap lowercase">ORD</span> D<span class="smcap lowercase">OVER'S</span> L<span class="smcap lowercase">IFE OF</span> F<span class="smcap lowercase">REDERICK THE</span> G<span class="smcap lowercase">REAT</span>. 8vo. 1832. Vol. II.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind"> L<span class="smcap lowercase">ADIES'</span> D<span class="smcap lowercase">IARY FOR</span> 1825 <span class="smcap lowercase">AND</span> 1826.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind">C<span class="smcap lowercase">HRISTIAN'S</span> C<span class="smcap lowercase">OUNSELS, &amp;C., WITH THE</span> S<span class="smcap lowercase">EPARATISTS</span>' S<span class="smcap lowercase">CHISM</span>, by Richard
+ Bernard, of Worksop or Batcombe, 1608.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind"> Any early Copies of Tyndale the Reformer's W<span class="smcap lowercase">ORKS</span>.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind">L<span class="smcap lowercase">IFE OF</span> D<span class="smcap lowercase">R</span>. R<span class="smcap lowercase">ICHARD</span> F<span class="smcap lowercase">IELD</span>, 2 Vols. 8vo. London. 1716-17.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind">F<span class="smcap lowercase">AIRFAX'S</span> T<span class="smcap lowercase">ASSO</span>, Singer's Edit. Large paper, uncut.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind">C<span class="smcap lowercase">RESPET</span>, P<span class="smcap lowercase">ERE</span>. Deux Livres de la Haine de Satan et des Malins
+ Esprits contre l'Homme. 8vo. Paris, 1590.</p>
+
+ <p class="ind">J<span class="smcap lowercase">ACQUIER</span>, N. F<span class="smcap lowercase">LAGELLUM</span> D<span class="smcap lowercase">ÆMONUM V.</span> H<span class="smcap lowercase">ÆRETICORUM</span> <span class="smcap lowercase">FASCINARIORUM, &amp;c</span>.
+ 8vo. Francfurt, 1581.</p>
+
+<p class="ind"><span class="topnum">*</span><span class="botnum">*</span><span class="topnum">*</span> Letters, stating particulars and lowest price, <i>carriage
+free</i>, to be sent to M<span class="smcap lowercase">R.</span> B<span class="smcap lowercase">ELL</span>, Publisher of "NOTES AND QUERIES," 186.&nbsp;Fleet Street.</p>
+
+
+
+<h3><span class="bl"> <a id="Notices1"></a>Notices To Correspondents.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="minor1"><i>Although we have again enlarged our paper to 24 pages, we are compelled
+to request the indulgence of our correspondents for omitting many highly
+interesting communications.</i></p>
+
+<p class="minor1">P. J. F. G. <i>The communication referred to does not appear to have
+reached us.</i></p>
+
+<p class="minor1">T. T. W. <i>Received with thanks. Will be used as soon as possible.</i></p>
+
+<p class="minor1">T. E. H. <i>who suggests that by way of hastening the period when we shall
+be justified in permanently enlarging our Paper to 24 pages, we should
+forward to those correspondents who will circulate them copies of our</i>
+Prospectus, <i>for them to enclose to such of their friends as they think
+likely from their love of literature to become Subscribers to</i>
+"N<span class="smcap lowercase">OTES AND</span> Q<span class="smcap lowercase">UERIES</span>", <i>is thanked for his valuable suggestion, which we shall be
+most ready to adopt. If therefore</i>, T. E. H., <i>or any other friend able
+and willing so to promote our circulation, will say how Prospectuses may
+be addressed to them, they shall be sent by return of Post.</i></p>
+
+<p class="minor1">M<span class="smcap lowercase">ERCURII</span> <i>will find his Query respecting Matthew's</i> Mediterranean
+Passage <i>in our 74th Number</i>, p. 210. <i>This correspondent is assured
+that our paper is</i> regularly <i>published at noon on Friday,&mdash;and that the
+London agent of his bookseller is deceiving him if he reports it as</i>
+"not out." <i>If his bookseller will try another agent for a week or two,
+he will find no difficulty in getting</i> "N<span class="smcap lowercase">OTES AND</span> Q<span class="smcap lowercase">UERIES</span>" <i>in time for
+the Yarmouth readers on Saturday.</i></p>
+
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+Nest&mdash;Prenzie&mdash;Legend in Frettenham Church&mdash;White Rose&mdash;Image of both
+Churches&mdash;Vineyards&mdash;Eisell&mdash;Statistics of Roman Catholic
+Church&mdash;Robertson of Muirtown&mdash;Omen at Marriage&mdash;Old London Bellman&mdash;On
+Passage in "Measure for Measure"&mdash;Sewell&mdash;Penn Family&mdash;Court Dress&mdash;Noli
+me tangere&mdash;School of the Heart&mdash;Lay of Last Minstrel&mdash;Cachcope
+Bell&mdash;Baron Munchausen&mdash;To Three Queries by Nemo, &amp;c., by C. P. P. (who
+is thanked for corrections)&mdash;The Tradescants&mdash;Meaning of
+Mosaic&mdash;Portugal&mdash;Genealogy of European Sovereigns.</i></p>
+
+<p class="minor1">V<span class="smcap lowercase">OLS</span>. I. <i>and</i> II., <i>each with very copious Index, may still be had,
+price</i> 9<i>s.</i>&nbsp;6<i>d. each.</i></p>
+
+<p class="minor1">"N<span class="smcap lowercase">OTES AND</span> Q<span class="smcap lowercase">UERIES</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>
+"N<span class="smcap lowercase">OTES AND</span> Q<span class="smcap lowercase">UERIES</span>" <i>in their Saturday parcels</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="minor1"><i>All communications for the Editor of</i> "N<span class="smcap lowercase">OTES AND</span> Q<span class="smcap lowercase">UERIES</span>" <i>should be
+addressed to the care of</i> M<span class="smcap lowercase">R</span>. B<span class="smcap lowercase">ELL</span>, No.&nbsp;186.&nbsp;Fleet Street.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<div class="boxad">
+<p class="center"><a id="ACROSS1"></a>ACROSS THE ATLANTIC.</p>
+<p class="center">Now ready, small 8vo., cloth, price 5<i>s.</i></p>
+<p class="cap">ACROSS THE ATLANTIC. By the Author of</p>
+<p class="center"> "Sketches of Cantabs."</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "A smart volume, full of clever observations about America and the
+ Americans, and the contrasts of trans-Atlantic and cis-Atlantic
+ life."&mdash;<i>John Bull.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "It is sensible as well as witty, accurate as well as facetious,
+ and deserves to be popular."&mdash;<i>Morning Post.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center">London: E<span class="smcap lowercase">ARLE</span>, 67. Castle Street, Oxford Street.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="boxad">
+<p class="cap">THE GENERAL LAND DRAINAGE AND IMPROVEMENT COMPANY.</p>
+<p class="center">Incorporated by Act of Parliament, 12 and 13 Vict. c. 91.<br />
+DIRECTORS.</p>
+
+<p class="ind">H<span class="smcap lowercase">ENRY</span> K<span class="smcap lowercase">ER</span> S<span class="smcap lowercase">EVMER</span>, Esq., M.P., Hanford, Dorset, Chairman.</p>
+<p class="ind">J<span class="smcap lowercase">OHN</span> V<span class="smcap lowercase">ILLIERS</span> S<span class="smcap lowercase">HELLEY</span>, Esq., Maresfield Park, Sussex, Deputy-Chairman.</p>
+<p class="ind">John Chevallier Cobbold, Esq., M.P., Ipswich. </p>
+<p class="ind">William Cubitt, Esq., Great George Street, Westminster. </p>
+<p class="ind">Henry Currie, Esq., M.P., West Horsley, Surrey. </p>
+<p class="ind">Thomas Edward Dicey, Esq., Claybrook Hall, Lutterworth. </p>
+<p class="ind">William Fisher Hobbs, Esq., Boxted Lodge, Colchester.</p>
+<p class="ind">Edward John Hutchins, Esq., M.P., Eaton Square, London. </p>
+<p class="ind">Samuel Morton Peto, Esq., M.P., Great George Street. </p>
+<p class="ind">Colonel George Alexander Reid, M.P., Bulstrode Park, Bucks. </p>
+<p class="ind">William Tite, Esq., F.R.S., Lowndes Square, London. </p>
+<p class="ind">William Wilshere, Esq., The Frythe, Welwyn, Herts.</p>
+
+<p>This Company is empowered to execute&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>1. All works of Drainage (including Outfalls through adjoining Estates),
+Irrigation, Reclaiming, Enclosing, and otherwise improving Land.</p>
+
+<p>2. To erect Farm Homesteads, and other Buildings necessary for the
+cultivation of Land.</p>
+
+<p>3. To execute Improvements, under Contract, with Commissioners of
+Sewers, Local Boards of Health, Corporations, Trustees, and other Public
+Bodies.</p>
+
+<p>4. To purchase Lands capable of Improvement, and fettered by
+Restrictions of Entail; and having executed the necessary Works, to
+resell them with a Title communicated by the Company's Act.</p>
+
+<p>Owners of Entailed Estates, Trustees, Mortgagees, Corporations,
+Incumbents, Life Tenants, and other Persons having only limited
+interests, may obtain the use of the Company's Powers to carry out every
+kind of permanent Improvement, either by the Application of their own or
+the Company's Funds, secured by a yearly Charge on the Property
+Improved.</p>
+
+<p>Proposals for the Execution of Works to be addressed to</p>
+
+ <p class="center">W<span class="smcap lowercase">ILLIAM</span> C<span class="smcap lowercase">LIFFORD</span>, Secretary.<br />
+ Offices, 52. Parliament Street, Westminster.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="boxad">
+<p class="center">Price 2<i>s.</i>&nbsp;6<i>d.</i>; by Post 3<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="cap">ILLUSTRATIONS AND ENQUIRIES RELATING TO MESMERISM. Part I. By the R<span class="smcap lowercase">EV</span>.
+S. R. M<span class="smcap lowercase">AITLAND</span>, DD. F.R.S. F.S.A. Sometime Librarian to the late
+Archbishop of Canterbury, and Keeper of the MSS. at Lambeth.</p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot"> "One of the most valuable and interesting pamphlets we ever
+ read."&mdash;<i>Morning Herald.</i></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"This publication, which promises to be the commencement of a
+ larger work, will well repay serious perusal."&mdash;<i>Ir. Eccl. Journ.</i></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"A small pamphlet in which he throws a startling light on the
+ practices of modern Mesmerism."&mdash;<i>Nottingham Journal.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot">"Dr. Maitland, we consider, has here brought Mesmerism to the
+ 'touchstone of truth,' to the test of the standard of right or
+ wrong. We thank him for this first instalment of his inquiry, and
+ hope that he will not long delay the remaining portions."&mdash;<i>London
+ Medical Gazette.</i></p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"The Enquiries are extremely curious, we should indeed say
+ important. That relating to the Witch of Endor is one of the most
+ successful we ever read. We cannot enter into particulars in this
+ brief notice; but we would strongly recommend the pamphlet even to
+ those who care nothing about Mesmerism, or <i>angry</i> (for it has come
+ to this at last) with the subject."&mdash;<i>Dublin Evening Post.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot">"We recommend its general perusal as being really an endeavour, by
+ one whose position gives him the best facilities, to ascertain the
+ genuine character of Mesmerism, which is so much
+ disputed."&mdash;<i>Woolmer's Exeter Gazette.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="blockquot">"Dr. Maitland has bestowed a vast deal of attention on the subject
+ for many years past, and the present pamphlet is in part the result
+ of his thoughts and inquiries. There is a good deal in it which we
+ should have been glad to quote ... but we content ourselves with
+ referring our readers to the pamphlet itself."&mdash;<i>Brit. Mag.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="center"> W. S<span class="smcap lowercase">TEPHENSON</span>, 12 and 13. Parliament Street.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="boxad">
+<p class="cap">CHURCHES OF THE MIDDLE AGES.By H<span class="smcap lowercase">ENRY</span> B<span class="smcap lowercase">OWMAN</span> and J. S. C<span class="smcap lowercase">ROWTHER</span>,
+Architects, Manchester. On the 1st of June, Part XIII., containing
+further Illustrations of Heckington Church; the beautiful Middle Pointed
+Church of Nantwich, Cheshire; and the noble Early Pointed Church of
+Frampton, Lincolnshire. Price 9<i>s.</i>, plain; 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> tinted; 12<i>s.</i>
+proofs on large paper.</p>
+
+ <p class="center">G<span class="smcap lowercase">EORGE</span> B<span class="smcap lowercase">ELL</span>, 186. Fleet Street.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="boxad">
+<p class="cap">EXTRACTS made from MSS. and Printed Works in the British Museum and
+other Libraries, Authorities found, References verified, Works revised
+for publication, and Researches connected with all branches of Literary
+Inquiry, executed on very moderate terms by W. H. B<span class="smcap lowercase">ERESFORD</span>.&mdash;Address,
+care of Mr. Goodinge, Stationer, &amp;c., 21. Aldersgate<span class="pagenum" id="page440">[440]</span> Street,
+London.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="boxad">
+<p class="cap">THE GENTLEMAN'S MAGAZINE for JUNE
+ contains, among others, the following
+Articles: Hartley Coleridge; James II. and the Devonshire Justices; the
+Legend of St. Peter's Chair (with an Engraving); Municipal Franchises of
+the Middle Ages; the Story of Nell Gwyn, by Peter Cunningham, Chapter
+VI.; Pilgrimage to the Holy Land; Curiosities of the Old French Canons;
+Dictionaries of Classic Archæology; Christian Iconography; the Heavenly
+Host (with numerous Engravings). With Notes of the Month, Review of New
+Publications, Proceedings of Archæological Societies, Historical
+Chronicle, and O<span class="smcap lowercase">BITUARY</span>, including Memoirs of Lord Langdale, Mr.
+Serjeant Ludlow, Joseph Moore, Esq., Dr. Pye Smith, W. H. Maxwell, &amp;c.
+&amp;c. Price 2<i>s.</i>&nbsp;6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center"> N<span class="smcap lowercase">ICHOLS</span> and S<span class="smcap lowercase">ON</span>, 25. Parliament Street.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="boxad">
+<p class="center">This Day is published, with many Plates, 8vo., 10<i>s.</i>&nbsp;6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="cap">HORÆ ÆGYPTIACÆ; or, the C<span class="smcap lowercase">HRONOLOGY OF</span> A<span class="smcap lowercase">NCIENT</span> E<span class="smcap lowercase">GYPT</span>, discovered from
+Astronomical and Hieroglyphic Records upon its Monuments, including many
+Dates found in Coeval Inscriptions. By R<span class="smcap lowercase">EGINALD</span> S<span class="smcap lowercase">TUART</span> P<span class="smcap lowercase">OOLE</span>, Esq.</p>
+
+<p class="center">J<span class="smcap lowercase">OHN</span> M<span class="smcap lowercase">URRAY</span>, Albemarle Street.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="boxad">
+<p class="center">ARNOLD'S INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF HEBREW.</p>
+
+<p class="center">In 12mo, price&nbsp;7<i>s.</i>&nbsp;6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="cap">THE FIRST HEBREW BOOK; on the Plan of "Henry's First Latin Book." By the
+R<span class="smcap lowercase">EV</span>. T<span class="smcap lowercase">HOMAS</span> K<span class="smcap lowercase">ERCHEVER</span> A<span class="smcap lowercase">RNOLD</span>, M.A. Rector of Lyndon, and late Fellow of
+Trinity College, Cambridge.</p>
+
+<p class="center">R<span class="smcap lowercase">IVINGTONS</span>, St. Paul's Church Yard, and Waterloo Place;</p>
+
+<p class="center">Of whom may be had, by the same Author,</p>
+
+<p>1. HENRY'S FIRST LATIN BOOK. Ninth Edition. 3<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p>2. THE FIRST GREEK BOOK. Second Edition. 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p>3. THE FIRST GERMAN BOOK. Second Edition. 5<i>s.</i>&nbsp;6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p>4. THE FIRST FRENCH BOOK. Second Edition. 5<i>s.</i>&nbsp;6<i>d.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="boxad">
+<p class="center"><small>Bohn's Standard Library for June.</small></p>
+
+<p class="cap">NEANDER'S CHURCH HISTORY. Vol. 3. Price&nbsp;3<i>s.</i>&nbsp;6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center">H<span class="smcap lowercase">ENRY</span> G. B<span class="smcap lowercase">OHN</span>, York Street, Covent Garden.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="boxad">
+<p class="center"><small>Bohn's Classical Library for June.</small></p>
+
+<p class="cap">OVID'S FASTI, TRISTIA, EPISTLES, &amp;c. Literally translated. Cloth. Price&nbsp;5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center">H<span class="smcap lowercase">ENRY</span> G. B<span class="smcap lowercase">OHN</span>, York Street, Covent Garden.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="boxad">
+<p class="center"><small>Bohn's Scientific Library for June.</small></p>
+
+<p class="cap">RICHARDSON'S GEOLOGY, including MINERALOGY and PALÆONTOLOGY, revised and
+enlarged by D<span class="smcap lowercase">R</span>. T<span class="smcap lowercase">HOMAS</span> W<span class="smcap lowercase">RIGHT</span>. Post 8vo. with upwards of 400
+Illustrations on Wood. Price&nbsp;5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center">H<span class="smcap lowercase">ENRY</span> G. B<span class="smcap lowercase">OHN</span>, York Street, Covent Garden.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="boxad">
+<p class="center"><small>Bohn's Cheap Series for June.</small></p>
+<p class="cap">THE HOUSE OF SEVEN GABLES. A Romance, by N<span class="smcap lowercase">ATHANIEL</span> H<span class="smcap lowercase">AWTHORNE</span>. Post 8vo.
