flc Notas and Queries, July 29, 1911. NOTES AND QUERIES: FOR LITERARY MEN, GENERAL READERS, ETC. When found, make a note of." CAPTAIN CUTTLE. ELEVENTH SERIES. VOLUME III. JANUARY JUNE, 1911. LONDON: PUBLISHED AT THE OFFICE, BREAM'S BUILDINGS, CHANCERY LANE, E.G. BY JOHN C. FRANCIS AND J. EDWARD FRANCIS. Notes and Queries, July 29, 1911. AC "boS M. LIBRARY 730975 UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO ii s. in. JAN. 7, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 1 LONDON, SATURDAY, JANUARY 7, 1011. CONTENTS. No. 54. NOTES : Milton Bibles, 1 Bishopsgate Street Without, 2 Chamney Family, 3 Anglo-American Mail Service: its Bicentenary South African Bibliography Samuel Richardson and the English Philosophers, 5 -Bells and Bell-Founders, 1560 Legal Macaronics, 6. QUERIES : "Terse" Claret-The Black Prince's Language "Die in beauty "Roger Greatorex Bibliography of Folk-lore, 7 Thread -Papers Pitt and Wilkes on Dis- franchisement Prebendary Gabriel Grant Militia Claims, 1716 Anne Boleyn : Bulley Family Lacy as a Place-Name, 8 John Hudson ' Pilgrim's Progress ' Imitated Oundle " Ennomic " " Caeqehouias " "Carent": " Patricksmas " : "Lukesmas" "Instant" or "Current" Rev. J. Samwell : Rev. J. Peacock Roeites of Calverton, 9 Andrew Arter's Memorial Church with Wooden Bell-Turret " God moves in a mysterious way," 10. REPLIES rMotto of 1851 Exhibition, 10 -Lord Mayor Trecothick, 11 Turcopolier Corn and Dishonesty, 12 Eminent Librarians Great Snow in 1614, 13 Christmas Mummers Christmas Bough or Bush Owls called "Cherubims" Authors Wanted John Bright's Quota- tions, 15 'Gentleman's Magazine ' Danes'-Blood, a Flower, 16 High Stewards and Recorders Dante and a Font Miss Sumner, 17 Elizabeth Woodville and the Kings of Cologne Babies and Kittens Lowthers v. Howards, 18. NOTES OX BOOKS :-Leland's ' Itinerary 'Reviews and Magazines. Booksellers' Catalogues. Notices to Correspondents. JEtrrfes. MILTON BIBLES. A BIBLE in the British Museum (Add. MS. 32, 310) is thus described in " Facsimiles of Royal, Historical, Literary, and other Auto- graphs in the Department of Manuscripts, British Museum. Edited by George F. Warner, M.A., Assistant Keeper of Manu- scripts. Series I. V." : " The Holy Bible printed by Robert Barker, London, 1612 : a copy which belonged to John Milton, who on the page here reproduced [facing the beginning of Genesis] entered memoranda of the dates of the birth, &c., of himself and members of his family, including his brother Christopher Milton [baptized 3 Dec., 1615] and his nephews Kd ward and John Phillips. The first five entries appear to have been made together in 1646 : the last two, written in 1657/8, after Milton had become totally blind, were added under his direction by another hand. Add. MS. 32, 310." The entries are as follows : " John Milton was born the 9 th of December, 308, die Veneris half an howr after 6 in the morning. " Christofer Milton was born on Friday about a month before Christmass at 5 in the morning, 1615. " Edward Phillips was 15 year old August, 1645. " John Phillips is a year younger, about Octob. "My daughter Anne was born July the 29 th on the fast at eevning about half an houre after six 1646. " My daughter Mary was born on Wedensday, Octob. 25 th , on the fast day in the morning about 6 a clock, 1618. " My son John was born on Sunday, March the 16 th about half an hower past nine at night, 1650. " My daughter Deborah was born the 2 d of May, being Sunday, somwhat before 3 of the clock in the morning, 1652. " [His*] My wife hir mother dyed about 3 days after. And my son about six weeks after his mother. " Katherin my daughter, by Katherin my second wife, was borne y e 19 th of October, between 5 and 6 in y e morning, and dyed y e 17 th of March following, 6 weeks after hir mother, who dyed y 9 3 rd of Feb., 1657." The Bible an octavo edition of 1636 printed by Young which Dr. Birch saw and examined in 1749-50, when he visited Milton's granddaughter Mrs. Foster in Cock Lane, near Shoreditch Church, also contains entries of births and deaths of Milton's chil- dren. Dr. Birch's own account is as follows : " She show'd me her Grand Mother's Bible in 8 VO printed by Young in 1636, in a Blank Leafe upon which Milton had enter'd in his own Hands the Births of his Children, as follows: " ' Anne my Daughter was born July the 29 th the day of the Monthly Fast between six and seven, or about half an hour after six the Ev'ning 1646. ' ' Mary my Daughter was born on Wednesday Octob. 25 on the Fast Day in the morning about six o'clock 1645. ' My Son John was born on Sunday March the 16 th halfe an houre past nine at night 1650. " ' My Daughter Deborah was born the 2 d of May, being Sunday somewhat before 3 of the Clock in the morning 1652.' " Birch Autograph MS. 4244. Mrs. Foster, daughter of Deborah, third daughter of Milton, of whom a long account is given in vol. vi. p. 751 ff. of Masson's ' Life of Milton,' married Abraham Clarke, who died some time after 1688. She afterwards married Thomas Foster, " a weaver in Spitalfields," and died in 1727. All Milton's children are mentioned except- ing Katherin. Masson gives the following entries from the burial registers of St. Margaret's, Westminster, " Feb. 10, 1657/8, Mrs. Katherin Milton," and again, "March 20, 1657/8, Mrs. Katherin Milton," and remarks that from these entries we should not know which designated the mother and which the child. He quotes, however, a sentence in Phillips' s memoir of his uncle Marked through. NOTES AND QUERIES. [11 s. m. JAN. 7, wn. which " settles the point." This sentence is as follows : 'By his [Milton's] second wife he had only one daughter, of which the mother, the first year after her marriage, died in^childbedjand the child also within a month after." Katherin Woodcocke married Milton on 12 November, 1656, and the child, according to the parish books of St. Margaret's, West- minster, was born 19 October, 1657. This date is given in the Museum Bible. Had Masson known of this Bible, he could even have given the exact day of death. There are slight differences in the wordings of some of the entries in the two Bibles. Here is another and important difference. " I am the book of Mary Milton," i.e. Mary Powell, Milton's first wife, is written, " in his wife's handwriting," in the Birch Bible. Those words are not in the Museum Bible, but on the inside of the back cover is written " Eliz. Elcock," and underneath "Eliz. Salmon, Her Book" (apparently maiden and married names). Of Milton's third wife, Elizabeth, nee Minshull, who died in 1727, the same year as Mrs. Foster, surviving Milton fifty-one years, we are told that she left all her effects, after payment of debts, to her nephews and nieces. Among those effects was " a large Bible." Possibly this was the Museum Bible, which had been acquired by one of those nieces. This Museum Bible was purchased from Thomas Kerslake in 1884. Masson's 'Life of Milton,' by the way, was published only three years previously. I naturally inquired of Dr. Warner whether Kerslake had given any details as to how the Bible had come into his possession. Dr. Warner kindly looked over all letters received from Kerslake during 1883 and 1884, but found nothing of the kind. Kerslake, who is now dead, wrote from Bristol. It would be extremely interesting to know its history. And per- haps some day the Bible described by Dr. Birch may come to light. J. S. S. BISHOPSGATE STREET WITHOUT. (See 11 S. ii. 246.) THE widening of this ancient thoroughfare begins at Lupinsky & Brandon's, tailors, Nos. 134 and 135, and will extend to Norton Folgate. It may be observed that the new ' Post Office Directory ' includes Bishopsgate only, and has a note that Bishopsgate Within and Without have been amalgamated under the new title. " The Black Raven," 136, Bishopsgate- Street Without, survives, like the curate's egg, " in parts." Some few years ago it could be distinguished, not by a hanging sign, but by a modern tessellated pavement at the entrance, bearing a large black raven. The probability, however, that it occupies the site of a more ancient house with the same sign is suggested by the circumstance of the upper portion containing, among other things, a very old-fashioned staircase, which I have not at present seen, and heavy beams of oak supporting the ceiling. My informant is Mr. Samuel Mossman, the- owner, who is landlord also of " The Swan Hotel " at Stratford, E., and whose con- nexion with " The Black Raven " has lasted over fifteen years. Mr. Mossman tells me that an old-fash- ioned society called " Ye Olde White Dogs " was held there for many years, and at Yule- time the chairman always gave the toast of " the buxom lasses and merry wives of Bishopsgate." The " White Dogs " at the same festive season distributed bread and coal tickets among the poor inhabitants of the surrounding district, a charity, sup- ported by many City merchants, which did a vast amount of good, but which has now been removed to the Bishopsgate Institute under a new name. There is a seventeenth - century token extant of " The Black Raven," but I do- not remember to have seen the sign noted by MB. McMuBBAY in his interesting lists of some of the " Signs of Old London." I have the remains of an old handbill, dated 1791, of "The Black Raven," 136, Bishopsgate Street Without. The land- lord at that time was Alfred Love, who announces the perhaps not surprising fact that he was a " direct importer and Bonder of all his wines and spirits, noted for Special Scotch and Irish Whiskies." A raven perched on a bough adorns this handbill. But why weie the " White Dogs " so named ? Angel Alley, which stood between Nos. 137' and 138, but was swallowed up by the Great Eastern Railway Station about, I think, sixteen years ago, probably marked the site of " The Angel Inn " in Bishopsgate Street,, where the Parish Clerks, incorporated in 1232 by Henry III., kept their hall, that is, the first hall of the Fraternity ; and by it was an almshouse for seven poor widows of deceased members. The Clerks kept the account of christenings, casualties, &c., and published the bills of mortality, among other privileges of their charter being exemp- tion from parish duties in the parish wherein ii s. in. j.. 7, MI.] NOTES AND QUERIES. they officiated ; they attended at funerals, j and proceeded on foot before the corpse, singing, until they reached the church ; they had also (probably at "The Angel") public feasts, with music and song. Lamb Alley, formerly between Nos. 144 and 145, derived its name from a sign of " The Lamb Tavern " ; and Sun Street, part of which still exists at the back of No. 144, though formerly it had a continua- tion through the opposite side of the street, also had its name from a sign of " The Sun." A token of " The Sun " in Bishopsgate Street, issued by W. I. A., probably relates to Bishopsgate Within, where there was a tavern of which Sun Yard marked the site : "To be Sold A Strong season' d Hunter ; also a gentle Gelding, Master of about fourteen or fifteen Stone, fit for a Lady. Enquire of Major Tames in Sun Yard, Bishopsgate Street." Daily Advertiser, 1 Oct., 1741. " The King's Arms," 128, Bishopsgate Street, was an ale-house in 1742, unless the following announcement relate to " The King's Arms," 106, Bishopsgate Street Within : " Lost the 31st of March last, from behind the Stoke Newington Coach, between Stoke Newing- ton and Bishopsgate, a Deal Box, with some Shifts, and Wearing Apparel. Whoever will bring the same to Mr. Hawkins at the King's Arms Ale-house in Bishopsgate Street, shall have a Guinea Reward, and no Questions ask'd." Daily Advertiser, 8 April, 1742. The tavern stands at the corner of Acorn Street, and was perhaps originally " The Acorn." There certainly was, according to Dodsley, an " Acorn " sign here which gave its name to Acorn Street. Sweetapple Court, at No. 157, was so named, not after such a sign, but after Sir John Sweetapple, the owner (Dodsley's ' London ' ) ; but who he was, whether knight or baronet, or whether he had held the office of Alderman (he was not appa- rently a Mayor), I cannot say. J. HOLDER MA.CMICHAEL. (To be continued.) CHAMNEY OR CHOLMONDELEY FAMILY. WHAT has been described as the " curt and absurd pronunciation of Cholmondeley as Chulmley or Chumley the contraction of illiterate flunkeys," appears to have another variation, to wit, " Chamney," a hybrid which will not be found in the ' Patronymia Britannica.' A family of Chamney sprang up in the counties of Wicklow and Wexford towards the end of the seventeenth century, and their descendants may still be traced, I relieve, in the sister isle. The traditional rigin of the name is related in ' The Metal Mines of Ireland,' a paper read before the Royal Dublin Society by Mr. G. H. Kinehan on 24 March, 1886. Speaking of the co. Wicklow, the author says : " Bacon, an Englishman, came over and built works at Shillelagh. Before his time most of bhe charcoal was sent to Wales to be there used in the final working of iron. He, however, con- sidered it would be more economical to import the pig iron than export the charcoal. This adventure was most successful, and at the time of the Commission for examination into the state of timber in Ireland, he had amassed a sum of over one million pounds. Having only one child, a daughter, the bait was too seductive to one of the Commissioners, a scion of the twice noble house of Cholmondeley, who became Bacon's son-in-law and successor, relinquishing his herit- age, and changing his name to Chamney. Al- though he changed his name during his life, and his descendants adopted the change, yet on his tomb in Carnew churchyard his real name and lineage are given. The Chamneys greatly in- creased the trade, having works not only at Shillelagh, where Bacon established the industry, but also in the Vale of Clara ; at Bally-na-Clash or ' Clash ' in Glenmalure ; at Woodenbridge and Aughrim, in the Vale of the Darragh Water, and elsewhere ; besides innumerable bloomeries ; his works popularly being said to have ' filled the county.' The Clash and Shillelagh iron was of very superior quality. Elsewhere in Ireland 5 the iron trade gradually ceased, as the woods were exhausted, but here it seems to have come to a sudden and untimely end prior to 1761, on account of a fracas between Chamney and the English agent of the lord of the soil. Written informa- tion about the old ironworks is very hard to pro- cure, as nearly all the Chamney papers appear to have been destroyed when the family were dis- persed. Old people will tell you that ' the noise of the Chamney hammer was a weather guide.' Also they know that the iron and ore was carried; in baskets on horseback from Wicklow port, and from the different mines ; and the old horse- tracks from the mines and Wicklow to the fur- naces can still be shown." Nearly twenty years ago I entered into correspondence with the late Rev. Joseph Chamney, D.D., Rector of Dromiskin, Armagh, with reference to the Chamney family, and we were able to piece together the following fragmentary genealogy. | John Cholmondeley or Chamney of I Ballard, co. Wicklow, and Ballynellot, co. I Wexford, born 1650, married circa 1686 Jane, daughter of Bacon, ironmaster of Shillelagh, and had issue a son Thomas and two daughters : Elizabeth, b. 1688, married Percival Hunt of Lara, co. Kildare ; Anne, married Archer. He died 1733, and. was buried at Carnew. NOTES, AND QUERIES. [ii s. m. JAN. 7, 1911. The son, Thomas Chamney, of Flatten, near Drogheda, co. Meath, married 24 Janu- ary, 1715, Margaret, d. of Francis Graves of Drogheda, and had issue : 1. Graves Chamney, Alderman, of Flatten. Died s.p., October, 1794. 2. John Chamney, married Van- homrigh (nearly related to Swift's "*' Vanessa "), a quo John Vanhomrigh Chamney, Captain 25th Foot. Will dated 1796. (1) Elizabeth, bom 4 March, 1717; married, 1746, Edward Archer of Mount John, co. Wicklow. (2) Jane, born 1718, married William Aickin. (3) Esther, born 1719, married Henry Cusack. (4) Frances, born 1720, married Thomas Jones, patentee of the Theatre Royal, Dublin. (5) Catherine, born 1726, married Joseph Swan of Tombrean, co. Wicklow. (6) Susannah, born 1727, married John Blacker. Edward and Elizabeth Archer had with other issue a daughter Jane, who married in 1781 Dr. John Haughton, a Dublin physician. Dr. Haughton' s second son was Sir Graves Chamney Haughton (1788-1849), Orientalist. In the ' D.N.B.' the latter 's second Christian name is erroneously given as Champney. But Champney, of course, has nothing to do with Chamney, being derived from the French " Champagnois," a native of Cham- pagne. The Rev. Joseph Chamney first drew my attention to the tradition that his family were a branch of the Cholmondeleys, and the romantic circumstances that had prompted the corruption of the surname. He, how- ever, had not been able to verify the state- ment as to John Chamney 's real name and lineage being inscribed on his tomb. It was only the other day that I myself was able to visit Carnew with this object in view. Unfortunately, I could not find this grave in the churchyard, nor was any official connected with the church forthcoming who might have assisted me. I have since dis- covered, however, that the Carnew inscrip- tions have been dealt with by the Associa- tion for the Preservation of the Memorials of the Dead in Ireland, and that the inscrip- tion I was in search of is given as follows : " Here lyeth the body of Jn Chamney, Esq., who departed this life the 11 th day of April, 1733, in the 81 th year of his age." Vol. vii. p. 205. Not a word about the alleged addition of his " real name and lineage," which would hardly have escaped the transcriber's notice if present. The church at Camew is about sixty years old, for it replaced an edifice con- demned as unsafe. The square tower, sur- mounted by a spire, of the former church is separated from the body of the present one. There is a Chamney memorial inside the church, viz., a mural tablet with the follow- ing inscription : " Sacred to the Memory | of Joseph Chamney, Esq., of Ballyrahin, late Captain of | the Coolat- tin Corps of Yeomany Infantry in the County of Wicklow. | On the 2 nd day of July, 179S, and the 52 nd year of his age, He was killed | with his nephew a most amiable youth both fighting | the battles of their God and of their King | in defence of their religion and their country. | In testimony | of the high sense entertained of his many public and private virtues | which are indelibly graven on the hearts of his numerous and sorrow- ing friends | they have erected this monument I A.D. 1806." The nephew was Capt. Nickson of the Coolkenna Corps. The engagement was the last of three reverses, or " melancholy affairs," as the Protestant historians term them, which the King's troops suffered in this neighbourhood within a few days. It took place half-way between Tinnahely and Carnew. The Yeomanry after their repulse took refuge in Capt. Chamney 's house at the foot of the hill, where under Capt. Morton and Lieut. Chamney, a son of the deceased, they sustained during fourteen hours the attacks of the rebels, who attempted repeatedly to fire the house. Some (particu- larly a large man from Gorey, named John Redmond, nicknamed Shaun Plunder) advanced under a covering of feather-beds to the hall-door, with the design of applying a torch to it ; but they were shot down in the attempt, despite this thick tegument. This incident is illustrated by Cruikshank in Maxwell's ' History of the Rebellion.' The Ballyrahin Chamneys were probably descended from another son of John Cham- ney, not included in the above pedigree. In Vicars' s ' Prerogative Wills of Ireland ' there is "Joseph Chamney, The Forge, co. Wicklow, 1742." Colour is lent to the assertion that the original name of the family was Cholmonde- ley by the fact that they bore the same arms. ' Chamney silver Irish silver of the early part of the eighteenth century has passed through my hands, and it bears the Cholmon- deley coat of arms and crest, which are also attached to the memorial to Capt. Chamney. 11 S. III. JAX. 7, 1911.] NOTES AND QUEKIKS. What was the date of the " Commission fo examination into the state of timber in Ireland," and where could the names o the Commissioners be seen ? H. G. ARCHER. ANGLO-AMERICAN MAIL SERVICE : ITS BICENTENARY. So many centenary anc bicentenary celebrations of various kinds take place in these days that it is somewha 1 strange that none appears to be contem plated of one which would make a particu larly wide and human appeal, that being the bicentenary of the establishment of a regular Anglo-American mail service. Th( beginnings of such a service can be traced of course, to the seventeenth century ; but it was not until the closing months of the first decade of the eighteenth that these seem to have settled into the periodic. In The Daily Courant for 8 January, 1711, appeared the following : " Bristol, Jan. 6. This Day arri v'd here the Roya Anne Packet Boat, Captain Shorter, from New York, with a Mail of Letters from Her Majesty's Dominions on the Continent of America, which made her Passage from Bristol to New York in 50 Days, and her Passage home in 28 Days. This is the first Mail in return from the Continent since the erecting the Correspondence to and from this Kingdom and the said Continent." The information here given was supple- mented by the subjoined advertisement, published in the same newspaper on the following 15 June, showing that this regular mail service had taken a firm hold upon the public : " For New York. "The Harley Packet-Boat from Bristol, Joseph Palmer, Commander, will be ready to Sail the last of this Instant June, (Wind and Weather per- mitting) with the Mail of Letters for the Continent of America, which will be taken in at the General Post-Office in London, or at any of the Post-Offices in Great-Britain, at any time between this and the last Day of this Instant June, 1711. And other lackets will be successively provided to depart monthly, with such Letters which shall be in the General Post-Office in London or Post-Office in Bristol, by the last Thursday in every Month. All Merchants and others, who have Occasion to send Goods or small Parcels, and are desirous to " us Passengers to New- York, New-England, Long-Island, Rhode-Island, East or West-Jersey, lensilvania, Maryland, Virginia or Carolina applying themselves to William Warren, or Jonathan Scarth Merchants, at the 3 Crowns in bracious- Street, London ; or to Richard Champion, Charles Hartford, Merchants, in Bristol, may be Accommodated on reasonable Terms. P. S JNote, That there are already Posts, and other Conveyances, from New- York to the several above- mentioned Places, And that the Reason why the late Packets have not duely kept their Cours, hath been occasioned by the Death of Sampson Mears ^ late Proprietor of the said Packets." More about this earliest Anglo-American periodic service is doubtless to be found, and would be w r elcome. ALFRED F. ROBBINS. SOUTH AFRICAN BIBLIOGRAPHY. As so many readers of ' N. & Q.' are devoted to the study of bibliography, a note should be made of that valuable contribution, ' South African Bibliography,' by Mr. Sidney Mendelssohn, published by Messrs. Kegan Paul, Triibner & Co., the first volume of which contains an Introduction by Mr. I. D.. Colvin. Mr. Mendelssohn has devoted the best part of eleven years to the compilation of his two noble volumes, the last five yeara having been almost entirely given to the work. The Bibliography was at first con- fined to the author's library of works relating to South Africa, but has been, extended to other sources. His own collec- tion he has left by his will to the Union Parliament of South Africa. He states in the preface, "It is not presented now, as I have by no means finished collecting" ; and he is afraid that he could not work without his collection at hand. A. N. Q. SAMUEL RICHARDSON AND THE ENGLISH PHILOSOPHERS. Richardson's novels con- tain numerous and characteristic references to 'the English philosophers. It is worth while to collect them, as they have not been noticed by his biographers. Lovelace, who has the greatest philosophi- cal knowledge of any of Richardson's characters, refers once to the contents of Shaftesbury's ' Essay on the Freedom of Wit and Humour ' (' Characteristicks/ vol. i,. Treatise II.) : " I always called another cause, when any of ny libertine companions, in pursuance of Lord Shaftesbury's test (which is part of the rake's creed, and what I may call the whetstone of nfidelity ), endeavoured to turn the sacred subject nto ridicule." ' Clarissa', iii. 147, ed. 1902. Lovelace also mentions Shaftesbury's ' Letter concerning Enthusiasm,' which contains an account of the French prophets (' Character- sticks,' i. 26-8) : " \Yhat we have been told of the agitations and vorkings, and sighings and sobbings of the French >rophets among us formerly, was nothing at all o the scene exhibited by these maudlin souls, at he re.-iding of these letters." ' Clarissa,' vii. 301 ; Iso cp. Shaftesbury, edited by Hatch, i. 378-81. In ' Sir Charles Grandison, 1 iii. 75-6, s an allusion to the title of Shaftesbury's. 6 NOTES AND QUERIES. pi s. m. JAN. 7, ion. ' Moralists ' (' Characteristicks,' vol. ii. Treatise V.) : " I would have all these moralists, as they affect to call themselves, suffer by such libertine prin- ciples, as cannot be pursued, but in violation of the very first laws of morality." Lovelace refers once to B. de Mandeville's * The Fable of the Bees ; or, Private Vices, Public Benefits ' : " At worst, I am entirely within my worthy friend Mandeville's assertion, that private vices are public benefits." ' Clarissa,' vi. 3. Berkeley's dialogue * Alciphron ; or, The Minute Philosopher,' is mentioned in * Sir 'Charles Grandison/ i. 281 : " He is thought to be a modern wit, you must know : and to speak after an admirable writer, a minute philosopher." Richardson's numerous references to Locke's * Some Thoughts concerning Education ' in the sequel to ' Pamela ' do not belong here. He does not seem to have read Locke's ' Essay concerning Human Understanding,' as the word " idea," first made popular by Locke, does not occur in his novels. Richard- son, in opposition to Locke, considers that there are innate ideas : " Principles that are in my mind ; that I found there ; implanted, no doubt, by the first gracious Planter." ' Clarissa,' iv. 165. H. G. WARD. Aachen. BELLS AND BELL-FOUNDERS, c. 1560 : JOHN GRANGER. I have just found on the Common Plea Roll for Michaelmas term, 9-10 Eliz. (1567), the following notes on the above subject, which I think should find a place in * N. & Q.' In the first entry Andrew Blease and John Kent, husbandmen, brought an action against John Granger of London, bell- founder (otherwise called John Graunger of Ightfelde, co. Salop, bell-founder), Humphrey Cole of Ightfelde, " yoman," and Henry Hewes of London (otherwise Henry Hewes of Assheparva, co. Salop, . " yoman "), to recover a debt of III. This is a mere entry of adjournment, and no particulars are given ; but the second entry relates to a cross suit in which John Kent of Olner, co. Chester, was summoned to answer the above John Granger or Graunger. It recites the following bond, dated 20 April, 1 Eliz. <1559) : " The condition of this obligation is such that if the above-bounden Andrew Blese and John Kent or either of them, their executors, administrators, and assigns, or the executors, administrators, or assigns of either of them, wel .and truly content and pay or cause to be contented And paide the somme of fy ve poundes syx shillinges ,nd viijd of lawfull money of Englande unto the ibove- named John Granger, his executors, administrators, or assignes, in maner and forme lereafter following, That is to say at the castyng of such a bell as the foresaide Andrewe and John Kent shall deliver unto the said John Granger 53s. 4d., and within one twelvemonth and one clay next after the castyng of the said bell other 53s. 4d., in full paiment of the foresaid some of 5 6.s. 8d. then this obligation to be void and of none effect ; and if default of payment be made of and in either of the foresaid payments at either of the dayes above limited, in part or in all, contrary to the true intent and meanyng hereof, Then this obligation to stande in full strength and vertue." I have looked up several authorities on Dells and bell-founding, but not one of them mentions John Granger or Graunger as a 'ounder. It seems possible that the bell alluded to was cast for a church at Olner in Cheshire, and that Andrew Blease and John Kent were churchwardens. HENRY R. PLOMER. 8, The Broadway, Hammersmith, W. LEGAL MACARONICS. This term was very happily applied at 7 S. i. 346 to that urious and composite jargon called law French ; ' and an instance from Dyer's Reports was given, in which a convicted ruffian " ject un brickbat a le Justice, que narrowly mist." The reporter is not dis- turbed by the occurrence of a word which he cannot translate. He simply puts it in bodily. A few instances may be added from Sir John Davis' s Reports, temp. Jac. I., but printed 1674 the first Irish Reports ever published. In Le Case de Customes : ' Que est graund honte a nostre Nation, destre issint enamour ove les Mercery & Grocery wares imports per strangers, & d expender sur eux plus que le value de touts les Staple & reall commodities de nostre Pais : que serra en fine le ruine del Commonweal." In Le Case de Tanistry : " Chescun Custome ad un commencement, coment que le memorie del home ne extend a ceo ; come le River Nilus ad un fountaine, coment que les Geographers nepoent trover ceo." In the same case, a certain ordinance " accord ove le Divine Ordinance en le case de Zelophehad, Num. Cap. 27." In Le Case del Roy all Piscarie de la Banne : " Auxy le Hoy auera les grands poissona del Mer, Balenas & Sturgiones et le Koy auera wilde Swans, come volatilia regalia." The reports of " Gulielme Bendloes, Ser- jeant de la Ley," 1661, furnish some. macaronic writing also. In 19 Jac. I. an action was brought for the invasion of a ii s. in. JAN. v, i9iL] NOTES AND QUERIES. pew in which plaintiffs and their ancestors " ont seie et kneel e pur oyer divine service in le Eglise de D. en un He en le upper End del Eglise." Two years later Mrs. Fetti- place sues the parson of Pusey " pour de bruser son close et de fouler ses herbes ove ses avers (viz.) beufes, vacces, galines, Ducks, Aucks, et Cock de Indies ; " and the Court sagaciously quashes the judgment against him on the ground that turkeys are not averia, but volatilia. In Cossett's Case, 2 Car. I., ** fuit prove que diverse fuerunt present in le 'Tauerne quant I'homme fuit tue per un plage BUT Je teste ove un quart pott, & drinking ensemble, mes ne fuit prove quex d'eux done le plage." In the same year it is said that the Statute of Westminster " n'est qu un Nurse [when] le child est nee, et 1'statute come careful mother prist ceo en ses braches a preserver ceo." And again : " Dodderidge dit que les parolls d'un Judgment doit estre certen et nemy destre vary ou frame solonque le pleasure et fond conceit de chescun home." I have extended the abbreviations. There is a mine of comedy in the old Reports. RICHARD H. THORNTON. WE must request correspondents desiring in- formation on family matters of only private interest to affix their name's and addresses to their queries, in order that answers may be sent to them direct. " TERSE " CLARET. In Sir C. Sedley's * Bellamira,' Act II. sc. i. (of 1687), Merry- man says, " I am so full I should spill terse at every jolt ; we drank gallons apiece " ; and a little further on, " He grudg'd her money for honest terse, and so he's right enough serv'd." Here it appears that terse was the name, proper or in slang, of some beverage. Shadwell, ' The Humourists,' Act IV. (of 1671), has " Must I stay till by the strength of terse claret you have wet yourself into courage ? " Here the epithet terse is applied to claret ; whence we may perhaps conclude that the terse in Sedley stands for " terse claret." But why is claret described as, or called, " terse," and what is the origin of the term ? Claret no doubt was imported in " terses " or " tierces," but so also, I suppose, were other wines. I do not find that Halliwell or Nares has dealt with " terse " in this sense, and shall be glad if readers of ' N. & Q.' can give us any light on it. JAMES A. H. MURRAY. ' Oxford. THE BLACK PRINCE'S LANGUAGE. It is stated in Mr. Edmund Storer's ' Peter the Cruel,' p. 308, that after the battle of Najara the Black Prince asked where Henry de Trastamara was : " 'E lo bort, es mort o' pres ? ' (' And the bastard, is he dead or taken ? ') he asked ; and when they told him of his escape, he answered prophetically, with the intuition of a true general : ' Noy ay res fait' ('Then nothing is done')." In what language or dialect was the Prince speaking Provenyal, Gascon, Languedocian, Bearnais, or what ? Was it his usual lan- guage in France and Spain ? ALBAN DORAN. " DIE IN BEAUTY." I have been reading lately the phrase "in Schonheit sterben " so often that it seems to me trite, but only now it occurs to me that I do not know its origin. Are readers of ' N. & Q.' in a better position with regard to it ? G. KRUEGER. Berlin. ROGER GREATOREX, PAPER MANUFAC- TURER. I should be grateful for any infor- mation regarding the family of Roger Greatorex, paper manufacturer. Between 1784 and 1795 he was living at Apsley Mill, in the parish of King's Langley, Herts. A later address may have been Two Waters Mill, Hemel Hempstead, same county. In 1800 he apparently had to move to Lancaster, and wrote of getting sailing accommodation for America ; but whether he went or not, I do not know. His son Lawrence was a passenger on the American ship Washington, sailing from Lisbon in November, 1799. This Lawrence settled in America, and, I believe, owned and operated the first paper mills in that country, on the Brandywine, near Wilmington, Delaware. I want also the names of the wives of Roger Greatorex and his son Lawrence. E. HAVILAND HILLMAN. 3227, Campo S. Samuele, Venice. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF FOLK-LORE. In the first report of the Council of the Folk-lore Society, dated 29 May, 1879, it is stated : " In April of last year it will be remembered that the Council prepared and issued forms for the com- pilation of a Bibliography of English Folk-lore. But almost immediately a member came forward and offered the use of his valuable collection, made for a Bibliography of superstitions and religious belief, which was the result of many years' work, involving, among other labours, complete perusal of the British Museum catalogues. Although this collection was only in part available for the Society's purpose, and did not cover all the ground which the Bibliography of Folk-lore will occupy, the Council very thankfully accepted this offer, and they are 8 NOTES AND QUERIES. m s. m. JAN. 7, 1911. able to announce as approaching completion ' The Bibliography of Folk-lore. Compiled and edited by Thomas Satchell.' " More than thirty years have passed since this announcement was made. When will the project be realized ? W. B. GERISH. THREAD-PAPERS. What, in early eigh- teenth-century journalistic language, were " thread-papers " ? As The Weekly Journal is a very scarce news-sheet, I may quote part of the letter in which the use of the term twice occurs. It is from Mist's Weekly Journal, 28 July, 1722 : M r Mist, June 10, 1722. The following Letter and Song were lost by a young Lady : It will please her to have 'em again by your Hand, and save the Looser and Finder a great deal of Confusion. You may assure her all's safe, if she can but stand some reading of your Journal ; but then she must look as grave as her Father does, when he spread your Excellencies before the Family. I am, Yours HONOUR. Don't mistake me for the Chamber-Maid by my Name. Madam, May 1, 1722. You tell me it is your Opinion, that no man was ever heartily in Love, without being seiz'd, at one time or other, with a Fit of Poetry, &c. This letter, too long to give in extenso, is accompanied by a ' Song ' beginning Haste, Shepherds, haste and come away, This joyful Sun gave Cloe birth, which is thus alluded to in the letter to the lady : "If my Labours are honour'd with a Station among your Thread-Papers, I shall take it as a happy Omen : More Labours, more Thread-Papers. If not, e'en let them share the same Fate with the Author, that is, be set on Fire by you " The writer signs himself " Poor Strephon." J. HOLDEN MACMlCHAEL. PlTT AND WlLKES ON DlSFRANCHISEMENT. May I venture to repeat a question which I put, without eliciting a reply, just eighteen years since (8 S. ii. 468) ? Where is to be found a list of the thirty- six decayed boroughs which the younger Pitt proposed, in 1785, to disfranchise, and of the ten corporations which he desired should transfer the right of return to the citizens ? And is there extant a list of the boroughs which Wilkes would have dis- franchised by his proposal of 1776 ? POLITICIAN. GABRIEL GRANT, PREBENDARY AND ARCH- DEACON OF WESTMINSTER. Whom and when did he marry ? He is said to have married twice. He died in 1638. G. F. R. B. MILITIA CLAIMS, 1716. The following account is copied from an old book belonging to the parish of Yelvertoft, Northampton- shire : "The particulars of the charges of the Militia Horse provided by the Rectors of Creke, Cotesbroke. Yelvertoft, and Coton, 1716. The whole set of Accoutrem ts , Coat, Carbine, Pistols, Saddle, Bridle, Billet and Housing. Sword, &c. 06 Oo 03 Man and Horse and Charges at North'ton 00 Oo 00 June the 4 th Man and Horse one day 00 10 Boots and Powder Horn A new Hat Mending the Pistols In all 08 03 07 Mem. This was paid in ye proportion following, viz. Rector of Creek a 3 rd part. Rector of Cotesbroke a 4 th part. Rector of Coton & \ 9 ,-tha Rector of Yelvertoft /-' To what particular assembly of the militia does this refer ? Is it to be assumed that rectors of parishes generally were charged with a special levy for militia ? JOHN T. PAGE. Long Itchirigton, Warwickshire. ANNE BOLEYN OR BULLEYN : BULLEY FAMILY. Can any of your readers tell me the correct way of spelling the name of the second wife of Henry VIII. ? In the Life of Archbishop Tait I see that he twice refers to her, spelling the name Bulleyn. This is the only instance I have seen of the name being thus spelt. In Queen Elizabeth's reign there was a well-known doctor named Bulley, who was said to be distantly related to the Queen. In that case the n must have been dropped about the middle of the sixteenth century, question is of interest to me, as my cousin Dr. Bulley, President of Magdalen College, Oxford, from 1856 to 1890, considered that his family were descended from a collateral branch of the Boleyn or Bulleyn family. Will any one kindly tell me when the change in the spelling took place, if the name was ever correctly spelt Bulleyn ? H. A. B. [The spelling of the Queen's name was discussed at 8 S. i. 435 ; ii. 13.] LACY AS A PLACE-NAME. In some parts of Surrey and I believe in other counties " Lacy " occurs as part of the name of an estate or village. I know of Polesden Lacy (where Sheridan lived), Camilla Lacy (the residence of Fanny Burney), Wilton Lacy, and others. ,, What is the origin of the suffix Lacy FRANK SCHLOESSER. ii s. in. JAX. 7, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 9 JOHN HUDSON (LATE BURKITT & HUDSON). I should much like to know when John Hudson, printseller and publisher, 85, Cheap- side, was carrying on his business. I have found his label among the pasted paper on the back of the frame of a portrait of a general (?) officer. I should guess 1820 as about the date of the portrait, which Hud- son's date of business may help me to identify. ROBERT PIERPOINT. SA, Bickenhall Mansions, W. * PILGRIM'S PROGRESS ' IMITATED. Who was the author of ' The Progress of the Pilgrim Good-Intent, in Jacobinical Times ' ? The seventh edition was printed in 1801 by J. Bateson. for John Hatchard of Piccadilly. Though a little heavy, the parable is carried on with ingenuity. There are allusions to the elder Darwin, Fulton, and Godwin on p. 30 ; to the guillotine, p. 123 ; and to cosmopolitanism, pp. 159-60. The paper is water-marked " M. & E." RICHARD H. THORNTON. 35, Upper Bedford Place, W.C. OUNDLE. What is the origin of this place- name ? ROBERT NEALE. " ENNOMIC." What does this word, which is not in the ' N.E.D.,' mean ? It occurs on p. 147 of George Meredith's ' Tragic Come- dians,' " Memorial Edition " : " I would not have it on my conscience that the commission of any deed ennomic, however un- wonted," &c. J. J. FREEMAN. " CAEQEHOUIAS." In ' An Eighteenth Century Correspondence,' p. 60, Deane Swift, writing to Sanderson Miller, says : " Neither is any fault so detestable as the fre- quency of Caeqehouias. Ands, Buts, Fors, Indeeds, &c., have cost me more pains," &c. What are the meaning and derivation of this word ? J. J. FREEMAN. " CARENT " : " PATRICKSMAS " : " LUKES- MAS." Can any reader give me the meaning of the old Scottish word " carent " ? It occurs several times in a diary of a Dum- bartonshire minister of the year 1705, and appears to refer to some ecclesiastical assessment or interest, as " carent due to the Mortification " ; "he came in to speak about his carent, but brought no money " ; " to give our obligement to transact his debts to the value of the price [of some land] against Whitsunday, bearing carent from Martinmas last." The word is not to be found in Jamieson's ' Dictionary.' The terms " Patricksmas " and " Lukes- mas," presumably 17 March and 18 October, are also used in the diary. Were those recognized term-days in Scotland at that period ? I can find no mention of them else- where. ANGLO-SCOT. [The 'N.E.D.' states that "Lukesmas" is now obsolete in Scotland, but was formerly a customary date (18 October) for payment of accounts. The latest example cited is from 1671, so that our corre- spondent brings the use of the word down to the next century.] " INSTANT " OR " CURRENT." In ' N. & Q.* for 26 November last (p. 440) it is said that the late F. H. Collins died " on the 16th inst." Are we to understand that this use of the word " instant " is sanctioned by ' N. & Q.,' as I regret to see it is by some dictionaries ? To our fathers it would have sounded much like saying that a man had died to-morrow. T. S. O. [The use in question is, we think, generally recog- nized.] REV. J. SAMWELL : REV. J. PEACOCK. I am anxious to find out what particulars I can respecting the Rev. John Samwell and the Rev. John Peacock, who were suc- cessive ministers of Broadway Meeting, co. Somerset. All I know of Mr. Samwell is that he was in office in July, 1763, and that a small annuity was bequeathed to him and his successors in that year. I am told that he relinquished his ministry to study medicine, but that after a time he resumed his old position. Whether this was so or no, the first instalment under the legacy was apparently paid on 10 March, 1765, to Mr. Peacock, who seems to have been his successor. Mr. Peacock preached a sermon which was published, and witnessed a wedding in Broadway Church in 1768. He was still in office in 1775, but vacated that position shortly after, as he was succeeded by the Rev. John Lewis in 1777. In 1766 he pub- lished a book entitled ' Hymns and Spiritual Songs,' designed to supersede Dr. Watts' s compositions. If any one can throw light on the history of either Mr. Samwell or Mr. Peacock, I shall be very grateful. JOHN W. STANDERWICK. Broadway, Ilmirister. ROEITES OF CALVERTON. Several of the Nottingham local histories comprise frag- mentary notices of a sect founded about 1780 at Calverton, Notts (the birthplace of the stocking-frame), by one John Roe, an illiterate inhabitant of that village. The 10 NOTES AND QUERIES. tu s. m. JAN. 7, mi. members were called Roeites, otherwise Re- formed Quakers (although not recognized by the Quakers proper), and the sect never extended beyond Calverton itself, where their one chapel and burial-ground long ago disused are yet pointed out. William Howitt, in one of his rural books, describes what he saw at a service in the chapel. I should be glad to learn if there exists any work of reference likely to supply a definite account of the Roeites and of their tenets. A. STAPLETON. ANDREW ARTER' s MEMOBIAL, HAMMER- SMITH. Can any one throw light upon the unpretentious stone pillar which stands in the roadway near the corner of Beavor Lane, Hammersmith, almost opposite Ravens- court Park ? The pillar in question, which is about a yard in height, and stands about a foot from the curb an excellent position, one cannot help thinking, for taking a wheel off a cart on a foggy evening bears on the side nearest the high road the following in- scription : Andrew Arter October 1877. There are traces of wording on at least one other side, but they are very faint. Who was Mr. Arter ? WILLIAM MCMURRAY. CHURCH WITH WOODEN BELL-TURRET. I should be glad if I could be assisted to locate the subject of a water-colour drawing, probably 1820 or earlier, depicting the exterior of the south side and east end of a small stone church consisting of nave and chancel. The nave shows a doorway and two windows, the latter placed noticeably high in the wall ; the chancel, a large and a small doorway at the side, and a three- light, square-headed east window of the debased period. All the doors and windows have heavy hood-mouldings. The west end of the nave carries a square' wooden bell- turret. The site is on high ground, with village roofs lower on the" left, and woods beyond. Under the east window are plain iron rails round a tomb. W. B. H. COWPER'S " GOD MOVES IN A MYSTERIOUS WAY." Will any contributor tell me the correct reading of Cowper's words in his famous hymn " God moves in a mysterious way " ? The whole verse runs : His purposes will ripen fast, Unfolding every hour. The bud may have a bitter taste, But sweet will be the flower. I remember seeing in ' N. & Q.' another version of the last couplet, reading The bud may have a bitter taste, But wait and smell the flower. Which is the original form ? WATSON SURR EXHIBITION OF 1851 : ITS MOTTO. (US. ii. 410, 452, 493.) THE motto " The earth is the Lord's," &c., must, as MR. WARD states, be regarded as the motto of the Great Exhibition. It was well known to be a favourite with the Prince Consort, and in addition to its appear- ing on the cover and title-page of the Official Catalogue, it is placed on the title-pages of the volumes of the Official Descriptive and Illustrated Catalogue. These I possess, in addition to my father's copy of the corrected edition of the Official Catalogue. The latter bears the imprint of Spicer Brothers, wholesale stationers, and of W. Clowes & Sons, printers, Contractors to the Royal Commission. Its price was Is. in the build- ing, and Is. 3d. if bought at the City office or of booksellers. At the foot of the cover are these words : Say not the discoveries we make are our own. The germs of every act are implanted within us, And God our instructor, out of that which is concealed, Developes the faculties of invention. This also appears in Latin on the back of the title : Ne nostra, ista quse invenimus, dixeris Insita sunt nobis omnium artium semina, Magisterque ex occulto Deus producit ingeiiia. Underneath, the translation is given as on the front cover (except that the third line reads "And God our instructor, from his concealment''), and below this is the fol- lowing : Humani Generis Progressus, Ex cpmmuni omnium labore ortus, Uniuscujusque industrial debet esse finis : Hoc Adjuvando, Dei opt. max. voluntatem exsequimur. The progress of the human race, Resulting from the common labour of all men, Ought to be the final object of the exertion of each individual. In promoting this end, We are carrying out the will of the great and blessed God. A short introduction states that the mottoes were selected by Prince Albert. This corrected edition contains a report of the opening proceedings, the address read ii s. in. JAN. 7, ion.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 11 by Prince Albert, the Queen's reply, and the prayer by the Archbishop of Canterbury. My father has written on the cover : " Second edition, 34 pages of advertisements, no duty." The back page is occupied by Bennett the watchmaker, who paid 1,000 guineas for the privilege, which was the largest sum at that time ever given for a single advertisement. The Religious Tract Society have the third page of the cover ; and among others who have pages are John Murray ; Colman of mustard fame ; C. Cox, King William Street, Strand (devoted to works originally published by Charles Knight) ; and Charles Knight, 90, Fleet Street, his Cyclopaedias and other books. On p. 32 of Part I. of the Official Illus- trated Catalogue it is stated that the Com- mittee appointed " to suggest inscriptions for the Prize Medals recommended for the medal to be executed after design No. 1 the following line, very slightly altered, from Manilius (' Astronomicon,' v. 737) : Est etiam in magno qusedam respublica mundo. For the medal from design No. 2, the following line from the first book of the ' Metamorphoses ' of Ovid (v. 25) : Dissociata locis concordi pace ligavit. For the medal design No. 3, the following line from Claudian (' Eidyll.,' vii. 20) Artificis tacitae quod meruere manus." Messrs. Spicer Brothers were the exhibitors of a large roll of paper 46 inches wide and 2,500 yards in length. This was the first time that the public were informed that it was possible to make paper of any length. JOHN COLLINS FBANCIS. I do not think NEL MEZZO is quite correct as to the motto of the Exhibition. The motto on the title-page of the Official Cata- logue is " The earth is the Lord's and all that therein is, the compass of the world and they that dwell therein." The quotation he gives as the motto is the inscription on one of the medals, and the fault that he finds with its Latin is not apparent in the intro- duction to the Catalogue, where the offending word "concordia" is correctly given concordi." The quality of the Com- mittee appointed to suggest inscriptions for the prize medals was too high to make such a blunder possible. The members were : The Hon. W. E. Gladstone, The Lord Lyttelton, The Hon. T. B. Macaulay, The Rev. H. G. Liddell, Head Master of Westminster School. J. T. STEELE, Secretary, Spicer Bros., Ltd. BARLOW TRECOTHICK:, LORD MAYOR (11 S. ii. 209, 298, 335). A portrait of Barlow Trecothick, if found, would be of interest to Bostonians, for some of his relatives were born here ; others lived here ; he himself was married here on 2 March, 1747, to Grizel Apthorp, a daughter of Charles Apthorp of Boston ; he was a friend to the American cause before the outbreak of the Revolution ; and from 1765 to 1772 he was the agent in London for New Hampshire. He died not 2 June (as sometimes stated), but 28 May, 1775 (London Chronicle, 27-30 May, 1775, xxxvii. 511). His father was Capt. Mark Trecothick, a mariner, who presumably died late in 1734 or early in 1735, as letters of administration were granted to his widow Hannah on 22 March, 1735. The estate was inventoried at 34Z. 2s. Barlow Trecothick' s brother Mark, also a mariner, was married here to Sarah Davis on 2 April, 1740. In his will, dated 2 August, 1745, Mark appointed the above-mentioned Charles Apthorp his exe- cutor, and mentioned " my Hon d Mother M rs Hannah Trecothick of Boston Widow," " my Sister Hannah Trecothick," and " my Brother Edward." Charles Apthorp ren- dered his account 7 April, 1747. The widow, Sarah Trecothick, does not mention any Trecothick in her will, dated 28 January, and proved 14 February, 1750 ; but in an account rendered 8 October, 1763, by her executor (her brother Amos Davis) there is the item, " To Barlow Trecothick, 1,271Z. 2s. lid." Barlow Trecothick's sister Hannah was born here 2 December, 1724 ; and here married James Ivers on 23 September, 1753. Their son James Ivers was born here 7 July, 1754 ; graduated at Harvard College in 1773 ; took the name of Trecothick on the death of his uncle Barlow Trecothick ; and died in 1843. A portrait of Barlow Trecothick's first wife, by Robert Feke, presumably taken before her marriage, still exists (or did exist in 1878) in Boston. She died at Addington, Surrey, 31 July, 1769, leaving no children. On 9 June, 1770, Barlow Trecothick married Ann Meredith. A portrait of her by Rey- nolds is reproduced in Graves and Cronin's ' History of the Works of Sir J. Reynolds.' In the same work (iii. 987) Mr. C. W. Franks says : " I was wrong in saying that Alderman Trecothick had no children. He had a son, and that son an only child, a daughter, who married Capt. Strachey, lately of Bownham, co. Gloucester." NOTES AND QUERIES. m s. ra. JAN. 7, 1911. This statement is inaccurate, the facts appearing to be as follows. This " son " was not the son of Barlow Trecothick, who left no children, but of James Trecothick (born Ivers). Under date of 21 February, 1777, this notice was printed in The London Chronicle of 20-22 February, xl. 179 : " Yesterday was married at .Spring-garden Chapel, James Trecothick, of Addington-place, in Surry, Esq., to Miss [Susanna] Edmonstone, eldest daughter of Sir Archibald Edmonstone, Bt." James and Susanna (Edmonstone) Tre- cothick had six children. The Gentleman's Magazine for November,': 1814, p. 496, records the following marriage : " Oct. 14. Barlow, eldest son of J. Trecothick, esq., to Eliza, second daughter of Rev. Dr. [John] Strachey, archdeacon of Suffolk." In the 1881 edition (p. 442) of Burke's ' Peerage, Baronetage, and Knightage ' it is stated that this Barlow Trecothick " has one daughter, Eliza Margaret, wife of Leonard M. Strachey, Esq." ALBERT MATTHEWS. Boston, U.S. TURCOPOLIER : KNIGHTS HOSPITALLERS (US. ii. 247, 336, 371). It is perhaps worth noting what were the langues, &c., in 1798, when Bonaparte took possession of Malta. I quote from ' An Accurate Historical Account of all the Orders of Knighthood/ p. 9 et seq. : " The Order was classed at that Period into eight Languages, or Nations, viz. 1. Provence ; 2. Auvergne ; 3. France ; 4. Italy ; 5. Arragon ; 6. Germany ; 7. Castile ; and 8. Anglo-Bavaria ; which last was added thereto, by the late Elector Palatin Charles Theodore de Sultzbach. That Prince conferred upon the Order all the Estates of the suppressed Society of the Jesuits, situated in Bavaria ; and which, at the time of their suppres- sion, had been united to the Electoral domains. Charles Augustus, Prince of Bretzenheim, was the first Grand-Prior of this Nation, or Language. He Was invested therewith in 1780 ; and resigned that dignity in 1799, immediatelv upon the death of the Elector. " The Grand -Master, as well as 'the Cardinals, enjoys the Title of Eminence ; and the Grand- Officers of the Order, are as follows : 1. The Grand-Commander, is the oldest Mem- ber of the Language of Provence. 2. The Marshal, of that of Auvergne. 3. The Hospitaler, of that of France. 4. The Grand-Admiral, of that of Italy. 5. The Grand -Conservator of that of Arragon. . The Grand-Bailiff, of that of Germany. 7. The Grand-Chancellor, of that of Castile. 8. And the Turcopolier, or Captain-General of the Cavalry, of that of Anglo-Bavaria. A foot-note adds : " Turcopolier, is a Term appertaining to the Order of Malta, which, previous to the Reforma- tion, was the Title of the Chief of the Language of England. Turcopole signified anciently in the Levant, a Light-Horseman, or a kind of Dragoon. The Turcopolier had, in this Quality, the Com- mand of the Cavalry, and of the English Marine. Guards of the Order. The military Orders gave this Name to those light-armed Cavaliers, who were the Esquires, or Serving-Brothers, of the Knights-Hospitalers of Saint John, or Knights of Malta, of the Templars, and the Teutonic Knights. Note of the Editor." The book from which I quote has neither name of author nor date. At the beginning is ' A Dissertation upon the existing State of Knighthood in Europe ; addressed to the Right Honourable Horatio Viscount Nelson,* which proves that it was written or pub- lished some time between 22 May, 1801, and 21 October, 1805. Though published in London by J. White, Fleet Street, it was printed by J. C. Briiggemann, Herrlichkeit, Hamburgh. The above-quoted foot-note appears merely as an editorial note, but many of the foot-notes come from Hugh Clark's ' Concise History of Knighthood/ 1784. On pp. 15, 16, we read : " The last Grand-Master, duly elected, was Ferdinand Baron de Hompesch. " On the 24th of Nov. 1798 Paul the first, Emperor of Russia, assumed the dignity of Grand- Master of this Order. In 1799 His Imperial Majesty conferred the Ensigns thereof, upon the Honourable Emma Lady Hamilton, wife of the right Honourable Sir William Hamilton, Knight of the Bath, late His Britannic Majesty's Envoy- Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the Court of Naples : and upon Sir Home Popham, a Captain of the British Navy, who received the permission of His Sovereign to assume and wear the same .... " Sir Richard James Lawrence, is likewise a Knight of this Order." The author refers (p. 17) particularly to Clark's ' Concise History,' to the ' History of the Knights of Malta ' by the Abbe de Vertot, and to Brydone's ' Toui,' presum- ably Patrick Brydone's ' Travels through Sicily and Malta,' London, 1774. I mentioned at 11 S. ii. 371 that the word Toiy>KO7rovAos appears as a Cypriote word meaning a field-watchman. Perhaps the word is a survival from the time (1291 1309) when the Knights of St. John were settled at Limisso, otherwise Limasol, in Cyprus. ROBERT PIERPOINT. CORN AND DISHONESTY : AN HONEST MILLER (11 S. ii. 508). The miller, whose business it is to transmute raw material into food stuff, has much in his power, and may, conceivably, abuse his trust. From of old his case has been proverbial, for the practice of individuals has been sufficient to establish a class reference. The standard literary allusion on the subject is contained us. m. JAN. .7, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 13. in two lines of the delineation Chaucer gives of his Miller in ' The Prologue,' 11. 562-3 : Wei coude he stelen corn, and tollen thryes ; And yet he hadde a thonibe of gold, pardee. See the illuminating and satisfactory note on the passage in the Clarendon Press edition of ' The Prologue,' &c., by Dr. Morris and Prof. Skeat. The miller, with his privilege of "multure " and so forth, is a robust figure in Scottish song, his various advantages and idiosyn- crasies having manifestly made a strong appeal to those shrewd and candid observers whose literary gift is now the only evidence of their existence. One of the brightest of their lyrics, illustrating the miller's steady good fortune, opens thus : Merry may the maid lie That marries the miller, For foul day and fair day He 's ay bringing till her ; Has ay a penny in his purse For dinner and for supper ; And gin she please, a good fat cheese, And lumps of yellow butter. THOMAS BAYNE. Let MR. GERISH consult Chaucer. In the old time every tenant was bound to grind at the manor -mill, and the miller was paid by a toll of the grain, which toll he took and measured himself. In the days of itinerant butchers they also were suspected. Fifty years ago I can remember street-boys shouting after the butcher's man : Butcher, butcher, killed a calf, Ran away with the best half. This was in the East Riding of Yorkshire. I have recently written about * Itinerant Tailors' (US. ii. 505). I might have added itinerant butchers and pig-killers. W. C. B. Those interested in the subject of the toll levied by millers will find several references to the system as it existed in Scotland in ' The Monastery ' (chap. xiii. and notes). Apropos of MB. GERISH' s reference to the case of the honest miller of Great Gaddesden, I remember reading in Milling some years ago a paragraph about an epitaph which was said to mark the last resting-place of an American miller. It ran : God works wonders now and then : Here lies a miller an honest man. The epitaph may possibly be apocryphal, but it serves to show that our forefathers' opinion of millers was by no means a flatter- ing one. LEONARD J. HODSON. Robertsbridge, Sussex. Sussex lays claim to an " honest miller " who resided at Chalvington ; but tradition says that he throve so ill that he hanged himself to his own mill-post. For further particulars see Sussex Archaeological Journal (vol. iii.)> and The Antiquary for June, 1909, in which the subject of honest millers is dealt with in an article on ' Sussex Wind- mills.' P. D. M. [ScoTUS and A. T. W. also thanked for replies.] EMINENT LIBRARIANS (US. ii. 489, 538). For G. H. Pertz, " Oberbibliothekar " of the Royal Library, Berlin, see an article in ' Meyer's Konversationslexikon.' There is an account of his son Georg Pertz, who trans- lated Burns into German, in Briimmer's ' Lexikon der deutschen Dichter des 1& Jahrhunderts.' G. H. Pertz's most im- portant service to Germanic philology is his finding the manuscript of the Old High German ' Strassburger Blutsegen,' pub- lished by Jakob Grimm. An account of this monument is given in Paul's ' Grundiiss der germanischen Philologie,' Band II., p. 66. H. G. WARD. Aachen. If MR. F. C. WHITE will revise his dates from information supplied by the ' D.N.B.,' he will find that the Rev. Henry John Todd was born in 1763 (not 1765), Dr. David Laing in 1793 (not 1790), and Sir Anthony Panizzi in 1797 (not 1799). W. SCOTT. GREAT SNOW IN 1614 (11 S. ii. 508).- Stow refers to the severity of the winter of 1613-14 in his annals thus : " The 17th of January began a great Frost, with extreame Snow \vhich continued untill the 14th of February, and albeit the Violence of the Frost and Snow some dayes abated, yet it continued freezing and snowing much or little untill the 7th of March." Some account of this severe frost is to be found in a contemporary chapbook, the title-page of which runs as follows : The Cold Yeare, 1614. A Deepe Snowe : In which Men and Cattell have perished, To the generall losse of Farmers, Grasiers, Hus- bandmen, and all sorts of People in the Countrie ; and no lesse hurtfull to Citizens. Written Dialogue-wise, in a plaine Familiar Talke betweene a London Shopkeeper, and a North-Country-Man, [n which, the Reader shall find many thinges for . his profit. mprinted at London for Thomas Langley in luie Lane, where they are to be sold. 1015. 14 NOTES AND QUERIES. [11 s. m. JAN. 7, 1911. A reprint of this chapbook may be found in vol. ii. of 'The Old Book Collector's Miscellany,' edited by the late Charles Hindley. W. C. BOLLAND, Lincoln's Inn. This great snow was in 1614/15 : " January 16th began the greatest snow which ever fell upon the earth within man's memorye. It covered the earth fyve quarters deep upon the playne. There fell also ten less snows in Aprill, some a foote deep, some lesse, but none continued long. Uppon May-day in the morning instead of fetching in flowers the youths brought in flakes of snow, which lay above a foot deep uppon the moores and mountaynes (Youlgrave Register, Derbyshire)." " At York a heavy snow fell in January and eleven weeks frost, and then the river Ouse over- flowed, which flooded the streets, and lasted ten days, destroying many bridges (Whittock's York)." The above quotations are from T. H. Baker's ' Records of the Seasons, Prices of Agricultural Produce, and Phenomena ob- served in the British Isles.' A. R. MALDEN. From my transcription of the ancient records of Whitgift's Hospital, Croydon, I quote the following contemporary note : " Divided among the brethren and Sisters, in consideration of the Great Snow and cold winter, according to the appoyntment and warrant of my L. Grace of Canterbury, to each one the sum of vi 8 . riii d . 'amounting in all to the sum of x 1 . xiii 8 . iv d . (1614-15)." ALFBED CHAS. JONAS. An interesting and verbatim account of the great snow will be found in The Reli- quary, vol. iv. p. 194, taken from the Youl- greave parish register ; also an account of a great drought in the following spring, when only two showers of rain fell in over four months. " Nature always pays its debts." A. C. Describing the great snow in the winter of 1614-15, Chambers (' Domestic Annals of Scotland') quotes from Balfour's 'Annals of Scotland,' and cites other authorities to show the terrible severity of the season. W. SCOTT. CHBISTMAS MUMMERS AS MAMMALS OB BIKDS (11 S. ii. 507). Some additional infor- mation may perhaps be obtained from Hone's ' Works,' edition 1845 ; an article in Chambers' s Journal, 1848, on ' Obser- vances of Christmas in the Olden Time ' ; * Dorsetshire Mummers,' in The Folk-lore Record, vol. iii. 1880 ; and Miss C. M. Yonge's ' The Christmas Mummers, and other Stories,' 1858. A graphic account of a singular custom once prevalent in Dumfriesshire, indicative of the detestation in which the memory of the persecutor Grierson of Lag was long held in that part of Scotland, will be found in ' The Burns Country,' by Mr. C. S. Dougall, 1904, pp. 271-4. The observance, not necessarily confined, however, to the Christ- mas season, represented the persecutor as a grotesque animal figure, crawling on all fours in search of Whigs. ' SCOTUS. Fosbroke, ' Antiquities,' p. 668, states that some mummers were disguised like bears, others like unicorns, bringing presents. There is a small illustrated plate of these, and a reference to Strutt's ' Sports,' 124, 189, 190. TOM JONES. CHBISTMAS BOUGH : CHBISTMAS BUSH (11 S. ii. 507). The Christmas bough, con- sisting of a bundle of evergreens decorated with oranges, apples, &c., and hung up in the kitchen, has always been called " the mistletoe " as long as I can remember, and is supposed to convey the same kissing privileges as, the actual mistletoe, which was never seen here before the days of railways. J. T. F. Winterton, Lines. In my own childhood (fifteen to twenty years ago) at Epworth in Lincolnshire, we never had a Christmas tree, but always a bush of the type described by ANCHOLME. It was formed of two wooden hoops placed one inside the other cross-wise, and then trimmed with evergreens, such as holly, ivy, box, &c. Apples, oranges, and small fancy articles were suspended from the framework, and a light hung in the middle or below. I have seen such bushes in other houses not many years since in the same place, and my father tells me they were common in South Notts in his boyhood. It was there called " the kissing-bush." We called it " the holly-bush." H. I. B. The earliest of those I knew over sixty years ago were much the same as described by ANCHOLME. The most used name for them in Derbyshire was " kissing-bush," because at every cottage Christmas gathering every one child, maid, lad, as well as mother and father had to be kissed under it, or, if it hung too low from the kitchen beam, by the side of it, and under it all the kissing forfeits in the games had to be redeemed. At one of the editorial references given I described the making of the " Christmas a s. in. JA. 7, ion.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 15 kissing-bush." The outer and inner hoops of which the frame of the kissing-bush was made were kept from year to year, for it was lucky to do this, just as it was to keep a portion of the " yowl-clog " with which to light the next year's fire-log. For many years none used the words " Santa Claus " or " Christmas tree " : it was Father Christmas and Christmas bush, bough, or bunch. THOS. RATCLIFFE. The Christmas tree, as stated in the query, was originally " made in Germany," whence it was brought over to this country in the early decades of last century. Since then it has attained so great a popularity among us that, as regards devotion to the Christmas tree, Britain may now be said to be more German than Germany itself. The Christmas bough, however, preceded the Christmas tree, and has more claim to be regarded as a British institution. For a discussion of the tree as well as the bough, see the various articles on Christmas in Chambers' s ' Book of Days,' vol. ii. With regard to literary references, does not Washington Irving, in his ' Sketch Book,' say something about the Christmas bough as a feature in Christmas observances ? SCOTUS. [MR. HOLBEN MACMICHAEL also thanked for reply.] OWLS CALLED " CHEBUBIMS " (11 S. ii. 505). I am reminded of a story which I heard, when a boy, from an old Cornish great-aunt, a tale which may be condensed thus : One evening two miners borrowed a gun, and went out for some unaccustomed sport. Presently something flew across the path in front of them ; the man with the gun fired, and the bird fell. But when the miners went to pick it up, they were first amazed, then terrified, for it was a big white owl ; they had never seen anything like it before, and could not believe that it was a bird. So they came to the dread conclusion that they had shot a cherub. Filled with horror, they rushed off to the rector, con- fessed their crime, and asked what they should do to save themselves from punish- ment. Thereupon the rector, who loved a joke, said that on Sunday they must walk through the village to the church, each clad in a white sheet, as a sign of penitence. Which was done, and no evil consequences resulted to the slayers. G. H. WHITE. St. Cross, Harleston, Norfolk. The reason probably why the owls were called " cherubims " was the resemblance between owls and the winged faces that passed for " cherubims " on headstones and elsewhere about village churches. I have heard a story of a lad who ran home to his father in a terrible fright, saying, " Father, father, I 've shotten a cherubim," thinking he had committed some unheard-of impiety. The father at once consoled him by telling him it was " nowt but a hullat " (owlet) that he had shot. J. T. F. Winterton, Lines. In the late Mr. Bosworth Smith's ' Bird Life and Bird Lore,' published by John Murray, may be seen a reproduction of an old print in ' Sporting Anecdotes ' (1804, Albion Press) entitled ' Cherubim Shooting.' The white owl, which looks at times all head and wings, is not unlike the representation of cherubim in Christian art, in which the head represents the fullness of knowledge implied in the name, the wings the angelic nature. FRANK E. COOPE. Thurlestone Rectory, Kingsbridge, S. Devon. ATJTHOBS OF QUOTATIONS WANTED (US- ii. 488). The lines quoted by MB. H. S. BBANDBETH are an incorrect version of a well-known passage in Tennyson's ' May Queen : Conclusion,' stanza 7 : The trees began to whisper, and the wind began to roll, And in the wild March-morning I heard them call my soul. The oratio recta of the poet has been changed into the oratio obliqua in the query, and there are other variations. W. S. S. The original couplet is in Tennyson's 'May Queen.' The garbled version of it appears, I feel sure, in a novel by either Charles or Henry Kingsley. It is there applied to the Guards leaving London for the Crimea : " Surely there was many a fine fellow who," &c. k G. W. E. RUSSELL. JOHN BBIGHT'S QUOTATIONS (US. ii. 508). 2. Unholy is the voice Of loud thanksgiving over slaughter'd men, is Cowper's translation of 'Odyssey,' xxii. 412. WM. EDWABD POLLABD. Hertford. 3. " Fortune came smiling," &c., will be found in Dryden's ' All for Love.' W. SCOTT. 4. " The Scipios' tomb contains no ashes now " is from ' Childe Harold,' iv. 79. THOMAS BAYNE. 16 NOTES AND QUERIES. m s. m. JAN. 7, ion. ' GENTLEMAN'S MAGAZINE ' : NUMBERING OF VOLUMES (11 S. ii. 388, 477). I am in- debted to MR. A. S. LEWIS for his reply, but it is not clear to me that he solves the diffi- culty by assuming a slip on the part of the editor. No doubt it is true, as MR. LEWIS points out, that the preface of fche January to June, 1857, volume speaks of its " two hundred predecessors " ; but this seems to be merely a loose phrase for " two hundred or thereby," as the immediately preceding leaf explicitly styles the volume "the two- hundred-and-second since the commence- ment," and this numeration is adhered to in subsequent volumes. Another correspondent points out that in the Preface to the Obituary Index printed in 1891 an attempt is made to defend the numeration by reckoning the issue for 1782 as composed of two volumes instead of one. But is there any justification for this ? The numbers for 1781 run to 633 pages. The numbers for 1782 run to 631 pages. The numbers for 1783 run to 1067 pages. It thus appears that the increase in bulk suggesting the breaking-up of each year into two parts took place in 1783, not 1782. Further, I find that the caption-heading of the number for July, 1783, is " The Gentle- man's Magazine for July, 1783 : being the first number of the second part of vol. 53 " ; while the heading of the number for July, 1782, lacks the italicized part. Our copy of July to December, 1783, has an independent title-page : " The Gentleman's Magazine for the year 1783. Part the second." Does a corresponding title-page exist for July to December, 1782 ? P. J. ANDERSON. Aberdeen University Library. DANES' -BLOOD, A FLOWER (11 S. ii. 488). This is a local name in Hertfordshire and Essex applied to several plants which are supposed to owe their origin to the blood of slaughtered Danes. My first acquaintance with a plant of this denomination proved to be the Dane wort or dwarf elder, which grew fairly freely in places by the side of the main road between Anstey and Barkway. Weever in his ' Antient Funeral Monu- ments,' 1631, p. 707, referring to Bartlow, Essex, says : "Banewort, which with bloud - red berries commeth up here plenteously, they still call by no other name than Danesbloud', of the number of the Danes that were there slaine." Camden in his 'Britannia,' 1607, refers to the same plant as the wall-wort or dwarf elder. It should be noted that the elder- berries are not red, but a reddish-black, and yield a violet juice. The Anemone pulsatilla or pasque-flower, found in abundance near Ashwell, Herts, is also known locally as Danes' -blood. Mr. E. V. Methold in his ' Notes on Stevenage, Herts,' remarks that in the hedges of the field known to this day as " Danes' Blood Field " there grows a plant called " monkshood," in which, during the spring, the sap turns to a reddish colour. W. B. GERISH. In * Tongues in Trees,' a work on plant- lore published by George Allen in 1891, I read at p. 48 : "The pasque-flower, Anemone pulsatilla, a native in the fields near Royston, is there supposed to have grown from the blood of Danes slain in battle. The same idea attaches in Wiltshire to the Danewort or dwarf elder, Sambucus Ebulus ; though at the High Cross on Watling Street near Leicester it is recorded as having been planted by the Romans as a preser- vative against dropsy." W. T. According to Folkard, the plant to which this legend properly belongs is the dwarf elder. He quotes Aubrey in support, who locates the legend at S laugh terford in Wilts. Friend says the name is given in various places to the rose, anemone, thistle, Adonis,, and other flowers too numerous to mention. C. C. B. Britten and Holland, ' Plant Names/ 1886, p. 142, give three species : 1. Sambucus Ebulus, L., Cambs, Wilts ; 2. Anemone pulsatilla, L., Cambs, N. Essex, Norf. 3. Campanula glomerata, L., Cambs. S. L. PETTY. Ulverston. It is not only the clustered bell-flower (Campanula glomerata) that is known as Danes' -blood. The dwarf elder, Sambucus Ebulus, is also known both as Danes' -blood and Danes' -wort (Berkshire), and, as may be seen in Salmon's ' London Dispensatory,' was a common remedy for various ills. The popular belief that the flower sprang originally from the blood of the Danes which stained the ancient battle-fields is still common in Wiltshire, North Hertfordshire, Hampshire, Cumberland, North Essex, and Norfolk. In Northamptonshire the plant is known also as Dane-weed, and Defoe in his ' Tour through Great Britain ' speaks of his going a little out of the road from* Daventry to see a great camp called Barrow Hill, and adds : " They say this was a Danish camp, and every- : thing hereab'out is attributed to the Danes, because ii s. HI. JAN. 7, ion.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 17 of the neighbouring Daventry, which they suppose to be built by them. The road hereabouts, too, being overgrown with Dane- weed, they fancy it sprang from the blood of Danes slain in battle ; and that, if upon a certain day iii the year you cut it, it bleeds." Vol. ii. p. 362. There is a full account of the tradition in The Gardeners' Chronicle, 1875, p. 515. See also Prior and Britten, s.v.v. Dane wort, Dane weed ; Aubrey's ' Natural History of Wilts,' p. 50 ; ' Natural History and Anti- quities of Surrey,' iv. 217, cited in ' Flowers and Flower Lore,' by the Rev. Hilderie Friend. 1884. J. HOLDEN MACMICHAEL. 4, Hurlingham Court, S.W. [G. F. R. B. also thanked for reply.] HIGH STEWARDS AND RECORDERS AT THE RESTORATION (US. ii. 488). Sir Orlando Bridgeman was Lord Keeper of the Great Seal 1667-72, during which time there was no one with the title of Lord Chancellor. Lord Campbell in the introduction to his ' Lives of the Lord Chancellors and Keepers of the Great Seal of England,' 1845, vol. i. p. 20, cites 5 Eliz. c. 18, which declares that " the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal for the time being shall have the same place, pre-eminence, and jurisdiction as the Lord Chancellor of England." He continues : " Since then there of course never have been a Chancellor and Keeper of the Great Seal concur- rently, and the only difference between the two titles is, that the one is more sounding than the other, and is regarded as a higher mark of royal favour." Will MRS. SUCKLING give her reference for the statement that Roger Gollop was M.P. for Southampton in 1659, and say whether Southampton means the county or the borough ? There is no Roger Gollop in the Index of the Official (Blue-book) Return of Members of Parliament. This does not prove that there was no such member, as the seventeenth-century lists are not perfect. George Gollopp, or Gollop, or Gallopp, alderman, sat for Southampton borough in the Parliaments of 17 May, 1625 12 August, 1625 ; of 6 February, 1625/615 June, 1626 ; of 17 March, 1627/810 March, 1628/9 ; and of 1640 (Long Parliament). In the Parliament of 13 April, 1640 5 May, 1640, Southampton borough was represented by Sir John Mill, Bt., and Thomas Levingstonne, Esq. In the next the Long Parliament one of the two mem- bers was George Gollopp (see above). In the next, 3 September, 1654 22 January, 1654/5, John Lisle, Esq., one of the Lords Commissioners of the Great Seal, and Re- corder of Southampton, appears alone as member for the borough. In the lists of the next three Parliaments, viz., of 1656, 1658/9, and 1660, the borough does not appear. It reappears in that of 1661 with two members. In the list of the Parliament of 1658.9, which lasted less than three months, there were two members for Southampton county : one of unknown name ("Return torn"), the other Robert Wallopp, Esq., of Fare Wallopp, co. Southampton. About that time a Wallopp generally sat for the county. ROBERT PIERPOINT. There was no Lord Chancellor in 1671. Clarendon surrendered the Great Seal on 30 August, 1667. It was given to Shaftes- bury on 17 November, 1672. During the intervening period Sir Orlando Bridgeman was Lord Keeper. EDWARD BENSLY. A great deal of valuable matter relating to High Stewards will be found in Webb's ' English Local Government, vols. ii. iii. ROLAND AUSTIN. Public Library, Gloucester. [G. F. R. B., DIEGO, M., and MB. W. SCOTT also thanked for replies.] DANTE, RUSKIN, AND A FONT (11 S. ii. 469). Dante says himself (' Inferno,' xix. 1920), when speaking of the punishment of the Simonists : " I saw the livid stone, on the sides and on the bottom, full of holes, all of one breadth ; and each was round. Not less wide they seemed to me, nor larger, than those that are in my beauteous San Giovanni made for stands to the baptizers ; one of which, not many years ago, I broke to save one that was drowning in it : L'un delli quali, ancor non e molt' anni, Rupp' io per uri che dentro ri annegava." A. R. BAYLEY. Miss SUMNER : MRS. SKRINE OR SKREENE (11 S. ii. 389, 475). I have a copy of the Chippendale book-plate of Wm. Brightwell Sumner of Hatchlands, East Clandon, Surrey, with a bequest label attached, " The Bequest of my Brother, the Rev d D r Rob Carey Sumner," which is enclosed in a floral wreath, c. 1770. The arms are : Ermines, two chevronels or, a crescent gu. for difference, impaling. . . .a stag trippant . . . .for Holme. Crest, a lion's head erased .... ducally gorged .... There is another book-plate of this family, viz., a festoon armorial, c. 1780, for Geo. Holmne Sumner, armiger, of Hatchlands ; but I have not a copy of it. 18 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. m. JAN. 7, 1911. There is a pedigree of the Sumners of Hatchlands in Burke' s ' Landed Gentry,' 5th ed. It also appears in other editions. CHAS. HALL CROUCH. 48, Nelson Road, Stroud Green, N. ELIZABETH WOODVILLE AND THE KINGS OF COLOGNE (11 S. ii. 449). The attempt to connect Elizabeth Woodville with one of the three Kings of Cologne is, I fear, a hope- less undertaking. It was doubtless through her mother, Jaquette or Jacqueline, that the connexion (if such there was) existed. But the difficulties in the way of tracing her descent seem insuperable. In Cologne, I believe, the names assigned to the three Kings are Gaspar (or Jaspar), Melchior, and Balthazar. There are, however, at least four other accounts, in every one of which the names are different. From an origin so obscure and nebulous, it appears impossible to deduce the pedigree of the Lady Eliza- beth Woodville with anything approaching accuracy. W. S. S. BABIES AND KITTENS (11 S. ii. 509). Miss Charlotte Leatham in an article on West Sussex superstitions lingering in 1868 (Folk - lore Eecord, i. 18) says : " The belief that a baby and a kitten cannot thrive in the same house is far from being peculiar to Sussex." Norfolk people hold the same view, and they will not hesitate to drown a cat if it is ailing when there is an infant about. W. B. GERISH. LOWTHEBS v. HOWARDS : A SUPERSTITION UPSET (11 S. ii. 504). I first heard the saying mentioned, "A Lowther cannot beat a Howard," during the recent election. If it is of long standing ("a century and a half," The Morning Post says), it is difficult to see how it could have any foundation on fact. In the Parliaments of 1695, 1698, 1700, 1701, and 1780 Carlisle, and in those of 1679, 1806, 1807, 1812, and 1818 Cumber- land, each of which was a two-seat con- stituency, returned both a Lowther and a Howard. This must have meant either a compromise or such a balance of power as gave no advantage to either family. The expression " A Lowther cannot beat a Howard," or, as I heard it, "A Lowther has never beaten a Howard," implies a number of contests at the polls in which a Howard was uniformly successful over a Lowther. I do not find that the political history of Cumberland and Westmorland affords any Confirmation of such a view. DIEGO. Leland's Itinerary in England. Edited by Lucy Toulmin Smith. Parts IX., X., and XI. (Bell & Sons.) THIS volume marks the conclusion of the valuable and scholarly work upon which Miss Toulmin Smith has been long engaged. Of its contents, one part only, Part X. having to do with Oxfordshire, Berkshire, Wilts, Somerset, Glouces- tershire, and Dorset is in the nature of con- tinuous narrative. The remainder 'consists of miscellaneous notes in Latin and English, those in Part XI. having formed to some extent the basis of the more connected disquisitions in the earlier portions of the Itinerary. An interesting Appendix to Part X. sets forth a ' Note ' by Thomas Hearne on the building of the bridge between Culham and Abingdon, concluding with the cita,tion of a " table " put up by " Mr. Richard Fannand, iron-monger," in the Hall of St. Helen's Hospital, wherein the details of the enterprise labour, material, and dimensions are set forth in pious and enthusiastic verse. This, the final volume, is supplied with every- thing necessary towards perfecting the work as a whole, and facilitating references. The Preface contains an additional note of the Leland MSS. in the British Museum ; there is a ' Conspectus of English and Welsh Counties ' touched upon by the traveller. ; a list of the ' Maps and Illustra- tions in the Five Volumes ' ; 'A Concordance of the Present Edition of Leland's Itinerary with Hearne's Printed Text, Second Edition, 1744 ' ; and a ' Glossary ' of ' Archaic Words and Senses ' ; while the two general Indexes, of ' Persons and Landowners ' and ' Places and Subjects ' respec- tively, which have reference to the volumes pre- ceding as well as the present, are, so far as we have been able to test them, wonderfully accurate. By her thorough and painstaking performance of a task which has demanded infinite patience and scrupulous care, no less than learning and critical insight of a high order, Miss Toulmin Smith has earned the gratitude not only of antiquaries, but also of those less responsible persons who love to dabble in local history and tradition for the romance that is in them. IN The Cornhill Magazine for the new year Mrs. Humphry Ward begins a new novel, ' The Case of Richard Meynell,' another story of theological difficulties, and Mr. and Mrs. Egerton Castle a lively story, ' The Lost Iphigenia.' Mr. J. Meade Falkner has a pleasant poem on ' Oxford.' Mrs. Woods's ' Pastel ' is concerned with ' Black and White,' and finds something to say in favour of the former. Sir Frederick Pollock in ' Arabiniana' deals with the odd sayings of Serjeant Arabin, an original character who administered justice from 1827 till 1841. His best-known saying, and we think his best the others are nothing like so witty is current in some such words as " Prisoner, God has given you good abilities, instead of which you go about the country stealing ducks." For " good abilities " we have generally heard " health and strength." Mrs. S. A. Barnett has a short, but sensible article ' Of Town Planning.' ' Marlborough's Men,' by Col. Hugh Pearse, is suggestive, but rather too much of a summary^to please us. " Q." has a lively ii s. in. JAN. 7, ion.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 19 account of ' The Election Count ' in his own dis- trict, the hopes and fears and amenities of such occasions. Sir James Ypxall in ' A Great Game at Hide and Seek ' explains how Bruslart worried Napoleon. His fantastic style is full of affecta- tion. Mr. A. C. Benson's personal sketch this month is concerned with ' J. K. S.,' and gives a highly interesting view of that brilliant and eccen- tric figure. The first of a series of " Examina- tion Papers " on famous authors is begun this month by a number of questions on Lamb which are set by Mr. E. V. Lucas. For the best answers two guineas are offered. The Fortnightly for the year is an exceptionally interesting number. Mr. J. L. Garvin's notes on the present political situation are not con- vincing, and are spoilt for us by idle repetition. Mr. Walter Sichel in ' Second Thoughts ' is also on the Conservative side, while Mr. Belloc in ' The Change in Politics ' abuses both sides, and has good reason, we think, for much that he con- demns. Mr. Granville Barker has an account of ' Two German Theatres ' which suggests abun- dant reflections concerning the mismanagement of our own stage and the recent failure of reper- tory. What Mr. Barker says should be carefully considered by all who care for the drama in this country. ' Post - Impressionists ' supply Mr. Walter Sickert with a subject for incisive criticism. A painter himself, Mr. Sickert writes with marked ability and verve on the artists who have come after the Impressionists of his earlier days. In ' Impressions of Congress ' Mr. Sydney Brooks brings out very well the free and easy manners of American politicians as compared with our own. Washington and Westminster are widely different in their observances. Any one can go past the doors of the national Capitol, smoke in corridors, and take any seat in the great public galleries which happens to be vacant. In the House of Representatives " each member has a revolving arm-chair and a spacious desk in front of it." ' A Candid Colloquy on Religion ' should attract attention, as it exhibits cleverly three typical points of view, the believer of the party being a Roman Catholic.' Mr. Sidney Low writes on ' The End of the Old Constitution ' with the experience of an old hand ; and Mr. W hitelaw Reid reprints an address on ' Byron ' delivered to inaugurate a proposed Byron Chair of English Literature. Mr. Francis Gribble has an article on ' Tolstoy ' which brings into relief some of the important points and inconsistencies in the career of that thinker and artist. ' Benlian,' a story by Mr. Oliver Onions, is a weird and effective study in morbid influences ; and Mr. Lennard's fourth section of his hero ' In Search of Egeria ' deals with a modern, neurotic type of woman. Ix the two opening papers of The Nineteenth Century Lord Ribblesdale and Lord Dunraven discuss the results of the recent election. Mr. Harold Cox speaks of the Referendum as ' A Great Democratic Reform ' necessary to cope with "misrepresentation by groups of log-rolling politicians." He hopes it may come into force in a few years. Lady Paget's ' Recollections of Copenhagen in the 'Sixties ' are chiefly concerned with the difficulties in the choice of the Danish King of Greece, whose father Prince Christian was, at first, decidedly opposed to separation from his son. Sir Edward Clayton considers ' The Home Secretary and Prison Reform,' providing, we think, some useful and shrewd criticism. Capt. G. S. C. Swinton is in favour of 'A " King Edward " Bridge ' as a memorial. Hungerford Bridge and Charing Cross Station are, it is argued, unworthy of their prominence. They are either to make way altogether, " the station moving bodily to a more convenient position elsewhere," or to be included in one great recon- struction scheme. This might be very fine, but the expense would be prohibitive. The second! part of ' The Married Working Woman : a Study,' is well worth reading. Of ' Carillon Music,' as Mr. E. B. Osborn says, little is known in England. He speaks of the triumphs achieved by various artists at the meeting of bell-masters in Mechlin. M. Denyn is the master of them all, and performs, we learn, on a set of thirty-five bells at Cattistock in Dorset every year on the last Thursday in July. This is the only keyboard carillon of any conse- quence in the country, but perhaps some of our latest towers will be provided with bell-music.. Mrs. Watherston gives a lively and interesting account of ' An Outpost of our Empire,' viz., Tamale in West Africa, which she was the first white woman to inhabit. Other articles are con- cerned with English sculpture, education, small holdings, and democracy, but we regret to firkl that no single paper deals with letters. Ix The Burlington Magazine the ' Editorial ' deals with ' National Memorials and Selection Committees.' The competition for the statue of King Edward should, it is said, be thrown open to all artists of the British Empire, and the designs be on show in some large central building during the period of the Coronation this year, when Colonial and Indian officials may be able to select those of them suitable for local requirements. The jury of selection is then discussed. We agree that it should foe possible, and is desirable, to get eminent foreigners to help ; and we also applaud the idea of using the services of ' : a certain number of men of general critical knowledge and familiarity with the masterpieces of older sculpture." The statue, after all, is not to be viewed mainly by sculptors, who, like other artists, are apt to ignore the claims of general design in favour of some technical subtlety or merit. Mr. Roger Fry writes on ' A Portrait of Leonello D'Este ' by Roger Van der Weyden which is figured in colours in the frontispiece, the coat of arms on the reverse side being also reproduced on a plate. Mr. Lionel Cust continues in his ' Notes on Pic- tures in the Royal Collections ' discussion of Van Dyck's splendid equestrian portraits of Charles I. M. Paul Lafond has discovered an interesting subject for discussion in ' Ox- Yokes in the North of Portugal,' the designs on which approach a primitive character, though the actual specimens secured are, in fact, contemporary work. They are certainly beautiful, and offer a fascinating field for the tracing of design down the ages. A similar study is afforded by a plate in which Sir Martin Conway puts together pictures of two fourteenth-century chests. Of the remaining articles and notes we mention specially a clever plea for the Post-Impressionists by Mr. A. Clutton- Brock, and information from a foreign correspondent concerning forthcoming letters of Van Gogh. It is noted that the ' St. Sebastian' of Mantegna has been moved from the village of Aigue-Perse to the Louvre. NOTES AND QUERIES. [11 s. m. JAN. 7, wn. BOOKSELLERS' CATALOGUES. JANUARY. r MR. ANDREW BAXENDINE'S Edinburgh Catalogue 121 contains some new books as well as second-hand ones and remainders. We note the ' Wellington Despatches,' with index, 13 vols., II. 5s. ; and Bewick's 'Birds ' and ' Quadrupeds/ -3 vols., half-morocco, Newcastle, 1816-21, II. 10s. Under Alpine is VVooster's ' Alpine Plants,' 2 vols., fine copy, 1Z. 10s. The " Ancient Classics for English Readers," 28 vols. in 14, half-calf, are II. 5s., and " Aldine Poets," 51 vols., cloth, as new, 21. 2s. Billings's ' Antiquities of Scotland,' 4 vols., 4to, half-morocco, 1845-52, a handsome copy, is 4Z. 10s. 6d. ; and the reprint, 1901, 21. Under Scotland is a complete set of the historians of Scotland, together 10 vols., cloth, 1871-80, 31. 15s. Qd. Under Scott are several entries, including 'The Border Antiquities,' 2 vols., 4to, old red morocco, 1814, 21. 2s. Under Burns are the first London edition with list of subscribers, red morocco, 1787, 3Z. 10s. 6d. ; and Allan Cunningham's edition, 8 vols., blue morocco, 21. 2s. The list, which is a varied one, contains fifteen hundred items. Mr. F. C. Carter's Hornsey Catalogue 27 is devoted to Americana. There are in all four hundred items at moderate prices. A collection of trials, 29 pamphlets, 1795-1852, may be had for 21. 12s., and 11 Civil War pamphlets, 1849-65, for 12s. Qd. Mr. Carter sends also (Extra Series 4) a Cata- logue of Deeds, Charters, and Autograph Letters. There are many documents relating to Gibbon, with some unpublished correspondence. Under ;St. Pancras is part of a plan showing a tea garden, and there is an item of special interest at the E resent time, a collection of 56 Peers' Proxies, lank, early nineteenth century, with signatures of Selkirk, Clinton, Shaftesbury, Verulam, Mac- aulay, and others, II. 5s. Mr. George Gregory of Bath includes in his Catalogue numbered 199-200 the rare mezzotint ' The Daughters of Sir Thomas Frankland,' engraved by Ward after Hoppner, published 21 April, 1800, a magnificent impression, 100 guineas. Among the books are Fathers of the Church, miscellaneous Theology, Clark's " Foreign Theological Library," and Greek and Latin classics. Works from the library of the late Canon Griffiths comprise Atkyns's ' Glouces- tershire,' folio, 1768, 3Z. 15s. ; ' Percy Anecdotes,' 40 vols. in 20, 1Z. 7s. ; Skelton's ' Oxonia Antiqua Restaurata,' 2 vols., imperial 4to, 1823, 2Z. 2s. ; and Foxe's ' Book of Martyrs,' black-letter, 3 vols., folio, 1641, 4Z. 10s. There are some recent purchases, among which are ' The American Atlas,' 1775, 6Z. ; and Ackermann's ' Cambridge,' 2 vols., imperial 4to, half-morocco, 1815, a brilliantly coloured copy, 13Z. Under Bath are Nattes's Views, 28 coloured plates, royal folio, handsomely bound in calf, 1806, 9Z. Mr. W T . M. Murphy's Liverpool Catalogue 160 contains the Transactions and Proceedinys of the Society of Biblical Archaeology, 1872-93, i3Z. 10s. ; a handsome set of Punch, original issue, 1841- 1909, 137 vols. in 69 yearly volumes, half-morocco, 27Z. 10s. ; the Abbotsford Scott, 17 vols., half- vellum, 1842-6, 10?. ; and the Dauphin edition of Boileau, 2 vols., large 4to, morocco, a choice copy, Paris, 1789, 5Z. 5s. Under Byroniana is the first edition of the ' Genuine Rejected Addresses,' original boards, very scarce, 1812, 4Z. Under Ceramic is Hobson's 'Worcester Porcelain,' 6Z. 6s. A copy of ' The Century Dictionary,' 8 vols., full morocco, gilt, is priced 61. Among many Dickens items is an extra-illustrated copy of the first 8vo edition with autograph letter of Dickens, levant, 1839, 6Z. 10s. Other works include ' The Historians' History of the World,' Times edition, 1907, 11Z. 10s. ; Smyth's ' Roman Medals,' 1Z. 5s. ; Montaigne's ' Essais,' Paris, 1600, 4Z. 10s. ; the first edition of Rogers's ' Italy,' 1830, 2Z. 10s. ; and Spotiswoode's ' Church of Scotland, 'fourth edition, 1677, 2Z. 10s. Dodsley's ' Collection of Old English Plays,' a fine fresh set, is 7Z. 7s. Under Constable are a pair of mezzo- tints, fine impressions, 15 guineas; also 'The Rainbow,' 4 guineas. Messrs. W. N. Pitcher & Co.'s Manchester Catalogue 189 contains all classes of literature. There is a large-paper copy of Angelo's ' Remi- niscences,' limited to 75 copies ; also a large- paper copy of ' The Picnic,' limited to 50 copies, together 3 vols., royal Svo, half-morocco, 1904-5, 5Z. 5s. Under Art Sales is Redford's ' History of Sales of Pictures,' 2 vols., scarce, 1888, 9Z. There is a set of the " Badminton Library of Sports and Pastimes," 30 vols., half blue morocco, 7Z. 10s.; and the Caxton Edition of ' La Com^die Humaine,' 4Z. The Haworth Edition of the Brontes' works, 7 vols., is, 3Z. 7s. Qd. There are also the Cole- ridge and Prothero edition of Byron, the 17- volume edition of Browning, the Vierge edition of ' Don Quixote,' Ormerod's ' Cheshire,' and Fielding, 11 vols., with Life by Murphy. An extra-illustrated Lysons's ' Magna Britannia,' extended to 10 vols., half -morocco, 1806-22, is 16Z. 10s. Under Manchester are 12 original pencil drawings by Melton Prior, depicting scenes during the visit of the Prince and Princess of Wales in 1887, 71. 10s. [Notices of other Catalogues held over.] We must call special attention to the following notices : WE beg leave to state that we decline to return communications which, for any reason, we do not print, and to this rule we can make no exception. WE cannot undertake to answer queries privately, nor can we advise correspondents as to the value of old books and other objects or as to the means of disposing of them. Editorial communications should be addressed to "The Editor of 'Notes and Queries ' "Adver- tisements and Business Letters to "The Pub- lishers " at the Office, Bream's Buildings, Chancery Lane, E.G. Lucis (" Terrible Vautrin "). Vautrin is a desperate criminal in Balzac's ' Le Pere Goriot.' XYLOGRAPITER (" Gruneisen "). He was for some years musical critic of The Athcmceum, and died in 1879. See life in ' D.N.B.' CORRIGENDUM. 11 S. ii. 512, col. 1, 1. 4, for ' Balser " read Baker. ii s. in. JAN. 14, ion.] NOTES AND QUEEIES. LONDON, SATURDAY, JANUARY U, 1911. CONTENTS.-No. 55. NOTES : Shelley and Leigh Hunt, 21 Statues and Memorials in the British Isles, 22 The Earliest Tele- graphy, 24 Sir John Chandos James Forsyth " Elze " =Already, 25 Longfellow on Dufresny, 26. QUERIES: Sophie Dawes Miss Wykeham Alderman Wilcox, 27 Benjamin D'Israeli of Dublin Teesdale Legion Capt. Witham and the Siege of Gibraltar- Grange Court, St. Clement Danes Thackeray and Pugilism Thackeray and the Stage T. J. Thackeray O. Goldsmith, B.A., 28 M. G. Drake Richard Heylin W. J. Lockwood T. Coryat and Westminster School Authors Wanted " Teetotal " Ha.ckney and Tom Hood Miss Pastrana Lady Elizabeth Preston, 29 County Coats of Arms Coroner of the Verge Crowe Families, 30. BEPLIES : Poor Souls' Light: " Totenlaterne," 30 Early Graduation Colani and the Reformation, 32 Henry of Navarre and the Three-Handled Cup Gordons at West- minster School, 33 Sir Walter Raleigh and Tobacco ' Young Folks ' Itinerant Tailors, 34 Westminster Chimes "Sackbut" Knots in Handkerchiefs Corpse Bleeding Artephius, ' De Characteribus Planetarum,' 35 Elephant and Castle in Heraldry Puns on Payne The Brown Sex, 36 Fores's Musical Envelope Bohemian Musical Folk-lore Al fieri in England Lady Conyngham Bishop Luscombe " Yorker," 37 Viscount Ossington " Tenedish," 38. NOTES ON BOOKS: 'The Romance of Bookselling' The National Review.' Booksellers' Catalogues. Notices to Correspondents. SHELLEY AND LEIGH HUNT. IN that very interesting compilation, ' Recol- lections of the Table Talk of Samuel Rogers,' the poet is reported to have said : " Before meeting Shelley in Italy, I had seen him only once. It was in my own house in St. James' Place, where he called upon me introducing himself to request the loan of some money which he wished to present to Leigh Hunt ; and he offered me a bond for it. Having nume- rous claims upon me at that time, 1 was obliged to refuse the loan." Prior to its final acceptance, a part of that statement seems to require revision. I do not think that Shelley before April, 1816, had any necessity to raise money for Leigh Hunt. Prof. Dowden in a note (' Life of Shelley,' vol. ii. p. 181) says : " When it was that he [Shelley] called on Rogers to request a loan for Leigh Hunt I cannot tell." While not disputing the fact that Shelley did call upon Rogers earlier than April, 1816, to borrow money, I submit that there is no evidence whatever that the money was intended for Leigh Hunt. I think it can be shown that the loan was requested for God- win, and that the date of Shelley's visit to Rogers was May, 1814. When, in February, 1813, Leigh Hunt and his brother were sentenced to two years' imprisonment, and a fine of 500?. each, for publishing a libel on the Prince Regent, Shelley, who was then at Tremadoc in Wales, wrote, on or about 19 February, to Hook- ham, and begged him to raise a subscription to pay Hunt's fine. Towards that object Shelley sent 201. When it was pointed out that neither of the Hunts would accept pecuniary assistance, Shelley wrote direct to Leigh Hunt, at that time in prison, and offered to pay either the whole, or a great part of the fine. This princely offer was at once declined by both the brothers Hunt, and there is no reason to believe that the question was ever reopened. As a matter of fact, Leigh Hunt was not personally known to Shelley until December, 1816, which was long after the period indicated by Rogers. That the visit to Rogers must have taken place prior to Byron's departure from England, in April, 1816, is proved by Rogers himself, who states that on the same day that Shelley called, Byron dined with him. Prof. Dowden tells us (' Life of Shelley,' vol. ii. p. 61) that in December, 1816, Mary became aware that Shelley had either given or con- veyed to Leigh Hunt a considerable sum of money, possibly for his private wants. This is the first intimation of any gift of money by Shelley to Leigh Hunt, and can have had no connexion whatever with Samuel Rogers. On the other hand, it is on record that in March, 1814, Shelley's affairs were in a critical condition. He wrote to his father to say that he could no longer delay raising money by the sale of post-obit bonds. Two months later, in May, 1814, Shelley tried very hard to raise money, but not for Leigh Hunt, who was not in need of money at that time. Shelley- wished to assist Godwin (Dowden, vol. i. pp. 417-18), with whose daughter he eloped at the end of July. In May, 1815, Shelley gave Godwin 1,OOOZ., and in the following month the poet became entitled to an income of 1,OOOZ. a year. He had then certainly no occasion to borrow money from Rogers, for he was, at that time, decidedly prosperous. " Re- lieved from poverty and the oppression of debt," says Prof. Dowden, he longed to get out of London, and to find some haven of peace with Mary Godwin. Again, in January, 1816, Shelley agreed to sell an annuity for Godwin's benefit ; but not one NOTES AND QUERIES. [11 s. m. JAN. H, 1911. word is mentioned of Leigh Hunt's neces- sities until the following December. In these circumstances it seems likely, either that Rogers may have forgotten, or perhaps in the first instance mistaken, the object for which Shelley begged a loan ; or that the compiler of the ' Table Talk * may have misunderstood the allusion. It appears to be only bare justice to a man who, in after years, was not so scrupulous, to remember that, in the hours of adversity which he passed in prison, he showed a fine spirit of independence. RICHARD EDGCUMBE. Edgbarrow, Orowthorne, Berks. STATUES AND MEMORIALS IN THE BRITISH ISLES. (See 10 S. xi. 441 ; xii. 51, 114, 181, 401 ; 11 S. i. 282; ii. 42, 242, 381.) I AGAIN desire to thank all correspondents, anonymous and otherwise, who have supplied information. Having given a first instalment of Queen Victoria Memorials at the last reference, I devote the present contribution mainly to Memorials of Prince Albert, after which I must proceed to other subjects now demand- ing attention. ROYAL PEESONAGES (continued). Hastings. About the centre of the town, on a site where seven roads converge, stands the Albert Memorial. It is 65 feet high, and was erected by public subscription at a cost of 860Z., to the memory of Prince Albert, consort of Queen Victoria. Above the entrance door of the tower is inscribed : " Erected to Albert the Good, in the year of our Lord 1862." Higher up on the same side is a statue of the Prince, represented in the robes of a Knight of the Garter. Above the statue is an illuminated clock. A drinking fountain is incorporated in the lower portion of the tower. The memorial is from designs by Mr. E. A. Heffer of Liver- pool. Edinburgh. A bronze equestrian statue of Prince Albert stands in the centre of Charlotte Square Gardens. The Prince is represented in the uniform of a. field-marshal. On the granite pedestal are bronze bas-reliefs depicting events in his life : (E. ) his marriage, (W.) opening of the Great Exhibition of 1851, (N.) distributing Orders, (S.) the Queen and Prince surrounded by their children. At the angles between are groups representative of (1) Art and Science, (2) Labour, (3) Nobility, (4) Service. The statue is the work of the late Sir John Steell, and the groups are by other sculptors. The work cost nearly 16,000?., and was inaugurated by Queen Victoria on 17 August, 1876. On the evening of the ceremony the sculptor received the honour of knighthood from his sovereign at Holyrood Palace. Ramsey, Isle of Man. On 20 September, 1847, the Royal Yacht with the Queen and Prince Albert on board anchored in Ramsey Bay. The Queen remained on board, but the Prince Consort landed and visited several points of interest in the neighbour- hood. The party had again embarked before the inhabitants were aware of the visit. A subscription was shortly after- wards started to erect a suitable memorial of the event. It consists of a tower 45 feet high, built of granite and slate, and furnished with a winding stairway in the interior. Over the doorway is inscribed : " Erected on the spot where H.R.H. Prince- Albert stood to view Ramsey and its neigh- bourhood during the visit of her most gracious Majesty Queen Victoria to Ramsey Bay, the 20th of September, 1847." Belfast. At the bottom of High Street, near the Quay, is the fine clock-tower known as " The Albert Memorial." It was erected by public subscription, was begun in 1865, and completed in 1868. It rises to a height of 138 feet, and was constructed from the designs of Mr. W. J. Barre. On the side facing High Street is a statue of the Prince ; and the tower terminates with a clock-chamber, open belfry, and spire. Balmoral. On Craig-lour-achin, one of the* most beautiful hills near Balmoral, a statue of Prince Albert stands on the apex of a pyramid or cairn of rough granite blocks. The Prince is represented clad in Highland costume, and bare-headed. His right hand rests upon the head of a large collie-dog standing beside him. The inscription con- tains the following quotation from the Apocryphal Wisdom of Solomon (chap. iv. verses 13 and 14) : " He, being made perfect in a short time, fulfilled a long time. For his soul pleased the Lord, therefore hasted He to take him away from among the wicked." Lochlee Forest, Braemar. At a spot in this forest known as Hall o' Craig o' Doon is a well from which Queen Victoria and Prince Albert once drank. The eleventh Earl of Dalhousie, who owned the demesne, placed over the well a memorial stone,, bearing the lines : Rest, traveller, on this lonely green, And drink and pray for Scotland's queen* ii s. m. j.. ii, j9ii.] NOTES AND QUERIES. Beneath this couplet is inscribed as follows : " Her Majesty Queen Victoria and His Royal Highness the Prince Consort visited this well and drank of its refreshing waters, the 20th of Septem- ber, 1860. The Year of Her Majesty's Great Sorrow." Balmoral Palace. Over the entrance door to the great tower is a richly carved panel. The globose centre is thus inscribed : This Castle of Balmoral was erected by R.R.H. Prince Albert Consort of H.M. Queen Victoria Begun Sept. 28th 1853 Completed Sept. Istll856 Tenby. On the Castle Hill stands the Welsh Memorial of Prince Albert. It was designed and executed by Mr. John Evan Thomas at a cost of 2,2501. The Prince is represented in the attire of a field-marshal, and wearing the regalia of the Order of the Garter. The statue was unveiled by Prince Arthur (Duke of Connaught) in 1865. The inscription is in Welsh. Wolverhampton. In the centre of Queen's Square is a bronze equestrian statue of Prince Albert. It was unveiled by Queen Victoria on 30 November, 1866. Liverpool. A bronze equestrian statue of Prince Albert is in St. George's Place. On the front of the granite pedestal is in- scribed : Albert, Prince Consort Born 1819, Died 1861. And on the back : " This statue of a wise and good Prince was erected by the Corporation of Liverpool, October, 1800." It was modelled by Thos. Thornycroft, and cost 6,000?. St. Peter Port, Guernsey. A replica of the statue of Prince Albert formerly in the gardens of the Royal Horticultural Society, and now placed near the entrance to the Royal Albert Hall, London, commemorates the visit of the Queen and Prince to the island in August, 1846. It is erected near the spot where they landed, and represents the Prince in the robes of the Order of the Garter. It was cast in copper at a cost of 1,200?. St. Anne, Alderney. A gateway leading into the churchyard was " Erected by the people of Alderney " to commemorate the visit of the Queen and Prince Albert in 1846. It is inscribed : " Albert, 1846." Aberdeen. In Union Street, near Union Bridge, is Marochetti's statue of Prince Albert. It was unveiled by Queen Victoria on 13 October, 1863. The following relate to. other royal', personages : Lichfield. On 30 September, 1908, the Earl of Dartmouth unveiled a statue of King Edward VII. which had been presented to the city by Mr. Robert Bridgman, the sculptor, in commemoration of his year of office as Sheriff. Medallion portraits of King Edward and Queen Alexandra, affixed to the front of the Lichfield Guildhall, were unveiled on 17 September, 1910. Hickleton, Yorkshire. In the proximity of Hickleton Hall, the seat of Viscount Hali- fax, a King Edward memorial cross has recently been erected. The cross, which stands about 20 feet high, is constructed of Portland stone, with local stone forming the base. In the centre of the cross itself is carved on the front a figure of the B. V. Mary bearing our Lord in her arms, and at the back are the three lions of England. The following is inscribed at the base : " To Edward the Seventh, King of England. This Cross is erected in memory of the past by Charles Lindley, Viscount Halifax, his faithful subject and servant, May 6th, 1910. " Grant him, O Lord, eternal rest, and let light perpetual shine upon him." Alnwick, Northumberland. In the neigh- bourhood of Alnwick Castle is a pillar in- scribed as follows : "William the Lion King of Scotland besieging Alnwick Castle was here taken Prisoner MCLXXIV. Two or three hundred yards north of the chapel dedicated to St. Leonard is a cross - bearing the following inscriptions : Malcolm III. King of Scotland besieging Alnwick Castle was slain here, Nov. 13, An. MXCIII. K. Malcolm's Cross decayed by time was restored by his descendant Elizabeth Duchess of Northumberland TMDCCLXXIV. Chislehurst. On Chislehurst Common, . hard by Camden Place, for some years the residence of the family of the third Napoleon, ex-Emperor of the French, is a granite NOTES AND QUERIES. C n s. m. JAN. u, mi. cross erected to the memory of the ill-fated Prince Imperial. On the pedestal are the following inscriptions : [Front.] Napoleon Eugene Louis Jean Joseph, Prince Imperial, Killed in Zululand, 1st June, 1879. [JBflw*.] " I shall die with a sentiment of profound gratitude for Her Majesty the Queen of England ;and all the Royal Family, and for the country where I have received for eight years such cordial hospitality." In memory of the Prince Imperial and in sorrow at his death this cross is erected by the residents of Chislehurst, 1880. The first of the latter inscriptions is an extract from the young Prince's will. JOHN T. PAGE. Long Itchington, \Yarwickshire. Nicholas Howe's monument, for which MB. PAGE inquired at 11 S. ii. 243, is situated an the village of Little Barford, Beds, and consists of a four-sided pillar about 3 feet high. The inscription on the sides runs as follows : (1) The Poet Rowe was born in this house 1673 (2) Author of Jane Shore sevral Tragedies and Translator of Lucan (3 ) Master of Polite Learn- ing and the Classical Authors (4) A secretary of State To Queen Ann, and Poet Laureate to King George. The above information has been kindly supplied me by Mr. J. H. Alington of Little Barford, whose grandfather erected the memorial. He adds : " The story is that the mother of the poet was travelling, and that the house (which is now the end one of a row of joined cottages in which labourers live) was a wayside inn, where she lodged at the time of his birth." W. R. B. PBIDEAUX. Reform Club. THE EARLIEST TELEGRAPHY. ACCORDING to an article by Mr. T. Sturdee "in The Strand Magazine for October last, " it was not until 1795, when Lord George Murray introduced his semaphore system, that anything like an efficient means of telegraphic communication was established." This implies the earlier existence of such communication ; and that idea is borne out in an article in the same magazine for .September by Mr. Bernard Darwin on * Some Curious Wagers.' That tells of a bet by the Duke of Queensberry with a Mr. Edgworth, which could have been won by the latter if it had not been that, " having in his mind a system of semaphores, he blurted out that he didn't mean to rely upon horses." There is a tantalizing absence of dates from this anecdote, but conjecturally it is of about 1750 ; and I should be interested to know whether there is a contemporary description of any earlier system of telegraphic com- munication than that which I give below. In The London Chronicle for 3-6 January, 1767, appeared the following :^ CORSICAN GAZETTE. Iftolarossa, August 28. On the 17th of this month, arrived here from Corte, two English Gentlemen, to embark on their return to Tuscany. They had been in- formed at Corte, of an invention by the Abbes Giulani and Liccia of our province, of a new con- trivance which they call, 11 Corri&re Volante, The Flying Courier ; by means of which, notice may be communicated in a few instants from one place to another, at the distance of many miles. The two young Abb6s were here at the arrival of these Gentlemen, who being desirous to see an experiment made of the new contrivance, it was accordingly made on the terrace of this tower, at the square of Saint Reperata, and the English Gentlemen were highly satisfied and pleased with it. Some months ago, when his Excellency the General was here, a like experiment was made, at the distance of ten miles, which succeeded perfectly well. As these English Gentlemen encouraged the two Abbes to inform the Publick of their invention, the following account of it is given, that the Publick may judge of the ad- vantages to be derived from it. The FLYING COURIER is a portable machine, which serves for the purpose of communicating at the distance of many miles a notice or advice, as clearly and distinctly, as if a voice was heard, or it was seen written on a leaf. To perform this operation, three things are necessary. 1. That the place from whence the notice is to be sent, which we shall call A, com- mand a view of the place to which the notice is directed, which we shall call B. 2. That at the place A, there be a machine with a person in- formed of the notice intended to be communicated to the place B. 3. That at the place B, there be another person with a similar machine, in order to return an answer to the place A, as shall be necessary. This operation is not restricted so as only to communicate intelligence from A to B, but the instant it is received at B, it may be conveyed to C, and from C may be conveyed to D, and so on, although C and D be not seen by A, provided that at every one of the places there be these machines, and the persons who perform, know at what precise time the operation is to be, so that they may stand in fixed attention. In this manner, the same notice may fly in a few hours from the one extremity to the other of a kingdom. This operation may be performed just now at the distance of 25 miles from one machine to another ; and when the machine shall be furnished with certain springs, Avhich are yet wanting, it may be done at the distance of 50 miles. It may n s. in. JAN. 14, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. be done by night, as well as by day, provided that the air be not charged with a low cloudy atmosphere, or any other dark vapour. Although the operation is performed in public, advice is communicated with the greatest secrecy, as it can neither be heard nor understood but by the persons who assist at the machines. Nay, if he who sends or receives the advice is desirous to conceal it, even from these persons, there is a method of doing it freely. In tine, this operation is performed with great expedition ; for, in a quarter of an hour may be communicated a period, containing about two huadred letters. Add to this, that the machine situated at the place A not only communicates advice to the other at the place B, but does not attempt it before being certain of being heard at B. Although so apparently precise, this description sadly lacks detail concerning the apparatus employed. Can that detail be found elsewhere ? ALFRED F. BOBBINS. SIR JOHN CHANDOS. In ' The Life of the Black Prince, by the Herald of Sir John Chandos,' recently edited by Miss Mildred K. Pope and Miss Eleanor C. Lodge of Oxford University, and published at the Clarendon Press (1910), it is stated in the 'Index of Proper Names,' p. 242, that Sir John Chandos was " son of Thomas Chandos, Sheriff of Herefordshire." This is an error the repetition of which in this important edition of the Chandos Herald's poem in- creases the need for its correction. The great Sir John Chandos, a knight- founder of the Order of the Garter, Viscount of St. Sauveur in Normandy, Constable of Aquitaine, and Seneschal of Poitou, was son and heir of Sir Edward Chandos, a dis- tinguished Derbyshire knight. Sir Edward, who received rewards for his service in the war with Scotland and for other services in the early reign of Edward III., was a constant friend and companion of that king. Sir John's parentage is correctly stated in his life in the ' Dictionary of National Biography,' which expressly cautions the reader against the above error, and that authority is, moreover, referred to on p. 242 mentioned above. M. Fillon, who is also there cited as an authority, and some other writers had earlier made the mistake of confusing this Sir John Chandos, the last of the knightly house of Chandos of Derbyshire, with another Sir John Chandos, son of the above Sir Thomas Chandos, and last of the male line of the baronial house of Chandos of Herefordshire and Shropshire. The latter Sir John died within the years 1428-30 (the ' D.N.B.' says 10 Dec., 1428) without issue, some sixty years after the death of his renowned kinsman, his sister's descendants becoming, in the eighteenth century, Dukes of Chandos. The knightly family of Chandos of Derby- shire, sprung from the baronial house, and seated in the county of Derby for five generations, is now represented by Chandos- Pole of Radbourne, through the marriage in the reign of Richard II. of Peter de la Pole and Elizabeth, niece and eventual sole heiress of Sir John Chandos of Radbourne r the famous warrior. The above Sir Thomas Chandos was in the King's division at Crecy, while his contemporary Sir John Chandos of the Derbyshire branch of the family was in attendance upon, and fighting beside, the youthful Prince of Wales, then only sixteen years old. R. E. E. CHAMBERS. Pill House, Bishop's Tawton, Barnstaple. JAMES FORSYTE. The article in the 'D.N.B.' on this Indian traveller needs some corrections. Capt. Forsyth joined the Bengal Army (not the Civil Service) in February, 1857, after receiving a university education not in England, but in Scotland. After some years of military service he was appointed Assistant Conservator, and acting Conser- vator of Forests in the Saugor and Nerbudda Territories. He was subsequently trans- ferred to the Central Provinces Commission, and after a time was nominated Settlement Officer, and then Deputy Commissioner of Nimar. He joined the Bengal Staff Corps in 1861, and was promoted to the rank of captain 20 February, 1869. His book ' The Highlands of Central India ' contained accounts of some, but by no means all, of his travels and explorations in the Central Provinces. R. E. B. " ELZE "= ALREADY. ' Glints o' Glen- gonnar,' by Christina Fraser, recently pub- lished, consists of a series of sketches illustrat- ing the life of dwellers in a remote district of Upper Clydesdale. The writer manifestly knows her people well, and perhaps the most fully presented character in her group is " Easie," the local shopkeeper, an incomer who has permanently retained certain impres- sions received in her native parish. Among these is the use of some words which are un- familiar to her youthful auditors : " Easie had twae words she used often, ' elze * and ' efterhin.' Jf a baker or cadger had come suner than she expected, she wad say, ' Is that you, elze ? I didna think it was that time o' day ' ; or, if we had been sent an erran' an' cam' back quick, she wad say, * Are ye back, elze ? Juist rin like a whittret/ If it was something she wad do later, she wad say'she wad do't efterhin." 26 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. m. JAN. n, 1911. "Efterhin" or " efterhend," for after- wards, and "whittret" for weasel, are still in fairly general use throughout the Lowlands ; but " elze " in the sense of already is less commonly known. Indeed, it is questionable if many who are familiar with the native speech ever heard it, to say nothing of including; it in their vocabulary. It is an interesting survival of the form " ellis " or *' els," which Jamieson in the ' Scottish Dictionary ' illustrates by quotations from Barbour, Gavin Douglas, * Sir Eg;eir,' and Archbishop Hamiltoun's ' Catechisme ' of 1551. That it signifies " already," and is distinct from the other " ellis " or " elles," which means else or otherwise, there seems to be no doubt whatever. All Jamieson' s examples support the distinction. Mr. Small in his edition of Gavin Douglas either ignored or discredited this specific meaning, for he gives it no place in his glossary. Douglas uses the word in his version of * ^Eneid ' iv. 135, where the poet describes Dido's waiting hunter : Hir fers steid stude stamping, reddy ellis, Rungeand the fomy goldin bitt jingling. It might, of course, be suggested that the word in this instance means " otherwise," or " apart from his rider " ; but it seems better to take it in the sense of the Latin jam, conveniently rendered in English as " already." Mr. Small glosses an example of " ellis " which occurs in Douglas's * Proloug of the First Buik of Eneados.' In this curiously critical and apologetic deliverance the translator makes it clear that he thinks liimself unworthy to stand English sponsor for Virgil, but he reflects that at least one predecessor has made a disgraceful show, and he concludes that he is warranted in offering his experiment. Then he brings the matter to an issue in this wise : Thocht sum wald sweir that I the text haue vareit, Or that I haue this volume quyte myscareit, Or threip planlie that I 22). It is pleasant indeed to read the cholarly and humane contribution of MB. 3uBBY on the subject of " Love me, love iy dog " ; his heait must be as that of the Indian who Thinks, admitted to an equal sky, His faithful dog shall bear him company, and will maintain with scrupulous sincerity :hat man's greatest companion is unques- ionably the dog. Often have I pondered why Sterne should have used such beautiful English over a donkey rather than a dog. 3ut I wish to add to MB. CUBBY'S notes the fact that the proverbs in Camden's ' Re- maines ' are not the earliest in our litera- ture, because I have in mind John Hey- wood's ' Proverbes,' first printed in 1546, and in that collection appears [s that ye haue bene so veraie a hog To my freendis. What man, loue me, loue my dog. Earlier again than Camden is the use made of the proverb by George Chapman (1612) in his comedy ' The Widdowes Teares.' Sir Thomas More reminds us " Whosoever loveth me, loveth my hound." By the way, what a peculiar play on the proverb is the French rendering " Who loves Jack loves his dog " (" Qui aime Jean aime son chien ") ! S. W. MAY. Liverpool. MB. CUBBY is perfectly correct regarding the unrelieved aversion and disgust of the early Hebrews for dogs, despite their humani- tarian consideration for the animal kingdom in general. To the Hebrews, as to the Greeks, man alone was worthy of the highest admiration ; so that such a dictum as " Love me, love my dog," was hardly compatible with their philosophy. Still, the dog must have won some measure of good treatment, even from that primitive people, when one of its leading men was named Caleb = dog. A passage in Theocritus, where the ferocity of dogs is held in quite as much abhorrence as it is in the Scriptures, is noteworthy. The poet enjoins Polyphemus " to keep a sharp eye on his dog lest he leap up and rend Galatea's fair flesh " : rj ras TratSos ri Kva/xatertv opovcnj Kara 8f oa KO.\OV d This may be paralleled by a story told in Tractate Sabbath 63. The good citizens and others used to breed a species of mastiff, called by the Rabbins "a caleb rong" or "bad dog," to warn off vagrants and intruders. They were the terror of the neighbourhood ; and on one occasion, say the doctors of the 52 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. m. JAN. 21, 1911. Talmud, a woman on her way to the public bakeries, being barked at by one of these brutes, was seized with premature labour. Hence arose the saying " Whoso harbours a ferocious dog mars the happiness of the home- stead " ; a proverb which Rashi interprets to mean " dogs drive away wandering minstrels and poor scholars, whose presence in the home is a source of joy." And here let me put on record an obvious textual corruption or misreading. The Gemarists derive that aphorism from Job vi. 14, and then proceed to add " the Greeks call a dog lomas," meaning, of course, Av/aris, 1806, iii. 368-79. L. C. Hoyau. In his ' Poe"sies traduites en ers francais,' Paris, 1837, 8vo. Nicholas le Deist de Kerivalant. In * Al- manach des Muses,' Paris, 1797, pp. 147-52- Also Paris, 1804. ii s. m. JAN. 28, MIL] NOTES AND QUERIES. Citizen Kivalant. Same as K^rivalant, q.v. Cf . ' Bibl. universelle,' Paris, 1858, xxi. 541. Le Mierre. See under D. B. above. Did Le Tourneur translate the Elegy ? Cf. the statement above under Ch^nier. Ilippolyte Marvint. In his * Souvenirs de college,' Paris, 1840. Madame Susanne Curchod de Nasse Necker. In her ' Varietes litteraires,' Paris, 1768, iv. 168. 1 have not been able to see this, and should be glad to have the reference verified or corrected. .1. Roberts. London, 1875. Sapinaud. In ' Le cimetiere et Le printemps traduits,' Paris, 1822, 8vo. Adrien de Sarrazin. In an appendix to his ' Quatre printemps de Kleist,' Paris, 1802. F. D. V. Paris, 1813. Villevielle. Writing to Nicholls on 22 May, 1770, Gray speaks of a Marquis de Villevielle, who, he says, had translated him by way of exercise. Was this translation ever published, and what poems did it include ? German. Anonymous. In The Kaleidoscope, Liverpool, 20 May, 1823, N.S. iii. 372-3. Friedrich Wilhelm Gotter. 1771. Information desired concerning the first edition. Said to have appeared also in the ' Musen Almanach,' but I cannot find it there. Also in his ' Gedichte,' 1771, i. 132-45, and in Torri, 2nd ed., 1813. Ludwig Theoboul Kosengarten. In his ' Gedichte,' Vienna, 1816, i. 123 (I have not seen this), and in Torri, 1817. Did this appear in the ' Musen Almanach ' ? William Mason. In Torri, 1817 ; said to have appeared in Mason's German translation of Gray's works, Leipsic, 1776. Information desired concerning this work, which is not listed in Kayser and is not in the British Museum. Niclas Muller. New York, 1874. In the Boston Public Library. Johann Baptist Bupprecht. In his ' Poetical Translations from the English,' Part I., Vienna, 1812, pp. 62-8. Have not seen this. Reprinted in Torri, 2nd ed., 1843. Johann Gottfried Seume. In his ' Collected Poems,' Riga, 1801, which 1 have not seen. Any earlier edition ? Did it appear in the ' Musen Almanach ' ? It is in his ' Sammtliche Werke,' Leipsic, 1826, i. 6-12 and v. 16-22. Greek. Giosafatte Cipriani. In Torri, 1817. Not in Tom's 2nd ed., 1843. Did it appear earlier ? William Cooke. Cambridge, 1785. Charles Coote. London, 1794. George Denman. Cambridge, 1871. J. Norbury. Eton. 1793. There was also a 2nd ed. in the same year. John Plumptre translated the Epitaph only, and appended it to his ' Ecloga sacra Alexandr Pope,' Wigorniffi, 1795. Bowyer Edward Sparke. London, 1794. Edward Tew. London, 1795. Richard Ward. In hia ' Celebria quaedam Anglorum poemata latine reddita,' London 1860, pp. 79-97. Stephen Weston. London, 1794. Hebrew. Giuseppe Venturi. In Torri, 1817 and 1813 in the 2nd ed. in Roman letters. Rossi Janos. Hungarian. Rome, 1827. Italian. Paolo Giuseppe Baraldi. Modena, Societa fipografica, 1816. I have not seen this. Antonio Buttura. In La Domenica (according ;o Torri) ; then in his ' L'arte poetica di Boileau Despre'aux recata in versi italiani,' Paris, 1806, p. 130-36. I have seen only the latter. Michel Angelo Castellazzi. In Torri, 1817. Did this appear earlier ? Francesco Cavazzocca. Verona, 1835. Re- printed in Torri, 2nd ed., 1843. Melchiorre Cesarotti. Padua, 1772. Abbate Crocchi. In Sleator's edition, Dublin, 1775, pp. 153-66. Giuseppe Gennari. Padua, Comino, 1772. J. Giannini. 2nd ed., London, 1782. When did the 1st ed. appear ? Domenico Gregori. In ' Scelta di ppesie di u celebri autori inglesi, recati in versi italiani," Rome, 1821, vol. i., which I have not seen. Agostino Isola. Cambridge, 1782. In the- Astor Library, New York. Marco Lastri. Florence, Molike, 1784. I have not seen this. Reprinted in Torri, 1817. Michele Leoni. Turin, Pomba, 1815. I have not seen this. Reprinted in Torri, 2nd ed., 1843. Lorenzo Mancini. In his ' Saggio sull' uomo e Lettera d' Abelardo ad Eloisa of Pope,' Florence, 1835, which I have not seen. Reprinted in Torri, 2nd ed., 1843. Angelica Palli. 1874. This is mentioned by Teza in Nuova Antoloc/ia, 3rd Ser. xxiii. 363. Where was it published ? Elisabetta Sesler Bond. In ' La morale inglese,' Venice, 1815, pp. 65 ff. This reference is from Torri, who reprints the translation in his 2nd ed.,. 1843. Martin Sherlock. 1779 ? Cf. 10 S. ii. 92. E. Teza. In Nnova Antologia, 3rd ser. xxiii.. 363-8, 16 Sept., 1889. Giuseppe Torelli. Verona, Carattoni, 1776. Domenico Trant. In Torri, 1st ed., 1817. Taddeo Wiel. In his ' Versioni da Thomas Gray, John Keats, Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe- Shelley, Robert Browning,' Venice, 1906. Giacomo Zanella. In his ' Varie version! poetiche,' Florence, 1887. Japanese. In ' Shintaishi-Sho ' (' Poems in New Style ')- Tokio (? ), 1882. I should be glad of further infor- mation concerning this. Latin. Anonymous. ' Gray's Elegy rendered into- Latin Elegiacs.' Oxford, James Parker & Co.,. 1876. Christopher Anstey and William Hayward Roberts. Cambridge, University Press, 1762. Published anonymously. Giovanni Francesco Barbieri. In Torri, 1st ed., 1817. Benedetto del Bene. Verona, Mainardi, 1817. W. A. Clarke. Oxford, Blackwell, 1904. Sir Alexander J. E. Cockburn, Lord Chief Justice. About 1871. Reprinted Boston, Dort- man, 1900. Giovanni Costa. Padua, Comino, 1772. 64 NOTES AND QUERIES. tu & m. JA*. a, 1911. J. D. In ' Musse Berkhamstedienses,' Berk- Ihamsted, McDowall, 1793. Has this translator been identified ? Henry Strahan Dickinson. Ipswich, Deck, 1849. H. J. Dpdwell, 1884. Information desired concerning it ; how does it begin ? S. N. E. London, 1824, 4to. Who was the translator ? Antonio Evangelj. Padua, 1772. I have not seen this. C. C. Felton. London, Longman, 2nd ed., 1822. When was the iirst edition published ? G. In The Gentleman's Magazine, 1793, Ixiii. 69, 166, 261, 360. Who was he ? G[avin] H[amilton]. Edinburgh, Douglas & Foulis, 1877. D. B. Hickie. 1823, 8vo. Not in the British Museum. At 10 S. i. 487 this is said to be re- ferred to in The Classical Journal, xxviii. 377 ; the reference seems to be wrong. William Hildyard. London, 1838, 12mo. Not in the British Museum. Kobert B. Kennard. Oxford, Parker, 1892. Benjamin Hall Kennedy. In his ' Between Whiles,' London, Bell, 1877, and in ' Sabrinaj Corolla,' 4th ed., London, Bell, 1890. R. Langrishe, Eton' College. In Gray's Works,' ed. Mason, London, 1775, ii. 205-13. Robert Lloyd. In his ' Poems,' London, 1762, pp. 239-57. " Also in Gray's ' Poems,' Dublin, 1768, pp. 115-25. John Heyrick Macaulay. In ' Arundines Cami,' 1841. H. A. J. Munro. Privately printed, 1874. Murphy. Mentioned by Torri, 2nd ed., 1843, p. xv. More information desired. Sidney George Owen. In ' Musa Clauda,' Clarendon Press, 1898. J. Pycroft, Brighton, 1879, 8vo. Not in the 'British Museum. What is the first line ? Henry T. Liddell, Earl of Ravens worth. Neither this nor the following is. in the British Museum. Information desired. H. Sewell. 1875. Where published ? Or is the edition cited by Bradshaw (p. 316), Romford, 1876, the only one published ? P. B. Shelley translated the Epitaph. Printed in Medwin's ' Life of Shelley,' 1808 (?), i. 48. Canon Sheringham. 1901. I have not seen this. Goldwin Smith translated stanzas 1-3 and the rejected stanza beginning " Hark, how the -sacred calm," in ' Anthologia Oxoniensis,' London, 1846. Giuseppe Venturi. In Torri, 1st ed., 1817. Gilbert Wakefield. Cambridge, Archdeacon, 1776. C. A. Wheelwright. In his ' Poems, Original .and Translated,' 2nd ed., 1811, ii. 67-78. Date of 1st ed. ? At 10 S. i. 487 said to be referred to in The Classical Journal, xi. 675 ; the reference is apparently wrong. J. Wright. London, T. Lewis, 1786. I have not seen this. I lately saw a translation (' T. Graii Elegeia Latine redditum ') which began " Devexum cecinere diem pulsa ara, boumque." The English and the Latin occupied pp. 4-21 of some pam- -phlet or book. Can any one tell me whose version this is and where it appeared ? Quite probably :it is one of those noted above. Portuguese. Anonymous (?). Four lines quoted in The Gentleman's Magazine, 1839, N.S. xii. 470. Antonio de Aracejo. According to 1 S. ii. 306,. said to have been privately printed at Lisbon toward the close of the eighteenth century. Can some one give the exact date ? Reprinted by Boulard in ' Traductions inter lin^aires,' Paris, 1802. H. E. Almeida Coutinho Porto, 2nd ed., 1837. Date of 1st ed. ? Russian. ' V. A. Zhukovsky. In Vieslnik Evropy, Decem- ber, 1802, part vi. 319-25. Can any one supply information concerning Zhukovsky's second trans- lation, made in 1839 ? Cf. 10 S. v. 357. Spanish. Anonymous (?). Referred to in The Gentleman's Magazine, 1839, N.S. xii. 470. Jos6 Antonio Miralla. Privately printed. 1904(?). A copy is in the Boston Public Library. Welsh. D. Davies. Caerfyrddin, I. Evans, 1798. T. J. Thomas. Llandyssul, J. D. Lewis, 1908. Excluding the last one mentioned in the Latin group, the number of translations notec above -is : Armenian, 1 ; French, 22 ; Ger- man, 7 ; Greek, 10 ; Hebrew, 1 ; Hungarian, 1 ; Italian, 21 ; Japanese, 1 ; Latin, 35 Portuguese, 3 ; Russian, 1 ; Spanish, 2 Welsh, 2. Total, 107. CLARK S. NORTHUP. Munich. (To be continued.) SIGNS OF OLD LONDON. (See 11 S. i. 402, 465 ; ii. 323.) THE subjoined list of signs is compiled from the original MS. treasury books (i.e., the wardens' accounts) of one of the minor City companies, c. 1530-1704. Temp, circa Henry VIII. and Edward VI. Rose, Coleman Street. St. John's Head, Gracious Street. Star, Cheapside (" Sterre in Chepe "). Cardinal's Hat [? Lombard Street]. Three Tuns at Guildhall Gate. Stocks Tavern [in the Stocks Market]. ? Nag's Head (" Horsehed "), Cheapside. Dagger, Cheapside (" Dagar in Chepe "). Bull's Head, Cheapside (" Bullhed in Chepe "). Cross, Tower Street. Dolphin, Tower Street. ? Snipe, Eastcheap (" Snytte in estchepe "), George, Bread Street. Red Lyon (no place named). Gun (" Gonne "), Billingsgate. Castle, Paternoster Row. White Horse, Friday Street. Grey hound, ^Fleet Street. 118. III. JAN. 28, MIL] NOTES AND QUERIES. 65 Temp. Elizabeth. Mitre, Bread Street. Bishop's Head, Lombard Street. Bell, Fish Street. Mermaid, Bread Street. Castle, Wood Street. Star, Cheapside (" Star in Cheape "). Dolphin, New Fish Street. Saracen's Head [? Snow Hill]. King's Head, Old Change.* George, Bread Street. Pope's Head, Lombard Street. Bell, Aldgate. White Horse (no locality). Boar's Head, Old Fish Street. Boar's Head, Eastcheap. Nag's Head, Cheapside ("horsse hedd in Cheape "). Swan, Crooked Lane. King's Head, Fish Street. Three Tuns, Guildhall Gate.f Chequer, Dowgate. Greyhound, Leadenhall. Parse, Old Bailey. King's Head, Old Change. Red Lion, St. Nicholas Shambles. Mitre, Bread Street Hill. Snipe, Eastcheap (" Snyte, Eastchepe "). Mermaid, Friday Street. Temp. James I. King's Head, Old Change. Boar's Head, Eastcheap. Maidenhead, Candlewick Street. Windmill, Coleman Street. Queen's Head, Queenhithe. Rose at Queenhithe. Dolphin (no place named). Sun, at Cripplegate. White Horse (as before). Mermaid, Bow Lane. Flying Horse (locality unspecified). Temp, diaries I. Rose and Crown (no place). Nag's Head Tavern, Cheapside. Castle Tavern [? Lad Lane]. Dagger, Friday Street. Ship Tavern, Old Bailey. Dog Tavern at Ludgate. Rose, Temple Bar. Sun Tavern, Milk Street. Goat, Long Lane. Temp. Charles II. King's Arms, Newgate Street. Coffee Bourse, Temple Bar. Rose Tavern, Poultry. Dog Tavern, Garlick'lTill. George, Ironmonger Lane. Angel, Old Change. George, Milk Street. Half Moon, Cheapside. Mitre, Cheapside. Sun, Milk Street. * This house belonged to the Company. t Between this and the earlier reference occurs mention of the " 3 Tonnes at Olde hawle gate " ; later we have the " Thre Tonnes att Gyld havle." Temp. James II. Swan Tavern, Old Fish Street. Sun Tavern, behind the Exchange. Golden Lyon, Fetter Lane. Crooked Billet, Maiden Lane. King's Head, Fleet Street. Dolphin, Lombard Street. King's Arms, Cateaton Street. Crown Tavern, Leadenhall Street. Castle, Paternoster Row. Crown, Honey Lane Market. Temp. William and Mary, Queen's Arms [? Newgate Street]. Old Dog Tavern (no place). Cock Alehouse (ditto). Wonder Tavern (ditto). Cross Keys Tavern, Holborn. Horn Tavern, Fleet Street. Three Tuns, Newgate Street. Bell, Bread Street. Bull Head [sic], Wood Street. Feathers, Cheapside. Dean's Head [St. Martin's-le-Grand], Rummer, Queen Street. Dog, Newgate. Swan, Dowgate. Horn Tavern, Doctor's Commons. Feathers Tavern (ditto). Mitre Tavern, Paul's Church Yard. ' Ship Tavern (no locality). King's Head, Old Exchange. Baptist Head [? Clerkenwell]. Crown Tavern, Guildhall. From the nature of the references to the signs it would appear that all, or nearly all of them, were taverns or other houses of refreshment ; beyond this the records yield no further information, so far as the great majority of the signs are concerned. While the arrangement of the list is from first to- last purely chronological, it seems advisable to add a note of caution in regard to the division into regnal periods, the latter being merely approximate, and making no allow- ance for overlapping. WILLIAM McMuRRAY. " FIRST AERIAL SHIP." In these days of improved, though still dangerous aeronautics >. I would call attention to an advertisement put forth by the European Aeronautical Society, and printed in The A.thenceum r pp. 573, 589, 25 July and 1 August, 1835 : '"FIRST AERIAL SHIP. The Eagle, 160 feet long, 50 feet high, 40 feet wide, manned by a Crew of Seventeen, constructed for establishing: direct Communications between the several Capitals of Europe. The First Experiment of this New System of AERIAL NAVIGATION will be made from London to Paris and back again. May be viewed from Six in the Morning till Dusk, in the Dock Yard of the Society, at the entrance of Kensington, Victoria-road, facing Kensington Gardens, between the First Turnpike from Hyde Park Corner and the Avenue to Kensington. 66 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. m. JAN. 28, 1911. Palace. Admittance every day of the week, Is. The Public is admitted on Sundays after Divine Service. Free Admission the whole year (Sun- days and Holidays included) for Members of the Society and their Friends." This looks rather like a hoax. One does not see how the ship could be intended to travel from city to city, and yet be on exhibition the whole year at Kensington. The advertisement may have been suppressed .after the second date named, on this account. RICHARD H. THORNTON. 36, Upper Bedford Place, W.C. SWEETAPPLE SURNAME. The surname Sweetapple (see ante, p. 3) occurs in the oldest remaining -Episcopal Register of Chichester, that of Bishop Robert Rede. Richard Swetappell, Swetappull, or Swet- appyll (the name is thus variously spelt), was a vicar-choral in the Cathedral, and was ordained priest by Rede on St. Matthew's Day, 1398, at the presentation of the Priory of Boxgrave (now Boxgrove). He attended the Bishop's Visitations of the Cathedral in 1397 and 1409. At the former a complaint was lodged against him, Philip Goldston, -and Richard Juldewyn, " that they are too quarrelsome and pugnacious." They are warned to behave better in future under penalty of 20d. to be applied to the common fund of the vicars. In 1407 he has become a notary public by Apostolical authority, and subscribes as such to the formal election of Dean Hasele in that year. He was employed &t Boxgrave in 1409 on the election of a Prior there. In the churchwardens' accounts of St. Edmund and St. Thomas, Sarum (Salisbury, 1896), I note the following : 1586/7, p. 134. For pewes. It'm for James Swrebaples 12d. 1587/8, p. 136. James Swete Apple for mending of a pin and nayles 5d. [Other items follow.] 1624/5, p. 181. Sam Sweetapple and his partner for iiij days sawinge of Timber 9s. 4of. [Other items.] The name is to be found in the ' Clergy List ' of the present year. CECIL DEEDES. Chichester. " CHARTUARY " : " TALE." W. Rastell in 1534 printed in Fleet Street " these xii. bookes, that ys to wyt Natura breuium, The olde tenures, Lyttylton tenures, "The new talys, The artycles upon the new talys, Dyuersyte of courtys, Justyce of peas, The chartuary, Court baron," &c. The book with the inviting title ' The new talys ' turns out to be ' Noue narrationes,' and the following book is the ' Articuli ad narrationes nouas pertinentes formati.' The ' Chartuary ' (pp. 361-89) is a collection of precedents of charters, bonds, acquittances, and the like. I note these words for the Supplement to the ' N.E.D.' Q. V. " HlC LOCUS ODIT, AMAT," &C. 111 * Variorum in Europa Itinerum Delicise,' collected by Nathan Chytrseus, 2nd ed., 1599, s.v. ' Brixiana,' p. 254, is the following : In Palatio Capitanei. Hie locus odit, aniat, punit, conservat, honorat, Nequitiem, pacem, crimina, jura, probos. Exactly the same words appear in ' Select ae Christian! Orbis Delicise,' by Franciscus Sweertius (Sweerts), 1608, p. 177, s.v. ' Brixiana,' probably copied from Chytrseus. Each verb governs the substantive lying under it. I find almost the same lines in an old commonplace book, viz:, Hsec domus odit, amat, punit, conservat, honorat, Nequitiam, pacem, crimina, jura, probos. In this extract from some newspaper or book (no date, probably put in some 60 years ago) it is said that they " may be read in front of the Town-hall in Leipsic." The lines according to the Chytraeus version, excepting that the words " Nequi- tiam, leges," take the place of "Nequitiem, pacem," are given in Murray's ' Handbook for Travellers in Central Italy,' 9th ed., 1875, p. 184. There they are said to be behind, and above, the seats of the judges in the court of the Podesta in the Palazzo Pretorio in Pistoia. Baedeker's ' Handbook for Northern Italy,' 7th ed., 1886, p. 370, confirms Murray's book, and gives 1507 as the date of the inscription. I have found no mention in either Murray or Baedeker of the lines as existing at either Brescia or Leipsic. Probably they were frequently used as an epigram in courts of justice. I add another version which I had noted but forgotten : Hsecce domus dat, amat, pmrit, conservat, honorat, JEquitiam, pacem, crimina, jura, bonos. 1620. i.e., This court does right, loves peace, preserves the laws, Corrects the wrong, honours the righteous cause. This epigram (presumably in the Latin only) is given as an inscription on the sessions house at Spittle-in-the-Street (Line.) in Stephen Whatley's ' England's Gazetteer,' 1751. It may be that there are other versions of the epigram in other places. ROBERT PIERPOINT. ii s. in. JAN. 28, ion.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 67 " GOUBD " OB " GOOBD," BUILDING TERM. I have recently encountered this word in West Cornwall on some tendering for stonewalling, the prices given being so much a " gourd." From inquiry I find that by this term is meant a run of 9 feet by 5 feet high ; but a few miles off the measurement varies. The word is new to me, and I do not find it in the ' E.D.D.' YGBEC. CONSPIRATORS OF 1562. There seems nothing to add to the excellent account of Arthur and Edmund Pole in the ' D.N.B.,' except that it would seem that they were arrested at " The Dolphin Inn," which was apparently close to St. Olave's steps on the south side of London Bridge, and not, as is there stated, " near the Tower." As to the other four conspirators arrested with them, (1) Anthony Fortescue has been the subject of much interesting and erudite discussion at 9 S. vii. 327, 435 ; viii. 73, 449 ; ix. 53. He probably died in the Tower. (2) Of Humphrey Berwick I can discover nothing. (3) and (4) Anthony Spencer and Richard Bingham were liberated from the Tower 3 May, 1567 (Dasent, ' Acts of the Privy Council,' vii. 351). Each of the two astrologers and wizards who had gone abroad 10 October, 1562, four days before their fellow-conspirators were captured, is described in the indictment as " late of London, gentleman." It seems probable, however, that the conspirator Edward Cosyn is to be identified with Edward Cussen, clerk, a fugitive, who possessed the manor of Eyrtforde alias Eyrthford in Bedfordshire, and is men- tioned in the Appendix to the 38th Report of the Deputy Keeper of the Public Records at p. 10, and in Strype's ' Annals,' II. ii. 597. Presumably he died abroad. John Prestall, the other astrologer, seems to have been inveigled into England in the early part of 1572. An indictment was drawn up against him in that year, but he was not brought to trial, though he was committed to the King's Bench, whence he was liberated on bail in 1574. It appears from the Appendix to the 38th Report at LI 2, and from Strype, II. ii. 596, that had been possessed of lands in Surrey. He was attainted in 1578 or 1579, and was in the Tower from before 11 October, 1578, down to 22 July, 1588, when he was liberated. He seems to have been living in London, practising sorcery, in 1591. His pretence to be " next heir to the Poles, who are next in blood to the Queen, whereof one is dead, and the other in Spain, who is next heir to the crown, and whom the Queen once promised to make kn.^wn as heir apparent," was all nonsense. Is it known when he died and who his parents were ? (See Dasent, op. cit., viii., x., xi., xii. ; the Calendars of State Papers ; and Cath. Rec. Soc., ii. and iii.) JOHN B. WAINEWBIGHT. WE must request correspondents desiring in- formation on family matters of only private interest to. affix their names and addresses to their queries, in order that answers may be sent to them direct. "TEBTIUM QUID." I shall be glad of any information as to the original use of this phrase. I have been greatly surprised to find that no example of it has been sent to us before 1826, and still more to find that this is also the earliest date in ' The Stan- ford Dictionary of Anglicised Words and Phrases.' There is, indeed, something similar in Coleridge's Friend of 1809-10, where he says, " The baleful product or tertium aliquid of this union retarded the civilization of Europe for centuries " ; but these seem to be the earliest examples yet found. Some metaphysicians appear to have used it to indicate a supposed something that is neither subjective nor objective, or different from both mind and matter, and it may perhaps have arisen in a Latin treatise on metaphysics. I am informed that a current statement attributing the phrase to Pythagoras is an error. The Latin version of Iambi ichus has, not tertium quid, but tertia res. I hope that some reader of *N. & Q.' can furnish earlier examples, and can help us in tracking tertium quid to its fontem et originem. J. A. H. MURRAY. Oxford. c CASABIANCA.' When and where was this poem first printed ? In his notice of Mrs. Hemans in the 'D.N.B.,' Mr. C. W. Sutton says that " in the second edition of the * Forest Sanctuary,' 1829, ' Casabianca ' first appeared." This, however, is a mis- bake, as it was printed at p. 129 vol. i. of Mrs. Hemans's ' Poems,' published at Boston in 1826. ALBERT MATTHEWS. Boston, U.S. JOHN OP COSINGTON. Cosington is the name of a village in Lincolnshire. Do you know a family of this name, and especially John of Cosington, who lived during the fourteenth century ? EDME DE LAURME. Soignies. 68 NOTES AND QUERIES. [11 s. m. JAN. 28, 1911. DICKENS : ' OLD CURIOSITY SHOP,' CHAP. xvi. : " SHALL ABALAH." When the old man and child first met Messrs. Codlin and Short, the persons of the Punch drama were scattered upon the ground. They included "the foreign gentleman, who, not being familiar with the language, is unable in the representation to express his ideas otherwise than by the utterance of the word * Shallabalah ' three distinct times." I have not seen any explanation of this foreign piece of lingo. Can it be an echo of the " Ma sh' Allah ! A'uz bi' llah ! " of Arab criers to proclaim a marvel ? At shadow-shows in Egypt I have heard the same words shouted by the Mutayyab (hired leader of applause) at moments when an afrit or a dreadful monster conies on the scene. Many of the tramping showmen of Europe were at one time Orientals of a kind ; I want to know if any Arabic pious formulas were part of their jargon. MABMADTJKE PICKTHALL. 5, Chimneys, Buxted. ' PICKWICK ' QUERIES. I shall be very much obliged for explanations of the mean- ing of the following phrases in Pickwick : 1. Flying the garter. 2. Punch and the flat-headed comedian and the tin box of music. 3. Green-foil smalls. PHILIP STEPHENS ON. [1. A game played by boys, at which they measure a distance by feet from a mark, and jump over the back of another boy bending down. Also known as " footit." 2. Close- fitting knee-breeches in tinsel ?] REV. J. BONAR, 1646 : MORETTI FAMILY. 1. In the Scottish register known as ' the Retours ' (a register of those served heirs to deceased relatives) I find under date 9 December, 1646, John Bonar senior of Lumquhat (in Fifeshire) served heir to " Master Henry Bonar, Vicaj of St. Martin's in-the-Fields, London." I can find his name in none of the registers of that church, nor in any account of the Church. Can any of your readers assist me in tracing his name and the date of his appointment, and supply any information about him ? There can be no doubt as to the fact of his being vicar. 2. In 1816 Agnes Bonar, daughter of Thomson Bonar of Camden Place and Chiselhurst, Kent, was married to Count Moretti, and in 1820 there was a son born of the marriage. From the ' Annuario della Nobilta Italiana ' I get the following infor- mation under ' Sormani-Moretti.' This family was a branch of the ancient Lombard family of Sormani, which went to Reggio Emilia in 1699, and succeeded to the name and arms of the noble family of Moretti. It received the title of Count on 25 November, 1776. The noble man bearing the title on 17 January, 1833, was Patrizo of Reggio. I am anxious to get further information as to this family and to know if there is any descendant living. HORATIUS BONAR. 3, St. Margaret's Road, Edinburgh. WILLIAM OF WARE. I understand that some passages from this author's work on the ' Sentences ' have been printed recently in a book on the Immaculate Conception B.V.M., and shall be very glad to be referred to the title, &c., of the book. Is it in the Bodleian Library ? Q. V. DRYDEN AS A PLACE - NAME. John Dryden of Canons Ashby, Northants, the father of Sir Erasmus Dryden, 1st Bt., is stated to have migrated from Cumberland. In 1488-9 John, William, and Archibald Drydane received the royal pardon for having fought against King James IV. They are described as " indwellers within the shire of Roxburgh." It seems probable that the Drydens of Cumberland came over the border, as Dryden is a place-name in Scot- land. I find mentioned John Sinclair of Drydenr Kt., under date 1513, and a Sinclair occurs there again in 1551. In 1713 George Lock- hart writes from Dryden to the Earl of Ox- ford. I shall be glad of any information relative to Dryden as a place-name. P. D. M. THE VICTORY : EARLY SHIPS OF THE NAME. I shall be obliged for any informa- tion relating to the following : 1. Date of construction of the Victory which was lost off the Caskets, 4 October, 1744. The United Service Museum and Greenwich Hospital possess models said to be of this ship, but they differ ; another model, with the same pretension, differs from both. Would one or more models have been made before construction. Char- nock mentions a Victory as first heard of at Portsmouth in 1703, taken to pieces in 1-721. Is anything known of this ship ? 2. At what date did the bowsprit cease to terminate in a top and carry a spritsail mast and jacks taff ? ii s. in. JAN. 28, MIL] NOTES AND QUERIES. 69 F 3. What improvements, if any, were introduced in the construction of ships-of- war between 1714 and 1727 ? AITCHO. [The second and third queries are too technical for discussion in our columns. We should advise application to Prof. Sir J. K. Laughton, the Secre- tary of the Navy Records Society, King's College, Strand, W.C.] BEATRIX GORDON=ROBERT ARBUTHNOT. I should be very grateful if any one could tell me who was the father of Beatrix Gordon. She married Robert Arbuthnot of Scots Mills, and was the grandmother of the celebrated Dr. John Arbuthnot. Both she and her husband are buried in the churchyard of St. Fergus, about six miles from Peterhead. I have been informed that she was the daughter of Robert Gordon of Pitlurg, but I cannot see any mention of her in that pedigree. CECIL LISTER KAYE. Denby Grange, Wakefield. BIRD QUOTATIONS. I shall be glad to learn the authors of the following : 1. Speckled, mellow-throated thrush. 2. Sweet thrush, whose wild untutored strain. 3. Farewell, sweet bird ! Thou still hast been (willow warbler). 4. Each spangled back (sunbird). 5. Welcome, dear swallow, to thy well-known nest- 6. As I was walking all alone, I heard two corbies. 7. Say, weary bird, whose level flight (crow). 8. Thou shrill proclaimer of the lonely hour (owl). M. SEATON. [6. A well-known ballad, 'The Twa Corbies,' first printed in Scott's ' Minstrelsy '] SWALLOW IN GREEK CAROL. Who was the translator into English of the following Greek carol ? The swallow, the swallow, she does with her bring, Soft seasons, &c. M. SEATON. * FAREWELL TO THE SWALLOWS.' A poem entitled ' Farewell to the Swallows,' attri- buted to Thomas Hood, was referred some twelve years ago to Canon Ainger, who expressed great dubiety that Hood was its author. It would be gratifying to know by whom it was written if not by Hood. The first stanza begins : Swallows sitting on the eaves, See ye not the falling leaves ? See ye not the gathered sheaves ? Farewell ! T. F. DWIGHT. La Tour de Peilz, Vaud,' Switzerland. BAGDAD. Has the Iranian or Old Persian origin of the name of Bagdad, first advanced by Fr. Spiegel (author of ' Eranische Alter- tumskunde,' 3 vols., 1871), as stated by Isaac Taylor in his * History of Place-Names ' (1898), i.e. = " God's Gift," derived from Zend or Old Persian Bagha = Sanskrit or Old Indian Bhaga, denoting divine power, and d<2d=gift, been generally accepted ? The Old Slavonic name and word for God, Bog, which is preserved in all Slavonic languages of the present time, has also been found to be originally akin to the Zend and Sanskrit name of divine power -Bagha and Bhaga. Cf. Uhlenbeck's 'Alt-Indisches Worterbuch' (1899), p. 193. H. KREBS. ADDERS' FAT AS A CURE FOR DEAFNESS. A man employed as a navvy on the line from Tunbridge Wells to Brighton kills adders in the season on the railway banks, and extracts their fat, which is in demand as a cure for deafness. " One lady " (in her gratitude) " gave him quite a lot o' money." I have heard the same specific vaunted among the peasantry of East Suffolk. Can any reader tell me whether the belief is ancient, and also whether there is any ground for supposing the ointment really efficacious ? SCRUTATOR. JACOBUS CLERK'S name appears in a Bible of about the middle or end of the seven- teenth century. The family was subse- quently connected with the South of Ireland. His eldest son was probably named John. Has any reader come across the name in pedigrees of English Clarkes ? R. S. CLARKE, Major. Bishop's Hall, Taunton. COL. OAKES AND QUEEN CAROLINE'S FUNERAL. Can any of your readers inform me where I can find particulars respecting Col. Oakes, who commanded a squadron of the 1st Life Guards employed to suppress the riot at the funeral of Queen Caroline in 1821 ? I believe that on this occasion he shot a man dead, and was in consequence cashiered ; but, later, an attempt was made to reinstate him in his former position. When this was found to be impracticable, he received a vote of thanks for the effectual manner in which he had prevented a riot, and was appointed to the Chief Constableship of Norfolk. I should be very glad to learn if these facts are correct, or to know where any details respecting his action in this matter can be found. (Mrs.) A. M. W. STIRLING, 30, Launceston Place, Palace Gate, W. 70 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. HI. JAN. 28, 1011. QUEEN'S REGIMENT : SHEFFIELD PLATE DISH. The officers of the Queen's Regiment, Warley, Essex, possess a very large old Sheffield plate dish donor's name forgotten. They would be glad to know what family have a cockatrice or griffin with arrow in its beak, and motto " In Deo spero," as shown on the dish. W. MACKIE, Lieut. -Col. NEWENHAM ABBEY, DEVON. In Dug- dale's ' Monasticon,' vol. v. p. 690, it is said that a minute account of the journey of the colony from Beaulieu, 2 January, 1246/7, appears in the Register of the Abbey of Newenham, " at present in the possession of William Wavell, Esq., M.D., of Barnstaple." Can any of your readers inform me where I can consult this Register, or find a transla- tion of the account of this journey ? J. K. F. CHERTSEY CARTULARIES. Can any one inform me whether there are any of the cartularies of Chertsey Monastery published besides those given by Dugdale ? G. A. K. JEREMY SMITH, 1666. Can any reader of ' N. & Q.' give me information concerning Jeremy Smith, who held the office of Ranger and Bailiff of Windsor Park in 1666 ? E. G. COCK. MARQUIS OF ORMONDE'S GUARD. Where can I get information concerning officers who served in the Marquis of Oimonde's Guard of Battleaxes ? E. G. COCK. BELFAST REGISTERS. Are there any old registers of Belfast in existence ? If so, would it be possible to see them ? I want information concerning some one born about 1677 in Belfast. E. G. COCK. IRISH BOOK OF REMEMBRANCE. I have a letter from an old Irish lady (now dead) in which she refers to a " Book of Remem- brance " which must have been published (probably in Ireland) before 1800. It was presumably a chronicle of Ulster families or of Anglo-Irish history. Apparently there was a list of subscribers printed at the beginning. Can any reader kindly refer me to such a book ? I am not at all sure that she gave me the right title of the book and I can find nothing like it at the British Museum. W. ROBERTS CROW. ALEXANDER HOLMES. 1848. In or aboul 1848 the late Alexander Holmes, formerly o1 3, St. George's Place, Hyde Park Corner, hac a remarkable adventure. A leader in The Times followed, entitled ' Taking the Bull >y the Horn.' Can some reader put me in correspondence with some one who retains a copy of the paper, now out of print ? I am interested, as the person referred to was my uncle, and the attempt was made ,o save his brother my father-in-law, the ate Joseph Arthur Holmes, J.P., D.L., &c., of logher House, co. Sligo, near which a hired assassin lay concealed. ALFRED EDGAR. 55, Inverleith Row, Edinburgh.. MILTON BIBLES. (11 S. iii. 1.) IN the later years of the last century I was a frequent visitor to Bristol, and always went the round of the old-book shops from the Colonnade to George's in Park Street, and I believe it was Kerslake who told me that when he was staying at a hydropathic establishment at Matlock, a fellow-visitor told him he had an old Bible in his bedroom that had belonged to Jo. Mitt on, the sporting man. Kerslake asked to see it, and, on its being brought, exclaimed : " Why, this be- longed to John Milton the poet ! " to which its owner replied : " If it only belonged to a poet, it ain't no good." The result was that Kerslake obtained it for a trifling sum, and later very liberally handed it to the British Mueum authorities at the same price. I am positive I acquired this information twenty or more years ago, and have no doubt it was from Kerslake's own lips. GEORGE POTTER. 10, Priestwood Mansions, Highgate, N. P.S. Since sending the above to 'N. & Q.' I have found in my Milton scrapbook an article with the heading 'Milton's Bible,' signed Thomas Kerslake, from The Athenceum of 5 January, 1884, which gives an extended account of the acquisition of this Bible, and references to others. I may add that I have drawn Sir George Warner's attention to this article, but I would recommend its perusal to J. S. S. and others interested. Probably some information as to the provenance of the Bible in question might be obtained by going through Kerslake's book- catalogues. I have two of them of about the late fifties or early sixties of the last century, which comprise the remains of the library formed by Dr. William Turner of Herbal n s. m. JAN. 28, i9iL] NOTES AND QUERIES. 71 fame, and of that of Sir Matthew Hale. Kerslake's methods of cataloguing were eccentric, and at the time of publishing the two catalogues which I have he was suffering from an acute attack of " news- paperitis," and added a " foot-note " of ten columns to one of the entries. * N. & Q.,' inter alia, came in for a bit of Mr. Kerslake's mind. All this, however, is by the way. But I feel sure the Milton Bible will be found in one of his catalogues, for Kerslake was not the man to hide a find of this kind. I may mention that an article on Milton's Bibles appeared in The Times of 13 December, 1907. See also ' Book-Prices Current,' 1901, No. 2838. W. ROBERTS. 18, King's Avenue, Clapham Park, S.W. Your correspondent has confused a mother and daughter in the paragraph beginning " Mrs. Foster, daughter of Deborah," &c. It was Deborah Milton, the poet's youngest surviving daughter, who married Abraham Clarke, and her only surviving daughter Elizabeth Clarke, who married Thomas Foster. Deborah Clarke died in 1727, and Elizabeth Foster in 1754, while the latter 's husband survived until 1761. For a note on Elizabeth Foster that escaped Masson's attention see 2 S. iii. 265. PERCEVAL LUCAS. It was Milton's granddaughter, the daughter of Deborah, who married Thomas Foster. Deborah married Abraham Clarke, and her daughter Elizabeth married Thomas Foster, and for her benefit 'The Mask of Comus ' was performed at Drury Lane Theatre in 1750. She died on 9 May, 1754, and was buried at Islington. In Sir Bernard Burke's ' Rise of Great Families : Extinction of Families of Illus- trious Men,' these particulars are found. R. C. BOSTOCK. See 7 S. vi. 253. JOHN T. PAGE. SOPHIE DAWES, BARONNE DE FEUCHERES (11 S. iii. 27). There is at least one portrait at Chantilly. S. D. A sketch of this adventuress in Chambers' s ' Biographical Dictionary,' 1897, p. 284, is derived apparently from private informa tion, or perhaps from French crimina records. Mr. T. H. Ward has an accoun of her in ' Men of the Reign,' 1885, pp. 317- 318. SCOTUS. Miss WYKEHAM, BARONESS WENMAN 11 S. iii. 27). Lord Folkestone to Thomas Oeevey, 23 February, 1818 : " Clarence has been near dying ; has been efused by the Princess of Denmark, and is going, } is thought, to marry Miss Wykeham." >eevey's ' Letters,' vol. i. p. 272. " But the maddest thing of all is what appeared a the Gazette of Tuesday the peerage conferred n . She is a disreputable half -mad woman. He perhaps thought it fair to give her this com- >ensation for not being Queen, for he wanted to tiarry her, and would have done so if the late ing would have consented." ' Greville Me- noirs,' vol. ii. p. 84. At a sale of curios some years ago at ing Street, Covent Garden, Mr. J. C. Stevens, according to a newspaper cutting, ffered a historic flag, which sold for eight guineas. This flag is of linen, and hand-painted with the rown, rose, shamrock, and thistle, and the words King and Constitution.' It was used at the time f the Coronation of George IV. and William IV., nd originally belonged to Miss Wykeham, after- wards the Baroness Wenman, a descendant of William of Wykeham. She was a Court beauty md a friend of Queen Adelaide." R. J. FYNMORE. Sandgate. LADY CONYNGHAM (11 S. ii. 508 ; iii. 37). W. S. S. confuses the lady's husband with ler son, the latter being the bearer to Queen Victoria of the news of her succession. The irst Marquis Conyngham died 28 December, 1832, according to Burke's ' Peerage.' H. ' YOUNG FOLKS' (11 S. ii. 450, 511 ; iii. 34). Besides ' Treasure Island,' Stevenson's Kidnapped ' and ' The Black Arrow ' were originally published as serials in this Deriodical. * Kidnapped ' ran from 1 May 31 July, 1886, in fourteen instalments, and was published in book-form during the same year. ' The Black Arrow ' ran through seventeen numbers of Young Folks, from 30 June to 20 October, 1883 ; but though it preceded ' Kidnapped ' in point of date, it was not published as a book till July, 1888. Both 'Treasure Island' and 'The Black Arrow ' purported to be written by " Captain George North," a pseudonym which was dropped when the stories were republished. The history of ' Treasure Island ' formed the subject of an interesting correspondence between Mr. Robert Leighton, Dr. Alex. H. Japp, and Mr. James Henderson in The Academy, for 3, 10, and 17 March, 1900. Although ' Treasure Island ' was begun in August, 1881, at The Cottage, Castleton of Braemar, it was not completed until Steven- son had arrived at Davos in October for the winter. W. F. PRIDEAUX. 72 NOTES AND QUERIES. [i> s. ra. JAN. 28, mi. THOMAS HARE (11 S. ii. 509). Is G. F. R. B. certain that he has given the name and place correctly ? An examination of various books fails to show that a Thomas Hare ever was born here, ever married here, ever lived here, or ever died here. ALBERT MATTHEWS. Boston, U.S. MONTAGU GERRARD DRAKE (11 S. iii. 29). William Mountague of Little Okely, Northants, in his will, dated 30 July, 1702 (P.C.C. 197 Eedes), refers to his great-grand- son Montagu Garrard (Gerard) Drake. G. F. R. B. may find this reference of use. There are other Drakes mentioned in the will. F. S. SNELL. JAMES FORSYTE (11 S. iii. 25). I re- member very well James Forsyth as a class- fellow and companion at the Grammar School of Aberdeen in 1848-51. Thereafter we were at Marischal College and University together for four years. At the close of that period a number of our fellow-students gained commissions in the regular army by competition, and in the H.E.I. C.'s forces by presentation of Cadetships by one of the directors, who was, or had been, Lord Rector. James Forsyth' s, I think, was one of the presentations. He must, at the time of his receiving it, have been 17 or 18 years of age. His father was the Rev. James Forsyth, D.D., minister of the West Parish Church, Aberdeen. ALEX. WARRACK. Oxford. THOMAS CORYAT AND WESTMINSTER SCHOOL (11 S. iii. 29). Probably Mr. Cousin wrote Westminster by mistake for Win- chester. In the late Mr. Kirby's 'Win- chester Scholars,' at p. 153, one Thomas Coryat occurs as the last on the roll for 1590. The entry is as follows : "Coryat, Thomas, (10) Odcombe. Qy. the traveller and author of ' Crudities.' " JOHN B. WAINE WRIGHT. In Gorton's ' Biographical Dictionary ' it is stated that Coryat was educated at Westminster. The ' Dictionary ' notice is based on Wood's ' Athenae Oxonienses ' and the ' Biographia Britannica.' W. SCOTT. " ELZE "= ALREADY (11 S. iii. 25). This elze, " already," is only a particular use of the general form else, and is so explained both in the ' N.E.D.' and ' E.D.D.,' with illustrative examples. The former quotes Gawin Douglas and Montgomery, and reminds us that it is in Ray's ' Glossary of North-Country Words,' reprinted by me for the E.D.S. Ray has : " Else, adv. before, already. ' I have done that else, i.e. already.' ' The derivation is from the A.-S. elles, not, as Jamieson suggests, from the A.-S. ealles, which is an unrelated word, and means " wholly." The senses are : otherwise, in another way ; also, at another time, formerly, already. WALTER W. SKEAT. If MR. BAYNE has access to a copy of Sir Thomas Dick Lauder on ' The Great Floods of August, 1829, in Morayshire,' 3rd ed., Elgin., 1873, he will find the word else used in the sense of " already." The quotation in which it occurs refers to the rising flood endangering an ornamental structure in his grounds : '" John,' said I to the gardener as he was open- ing the gate that led to it, ' I fear our temple may be in some danger if this goes on ! ' ' Ow, sir, it 's awa' else.' " ALEX. WARRACK. Oxford. ROYAL CHRISTMASES AT GLOUCESTER ( 1 1 S. ii. 501). With reference to Gloucester's position as an administrative centre in Saxon and Norman times see Freeman's observa- tions in his * Norman Conquest,' ii. 61 and iv. 393, 623, and 690. Both Robert, Duke of Normandy, son of William the Conqueror, and Edward II. are buried in the Cathedral. N. W. HILL SS. PROTHUS AND HYACINTHUS (11 S. ii. 528). From ' Studies in Church Dedica- tions ' (pp. 141-2) it seems probable that the church of Blisland, near Bodmin, is the only English ascription to St. Protus, whose name has been sometimes rendered Pratt. Miss Arnold-Forster does not identify him with Protasius, Bishop of Milan, who was a friend of St. Athanasius ; for, she says, " the evidence of Blisland feast-day [formerly September 11] points us to another saint, a certain very apocryphal martyr, commemorated at Rome, together with his companion St. Hyacinthus, on September 11, under the reign of the Emperor Gallienus. His story may be found in Baring- Gould's ' Lives of the Saints,' where it forms part of the romantic and fabulous Acts of a certain high-born damsel, St. Eugenia." The name of St. Protus was to be found in the Calendars of York, Sarum, and Hereford. ST. SWITHIN. [W. S. S. also thanked for reply.] us. HI. JAN. 28, MIL] NOTES AND QUERIES. GTJICHARD D' ANGLE (US. ii. 427, 472, 493). In the ' Vie et Gestes du Prince Noir ' he is mentioned at least five times. I refer to " Le Prince Noir Poeme du Heraufc d'armes Chandos The Life & Feats of Arms of Edward the Black Prince by Chandos Herald a Metrical Chronicle with English Translation and Notes by Fran- cisque-Michel. London & Paris 1883." In the description of the army of the King of France before the battle of Poitiers, Chandos the Herald speaks of " a body of four hundred armed horses, with four hundred knights upon them, all of the noblest escutcheon." Guychard d'Angle les conduisoit, Qui noble chivaler estoit. Line 1040. He appears to have been associated in his command with le Sieur d'Augebugny and Eustace de Ribemont. In the early part of the battle Atant veissez venir poignant Un chivaler preu et vaillant Qui appelez fut Guychard d'Angle. Cil ne se boutoit pas en Tangle, Ains feroit parmy le mestee, Sachez, de lance et de esp^e. Line 1192. (In other instances " veissez " is " veissez," with an accent.) " Then might you see coming spurring on a preux and valiant knight,"Guichard d'Angle by name, who did not put himself in a corner, but struck with lance and sword, know you, amidst the metee." Later Guichard d'Angle, having joined the English, appears in the vanguard led by the Duke of Lancaster, when the army was marching into Navarre on its way to Spain : Et 1'autre le bon Guychard d'Angle, Qui ne doit estre mis en Tangle, Ainz est bien droit que horn s'en remorge. Line 2283. " The other the good Guichard d'Angle, who must not be put in a corner, but is it right that men should remember him." Probably "is it " means " it is." " The other " means the other of the two marshals, the first mentioned being Stephen de Cosinton. The next extract comes from the descrip- tion of the battle of Najera. Speaking of those who were on the right of the Duke of Lancaster, Chandos Herald says : Et la fut le bon Guychard d'Angle, Qui ne se tenoit pas en Tangle. Ovesque li ot ses deux filtz. Line 3233. " And there was the good Guichard d'Angle, who kept not in the background. His two sons he had with him." He is mentioned again, among the chief officers of the " right noble Prince, whilst he held the province of Aquitaine " : Monsieur Gwichard d'Angle fut mareschal. Line 4193. Estephen (sic) de Cosinton apparently wa& co -marshal. I have given the true numbers of the lines. In the Errata is the following : " In the numeration of the marginal figures for 1. 2890 read 2860, and so on till the end." There is, p. 332, a note as to line 1040 : " Guichard d'Angle, sire de Pleumartin, and in 1350, seneschal of Saintonge. He was present at the engagement with the English at Saint-Jean- d'Angely in 1346, and was taken before the same town in 1351, and carried to England. After his release at the end of the following year, he was constantly engaged against the English, until his capture at Poitiers. After this he joined the side of England, in 1363 was appointed by the Black Prince marshal of Aquitaine, and in such capacity ordered the following year to levy the revenues in the dukedom. (Rot. Vase., 38 Ed. III. , membr. 4 : Rymer, vol. iii. p. 726, cf. p. 801.) He fought gallantly at Najera 1367. By an entry dated February 19, 1341 (n. st.), Charles V. gave to Geoffroy de la Celle, knight, 60 pounds torneses of land in Touraine on the estates forfeited of Guichard d'Angle, ' chevalier rebelle.' (Archives Nat., JJ. 102, no. 182.) In 1372.be was elected into the order of the Garter, and at the coronation of Richard II. was rewarded with the earldom of Huntingdon and 100 marks per annum for the support of the dignity. He died in the spring of 1380." According to the preface (p. xvi), Chandos probably wrote his poem in 13 86, or perhaps a year or two earlier. Francisque-Michel in his preface (p. vi) quotes from an " account drawn up by indefatigable John Anstis, Garter King at Arms," among his papers deposited in the Heralds' College : " Chandos was the herald of the famous Sir John Chandos, constable of Aquitaine." ROBERT PIERPOINT. [See the note on Sir John Chandos, ante, p. 25.] ISAAC JAMINEAU (11 S. ii. 509). He was appointed Consul at Naples at the date given by G. F. R. B. (2 July, 1753), and apparently held that office till August, 1779, when he was succeeded by James Douglas. He died 3 November, 1789. I have been unable to find his name among the officials of the Post Office in the various issues of the ' Royal Kalendar ' between 1779 and his death. ALFRED B. BEAVEN. Jamineau wrote a paper * On the late Eruption of Mount Vesuvius,' which appeared in The Transactions of the Philo- sophical Society, x. 563, 1755. W. S. S. 74 NOTES AND QUERIES. [11 s. m. JAN. 28, 1911. THE STAIR DIVORCE, 1820 (11 S. ii. 489). Sharpe (' Genealogical Peerage,' vol. iii.), Anderson (' Scottish Nation,' vol. iii.), and Burke (' Peerage,' 1875 edition) repeat substantially the same story. John William Henry Dalrymple, who became 7th Earl of Stair in 1821, married in 1808, to quote the words of Anderson, " Laura, youngest daughter of John Manners* Esq., of Grantham Grange, and Louisa, Countess of Dysart. This marriage was dissolved the follow- ing year, in consequence of his having entered into a marriage contract in 1804 with Johanna, daughter of Charles Gordon, Esq., of Cluny. The latter marriage was, however, dissolved in June, 1820." The contradictions arise out of the intricacies of Scots law. The future Earl became a married man in 1804 without being 4 * aware of it. No doubt the dissolution of his 1808 marriage was brought about at the instance, or on behalf, of his real wife, Joanna Gordon. There is no evidence to show that the two ever lived together after 1809. According to Scots law, separation for four years consti- tuted a valid ground for divorce. It was on this ground, I think, that the future Earl obtained divorce in 1820. The question of adultery had nothing to do with the case. Public sympathy was largely on the side of the lady. She lived in Edinburgh, possibly died there, and was sometimes spoken of as " the ill-fated Countess of Stair." SCOTUS. "DiE IN BEAUTY" (11 S. iii. 7). I can answer my own query now : "in Schonheit sterben " occurs in Ibsen's * Hedda Gabler,' last act. G. KRUGER. [MR. W. R. PRIOR also refers to Ibsen.] " ALL COMES OUT EVEN AT THE END OF THE DAY" (11 S. ii. 527). Were not these words suggested by those of Brutus ? O, that a man might know The end of this day's business ere it come ! But it sufficeth that the day will end, And then the end is known.' ' Julius Caesar,' V. i., last speech. LIONEL SCHANK. Is not this another version of the saying " The evening brings all home " ? NORTH MIDLAND. It might seem at first sight as if the words " All comes out even at the end of the day,' were merely an equivalent for the trite saying " Death equalizes all things." There are, however, many old sayings which convey a similar idea, but present it with consider able variety of phraseology. It is some vhat difficult to determine which of these ayings the Home Secretary had in mind when he quoted the words. One may magine that he was giving the substance, ather than the ipsissima verba, of some Id writer, or perhaps that he was com- )ining the sense rather than the actual vords of several sayings. W. SCOTT. I fancy that the difficulty lies in the adverb " even," and that the phrase is tanta- Tiount to the beautiful insight of Paul when he declared " All things work together for good." M. L. R. BRESLAR. HOLWELL FAMILY (11 S. ii. 528). The bllowing note regarding the Holwell family may interest J. T. P. : " Zephaniah and Sarah Hollival of St. Werburgh Street, Dublin, had John Hollival, baptized in St. Werburgh's Church, Dublin, 23 September, 1711. This John had the destiny to emerge from :he Black Hole of Calcutta and become Governor of Bengal." The brothers Edward and Bowes, younger sons of John Minchin Walcot of Glenahilty, co. Tipperary, and Croagh, co. Limerick, along with a John Pigott (?), were also among the 23 survivors. WM. JACKSON PIGOTT. Manor House, Dundrum, co. Down. ALEXANDER GLENNY (11 S. ii. 509). All I can add is that his wife's name was Deborah, and that she died 9 December, 1804, at the aee of 71 years. W. W. GLENNY. Barking, Essex. CHRISTMAS BOUGH : CHRISTMAS BUSH (11 S. ii. 507 ; iii. 14). This subject is dealt with in an article by Mr. S. J. Adair Fitz-Gerald which appeared in T. P.'s Weekly, 23 December, 1910. S. O. L. THACKERAY AND THE STAGE (11 S. ii. 428, 494). Important information on this sub- ject may be seen in The Athenceum of 16 and 30 July, 1892. H. S. EXHIBITION or 1851 (US. ii. 410, 452, 493 : iii. 10). Surely, as Privy Councillors and Cabinet ministers, T. B. Macaulay and W. E. Gladstone were entitled to be, and ought to have been, styled Right Honourable, not Honourable. If the Official Catalogue was at fault, it was unquestionably a blunder. FREDERICK CHARLES WHITE. 26, Arran Street, Roath Street, Cardiff. [The Official Catalogue described both as "the Hon."] n s. in. JAN. 28, i9ii.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 75 EARLY GRADUATION : GILBERT BURNET, JOHN BALFOUR (11 S. ii. 427 ; iii. 32). On p. 88 of ' Admissions to the College of St. John the Evangelist in the Uni- versity of Cambridge,' Part II., ed. by J. E. B. Mayor, is Wotton's certificate of good, conduct from the fellows of St. Katherine's Hall (the master being away). It is here stated that he " commenced batchelor of arts in January 1679/80." This is decisive for the higher age of thirteen years and c. five months. EDWARD BENSLY. The names of Wotton and Bentley appear in the Cambridge Honours List for the year 1679/80. Wotton's name is second, and Bentley 's sixth upon the list. A. R. MALDEN. * KOSSUTH COPPERED,' SATIRICAL POEM (US. ii. 490). There is a copy of this in the Boston Public Library. On the verso of the title it is stated that " a portion of this poem appeared, some weeks ago, in The New York Herald." If L. L. K. cannot find a copy near home, I shall be glad to answer any question that may be sent direct to me. ALBERT MATTHEWS. Boston, U.S. REV. J. SAMWELL : REV. J. PEACOCK (11 S. iii. 9). In Julian's 'A Dictionary of Hymnology,' 1907, p. 1586, it is stated that John Peacock was b. 1731, became a Wesleyan minister 1767, retired 1796, and d. 1803. In 1776 he published 'Songs of Praise compiled from the Holy Scriptures.' FREDERIC BOASE. ANDREW ARTER'S MEMORIAL, HAMMER- SMITH (11 S. ii. 10). Mr. Andrew Arter was a timber merchant. He lived at Linden House, Upper Mall, Hammersmith, and represented Hammersmith in the first and second London County Councils. G. W. E. R. The low stone pillar standing in Beavor Lane, Hammersmith, is evidently a sort of cippus marking the angle of a particular plot of ground, which has been left by some incom- plete road-widening in its present dangerous position ; and Mr. Andrew Arter, whose name is inscribed on the face of the stone, was evidently the owner of the plot. His death was recently announced in the papers, and he was the son of a timber merchant of the same name, the site of whose premises in Little North Street, Chelsea, is now absorbed in that of Harrod's Stores, and who, somewhere in the fifties, erected the houses of Bridge Avenue, Hammersmith, as a speculation. J. TAVENOR-PERRY. Chiswick. The worthy here commemorated lived in Beevor Lane for many years, and died, I believe, last year. The monument is merely a boundary stone which he inscribed similarly to one deciphered by me long ago, and mentioned in the papers of a bygone archaeo- logical society. SAMUEL PICKWICK. QUAKER OATS (US. ii. 528). Recalling former notices on numerous hoardings, I seem dimly to remember an explanation of the term " Quaker Oats " vouchsafed by the makers of that delicacy. The name (so I seem to recall the matter) was properly " Quaking Oats," from a fancied resemblance to the Briza Media or " quaking grass " of botany. As " quaking," however, was felt to be an unsuitable word to use for an article of food, it was altered into " Quaker," whence in due time emerged the portly gentleman in Quaker garb, whose full-blown proportions represented the result of the use of the preparation. SCOTUS. It is certain that " Quaker Oats " are food so named because the peculiar way of milling that produces this food was first carried on in Pennsylvania, the American State named after its founder, the famous Quaker Wm. Penn. T k WILSON. Harpenden. WILLIAM MEARS, BELLFOUNDER, 1626 (11 S. ii. 445). The baptismal entry recorded at this reference does not seem to refer to the Wm. Mears of the Whitechapel bell- foundry, though possibly his family might have come from Nottingham. The White- chapel firm was begun about 1570 by William Mott, who sold it in 1606 to Carter of Reading. It passed to Thomas Bartlett in 1619, and he and his descendants carried it on till the end of the century. The last Bartlett died in 1701, when Richard Phelps succeeded. After him came Lester & Pack , then Chapman was taken into partnership, and the firm became Lester, Pack & Chap- man ; but the first name was soon dropped, and the firm was known as Pack & Chapman. Their bells were noted for being marked with riming mottoes, well known to cam- panologists. Pack died 1781, when Chap- man took as a partner William Mears. The latter had learnt his trade at the White- chapel foundry, and had started in business for himself several years previously. The 76 NOTES AND QUERIES. in s. m. j. a, 1911. firm became W. & T. Hears in 1787, Thomas probably being the son of William. William retired altogether in 1789. These particu- lars are abridged from Stahlschmidt's * Church Bells of Kent,' pp. 66, 92, 93, 109- 113, where a fuller account of the White- chapel firm can be found, but no further details as to William Mears. A. RHODES. SHIP LOST IN THE FIFTIES (11 S. ii. 528). Was the ship in question the Birkenhead (steam- transport), wrecked on the coast of Cape Colony on 26 February, 1852 ? G. C. MOOEE SMITH. On 19 October, 1853, the Dalhousie (com- manded by Capt. Butterworth) foundered off Beachey Head, when the Captain, the passengers, and all the crew, with the exception of one man, perished, about 60 persons in all being lost. Perhaps this may be the vessel referred to in the query. The newspapers of the period will no doubt contain a list of the drowned. On 30 August, 1857, the Dunbar clipper was wrecked on the rocks near Sydney, when 121 persons perished. Only one individual was saved, after clinging to the rocks for about thirty hours. W. SCOTT. ALFIERI IN ENGLAND (US. ii. 421, 532 ; iii. 37). The duel between Edward, second Viscount Ligonier, and Count Alfieri took place in the Green Park on Tuesday, 7 May, 1771. See Public Advertiser, 11 May ; Gazetteer, 11 and 14 May ; Town and Country Mag., iii. 238, 277 ; Lady's Mag. [1771], 478. Alfieri is said to have been wounded slightly in the arm, and his life spared, after he was disarmed, by the injured husband. In the petition for divorce at Doctors' Commons in June-November of the same year the movements of Lady Ligonier and Alfieri after the duel were described by several of the witnesses. The former left Cobham Park on the evening 'of 7 May, and from the 8th to the 17th of the month she resided in New Norfolk Street, London, where she was visited by the Count. On 17 May she set out for France, being joined at Shooter's Hill by Alfieri ; but, as no accommodation could be had there, they proceeded to " The Rose Inn " at Dartford. Here they stayed together until Monday, 20 May. On that morning they went in a post-chaise to Shooter's Hill; but Lady Ligonier and another lady returned the same evening to " The Rose Inn," and proceeded to Rochester. Shortly afterwards Alfieri followed on horseback. The witnesses state that the pair were going to France together. See ' Select Trials at Doctors' Commons/ printed for S. Bladon, London, 1779, vol. iii. The account of the divorce proceedings in the ' Journals of the House of Lords,' January, 1772, corroborates the statement that Lady Ligonier went to France ; and according to a paragraph in The Public Advertiser of 20 November, 1771, she was- then residing at Calais. There are many statements about the pair in 'The Gazetteer of 1771, and a careful search through the files of the newspapers for this year would probably disclose Alfieri' s movements in detail. HORACE BLEACKLEY. 'TiT FOR TAT,' AMERICAN NOVEL (US. ii. 489 ; iii. 56). In Sampson Low & Co.'s ' English Catalogue, 1872-80,' Miss M. E, Smith is named as the author of a book with this title, an edition of which was published in 1875 by Hurst & Blackett. This lady is apparently the Mary Elizabeth Smith who brought an action for breach of promise against Lord Ferrers, and wrote in 1849 a poem, ' Moscha Lamberti,' that is partly autobiographical. N. W. HILL. AUTHORS OF QUOTATIONS WANTED (US. iii. 29). Captives of his (or my) bow and spear A faulty remembrance of 2 Kings vi. 22,. " Wouldest thou smite those whom thou hast taken captive with thy sword and with thy bow ? " W. C. B. [PROF. BENSLY also refers to the same text.} RIDDLE OF CLARET (11 S. ii. 527). An old custom is here referred to. It is difficult,, perhaps impossible, to ascertain how it originated. A riddle or sieve was no doubt employed for convenience in carrying the bottles of wine. Claret rather than any other wine was probably consumed because it was comparatively cheap and easy to be procured. But why a riddle of thirteen bottles should almost invariably have formed a feature at archery dinners is not at all easy to conjecture. At archery meetings the number thirteen may perhaps have been supposed to bear some mystic relationship to the number of arrows discharged in the competition. But the gift of a riddle of claret was not confined to archery meetings. At golf competitions also the magistrates and town council, invited to the closing celebration dinner, were in the habit of presenting for consumption a riddle of claret. Perhaps some superstitious notion lay at the root a s. m. JAN. 28, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 77 of the custom. At all events, the gift of a riddle of claret was of long standing, and dates from days when people attached more importance to lucky and unlucky numbers than they do now. SCOTTJS. WATER-SHOES FOE, WALKING ON THE WATER : GEORGE PARRATT (11 S. ii. 485). In * The Wonders of the Universe ; or, Curiosities of Nature and Art,' 1824, culled on the false title and at the head of the letterpress * The New Wonderful and Enter- taining Magazine,' p. 47, is an article headed ' A Curious Invention for Walking upon the Water.' The first paragraph is : " Mr. Kent's [of Glasgow] recent invention of a machine by which he walks or moves along upon the water at the rate of three miles per hour, has produced the announcement of another novelty of the same description, but which seems more extensively useful. The inventor terms it an Aquatic Sledge ; it is thus described : " Then follows an account of this sledge, invented " some years ago " by Mr. Bader, " councellor of mines at Munich, in Bavaria." " The first public experiment was made with this machine on the 29th of August, 1810, before the royal family at Nymphenburg, with complete success. It is described as consisting of two hollow canoes or pontoons, eight feet long, made of sheet copper, closed on all sides, joined to each other in parallel direction, at a distance of six feet, by a light wooden frame. Thus joined, they support a seat resembling an arm-chair, in which the rider is seated, and impels and steers the sledge by treading two large pedals before him Each of these pedals is connected with a paddle, fixed perpendicularly in the intervals between the two pontoons. In front of the seat stands a small table, on which he may read, write, draw, or eat and drink .... This vehicle is far safer than a common boat, the centre of gravity being con- stantly in the middle of a very broad base, a circumstance which renders upsetting, even in the heaviest gale, absolutely impossible. It is moreover so contrived, that it may be taken to pieces in a few minutes, packed in a box, and put together in very short time." The box containing two metal pontoons, each eight feet long, and the other things must have been rather large. Some 20 or 25 years ago there was an exhibition of " life-saving " inventions in the Channel. The chief organizer, or perhaps only one of the organizers, was a friend ot mine, dead long ago, Mr. George Parratt. He was a fairly prolific inventor of in- genious but useless things. His pet in- vention was a lifeboat consisting mainly of collapsible pontoons, which in case of need were to be inflated by bellows. This was, I think, the principal machine in the exhibition, which took place on and about the^catamaran steamship Castalia, which is now, or was not very long ago, a smallpox hospital, somewhere in the lower reaches of the Thames. Among the strange inventions was one for as it were walking in the sea. It was an indiarubber boat about four feet long by about two feet in the middle, with two india- rubber stockings attached to the bottom. The inventor's assistant got into this boat with his legs in the stockings, closed the top covering round his waist, and then went down the perpendicular ladder lashed to the ship's side. Either before going down or directly he got into the water, he proceeded to inflate the apparatus through a tube. He had with him a little double paddle, with which he was intended to propel himself. The tube, however, got loose or otherwise out of order, and the boat began to fill and sink. Fortunately, there was a very handy man on board, with little more than a pair of old trousers on ; he hurried down the ladder, and caught the hand of the sinking assistant of the inventor. There were other inventions which were so dangerous that it was a wonder that no one was drowned, although the sea was perfectly calm. At one time Parratt 's raft lay in the Serpentine at another in the water at (?) the Earl's Court Exhibition. What be- came of it eventually I do not know. ROBERT PIERPOINT. COUNTY COATS OF ARMS : Co. SOMERSET (11 S. iii. 30). According to 'The Book of Public Arms,' Somerset has no armorial bearings : " The seal of the County Council simply ex- hibits the inscription, ' The Seal of the County Council of Somerset, 1889.' The arms of Bath have sometimes done duty for the county; but the ' Justices ' Seal, which is most beautifully executed, represents King Ina in his Palace of Justice, and at his feet is a portcullis, the old Plantagenet badge, evidently allusive to the old Beauforts, Dukes of Somerset. On the dexter side are the arms of the Somersets, Dukes of Beaufort, balanced on the sinister by the arms of the Seymours, Dukes of Somerset. At the base are the arms of the See of Bath and Wells, and at the top are the arms .... a cross patonce between four martlets." ROLAND AUSTIN. Public Library, Gloucester. PlTT AND WlLKES ON ENFRANCHISEMENT (11 S. iii. 8). Inquiry is made at the above reference for the names of the 36 boroughs which Mr. Pitt in 1785 proposed to dis- franchise, and the inquirer adds that he put this question many years ago. 78 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. in. JAN. as, 1911. I doubt whether it is possible for us at this time to specify them, and I cannot find that Mr. Pitt ever enumerated them. In his speech in Parliament (18 April, 1785) he expressed his belief that the House would agree with him in thinking that " there were about 36 boroughs so decayed as to come within the scheme," and he proposed " the establishment of a fund fa million Eounds] for the purpose of purchasing the anchise of such boroughs as might be induced to accept of it " (' Parl. Hist.,' xxv. 441-2). This language seems to me to show that he necessarily left the names of the boroughc in the dark. The Western counties of England by themselves would have provided a sufficient number of Parliamentary boroughs which were ripe for extinction. W. P. COURTNEY. Unless the names of the burghs proposed to be disfranchised by Pitt are contained in the Journals of the House of Commons, it is hard to say where a complete list of them may now be found. The following works might be consulted : Stockdale's ' Parliamentary Guide ' for 1785, or ' De- bates and Parliamentary Register .... from 1780 to 1796,' published by Debrett. Massay's ' History of England during the Reign of George III.,' vol. i. chap, ix., deals at some length with the subject of corrupt constituencies. Earl Stanhope (' History of England from the Peace of Utrecht,' vol. i. chap, i.) gives a list of 35 " hereditary seats," which probably coincides to some extent with the list of Pitt. The Rev. Christopher Wyvill, Rector of Black Notley, published a work bearing directly on Pitt's Bill, entitled ' Summary Explanation of the Principles of Mr, Pitt's intended Bill for Amending the Representation of the People in Parliament ' 1785. He also wrote, ' State of the Repre- sentation of the People of England/ 1793, and * Political and Historical Arguments proving the Necessity of Parliamentary Reform,' 1811, 2 vols., but I cannot say whether he gives the names of burghs to be disfranchised. As regards Wilkes, it is scarcely likely that any list of the burghs he proposed to wipe out can now be found. His speech, how- ever, in bringing forward his measure, is still extant, and may be read in " The Treasury of British Eloquence .... Compiled by Robert Cochrane," Edinburgh, W. P. Nimmo, 1881, pp. 165-9. In the course of his speech he names some ten or a dozen burghs to which the term " rotten " used to be applied. W. SCOTT. RATS AND PLAGUE (11 S. ii. 465). " Accordingly it appears that the priests and diviners then knew that ' scientific basis ' " is the ending of my Note 2431 in The Boston Evening Transcript's ' Noter> and Queries ' of 10 September, 1910 ; and this note can doubtless be seen in the file of that periodical at its London office, 3, Regent Street, by any interested in coinci- dences. My note was based on a dim remembrance of a similar article in The New York Evening Post of about ten years ago, so the parallel is not novel, as thought by CANON SAVAGE. Further light is thrown by Baikie's * Sea Kings of Crete,' pp. 167-8 ; and that the rats are not directly responsible for spreading: the plague, but merely as they are" hosts " for fleas, may be inferred from a paper read before the (London) Zoological Society on 15 November, and briefly recorded in The Athenceum of 10 December, p. 738. ROCKINGHAM. