The Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Queries, Vol. III, Number 86, June 21, 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 86, June 21, 1851 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Geneologists, etc. Author: Various Editor: George Bell Release Date: September 21, 2011 [EBook #37496] Language: English Character set encoding: ASCII *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES AND QUERIES, VOL. III *** Produced by Charlene Taylor, Jonathan Ingram and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) [Transcriber's Note: This text uses _underscores_ to indicate _italic_ fonts. Original spelling varieties have not been standardized. Some medieval contractions have been tentativley [expanded] in [brackets]. The Roman numeral *C shows an inverted C, or closing ). A list of volumes and pages in "Notes and Queries" was added at the end.] 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. 86. SATURDAY, JUNE 21. 1851. Price Threepence. Stamped Edition, 4_d._ CONTENTS. NOTES:-- Notes on Books, No. I.: Mackintosh on Ogilvie's Essay on the Right of Property in Land, by S. W. Singer 489 Notes on Ireland, No. I.: Freedom from Serpents 490 Canons and Articles of 1571 491 On Two Passages in Dryden, by H. H. Breen 492 Minor Notes:--Lord Edward Fitzgerald's Mother--Chaucer and Gray--Shakspeare Family--Epitaph on Dr. Humphrey Tindall--Specimens of Composition--Burke's "mighty Boar of the Forest" 492 QUERIES:-- Queries on Tennyson 493 Ancient Modes of hanging Bells, by Rev. A. Gatty 493 Minor Queries:--English Sapphics--Equestrian Statues--Plays in Churches--"The Right Divine of Kings to govern wrong"--Serius, where situated?--Hollander's Austerity, &c.--Brother Jonathan--Authorship of the "Groves of Blarney"--Carnaby--Death of Death's Painter--Book Plates--Querelle d'Allemand--Bassenet of Eaton--Dumore Castle, or the Petrified Fort--Charles Dodd, the Ecclesiastical Historian--Ussher's Works, by Dr. Elrington--Family of Etty the Artist--St. Hibbald 494 MINOR QUERIES ANSWERED:--Unde derivatur "Gooseberry Fool?"--Biography of Bishop Hurd--Friday, why considered unlucky--The Lord Mayor a Privy Councillor--Alterius Orbis Papa--Mrs. Elstob--Cardinal Bellarmin 496 REPLIES:-- Shakspeare's Use of "Captious" and "Intenible." Shakspeare's "Small Latin" 497 Earth thrown upon the Coffin, by Rev. A. Gatty, &c. 499 On the Word "Prenzie" in "Measure for Measure," by John Taylor 499 Zacharie Boyd 500 Replies to Minor Queries:--Death, how symbolised--A Kemble Pipe--Flemish Work on the Order of St. Franciscus--Meaning of Tick--Spelling of Britannia, &c.--Fossil Elk of Ireland--"In Time the Bull," &c.--Baldrock--Epitaph--Prayer of Mary Queen of Scots--Aristophanes on the Modern Stage--The White Rose--Mark for a Dollar--Gillingham--On the Lay of the Last Minstrel, &c.--Lines on Temple--Sewell, Meaning of--Lambert Simnel--Tennyson's "In Memoriam"--The second King of Nineveh who burned his Palace--Legend in Frettenham Church--Natural Daughter of James II.--Clarkson's Richmond--MSS. of Sir Thomas Phillipps--Meaning of Pilcher--Antiquity of Smoking--Principle of Association--Corpse makes a Right of Way--Chloe--Family of Sir J. Banks--Verse Lyon--Heronsewes--Theory of the Earth's Form--Mythology of the Stars--Topical Memory--Eisell--Four Want Way--Meaning of Carfoix--A regular Mull--William Hone--The Rev. Mr. Gay--Lady Mary Cavendish--Hand giving the Blessing--The Oldenburg Horn--Covey--Davy Jones's Locker--Umbrella--Nao, a Ship--Birth of Spenser, &c. 501 MISCELLANEOUS:-- Notes on Books, Sales, Catalogues, &c. 510 Books and Odd Volumes wanted 510 Notices to Correspondents 511 Advertisements 511 Notes. NOTES ON BOOKS, NO. I. _Mackintosh on Ogilvie's Essay on the Right of Property in Land._ At the dispersion of the library of the late Sir James Mackintosh, striking evidence of his extensive reading appeared. It seems to have been his custom to always read with a pencil in his hand, to score the remarkable passages, and to make occasional notes; generally at the end of the book he indicates the place where, and date when he read it. One remarkable and not uninteresting example occurs in the following volume in my possession: "An Essay on the Right of Property in Land, with respect to its foundation in the Law of Nature: its present establishment by the municipal laws of Europe; and the regulations by which it might be rendered more beneficial to the lower ranks of Mankind." London, 1782, 8vo. On the inside of the cover Sir James Mackintosh has written: "_Clapham Common_, July 18, 1828.--An ingenious and benevolent, but injudicious book, which is a good example of the difficulty of forming plans for the service of mankind. To the author, an accomplished recluse, a lettered enthusiast of no vulgar talent or character, I owe the cultivation of a sense of the beautiful in poetry and eloquence, for which at the distance of near half a century I feel a lively gratitude. It was written by _William Ogilvie_, Professor of Humanity in King's College, Aberdeen. I even now recollect passages of his Translation of the 4th Book of the Eneid.--J. MACKINTOSH." I have found a corroboration of the estimate above given of this person, by another of his countrymen, James Ogilvie (who appears to have been an itinerant teacher of oratory in America) in a volume of _Philosophical Essays_ published in Philadelphia in 1816. Speaking of a gifted native of Scotland of the name of McAllester, settled in the far west, near Bard's Town, and lamenting that he should choose to bury his talents in obscurity and indolence, the writer says: "He came nearer to the character of a scientific sage than any human being the narrator has ever known, with the exception of _William Ogilvie_, Professor of Humanity in King's College, Old Aberdeen, Author of a profound original 'Essay on the Right of Property in Land.'" The book itself is, in some respects at least, well worthy of attention, and especially at the present moment, when the subject it embraces presses itself upon all men's consideration. On _emigration_, for instance, Ogilvie has some anticipatory views: thus he observes with truth: "To increase the prosperity and the happiness of the greater number, is the primary object of government, and the increase of national happiness must be the increase of national strength. Is it not then the duty, and perhaps also the interest of every legislature in the West of Europe to promote the emigration of its less opulent subjects, until the condition of the lower classes of men at home be rendered nearly as comfortable as the condition of the same classes in the new settlements of North America?"--Pp. 50, 51. Just now, when the Property Tax is to receive the mature consideration of the legislature, the following passage, which also anticipates the public feeling as expressed lately by an influential part of the press, deserves to be cited: "Without regard to the original value of the soil, the gross amount of property in land is the fittest subject of taxation; and could it be made to support the whole expense of the public, great advantages would arise to all orders of men. What then, may it be said, would not, in that case, the proprietors of stock in trade, in manufactures, and arts, escape taxation, that is, the proprietors of one half of the national income? They would indeed be so exempted; and very justly, and very profitably for the state; for _it accords with the best interests of the community through successive generations, that_ ACTIVE PROGRESSIVE INDUSTRY SHOULD BE EXEMPTED, IF POSSIBLE, FROM EVERY PUBLIC BURTHEN, _and that the whole weight should be laid on that quiescent stock, which has been formerly accumulated, as the reward of an industry which is now no longer exerted_."--P. 207. In another work on political economy, Sir James has also recorded his opinion, and indicated some passages, which have been copied by Godwin. The work is: _Doutes Proposes aux Philosophes Economistes sur l'Ordre Naturel et Essentiel des Societes Politiques, par M. l'Abbe de Mably_: a la Haye, 1768, 8vo. "This book is a greater mixture of sense and nonsense than any other I ever read. What he says against the _Political_ jargon of the Economists, their evidence and their _despotisme legal_, is perfectly well reasoned. His own system of ascribing all evils to the Institution _of Separate Property_ is too absurd for any serious discussion." It is pleasant to have these recorded opinions of such a man as Mackintosh on books the subjects of which he had deeply meditated. Indeed, to me there is a great charm in such private memoranda of a distinguished and able man, giving the passing impression on his mind in the course of his reading. S. W. SINGER. Mickleham, June 7. 1851. NOTES ON IRELAND, NO. I. _Notes on Ireland's Freedom from Serpents._ That Ireland was infested with venomous reptiles before St. Patrick's time, that he banished them, "_and that serpents cannot survive in Ireland_," is a well-known tradition, and one universally received amongst the native Irish. In Christian symbolism it was usual to designate sin or Paganism by a serpent or dragon, and saints who converted heathen nations, or subdued the evil promptings of their own nature, were represented with a serpent or dragon beneath their feet. Thus, St. Patrick, by preaching the doctrine of the Cross, and uprooting Paganism, may be said to have banished venomous serpents from Ireland. In his case, however, the symbol may have had a deeper meaning, if, as many (and with great probability) think, _serpent worship_ formed part of that Oriental heathenism which obtained in early times in Ireland. Dr. Geoffry Keating, in his _History of Ireland_ (in the Irish language), which he completed about the year 1625, says: "Saoilim gurab do an _deamhnaibk_ gairmithear _naithreacha nimke_ i m-beathaidh Patraic" ("I think that by the serpents spoken of in the life of St. Patrick were meant _demons_"). _Serpents_ figure among the carvings and hieroglyphical ornaments on some of the remnants of Irish antiquity which still puzzle our antiquaries. On Cruach Padruig, in Mayo, there is a sort of tarn which still bears the name of Loch na Pheiste, or the Serpent's Lake; and one of "the Two Lakes," whence Gleandaloch derives its name, has the same appellation. Solinus, who flourished at the close of the second century, notices, I believe, the strange fact of Ireland's having an immunity from reptiles; Isidore and Bede, in the seventh and eighth centuries, respectively repeat the assertion. Donatus, Bishop of Fesulae, who flourished about the middle of the ninth century, says, in a Latin poem on his native country: "Nulla venena nocent; nec Serpens serpit in herba; Nec conquesta canit garrula Rana lacu In qua Scotorum gentes habitare merentur; Inclyta gens hominum, milite, pace, fide." "Rana." A note on this word in Montgomery's _Poetry of Ireland_ declares: "However fabulous this may appear, it is certain that _Frogs_ were formerly unknown in this country: _they were first propagated here from spawn introduced as an experiment by a Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin, in 1696_." Joceline of Furnes, Sir James Ware, Fynes Moryson, and several others, notice the absence of serpents in Ireland. A Belfast correspondent to the _Dublin Penny Journal_, June, 1834, mentions some cases of _introducing reptiles_ into Ireland: "About 1797, a gentleman is said to have imported from England into Wexford, a number of vipers:" they died immediately after. He continues:-- "We are sorry to record that the virtues of the good old times have passed away, _as snakes are at this moment_ (June, 1834) _free denizens of the County of Down, and gambolling in its shrubberies and plantings_." The particulars are as follows: "In the summer of 1831, a gentleman, by way of experiment to ascertain whether snakes would survive in Ireland, brought from Scotland a few pair of what are usually called the common snake (_Coluber natrix_). These he put into a plantation at Milecross, near Newtownards, where they soon from their number gave evidence of becoming as fruitful as if they had been placed in South Carolina." I have not heard how long the snakes continued at Milecross, but I believe they are not there now. The Marquis of W----d, I have heard, in a similar freak, endeavoured, but unsuccessfully, to propagate snakes on his property. The usual Irish word for _serpent_ is _nathair_; Welsh, _gnadr_; German, _natter_; Anglo-Saxon, _naedre_; Latin, _natrix_; English, _adder_. The epithet _nimhe_, poison, is often added, and a compound word made, _nathair-neimhe_. _Peist_, a word I have before alluded to, is analogous with the Latin _best-ia_, and means a _worm_, a _beast_, as well as a _serpent_. EIRIONNACH. CANONS AND ARTICLES OF 1571. Dearest Sir, Yours of the 4th I showed to Mr. Baker, who desires me to tell you, that the Canons of 1571, with the subscriptions, are (as the Articles) in paper bound up in the same volume of the _Synodalia_, and stand there next to the "Articles of 1571" subscribed by the Archbishop and ten Bishops. I agree with you that the MS. of 1562 was designed to be subscribed without alterations; but your reasons do not satisfy me that the alterations were posterior to the subscription, for notwithstanding the alterations it appeared very plain to the subscribers what they subscribed to, and there needed no memorandum to them that the lines of minium were designed to exclude all that was scored; and the care that was taken to alter the account of the number of lines and Articles of the several pages conformably to the alterations made by the lines of minium was wholly unnecessary, and to no purpose, except the subscriptions were to follow, in the middle of which the subscribers own the exact number of Articles and lines in every page, and therefore this care was necessary that their subscription might be true; but supposing they subscribed before the alterations, the lines of minium were sufficient to show what alterations were to be made in the new copy of the Articles, and not the least occasion for adjusting the number of Articles and lines at the end to the foregoing pages. But both these are but conjectures on your and my part, and the main point does not depend upon them, which is in my opinion, whether this MS. could be designed for the _Publick Record_, and that it was not I think the want of such a memorandum as you speak of, as well as the Archbishop leaving it to C. C. C. as his own property, is a sufficient evidence: though I must confess I am apt to think the postscript in the _Publick Record_ (which I take to be printed from the record in Renald Wolfe's edition of 1563 referred to by your adversary) refers to this MS., and the subscriptions to it of both houses. Mr. Baker nor I had Gibson's _Synod. Anglicana_; but this morning I got a sight of it from the booksellers, and have sent it to Mr. Baker, who I hope will make a better use of it than I am able to do; the passage you refer to favours an opinion that I have had, that the subscriptions were left in the keeping of the President of the Convocation, the Archbishop or Bishop of London; but that a _Publick Record_ (different from that with the subscriptions, and left with the President) was engrossed in parchment, and preserved in its proper place, the Registry of the Convocation; and thus that which Archbishop Laud found at Lambeth might be left there. I cannot tell exactly the number of blank pages (whether three or more) between the subscription of the Bishops and of the Lower House in 1562. Both Mr. Baker and I omitted to take so much notice of it; but we both remember that there might be room in the MS. for the clause in the beginning of the twentieth Article, partly in the space between the nineteenth and the twentieth Article, and partly in the margin; or in the margin there might be room enough for the whole clause. Rogers' first edition was 1579, under this title: "The English Creed, wherein is contained in tables an Exposition on the Articles, which every one is to subscribe unto. Where the Article is expounded by Scriptures and Confessions of all the Reformed Churches and Heresies displayed, by Thomas Rogers. Printed for Andrew Mansell, 1579, in fol." This title I transcribe from Andrew Mansell's printed Catalogue of Books, published 1595. I mentioned to you another edition in 1585, the first part, and 1587, the second part, with a new title and pretty great additions; and I think I told you the second part began with the twentieth Article. It may seem from thence that his first edition in 1579 was not upon all the Articles; but I believe it was, and that the other edition came not out both parts together, because of the additions. I am sorry you find it not among Mr. Anstey's books, nor can I find it here. With my humble service to your good lady, I am, dearest sir, your most affectionate humble servant, THO. BROWNE. The letter, of which the above is a transcript, may be interesting to some of your readers; I therefore send it you for publication; the name of the person to whom it was addressed, and the date, have been torn off. (p). [Thomas Browne, the writer of the foregoing letter, was a fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge; but subsequently, with his friend Mr. Baker, became a Nonjuror. The letter appears to have been written to the Rev. Hilkiah Bedford, a Nonjuring clergyman, who was at this time preparing his masterly reply to Anthony Collins' work, _Priestcraft in Perfection_, which was published in 1709. Mr. Bedford's work was published anonymously, and is entitled, _A Vindication of the Church of England from the Aspersions of a late Libel entituled "Priestcraft in Perfection," &c._ By a Priest of the Church of England: London, 1710. The preface has been attributed to Dr. Joseph Trapp. Mr. Bedford has availed himself of the information conveyed to him in the letter given above, especially in pages 32. 35. 42. 78. 84. At page 101. he says, "I shall set down what farther account concerning this ancient MS. I have received in several letters from two persons of great learning and integrity at Cambridge, who have consulted these MSS. of Corpus Christi formerly, and been so obliging to examine them again now for my satisfaction, with all the care and exactness due to a matter of such moment." The _minium_ mentioned by the writer of the letter is the red lead pencil commonly used by Archbishop Parker, for noting particular passages in the documents he perused.] ON TWO PASSAGES IN DRYDEN. I have met with a notion in Dryden's _Poems_, which reads very like a blunder. It occurs in the "Spanish Friar," as follows:-- "There is a pleasure sure in being mad, Which none but madmen know." And again in this couplet: "And frantic men in their mad actions show A happiness, that none but madmen know;" There is a description of madness to which all men are more or less subject, and which Pascal alludes to in one of his "Pensees:" "Les hommes sont si necessairement fous, que ce serait etre fou par un autre tour de folie, que de ne pas etre fou:" or, as Boileau has it in the couplet: "Tous les hommes sont fous, et malgre leurs soins, Ne different, entre eux, que du plus ou du moins." There is another sort of madness which is described by Terence as ---- "cum ratione insanire." And there is a third species of it, which Dryden himself speaks of in the well-known line adopted from Seneca: "Great wits are sure to madness near allied." Now, it is obvious that, in the passages above quoted from Dryden, he does not refer to any of these three kinds of madness. As a man, he could say in regard to the first: "Homo sum: humani nihil a me alienum puto." As a man of the world his whole life was an exemplification of the second; for no one knew better than he how to be mad by rule. And as one of our greatest wits he was entitled to claim a near alliance to that madness which is characteristic of men of genius. It is clear, therefore, that, in the lines quoted above, he speaks of that total deprivation of reason, which is emphatically described as stark, staring madness; and hence the blunder. In point of fact, Dryden either knew the pleasure and happiness of which he speaks, as belonging to that sort of madness, or he did not know them. If he knew them, then by his own showing he was a madman. If he did not know them, how could he affirm that none but madmen knew them? Should my view of this matter be incorrect, I shall be thankful to any of your readers who will take the trouble to set me right. HENRY H. BREEN. St. Lucia, April 15. 1851. Minor Notes. _Lord Edward Fitzgerald's Mother._--A highly respectable woman, recently living in my service, and who was born and bred in the household of the late Duke of Leinster, told me that, when she was a child, she was much about the person of "the old Duchess;" and that she had often seen the bloody handkerchief that was taken off Lord Edward Fitzgerald, after he had been shot at his capture. This relic of her unfortunate son the venerable and noble lady always wore stitched inside her dress. The peerage states that she was a daughter of the Duke of Richmond, was married in 1746-7, and bore seventeen children. As the arrest of Lord Edward Fitzgerald was not until 1798, she must have been full seventy years old when she thus mourned; reminding one in the sternness of her grief of the "Ladye of Branksome." A. G. _Chaucer and Gray._--Of all the oft-quoted lines from Gray's _Elegy_, there is not one which is more frequently introduced than the well-known "E'en, in our ashes live their wonted fires." Now Gray was an antiquary, and there is no doubt too well read in Chaucer. Is it too much, therefore, to suggest that he owed this line to one in Chaucer's "Reves Prologue:" "Yet in our ashen cold is fire yreken." In Chaucer the sentiment it embodies is satirical:-- "For whan we may not don, than wol we speken, Yet in our ashen cold is fire yreken." In Gray, on the other hand, it is the moralist who solemnly declares: "E'en from the tomb the voice of nature cries, E'en in our ashes live their wonted fires." But the coincidence cannot surely be accidental. WILLIAM J. THOMS. _Shakspeare Family._--In the _Rotulorum Patentium et Clausorum Cancellariae Hiberniae Calendarium_, vol. i. pars i. p. 99 b. is an entry, which shows that one Thomas _Shakespere_ and Richard Portyngale were appointed Comptrollers of Customs in the port of Youghal, in Ireland, in the fifty-first year of Edward III. J. F. F. _Epitaph on Dr. Humphrey Tindall_ (Vol. iii., p. 422.).--The epitaph in Killyleagh churchyard is not unlike the following inscription on the tomb of Umphrey Tindall, D.D., Dean of Ely and President of Queen's College, Cambridge, who died Oct 12, 1650, in his sixty-fifth year, and is buried in the south aisle of the choir of Ely Cathedral:-- "In presence, government, good actions, and in birth, Grave, wise, courageous, noble, was this earth; The poor, the Church, the College say, here lies A friend, a Dean, a Master, true, good, wise." K. C. Cambridge. _Specimens of Composition._--In the current (June) number of the _Eclectic Review_ there is a critique on Gilfillan's _Bards of the Bible_, the writer of which indulges in the use of several most inelegant, extraordinary, and unpardonable expressions. He speaks of "spiritual monoptotes," &c., as if all his readers were as learned as he himself professes to be: but the climax of his sorry literary attempt is as follows: "Over the whole literature of modern times there is a feeling of reduced inspiration, milder possession, relaxed orgasmus, tabescent vitality, spiritual collapse."--P. 725. What would the author of the _Spectator_ have thought of a writer who could unblushingly parade before the literary public such words as "relaxed orgasmus," "tabescent vitality," "monoptotes," &c.? J. H. KERSHAW. _Burke's "mighty Boar of the Forest."_--It has been much canvassed, what induced Burke to call Junius the "mighty boar of the forest." In the thirteenth book of the _Iliad_ I found that Idomeneus, when awaiting the attack of AEneas, is compared to the "boar of the mountains." I think it therefore probable that Burke applied the comparison (quoting, from memory) to Junius. Perhaps you will not think this trifle unworthy of a place among the "Notes." KENNETH R. H. MACKENZIE. Queries. QUERIES ON TENNYSON. I should be much obliged to any of your correspondents who would explain the following passages of Tennyson: 1. _Vision of Sin_ (_Poems_, p. 361.): "God made himself an awful rose of dawn." 2. _Vision of Sin_ (_Poems_, p. 367.): "Behold! it was a crime Of sense avenged by sense that wore with time." 3. _In Memoriam_, p. 127.: "Over those ethereal eyes The bar of Michael Angelo." (Coleridge, _Introduction to Second Lay Sermon_, p. xxvi., says: "Whose ample foreheads, with the weighty bar, ridge-like, above the eye-brows, bespoke observation followed by meditative thought:" but why the allusion to Michael Angelo?) [Is our correspondent aware that the "_Bar_ of Michael Angelo" has already formed the subject of a Query from MR. SINGER. See our 2nd Vol., p. 166.] 4. _The Princess_, p. 66.: "Dare we dream of that, I ask'd, Which wrought us, as the workman and his work, That practice betters." "Heir of all the ages." Is this traceable to the following lines of Goethe? "Mein Vermaechtniss, wie herrlich weit und breit! Die Zeit ist mein Vermaechtniss, mein Acker ist die Zeit!" Is the poem "The Lord of Burleigh" founded on fact or not? In an old review of Tennyson in the _Westminster and Foreign Quarterly_, it is stated to refer to the "mesalliance of the Marquis of Westminster;" but any such notion is denied in the article on "Ballad Poetry" in the last number of that journal. ERYX. ANCIENT MODES OF HANGING BELLS. In the Churchwardens' accounts of Ecclesfield parish, the following entries occur:-- "1527. It. paid to James Frodsam for makyng of iiij bell collers, xiiijd. "----. It. paid to Robert Dawyre mendyng a bell wheyll, iijd. "1530. It. for festnynge a gogon in ye belle yocke, jd." The foregoing extracts are quoted with a view to ascertaining at how early a period the framework, now employed for suspending bells in churches, was in use. It would appear that in 1527 the bell-_wheel_ was known, and the bell swung on gudgeons ("gogon"), as it does now; but it may be doubted whether it was the same full wheel which we have. In a paper on Bells, read before the Bristol and West of England Architectural Society, Dec. 10, 1849, by the Rev. H. T. Ellacombe, and which has since been published in that Society's Report, I observe that two interesting plates of the bell-wheels are given: one being the old half-wheel, as still to be seen at Dunchideock in Devonshire; and the other the present whole wheel, which Mr. Ellacombe considers was a new thing in 1677. Supposing that only the half-wheel was known in 1725, still the leverage which it afforded in raising the bell was the same as is given by its modern substitute. What then was the still earlier way of obtaining the momentum necessary to peal-ringing? A drawing of an ancient campanile turret which I have, exhibits a short piece of wood stuck at right angles into the beam to which the bell is fastened; and from the end of this, the rope depends, and would, of course, when pulled, easily swing the bell on its axle. Observation in old belfries, or illustrations in old books, would possibly throw light upon my Query, which is, What were the modes of hanging church bells for ringing, prior to the invention of the bell-wheel? ALFRED GATTY. Minor Queries. _English Sapphics._--Can any of your readers furnish a list of the best specimens of the English sapphic metre in the English language?--Every one is familiar with Canning's _Needy Knife Grinder_, in the poetry of the _Anti-Jacobin_, but I do not believe Dr. Watts's beautiful sapphic lines are as well known as they deserve. I have not a copy of them by me, but I give the first stanza from memory: "When the fierce North Wind, with his airy forces, Rears up the Baltic to a foaming fury, And the red lightning, with a storm of hail, comes Rushing amain down." FM. _Equestrian Statues._--I have heard it remarked that, with the solitary exception of the Duke of Wellington, there is no instance of an equestrian statue being erected to a subject, in Her Majesty's dominions. Is this so? FM. _Plays in Churches._--In Cooke's _Leicestershire_ the following is given as an extract from the church register of Syston: "1602, paid to Lord Morden's players because they should not play in the church, 12d." Who was this Lord Morden; and did the chartered players claim the right of their predecessors, the "moralitie men," to use the church for their representations? Was the 12_d._ given as a bribe to the players to induce them to forego their claim, or expended in the hire of a place more in accordance with the parish authorities' ideas of propriety? EMUN. "_The Right Divine of Kings to govern wrong._"--Where is this oft-quoted line to be found, and who is the author of it? It is marked as a quotation in Pope's _Dunciad_, book iv. S. WMSON. _Serius, where situated?_--In requesting the information upon a point in geography with which this note concludes, I shall not, I trust, incur censure for introducing it by quoting a few of the lines in which the poet Vida conveys to parents his advice upon the choice of a master for their sons: "Interea moniti vos hic audite, parentes, Quaerendus rector de millibus, eque legendus, Sicubi Musarum studiis insignis et arte, Qui curas dulces, carique parentis amorem Induat, atque velit blandum perferre laborem. * * * * * Ille autem, pueri cui credita cura colendi, Artibus egregiis, in primis optet amari, Atque odium cari super omnia vitet alumni." I cannot pass unnoticed his counsel to masters: "Ponite crudeles iras, et flagra, magistri, Foeda ministeria, atque minis absistite acerbis. Ne mihi ne, quaeso, puerum quis verbera cogat Dura pati; neque enim lacrymas, aut dulcis alumni Ferre queunt Musae gemitus, aegraeque recedunt, Illiusque cadunt animi," &c. Vida exemplifies the consequences of the furious character and raging conduct of a master, in the harsh treatment of his defenceless flock (_turba invalida_), in the instance of a lovely boy, who, forgetful of fear, "Post habuit ludo jussos ediscere versus." The terror excited by the savage pedagogue throws the poor little fellow into a fatal illness: "Quo subito terrore puer miserabilis acri Corripitur morbo; parvo is post tempore vitam Crescentem blanda coeli sub luce reliquit. Illum populifer Padus, illum _Serius_ imis _Seriades_que diu Nymphae flevere sub undis." _Vidae Poet._, lib, i. 216. &c. My inquiry is after _Serius Seriades_que Nymphae. Where is the Serius? What is the Italian name for this (I presume) tributary of the Po? F. W. F. _Hollander's Austerity, &c._--Will you, or some one of your readers, kindly explain the allusions in the following passage?-- "Mr. Secretary Winwood is dead, whereby you see _Death expects no Complement_, otherwise he would certainly have _kept it at the Staff's End_, with a kind of _Hollander's austerity_." [Sir Th. Wentworth to Sir H. Wotton, Nov. 8. 1617, _Strafford's Letters and Despatches_, vol. i. p. 5.] C. P. PH***. _Brother Jonathan._--Why is, and when first was, this fraternal cognomen bestowed upon the United States of America? Is it strictly applicable to the whole of the Union, or only to those states which were settled and peopled by the Puritan fathers? HENRY CAMPKIN. _Authorship of the "Groves of Blarney."_--Can any one inform me when, and by whom, the ludicrous ballad, entitled the Groves of Blarney, was composed, and where it may be found. Everybody knows the lines which describe "Cupid and Venus and old Nicodemus, all standing out in the open air." E. V. _Carnaby._--What is the derivation and meaning of this word, as the name of a square or street? ARUN. _Death of Death's Painter._--Most persons have heard of the story of an Italian painter who embodied the idea of Death on the canvass so truthfully, that the contemplation of it caused his own death. I always thought it was fabulous, till I met with it in the translation of Vasari's _Lives of the Painters_, vol. ii. p. 305., now being published in Bohn's _Standard Library_. The name of Fivizzano is there given to the painter, and the following epigram is said to have been inscribed beneath the picture:-- "Me veram pictor divinus mente recepit. Admota est operi deinde perita manus. Dumque opere in facto defigit lumina pictor, Intentus nimium, palluit et moritur. Viva igitur sum mors, non mortua mortis imago Si fungor, quo mors fungitur officio." Which may be thus translated:-- Me with such truth the painter's mind discerned, While with such skilful hand the work he plied, That when to view his finished work he turned, With horror stricken, he grew pale, and died. Sure I am living Death, not Death's dead shade, That do Death's work, and am like Death obeyed. Can you refer me to any authority for the story? J. C. H. Finsbury. _Book Plates._--I have been some years collecting book plates with a view latterly of writing _A History of Book Plates_, if I can find time to do so. Several years ago, in a paper which was printed in the _Oxford Heraldic Society's Report_, I suggested 1700 as their earliest known date. I am glad to have an opportunity of mentioning that paper for the sake of saying, that I made some mistakes in it. Mr. Burgon on seeing it said, in a following report, that he had seen a book plate dated 1698. I have since obtained one or two dated in that year. I am anxious to know from any of your readers whether they have seen any English book plate dated before 1698. I am inclined to think that foreign book plates are to be found of an earlier date. I have some, unfortunately not dated, which I think are earlier. There is no doubt, however, that in this country at least they did not become general till after that date. If I live to publish the little work which I meditate, I will give all the information which I can produce on the subject. DANIEL PARSONS. _Querelle d'Allemand._--The phrase, "faire une querelle d'Allemand," means, as your readers are aware, to pick a quarrel with a person for the mere pleasure of quarrelling: and the earliest instance of its application, that occurs to me, will be found in one of Du Vair's essays, where speaking of the virtues of some of his predecessors in the office of "chancelier", he says: "Apres avoir longuement et fidelement servi la patrie, on leur dresse des querelles d'Allemand, et de fausses accusations pour les bannir des affaires." Is the origin of this expression connected with any particular occurrence in history; or has it arisen from any proneness to quarrel, which might be said to be inherent in the national character of the Germans? HENRY H. BREEN. St. Lucia, May, 1851. _Bassenet of Eaton._--Edward Bassenet, the first married Dean of St. Patrick's, Dublin, and who in the words of Swift, "surrendered the deanery to that beast Hen. VIII.," was of a family seated at Eaton, in Denbighshire. He had four sons, Richard, William, John, and George; on whom he settled the Irish property which he acquired at the surrender, and probably what he held at Eaton. (See Mason's _St. Patrick's_, p. 151.) Can any of your correspondents inform me if this family be still in existence, and in possession? or if not, how soon it failed? From the notices given by Mason, it seems probable that the eldest son died without issue; but even this is not certain, and beyond this I have no clue. D. X. _Dumore Castle, or the Petrified Fort._--Can any of your valued contributors trace the origin of this ancient fortress, which is situated on a peak of the Grampian Hills, seven miles north-east from Crieff, immediately above the romantic glen of Almond, so much spoken of in Wordsworth's poems as the burial-place of Ossian. The fort has the appearance of a large circus ring, around which are scattered the remains of this once remarkable stronghold, and which to every appearance have been burned to an extensive degree. Tradition assigns it to be the spot in which the Caledonians so nobly defended the further progress northward of the Romans; and also that it was the custom in those days, for the purpose of making their places of defence more secure, to build a double wall, in which all manner of combustibles were put, which they kindled, and let burn for the space of a few days. Being peculiarly attached to this romantic spot, and anxious to have any particulars regarding its history, perhaps you would be so kind as give it a corner in your valuable "NOTES AND QUERIES;" whereby it may be the means of gaining an answer to my Query. JAMES C. _Charles Dodd, the Ecclesiastical Historian._--The catalogue of the Bodleian Library asserts that this author's real name is Hugh Tootle. I should like to know the authority for this statement? TYRO. Dublin. _Ussher's Works, by Dr. Elrington._--If you, or any of your correspondents, can inform me when the remaining volume of the new edition of Archbishop Ussher's works by Dr. Elrington, is likely to be published, I shall esteem it a favour, as I am unable to learn from the booksellers. C. PAINE, Jun. _Family of Etty the Artist._--In the _Diary_ of Ralph Thoresby, F. R. S., 1702, vol. i. p. 366., occurs the following passage:-- "Evening sat up too late with a parcel of artists I had got on my hands; Mr. Gyles, the famousest painter of glass perhaps in the world, and his nephew, Mr. Smith, the bell-founder (from whom I received the ringing or gingling spur, and that most remarkable, with a neck six inches and a half long); Mr. Carpenter the statuary, and Mr. Etty the painter, with whose father, Mr. Etty, senr, the architect, the most celebrated Grinlin Gibbons wrought at York, but whether apprenticed with him or not I remember not well. Sate up full late with them." Thoresby at this time was at York. Were these Ettys ancestors of the late William Etty? In the "Autobiography" published in the _Art Journal_, it is stated that his father was a miller at York, but the account goes no farther back. It would be interesting to ascertain how far this was a case of hereditary genius. Is anything known of the "Etty the Painter," and "Etty, Sen., the architect," to whom Thoresby alludes? and are any of their works extant? G. J. DE WILDE. _St. Hibbald._--Who was St. Hibbald, and where is some account of him to be found? He is reported to have been buried at Hibbaldstowe, near Kirton, in Lindsey. K. P. D. E. Minor Queries Answered. _Unde derivatur "Gooseberry Fool?"_--I have heard some wild guesses on this subject; the most preposterous, perhaps, being that which would connect the term with gooseberry _food_. Has not the French word _fouler_, "to press," or "squeeze," something to do with the matter? T. J. T. Cheltenham, May 6. 1851. [Our correspondent will find ample confirmation of the accuracy of his derivation in Tarver's _Phraseological Dictionary_, where, under _Fouler_, he will find the examples, "_Fouler des pommes, du raisin_, to press, to crush, to squeeze apples, grapes."] _Biography of Bishop Hurd._--The longest biographical sketch I remember to have seen of the late Bishop Hurd, the friend and biographer of Bishop Warburton, was in a work called the _Ecclesiastical Register_, or some such name, I suppose of the date of 1809 or thereabouts. Can any correspondent of "NOTES AND QUERIES" direct me to the precise title and date of the work, or point out any better sketch of the Bishop's life? F. K. [In the collected Works of Bishop Hurd, 8 vols. 8vo., edit. 1811, will be found an autobiographical sketch of the Bishop, entitled "Some Occurrences in my Life," discovered among his papers after his decease. Nichols' _Literary Anecdotes of the Eighteenth Century_, vol. vi. pp. 468-512., contains a long and interesting account of the Bishop. See also the _Annual Register_, vol. 1. p. 155.] _Friday, why considered unlucky._--Can any of your readers tell me why Friday is considered an unlucky day? E. N. W. [There is no doubt the belief of Friday being an unlucky day originated in its being the day of the Crucifixion. A very early allusion to this superstition, and which has not we believe been recorded by Brande, will be found in Geoffrey de Vinsauf's "Lament for Richard Coeur de Lion," who was killed on a Friday: "O Veneris lacrymosa dies, O sidus amarum! Illa dies tua nox fuit, et Venus illa venenum." It is to this passage Chaucer refers in his _Nonnes_ Preeste's Tale, v. 15, 353., _et seq._, when he says: "O Gaufride, dere maister soverain, That, whan thy worthy King Richard was slain With shot, complainedest his deth so sore, Why ne had I now thy science and thy lore, The Friday for to chiden, as did ye? For on a Friday sothly slain was he."] _The Lord Mayor a Privy Councillor._--Can any of your contributors inform me whether the prefix "Right Honourable" is accorded to the title of the Lord Mayor of London as a mere matter of courtesy, or whether our Chief Magistrate is for the time being _ex officio_ a Privy Councillor, and consequently "Right Honourable?" If any authority for either position can be cited, so much the more satisfactory. LEGALIS. [The Lord Mayor is never sworn as a Privy Councillor; but on the demise of the Crown attends the meeting, of the Privy Council held on such occasion, and signs the proclamation of the new Sovereign. On the accession of William IV., some objection was, we believe, made to the admission of the Lord Mayor into the Council Chamber, which was, however, abandoned on an intimation that if the Lord Mayor was not admitted, he would retire, accompanied by his officers and the aldermen who were present.] _Alterius Orbis Papa._--In the Bishop of Exeter's celebrated _Pastoral Letter_, p. 44., the Archbishop of Canterbury is styled-- "The second spiritual chief of Christendom, _alterius orbis Papa_." In conversation a few days since I heard these expressions objected to, when a gentleman present observed that the title "Alterius orbis Papa" was conferred by the Bishop of Rome, or Pope of Christendom, on his confrere of Canterbury, at a very early period. His memory did not furnish him with the precise date, but he was convinced that such was the fact as reported in Collier's _Ecclesiastical History_, and seemed inclined to refer it to a period not long subsequent to the mission of Augustine. Is such the fact? or, if not, to whom may the words be ascribed? A. B. Redland, June 5. [Carwithen, in his _History of the Church of England_, vol. i. p. 40., speaking of Wolsey's attempt to gain the popedom, says, "His aim was the chair of St. Peter, and to the attainment of his wishes he rendered subservient both the alliances and the enmities of his own country. At home, even the papacy could confer on him no accession of power: he was indeed _papa alterius orbis_."] _Mrs. Elstob._--Mrs. Elstob, the Anglo-Saxon scholar, is stated by a recent reviewer to have passed the period of her seclusion in a village in Wiltshire, until taken notice of by a neighbouring clergyman. What village was this, and who was the clergyman? for other authorities place her at Evesham in Worcestershire. J. W. [We are inclined to think that _Wiltshire_ must be a misprint for _Worcestershire_ in the Review, as the notices of Miss Elstob in Kippis' _Biographia Britannica_, and Nichols' _Anecdotes of Bowyer_, only speak of her retirement in distressed circumstances to Evesham, where she attracted the notice of Mr. Ballard, author of _Memoirs of British Ladies_, and of Mrs. Capon, wife of the Rev. Mr. Capon, of Stanton, in Gloucestershire.] _Cardinal Bellarmin._--I find the following passage in D'Israeli's _Curiosities of Literature_:-- "Bellarmin was made a Cardinal for his efforts and devotion to the Papal cause, and maintaining this monstrous paradox--that if the Pope forbid the exercise of virtue and command that of vice, the Roman Church, under pain of sin, was obliged to abandon virtue for vice, if it would not sin against conscience." Can any of your readers favour me with the text in Bellarmin, which contains this "monstrous paradox?" HENRY H. BREEN. St. Lucia, May, 1851. [The passage will be found in _Disputationum Roberti Bellarmini, de Controversiis Christianae Fidei: De Summo Pontifice_, lib. iv. cap. v. sect. 8.: Pragae, 1721, fol., vol. i. p. 456.: "8. Secundo, quia tunc necessario erraret, etiam circa fidem. Nam fides Catholica docet, omnem virtutem esse bonam, omne vitium esse malum: si autem Papa erraret praecipiendo vitia, vel prohibendo virtutes, teneretur Ecclesia credere, vitia esse bona, et virtutes malas, nisi vellet contra conscientiam peccare. Tenetur enim in rebus dubiis Ecclesia acquiescere judicio summi Pontificis, et facere quod ille praecipit; non facere, quod ille prohibet; ac ne forte contra conscientiam agat, tenetur credere bonum esse, quod ille praecipit: malum, quod ille prohibet."] Replies. SHAKSPEARE'S USE OF "CAPTIOUS" AND "INTENIBLE." SHAKSPEARE'S "SMALL LATIN." (Vol. ii., p. 354.; Vol. iii., p. 65.) This is another discussion in which Shakspeare's love of antithesis has not been sufficiently recognised. The contrast in this case is in the ideas--ever receiving, never retaining: an allusion to the hopeless punishment of the Danaides, so beautifully appropriate, so unmistakeably apparent, and so well supported in the context, that I should think it unnecessary to offer a comment upon it had the question been raised by a critic less distinguished than Mr. Singer; or if I did not fancy that I perceive the origin of what I believe to be his mistake, in the misreading of another line, the last in his quotation. The hopelessness of Helena's love is cheerfully endured; she glories in it: "I know I love in vain--strive against hope-- Yet still outpour the waters of my love, And lack not to lose still." This last line Mr. Singer reads, "and fail not to lose still;" but surely _that_ is not Helena's meaning? She means that her spring of love is inexhaustible; that, notwithstanding the constant, hopeless waste, there lacks not (a supply) "to lose still!" Johnson was one of those commentators enumerated by Mr. Singer, of whom he observes, as a matter of surprise, "that none of them should have remarked that the sense of the Latin 'captiosus,' and of its congeners in Italian and French, is deceitful, fallacious;" "and," he adds, "Bacon uses the word for 'insidious,' 'ensnaring.'" But surely Johnson the commentator was no other than Johnson the lexicographer; and yet, for these precise definitions of "captious," which J. S. W. thinks "_too refined and recondite_" for Shakspeare's "small Latin," we need apply to no higher source than to that familiar household companion--_Johnson's Dictionary_, wherein is anticipated the citation of Bacon, and even of the French word "captieux." It could not therefore be from ignorance that Johnson failed to propose this recondite sense, but from a conviction that it would not represent the true meaning of Shakspeare. It will be perceived that, in appreciation of "captious," I side with Steevens, Malone, Knight, Collier, and even with J.S.W.; in whom, however, with his irreverent allusion to "_a man_ who had small Latin," I can recognise no true worshipper of Shakspeare. Why should Shakspeare be constantly twitted with this "small Latin," as if the "_school-like gloss_" of a hundred Porsons could add one scintilla to the glory of his name? His was the universal language of nature; and well does Mr. Singer remark that "We all know, by intuition as it were, what Shakspeare meant." It is true that we discuss his mere words in the endeavour to school our understandings to HIS level; but he, hedged by the divinity of immeasurable genius, must, himself, be sacred;--to attempt to measure his attainments by our finite estimation, is indeed sacrilege! In retailing Ben Jonson's unluckily chosen expression, J.S.W. does not seem to be aware that it has been doubted, and ably doubted, by Mr. Knight, in his _History of Opinion_, that Jonson himself used it by any means in the pedagogue sense usually adopted. And it does seem scarcely credible that Jonson would give utterance to a puff so miserably threadbare, so absurd too on the very face of it; for in what possible way could an alleged deficiency of Greek and Latin _in Shakspeare_, affect a comparison, _made by Jonson_, between Shakspeare and the poets of Greece and Rome? As well might it be said that ignorance of the Greek language, in Napoleon Buonaparte, would prevent a parallel between him and Alexander the Great! What if Ben Jonson meant his fifth line to continue the supposition of the first?--"_though_" is a word which has a hypothetical, as well as an admissive meaning; and there is no difficulty in reading his lines in this way: "_If_ I thought my judgment were of yours, and _though_ thy learning were less; still I would not seek to compare thee with modern men, but call forth thundering Eschylus," &c. But I should like to ask J. S. W., as the nearest example from the same play, which does he really think would require the _larger_ Latin,--to discover the trite and only meaning of "captiosus," or to use _triple_ in the sense conferred upon it in Helena's description, to the King, of her father's legacy? We have not at present in the English language any equivalent for that word as Shakspeare used it, and of which he has left us another example in _Antony and Cleopatra_, where the triumvir is called "the triple pillar of the world." We have failed to take advantage of the lesson given us by our great master, and consequently our language is deprived of what would have been a most convenient acquisition. It is true that Johnson gives a definition of "triple," in reference to its application to Antony, viz., "consisting of three conjoined;" but that meaning, however it might be applicable to the triumvirate collectively, is certainly not so to the members individually. To meet Shakspeare's use of the word, the definition must be extended to "consisting of, _or belonging to_, three conjoined:" a sense in which "triplex" was undoubtedly used by the Latins. Ovid would call the triumvirate "viri triplices," and of course each one must be "vir triplex;" but perhaps the clearest instance of the triune application is where he addresses the Fates (in _Ibin._ 76.) as spinning out "triplici pollice" (with triple thumb) the allotted task. Now as only one of the sisters held the thread, there could be but one individual thumb engaged (although with a sort of reflective ownership to all three); and there can be no question that Ovid would apply the same term to the shears of Atropos, or the distaff of Clotho. Here, then, is a _really recondite_ meaning, fairly traced to Shakspeare's own reading; for had he borrowed it from any one else, some trace of it would be found, and Warburton need not have stultified himself by his sapient note--"IMPROPERLY USED FOR THIRD!" But to return to "captious," there is, after all, no such great difference whether it be one's goods, or one's wits, that are taken possession of; or whether the capture be effected by avidity or fraud; both meanings unite in our own word "caption:" and there seems no good reason why "captious" should not derive from "caption," as readily as "cautious" from "caution." It is for the antithesis I contend, as a key to the true sense intended by Shakspeare: the whole play is full of antitheses, uttered especially by Helena;--and certainly, if we recognise the allusion to the Danaides (as who will not?), we cannot, without depriving it of half its force and beauty, receive "captious" in the sense of "deceptious." The Danaides _were not_ deceived--the essence of their punishment was utter absence of hope; Tantalus _was_ deceived--the essence of _his_ punishment was hope ever recurring. With respect to the suggestion of "capacious" by W.F.S. (p. 229.), he could not have read Mr. Singer's paper with attention, or he would have perceived that he had been anticipated by Farmer, who, by elision, had obviated the metrical objection of J.S.W. (p. 430.). But the meaning of "capacious" is "capable of containing," and, as such, it would be more than antithetical, it would be contradictory, to "intenible." If _capacious_ be consistent with _leaky_, then the "uxor secreti capax" must have been rather an unsafe confidante. A. E. B. Leeds, June 5. 1851. EARTH THROWN UPON THE COFFIN. (Vol. iii., p. 408.) The origin of this ceremony must undoubtedly be sought in man's natural desire to cover a dead body from the public view. The casting a handful of soil on the coffin is emblematic of the complete inhumation. The most ancient writings have allusions to the shamefulness of a corpse lying uninterred. Being thrown outside the walls of Jerusalem, with the burial of an ass (Jeremiah xxii. 19.), was regarded as the worst possible fate. Wheatly's observations upon this point, in his annotations on the burial service in the Prayer Book, are as follows: "The casting earth upon the body was esteemed an act of piety by the very heathens (AElian, _Var. Hist._, l. v. c. 14.), insomuch that to find a body unburied, and leave it uncovered, was judged amongst them a great crime (Hor. l. i. od. 28. v. 36.). In the Greek Church this has been accounted so essential to the solemnity, that it is ordered to be done by the priest himself (Goar, _Eucholog. Offic. Exeq._, p. 538.); and the same was enjoined by our own rubric in the first Common Prayer of King Edward VI.: '_Then the priest casting earth upon the corpse_,' &c. But in our present Liturgy (as altered in Queen Elizabeth's reign, 1559), it is only ordered that it '_shall be cast upon the body by some standing by_:' and so it is generally left to one of the bearers, or sexton, who, according to Horace's description (_injecto ter pulvere_, vid. supra), gives three casts of earth upon the body or coffin, whilst the priest pronounces the solemn form which explains the ceremony, viz. '_earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust._'" The note in Horace upon the three words above quoted is very much to the point: "_In sacris hoc genus sepulturae tradebatur, ut si non obrueretur, manu ter jacta terra, cadaveri pro sepultura esset._" (Vet. Schol.) The ancients thought that the spirit of an unburied corpse could not reach the Elysian fields, but wandered disconsolate by the Styx, until some pious hand paid the customary funeral rites. See the case of Patroclus (_Iliad_, xxiii. 70, et seq.). To lay the unquiet ghost, a handful of earth on the bodily remains would suffice: "_Pulveris exigui jactu compressa quiescent._" The indignity of a public execution is much aggravated by allowing the body of the criminal to remain exposed, as in the case of the five sons of Saul whose corpses were guarded by Rizpah (2 Sam. xxi.); and in our own recent custom of ordering pirates and the worst kind of murderers, to be gibbeted in chains, as a monumental warning. Three or four summers ago I buried an Irish reaper, who had suddenly died in the harvest-fields. About half a dozen fellow-labourers, Irish and Roman Catholics like himself, bore him to the grave. At the words _earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust_, they threw in handfuls of soil; and, as soon as the service was over, they filled up the grave with spades which they had brought for the purpose. No doubt, there was religious prejudice in all this; but their behaviour was most reverent, and what they did seemed to arise from the generous _instinct to cover the dead body_ of a comrade. Alfred Gatty. _Wheatly on the Common Prayer_ (ch. xii. Sec.5.) derives this custom from the ancients, and adds that-- "In the Greek Church, the casting earth upon the body has been accounted so essential to the solemnity, that it is ordered to be done by the priest himself. And the same was enjoined by our own rubric in the first Common Prayer of King Edward VI." For the Greek Church Wheatly refers to Goar _Rituale Graecorum_, p. 538. The passage, which I transcribe from Goar, runs as follows:-- "Et cadaver in monumento deponitur. Sacerdos vero terram batillo tollens superinjecit cadaveri, dicens, 'Domini est terra et plenitudo ejus: orbis terrarum et qui habitant in eo.' His peractis cadaveri superinfundunt lampadis oleum, aut e thuribulo cinerem. Atque ita ut moris est, sepulchrum operiunt dum dicuntur moduli," &c. The following reference may also be added, Goar, 556., "Officium funeris monachorum," where the earth is directed to be thrown "in crucis modum." N. E. R. (a Subscriber.) ON THE WORD "PRENZIE" IN "MEASURE FOR MEASURE." (Vol. iii., p. 401.) "The first folio," says Dr. Johnson, "has in both places _prenzie_, from which the other folios made _princely_, and every editor may make what he can." It will not be difficult, I conceive, to find out what sense Shakspeare meant to convey by this word, and to show that what he meant he has expressed with sufficient accuracy, though his meaning was soon after misunderstood. Our language owes much of its wealth of words to the talent which our great poet possessed for coining them--a talent which he exercised with marvelous tact: and if now and then some of them failed for want of being properly printed, we may rather wonder that so many obtained currency, than that a few ceased to circulate soon after they were first introduced. The idea intended to be conveyed by the word _prenzie_, is that which is expressed in the following passages: "All this I speak _in print_; for _in print_ I found it." _Two Gentlemen of Verona_, Act II. Sc. I. "I will do it, Sir, _in print_." _Love's Labour's Lost_, Act III. Sc. I. on which Steevens remarks: "_In print_ means _with Exactness_--with the _utmost Nicety_." He supports this meaning by quotations from other dramatic writers of the same age: "Not a hair about his Bulk, but it stands _in print_." (1605) "I am sure my husband is a Man _in print_, in all things else." (1635.) When, therefore, Claudio, who, as your correspondent LEGES observes, is aware of Angelo's reputation for sanctity, exclaims in astonishment: "The _prenzie_ Angelo?" he means the same as if he had said: "What! that Man _in print_?" "The _printsy_ Angelo?" But _prenzie_ is a term applied to _apparel_ as well us to _character_; and how does this accord with the interpretation here given? "O 'tis the cunning livery of hell, The damned'st body to invest and cover In _prenzie_ guards!" Here again we are supplied by Steevens with apt quotations in illustration from other writers of the same age: "Next, your Ruff must stand _in print_." (1602.) and "This Doublet sits _in print_, my Lord!" (1612.) "In _printsy_ guards" means the same, therefore, as "Guards _in print_," or, _robes_ put on "with _exactness_--with the _utmost nicety_." _Printsy_ is a word of the same formation with _tricksy_; and the phrase, "The _printsy_ Angelo!" is as good English as "My _tricksy_ Ariel!" It was probably pronounced _prentsy_ (_prenzie_) in the time of Shakspeare; the word _print_ being derived from _empreinte_. Sir W. Scott speaks of "a _prent_ book," for a printed book. _Besprent_ is the participle of _besprinkle_. Of similar formation with _printsy_ and _tricksy_, are _linsy_, _woolsy_, and _frowsy_; but as all these adjectives, except the first, are derived from nouns representing natural or familiar things, while _printsy_ is founded on a word having no connexion with any obvious idea, it is probable that this difference may account for the fact that _printsy_ so early fell into disuse, while the rest were retained without difficulty. By the word _printsy_, those four conditions are fulfilled for which your correspondent so properly contends:--1. the word is "suitable to the reputed character of Angelo." 2. It is "an appropriate epithet to the word _guards_." 3. It supplies "the proper metre in both places." 4. It is "similar in appearance to the word _prenzie_." No other word has been produced which so fully represents the formality and hypocrisy of Angelo, as described in the quotations so conveniently brought into one view by your correspondent, though one of the epithets made use of comes very near the mark: "Lord Angelo is _precise_!" JOHN TAYLOR. ZACHARIE BOYD. (Vol. i., pp. 298. 372. 406.) I would refer your correspondents H. B., H. I. (p. 372.), and PHILOBODIUS and MR. JERDAN (p. 406.), to the following volumes: _The Last Battle of the Soule in Death_, by Mr. Zacharie Boyd, Preacher of God's Word in Glasgow, edited by Gabriel Neil, Glasgow, 1831; McUre's _History of Glasgow, with Appendix_, Glasgow, 1830. As the first of these vols. is now very scarce (a limited number being printed by subscription), the following extracts may be interesting to some of your readers, and at the same time correct some errors of our correspondents:-- "Mr. Zacharie Boyd was descended from the family of the Boyds of Pinkill (Carrick, Ayrshire). He was cousin to Mr. Robert Boyd, of Trochrigg, who was appointed Principal of the University of Glasgow in 1615. The date of his birth is not exactly known; some time previous to 1590. He received his education at the school of Kilmarnock. The first notice we have of him is in a letter to Principal Boyd, from David Boyd, in 1605, wherein he says, '_There is a friend of yours, Zacharie Boyd, who will pass his course at the colledge within two years._' After having finished his course at the University of Glasgow, he studied at the College of Saumur, in France, under his relation, Robert Boyd: he returned to his native county in 1621. In 1623 he was ordained Minister of the Barony Parish of Glasgow, in which situation he continued till his death in 1653-1654." Mr. Zacharie Boyd was never Principal or a Professor in Glasgow College: the only office he ever held in the college was that of Lord Rector (an honorary office annually elected), which he held in the years 1634, 1635, 1645. He was a great benefactor to the college, to which he left 20,000_l_. Scots, for buildings and bursaries. The crypt below Glasgow Cathedral, called St. Mungo's Crypt, was the barony church in Zacharie's time, and where he preached; it is this same place which Sir Walter Scott so well describes in _Rob Roy_ (vol. ii. chap. 3., edition in 48 vols.), where Francis Osbaldistone heard sermon. Z. Boyd was, both in prose and verse, a very voluminous writer; his works, however, are chiefly in MS. in the library of Glasgow College. In addition to editing _The Last Battle_, Mr. Neil has examined the "Poetical Works" in MS.; and has given a summary of the whole in the Appendix to the _Biographical Sketch_; and has printed for the first time upwards of 3000 lines from the poetical MSS. With regard to Mr. Boyd's poetry, the following account from Neil's _Biographical Sketch_ may be accounted satisfactory, with reference to the lines often quoted as from Zacharie Boyd's Bible: "The work, however, which has given the greatest public notoriety to his name as a poetical writer, is that generally called 'Zacharie Boyd's Bible,' said to be a metrical version of the whole Scriptures--an arduous task indeed, if ever he contemplated the undertaking. But such a book as this has existed only in name, not in reality; _at least, it is nowhere to be found among his works_. The only one approaching to it is a metrical version of the 'Four Evangels,' which proceeds through the Gospels of the New Testament by chapter and verse.... And, among other works, he produced two volumes under the title of '_Zion's Flowers_,' _and it is these_ which are usually shown as his Bible, and have received that designation. These volumes consist of a collection of Poems from select subjects in Scripture History, such as Jonah, Jephtha, David and Goliath, &c., &c., rendered into the dramatic form, in which various 'Speakers' are introduced, and where the prominent parts of the Scripture narrative are brought forward and amplified. We have a pretty close parallel to these in the 'Ancient Mysteries' of the thirteenth or fourteenth centuries, and in the Sacred Dramas of more modern writers. "It is from this work, _Zion's Flowers_, that the various quotations which have occasioned so much mirth to the public are said to have been made, _but not one of these which are in circulation_ are to be found there: the only '_genuine extract_ from these MSS. is that printed by Pennant.'"--_Biog. Sketch_, p. 14. _et seq._ The "genuine extract" will be found in Pennant's _Tour in Scotland_, vol. ii. p. 156. PHILOBODIUS, "NOTES AND QUERIES," Vol. i., p. 406., will find the four lines he quotes given differently there. S. WMSON. P.S. To show the extent of Mr. Boyd's _poetical perseverance_, I subjoin a note of the contents of one of his poetical MSS.:--the _Flowers of Zion_, generally called Zacharie Boyd's Bible. David and Goliath contains about 850 lines. Historie of Jonah 1130 " ---- of Samson 2100 " ---- of Jephtha 720 " The Flood of Noah 860 " The Tower of Babylon 930 " The Destruction of Sodom 2000 " Abram commanded to sacrifice Isaac 840 " Historie of the Baptist 800 " The Fall of Adam 900 " Abel murdered 900 " Pharaoh's Tyranny and Death 2480 " Historie of Jacob and Esau 750 " ---- of Jacob and Laban 1400 " Jacob and Esau reconciled 720 " Dinah ravished by Shechem 440 " Joseph and his Brethren } 1615 " Joseph tempted to Adultery } Nebuchadnezzar's Fierie Furnace 3280 " Also at the end-- The World's Vanities (Divided into 8 Branches:--1st. Strength, 2nd. Honour, 3rd. Riches, 4th. Beautie, 5th. Pleasure, 6th. Wisdom, 7th. Children, 8th. Long Life) contains about 550 lines. The Popish Powder Plot (The Speakers--Christ--King James--Elizabeth--Peeres of England--The Lords appointed to trye the Traitors--The Earls of Nottingham, Suffolke, the Lord Monteagle--The Sherriffe of Worcester--The Devill--the Jesuit Gerrard--Robert Catesby--Thomas Percy, Guy Faux, &c. &c. &c.) contains about 1560 lines. Replies to Minor Queries. _Death, how symbolised_ (Vol. iii., p. 450.).--I beg to inform your correspondent S. T. D., that in an old 4to. volume in my possession, which treats principally of the topic about which he is inquiring, there are several engravings of Death as a skeleton. In one he is armed with a bow and arrow, an axe, and a scythe notched as a saw. In another he has an axe only: while in a third, in which he is announcing his dissolution to a man on his deathbed, he has a spade in his left hand, while with his right he points upwards; and on his head is a wreath of thorns with flowers standing up out of it. I do not know whether the book is a rare one or not. It is in black letter, and at the end is the date 1515. The title, which is a woodcut, rather curious, is--_Sermones Johannis Geilerii Keiserspergii, &c., &c._ There are also six other woodcuts, after the manner of Albert Durer, very quaint and curious. The volume is in its original vellum, over oak boards, finely tooled, and has once been bound at the corners and clasped with metal. In MS. on the top of the title are the words "Monast. S. Udalrici Aug'ae." Though in very good condition, the black-letter type is so curiously crabbed and abbreviated that I have not had time to do more than ascertain that it seems a very singular and a learned work. H. C. H. Rectory, Hereford, June 8. 1851. [The author of the curious work in the possession of our correspondent is John Geiler, called also Gayler, Keiserspergius, an eminent Swiss divine, who was born in 1445, and died in 1510. His works in German and Latin are books of rare occurrence, and consist principally of Sermons. Oberlin published in 1786 a curious life of Geiler. For the titles of his various works, consult Panzer's _Annales Typographici_, vol. vi.] _Death_ (Vol. iii., p. 450.).--Has S. T. D. consulted the excellent treatise of Lessing, "Wie die Alten den Tod gebildet?" It is illustrated with many engravings. (See Lessing's _Saemmtliche Schriften_, 1839, vol. viii.) C. P. PH***. Oxford, Whit-Monday. _A Kemble Pipe_ (Vol. iii., p. 425.).--If DR. RIMBAULT will turn to vol. i., p. 10. of Campbell's _Life of Mrs. Siddons_, he will find that the Kemble of smoking notoriety alluded to in the proverb, met his fate at a date long subsequent to the Marian persecution. He was apprehended on a charge of implication in Titus Oates's plot, and executed at Hereford, August 2d, 1679, being one of the last persons who suffered death for their religious opinions in England. He was hung, not burnt, and his hand is still preserved in the Reliquary of the Roman Catholic Chapel at Worcester. "On his way to execution," says Mr. Campbell, "He smoked his pipe and conversed with his friends; and in that county it was long usual to call the last pipe that was smoked in a social company, a Kemble's pipe." SPERIEND. _Flemish Work on the Order of St. Franciscus_ (Vol. i., p. 385.).--Your correspondent JARLTZBERG may find a copy of the _Wyngaert_ in the library of the _Maatschappij van Letterkunde_ (Lit. Soc.) in Leyden, and may read an account of the work in vol. ii. pp. 151, 152. of the _Society's Transactions_. The copy in my possession is entitled _Den Wyngaert van Sinte Franciscus vol_ [not _van_] _schoone historien, legenden en deuchdelycke leeringhen allen menschen seer profytelyck_. Like most of the works issued from the press of Eckert van Hombach, it is well printed on good paper; the leaves (not the _pages_) are numbered up to 418, and besides there are six leaves without pagination for the index, as well as three for the prologue, in which we learn why the work was called _Wyngaert_. All the copies I have met with bear the date 1518, though in Hultman's _Catalogue_, p. 20. No. 92., we find 1578, probably an error of the printer. In J. Koning's _Catalogue_, 1833, p. 17. No. 59., we are referred to Bauer, _Bibl. libr. rar._, vol. iv. p. 301.; and to the _Catalogue raisonne_ de Crevenna, vol. v. p. 85., where we read: "Ce volume contient les vies des Saints de l'ordre de St. Franciscus, precedees de celle de son instituteur, _et n'est point une traduction_ du Livre des Conformites (_Liber Conformitatum_), quoiqu'il est probable qu'on ait pris beaucoup de ce livre." Van Bleyswijk, in his _Description of Delft_, vol. i. p. 339., says,-- "The Franciscans bought up the work, in order to suppress and destroy it: it is therefore no wonder that copies of it are scarce." Unless you read it, says Professor Ackersdijck, in his _Archief voor Kerk. Gesch._, you will hardly conceive it possible for any one to write such a mass of folly and absurdity. V. D. N. NAVORSCHER, p. 179. June, 1851. _Meaning of Tick_ (Vol. iii., p. 357.).--The following anecdote, as characteristic of the individual as illustrative of the above Query, may perhaps be considered deserving a corner in your Journal:-- "A well-meaning friend calling one morning on Richard B. Sheridan, wound up a rather prosy exordium on the propriety of domestic economy, by expressing a hope, that the pressure of some difficulties from which he had been temporarily removed, would induce a more cautious arrangement in future. "Sheridan listened with great gravity, and thanking his visitor, assured him that he never felt so happy, as all his affairs were now proceeding with the _regularity of clockwork_, adding (with a roguish twinkle of the eye, and giving his arm the oscillating motion of a pendulum), 'Tick, tick, tick!' It is needless to add, the Mentor took a hasty leave of his witty but incorrigible companion." M. W. B. _Spelling of Britannia, &c._ (Vol. iii., pp. 275. 463.).--I believe that there is no mistake as supposed in the inscription on the Geo. III. shilling. The double "T" is expressive of the plural "Britt." for "Britanniarum". Have we not many similar instances, _e. g._ "codd." for "codices," "libb." for "libri;" or, one of every-day occurrence, "pp." for "pages?" W. M. N. _Fossil Elk of Ireland_ (Vol. ii., p. 494.; Vol. iii., pp. 26. 121. 212.).--W. R. C. (a Subscriber) will find some very interesting accounts of this creature in Boate and Molyneux's _Natural History of Ireland_, p. 137.; and in an excellent paper by Dr. Cane, in the _Transactions of the Kilkenny Archaeological Society for the Year 1850_, where several works containing accounts of the animal are referred to. An interesting memoir by Dr. Hibbert on the discovery of the _Megaceros Hibernicus_, or fossil elk, in the Isle of Man, will be found in the fifth number of the _Edinburgh Journal of Science_, published in 1826.[1] [Footnote 1: _Errata._--Query, should not the word "Rochenon," in Vol. i., p. 380. col. 1., be "Rosbercon?" and should not "D. H. MCarthy," in Vol. ii., p. 348. col. 1., be "D. F. MCarthy" (Denis Florence MCarthy)? Such errors, however trifling they may now appear, may hereafter confuse.] R. H. _"In Time the Bull," &c._ (Vol. iii., p. 388.).--The quotation-- "In time the bull is brought to bear the yoke," seems to be from Ovid, _Tristia_, iv. 6. 1.: "Tempore ruricolae patiens fit taurus aratri;" or _Ar. Am._ i. 471.: "Tempore difficiles veniunt ad aratra juvenci." P. J. F. G. Cambridge, May 22. 1851. [N. B., E. C. H., and several other correspondents, have furnished similar references to Ovid.] _Baldrock_ (Vol. iii., pp. 328. 435.).--MR. CHADWICK'S quotations on this word are very opportune, and useful by way of illustration, and for elucidating the meaning of the word. I will endeavour to explain this part of bell gear, and the purpose for which it was used. _Baldrock_ (_sic_) is probably the patois of a locality for _bawdrick_, which means a belt, or the leather strap and other appurtenances of the upper part of the clapper, by which it was suspended from the crown staple. In old _black-letter_ bells (if one may use the term) the upper part of the clapper was shaped like a stirrup, through which a strap of stout leather, often doubled, was passed; but between this and the staple a piece of hard wood of like width was inserted, and fitted to work on the round part of the crown staple. Through this leather and wood an iron pin was passed; and all was fastened together, and kept stiff in place, by a curiously cut piece of tough wood, called a _busk-board_, one end of which was tied round the stem of the clapper. I have seen many such. There was one at Swanswich next Bath: but without a sketch it is difficult to explain. I will enclose a sketch, to be used at the Editor's discretion. A few years ago, I made the following extracts from the very interesting accounts of the churchwardens (guardians) of St. Edmund's, Sarum. I have no doubt that similar entries may be found in all such old accounts, and I hope these may induce other gentlemen to inquire for them. Unfortunately I did not copy the _sums_ paid. "1591. Layd out for a Bawdrope for the Great Bell, 5_s._ For grafting of Bawdropes & finding Leather. Making of a '_pinn_' for the fourth Bell Bawdrope. 1588. Paide for Lether to mend the Bawdricke. 1572. Payd for a Bald Rybbe for the fourth Bell. (It occurs again for other bells.) 1552. Mendinge off the Bawdrycke off the greatt Bell. 1541. Payd for mendynge the wheles of the 3 Bells, and for Bawdrykes. 1524. Bawdderyke to the v. Bell. 1495. [Pro] emendacione rote ejusdem Campane et [pro] Bawdryke ejusdem Campane. 1482. [Pro] tribus Bawdrykys. 1473. Bawdryke bought for the iiij Belle. 1469. Bawderyke. Whyt Lethyr for the Bawdryke in the years of Ed. VI." H. T. ELLACOMBE. In a decree of the Court of Chancery of the year 1583 is the following passage: "It is alleged that a certain close ... in the parish of Smarden, in the County of Kent, now called and known by the name of Ropefield, was, long time sithence, given by one John of Hampden, to and for the maintenance and finding of ropes, _bawdricks_, oil, and leather, for the use of ringing of the bells in the steeple of the said parish church of Smarden, &c., &c." James _v._ Woolton, 6 May, 1583. (_Reg. Lib._ B. 1582. fo. 502.) Not understanding the word "bawdrick," I applied to Messrs. Mears, bell-founders, Whitechapel, who kindly gave me the following information: "The bawdrick is the head of the clapper, or the coupling by which it hangs on the staple inserted in the crown of the bell. It is fitted on to the head of the clapper, and a lining of leather is inserted to prevent the creaking of the iron, when the end of the clapper is oscillating. Hence, no doubt, the introduction of 'leather' in the document referred to. The word is still in use." CECIL MONRO. Registrar's Office, Court of Chancery, June 14. 1851. The baldrick was a leather thong, or strap, fastened with a buckle, for the purpose of suspending the clapper inside the bell, both of which had loops or eyes to receive it; from its continual wear, new baldricks were often required. I subjoin a few extracts from the parish accounts of St. Antlins, or St. Anthony, Budge Row, relating thereto. 1590. "Paide the smythe for making a new clapper for the great bell, x_s._ "Paide for a _bawdrick_ for the great bell, ii_s._ vi_d._ "Paide for a _buckell_ for the same, vi_d._ "Paide for a _baldrick_ for the fift bell, i_s._ viii_d._ 1594. "Paide for a new _bawdricke_ for one of the bells the Crownacion daie, ii_s._ 1578. "Paide for an _eie_ for the great bell clapper, vi_s._ "Item for a rope for the morning bell, ij_s._ vi_d._" I could adduce several other instances if required, but these may suffice. W. CHAFFERS, Jun. _Catalogue of Norman Nobility_ (Vol. iii., p. 266.).--Your correspondent Q. G. asked some weeks ago where the catalogue of Norman nobility before the Conquest was to be found? In the _Historiae Normannorum_, published in Paris in 1619, at p. 1127., he will find the "Catalogus nobilium qui immediate praedia a Rege conquaestore tenuerunt." In this list occurs the name of Geri (Rogerius) de Loges, whose lordship was in the district of Coutances. At p. 1039. of the same work, we find that Guarinus de Logis was feudal lord of certain domains in the bailiwick of Falaise. In a roll of all the Norman nobles, knights, and esquires who went to the conquest of Jerusalem with Robert Duke of Normandy in the first crusade, and copied from an ancient MS. written on vellum, found in the library of the cathedral of Bayeux, entitled "Les anciennes histoires d'outremer," we also find the name of John de Logis, who bore az. a cinque foile ar. I think, therefore, that M. J. T. (p. 189.) is in error in confounding the family of Ordardus de Logis with that of the Baron of Hugh Lupus. The names of the Norman nobles were territorial; and it is probable that these worthies were not related, as the names were spelt differently. According to the Doomsday Survey, Gunuld, the widow of Geri de Loges, held the manor of Guiting Power in Gloucestershire. The elder line of Ordardus de Logis, Baron of Wigton, terminated in an heiress, who carried the estate into the family of Lucy (I think in the reign of Edward III.), Adam, the seventh and last baron, having died without male issue; and it afterwards became the property, by marriage, of the ancestor of the present Earl of Carlisle. The descendants of Ordardus are still to be found in the remote valleys of the north of Yorkshire, and in parts of Durham: and I have been told that the Rev. John Lodge, late Fellow of Magdalen College, Cambridge, claimed to be of this family. S. Oxford, June 13. 1851. _Epitaph_ (Vol. iii., pp. 242. 339.).--I have before me a 24mo. tract of forty-seven pages: "Nicolai Barnaudi a Crista Arnaudi Delphinatis, Philosophi et Medici, Commentariolum in AEnigmaticum quoddam epitaphium Bononiae studiorum, ante multa secula marmoreo lapidi insculptum. Huic additi sunt Processus Chaemici non pauci. Nihil sine Numine, Lugduni, Batavorum, [CI*C.I*C.III*C.]" The first thirty pages are devoted to the epitaph on AElia Laelia Crispus. We are told:-- "Nec defuerunt alii, qui, ut audio, Animam hominis, alii nubium Aquam, alii, ut hic intellexi a viro de litteris bene merito, Eunuchum quemdam, alii alia varia, hoc epitaphio tractari phantasmata suis scriptis contenderunt. Haec ego cum intellexissem, eorum misertus, qui abditioris philosophiae in castris militant, operae pretium facturum me existimavi, si trismegisticum hoc epitaphium eis aperire conarer." This he proceeds to do very satisfactorily, as the following specimen will show:-- "AELIA. Solaris, dubio procul, ut nomen indicat, sive solis filia, immo substantia, essentia, radius, virtus, et illa quidem invisibilis solis nostri, ne quis eam a sole vulgi natam, perperam cogitet; neque tamen desunt, qui eam ex Urani et Vestae filio, Saturno, et Ope ejus sorore, a qua cum plures Saturnus suscepisset liberos, eosque vorasset, et e vestigio evomuisset, Jupiter servatus, ejusque loco lapis Saturno presentatus fuit, ac si cum peperisset Opis, ab ipsis inquam, eam natam esse cogitent; at quidquid sit, AELIA, seu solaris est, neque tamen (tanta est ejus amplitudo), astro illo, mundi oculo amicta incedit; sed et altero, minore luminari, Luna, quae sub pedibus ejus est comitata, ideo etiam dicitur LAELIA, quasi solis amica, etc., etc." On a fly-leaf I find the following written by an unknown hand: "Commentarios in hoc epitaphium scripserunt Joannes Trevius Brugensis, et Richardus vitus Basinstochius, jurisconsultus Anglus cujus liber editus Durdrecti apud J. van Leonem Berawoul, Anno 1618. Vid. et de hoc enigmate Boxhorn." If MR. CROSSLEY does not make this note wholly superfluous, make use of it as you please. J. S. Woudenberg, May 12. 1851. _Prayer of Mary Queen of Scots_ (Vol. iii., p. 369.).--The following version of this prayer, differing from that given by MR. FALCONER, may be interesting. In Archdeacon Bonney's _Historic Notices in reference to Fotheringay_, p. 109., this note occurs: "Seward asserts that the following lines were repeated by the Queen of Scots immediately before her execution. They are set to music by the late Dr. Harrington, of Bath, and other musicians. "'O Domine Deus, speravi in Te! O chare mi Jesus, nunc libera me! In dura catena, in misera poena, desidero Te; Languendo, gemendo, et genuflectendo, Adoro, imploro, ut liberes me.' TRANSLATION. 'O Lord my God, I have relied in Thee! Now, O dear Jesu, set me, set me free! In chains, in pains, long have I wished for Thee; Faint, and with groans, I, bowing on my knee, Adore, implore Thee, Lord, to set me free.'" I may add, that the Latin lines have recently been very beautifully set to music by that eminent composer, Mrs. Kingston. W. G. M. Your correspondent on the subject of the lines said to have been repeated by Mary Queen of Scots on the scaffold, furnishes a translation of them in lieu of others, which he condemns; and his version has provoked me to try my hand at one, in which I have studied rhythm more than rhyme: the rhythm and the intensity of the ordinal. "Great God, I have trusted In peril on Thee! Dear Jesus, Redeemer, Deliver thou me! In my prison-house groaning, I long but for Thee; Languishing, moaning, Bow'd down on bent knee, I adore Thee, implore Thee, From my sins set me free." ALAN. _Aristophanes on the Modern Stage_ (Vol. iii., pp. 105. 250.).--Finding that no correspondent of yours, in answer to a Query which appeared some time back, viz.: "Whether any play of Aristophanes had ever been adapted to the modern stage," has yet mentioned the only two instances of which I am aware, I beg to refer the Querist to the _Plaideurs_ of Racine (an adaptation of the _Wasps_), and to a very ingenious modernisation of the _Birds_ by Mr. Planche, produced about four years since at the Haymarket as an Easter piece, under its original title. I cannot refrain from taking this opportunity of protesting, under your justly powerful auspices, against the use of the word "Exposition" in its French sense of _Exhibition_, now creeping into places where it could scarcely have been expected. AVENA. _The White Rose_ (Vol. iii., p. 407.).--The version which I have of the beautiful lines quoted by your correspondent is (I quote from memory): "If this fair rose offend thy sight It on thy bosom wear, 'Twill blush to find itself less white, And turn Lancastrian there." The succeeding couplet has equal merit: "But if thy ruby lip it spy As kiss it thou mayst deign, With envy pale 'twill lose its dye, And Yorkist turn again." C. I. R. The origin of the blush imparted to the rose is most beautifully described by Carey: "As erst in Eden's blissful bowers Young Eve surveyed her countless flowers, An opening rose of poorest white She marked with eye that beamed delight; Its leaves she kissed, and straight it drew From Beauty's lip the vermeil hue." J. A. DOUGLAS. _Mark for a Dollar_ (Vol. iii., p. 449.).--The origin of the sign of the dollar, concerning which T. C. inquires, is, I believe, a contraction of _scutum_, the same as _L_, formerly written _Li_, is of _libra_. The strokes through the S are merely the signs of contraction. K. P. D. E. _Gillingham_ (Vol. iii., p. 448.).--In a foot-note to Rapin (2nd edit., vol. i. p. 130.), the general assembly convened by Earl Goodwin, at which Edward the Confessor was chosen king, is stated, upon the same authority as Hutchins has referred to (viz. Malmsbury), to have been "Gilingeham _or_ London." If at Gillingham, there can be but little doubt it was Gillingham near Chatham, of which latter place Goodwin is stated to have been then possessed. J. B. COLMAN. Eye, June 10, 1851. The share that Earl Godwin bore in the establishment of King Edward (the Confessor) on the throne of England seems to make it probable that Gillingham in Kent, not the Gillingham in Dorsetshire, was the scene of the council referred to by your correspondent QUIDAM. Edward, observe, was coming from the continent, and relied entirely on the support of the great East Kentish Earl. Milton names the council in his History of England, _Works_, vol. vi. p. 275., Pickering, ed. 1831. He seems to be still quoting Malmsbury. E. J. E. Blackheath, June 9. 1851. _On the Lay of the Last Minstrel, &c._ (Vol. iii., p. 364.).--In reading A Borderer's interesting note on _The Lay of the Last Minstrel_, it occurred to me, whether there may not have been (perhaps unconsciously) in Walter Scott's mind a link of connexion betwixt his own "elvish page," as an agent in bringing about the nuptials of Lord Cranstoun with the Lady Margaret; and the part played by Cupid, in regard to Dido, after he had been transformed into Ascanius, as described in the first AEneid. Indeed the beautiful "Song of Robin Goodfellow" (Vol. iii., p. 403) suggests a similar speculation; for in the gambols of Puck there is something analogous to the freaks of Cupid after his metamorphose. But other and closer parallels will probably occur to your learned readers, and show that some of what are commonly esteemed the most original modern creations owe much to classical invention. ALFRED GATTY. _Lines on Temple_ (Vol. iii., p. 450.).--J. S. will find the lines he asks about, given (but without comment) in Knight's _Cyclopaedia of London_, p. 440. P. M. M. J. S. will find the lines he has sent you printed in Hone's _Year Book_ (1832), p 113.; where may be also seen the following ANSWER. "Deluded men, these holds forego, Nor trust such cunning elves; These artful emblems tend to show Their clients, not themselves. 'Tis all a trick, these are but shams, By which they mean to cheat you; For have a care, you are the LAMBS, And they the wolves that eat you. Nor let the thought of no 'delay' To these their courts misguide you; You are the showy HORSE, and they Are jockeys that will ride you." Hone does not give a hint as who was the author of either, nor can I inform J. S. EDWARD FOSS. [The REV. MACKENZIE WALCOTT has also kindly informed us that the original lines and the rejoinder are to be found in Brayley's _Londiniana_, vol. iv. pp. 216-7.] _Sewell, Meaning of_ (Vol. iii., pp. 391. 482.).--H. C. K. makes an error in supposing that "formido," as used by Virgil in the passage quoted, and "sewell," are convertible terms. If there is any word in that passage which could be considered coextensive in meaning with the word "sewell," it would undoubtedly be "penna." Nor is "sewell" a _modern_ term, as he supposes; in proof of which I add an extract from a letter written by Dr. Layton, one of the commissioners for the suppression of monasteries, to Thomas Cromwell, dated 1535, in which the word "sewel" occurs: "We have sett Dunce (Duns Scotus) in Bocardo, and have utterly banisshede hym Oxforde for ever, with all his blinde glosses, and is nowe made a comon servant to evere man, faste nailede up upon postes in all comon houses of easement: _id quod oculis meis vidi_. And the second tyme we came to New Colege, affter we hade declarede your injunctions, we fownde all the gret quadrant court full of the leiffes of Dunce, the wynde blowing them into evere corner. And there we fownde one Mr. Grenefelde, a gentilman of Buckinghamshire, getheryng up part of the said bowke leiffes (as he saide) therewith to make hym _sewelles_ or _blawnsherres_ to kepe the dere within the woode, thereby to have the better cry with his howndes." H. C. K. wishes to know the origin of the word "sewell." Can any of your readers explain the derivation of the term "blawnsherres?" Can it be connected with the French _blanche_, from white parchment, &c. having been used in making them? E. A. H. L. _Lambert Simnel_ (Vol. iii., p. 390.).--Though I cannot throw any light upon the question of T., _Was this his real name?_ I may mention, as a Worcestershire man, that it is a custom among the pastrycooks of Worcester to make, at the beginning of Lent, a rich sort of cake; consisting of a thick crust of saffron-bread filled with currants, citron, and all the usual ingredients of wedding-cake, which is called a "simnel." I cannot say how long this custom has existed, but I have every reason to believe it is one of great antiquity. From Johnson's explanation of the term, I conclude, that this practice of making "simnels" must in former times have been more general than it is at present. E. A. H. L. _Tennyson's "In Memoriam"_ (Vol. iii., pp. 142. 227. 458.).--I submit that the "crimson-circled star" may be named without calling on the poet to explain. The planet Venus, when she is to the east of the sun, is our _evening star_ (and as such used to be termed Hesperus by the ancients). The evening star in a summer twilight is seen surrounded with the glow of sunset, "crimson-circled." The rose, too, was a flower sacred to Venus, which might justify the epithet. But I suppose the blush of the sky was what the poet thought of at such a moment. Venus sinking into the sea, which in setting she would appear to do,--falls into the _grave of Uranus_,--her father, according to the theory of Hesiod (190). The part cast into the sea, from which Aphrodite sprung, is here taken, by a becoming license (which softens the grossness of the old tradition), for the whole; so that the ocean, beneath the horizon of which the evening star sinks, may be well described by the poet as "_her_ father's grave." That Venus is meant, the gender of the pronoun relating to the star seems to prove beyond a doubt; there being no other sufficiently important to occur in a picture of this kind, to which a female name is given. V. Belgravia, June 12. 1851. _The second King of Nineveh who burned his Palace_ (Vol. iii., p. 408).--D. X. will find all that is known of this king in the Armenian version of Eusebius's _Chronicle_, 53., and in the _Chronographia_ of Georgius, Syncellus (and subsequently Patriarch) of Constantinople, p. 210. B. The former gives as his authority Abydenus, and the latter Polyhistor. Both passages will be found in Cory's _Ancient Fragments_. The Median king is called in both Astyages, and not Cyaxares; but the date of the catastrophe being fixed by Ptolemy's Canon in 625 B. C., the reviewer, I suppose, considered himself justified in altering the name to that of the king who appears from Herodotus to have governed Media at that date. E. H. D. D. _Legend in Frettenham Church_ (Vol. iii., p. 407.).--Your correspondent C. J. E. may find some account of the legend illustrated on the walls of Frettenham Church in the _Calendar of the Anglo-Catholic Church_, from which it appears that St. Eligius, Eloy, or Loye, is the hero of the incident. He was the patron of blacksmiths, farriers, &c.; and accomplished, on one occasion, the shoeing of a refractory horse by amputating the leg; and the operation performed, he replaced the severed member. Doubtless, as C. J. E. suggests, the shoeing might have been effected without so much periphrasis; but perhaps the saint intended to teach the animal docility, and inspire the spectators with a more palpable proof of his supernatural powers, than the performance of the operation by his mere _ipse dixit_ would have afforded. The church of Durweston, Dorsetshire, is named in his honour, and a rude sculpture over the doorway commemorates the incident. C. A. _Natural Daughter of James II._ (Vol. iii., pp. 224. 249. 280.).--When the answer of C. to my inquiry first appeared, I doubted whether after such strong reproof I ought again to address you; but as your valuable paper was intended for the ignorant as well as for the learned, and as C. (Vol. iii., p. 334.) places your respected correspondent MR. DAWSON TURNER in the same class as my humble self, I no longer hesitate. When I proposed the Query, I had no ready access to any book which would easily give me the required information, and it did not appear to me to be any great sin in making use of "NOTES AND QUERIES" for what I conceive is its legitimate object, the communication of knowledge; and I do not think the space my Query occupied was wasted when it called forth the interesting reply of P. C. S. S. I would now take the liberty of asking C. to explain the following extract from _Souverains du Monde_, not finding any particulars respecting the first marriage here alluded to in those books to which I have been able to refer:-- "Les enfans naturals du Roi Jaques II. sont 1.... 2.... 3.... "4. Catherine Darnley, mariee en premieres noces avec Thomas Wentworth, Baron de Raby; et en secondes noces, en 1699, avec James, Comte d'Anglesey. Elle est morte en 1700. Sa mere etoit Catherine Sedley, Comtesse de Dorchester, Baronne d'Arlington. "5. N. mariee avec le Duc de Buckingham le 27 Mars, 1706." You will observe that my former inquiry referred to the daughter above stated as the fifth child. It is plain that the compiler of _Les Souverains du Monde_ is in error in making the wife of the Earl of Anglesey a distinct person from the wife of the Duke of Buckingham. Who was the wife to the Thomas Wentworth here mentioned? and, if a natural daughter of James II., I should be glad of the following particulars,--the names of her mother and self--the dates of her birth, marriage, and death--and the date of the death of her husband. I must apologise for trespassing thus at length upon your space. F. B. RELTON. _Clarkson's Richmond_ (Vol. iii., p. 372.).--The late Mr. Clarkson's manuscripts were transferred to his son, the Rev. Christ. Clarkson; whose address might probably be obtained by Q. D. from J. B. Simpson, Esq., Richmond, Yorkshire. M. _MSS. of Sir Thomas Phillipps_ (Vol. iii., p. 358.).--I see that in the "Notices to Correspondents," in No. 79., for May 3, you inform W. P. A. that the _Catalogue of Sir Thomas Phillipps's MSS._ is privately printed, and that there are copies at the Bodleian, Athenaeum, and Society of Antiquaries. You may perhaps be interested to know that a catalogue of about three thousand of the Middlehill MSS. is to be found in a work entitled _Catalogi Librorum MSSorum qui in Bibliothecis Galliae, Hiberniae, Helvetiae, Belgiae, Britanniae Magnae, Hispaniae, Lusitaniae asservantur: a Gustavo Haenel_: Lipsiae, 1830. A copy of this important work is in the reading-room of the British Museum. I may add that a copy of the privately printed _Catalogue of Sir T. Phillipps's MSS._ is now to be found in the British Museum, but it has only recently (within the last few months) made its way into the Catalogue. C. W. GOODWIN. _Meaning of Pilcher_ (Vol. iii., p. 476.).--Is not our excellent correspondent MR. SINGER mistaken in supposing that the ears are the ears of the scabbard or pitcher? If you draw one thing out of another by the ears, it must be by the ears of the first, not of the second; yet he also says that it is used for hilts. C. B. _Antiquity of Smoking_ (Vol. iii., p. 484.).--May I add, in my defence as to the Thracians' smoking, that all I said was, that there was nothing in Solinus, chap. 15. I had looked at the Bipont edition, in which, as I now see, the passage is in chapter 10. C. B. _Principle of Association_ (Vol. iii., p. 424.).--I cannot but doubt whether "La partie reelle de la metaphysique" means "all that has yet been done in the philosophy of the human mind." I apprehend it means the material, or physical part; that which is connected with the structure of the body. This would apply to Hartley, though not to Mr. Gay: but I speak in the dark, for I have not that edition of La Place which your correspondent refers to. C. B. _Corpse makes a Right of Way_ (Vol. iii., p. 477.).--That a funeral creates a right of way, is an error founded on the fact that, being a remarkable, and sometimes a crowded event, it is not an unfrequent evidence of the previous existence of a right of way. C. B. _Chloe_ (Vol. iii., p. 449.).--In reply to a Query in one of your late numbers respecting the meaning of the expression "as drunk as Chloe," it has been suggested to me that it refers to a lady who is mentioned often in Prior's _Poems_, and who was celebrated for the propensity alluded to. ERYX. _Family of Sir J. Banks_ (Vol. iii., p. 390.).--It appears, on a reference to Burke's _Commoners_, that the ancestors of Sir J. Banks were possessed of property in and about Keswick; and the present representative of the family possesses black-lead mines in Borrowdale, Cumberland. It is, therefore, very probable that the Mr. John Banks in question may have been of the same family, though not a lineal descendant of Sir J. Banks. L. H. _Verse Lyon_ (Vol. iii., p. 466.).--In the literal reprint of Puttenham, 1811, I find the words extracted by J. F. M., with one unimportant exception, "And they _called_ it _Verse Lyon_." J. F. M. may find some account of Leonine verses, which "are properly the Roman hexameters and pentameters rhymed," in Price's edition of Warton's _History of English Poetry_, vol. i. p. cxviii. H. G. T. _Heronsewes_ (Vol. iii., p. 450.).--A probable derivation is given in Tyrwhitt's note on the passage in the _Squire's Tale_ from the French _heronceaux_, which would probably, in English usage, become either _heronsewes_, or _heronshaws_. It is of course a diminutive, like "lioncel," "pennoncel," &c. H. G. T. _Theory of the Earth's Form_ (Vol. iii., p. 331.).--Who first taught that the form of the earth was that of a sphere? In Isaiah xl. 22. appears the following passage: He that sitteth upon the CIRCLE of the _earth_ and the inhabitants thereof," &c. Does not this extract prove that the Jews, as a people, were acquainted with the spherical form of the earth in Isaiah's time; the prophets usually addressing the people in popular language. C. N. S. _Mythology of the Stars_ (Vol. iii., pp. 70. 155.).--In the replies to correspondents on the above head, I have not seen noticed Dr. Lamb's translation of the old Greek poet Aratus, a work which, for a few shillings, would satisfy most persons on the subject, and be found entertaining in giving instruction. T. M. _Topical Memory_ (Vol. iii., p. 449.).--On topical memory I can refer your inquirer to _Cicero de Oratore_, book ii. lxxxvi., lxxxvii., Sec.351-358., and _Ad Herenn._ iii. xvi.-xx., and _Quintil._ xi. ii. 2., p. 431. Rollin, ed. 1758. E. J. S. _Eisell_ (Vol. iii., p. 397.).--The following illustration of this word occurs in a MS. (Dd. i. fol. 7.) belonging to the University of Cambridge. The date is about 1350: "şe iewis herde şis word wel alle, And anon _eysel_ şei mengid wiş galle." It is here manifestly = _vinegar_. C. H. _Eisell._--I have long been convinced that the true interpretation of this word might be attained by a reference to the Welsh language; in which may be found the word _Aesell_ (_idem sonans_ with _Eisell_), implying verjuice, or vinegar. The two words are clearly identical (see page 377.). GOMER. _Four Want Way_ (Vol. iii., pp. 168. 434.).--A cross road, or that point where four roads meet, is frequently called by the peasantry in Kent "the four vents" in other counties, "the four wents," "the four want way," &c. I have always considered the word as being derived from the ancient VENTA: thus VENTA _Icenorum_ (Caister, near Norwich), the highway of the Iceni; VENTA _Silurum_ (Caerwent, in Monmouthshire), the highway of the Silures; VENTA _Belgarum_ (Winchester), the highway of the Belgae; both of which last-named cities retain in some degree the ancient appellation. W. CHAFFERS, Jun. _Meaning of Carfoix_ (Vol. iii., p. 469.).--Will your correspondent K. TH. give, if he can, an account of the word "carfoix?" Is it not the French _carrefour_, a name applied to more than one place in Guernsey, though not, I believe, necessarily to a spot where four ways meet? The chief carrefour there is at the junction of the Pollet, High Street and Smith Street; another is in the country, the _Carrefour aux Lievres_, the precise locality of which I cannot quite recall. MR. METIVIER, whose name I am glad to see in your pages, can tell, I dare say, of others. I suppose the derivation to be in _Quatuor fores_, or some French derivative from those words. "Carfoix" reminds me of "Carfax" in Oxford. Are the names akin to each other? E. J. S. _A regular Mull_ (Vol. iii., p. 449.).--The story of King Mul is perhaps rather far-fetched. If it would neither put your correspondent in a _stew_, nor get myself into a _broil_, nor you into a _mess_ or a _pickle_, I would settle his _hash_ by suggesting that terms of cookery are frequently used as descriptive of disagreeable predicaments; and that though in our time nothing except beer or wine is _mulled_, yet it may not always have been so. Or may not the word be a corruption of _muddle_? I stand up for neither, but I will back either against King Mul. M. _William Hone_ (Vol. iii., p. 477.).--I expect that A. N. is labouring under a mistake in inquiring about an account of the "conversion" of "William Hone, THE COMPILER of the _Every-day Book_;" and that he means "_The Early Life and Conversion of William Hone_, a narrative written by himself, _edited_ by his SON, William Hone, author of the _Every-day Book_, &c. London, J. Ward & Co., Paternoster Row, 1841. One Shilling." I have no doubt that the work may be procured at the publishers'; but should not that be practicable, I shall be happy to lend your correspondent my copy. It may perhaps be neither unjust nor uninteresting to add, that _I know_ (from his own communication, shortly after the memorable trials) he was so affected by the celebrated _Parodies_ being charged as "blasphemous," that he immediately stopped the sale of them; that, though money was then of some consequence to him, he refused tempting offers for copies; and that he did so, because he declared he would rather suffer any privations than be considered as having sought to revile the religion of his country, or to do aught to injure Christianity, which he deemed to be the hope of all, and the poor man's charter. In making those observations, he emphatically placed his hand on a Bible which lay upon my table. A HERMIT AT HAMPSTEAD. _The Rev. Mr. Gay_ (Vol. iii., p. 424.).--The name of Gay is not very common in the West of England, and MR. TAGART may possibly obtain some account of the Rev. Mr. Gay from the descendants of Gay of Goldworthy, near Bideford, in the county of Devon, who sprang from Hampton Gay in the county of Oxford, but became seised of the manor of Goldworthy, about the year 1420, by marriage with the daughter and heir of Curtis of Goldworthy, a branch of the ancient family of Curtis of Lostwithiel, in the county of Cornwall. The latest representative of this family of Gay, of whom I have met with any notice, is Mr. Lawrence Gay, who, according to Lyson, was living in the year 1822 at South Molton, in the county of Devon. Lyson also says that "John Gay, the poet, was of this family." LLEWELLYN. _Lady Mary Cavendish_ (Vol. iii., p. 477.).--I know nothing of any _Lady Mary's_ having married Mr. Maudsley, or Mosley of the Guards; but it is certain that she could not have been, _strictly speaking_, of the same family as Sir Henry Cavendish of Ireland, whose wife was created Lady Waterpark, with remainder to her issue by Sir Henry, who was descended from a _natural son_ of the Devonshire family, and even, I believe, before it was ennobled; so that it cannot be said that any _Lady_ Mary Cavendish was of the same family as Sir Henry. C. _Hand giving the Blessing_ (Vol. iii, p. 477.).--In blessing the people, the clergy of the Church of Rome raise the thumb and two forefingers, and close the others, to represent the three persons of the Trinity; and they give this some divine origin; but it is really an adoption of a pagan symbol in use long before the introduction of Christianity, not only by the Romans, but the Egyptians also. In Akerman's _Archaeological Index_, p. 116., is an engraving of a silver plate of Roman workmanship, in which the figures representing Minerva and Juno have their hands elevated with the thumb and finger so disposed, and the figure of Vesta has the left hand in the same position. I wish some of your correspondents who are familiar with the classics and Egyptian antiquities, would further illustrate the origin of this curious and ancient custom, which hitherto has been regarded as originating with the Church of Rome only. W. W. _The Oldenburg Horn_ (Vol. ii., pp. 417, 516.).--There is a good engraving of this Horn, and the tradition about it is related, in p. 264, of the curious _Dissertatio de admirandis mundi Cataractis_ of Johannes Herbinius, Amstelodami, 1678, of which book there is a copy in the library of the Geographical Society. W. C. TREVELYAN. Athenaeum, June 16. 1851. _Covey_ (Vol. iii., p. 477.).--How could such a question be asked? Covey is _couvee_, French for a _brood_, a _hatching_, from _couver_, to hatch eggs. C. _Davy Jones's Locker_ (Vol. iii., p. 478.).--During many years of seafaring life, I have frequently considered the origin of this phrase, and have now arrived at the conclusion, that it is derived from the scriptural account of the prophet Jonah. The word _locker_, on board of ship, generally means the place where any particular thing is retained or kept, as "the bread locker," "shot locker," "chain locker," &c. In the sublime ode in the second chapter of the Book of Jonah, we find that the Prophet, praying for deliverance, describes his situation in the following words: "In the midst of the seas; and the floods compassed me about:--the depth closed me round about:--the earth with her bars was about me." The sea, then, might not be misappropriately termed by a rude mariner, Jonah's locker; that is, the place where Jonah was kept or confined. Jonah's locker, in time, might be readily corrupted to Jones's locker; and Davy, as a very common Welsh accompaniment of the equally Welsh name, Jones, added; the true derivation of the phrase having been forgotten. W. PINKERTON. _Umbrella_ (Vol. iii., p. 482.).--The use of this word may be traced to an earlier period than has yet been shown by any of your correspondents? In Florio's _Worlde of Wordes_, 1598, we have it thus:-- "_Ombrella_, a fan, a canopie, also a testern or cloth of state for a prince, also a kind of round fan or shadowing that they use to ride with in summer in Italy, a little shade." [Greek: D.] _Nao, a Ship_ (Vol. iii., p. 477.).--A. N. is informed that _naw_ is a Celtic name for a ship (the _w_ is sometimes sounded like _oo_); though the word is obsolete, authority for its application may be found in Davies' _Mythology, &c. of the Druids_. In the appendix to this work there is a poem (No. 6.) by Taliesin, containing the following example:-- "Ymsawdd yn llyn, heb _naw_." "Sinking in the lake, without a ship." The Britons consequently had a name for a ship, independent of Roman influence. Can A. N. produce any evidence that the Britons in pre-Roman times did not possess any vessels superior to the _cwrygl_? Is it probable that the warlike aid which the Britons constantly rendered the Gauls, was conveyed across the channel in mere "osier baskets?" Had the "water-dwellers" (Dwr-trig-wys) of Dorsetshire (Durotriges) attained no higher grade in navigation than that simple mode of water conveyance? I am almost inclined to exclaim, "Mi dynaf y torch a thi" ("I will pull the torque with thee") in respect to the position claimed for the Latin _longa_; but passing this, I will advance the opinion that the Celtic _naw_ is the root of the Latin _navis_. GOMER. _Birth of Spenser_ (Vol. i., pp. 489. 482.).--Is not 1510 a mistake for 1550? The figures 1 and 5 are often confounded in manuscripts of Spenser's age. The mistake was probably that of the sculptor. D. X. _Petworth Registers_ (Vol. iii., pp. 449. 485.).--The period over which these Registers extend is thus shown in the Accounts and Papers printed by order of Parliament in the year 1833, vol. xxxviii. p. 335:-- "County of Sussex.--Arundel Rape. "Parish Register Books earlier than the new Registers commencing with A. D. 1813 (according to 52 Geo. III. c. 146.), remain at the following places:-- "Petworth R. No. I. Bap. Bur. 1559-1794, Marr. 1559-1753; No. II. Bap. Bur. 1795-1812; Nos. III.-VI., Marr. 1754-1812." The earlier register-book used by Heylin must have been removed from the proper custody before the year 1831. If still preserved in any public or private library it may perhaps reward some reader of "NOTES AND QUERIES" in the next century by turning up when unsought for. In the mean time, however, is there no official copy to be found in the Archbishop's courts at Canterbury? LLEWELLYN. _Arms of the Isle of Man_ (Vol. iii., p. 373.).--The symbol of three legs conjoined no doubt denotes the triangular shapes of the Isle of Man, and Sicily or Trinacria. The [Greek: tria akra] from which the name of the latter is derived are the promontories of Lilybaeum, Pachynus, and Pelorus, now Capes S. Vito, Passaro, and Faro (Virg. AEn. iii. 384.). It is somewhat curious that the earliest coinage of this island, A.D. 1709 (which by the bye is cast, and not struck in the usual way: Obv. The crest of the Earls of Derby, the Eagle and Child, SANS CHANGER; Rev. The three legs), has the motto QVOCVNQVE . _GESSERIS_ . STABIT. The coinage of 1723 is exactly similar, but struck; whereas that of 1733 and all the succeeding .coinages have QUOCUNQUE . JECERIS . STABIT, which is clearly the correct reading. I may add that I am engaged on a work on the Copper Coinage of Great Britain and her Colonies, and shall be thankful for any information on the subject respecting rare types, their history, &c. E. S. TAYLOR. Miscellaneous. NOTES ON BOOKS, SALES, CATALOGUES, ETC. Messrs. Longman have commenced the publication, under the title of _The Traveller's Library_, of a series of shilling volumes which is intended to comprise "books of entertaining and valuable information in a form adapted for reading while travelling, and at the same time of a character that will render them worthy of preservation." The 1st Number contains Mr. Macaulay's brilliant sketch of '_Warren Hastings_' which has been appropriately followed by that of '_Lord Clive_,' from his _Historical Essays_ and will be succeeded by '_The Earl of Chatham_,' '_William Pitt_,' '_Horace Walpole_,' &c., from the same pen; and these again by other works of acknowledged merit, the price of which has hitherto confined them within a comparatively narrow circle of readers. The 3d Number, '_London_,' by Mr. McCulloch, belongs to this class. As a really cheap and not merely low-priced series of valuable books, this well-printed _Traveller's Library_ deserves, and, we trust will meet with, every success. At a moment like the present, when so much inquiry is directed to the subject of public health and indeed of health generally, we may be excused for directing the attention, of our readers to '_The Laws of Health in relation to Mind and Body, in a Series of Letters from an Old Practitioner to a Patient_,' by Lionel J. Beale, as a small volume of useful hints and suggestions from one who obviously combines shrewd observation and professional knowledge, with that most useful of all qualifications for a writer on such a topic, namely, sound common sense. BOOKS RECEIVED.--_Illustrations of Mediaeval Costume in England from MSS. in British Museum, &c._, by C. A. Day and J. H. Dines, Part 3. The present number of this very cheap work on costume contains no less than three _coloured_ plates--curiously illustrative of the subject, though not so strictly English as the title-page would indicate. _Hurry-graphs_, by N. Parker Willis, and _The House of Seven Gables_, by Nathaniel Hawthorne, form the new volumes of Bohn's Cheap Series. The former is characterised by the usual light, off-hand style of the writer. The latter will add to the reputation which Mr. Hawthorne has won by his '_Scarlet Letter_.' They are two pleasant volumes for the steam-boat or the railway carriage. _An Essay of the Authenticity of the Four Letters of Atticus, included in Woodfall's Edition of Junius_, by William Cramp, is an attempt, and we must add an unsuccessful attempt, to prove that the Letters in question were written by Lord Chesterfield. Messrs. Sotheby and Wilkinson will be occupied during the next week in the sale of the fifth portion of the singularly curious and valuable Library of Thomas Jolley, Esquire, including, among other interesting autographs, Literary Assignments, Receipts of Pope, Swift, Thomson, Fielding, &c. CATALOGUES RECEIVED.--J. Miller's (43. Chandos Street) Catalogue of Books Old and New; B. Quaritch's (16. Castle Street, Leicester Square) Cheap Book Circular No. 30. of Books in all Languages. BOOKS AND ODD VOLUMES WANTED TO PURCHASE. ALBERT LUNEL, a Novel in 3 Vols. DR. ADAMS' SERMON ON THE OBLIGATION OF VIRTUE. Any edition. ENGRAVED PORTRAITS OF BISHOP BUTLER. RETROSPECTIVE REVIEW. Vol. IV. DENS' THEOLOGIA MORALIS ET DOGMATICA. 8 Vols. 12mo. Dublin, 1832. MARLBOROUGH DISPATCHES. Volumes IV. and V. ART JOURNAL, 1839 to 1844 inclusive. Also 1849. BULWER'S NOVELS. 12mo. Published at 6s. per Vol. Pilgrims of the Rhine. Alice, and Zanoni. STEPHANI THESAURUS. Valpr. Parts I. II. X. XI. and XXIX. KIRBY'S BRIDGEWATER TREATISE. 2 Vols. The _Second Vol._ of CHAMBERS' CYCLOPAEDIA OF ENGLISH LITERATURE. MITFORD'S HISTORY OF GREECE, continued by Davenport. 12mo. 8 Vols. Published by Tegg and Son, 1835. Volume _Eight_ wanted. L'ABBE DE SAINT PIERRE, PROJET DE PAIX PERPETUELLE. 3 Vols. 12mo. Utrecht, 1713. AIKIN'S SELECT WORKS OF THE BRITISH POETS. 10 Vols, 24mo. Published by Longmans and Co. 1821. Vols. I. V. and VIII. wanted. CAXTON'S REYNARD THE FOX (Percy Society Edition). Sm. 8vo. 1844. CRESPET, PERE. Deux Livres de la Haine de Satan et des Malins Esprits contre l'Homme. 8vo. Francfort, 1581. 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. THE CRY OF THE OPPRESSED, being a True and Tragical Account of the unparalleled Sufferings of Multitudes of Poor Imprisoned Debtors, &c. London, 1691. 12mo. MARKHAM'S HISTORY OF FRANCE. Vol. II. 1830. MARKHAM'S HISTORY OF ENGLAND. Vol. II. 1836. Sixth Edition. JAMES'S NAVAL HISTORY. (6 Vols. 8vo.) 1822-4. Vol. VI. HUME'S HISTORY OF ENGLAND. (8 Vols. 1818.) Vol. IV. RUSSELL'S EUROPE, FROM THE PEACE OF UTRECHT. 4to. 1824. Vol. II. CLARE'S RURAL MUSE. WATT'S BIBLIOTHECA BRITANNICA, Part V. 4to. STRUTT'S MANNERS AND CUSTOMS. Vol. II. 4to. 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Just published, fcp. 8vo., cloth, with Steel engraving, price 4_s_. 6_d_. THE FAIRY GODMOTHERS and other Tales. By Mrs. ALFRED GATTY. "Her love for Fairy literature has led Mrs. Alfred Gatty to compose four pretty little moral stories, in which the fairies are gracefully enough used as machinery. They are slight, but well written, and the book is altogether very nicely put out of hand."--_Guardian._ London: GEORGE BELL, 186 Fleet Street. THE LATER HISTORY OF THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND. In One Volume. small 8vo., price 8_s._ 6_d._ THE HISTORY OF THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND FROM THE REVOLUTION TO THE LAST ACTS OF CONVOCATION, 1688-1717. By the REV. WILLIAM PALIN, M.A., Rector of Stifford, Essex. This Volume forms a Continuation to the Works of Bishop Short, Mr. Carwithen, and other Writers on the Earlier History of the Church of England. RIVINGTONS, St. Paul's Church Yard, and Waterloo Place. ARNOLD'S HOMER FOR BEGINNERS. In 12mo., price. 3_s._ 6_d._ HOMER'S ILIAD, BOOKS I.--III., with English Notes; forming a sufficient Commentary for Young Students. By the REV. THOMAS KERCHEVER ARNOLD, M.A., Rector of Lyndon, and late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. RIVINGTONS, St. Paul's Church Yard, and Waterloo Place; Of whom may be had, by the same Editor, HOMERI ILIAS, LIB. I.--IV., WITH A COPIOUS CRITICAL INTRODUCTION AND ENGLISH NOTES. In 12mo., 7_s._ 6_d._ "This Edition is intended to assist more advanced students at schools and colleges. A more useful and complete guide to the study of Homer we do not know. If any body makes himself thoroughly master of the contents of this volume, he will find no difficulty in fully comprehending any other part of the Odyssey."--_Athenaeum._ THE GENERAL LAND DRAINAGE AND IMPROVEMENT COMPANY. Incorporated by Act of Parliament, 12 and 13 Vict. c. 91. DIRECTORS. HENRY KER SEYMER, 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. Henry Currie, Esq., M.P., West Horsley, Surrey. Thomas Edward Dicey, Esq., Claybrook Hall, Lutterworth. William Fisher Hobbs, Esq., Boxted Lodge, Colchester. Edward John Hutchins, Esq., M.P. Eaton Square, London. Samuel Morton Peto, Esq., M.P., Great George Street. 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. 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WALKER'S RHYMING DICTIONARY, in which all Words are arranged according to their Terminations; answering at the same time the Purpose of a Pronouncing and Explanatory Dictionary of the English Language. Thick 12mo., cloth, 6_s._ 6_d._ (1851.) [Star symbol] The present edition has been carefully revised throughout, and is now offered at a remarkably reasonable price to ensure a rapid sale. G. WILLIS, Great Piazza, Covent Garden. Now ready, price 5_s._ illustrated, No. I. of THE ARCHITECTURAL QUARTERLY REVIEW. CONTENTS. Introductory Address to our Readers. The Great Exhibition and its Influence upon Architecture. Design in Ecclesiastical Architecture. Museums at Home and Abroad. Ruskin and "The Stones of Venice." Architectural Nomenclature and Classification. Domestic Gothic Architecture in Germany. Inventors and Authorship in relation to Architecture. Assyrian Architecture. NOTICES OF NEW BOOKS. Classified List of Books recently published. RETROSPECTIVE REVIEW:--Chevreul on Colour. BUILDINGS AND FURNITURE. NEW INVENTIONS:--Machinery, Tools, and Instruments.--Materials, and Contrivances; Self-acting Dust-shoot Door; Removal of Smoke by Sewers, &c. &c.--Patents and Designs registered, &c. &c. "This new and professional Quarterly we hail as an acquisition. It promises to be conducted with intelligence, kindly spirit, and proper concern for the interests of the profession and the public.... It is altogether a good first part."--_Builder._ GEORGE BELL, 186. Fleet Street (next St. Dunstan's Church). Just published, in 8 volumes 8vo., 4_l._ 4_s._, uniform with Library Editions of Herbert and Taylor, THE WORKS OF JOHN MILTON in VERSE and PROSE. Printed from the Original Editions. With a Life of the Author, by the REV. JOHN MITFORD. WILLIAM PICKERING, 177. Piccadilly. PROVIDENT LIFE OFFICE, 50. REGENT STREET. CITY BRANCH: 2. ROYAL EXCHANGE BUILDINGS. Established 1806. Policy Holders' Capital, 1,192,818_l._ Annual Income, 150,000_l._--Bonuses Declared, 743,000_l._ Claims paid since the Establishment of the Office, 2,001,450_l._ _President._ The Right Honourable EARL GREY. _Directors._ The Rev. James Sherman, _Chairman_. Henry Blencowe Churchill, Esq., _Deputy-Chairman_. Henry B. Alexander, Esq. George Dacre, Esq. William Judd, Esq. Sir Richard D. King, Bart. The Hon. Arthur Kinnaird Thomas Maugham, Esq. William Ostler, Esq. Apsley Pellatt, Esq. George Round, Esq. Frederick Squire, Esq. William Henry Stone, Esq. Capt. William John Williams. J. A. Beaumont, Esq., _Managing Director_. _Physician_--John Maclean, M.D. F.S.S., 29. Upper Montague Street, Montague Square. NINETEEN-TWENTIETHS OF THE PROFITS ARE DIVIDED AMONG THE INSURED. Examples of the Extinction of Premiums by the Surrender of Bonuses. -------+--------+----------------------+-------------------- | | | Bonuses added Date | Sum | | subsequently, of |Insured.| Original Premium. | to be further Policy.| | | increased annually. -------+--------+----------------------+-------------------- 1806 | L2500 |L79 10 10 Extinguished| L1222 2 0 1811 | 1000 | 33 19 2 Ditto | 231 17 8 1818 | 1000 | 34 16 10 Ditto | 114 18 10 -------+--------+----------------------+-------------------- Examples of Bonuses added to other Policies. ------+------+--------+------------+------------------------ Policy| Date.| Sum | Bonuses | Total with Additions No. | |Insured.| added. |to be further increased. ------+------+--------+------------+------------------------ 521 | 1807 | L900 | L982 12 1 | L1882 12 1 1174 | 1810 | 1200 | 1160 5 6 | 2360 5 6 3392 | 1820 | 5000 | 3558 17 8 | 8558 17 8 ------+------+--------+------------+------------------------ Prospectuses and full particulars may be obtained upon application to the Agents of the Office, in all the principal Towns of the United Kingdom, at the City Branch, and at the Head Office, No. 50. Regent Street. Nearly ready, Second Edition, revised and corrected. Dedicated by Special Permission to THE (LATE) ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY. PSALMS AND HYMNS FOR THE SERVICE OF THE CHURCH. The words selected by the Very Rev. H. H. MILMAN, D.D., Dean of St. Paul's. The Music arranged for Four Voices, but applicable also to Two or One, including Chants for the Services, Responses to the Commandments, and a Concise SYSTEM OF CHANTING, by J. B. SALE, Musical Instructor and Organist to Her Majesty. 4to., neat, in morocco cloth, price 25_s._ To be had of Mr. J. B. SALE, 21. Holywell Street, Millbank, Westminster, on the receipt of a Post Office Order for that amount: and, by order, of the principal Booksellers and Music Warehouses. "A great advance on the works we have hitherto had, connected with our Church and Cathedral Service."--_Times._ "A collection of Psalm Tunes certainly unequalled in this country."--_Literary Gazette._ "One of the best collection of tunes which we have yet seen. Well merits the distinguished patronage under which it appears."--_Musical World._ "A collection of Psalms and Hymns, together with a system of Chanting of a very superior character to any which has hitherto appeared."--_John Bull._ Also, lately published, J. B. SALE'S SANCTUS, COMMANDMENTS and CHANTS as performed at the Chapel Royal St. James, price 2_s._ C. LONSDALE, 26. Old Bond Street. Printed by THOMAS CLARK SHAW, of No. 8. New Street Square, at No. 5. New Street Square, in the Parish of St. Bride in the City of London; and published by GEORGE BELL, of No. 186. Fleet Street, in the Parish of St. Dunstan in the West, in the City of London, Publisher, at No. 186. Fleet Street aforesaid.--Saturday, June 21. 1851. List of volumes and pages in "Notes & Queries", Vol. I-III: +---------------+-------------------+-----------+-------------+ | Notes & Queries Vol. I. | +---------------+-------------------+-----------+-------------+ | Vol., No. | Date, Year | Pages | PG # xxxxx | +---------------+-------------------+-----------+-------------+ | Vol. I No. 1 | November 3, 1849 | 1 - 17 | PG # 8603 | | Vol. I No. 2 | November 10, 1849 | 18 - 32 | PG # 11265 | | Vol. I No. 3 | November 17, 1849 | 33 - 46 | PG # 11577 | | Vol. I No. 4 | November 24, 1849 | 49 - 63 | PG # 13513 | +---------------+-------------------+-----------+-------------+ | Vol. I No. 5 | December 1, 1849 | 65 - 80 | PG # 11636 | | Vol. I No. 6 | December 8, 1849 | 81 - 95 | PG # 13550 | | Vol. I No. 7 | December 15, 1849 | 97 - 112 | PG # 11651 | | Vol. I No. 8 | December 22, 1849 | 113 - 128 | PG # 11652 | | Vol. I No. 9 | December 29, 1849 | 130 - 144 | PG # 13521 | +---------------+-------------------+-----------+-------------+ | Vol. I No. 10 | January 5, 1850 | 145 - 160 | PG # | | Vol. I No. 11 | January 12, 1850 | 161 - 176 | PG # 11653 | | Vol. I No. 12 | January 19, 1850 | 177 - 192 | PG # 11575 | | Vol. I No. 13 | January 26, 1850 | 193 - 208 | PG # 11707 | +---------------+-------------------+-----------+-------------+ | Vol. I No. 14 | February 2, 1850 | 209 - 224 | PG # 13558 | | Vol. I No. 15 | February 9, 1850 | 225 - 238 | PG # 11929 | | Vol. I No. 16 | February 16, 1850 | 241 - 256 | PG # 16193 | | Vol. I No. 17 | February 23, 1850 | 257 - 271 | PG # 12018 | +---------------+-------------------+-----------+-------------+ | Vol. I No. 18 | March 2, 1850 | 273 - 288 | PG # 13544 | | Vol. I No. 19 | March 9, 1850 | 289 - 309 | PG # 13638 | | Vol. I No. 20 | March 16, 1850 | 313 - 328 | PG # 16409 | | Vol. I No. 21 | March 23, 1850 | 329 - 343 | PG # 11958 | | Vol. I No. 22 | March 30, 1850 | 345 - 359 | PG # 12198 | +---------------+-------------------+-----------+-------------+ | Vol. I No. 23 | April 6, 1850 | 361 - 376 | PG # 12505 | | Vol. I No. 24 | April 13, 1850 | 377 - 392 | PG # 13925 | | Vol. I No. 25 | April 20, 1850 | 393 - 408 | PG # 13747 | | Vol. I No. 26 | April 27, 1850 | 409 - 423 | PG # 13822 | +---------------+-------------------+-----------+-------------+ | Vol. I No. 27 | May 4, 1850 | 425 - 447 | PG # 13712 | | Vol. I No. 28 | May 11, 1850 | 449 - 463 | PG # 13684 | | Vol. I No. 29 | May 18, 1850 | 465 - 479 | PG # 15197 | | Vol. I No. 30 | May 25, 1850 | 481 - 495 | PG # 13713 | +---------------+-------------------+-----------+-------------+ | Notes & Queries Vol. II. | +----------------+--------------------+---------+-------------+ | Vol., No. | Date, Year | Pages | PG # xxxxx | +----------------+--------------------+---------+-------------+ | Vol. II No. 31 | June 1, 1850 | 1-15 | PG # 12589 | | Vol. II No. 32 | June 8, 1850 | 17-32 | PG # 15996 | | Vol. II No. 33 | June 15, 1850 | 33-48 | PG # 26121 | | Vol. II No. 34 | June 22, 1850 | 49-64 | PG # 22127 | | Vol. II No. 35 | June 29, 1850 | 65-79 | PG # 22126 | +----------------+--------------------+---------+-------------+ | Vol. II No. 36 | July 6, 1850 | 81-96 | PG # 13361 | | Vol. II No. 37 | July 13, 1850 | 97-112 | PG # 13729 | | Vol. II No. 38 | July 20, 1850 | 113-128 | PG # 13362 | | Vol. II No. 39 | July 27, 1850 | 129-143 | PG # 13736 | +----------------+--------------------+---------+-------------+ | Vol. II No. 40 | August 3, 1850 | 145-159 | PG # 13389 | | Vol. II No. 41 | August 10, 1850 | 161-176 | PG # 13393 | | Vol. II No. 42 | August 17, 1850 | 177-191 | PG # 13411 | | Vol. II No. 43 | August 24, 1850 | 193-207 | PG # 13406 | | Vol. II No. 44 | August 31, 1850 | 209-223 | PG # 13426 | +----------------+--------------------+---------+-------------+ | Vol. II No. 45 | September 7, 1850 | 225-240 | PG # 13427 | | Vol. II No. 46 | September 14, 1850 | 241-256 | PG # 13462 | | Vol. II No. 47 | September 21, 1850 | 257-272 | PG # 13936 | | Vol. II No. 48 | September 28, 1850 | 273-288 | PG # 13463 | +----------------+--------------------+---------+-------------+ | Vol. II No. 49 | October 5, 1850 | 289-304 | PG # 13480 | | Vol. II No. 50 | October 12, 1850 | 305-320 | PG # 13551 | | Vol. II No. 51 | October 19, 1850 | 321-351 | PG # 15232 | | Vol. II No. 52 | October 26, 1850 | 353-367 | PG # 22624 | +----------------+--------------------+---------+-------------+ | Vol. II No. 53 | November 2, 1850 | 369-383 | PG # 13540 | | Vol. II No. 54 | November 9, 1850 | 385-399 | PG # 22138 | | Vol. II No. 55 | November 16, 1850 | 401-415 | PG # 15216 | | Vol. II No. 56 | November 23, 1850 | 417-431 | PG # 15354 | | Vol. II No. 57 | November 30, 1850 | 433-454 | PG # 15405 | +----------------+--------------------+---------+-------------+ | Vol. II No. 58 | December 7, 1850 | 457-470 | PG # 21503 | | Vol. II No. 59 | December 14, 1850 | 473-486 | PG # 15427 | | Vol. II No. 60 | December 21, 1850 | 489-502 | PG # 24803 | | Vol. II No. 61 | December 28, 1850 | 505-524 | PG # 16404 | +----------------+--------------------+---------+-------------+ | Notes & Queries Vol. III. | +-----------------+-------------------+---------+-------------+ | Vol., No. | Date, Year | Pages | PG # xxxxx | +-----------------+-------------------+---------+-------------+ | Vol. III No. 62 | January 4, 1851 | 1-15 | PG # 15638 | | Vol. III No. 63 | January 11, 1851 | 17-31 | PG # 15639 | | Vol. III No. 64 | January 18, 1851 | 33-47 | PG # 15640 | | Vol. III No. 65 | January 25, 1851 | 49-78 | PG # 15641 | +-----------------+-------------------+---------+-------------+ | Vol. III No. 66 | February 1, 1851 | 81-95 | PG # 22339 | | Vol. III No. 67 | February 8, 1851 | 97-111 | PG # 22625 | | Vol. III No. 68 | February 15, 1851 | 113-127 | PG # 22639 | | Vol. III No. 69 | February 22, 1851 | 129-159 | PG # 23027 | +-----------------+-------------------+---------+-------------+ | Vol. III No. 70 | March 1, 1851 | 161-174 | PG # 23204 | | Vol. III No. 71 | March 8, 1851 | 177-200 | PG # 23205 | | Vol. III No. 72 | March 15, 1851 | 201-215 | PG # 23212 | | Vol. III No. 73 | March 22, 1851 | 217-231 | PG # 23225 | | Vol. III No. 74 | March 29, 1851 | 233-255 | PG # 23282 | +-----------------+-------------------+---------+-------------+ | Vol. III No. 75 | April 5, 1851 | 257-271 | PG # 23402 | | Vol. III No. 76 | April 12, 1851 | 273-294 | PG # 26896 | | Vol. III No. 77 | April 19, 1851 | 297-311 | PG # 26897 | | Vol. III No. 78 | April 26, 1851 | 313-342 | PG # 26898 | +-----------------+-------------------+---------+-------------+ | Vol. III No. 79 | May 3, 1851 | 345-359 | PG # 26899 | | Vol. III No. 80 | May 10, 1851 | 361-382 | PG # 32495 | | Vol. III No. 81 | May 17, 1851 | 385-399 | PG # 29318 | | Vol. III No. 82 | May 24, 1851 | 401-415 | PG # 28311 | | Vol. III No. 83 | May 31, 1851 | 417-440 | PG # 36835 | | Vol. III No. 84 | June 7, 1851 | 441-472 | PG # 37379 | | Vol. III No. 85 | June 14, 1851 | 473-488 | PG # 37403 | +-----------------+-------------------+---------+-------------+ | Vol I. Index. [Nov. 1849-May 1850] | PG # 13536 | | INDEX TO THE SECOND VOLUME. MAY-DEC., 1850 | PG # 13571 | | INDEX TO THE THIRD VOLUME. JAN.-JUNE, 1851 | PG # 26770 | +-----------------------------------------------+-------------+ End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes and Queries, Vol. III, Number 86, June 21, 1851, by Various *** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES AND QUERIES, VOL. III *** ***** This file should be named 37496.txt or 37496.zip ***** This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/7/4/9/37496/ Produced by Charlene Taylor, Jonathan Ingram and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will be renamed. 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