+Price&nbsp;1<i>s.</i>&nbsp;6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center">H<span class="smcap lowercase">ENRY</span> G. B<span class="smcap lowercase">OHN</span>, York Street, Covent Garden.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="boxad">
+<p class="center"><small>Bohn's Cheap Series for May.</small></p>
+<p class="cap">WILLIS'S HURRY-GRAPHS, or SKETCHES of SCENERY, CELEBRITIES, and SOCIETY,
+taken from Life. By N. P<span class="smcap lowercase">ARKER</span> W<span class="smcap lowercase">ILLIS</span>. Price&nbsp;1<i>s.</i>&nbsp;6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center">H<span class="smcap lowercase">ENRY</span> G. B<span class="smcap lowercase">OHN</span>, York Street, Covent Garden.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="boxad">
+<p class="center">
+<img src="images/image01.jpg" width="450" height="361" alt="Tomb of Geoffrey Chaucer" />
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">COMMITTEE FOR THE REPAIR OF THE </p>
+<p class="center2"><b>TOMB OF GEOFFREY CHAUCER.</b></p>
+
+<p>JOHN BRUCE, Esq., Treas. S.A.</p>
+<p>J. PAYNE COLLIER, Esq., V.P.S.A.</p>
+<p>PETER CUNNINGHAM, Esq., F.S.A.</p>
+<p>WILLIAM RICHARD DRAKE, Esq., F.S.A.</p>
+<p> THOMAS W. KING, Esq., F.S.A.</p>
+<p>SIR FREDERICK MADDEN, K.H.</p>
+<p> JOHN GOUGH NICHOLS, Esq., F.S.A.</p>
+<p> HENRY SHAW, Esq., F.S.A.</p>
+<p>SAMUEL SHEPHERD, Esq., F.S.A.</p>
+<p> WILLIAM J. THOMS, Esq., F.S.A.</p>
+
+<p>The Tomb of Geoffrey Chaucer in Westminster Abbey is fast mouldering
+into irretrievable decay. A sum of One Hundred Pounds will effect a
+perfect repair. The Committee have not thought it right to fix any limit
+to the contribution; they themselves have opened the list with a
+subscription 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>Subscriptions have been received from the Earls of Carlisle, Ellesmere,
+and Shaftesbury, Viscounts Strangford and Mahon, Pres. Soc. Antiq., the
+Lords Braybrooke and Londesborough, and many other noblemen and
+gentlemen.</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
+at the Charing Cross Office, to William Richard Drake, Esq., the
+Treasurer, 46. Parliament Street, or Wllliam J. Thoms, Esq., Hon. Sec.,
+25. Holywell Street, Millbank.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="boxad">
+<p class="center">WALCOTT'S HISTORY OF WESTMINSTER.</p>
+
+<p class="center">In 8vo., price 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, the Second Edition (with Appendix and
+Notes) of</p>
+<p class="cap">MEMORIALS OF WESTMINSTER: the City, Royal Palaces, Houses of
+Parliament, Whitehall, St. Peter's College, Parish Churches, Modern
+Buildings and Ancient Institutions. By R<span class="smcap lowercase">EV</span>. M<span class="smcap lowercase">ACKENZIE</span> E. C. W<span class="smcap lowercase">ALCOTT</span>,
+M.A., of Exeter College, Oxford; Curate of St. James's, Westminster.</p>
+
+<p class="center">R<span class="smcap lowercase">IVINGTONS</span>, St. Paul's Church Yard, and Waterloo Place;</p>
+<p class="center">Of whom may be had, by the same Author, just published,</p>
+
+<p>THE ENGLISH ORDINAL: its History, Validity, and Catholicity. 10<i>s.</i>&nbsp;6<i>d.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="boxad">
+<p class="center">Just published, in 1&nbsp;vol. fcp. 8vo. 5<i>s.</i> cloth,</p>
+<p class="cap">A TREATISE OF EQUIVOCATION. Wherein is largely discussed the question
+whether a Catholicke or any other person before a magistrate, being
+demanded upon his Oath whether a Prieste were in such a place, may
+(notwithstanding his perfect knowledge to the contrary) without Perjury,
+and securely in conscience, answer No; with this secret meaning reserved
+in his mynde, That he was not there so that any man is bounde to detect
+it. Edited from the Original Manuscript in the Bodleian Library, by
+D<span class="smcap lowercase">AVID</span> J<span class="smcap lowercase">ARDINE</span>, of the Middle Temple, Esq., Barrister at Law.</p>
+
+ <p class="center">London: L<span class="smcap lowercase">ONGMAN</span>, B<span class="smcap lowercase">ROWN</span>, G<span class="smcap lowercase">REEN</span>, and L<span class="smcap lowercase">ONGMANS</span>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="ind">Printed by T<span class="smcap lowercase">HOMAS</span> C<span class="smcap lowercase">LARK</span> S<span class="smcap lowercase">HAW</span>, of No. 8. New Fleet Square, at No.
+5. New Street Square, in the Parish of St. Bride in the City of London;
+and published by G<span class="smcap lowercase">EORGE</span> B<span class="smcap lowercase">ELL</span>, of No. 186. Fleet Street, in the Parish of
+St. Dunstan in the West, in the City of London, Publisher, at No. 186
+Fleet Street aforesaid.&mdash;Saturday, May 31. 1851.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<div class="tnbox2">
+<p>Transcriber's Note: Original spelling varieties have not been standardized.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Queries, Vol. III, Number
+83, May 31, 1851, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES AND QUERIES, MAY 31, 1851 ***
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+</pre>
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+</body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Queries, Vol. III, Number 83, May
+31, 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, Vol. III, Number 83, May 31, 1851
+ A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists,
+ Antiquaries, Geneologists, etc
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: George Bell
+
+Release Date: July 29, 2011 [EBook #36835]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES AND QUERIES, MAY 31, 1851 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charlene Taylor, Jonathan Ingram and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NOTES AND QUERIES:
+
+A MEDIUM OF INTER-COMMUNICATION
+
+FOR
+
+LITERARY MEN, ARTISTS, ANTIQUARIES, GENEALOGISTS, ETC.
+
+
+"When found, make a note of."--CAPTAIN CUTTLE.
+
+
+VOL. III.--NO. 83--SATURDAY, MAI 31. 1851.
+
+Price Threepence. Stamped Edition 4_d._
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+
+ Page
+
+ On the Proposed Record of Existing Monuments 417
+
+ NOTES:--
+
+ Illustrations of Chaucer, No. VII.: The star Min Al Auwa 419
+
+ Traditions from remote Periods through few Links, by Rev.
+ Thos. Corser 421
+
+ Dr. Young's Narcissa 422
+
+ Minor Notes:--Curious Epitaph--The Curse of Scotland--The
+ Female Captive--Pictorial Antiquities 422
+
+ QUERIES:--
+
+ English Poems by Constantine Huyghens, by S. W. Singer 423
+
+ The Rev. Mr. Gay, by Edward Tagart 424
+
+ Minor Queries:--Carved Ceiling in Dorsetshire--Publicans'
+ Signs--To a T.--Skeletons at Egyptian Banquet--Gloves--Knapp
+ Family in Norfolk and Suffolk--To learn by "Heart"--Knights--
+ Supposed Inscription in St. Peter's at Rome--Rag Sunday in
+ Sussex--Northege Family--A Kemble Pipe of Tobacco--Durham
+ Sword that killed the Dragon 424
+
+ MINOR QUERIES ANSWERED:--"At Sixes and Sevens"--Swobbers--
+ Handel's Occasional Oratorio--Archbishop Waldeby's
+ Epitaph--Verstegan--Royal Library 425
+
+ REPLIES:--
+
+ Hugh Holland and his Works, by Bolton Corney 427
+
+ The Milesians 428
+
+ The Tanthony 428
+
+ Pilgrims' Road to Canterbury 429
+
+ Replies to Minor Queries:--Shakespeare's Use of
+ "Captious"--Inscription of a Clock--Authors of the Anti-Jacobin
+ Poetry--"Felix, quem faciunt," &c.--Church Bells--Chiming,
+ Tolling, and Pealing--Extraordinary North Briton--Fitzpatrick's
+ Lines of Fox--Ejusdem Farinae--The Sempecta--"Nulli fraus
+ tuta latebris"--Voltaire, where situated--By the Bye--Bigod de
+ Loges--Knebsend--Mrs. Catherine Barton--Peter Sterry--Wife of
+ James Torre--Ramasse--Four Want Way--Dr. Owen's Works--Bactrian
+ Coins--Baldrocks--Tu Autem--Commoner marrying a Peeress--Ancient
+ Wood Engraving--Vegetating Insects--Prayer at the Healing--M.
+ or N., &c. 430
+
+ MISCELLANEOUS:--
+
+ Notes on Books, Sales, Catalogues, &c. 438
+
+ Books and Odd Volumes wanted 438
+
+ Notices to Correspondents 439
+
+ Advertisements 439
+
+
+
+
+ON THE PROPOSED RECORD OF EXISTING MONUMENTS.
+
+
+ Although disappointed in the hope we had entertained of being, by this
+ time, in a position to announce that some decided steps had been taken
+ to carry out, in a practical manner, the great scheme of preserving a
+ record of our existing Monuments, we are gratified at being enabled to
+ bring under the notice of our readers several communications which
+ show the still increasing interest which is felt upon the subject.
+
+ The first, by Sir Thomas Phillipps, besides some valuable information
+ upon the matter immediately under consideration, contains several very
+ useful suggestions upon other, though kindred points.
+
+In approving of the design mentioned in your "NOTES" by MR. DUNKIN, it
+has surprised me that in no one of the communications which you have
+there printed is any allusion to the multitude of inscriptions already
+collected, and now preserved in the British Museum and other libraries.
+A list of what are already copied should _first_ be made, which would
+considerably abridge the labour of collecting. For instance, the whole
+of Gloucestershire has been preserved by Bigland, and nearly two-thirds
+of these have been printed. I should recommend his plan to be adopted,
+being _multum in parvo_, as to the headstones in the churchyards, and
+the clearest for reference by its alphabetical order of parishes. He
+copies them about 1780; so that now seventy years remain to be obtained.
+His collection would make two, or at most three, volumes folio, by which
+we can form an approximate idea as to the extent for the kingdom, which
+I estimate at one hundred volumes for the forty counties, because some
+of these are very small, and many monuments have been destroyed by the
+barbarous Gothlike conduct of church renovators and builders. (_A
+propos_ of which conduct, I believe they are liable to an _action at
+law_ from the next of kin: at all events, it is sacrilege.) In many
+county histories, _all_ the monuments inside the churches, up to nearly
+the date of the publication, have been printed, as in Nichols's
+_Leicestershire_. I have myself printed the greater part of those for
+Wiltshire; but some are incorrectly printed, not having been collated;
+for I merely printed a few as handbooks to accompany me in my personal
+correcting survey of each church at another time. I have also printed as
+far as letter "E" of Antony a Wood's and Hinton's _Oxfordshire
+Monuments_, of which, I believe, MR. DUNKIN has a MS. copy. Now, it
+would be useless to reprint those which have been printed; consequently
+I should imagine twenty-five or thirty volumes, on Bigland's plan, would
+comprise all the villages; and I should imagine five or ten volumes at
+most would comprise all the capital towns. Allow me here to suggest the
+absolute necessity of taking "Notes" of the residence, parentage, and
+kindred of _every one_ of the families of that vast tide of emigration
+now quitting our shores; and I call Lord Ashley's and Mr. Sidney
+Herbert's attention to it. These poor people will, many of them, become
+rich in half a century; will then probably die without a kindred soul in
+America to possess their wealth; and their next of kin must be sought
+for in the mother land, where, unless some _registered memorial_ of
+their departure and connexions is kept, all traces of their origin may
+be lost for ever. It was the neglect of an act like this which has
+involved the beginning of nations in such profound obscurity. It was the
+neglect of such a register as I here propose, that makes it so difficult
+now for the American to discover the link which actually connected him
+with England. There is a corporate body, long established in this
+country, whose sole occupation is to make such registers; but at present
+they confine themselves to those called gentlemen. Why not make them
+useful as registers of the poor, at a small remuneration for entering
+each family. These poor, or their descendants, will some day become
+gentlemen, and perhaps not ashamed of their ancestry, although they may
+derive it through poverty. How gratified they may feel to be able, by
+means of this proposed registry, clearly to trace themselves to Great
+Britain (once the mistress of half the world), when their now adopted
+country has risen up in her place, and the mother has become subject to
+the daughter.
+
+And then, too, how valuable will Americans and Canadians, Australians
+and New Zealanders, find the proposed _Monumentarium_ of MR. DUNKIN.
+
+ THOS. PHILLIPPS.
+ Middle Hill, April, 1851.
+
+ The next is from a frequent contributor to our pages, and we have
+ selected it for publication from among many which we have received
+ promising assistance in the carrying out of the great scheme, because
+ it shows very strikingly how many of the memorials, which it is the
+ especial object of that scheme to preserve, have disappeared within
+ the last few years.
+
+Your valuable remarks on this head have induced me to send you a few
+observations in the same direction. You have justly said that the means
+by which the object can be accomplished fall into the three distinct
+operations of Collection, Preservation, and Publication. The first will
+require the help of all antiquaries throughout the kingdom who will
+volunteer their services, and of the clergymen resident in country
+parishes. Where possible, it would be well to find a co-operator in
+every county town, who would undertake the collection of all ancient
+memorials in his own district, either by personal inspection, or by the
+aid of the clergy. For this county we have, fortunately, a record of
+all or most of the monuments existing in the time of James I., published
+in Burton's History. Besides the monuments, there are also mentioned the
+coats of arms preserved in the churches. In the useful and voluminous
+world of Nichols, the record is brought down nearly to the commencement
+of the present century. But in late years, many ancient memorials have
+been removed altogether, or displaced. A day or two ago, I found only
+one monument in a village church, where Burton says there were two in
+his time. The chancel of St. Martin's Church, Leicester, a few years
+ago, contained a large number, of which many have been placed elsewhere,
+in order to "improve" the appearance of this part of the edifice. I
+believe a list of the monuments is preserved somewhere. This kind of
+proceeding has been carried on very generally throughout the country
+since the desire for "church restoration" has prevailed, and has led to
+great alterations in the interiors of our old parish churches. I should
+be happy to lend a helping hand in the collections for Leicester and the
+neighbourhood.
+
+ JAYTEE.
+
+ From our next communication, it will be seen that the Scottish
+ Antiquaries, whose zeal and intelligence in the preservation and
+ illustration of objects of national interest, are beyond all praise,
+ are working in the same direction; and although we have not seen the
+ _Origines Parochiales_, we can readily believe in the great value of a
+ work of such a character when undertaken by the Bannatyne Club.
+
+It may interest some of your "Monumental" and "Ecclesiological"
+correspondents to be informed that in 1834 there was collected and
+published by D. Macvean, bookseller, Glasgow, a volume of _Epitaphs and
+Monumental Inscriptions in Scotland_. Also, that there has just been
+published by Lizars, Edinburgh, for the Bannatyne Club, the first volume
+of the _Origines Parochiales Scotiae_.
+
+The former of these books (_Epitaphs_, &c.) is perhaps of no great
+value, being badly selected and worse arranged; but the latter
+(_Origines_, &c.) seems to be exactly such a work as W. J. D. R. (Vol.
+iii., p. 314.) has in his mind's eye for England.
+
+ Y.
+
+ A correspondent, MERCURII, has also directed our attention to a small
+ volume, published in 1848, by one of the most valued contributors to
+ our own columns, MR. DAWSON TURNER, under the title of _Sepulchral
+ Reminiscences of a Market Town, as afforded by a List of the
+ Interments within the Walls of the Parish Church of St. Nicholas,
+ Great Yarmouth, collected chiefly from Monuments and Gravestones still
+ remaining, June, 1845_. This little volume may be regarded as a public
+ testimony on the part of MR. DAWSON TURNER to the value of the plan
+ under consideration, and there are few antiquaries whose opinions are
+ entitled to greater respect upon this or any other point to which he
+ has devoted his talents and attention. Can we doubt, then, the success
+ of a plan which has met with such general approbation, and is
+ undertaken with so praiseworthy an object,--an object which may well
+ be described in the words which Weever used when stating the motive
+ which led him to undertake the publication of his _Funeral Monuments_,
+ viz., "To check the unsufferable injury, offered as well to the living
+ as to the dead, by breaking down and almost utterly ruinating
+ monuments with their epitaphs, and by erasing, tearing away, and
+ pilfering brazen inscriptions, by which inhumane deformidable act, the
+ honorable memory of many virtuous and noble persons deceased is
+ extinguished, and the true understanding of divers families is so
+ darkened, that the course of their inheritance is thereby partly
+ interrupted."
+
+
+
+
+Notes.
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS OF CHAUCER, NO. VIII.
+
+_The Star Min Al Auwa._
+
+ "Adam Scrivener, if ever it thee befall Boece, or Troilus, for to
+ write newe, Under thy long locks thou mayst have the scull But, after
+ my making, thou write more trew; So oft a day I mote thy worke renew,
+ It to correct, and eke to rubbe and scrape, And all thorow thy
+ negligence and rape."
+
+ _Chaucer to his own Scrivener._
+
+If, during his own lifetime, and under his own eye, poor Chaucer was so
+sinned against as to provoke this humorous malediction upon the head of
+the delinquent, it cannot be a matter of surprise that, in the various
+hands his text has since passed through, many expressions should have
+been perverted, and certain passages wholly misunderstood. And when we
+find men, of excellent judgment in other respects, proposing, as
+Tyrwhitt did, to alter Chaucer's words to suit their own imperfect
+comprehension of his meaning, it is only reasonable to suspect that
+similar mistakes may have induced early transcribers to alter the text,
+wherever, to their wisdom, it may have seemed expedient.
+
+Now I know of no passage more likely to have been tampered with in this
+way, than those lines of the prologue to the _Persone's Tale_, alluded
+to at the close of my last communication. Because, supposing (which I
+shall afterwards endeavour to prove) that Chaucer really meant to write
+something to this effect: "Thereupon, as we were entering a town, the
+moon's rising, with Min al auwa in Libra, began to ascend (or to become
+visible),"--and supposing that his mode of expressing this had been,
+
+ "Therewith the mone's exaltacioun,
+ In libra men alawai gan ascende,
+ As we were entrying at a towne's end:"
+
+--in such a case, what can be more probable than that some ignorant
+transcriber, never perhaps dreaming of such a thing as the Arabic name
+of a star, would endeavour _to make sense_ of these, to him, obscure
+words, by converting them into English. The process of transition would
+be easy; "min" or "men" requires little violence to become "mene" (the
+modern "mean" with its many significations), and "al auwa" (or "alwai,"
+as Chaucer would probably write it) is equally identical with "alway."
+The misplacement of "Libra" might then follow as a seeming necessity;
+and thus the line would assume its present form, leaving the reader to
+understand it, either with Urry, as,
+
+ "I mene Libra, that is, I _refer to_ Libra;"
+
+or with Tyrwhitt:
+
+ "In mene Libra, that is, In _the middle of_ Libra."
+
+Now, to Urry's reading, it may be objected that it makes _the thing
+ascending_ to be Libra, and does not of necessity imply the moon's
+appearance above the horizon. But since the rising of the moon is a
+_visible_ phenomenon, while that of Libra is theoretical, it must have
+been _to the former_ Chaucer was alluding, as to something witnessed by
+the whole party as they
+
+ "Were entrying at a towne's end;"
+
+or otherwise this latter observation would have no meaning.
+
+The objection to Tyrwhitt's reading is of a more technical nature--the
+moon, if in _the middle_ of Libra, _could not_ be above the horizon, in
+the neighbourhood of Canterbury, at four o'clock P. M., in the month of
+April. Tyrwhitt, it is true, would probably smooth away the difficulty
+by charging it as another inconsistency against his author; but I--and I
+hope by this time such readers of "NOTES AND QUERIES" as are interested
+in the subject--have seen too many proofs of Chaucer's competency in
+matters of science, and of his commentator's incompetency, to feel
+disposed to concede to the latter such a convenient method of
+interpretation.
+
+But there is a third objection common to both readings--that they do not
+satisfactorily account for the word "alway;" for although Tyrwhitt
+endeavours to explain it by _continually_, "was _continually_
+ascending," such a phrase is by no means intelligible when applied to a
+single observation.
+
+For myself, I can say that this word "alway" was, from the first, the
+great difficulty with me--and the more I became convinced of the studied
+meaning with which Chaucer chose his other expressions, the less
+satisfied I was with this; and the more convinced I felt that the whole
+line had been corrupted.
+
+In advocating the restoration of the reading which I have already
+suggested as the original meaning of Chaucer, I shall begin by
+establishing the _probability_ of his having intended to mark the moon's
+place by associating her rising with that of a known fixed star--a
+method of noting phenomena frequently resorted to in ancient astronomy.
+For that purpose I shall point out another instance wherein Chaucer
+evidently intended an application of the same method for the purpose of
+indicating a particular position of the heavens; but first it must
+noted, that in alluding to the Zodiac, he always refers _to the signs_,
+never to the constellations--in fact, he does not appear to recognise
+the latter at all! Thus, in that palpable allusion to the precession of
+the equinoxes, in the Frankeleine's Tale--
+
+ "He knew ful wel how fer Alnath was shove
+ From the hed of thilke fixe Aries above:"
+
+--by _the hed of Aries_, Chaucer did not mean the os frontis of the Ram,
+whereon Alnath still shines conspicuously, but the equinoctial point,
+from which Alnath _was shove_ by the extent of a whole sign.
+
+This being premised, I return to the indication of a point in the
+ecliptic by the coincident rising of a star; and I contend that such was
+plainly Chaucer's intention in those lines of the Squire's Tale wherein
+King Cambuscan is described as rising from the feast:--
+
+ "Phebus hath left the angle meridional,
+ And yet ascending was the beste real,
+ The gentle Leon, _with his Aldryan_."
+
+Which means that _the sign_ Leo was then in the horizon--the precise
+degree being marked by the coincident rising of the star Aldryan.
+
+Speght's explanation of "Aldryan," in which he has been copied by Urry
+and Tyrwhitt, is--"a star in the neck of the Lion." What particular star
+he may have meant by this, does not appear; nor am I at present within
+reach of probable sources wherein his authority, if he had any, might be
+searched for and examined; but I have learned to feel such confidence in
+Chaucer's significance of description, that I have no hesitation in
+assuming, until authority for a contrary inference shall be produced,
+that by the star "Aldryan" he meant REGULUS, not the neck, but the
+heart, of the Lion--
+
+1st. Because it is the most remarkable star in the sign Leo.
+
+2nd. Because it was, in Chaucer's time, as it now is, nearly upon the
+line of the ecliptic.
+
+3rd. Because its situation in longitude, about two-thirds in the sign
+Leo, just tallies with Chaucer's expression "_yet_ ascending,"--that is,
+one-third of the sign was still below the horizon.
+
+Let us examine how this interpretation consists with the other
+circumstances of the description. The feste-day of this Cambuscan was
+"The last idus of March"--that is, the 15th of March--"after the
+yere"--that is, after the _equinoctial year_, which had ended three or
+four days previously. Hence the sun was in three degrees of
+Aries--confirmed in Canace's expedition on the following morning, when
+he was "in the Ram foure degrees yronne," and his corresponding right
+ascension was twelve minutes. Now by "the angle meridional" was meant
+the two hours _inequall_ immediately succeeding noon (or while the "1st
+House" of the sun was passing the meridian), and these two hours may, so
+near the equinox, be taken as ordinary hours. Therefore, when "Phebus
+hath left the angle meridional," it was two o'clock P.M., or eight hours
+after sunrise, which, added to twelve minutes, produces eight hours
+twelve minutes as the ascending point of the equinoctial. The ascending
+point of _the ecliptic_ would consequently be twenty degrees in Leo, or
+within less than a degree of the actual place of the star Regulus, which
+in point of fact did rise on the 15th of March, in Chaucer's time,
+almost exactly at two in the afternoon.
+
+Such coincidences as these could not result from mere accident; and,
+whatever may have been Speght's authority for the location of Aldryan, I
+shall never believe that Chaucer would refer to an inferior star when
+the great "Stella Regia" itself was in so remarkable a position for his
+purpose--assuming always, as a matter of course, that he referred his
+phenomena, not to the country or age wherein he laid the action of his
+tale, but to his own.
+
+This, then, is the precedent by which I support the similar, and rather
+startling, interpretation I propose of these obscure words "In mena
+Libra alway."
+
+There are two twin stars, of the same magnitude, and not far apart, each
+of which bears the Arabic title of Min al auwa; one ([Greek: beta]
+Virginis) in the sign Virgo--the other ([Greek: delta] Virginis) in that
+of Libra.
+
+The latter, in the south of England, in Chaucer's time, would rise a few
+minutes before the autumnal equinoctial point, and might be called
+_Libra_ Min al auwa either from that circumstance, or to distinguish it
+from its namesake in Virgo.
+
+Now on the 18th of April this Libra Min al auwa would rise in the
+neighbourhood of Canterbury at about half-past three in the afternoon,
+so that by four o'clock it would attain an altitude of about five
+degrees--not more than sufficient to render the moon, supposing it to
+have risen with the star, visible (by daylight) to the pilgrims
+"entrying at a towne's end."
+
+It is very remarkable that the only year, perhaps in the whole of
+Chaucer's lifetime, in which the moon could have arisen with this star
+on the 18th of April, should be the identical year to which Tyrwhitt,
+_reasoning from historical evidence alone_, would fain attribute the
+writing of the _Canterbury Tales_. (Vide Introductory Discourse, note
+3.)
+
+On the 18th of April, 1388, Libra Min al auwa, and the moon, rose
+together about half-past three P. M. in the neighbourhood of Canterbury;
+and Tyrwhitt, alluding to the writing of the _Canterbury Tales_, "_could
+hardly suppose it was much advanced before 1389!_"
+
+Such a coincidence is more than remarkable--it is convincing: especially
+when we add to it that 1388 "is the very date that, by a slight and
+probable injury to the last figure, might become the _traditional_ one
+of 1383!"
+
+Should my view, therefore, of the true reading of this passage in
+Chaucer be correct, it becomes of infinitely greater interest and
+importance than a mere literal emendation, because it supplies that
+which has always been supposed wanting to the _Canterbury Tales_, viz.,
+some means of identifying the year to which their action ought to be
+attributed. Hitherto, so unlikely has it appeared that Chaucer, who so
+amply furnishes materials for the minor branches of the date, should
+leave the year unnoted, that it has been accounted for in the
+supposition that he reserved it for the unfinished portion of his
+performance. But if we consider the ingenious though somewhat tortuous
+methods resorted to by him to convey some of the other data, it is by no
+means improbable that he might really have devised this circumstance of
+the moon's rising as a means of at least _corroborating_ a date that he
+might intend to record afterwards in more direct terms.
+
+ A. E. B.
+
+P.S.--Since writing the foregoing I have obtained, through the kindness
+of Mr. Thoms, the several readings of the lines commented upon in six
+different MSS. in the British Museum. And I have great satisfaction in
+finding that five out of the six confirm my hypothesis, at least with
+respect to the uncertain spelling of "alway." The readings in respect of
+the two words are these:
+
+ I meene alweye.
+ In mena alway.
+ I mene allweye.
+ In mene allwey.
+ I mene alweie.
+ I mene alwaye.
+
+I acknowledge that, from the first, if I could have discovered a
+probable interpretation of "mene" as an independent word, I should have
+preferred it rather than that of making it a part of the Arabic name,
+because I think that the star is sufficiently identified by the latter
+portion of its name "Al auwa," and because the preservation of "mene" in
+its proper place in the line would afford a reading much less forced
+than that I was obliged to have recourse to. Now it very singularly
+happens that in "NOTES AND QUERIES" of this day (page 388.) I find, upon
+the authority of A. C. M., that there is an Armorican word "menex" or
+"mene," signifying a summit or boundary. Here is an accidental, though
+most probable, original of the Chaucerian "mene," because the moon's
+place in longitude at the time specified was precisely on the verge or
+boundary of Libra: or even in the sense "summit" the word would be by no
+means inappropriate to the point of a sign in the ecliptic which first
+emerges from the horizon; with such a reading the lines would stand
+thus, which is a very slight change from _their present form_:
+
+ "Then, with the mone's exaltacioun
+ In menez Libra, ALWAI gan ascende,
+ As we were entrying at a towne's end."
+
+Perhaps A. C. M. would be good enough to cite his authorities for the
+word "mene," "menez"--in the signification of "summit" or "margin"--with
+examples, if possible, of its use in these or kindred senses.
+
+And perhaps some Arabic scholar will explain the name "Min al auwa," and
+show in what way the absence of the prefix "Min" would affect it?
+
+ A. E. B.
+
+
+TRADITIONS FROM REMOTE PERIODS THROUGH FEW LINKS.
+
+In some of your former numbers (Vol. iii., pp. 206. 237. 289.) allusions
+have been made by your correspondents, showing that traditions may come
+down from remote periods through very few links. Having myself seen a
+man whose father lived in the time of Oliver Cromwell, I trust I shall
+be excused for stating some particulars of this fact, which I think will
+be considered by your readers as one of the most remarkable on record.
+In the year 1844 died James Horrocks, a small farmer, who lived at
+Harwood, a short distance from Bolton, in Lancashire, having completed
+his hundredth year. This circumstance, however, was not so remarkable as
+that of his own birth, his father, William Horrocks, having been born in
+1657, one year before the death of Cromwell, and having married in 1741,
+at the advanced age of eight-four, a second wife, a young and buxom
+woman of twenty-six, by whom he had one child, the above James Horrocks,
+born March 14, 1744, and baptized at Bradshaw Chapel, near Bolton.
+
+It is believed that the first wife of William Horrocks had been employed
+in the well-known family of the Chethams, at Castleton Hall, near
+Rochdale (a branch of that of Humphrey Chetham), by whom they were both
+much respected; and soon after the second marriage, he and his youthful
+wife were sent for to Castleton Hall by the Chethams, by whom they were
+treated with much kindness; and the remarkable disparity of years in
+their marriage having no doubt created great interest, a painter was
+employed to take their portraits, which are still in existence, with the
+ages of the parties at the time, and the dates, when taken, painted upon
+them.
+
+I paid the son, James Horrocks, more than one visit, and on the last
+occasion, in company with James Crossley, Esq., of Manchester, the
+Reverend Canon Parkinson, Principal of St. Bees' College, and one or two
+other gentlemen, I took my son with me. It happened to be the very day
+on which he completed his hundredth year, and we found him full of
+cheerfulness and content, expecting several of his descendants to spend
+the day with him. I possess a portrait in crayons of this venerable
+patriarch, taken on that day by a very clever artist, who accompanied us
+on our visit, and which is an extremely faithful likeness of the
+original. Should it please Providence to spare my son to attain to his
+seventieth year, he also will be enabled, in the year 1900, to say that
+he has seen a man whose father lived in the time of Oliver Cromwell;
+thus connecting events, with the intervention of _one_ life only,
+comprehending a period of very nearly two centuries and a half.
+
+P.S. A very interesting narrative of all the facts of this case was
+published in the _Manchester Guardian_ a few years ago, comprising many
+curious particulars not noticed by myself, a copy of which I shall be
+glad to send you, if you think it worthy of insertion in "NOTES AND
+QUERIES."
+
+ THOMAS CORSER.
+ Stand Rectory.
+
+ [We accept with thanks the offer of our valued correspondent.]
+
+
+DR. YOUNG'S NARCISSA.
+
+A pamphlet was recently published at Lyons and Paris, by a Monsieur de
+Terrebasse, intending to prove that the daughter-in-law of Dr. Young, so
+pathetically lamented by him in the _Night Thoughts_ under the poetical
+name of "Narcissa," was not clandestinely buried at Montpellier; that
+Dr. Young did not steal a grave for her from the Roman Catholics of that
+city; and that consequently the celebrated and touching episode in Night
+III. is purely imaginary. This opinion of M. de Terrebasse, first given
+to the world by him in 1832, and now repeated, has been controverted by
+the writer of an article in the _Gazette Medicale_ of Montpellier. The
+tomb, it is said, of Elisabeth Lee, Dr. Young's daughter-in-law, was
+discovered a few years since at Lyons; and M. de Terrebasse endeavours
+to prove, from that circumstance, and from a comparison of facts and
+dates, that this Elisabeth Lee was the "Narcissa" of the poet. Not
+having seen M. de Terrebasse's pamphlet, and being indebted to the
+_Journal des Savants_ for this brief account of it, it seems difficult
+to discover from it how M. de Terrebasse can pretend so summarily to
+invalidate the solemn and touching assertions of the poet, which
+assuredly are anything but flights of fancy.
+
+ "Deny'd the charity of dust to spread
+ O'er dust! a clarity their dogs enjoy,
+ What could I do? what succour? what resource?
+ With pious sacrilege a grave I stole;
+ With impious piety that grave I wrong'd;
+ Short in my duty, coward in my grief!
+ More like her murderer than friend, I crept
+ With soft suspended step, and muffled deep
+ In midnight darkness, whisper'd my last sigh."
+
+ _Night Thoughts; Narcissa._
+
+In the notes to an edition of the _Night Thoughts_, printed in 1798, by
+C. Whittingham, for T. Heptinstall--
+
+ "It appears," it is stated, "by the extract of a letter just printed,
+ that in order to obtain a grave, the Doctor bribed the under gardener,
+ who dug the grave, and let him in by a private door, bearing his
+ beloved daughter, wrapped up in a sheet, upon his shoulder. When he
+ had laid her in this hole he sat down, and, as the man expressed it,
+ 'rained tears.' It appears also, that some time previous to this
+ event, expecting the catastrophe, he had been seen walking solitarily
+ backward in this garden, as if to find the most solitary spot for his
+ purpose."--See _Evang. Mag._, Nov. 1797.
+
+I do not know what authority this letter quoted from the _Evang. Mag._
+may possess.
+
+ J. M.
+ Oxford, May 20.
+
+
+Minor Notes.
+
+_Curious Epitaph._--The following lines are on a stone in Killyleagh
+churchyard. I have a faint recollection of seeing a similarly
+constructed epitaph in Harris's _History of the County of Down_, which
+was perhaps composed by the same person. Is any of your readers
+acquainted with any English inscription in the same style?
+
+ "Mysta, fidelis, amans, colui, docui, relevavi,
+ Numen, oves, inopes, pectore, voce, manu.
+ Laude orbem, splendore polum, cineresque beatos,
+ Fama illustravit, mens colit, urna tenet."
+
+It will easily be seen that the first, fourth, seventh, and tenth words
+are to be read in connexion, as are those that follow these, and those
+next in succession.
+
+The person on whose tomb the lines occur was the Rev. William
+Richardson, who died in 1670, having been minister of Killyleagh for
+twenty-one years. By the way, is not _mysta_ a strange designation for a
+Presbyterian minister? I should think it would be now considered as
+objectionable as _sacerdos_.
+
+ E. H. D. D.
+ Killyleagh, co. Down.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_The Curse of Scotland_ (Vol. i., pp. 61. 90.; Vol. iii., p. 22.).--
+
+ "The queen of clubs is called in Northamptonshire Queen Bess, perhaps,
+ because that queen, history says, was of a swarthy complexion; the
+ four of spades, Ned Stokes, but why I know not; the nine of diamonds,
+ the curse of Scotland, because every ninth monarch of that nation was
+ a bad king to his subjects. I have been told by old people, that this
+ card was so called long before the Rebellion in 1745, and therefore it
+ could not arise from the circumstance of the Duke of Cumberland's
+ sending orders, accidentally written upon the card, the night before
+ the battle of Culloden, for General Campbell to give no quarter."
+
+The above extract from a communication to the _Gentleman's Magazine_ for
+1791, p. 141., is quoted in Mr. Singer's _Researches into the History of
+Playing Cards_, p. 271.; but the reason assigned by the writer does not
+explain why the nine of _diamonds_ should have acquired the name in
+question. The nine of any _other_ suit would be equally applicable.
+
+ L.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_The Female Captive: a Narrative of Facts which happened in Barbary in
+the Year 1756. Written by Herself_, 2 vols. 12mo. Lond., 1769.--Sir
+William Musgrave has written this note in the copy which is now in the
+library at the British Museum:
+
+ "This is a true story. The lady's maiden name was Marsh. She married
+ Mr. Crisp, as related in the narrative. But he having failed in
+ business went to India, where she remained with her father, then agent
+ Victualler at Chatham, during which she wrote and published these
+ little volumes. On her husband's success in India, she went thither to
+ him.
+
+ "The book having, as it is said, been bought up by the lady's friends,
+ is become very scarce."
+
+ Y. S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Pictorial Antiquities._--The following memorandum, in the _autograph_
+of Edward, Earl of Oxford (the Harleian collector), seems worth
+preserving:
+
+ "A picture of Edward IV. on board at Kensington.
+
+ "A whole length of him at St. James's, in a night-gown and black cap.
+
+ "A portrait of his queen in the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford.
+
+ "Jane Shore at Eaton (_sic_).
+
+ "Richard III. at Kensington.
+
+ "Picture of Henry V. and his family at Mr. West's.
+
+ "A picture of Mabuse at St. James's, called Albert Durer.
+
+ "Matthew Paris with miniatures, in the British Museum.
+
+ "William of Wickham's Crozier at Oxford.
+
+ "Greek enamellers in the reign of the two Edwards.
+
+ "An old altar-table at Chiswick; Lord Clifford and his lady kneeling;
+ Consecration of Thomas a Becket at Devonshire House, both by Van
+ Eyck."
+
+ "Froissart illuminated, wherein is a miniature of Richard II., in the
+ Museum."
+
+One might have thought that these notes were made for the use of Horace
+Walpole's _History of Painting_; but their writer, the second Lord
+Oxford, died in June, 1741, long before Walpole could have thought of
+such matters. They perhaps may afford clues to other antiquaries.
+
+ C.
+
+
+
+
+Queries.
+
+
+ENGLISH POEMS BY CONSTANTINE HUYGHENS.
+
+It is probable that some of your friendly correspondents in Holland may
+have it in their power to indicate where the English verses of
+Constantine Huyghens are to be found which he refers to in his _Koren
+Bloemen_, 2de Deel, p. 528. ed. 1672, where he was given Dutch
+translations with the following superscriptions: "Aen Joffw Utricia
+Ogle, uyt mijn Engelsh;" and "Aen Me-Vrouwe Stanhope, met mijn Heilige
+dagen, uyt mijn Engelsh."
+
+Huyghens appears to have had a thorough knowledge of our language, and
+his very interesting volume contains translations of twenty of Dr.
+Donne's poems, very ably rendered, considering the difficulty of the
+task. He refers to this in his address to the reader, and says that an
+illustrious Martyr [Charles I.] many years since had declared that he
+could not have believed that any one could have successfully
+accomplished it. Huyghens confesses that the Latinisms with which our
+language abounds, had given him much to wrestle with; and that it was
+difficult to express in pure Dutch such words as _ecstasy_, _atomy_,
+_influence_, _legacy_, _alloy,_ &c. The first stanza of the song, "Go
+and catch a falling Star," may perhaps be acceptable to some of your
+readers, who may not readily have access to the book:
+
+ "Gaet en vatt een Sterr in 't vallen,
+ Maeckt een' Wortel-mensch[1] met kind,
+ Seght waer men al den tijd die nu verby is vindt,
+ En wie des Duyvels voet geklooft heeft in twee ballen:
+ Leert my Meereminnen hooren,
+ Leert my hoe ick 't boose booren,
+ Van den Nijd ontkommen moet,
+ En wat Wind voor-wind is voor een oprecht gemoed."
+
+ [Footnote 1: Mandrake.]
+
+One more example of his translation, from the epigram on Sir Albertus
+Morton, may be allowed, as it is short:
+
+ "She first deceased; he for a little tried
+ To live without her; liked it not, and died."
+
+ "Sy stierf voor uyt: hy pooghd' haer een' wijl tijds te derven,
+ Maer had geen' sin daer in, en ging oock liggen sterven."
+
+Considering the affinity of the languages, and the frequent and constant
+intercourse with Holland, it is singular that we should have to
+reproach ourselves with such almost total ignorance respecting the
+literature of that country. With the exception of the slight sketch
+given by Dr. Bowring of its poetical literature, an Englishman has no
+work to which he can turn in his own language for information; and Dutch
+books may be sought for in vain in London. The late Mr. Heber when in
+Holland did not neglect its literature, and at the dispersion of his
+library I procured a few valuable Dutch books; among others, the very
+handsome volume which has given rise to this note. It contains much
+interesting matter, and affords a most amiable picture of the mind of
+its distinguished author, who lived to the very advanced age of
+ninety-one. There is a speaking and living portrait of him prefixed,
+from the beautiful graver of Blotelingk, and a view of his chateau of
+Hofwyck, with detailed plans of his garden, &c. He was secretary to
+three successive princes of Nassau, accountant to the Prince of Orange,
+and Lord of Zuylichem; and lived in habits of friendly intercourse with
+almost all the distinguished men who flourished during his long and
+prosperous life. His son is well known to the world of science as the
+inventor of the pendulum.
+
+Translations of three or four of Constantine Huyghens' poems are given
+by Dr. Bowring in his _Batavian Anthology_. And the great Vondel
+pronounces his volume to be--
+
+ "A garden mild of savours sweet,
+ Where Art and Skill and Wisdom meet;
+ Rich in its vast variety
+ Of forms and hues of ev'ry dye."
+
+ S. W. SINGER.
+
+
+THE REV. MR. GAY.
+
+The very interesting notices which you have often given us of the truly
+great and inestimable Locke, induce me to trouble you with an inquiry
+relative to a philosophical writer, who followed in his school, I mean
+the Rev. Mr. Gay, the author of the Dissertation prefixed to Bishop
+Law's translation of King's _Origin of Evil_. It is sufficient evidence
+of the importance of that Dissertation, that it put Hartley upon
+considering and developing the principle of association, into which
+principle he conceived, and endeavoured to prove, that all the phenomena
+of reasoning and affection might be resolved, and of which Laplace
+observes, that it constitutes the whole of what has yet been done in the
+philosophy of the human mind; "la partie reelle de la metaphysique"
+(_Essai Philosophique sur les Probabilites_, p. 224. ed. 1825).
+
+Of this Mr. Gay, I have not yet been able to learn more than that he was
+a clergyman in the West of England; but of what place, of what family,
+where educated, of what manner of life, or what habits of study,
+biographical or topographical reading has hitherto furnished me with
+any information. I should feel greatly indebted to any of your readers
+who would give the clue to what is known or can be known about him. It
+is probably within easy reach, though I have missed it. The ordinary
+biographical dictionaries make no mention of him.
+
+ EDWARD TAGART.
+ North End, Hampstead, May 19. 1851.
+
+
+Minor Queries.
+
+_Carved Ceiling in Dorsetshire._--In the south of Dorsetshire there is a
+house (its name I do not remember) which has a beautifully carved
+ceiling in the hall. This is said to have been sent from Spain by a King
+of Castile, who, being wrecked on this coast, and hospitably entertained
+by the owners of the mansion, took this method of showing his gratitude.
+Can any of your readers inform me what king this was, or refer me to any
+work in which I may find it?
+
+ JERNE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Publicans' Signs._--Will any of your readers inform me whether the
+_signs of publicans_ were allowed to be retained by the same edict which
+condemned those of all other trades?
+
+ ROVERT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To a T._--What is the origin of the phrase; and of that "To fit to a
+T.?" (Query, a "T square" = ad amussim.)
+
+ A. A. D.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Skeletons at Egyptian Banquet._--Where did Jer. Taylor find this
+interpretation of the object of placing a skeleton at the banqueting
+table:--
+
+ "The Egyptians used to serve up a skeleton to their feasts, that
+ the vapours of wine might be restrained with that bunch of myrrh,
+ and the vanities of their eyes chastened by that sad object."
+
+Certainly not in Herodotus, 2. 78.; which savours rather of the
+_Sardanapalian_ spirit: "Eat, drink, and love--the rest's not worth a
+fillip!" Comp. Is. xxii. 13., 1 Cor. xv. 32.
+
+ A. A. D.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Gloves_ (Vol. i., pp. 72. 405.; Vol. ii., p. 4.; Vol. iii., p.
+220.).--Blount, in his _Law Dictionary_, fo. 1670, under the title
+"Capias Utlagatum," observes:
+
+ "At present, in the King's Bench, the _outlawry_ cannot be reversed,
+ unless the defendant appear in person, and, by a present of gloves to
+ the judges, implore and obtains their favour to reverse it."
+
+Perhaps some of your correspondents may be able to state when the
+practice of presenting gloves to the judges on moving to reverse an
+outlawry in the King's Bench was discontinued. The statute 4 & 5 Will.
+and Mar. c. 18., rendered unnecessary a _personal_ appearance in that
+court to reverse an outlawry (except for treason or felony, or where
+special bail was ordered).
+
+ C. H. COOPER.
+ Cambridge, March 24. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Knapp Family in Norfolk and Suffolk._--I should be much obliged to any
+Norfolk or Suffolk antiquary who would give me information as to the
+family of Knapp formerly settled in those counties, especially at
+Ipswich, Tuddenham, and Needham Market in the latter county. My
+inquiries have not discovered any person of the name at present residing
+in any of these places; and my wish is to learn how the name was lost in
+the locality; whether by migration--and if so, when, and to what other
+part of the county; or if in the female line, into what family the last
+heiress of Knapp married; and, as nearly as may be, when either of these
+events occurred?
+
+ G. E. F.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_To learn by "Heart."_--Can you give any account of the origin of a very
+common expression both in French and English, _i. e._ "Apprendre _par
+coeur_, to learn _by heart?_" To learn _by memory_ would be
+intelligible.
+
+ A SUBSCRIBER TO YOUR JOURNAL.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Knights._--At some periods of our history the reigning monarch bestowed
+the honour of knighthood, 1306, Edward I.; at other times, those in
+possession of a certain amount of property were compelled to assume the
+order, 1254. Query, Was there any difference in rank between the two
+sorts of knights?
+
+ B. DE. M.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Supposed Inscription in St. Peter's Church, Rome._--When at school in
+France, some twenty years ago, I was informed that the following
+inscription was to be found in some part of St. Peter's Church in Rome:
+
+ "Nunquam amplius super hanc cathedram cantabit Gallus."
+
+It appears that the active part taken by the French in fomenting the
+great schism of the Church during the fourteenth century, when they set
+up and maintained at Avignon a Pope of their own choosing, had generated
+an abhorrence of French interference in the Italian mind; and that, when
+the dissensions were abated by the suspension of the rival Popes, the
+_ultramontane_ cardinals had posted up this inscription to testify their
+desire for the exclusion of French ecclesiastics from the Papal chair.
+In one respect the prediction remains in force to this day; for I
+believe I am correct in saying that no Frenchman has worn the triple
+crown for the last 450 years. But that portion of it which is implied in
+the second meaning of "Gallus," has been woefully belied in our time by
+the forcible occupation of Rome by a French army, on which occasion the
+Gallic cock had all the "crowing" to himself.
+
+I have never had an opportunity of ascertaining the existence of this
+inscription, and shall be obliged to any correspondent of "NOTES AND
+QUERIES" who will afford information on the subject.
+
+ HENRY H. BREEN.
+ St. Lucia, April, 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Rag Sunday in Sussex._--Allow me to ask the explanation of "Rag Sunday"
+in Sussex. I lately saw some young gentlemen going to school at
+Brighton, who had been provided with some fine white handkerchiefs, when
+one observed they would not stand much chance of escape on "Rag Sunday."
+He then told me that each boy, on the Sunday but one preceding the
+holidays, always tore a piece of his shirt or handkerchief off and wore
+it in the button-hole of his jacket as his "rag." When a boy, I remember
+being compelled to do the same when at school at Hailsham in Sussex, and
+all boys objecting had their hats knocked off and trod on.
+
+ H. W. D.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Northege Family._--Can any one tell me the county and parish in which
+the family of Northege were located in the sixteenth century?
+
+ E. H. Y.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_A Kemble Pipe of Tobacco._--In the county of Herefordshire, the people
+call the last or concluding pipe that any one means to smoke at a
+sitting, a _Kemble pipe._ This is said to have originated in a man of
+the name of Kemble, who in the cruel persecution under Queen Mary, being
+condemned for heresy, in his walk of some miles from the prison to the
+stake, amidst a crowd of weeping friends and neighbours, with the
+tranquillity and fortitude of a primitive martyr, _smoked a pipe of
+tobacco_! Is anything known of this Kemble? and where can I find any
+corroboration of the story here told?
+
+ EDWARD F. RIMBAULT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Durham Sword that killed the Dragon._--In the Harleian MS. No. 3783.,
+letter 107., Cosin, in describing to Sancroft some of the ceremonies of
+his reception at Durham, mentions "_the sword that killed the dragon_,"
+as a relic of antiquity introduced on the occasion. I should feel
+obliged, if you, or any of your antiquarian readers, could kindly refer
+me to some tolerably full account of the ceremony alluded to, or throw
+any light upon the meaning of the custom in question, the origin and
+history of the sword, and the tradition connected with it.
+
+ J. SANSOM.
+
+
+Minor Queries Answered.
+
+"_At Sixes and Sevens_" (Vol. iii., p. 118.).--May not this expression
+bear reference to the _points_ in the card-game of piquet?
+
+ G. F. G.
+
+May not this expression have arisen from the passage in Eliphaz's
+discourse to Job?
+
+ "He shall deliver thee is _six_ troubles; yea, in _seven_ there shall
+ no evil touch thee."--Job. v. 19.
+
+ A. M.
+
+Mr. Halliwell, in his _Dictionary of Archaic and Provincial Words_, vol.
+ii. p. 724., thus explains this phrase:
+
+ "The Deity is mentioned in the _Towneley Mysteries_, pp. 97. 118., as
+ He that 'sett alle on seven,' _i. e._, set or appointed everything in
+ seven days. A similar phrase at p. 85. is not so evident. It is
+ explained in the Glossary, 'to set things in, to put them in order;'
+ but it evidently implies, in some cases, an exactly opposite meaning,
+ to set in confusion, to rush to battle, as in the following examples.
+ '_To set the steven_, to agree upon the time and place of meeting
+ previous to some expedition,'--_West and Cumb. Dial._ p. 390. These
+ phrases may be connected with each other. Be this as it may, hence is
+ certainly derived the phrase _to be at sixes and sevens_, to be in
+ great confusion. Herod, in his anger at the wise men, says:
+
+ "'Bot be they past me by, by Mahowne in heven,
+ I shalle, and that in hy, _set alle on sex and seven_;
+ Trow ye a kyng as I wyll suffre thaym to neven
+ Any to have mastry bot myself fulle even.'
+
+ _Towneley Mysteries_, p. 143.
+
+ "'Thus he _settez on sevene_ with his sekyre knyghttez.'
+
+ _Morte Arthure_, MS. Lincoln, f. 76.
+
+ "'The duk swore by gret God of hevene,
+ Wold my hors so evene,
+ Zet wold I _set all one seven_
+ Ffor Myldor the swet!'
+
+ _Degrevant_, 1279.
+
+ "'Old Odcombs odnesse makes not thee uneven,
+ Nor carelesly set all _at six and seven_.'
+
+ Taylor's _Workes_, 1630, ii. 71."
+
+ J. K. R. W.
+
+ [Six and seven make the proverbially unlucky number _thirteen_, and we
+ are inclined to believe that the allusion in this popular phrase is to
+ this combination.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Swobbers._--There is a known story of a clergyman who was recommended
+for a preferment by some great men at court to an archbishop. His Grace
+said, "He had heard that the clergyman used to play at whist and
+_swobbers_; that as to playing now and then a sober game at whist for
+pastime, it might be pardoned; but he could not digest those wicked
+swobbers;" and it was with some pains that my Lord Somers could
+undeceive him. So says Swift, in his _Essay on the Fates of Clergymen_;
+and a note in Sir W. Scott's edition (1824, vol. viii. p 231.) informs
+us that the primate was "Tenison, who, by all contemporary accounts, was
+a very dull man." At the risk of being thought as dull as the
+archbishop, I venture to ask for an explanation of the joke.
+
+ J. C. R.
+
+ [Johnson, under "Swobber" or "Swabber," gives, "1. A sweeper of the
+ deck;" and "2. Four privileged cards that are only incidentally used
+ in betting at the game of whist." He then quotes this passage from
+ Swift, with the difference that he says "clergymen." Were not the
+ cards so called because they "swept the deck" by a sort of
+ "sweep-stakes?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Handel's Occasional Oratorio._--Will DR. RIMBAULT, or some other
+musical correspondent of your journal, enlighten us as to the true
+meaning of the name _Occasional Oratorio_, prefixed to one of Handel's
+compositions, of which no one that I have ever met with has heard more
+than the overture? This composition has become almost universally known
+from the foolish practice which used to prevail of performing it as an
+introduction to _Israel in Egypt_, or any other work to which its
+composer had purposely denied the preliminary of an overture; a practice
+now happily exploded, which seems to have had its origin in a
+misinterpretation of the name; as though Handel had written the overture
+to suit any _occasion_ when one might be needed, instead of, as I am
+rather disposed to believe, having some particular occasion in view for
+which the oratorio was composed.
+
+ E. V.
+
+ [Surely, if there is no _Occasional_ Oratorio to be found, the
+ _Overture_ must mean that it was to be used on _occasion_. Our
+ correspondent does not seem to know the word as it is used by writers
+ of a century ago, for "Occasional Sermons" or services, &c. The
+ question is simply one of fact. _Is_ there an Oratorio? Everybody
+ knows the overture. The writer of this note remembers being horrified,
+ when a freshman, at hearing the fugue break forth in the College
+ Chapel, was pondering in his mind whether it was Drops of Brandy, or
+ the Rondo in the Turnpike-Gate, both then popular tunes.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Archbishop Waldeby's Epitaph._--W. W. KING would be obliged by a
+perfect copy of the inscription on the monumental brass of Archbishop
+Waldeby in Westminster Abbey.
+
+ [The brass is engraved in Harding's _Antiquities of Westminster
+ Abbey_; but it appears that one half of the following inscription,
+ which was formerly round the verge of the brass, has now been torn
+ away:--
+
+ "Hic fuit expertus in quovis jure Robertus,
+ De Waldeby dictus nunc est sub marmore strictus;
+ Sacre Scripture Doctor fuit, et geniture
+ Ingenuus Medicus et plebis semper amicus
+ Presul Adurensis posthoc Archas Dublinensis
+ Hinc Cicestrensis, tandem Primas Eborensis
+ Quarto kalend. Junii migravit cursibus anni
+ Sepultus milleni ter C. septem Nonies quoque deni.
+ Vos precor, Orate quod sint sibi dona beate
+ Cum sanctis vite requiescat et hic sine lite."
+
+ Weever, in his _Funeral Monuments_, quotes the following description
+ of him from a MS. account of the Archbishops of York, in the Cottonian
+ Collection:--
+
+ "Tunc Robertus ordinis fratris Augustini
+ Ascendit in cathedram primatis Paulini,
+ Lingua scientificus sermonis latini
+ Anno primo proximat vite sue fini,
+ De carnis ergastulo presul evocatur
+ Gleba sui corporis Westminstre humatur."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Verstegan._--Will any of the contributors to your valuable miscellany
+be kind enough to inform me if there are any engraved portraits of the
+quaint old antiquary Richard Verstegan, the author of a curious work,
+entitled _A Restitution of Decayed Intelligence_? The portraits may be
+common, but living in the country, and at distance from town, I have no
+friend from whom I can glean the required information. Can my informant
+at the same time acquaint me with the best edition of his work? There
+was one printed at Antwerp in 1605.
+
+ J. S. P. (a Subscriber.)
+
+ [Our correspondent will find a notice of Verstegan's work in page 85.
+ of this volume. The first edition was printed at Antwerp in 1605, and
+ was reprinted at London in 4to. in 1634, and in 8vo. in 1655 and 1673.
+ The first edition is deservedly reckoned the best, as well on account
+ of containing one or more engravings, afterwards omitted, as also for
+ the superiority of the plates, those in the subsequent editions being
+ very indifferent copies. No portrait of the author is noticed either
+ by Granger or Bromley.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Royal Library._--In the new edition of Boswell's _Life of Johnson_
+(published by the proprietors of the _Illustrated London News_), in the
+_National Illustrated Library_, the editor, in reference to the library
+of King George III. (which is generally understood to have been
+presented to the nation by George IV., and which is recorded to have
+been given, in an inscription placed in that magnificent hall), has
+appended the following note:--
+
+ "It has recently transpired that the government of the day bought the
+ library of George IV., just as he was on the eve of concluding a sale
+ of it to the Emperor of Russia."
+
+Can any of your readers inform me if this is correct, and whether the
+nation have really paid for what has always been considered a most
+worthy and munificent present from a monarch to his subjects? I trust to
+hear that the editor has been misinformed.
+
+ J. S. L.
+
+ [The nation certainly never paid one farthing for this munificent
+ present. The Russian Government offered, we believe, to purchase the
+ library; and this is probably the origin of the statement in the note
+ quoted by our correspondent.]
+
+
+
+
+Replies.
+
+
+HUGH HOLLAND AND HIS WORKS.
+
+An accidental circumstance having led me to re-peruse the article
+entitled _Hugh Holland and his works_ (Vol. ii., p. 265.), I feel myself
+called on, as a lover of facts, to notice some of the statements which
+it contains.
+
+1. "He was born at Denbigh in 1558." He was born at Denbigh, but not in
+1558. In 1625 he thus expressed himself:
+
+ "Why was the fatall spinster so vnthrifty?
+ To draw my third four yeares to tell and fifty!"
+
+2. "In 1582 he matriculated at Baliol College, Oxford." He did not quit
+Westminster School till 1589. If he ever pursued his studies at Baliol
+College, it was some ten years afterwards.
+
+3. "About 1590 he succeeded to a fellowship at Trinity College,
+Cambridge." In 1589 he was elected from Westminster to a _scholarship_
+in Trinity College, Cambridge--not to a _fellowship_. At a later period
+of life, he may have succeeded to a fellowship.
+
+4. "Holland published two works: 1. _Monumenta sepulchralia Sancti
+Pauli_, London, 1613, 4to. 2. _A cypress garland_ etc., London, 1625,
+4to." Hugh Holland was not the compiler of the first-named work: the
+initials H. H admit of another interpretation. This, however, is a very
+pardonable oversight. I could give about twenty authorities for
+ascribing the work to Hugh Holland.
+
+5. The dates assigned to the _Monumenta Sancti Pauli_ are "1613, 1616,
+1618, and 1633." Here are three errors in as many lines. The _first_
+edition is dated in 1614. The edition of 1633, which is entitled
+_Ecclesia Sancti Pavli illvstrata_, is the _second_. No other editions
+exist.
+
+6. "Holland also printed a copy of Latin verses before Alexander's
+_Roxana_, 1632." No such work exists. He may have printed verses before
+the _Roxana_ of W. Alabaster, who was his brother-collegian.
+
+The authorities which I have consulted are Fuller, Anthony a Wood, Henry
+Holland, son of the celebrated Philemon Holland, Hugh Holland, and
+Joseph Welch; and in submitting the result of my researches to critical
+examination, I must commend the writer of the article in question for
+his continued efforts to produce new facts, and to explode current
+errors.
+
+Insensible as modern critics may be to the poetical merits of Hugh
+Holland, we find him described by Camden as one of the _most pregnant
+wits_ of those times; and he certainly gave a notable proof of his
+wit--for fame is that which _all hunt after_--in contributing some lines
+to _Mr. William Shakespeares comedies, histories, and tragedies_.
+
+On that account, if on no other, the particulars of his life should be
+inquired into and recorded. His _Cypress garland_, a copy of which I
+possess, is rich in autobiographical anecdote; and I have collected some
+of his fugitive verses, a specimen of which may amuse. As one of the
+shortest, I transcribe the lines which he addressed to Giles Farnaby, a
+musical composer of some eminence, on the publication of his _Canzonets
+to fowre voyces_, A. D. 1598.
+
+ "_M. Hu. Holland to the author._
+
+ I would both sing thy praise, and praise thy singing,
+ That in the winter nowe are both a-springing;
+ But my muse must be stronger,
+ And the daies must be longer.
+ When the sunne's in his hight with ye bright Barnaby,
+ Then should we sing thy praises, gentle Farnaby."
+
+ BOLTON CORNEY.
+
+
+THE MILESIANS.
+
+(Vol. iii., p. 353.)
+
+In reply to W. R. M., who asks for information respecting the round
+towers of Ireland, I beg to refer him to Dr. Petrie's essay on the
+_Ecclesiastical Architecture of Ireland_, in which he will find a full
+discussion of the origin, uses, and history of the round towers.
+
+In reference to the Milesians and other early colonists of Ireland, he
+will find the most authentic ancient traditions in the Irish version of
+the _Historia Britonum of Nennius_, lately published by the Irish
+Archaeological Society of Dublin, with a translation and notes, by the
+Rev. J. H. Todd, D.D. The same volume contains also some very curious
+and valuable notes by the Hon. A. Herbert.
+
+What W. R. M. says about the pronunciation of certain names of towns in
+Ireland, as confirming the tradition of a Milesian colony from Spain, is
+a complete mistake. The pronunciation of _gh_ to which he alludes,
+exists only amongst the English (or Anglicised natives) who are unable
+to pronounce the guttural _ch_ or _gh_ of the Celtic Irish, and have
+substituted for it the sound of _h_, or the sound of the Spanish _j_, to
+which W. R. M. refers. Besides this, every philologist knows that the
+present language of Spain had no existence at the period to which the
+Milesian invasion of Ireland must be referred. It is true that on the
+west coast of Ireland some families among the peasantry retain many of
+the characteristic features of modern Spaniards; but this circumstance
+is due to an intercourse with Spain of a much more recent date than the
+Milesian invasion, and is therefore no evidence of that event. It is
+well known that considerable trade with Spain was carried on at Galway
+and other ports of western Connaught, two centuries ago, and that many
+Spanish families settled in Ireland, or intermarried with the natives
+during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
+
+To remove W. R. M.'s mistaken impression that Drogheda, Aghada, &c., are
+names of Spanish origin, it may be well to inform him, first, that the
+_gh_ in such names is not sounded like the Spanish _j_, except, as I
+have said, by--(I was on the point of writing _foreigners_), but I mean
+by those who are unable to pronounce our Celtic guttural aspirates.
+Secondly, that Drogheda, Aghada, &c., are names significant in the Irish
+language and perfectly well understood, and that as now written they are
+not seen in their correct orthography, but in an Anglicised spelling
+intended to represent to English ears the native pronunciation. In the
+last century Drogheda was usually written _Tredagh_ in English; but the
+word in its proper spelling is _Droichet-atha_, the bridge of the ford,
+_trajectum vadi_. There are many places in Ireland named from this word
+_Droichet_, which is no doubt the Latin _trajectum_, the same which
+forms a part of the name of _Utrecht_ (Ultrajectum), and other towns on
+the continent.
+
+The word _Agha_, properly _Achadh_, signifies a _field_, and enters into
+the composition of hundreds of topographical names in Ireland. But in
+every case the _gh_ (or _ch_, as it properly is) is pronounced
+gutturally by the peasantry; the _h_ or Spanish _j_ sound is a modern
+Anglicised corruption.
+
+On the subject of Irish proper names of places and persons a vast body
+of curious and valuable information will be found in the publications of
+the Irish Archaeological Society, and also in O'Donovan's splendid
+edition of the _Annals of the Four Masters_.
+
+ HIBERNICUS.
+
+We _mere Irish_ assume to be descended from a Phoenician colony; the
+word _Milesian_ is not Irish, the families so designated being known in
+the Irish language only as "Clonna Gaeel" (I spare the English reader the
+_mute_ consonants, which _would rather bother him_ to get his tongue
+round).
+
+Our tradition is, that the leader of the said colony saw Ireland from a
+tower, still said to exist near Corunna; he bore the style of _Mileadle
+Spaniogle_, for which no better translation is offered than "the soldier
+of Spain." His brothers and sons, the chief himself having deceased, are
+said to have conducted the expedition to Ireland; and if your
+correspondent wishes for a full account of their adventures, he should
+consult Keating's _History of Ireland_, which will, at all events,
+afford him some amusement.
+
+As to the round towers, Mr. Petrie's book on _The Ecclesiastical
+Antiquities or Architecture of Ireland_ has set that question at rest.
+He has shown that they are undoubtedly Christian buildings intended as
+_Bell-houses_, which their name in Irish signifies; and further,
+probably, for the safe keeping of the sacred vessels, &c., in time of
+war or tumult. It is unfortunately too certain that agitation was always
+rife in Ireland. On all points connected with Irish antiquities, the
+safest and best reference is to the Secretary of the Royal Irish
+Academy, Dublin. If this answer attract any of your correspondents to
+visit the museum of that establishment, I venture to prophecy that they
+will account themselves well repaid for their trouble, even though they
+should miss visiting the Great Exhibition thereby.
+
+ KERRIENSIS.
+
+
+THE TANTHONY.
+
+(Vol. iii., pp. 105. 229. 308.)
+
+I remember hearing a worthy citizen of Norwich remark, that it was very
+odd there should be three churches in the city called after saints whose
+names began with the letter T. Having been myself resident in that city
+many years, without being aware of this fact, I took the liberty of
+inquiring to which three he alluded; when I was unhesitatingly told,
+"Why, Sain Tandrew's, Sain Taustin's, and Sain Tedmund's, to be sure!"
+Let me then be allowed to repeat ARUN'S question, and to ask, "Why not
+Tanthony for Saint Anthony?"
+
+The same worthy citizen was once sheriff of Norwich, and, as is, or
+haply was, the custom,--for I know not how these matters are managed
+now-a-days,--went forth in civic state to meet the judges of assize.
+When their lordships were seated in the sheriff's carriage, one of them
+charitably observed, "Yours, I believe, is a very ancient city, Mr.
+Sheriff!" to which the latter, a little flurried, no doubt, at being
+thus so pointedly addressed, but in decided accents, replied, "It _was_
+ONCE, my Lord!" And without stopping to consider what was passing in his
+mind when he gave utterance to these somewhat ambiguous words, may we
+not take them up, and ask whether it be not even so, not only as regards
+Norwich, but most of her venerable sister towns as well? Where are their
+quondam glories--their arts and rare inventions--their "thoughts in
+antique words conveyed"--their "boast of heraldry"--their pageantries
+and shows? Where their high-peaked gables--their curiously wrought eaves
+and overhanging galleries--their quaint doorways, so elaborately carved,
+and all their other cunning devices?--"Modern Taste," with finger
+pointed to the newest creation of her plaster genius, triumphantly
+echoes the monosyllable, and answers, "Where?" Well, we are perforce
+content; only with this proviso:--if, fatigued with the tinselled
+superficialities and glossy refinements of the present, we are fain to
+"cast one longing lingering look behind," and chance to light upon some
+worthy illustrative memorial of the literature, the manners, or domestic
+life of the past,--that the spirit of Captain Cuttle's sage advice be
+made our own, and that we forthwith transfer our prize for the critical
+examination of "diving antiquaries" to the conservative pages of "NOTES
+AND QUERIES."
+
+ COWGILL.
+
+_The Tanthony._--Will your correspondent ARUN permit one to refer him to
+an authority for the use of the word "Tanton" for St. Anthony? An
+hospital in York, dedicated to St. Anthony, after the dissolution came
+into the possession of a gild or fraternity of a master and eight
+keepers, who were commonly called "Tanton Pigs." Vide Drake's
+_Eboracum_, p. 315.
+
+ [Greek: D].
+
+_Tanthony Bell at Kimbolton._--"Tanthony" is from St. Anthony. In
+Hampshire the small pig of the litter (in Essex called "the cad") is, or
+once was, called "the Tanthony pig." Pigs were especially under this
+saint's care. The ensign of the order of St. Anthony of Hainault was a
+collar of gold made like a hermit's girdle; at the centre thereof hung
+a crutch and a small bell of gold. St. Anthony is styled, among his
+numerous titles, "Membrorum restitutor," and "Daemonis fugator:" hence
+the bell.
+
+ "The Egyptians have none but wooden bells, except one brought by the
+ Franks into the monastery of St. Anthony."--Rees' _Cyclopaedia_, art.
+ Bell.
+
+I hope ARUN will be satisfied with this connexion of St. Anthony with
+the pig, the crutch, and the bell.
+
+"The staff" in the figure of the saint at Merthyr is, I should think, a
+crutch.
+
+ "The custom of making particular saints tutelars and protectors of one
+ or another species of cattle is still kept up in Spain and other
+ places. They pray to the tutelar when the beast is sick. Thus St.
+ Anthony is for hogs, and we call a poor starved creature a _Tantony_
+ pig."--Salmon's _History of Hertfordshire_, 1728.
+
+ A. HOLT WHITE.
+
+May I venture to observe, in confirmation of ARUN'S suggestion as to the
+origin of this term, that the bell appears to have been a constant
+attribute of St. Anthony, although I have tried in vain to discover any
+allusion to it in his legend?
+
+Frederick von Schlegel, in describing a famous picture by Bramante
+d'Urbino (_AEsthetic and Miscellaneous Works_, p. 78.), mentions St.
+Anthony as "carrying the hermit's little bell;" and Lord Lindsay, in the
+Introduction to his _Letters on Christian Art_ (vol. i. p. 192.), says
+that St. Anthony is known by "the bell and staff, denoting mendicancy."
+If this be the case, the bell at Kimbolton was doubtless intended
+originally to announce the presence of some wayfarer or mendicant.
+Tanthony is a common contraction for St. Anthony, as in the term "a
+Tanthony pig;" and a similar system of contraction was in use amongst
+the troubadours, who put _Na_ for _Donna_; as _Nalombarda_ for _Donna
+Lombarda_.
+
+The bell carried by St. Anthony is sometimes thought to have reference
+to his Temptations; bells being, in the words of Durandus, "the trumpets
+of the eternal king," on hearing which the devils "flee away, as through
+fear." I think, however, that these words apply rather to church bells.
+
+ E. J. M.
+
+
+PILGRIMS' ROAD TO CANTERBURY.
+
+(Vol. ii., pp. 199. 237. 269. 316.)
+
+I think those of your readers who are interested in this Query will feel
+that the replies it has received are not quite satisfactory, and I
+therefore trust you will find some room for the following remarks.
+
+I would beg to ask, can there be any doubt that from Southwark to
+Dartford, and from Rochester to their destination, Chaucer and his
+fellow pilgrims journeyed along the old Roman way, then for many
+centuries the great thoroughfare from London to the south-eastern
+coast, and which for these portions of the route is nearly identical
+with the present turnpike-road? The _Tales_ themselves make it certain
+that the pilgrims started on this ancient way; for when the Host
+interrupts the sermonising of the Reeve, he mentions Deptford and
+Greenwich as being in their route:
+
+ "Say forth thy tale, and tarry not the time,
+ Lo Depeford, and it is half way prime;
+ Lo Greenewich, there many a shrew is in,
+ It were all time thy tale to begin."
+
+Shortly after leaving Dartford the turnpike-road bends to the left,
+reaching Rochester by Gravesend and Gadshill; whilst the Roman way,
+parts of which are still used, was carried to that city by Southfleet,
+and through Cobham Park; and it seems to me that the only question we
+have to solve is, whether Chaucer followed the Roman way throughout, or
+whether between Dartford and Rochester he took the course of what is now
+the turnpike-road. For I cannot but think it very unlikely that, with a
+celebrated road leading almost straight as a line to Canterbury, the
+pilgrims should either go many miles out of their way to seek another,
+as they must have done, or run the risk of losing themselves in a
+"horse-track."
+
+In attempting to determine this point, your readers will remember the
+injunction of Poins:
+
+ "But, my lads, my lads, to-morrow morning by four o'clock early at
+ Gadshill; there are pilgrims going to Canterbury with rich offerings,
+ and traders riding to London with fat purses."--_Henry IV._, Pt. I.
+ Act I. Sc. 2.
+
+And Gadshill the robber tells his fellows:
+
+ "There's money of the king's coming down the hill; 'tis going to the
+ king's exchequer."--Act II. Sc. 2.
+
+Here we learn, not only that in Shakspeare's time the road between
+London and Canterbury was by Gadshill, but also that the tradition was
+that the pilgrims had been accustomed to travel that road. We cannot, I
+think, be far out of the way in concluding this to have been the road
+that Chaucer selected, and thus have the satisfaction of connecting with
+it in an immediate and especial manner the two greatest names in our
+literature; for, if he meant the only other road that seems at all
+likely, he would, near Cobham, pass within two miles of this famed hill.
+Nor can there be much doubt that so loyal a company, following a pious
+custom, would tarry at Rochester, to make their offerings on the shrine
+of St. William; if so, among the many thousands who have trodden the
+steps, now well-nigh worn away, leading to its site, is there one
+individual whose presence here we can recall with more pleasure than
+that of the father of English poetry?
+
+It is evident that the road mentioned by S. H. (Vol. ii., p. 237.) is
+not Chaucer's road; but I can well understand why it should be called
+the "Pilgrims' Road;" nor should I be surprised to learn that other
+roads in Kent are known by the same name, for Chaucer tells us in the
+"Prologue" to the _Tales_ that
+
+ "From every shire's end
+ Of Engle-land to Canterbury they wend:"
+
+and I need scarcely say that these widely scattered pilgrims would not
+all traverse the country by one and the same road, but that they would
+select various routes, according to the different localities from which
+they came. Hence, several roads might be called "Pilgrims' Roads."
+
+From a paper which appeared in the _Athenaeum_ in 1842, and has since
+been reprinted in a separate form, the writer of which I take to be
+identical with the reviewer of Buckler's work referred to by MR.
+JACKSON, I think we may gather that what he speaks of as the "Old
+Pilgrims' Road" is the Otford Road noticed by S. H. and M. (2.) Messrs.
+Buckler's tract mentions no wayside chapels in Kent.
+
+It may not be uninteresting to add, that the author of _Cabinet Pictures
+of English Life--Chaucer_ has expressed his firm belief, the grounds for
+which must be sought in his work, that the "Pilgrims' Room" of the
+Tabard, now the Talbot, in Southwark, whence these memorable pilgrims
+set forth, must be at least as old as Chaucer, and that the very gallery
+exists along which Chaucer and the pilgrims walked.
+
+ ARUN.
+
+
+Replies To Minor Queries.
+
+_Shakspeare's Use of "Captious"_ (Vol. ii., p. 354.; Vol. iii., p.
+229.).--As W. F. S. does me the favour to ask my opinion of his notion
+respecting the passage in _All's Well that Ends Well_, I beg to say that
+I am very glad to find he agrees with me in regard to the
+_signification_ of the word "captious;" but that I cannot suppose, with
+him, that Shakspeare wrote _capatious_ in a passage in which the metre
+is regular; for what sort of verse would be--
+
+ "Yet in this _capatious_ and intenible sieve?"
+
+Surely W. F. S. has too good an ear to allow him to fix such a line in
+Shakspeare's text.
+
+ J. S. W.
+ Stockwell, April 3. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Inscription on a Clock_ (Vol. iii., p. 329.).--The words written under
+the curious clock in Exeter Cathedral, about which your correspondent M.
+J. W. HEWETT inquires, and which are, or were, also to be found under
+the clock over the Terrace in the Inner Temple, London, are, in truth, a
+quotation from Martial; and it is singular that a sentiment so truly
+Christian should have escaped from the pen of a Pagan writer:
+
+ "They" (that is, the moments as they pass) "slip by us unheeded, but
+ are noted in the account against us."
+
+What could Chrysostom or Augustine have said stronger or better? The
+whole epigram is so good that I venture to transcribe it.
+
+ "AD MARTIALEM DE AGENDA VITA BEATA.
+
+ "Si tecum mihi, care Martialis,
+ Securis liceat frui diebus,
+ Si disponere tempus otiosum,
+ Et verae pariter vacare vitae,
+ Nec nos atria, nec domos potentum,
+ Nec lites tetricas, forumque triste
+ Nossemus, nec imagines superbas:
+ Sed gestatio, fabulae, libelli,
+ Campus, porticus, umbra, virgo, thermae;
+ Haec essent loca semper, hi labores.
+ Nunc vivit sibi neuter, heu! bonosque
+ Soles effugere atque abire sentit;
+ Qui nobis PEREUNT, ET IMPUTANTUR.
+ Quisquam vivere cum sciat, moratur?"
+
+ Lib. v. ep. 20.
+
+ W.[2]
+
+ [Footnote 2: We are indebted to several other correspondents for
+ similar replies to this Query; and one, A. C. W., remarks that the
+ epigram from which these lines are quoted, is thus translated by
+ Cowley:
+
+ "Now to himself, alas! does neither live,
+ But sees good suns, of which we are to give
+ A strict account, set and march thick away:
+ Knows a man how to live, and does he stay?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Authors of the Anti-Jacobin Poetry_ (Vol. iii., p. 348.).--I knew _all_
+the writers, some of them intimately; and I have no doubt of the general
+accuracy of MR. HAWKIN'S communication. The items marked B are the least
+to be relied on. I do not think Mr. Hammond, then Canning's colleague as
+Under-Secretary of State, wrote a line, certainly not of verse, though
+he no doubt assisted his friend in compiling, and perhaps correcting;
+good offices, which obtained him an honourable _niche_ in the
+counter-satire issued from Brooke's, and preserved from oblivion by
+having been reprinted in the _Anti-Jacobin_ to give more poignancy to
+Canning's reply, "Bard of the borrowed lyre," &c.
+
+The Latin verses "Ipsa mali Hortatrix" were the _sole_ production of
+Lord Wellesley, and he reprinted them a year or two before his death;
+Mr. Frere had no share in them: but, on the other hand, Mr. Frere may
+have been, and I think was, the author of the _translation_, "Parent of
+countless crimes." Lord Wellesley certainly was not; for it was made
+after he had sailed for India.
+
+With regard to Mr. Wright's appropriation of particular passages of the
+longer poems to different authors, it is obviously impossible that it
+should be more than a vague conjecture. I _know_ that both Canning and
+Gifford professed _not_ to be able to make any such distribution; but
+both left on my mind the impression that Canning's share of the "New
+Morality" was so very much the largest as to entitle him to be
+considered its author. Ought not Canning's verses to be collected?
+
+ C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"_Felix, quem faciunt," &c._ (Vol. iii., p. 373.).--Though I cannot
+refer EFFIGIES to the original author of this passage, the following
+parallels may not be unacceptable to him:
+
+ "Felix, quem faciunt aliorum cornua cautum,
+ Saepe suo, coelebs dixit Acerra, patri."
+
+ Joannis Audoeni, _Epigr_. 147. Lib. i. (nat. circa 1600.)
+
+Again:
+
+ "Felix, quicunque dolore
+ Alterius disces posse carere tuo."
+
+ Tibul. lib. iii. 6. 43.
+
+It is remarkable that the annotator on this passage in the Delphin ed.,
+Paris, 1685, p. 327., quotes the line in question thus: "Consonat illud:
+Felix quem faciunt," &c., _without giving the authority_.
+
+Again:
+
+ "Periculum ex aliis facere, tibi quod ex usu siet."--Ter. _Heaut._ i.
+ 2. 36. (Not 25., as in the Delphin _Index_.)
+
+Again:
+
+ "Feliciter is sapit, qui periculo alieno sapit."
+
+This passage is assigned to Plautus in the _Sylloge_ of Petrus
+Lagnerius, Francf. 1610, p. 312., but I cannot find it in this author.
+
+ C. H. P.
+ Brighton, May 12. 1851.
+
+Perhaps it is hardly an answer to EFFIGIES to tell him that the earliest
+occurrence of this line, with which I am acquainted, is in a rebus
+beneath the device of the Parisian printer, Felix Balligault, about the
+year 1496. Thus:
+
+ "Felix quem faciunt aliena pericula cautum.
+ Felici monumenta die felicia felix
+ Pressit: et haec vicii dant retinentve nihil."
+
+The device is a fruit-tree, from which a shield is suspended inscribed
+_felix_. Two apes are seated at the foot of the tree. The thought is,
+however, common to the wise and the witty of every age. Menander has it
+thus:--
+
+ [Greek: "Blepon pepaideum eis ta ton allon kaka."]
+
+And Plautus:
+
+ "Feliciter sapit qui alieno periculum sapit."
+
+Compare Terence, _Heaut._ i. 2. 36.:
+
+ "Periculum et aliis facere, tibi quod ex usu siet."
+
+And Diodorus Siculus, i. ab init.:
+
+ [Greek: "Kalon gar to dunasthai tois ton allon agnoemasi pros
+ diorthosin chresthai paradeigmasi."]
+
+And Tibullus, lib. iii. eleg. vi.:
+
+ "Felix, quicunque dolore
+ Alterius disces posse carere tuo."
+
+These indications may perhaps put your correspondent in the way of a
+more satisfactory answer to his question.
+
+ S.W. SINGER.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Church Bells_ (Vol. iii., p. 339.).--Should the following extract from
+Mr. Fletcher's _Notes on Nineveh_ have escaped the notice of MR. GATTY,
+it may probably interest him:--
+
+ "During the following (12th) century Dionysius Bar Salibi occupied the
+ (Jacobite) patriarchal throne, a man noted for piety and learning. He
+ composed several works on theological subjects, among which we find a
+ curious disquisition on bells, the invention of which he ascribes to
+ Noah. He mentions that several histories record a command given to
+ that patriarch to strike on the bell with a piece of wood three times
+ a day, in order to summon the workmen to their labour while he was
+ building the ark. And this he seems to consider the origin of church
+ bells, an opinion which, indeed, is common to other Oriental
+ writers."--Vol. ii. p. 212.
+
+ E. H. A.
+
+_Chiming, Tolling, and Pealing_ (Vol. iii., p. 339).--Though the
+following has not, I fear, _canonical_ authority, nor is it of _remote_
+antiquity, still, as they are not lines of yesterday, they may serve as
+one Reply to Mr. GATTY'S late Query on _Chiming, tolling, and
+pealing_:--
+
+ "To call the folk to church in time
+ We _chime_,
+ When joy and mirth are on the wing
+ We _ring_,
+ When we mourn a departed soul
+ We _toll_."
+
+I think it probable (though I have no direct proof of it) that the great
+bell, or tenor, was always RUNG when a sermon was to be _preached_,
+which was not the case when there was to be only prayers. I believe it
+is so at this day at St. Mary's, Oxford; it is very certain that the
+great bell, being so rung, is in some places called the _Sermon_ Bell,
+though I remember two legends on tenor bells, which seem to imply that
+they were intended to call to prayers, viz.:--
+
+ "Come when I call,
+ To serve God all."
+
+ "For Christ, his flock, I aloud do call,
+ To confess their sins, and be pardoned all."
+
+The difference between ringing the tenor (or any bell for prayers), and
+ringing it as a knell, is, that in the latter case the bell is set at
+every pull or stroke, which causes a solemnity in the sound very
+different from that produced by the very reverse mode of ringing it. Oh!
+what language there is in bells. In _ringing_, the bell is swung round;
+in _tolling_, it is swung merely sufficiently for the clapper to strike
+the side. _Chiming_ is when more bells than one are _tolled_ in harmony;
+if this be correct, to _toll_ can be applied only when _one_ bell is
+sounded, and Horne Tooke's definition of the word, from _tollere_, to
+_raise up_, must be wrong (humiliter loquor).
+
+With regard to the present use of the old Sanctus Bell, which is called
+at Ecclesfield _Tom Tinkler_, the same is often called the _Ting Tang_.
+
+ H. T. ELLACOMBE.
+ Clyd St. George.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Extraordinary North Briton_ (Vol. iii., p. 409.).--In answer to the
+inquiries of the reviewer in the _Athenaeum_ of May 17, and your
+correspondent, the writer of the _Extraordinary North Briton_ appears to
+have been an individual of the name of William Moore, not, as apparently
+supposed, the poet William Mason. I have, amongst a complete series of
+the London newspapers of the day, a set of the _Extraordinary North
+Briton_, beginning Tuesday (May 10, 1768) and terminating with the 91st
+No. (Saturday, January 27, 1770). Whether it was continued further I do
+not know. The early numbers are published by Staples Steare, 93. Fleet
+Street, and the subsequent ones by T. Peat, 22. Fleet Street, and by
+William Moore, 55., opposite Hatton Garden, Holborn. The second and
+subsequent numbers are entitled, _The Extraordinary North Briton_, by
+W---- M----. In the last three numbers the W---- M---- is altered to
+William Moore, and at the end of each is "London, printed and sold by
+the author, W. Moore, No. 22., near St. Dunstan's Church, Fleet Street."
+In the 90th number is the following advertisement:
+
+ "Mr. Moore thinks it highly incumbent on him to acquaint the public,
+ that Thomas Brayne (who was his shopman all last winter) is now
+ publishing a spurious paper under the same title in Holborn; that they
+ may not be deceived, Mr. Moore's name will be in front of every paper
+ he writes. He begs leave further to add, that Brayne sold several
+ papers last week in his name, and told those who purchased them, that
+ they were wrote by Mr. Moore, and that he published for him. In order
+ that the public may not be deceived by such low artifice, an affidavit
+ of Brayne's proceedings in this respect, will appear in the public
+ papers some time next week."
+
+I have also the papers published by Brayne, which are advertised at the
+end to be "Printed and Published by T. Brayne, No. 55., opposite Hatton
+Garden, Holborn."
+
+I have referred to No. 4, for Friday, June 3, 1768, addressed to Lord
+Mansfield, noticed in the _Athenaeum_; but, with all due respect to the
+opinion of the reviewer, I cannot see the slightest similitude to the
+style of Junius. It appears to me to be a very feeble performance, and
+by a very inferior person. Indeed, the entire series of the
+_Extraordinary North Briton_ seems poor and flat when compared with its
+predecessor, the original and famous _North Briton_.
+
+The attempt to show Mason to be Junius is amusing and ingenious; but the
+reviewer has evidently failed in persuading himself, and therefore,
+amidst the many startling improbabilities by which such an attempt is
+encompassed, is scarcely likely to gain many converts to such a theory.
+
+ JAMES CROSSLEY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Fitzpatrick's Lines on Fox._--MR. MARKLAND, in your 78th Number (p.
+334.), asks the true reading of the third line.--The word should be
+"mind," not "course."
+
+The lines are under the engraved bust of Fox, prefixed to the edition,
+in elephant folio, of his _History of the early Part of the Reign of
+James II._, and the word there given is "course." In my copy of that
+work is inserted a letter from Miller, the publisher, to a deceased
+friend of mine, who was an original subscriber at "Five Guineas,
+boards!"
+
+That letter, so far as is material, is as follows:--
+
+ "The error in the engraving of the writing was certainly a very bad
+ one, and not to be remedied, but it is a satisfaction to me that it
+ was Lord Holland's mistake and not mine. I have his lordship's
+ original writing of the four lines to clear myself. W. Miller,
+ Albemarle Street, June 6, 1808."
+
+ Q. D.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Ejusdem Farinae_ (Vol. iii., p. 278.).--This phrase was used in a
+disparaging sense long before the time of the "scholastic doctors and
+casuists of the middle ages," as may appear from Persius, v. 115-117.,
+where he is showing that an elevation in rank does not necessarily
+produce a more elevated tone of mind; and says to an imaginary upstart:
+
+ "Sin tu, cum fueris _nostrae_ paulo ante _farinae_,
+ Pelliculam veterem retines, et fronte politus
+ Astutam vapido servas sub pectore vulpem," &c.
+
+It is needless to add that the metaphor is taken from loaves made from
+the "_same batch_" of flour, where, if one be bad, all the others must
+be equally so.
+
+ J. EASTWOOD.
+ Ecclesfield Hall.
+
+Stephens, in his _Thesaurus_, under the head of "Farinae," states--
+
+ "Proverbiales locutiones sunt, Ejusdem Farinae, Nostrae farinae,"
+
+but makes no allusion to its being a term expressive of baseness and
+disparagement. Nor does it seem to be so used by Persius in v. 115. of
+his 5th Satire:
+
+ "Si tu, cum fueris nostrae paulo ante farinae."
+
+We employ a somewhat similar expression, when we say, "both of the same
+kidney."
+
+ C. I. R.
+
+This expression may be traced beyond "the scholastic doctors and
+casuists of the middle ages." Erasmus, in his _Adagia_, says,--
+
+ "Ejusdem farinae dicuntur, inter quos est indiscreta similitudo. Quod
+ enim aqua ad aquam collata, idem ad farinam farinae. Persius in 5
+ Satyr.
+
+ "'Nostrae paulo ante farinae,
+ Pelliculam veterem retines.'"
+
+And again, on the proverb "Omnia idem pulvis," he says,--
+
+ "Quin nobis omnia idem, quod aiunt, pulvis: alludens ad defunctorum
+ cineres, inter quos nibil apparet discriminis. Confine illi quod alio
+ demonstravimus proverbio, ejusdem farinae. Siquidem antiqui farinam
+ pollinem vocabant."
+
+Is. Casaubon, in a note on the above passage of Persius, says,--
+
+ "Proverbium Latinum ad notandum similitudinem, 'est ejusdem farinae,'
+ proprie locum habet in panibus."
+
+Though the expression is generally, if not always, used disparagingly,
+as the corresponding expressions "birds of a feather" and "of the same
+kidney," yet I should doubt whether the term "farinae" is itself
+expressive of baseness, any more than "feather" or "kidney." By the way,
+what is the origin of the latter of the above expressions?
+
+ E. S. T. T.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_The Sempecta_ (Vol. iii., pp. 328. 357.).--I have to return many thanks
+to DR. MAITLAND for his kindness in so promptly answering my Query. The
+reference to Martene has enabled me to find the poem in question. It is
+in Martene and Durand's _Thesaurus novus Anecdotorum_, Paris, 1717; and
+will be found in vol. iii. col. 1333. The poem forms caput iii. of the
+second book of the _Historia Monasterii Villariensis in Brabantia,
+ordinis Cisterciensis_ (a title which shows the monastery to which the
+old soldier-monk belonged instead of Croyland), and is headed "Incipit
+vita beati Franconis." I think there are few of your readers who will
+not thank me for calling their attention to it, if they will take the
+trouble to refer to Martene's work.
+
+ H. R. LUARD.
+ Trin. Coll. May 5.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"_Nulli fraus tuta latebris_" (Vol. iii., p. 323.) will be found in
+_Camerar. Emblem._, cent. ii. 40.
+
+ Q. Q.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Voltaire--where situated_ (Vol. iii., p. 329.).--If the Querist will
+look to the _Critical Essays of an Octogenarian_, by J. R. (the learned,
+venerable, and respected James Roche, Esq., of Cork), he will find, at
+p. 11. vol. i., that there is no such place, the word "Voltaire" being
+merely a transposition of the name of the party assuming it as a
+designation. Thus, he was called _Arouet Le Jeune_. Transpose the
+letters of _Arouet L. J._, and allowing _j_, _u_ and _i_, _v_ to be used
+for each other, you have _Voltaire_.
+
+ K.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_By the Bye_ (Vol. ii., p. 424.; Vol. iii., p. 109.).--In further
+illustration of this phrase, I would advert to the practice of declaring
+by the bye, which prevailed in the superior courts of common law, before
+the Uniformity of Process Act (2 Will. IV., c. 39.). The following
+extract from Burton's _Exchequer Practice_, 1791, vol. i. p. 149., will
+sufficiently explain this happily obsolete matter:--
+
+ "By the old rules it is ordered, 'That upon every defendant's
+ appearance, the plaintiff may put in as many declarations as he will
+ against every such defendant, provided they all be put in at one and
+ the same time.' If there be more than one declaration delivered at the
+ same time against the same defendant, every additional declaration so
+ delivered is called delivering the declaration by the bye."
+
+In the King's Bench, in certain cases, any other plaintiff could declare
+by the bye against the defendant, and that even before the original
+plaintiffs had declared. See Crompton's _Practice Common-placed_, 2nd
+ed., 1783, vol. i. p. 100.
+
+_The Doctor_ (in chap. cx.) says--
+
+ "By the bye, which is the same thing, in common parlance, as by the
+ way, though critically there may seem to be a difference; for by the
+ bye might seem to denote a collateral remark, and by the way a direct
+ one."
+
+By the bye, what a pity it is there is no Index to _The Doctor_.
+
+ C. H. COOPER.
+ Cambridge, March 24, 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Bigod de Loges_ (Vol. iii., p. 306.).--There is an error, perhaps a
+clerical one, in M. J. T.'s statement, that "Bigod, whose name was
+attached to the charter of foundation of St. Werburgh's Abbey, is
+elsewhere, according to Ormerod, called Robert."
+
+The remark is by Leycester, not Ormerod, and the purport is exactly the
+converse. To the words "Signum Roberti de Loges" is added, "alii Bigot
+de Loges hic legunt." Vide _Monasticon_, pars I., pp. 200. 202.
+
+This passage will be found in Leycester's _Antiquities_, p. 111.,
+reprinted in _Hist. Chesh._, vol. i. p. 13. But Leycester's
+_Prolegomena_ is the heading, and the initials "P. L." are appended to
+the note.
+
+ LANCASTRIENSIS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Knebsend or Nebsend, co. York_ (Vol. iii., p. 263.).--A part of
+Sheffield is called Neepsend, which is probably the place inquired after
+by J. N. C., especially as the ordinary pronunciation of it is
+_Nep_send.
+
+ J. EASTWOOD.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Mrs. Catherine Barton_ (Vol. iii., p. 328.).--Your correspondent will
+find all that is known in Sir David Brewster's _Life of Newton_, and
+will see (p. 323.) that her maiden name must have been either Smith,
+Pilkington, or Barton itself.
+
+ M.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Peter Sterry_ (Vol. iii., p. 38.).--In the title-page to his sermon,
+preached before the Parliament, Nov. 1, 1649 (Lond. 1650, 4to.), Sterry
+is called "sometime Fellow of Emanuel College, Cambridge; now a Preacher
+of the Gospel in London." Some account of him may be seen in Burnet's
+_History of his own Time_; and in the _Memoirs of Edmund Ludlow_. Wood
+says that Peter Sterry was notorious "for keeping on that side which had
+proved trump" (_Athenae_, iii. 197., edit. Bliss).
+
+ EDWARD F. RIMBAULT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Wife of James Torre_ (Vol. iii., p. 329.).--In reply to MR. PEACOCK'S
+Query I beg to inform him that the lady's name was Elizabeth, youngest
+of the four daughters and co-heiresses of William Lincolne, D.D., of
+Bottesford, and by her Mr. Torre had several children, all of whom died
+young except Jane, who married, in 1701, the Rev. Thomas Hassel. This is
+taken from Burke's _Dictionary of Landed Gentry_, vol. ii, M to Z,
+published by Colburn, London, 1847, where the Torre pedigree can be
+seen, but no other mention of the _Lincolne_ family is there made. There
+are seven different coats of arms and crests under the name _Lincolne_
+in Burke's _Armory of England, Scotland, and Ireland_, published by
+Churton in 1843. This is all I can find at present.
+
+ J. N. C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Ramasse_ (Vol. iii., p. 347.).--One word to complete MR. WAY'S
+explanation. This style of sliding down the slopes of the Alps is called
+a _ramasse_, because the guides are ready below to _ramasser_, that is,
+to _pick up_, the travellers who are thus sent down.
+
+ C.
+
+This word is by no means obsolete in France, in the acceptation of "a
+sledge." In addition to the instances given from Barre and Roquefort by
+MR. ALBERT WAY, in his instructive note on the "Pilgrymage of Syr R.
+Guylforde, Knyght," I find in Napoleon Landais' _Dictionnaire general et
+grammatical des Dictionnaires Francais_," the following explanation:--
+
+ "RAMASSE, chaise a porteurs, traineau pour descendre des montagnes ou
+ il y a de la neige: _descendre une montagne dans une ramasse_."
+
+He also says, in defining the meaning of the verb "ramasser:"
+
+ "Trainer dans une _ramasse: on le ramassa pendant deux heures; quand
+ il fut sur la montagne, il se fit ramasser_."
+
+The late Mr. Tarver, in his _Dictionnaire Phraseologique Royal_, has
+also the following:
+
+ "RAMASSE, s. f. (t. de voyageur), sledge.
+ "_On le ramassa_, they conveyed him in a sledge.
+ "RAMASSEUR, a man who drives a sledge."
+
+ D. C.
+ St. John's Wood, May 4. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Four Want Way_ (Vol. iii., p. 168.).--Halliwell describes the word
+"want" as meaning in Essex a cross-road. It is still used here as
+denoting a place where four roads meet, and called "a four want way." I
+always fancied it meant a wont way, _via solita_; but I have no
+authority for the etymology.
+
+ BRAYBROOKE.
+ Audley End.
+
+ ["Went" is used in Chaucer in the sense of "way," "passage,"
+ "turning," or road: thus, in _Troilus and Creseide_, iii. 788., he
+ speaks of a "a privie went," and v. 605., "And up and doun there made
+ he many a went;" and in the _House of Fame_:
+
+ "And in a forrest as they went,
+ At the tourning of a went."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Dr. Owen's Works_ (Vol. i., p. 276.).--The editor of the _Works of John
+Owen_ is informed, that in the valuable library of George Offor, Esq.,
+of Hackney, will be found a thick volume in manuscript of unpublished
+_Sermons on the Fifty-third Chapter of Isaiah_, in the Doctor's own
+hand-writing, and apparently prepared for publication. The same library
+also contains two scarce pieces by Dr. Owen, which it is thought have
+never been reprinted: 1. _The Stedfastness of Promises, and the
+Sinfulness of Staggering_, opened in a sermon preached at Margaret's, in
+Westminster, before the Parliament, Feb. 28, 1649, being a Day set apart
+for Solemn Humiliation throughout the Nation. By John Owen, Minister of
+the Gospel. London, 1650. 4to. pp. 54.--2. _God's Work in Founding Zion,
+and his People's Duty thereupon._ A Sermon preached in the Abbey Church
+at Westminster, at the opening of the Parliament, Sept. 17, 1656. By
+John Owen, a Servant of Jesus Christ in the Work of the Gospel. Oxford,
+1656. 4to. pp. 48.
+
+ J. Y.
+ Hoxton.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Bactrian Coins_ (Vol. iii., p. 353.).--Has your correspondent read the
+book by Masson _On the Coins, &c. of Afghanistan_, published by
+Professor H. H. Wilson? There are also references to authorities in
+Humphreys _On Ancient Coins and Medals_.
+
+ C. B.
+
+_Bactria._--BLOWEN will find some trustworthy information respecting
+Bactria in Professor Lassen's _Indische Alterthumskunde_, Zweiter Band,
+pp. 277. et seq. Bonn, 1849; and a list of authorities on the
+Graeco-Bactrian coins in the same work, pp. 282. 283. (notes).
+
+ C. H.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Baldrocks_ (Vol. iii., p. 328.).--On looking over a vestry book
+belonging to South Lynn in this town, commencing at 1605, and ending in
+1677, I find some Churchwardens' Accounts, and amongst them the two
+following entries, which may, I trust, assist "A CHURCHWARDEN," and lead
+to an elucidation of this word:--
+
+ "1610.
+ "Janua. 17. ffor a _balledrick_ to ye great Bell, xxi_d._
+
+ "1618.
+ "Novemb. 22. Item. for mendine of ye _baldericke_ for ye foore
+ bell, vj_d._"
+
+From these entries it seems that the "baldrock" was something attached
+to the great bell.
+
+In most of the recent English Dictionaries the word is applied to
+furniture, and to a belt or girdle. But in a Latin Dictionary published
+at Cambridge in 1693, I find in the Anglo-Latin part the following:--
+
+ English. A bawdrick of a bell clapper.
+ Latin. Ropali corrigia.
+
+And the English of "Ropali Corrigia" seems (notwithstanding the English
+version given with it) to be "_pieces of leather_," or "_thongs of
+leather_" to the bell clapper, but for what purpose used I do not know.
+
+ JOHN NURSE CHADWICK.
+
+P.S. The word "corrigia" is taken from the word "corium," a skin of
+leather.
+
+ [Were not these leather coverings?--that for the rope, to prevent its
+ cutting the ringer's hands (as we constantly see), and also to prevent
+ his hand slipping; and that for the clapper, to muffle it--straps of
+ leather girded round them.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Tu Autem_ (Vol. iii., pp. 265. 308.).--The "Tu Autem," still remembered
+at Oxford and Cambridge, and yet lingering at the public dinners of the
+canons of Durham, is the last fragment of what was once a daily, or at
+least an almost daily, religious form or service at those ancient
+places; and it is rather strange that such a fragment should have
+remained so long in the collegiate and cathedral refectory without
+having preserved any remembrance of its real origin and meaning. If
+Bishop Hendren or Father Holdfast would forego their favourite pursuits
+for a few minutes, and look into your interesting and improving
+miscellany, they might inform you that in the Romish Breviary--which, no
+doubt, has preserved many ancient religious services--there is a form
+entitled _Benedictio mensae_. As the generality of your readers may not
+have the Breviary at hand, I send you so much of the service as may
+suffice for the present purpose.
+
+ "BENEDICTIO MENSAE.
+
+ "_Ante prandium Sacerdos benedicturus mensam, incipit_, Benedicite,
+ _et alii repetunt_, Benedicite. _Deinde dicit_ Oculi omnium, _et alii
+ prosequuntur_. In te sperant, Domine, et tu das escam illorum in
+ tempore opportuno" &c. &c. Then "Gloria Patri" &c., and "Pater noster"
+ &c. &c.
+
+ "_Postea Sacerdos dicit_:
+
+ "Oremus.
+
+ "Benedic Domine nos, et haec tua dona, quae de tua largitate sumus
+ sumpturi. Per Christum Dominum nostrum. Amen.
+
+ "_Deinde Lector._ Jube Domine benedicere. _Benedictio._ Mensae
+ coelestis participes faciat nos Rex aeternae gloriae. Amen.
+
+ "_Post prandium aguntur gratiae hoc modo. Dicto a Lectore_, Tu autem
+ Domine miserere nobis. Deo gratias, _omnes surgunt_.
+
+ "_Sacerdos incipit._ Confiteantur tibi Domine omnia opera tua. Et
+ Sancti tui benedicant tibi. Gloria Patri, &c.
+
+ "_Postea Sacerdos absolute dicat_: _A_gimus tibi gratias, omnipotens
+ Deus, pro universis beneficiis tuis, &c.
+
+ "_Deinde alternatim dicitur Psalmus._ Miserere mei Deus.
+
+ "_Vel Psalmus 116._" (in our version, 117.), &c. &c. &c.
+
+The service then proceeds with very much repetition. The performance of
+the whole would probably occupy twenty minutes.
+
+I must note that there are variations in the service depending upon the
+season, &c. &c.
+
+I have indicated the _rubric_ of the Breviary by _Italics_.
+
+ J. YALC.
+ Preston, Lanc.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Commoner marrying a Peeress_ (Vol. ii., p. 230.).--Your correspondent
+L. R. N. inquires whether there is any decision subsequent to that in
+the reign of Henry VIII. on the claim to the Taylboys barony, respecting
+the right of a Commoner marrying a peeress to assume her title and
+dignity, he having issue male by her. In reply I beg to inform him that
+there appears to have been one on the claim of Richard Bertie, in 1580,
+to the Barony of Willoughby, in right of his wife Catherine Duchess of
+Suffolk, as tenant by the curtesy, which was rejected, and Peregrine
+Bertie her son was admitted in the lifetime of his father. It seems,
+however, from the want of modern instances, as also by the elevation of
+ladies to the rank of peeresses, with remainders to their children, thus
+enabling the issue to sit in the lifetime of the father, that the
+prevailing notion is against curtesy in titles of honour. This subject
+will be found treated at some length in Cruise's _Digest_, vol. iii. pp.
+187, 188. 198. ed. 1818.
+
+ O. S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Ancient Wood Engraving_ (Vol. iii., p. 277.).--The subject of THE
+HERMIT OF HOLYPORT'S question is an engraving of the "Pinax" of Cebes, a
+Theban philosopher who wrote circa A. M. 3600, and who, in his
+allegorical work of that name, described human life under the guise of a
+picture.
+
+This information is for the HERMIT'S especial benefit, as I suppose it
+will be old news to most of your correspondents.
+
+I have an old Dutch edition of the "Pinax" (Gerard de Jager, 1683),
+bound in vellum, with the _Enchiridion_ and other works of Epictetus;
+the frontispiece of which is the fellow to the Hermit's engraving.
+
+ F. I.
+ Bradford.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Vegetating Insects_ (Vol. iii., p. 166.).--As the Query of MR. MANLEY
+in No. 70. has not been answered, I beg to say that Vegetating Insects
+are not uncommon both in New South Wales and New Zealand. The insect is
+the caterpillar of a large brown moth, and in New South Wales is
+sometimes found six inches long, buried in the ground, and the plant
+above ground about the same length: the top, expanded like a flower, has
+a brown velvety texture. In New Zealand the _plant_ is different, being
+a single stem from six to ten inches high: its apex, when in a state of
+fructification, resembles the club-headed bulrush in miniature. When
+newly dug up, and divided longitudinally, the intestinal canal is
+distinctly visible, and frequently the hairs, legs, and mandibles.
+Vegetation invariably proceeds from the nape of the neck; from which it
+may be inferred, that the insect, in crawling to the place where it
+inhumes itself, prior to its metamorphosis, while burrowing in the light
+vegetable soil, gets some of the minute seeds of the fungus between the
+scales of its neck, from which in its sickening state it is unable to
+free itself, and which consequently, being nourished by the warmth and
+moisture of the insect's body then lying motionless, vegetates, and not
+only impedes the process of change in the chrysalis, but likewise
+occasions the death of the insect. The New South Wales specimen is
+called "Sphaeria Innominata," that of New Zealand "Sphaeria Robertsii;"
+both named, I believe, by Sir W. J. Hooker. In some specimens of the New
+Zealand kind now before me, the _bodies_ of the insects are in their
+normal state, but the legs, &c., are gone.
+
+Both specimens are figured and described in the _Tasmanian Journal_,
+vol. i. No. 4.
+
+ VIATOR.
+
+ Chatham.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Prayer at the Healing_ (Vol. iii., p. 352.).--N. E. R. inquires whether
+this prayer found a place in the prayer-books printed at Oxford or
+Cambridge.
+
+I have it before me in the folio Book of Common Prayer, "Oxford, printed
+by John Baskett, Printer to the King's Most Excellent Majesty, and to
+the University, MDCCXV." It is placed between the form of prayer for
+Aug. 1. (the King's Accession) and the King's Declaration preceding the
+Articles.
+
+This form differs from that given by Sparrow, in his _Collection_, edit.
+1684, p. 165., as follows:--
+
+Sparrow gives _two_ Gospels: Mark, xvi. 14., St. John, i. 1., the
+imposition of the King's hands taking place at the words "_they shall
+lay_," &c. in the reading of the first, and the gold being placed at
+reading the words "_that light_" in the second.
+
+In Baskett's form, the _first_ Gospel only is used, with the collect
+"_Prevent us, O Lord_," before it.
+
+In Baskett's form, the supplicatory versicles and Lord's Prayer, which
+agree in their own order with the earlier form, _follow_ this first
+Gospel, and _precede the imposition and the suspension of the gold_,
+during which (it is directed) the chaplain that officiates, _turning
+himself to his Majesty_, shall say these words following:
+
+ "God give a blessing to this work, and grant that these sick persons,
+ on whom the king lays his hands, may recover through Jesus Christ our
+ Lord."
+
+This does _not_ appear in Sparrow's form of 1684, _neither_ does the
+following address, at the close, by the "chaplain, _standing with his
+face towards them that come to be healed_."
+
+ "The Almighty God, who is a most strong tower to all them that put
+ their trust in Him, to whom all things in heaven, in earth, and under
+ the earth do bow and obey, be now and evermore your defence, and make
+ you know and feel that there is none other Name under heaven given to
+ man, in whom, and through whom, you may receive health and salvation,
+ but only the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, Amen."
+
+Objectionable as the ceremony was, there can be no doubt that a much
+more Protestant character was given to it by these alterations.
+
+ LANCASTRIENSIS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_M. or N._ (Vol. i., p. 415.; Vol. ii., p. 61.; Vol. iii., p.
+323.).--With reference to the initials or letters M. and N. found in the
+Catechism and the Marriage Service of our Common Prayer Book, it has
+struck me that a fancy of mine may satisfy some of those who wish to
+find more than a mere caprice in the selection of them.
+
+It is remarkable that in the Catechism we read N. or M., while in the
+service for Matrimony M. is for the man, N. for the woman.
+
+I have imagined long ago that "N. or M." may mean "_n_omen viri; aut
+_m_ulieris:" that M. may stand for "maritus" in the other place, and N.
+for "nupta."
+
+ TYRO ETYMOLOGICUS.
+
+N. stands (as it constantly did in MS.) for "nomen" or name; M. for N.
+N., "nomina" or names. You will observe that in black letter the forms
+of N and M are so very similar that by an easy contraction double N
+would pass into M, and thus the contracted form N. N. for "nomina" might
+have come into M. Corroborating this is the fact that the answer to What
+is your name? stands thus: Answer N. or M., and not M. or N.
+
+ J. F. T.
+
+P.S. Throughout the Matrimonial Service I observe M. attached to the
+man's name, but N. to the woman's.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Dancing Trenchmore_ (Vol. iii., p. 89.).--Your correspondent S. G. asks
+the meaning of this phrase? _Trenchmore_ was a very popular dance in the
+sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The earliest mention I find of it
+occurs in 1564, and the latest in 1728. The figure and the musical notes
+may be seen in the fifth and later editions of _The Dancing Master_. See
+also Chappell's _National English Airs_, vol. ii. p. 181., where some
+amusing quotations concerning its popularity are given. _Trenchmore_
+(the meaning of which we have to seek) was, however, more particularly
+the name of the _dance_ than the tune. The _dance_, in fact, was
+performed to _various_ tunes. In proof of this I give the following
+quotation from Taylor the water-poet's _Navy of Land Ships_, 1627:
+
+ "Nimble-heel'd mariners (like so many dancers) capring in the pompes
+ and vanities of this sinful world, sometimes a Morisco, or
+ _Trenchmore_ of forty miles long, to the tune of _Dusty my deare_,
+ _Dirty come thou to me_, _Dun out of the mire_, or _I waile in woe and
+ plunge in paine_: all these dances have no other musicke."
+
+ EDWARD F. RIMBAULT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Demosthenes and New Testament_ (Vol. iii., p. 350.).--If your
+correspondent C. H. P. had referred to the _Critici Sacri_, he would
+have found his questions answered. With regard to the quotation from
+Acts xvii. 21., I beg to inform him that Drusius makes the same
+reference, but generally only, as Pricaeus; while Grotius gives the
+passages with particular references, in the same manner as Lagnerius. As
+to the passage from St. Matthew xiii. 14., he would have found, had he
+consulted the _Critici Sacri_, that Grotius quotes the same passage from
+Demosthenes as Pricaeus; but, as far as I can see, they are the only
+commentators in that work who observed the parallel passages. However,
+the fact of its being "employed as an established proverb by Demosthenes
+having been generally overlooked," as C. H. P. supposes, is not quite
+correct, as it is mentioned in the brief notes in Dr. Burton's _Greek
+Testament_, Oxon., 1831.
+
+ H. C. K.
+ ---- Rectory, Hereford, May 3. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Roman Catholic Church_ (Vol. iii., pp. 168. 409.).--E. H. A. will find
+the information which he requires in the _Notizie per l'anno_ 1851. It
+is a very small annual published at Rome _by authority_. Its price
+cannot exceed 4_s._ or 5_s._
+
+ F.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Yankee, Derivation of_ (Vol. iii., p. 260.).--In Webster's _American
+Dictionary_, and in the _Imperial Dictionary, English, Technological,
+and Scientific_, J. M. will see the etymology of Yankee, which M.
+Philarete Charles supposes not to be given in any work American or
+English.
+
+ NORTHMAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_English French_ (Vol. iii., p. 346.).--I take the liberty to inform C.
+W. B., for the justification of my countrymen, as well as of his own,
+that the _Guide to Amsterdam_ was probably written by a British subject
+born between the tropics, and will point out, not by way of reprisals,
+but as a curiosity of the same sort, an example of French-English to be
+found in a book just published by Whittaker and Co., entitled _What's
+What in 1851_? Let any one who understands French try to read the
+article, p. 69., headed "Qu'est que, qu'est que la veritable luxure en
+se promenant," and if he can guess at the meaning of the writer, no
+foreign-English I ever met with will ever give him trouble.
+
+ G. L. KEPPER.
+ Amsterdam, May 10. 1851.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Deans, when styled Very Reverend_ (Vol. iii., p. 352.).--I cannot
+answer this question, but I can supply a trace, if not a clue. I find in
+a long series of old almanacks that the list of deans is invariably
+given as _the Reverend_ the dean down to 1803 inclusive. I unluckily
+have not those for the three next years, but in that for 1807 I find
+"_the very Reverend_ the dean."
+
+ C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Duchess of Buckingham_ (Vol. iii., p. 281.).--There is one circumstance
+omitted by P. C. S. S., in his remarks upon the Duchess of Buckingham,
+which explains why _a Phipps_, on being called to the peerage, chose the
+titles of Mulgrave and Normanby.
+
+By her second husband--the Duke of Buckingham and Normanby--she had one
+son, who succeeded to the title and estates; but, dying unmarried during
+his mother's lifetime, _bequeathed to her all the Mulgrave and Normanby
+property_. Her daughter (by her first marriage with James Annesley,
+third Earl of Anglesey) was then the wife of Mr. W. Phipps, son of Sir
+Constantine Phipps, Lord Chancellor of Ireland: to their issue,
+Constantine Phipps, first Lord Mulgrave, the Duchess _left by will these
+estates_; thus founding her grandson's fortune, although she did not
+live to see him created the first Baron Mulgrave.
+
+The Sheffield Buckingham family, although extinct in the male line, is
+represented in the female branch by the Sheffield Dicksons; Mrs.
+Dickson, the widow of Major Dickson, of the Life-Guards, being in direct
+descent from the Lady Catherine Darnley's husband, by another wife.
+
+ A. B.
+ Redland, April 13.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Swearing by the Peacock_ (Vol. iii., p. 70.).--Swearing in the presence
+of a peacock, referred to by T. J., from Dr. Lingard's _History of
+England_, time of Edward I., is, with the ceremony observed at the Feast
+of the Peacock, in the thirteenth century, related at full by Mr. Knight
+in his _Old England_, pp. 311. and 312.; and the representation of the
+Feast from the Bran of Robert Braunche, in the choir of St. Margaret's
+Church at Lynn (a mayor of Lynn), who died October 15, 1364, is given
+fig. 1088.
+
+ BLOWEN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Howe Family_ (Vol. iii., p. 353.).--Your correspondent who asks what
+was the connexion of the Howes with the royal family, will find in
+Walpole's _Reminiscences_ (ch. ii.) that Charlotte Viscountess Howe, the
+mother of Captain Howe, afterwards the celebrated admiral, and of
+General Sir William Howe, was the daughter of George I. by Madame
+Kelmansegge, Countess of Platen, created in England Countess of
+Darlington.
+
+ C.
+
+
+
+
+Miscellaneous.
+
+
+NOTES ON BOOKS, SALES, CATALOGUES, ETC.
+
+Dr. Gregory, Professor of Chemistry at the University of Edinburgh, and
+the translator of Reichenbach's _Researches on Magnetism_, has just
+published a volume destined, we believe, to excite considerable
+attention, both from the nature of its subject and the position of the
+writer. It is entitled _Letters to a Candid Inquirer on Animal
+Magnetism_, and in the first Part, after describing the phenomena, and
+their application to medical purposes, and to the explanation of much
+that is obscure in what is called Magic or Witchcraft, "a great part of
+which appears to have rested on a knowledge of these phenomena possessed
+by a few in an ignorant age," Dr Gregory suggests, not as a fully
+developed theory, but simply as a conceivable idea, an explanation of
+the _modus operandi_ in magnetic phenomena, especially in clairvoyance.
+The basis of this explanation is the existence of that universally
+diffused power or influence, the existence of which, in Dr. Gregory's
+opinion, Reichenbach has demonstrated. The second Part consists of a
+large and startling collection of mostly unpublished cases; and Dr.
+Gregory expresses his conviction that if the evidence is fairly studied,
+it will be impossible to believe that the alleged facts are the result
+of imposture or of delusion; or to resist the conviction, which
+investigation will confirm, that the essential facts, however apparently
+marvellous, are yet true, and have been faithfully reported. These cases
+are indeed most extraordinary, and would, at first sight, seem more
+fitted to fill our Folk Lore columns than to become the subject of
+scientific enquiry; and most readers, we believe, will rise from their
+perusal with an inclination to admit that there are more things true
+than are dreamt of in their philosophy--some with an anxious doubt
+whether these "arts" are not as "forbidden" as they are "curious."
+
+The Society of Arts have opened a reading-room for the gratuitous use of
+foreign visitors to London during the Great Exhibition. Our readers will
+be doing a kindness to their friends from the Continent by making them
+acquainted with this act of liberality and good feeling on the part of
+the Society of Arts.
+
+Messrs. Puttick and Simpson (191. Piccadilly) will sell on Wednesday and
+Thursday next a curious and valuable Library, rich more especially in
+the department of voyages and travels, and including a collection of
+very rare works relating to America.
+
+CATALOGUES RECEIVED.--B. Quaritch's (16. Castle Street, Leicester
+Square) Cheap Book Circular No. 29. of Books in all Languages.--C.
+Hamilton's (22. Anderson's Buildings, City Road) Interesting Catalogue
+No. 43. of Cheap Tracts, Law and Miscellaneous Manuscripts, &c.--J.
+Miller's (43. Chandos Street) Catalogue No. 23. of Books Old and New.
+
+
+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.
+
+ THOMS' 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 et 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).
+
+ WHARTON'S ANGLIA SACRA. Vol. II.
+
+ PHEBUS (Gaston, Conte de Foix), Livre du deduyt de la Chasse.
+
+ TURNER'S SACRED HISTORY. 3 vols. demy 8vo.
+
+ KNIGHT'S PICTORIAL HISTORY OF ENGLAND. Vol. IV. Commencing from
+ Abdication of James II.
+
+ LORD DOVER'S LIFE OF FREDERICK THE GREAT. 8vo. 1832. Vol. II.
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+ LADIES' DIARY FOR 1825 AND 1826.
+
+ CHRISTIAN'S COUNSELS, &C., WITH THE SEPARATISTS' SCHISM, by Richard
+ Bernard, of Worksop or Batcombe, 1608.
+
+ Any early Copies of Tyndale the Reformer's WORKS.
+
+ LIFE OF DR. RICHARD FIELD, 2 Vols. 8vo. London. 1716-17.
+
+ FAIRFAX'S TASSO, Singer's Edit. Large paper, uncut.
+
+ CRESPET, PERE. Deux Livres de la Haine de Satan et des Malins Esprits
+ contre l'Homme. 8vo. Paris, 1590.
+
+ JACQUIER, N. FLAGELLUM DAEMONUM V. HAERETICORUM FASCINARIORUM, &c. 8vo.
+ Francfurt, 1581.
+
+ [Star symbol] Letters, stating particulars and lowest price, _carriage
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+ read."--_Morning Herald._
+
+ "This publication, which promises to be the commencement of a larger
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+
+ "A small pamphlet in which he throws a startling light on the
+ practices of modern Mesmerism."--_Nottingham Journal._
+
+ "Dr. Maitland, we consider, has here brought Mesmerism to the
+ 'touchstone of truth,' to the test of the standard of right or wrong.
+ We thank him for this first instalment of his inquiry, and hope that
+ he will not long delay the remaining portions."--_London Medical
+ Gazette._
+
+ "The Enquiries are extremely curious, we should indeed say important.
+ That relating to the Witch of Endor is one of the most successful we
+ ever read. We cannot enter into particulars in this brief notice; but
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+ with the subject."--_Dublin Evening Post._
+
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+ Gazette._
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+ =A TREATISE OF EQUIVOCATION.= Wherein is largely discussed the
+ question whether a Catholicke or any other person before a magistrate,
+ being demanded upon his Oath whether a Prieste were in such a place,
+ may (notwithstanding his perfect knowledge to the contrary) without
+ Perjury, and securely in conscience, answer No; with this secret
+ meaning reserved in his mynde, That he was not there so that any man
+ is bounde to detect it. Edited from the Original Manuscript in the
+ Bodleian Library, by DAVID JARDINE, of the Middle Temple, Esq.,
+ Barrister at Law.
+
+ London: LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, and LONGMANS.
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+Printed by THOMAS CLARK SHAW. of No. 8. New Fleet Square, at No. 5. New
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+published by GEORGE BELL, of No. 186. Fleet Street, in the Parish of St.
+Dunstan in the West, in the City of London, Publisher, at No. 186 Fleet
+Street aforesaid.--Saturday, May 31. 1851.
+
+
+
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+[Transcriber's Note: This text uses _underscores_ to indicate _italic_
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+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Queries, Vol. III, Number
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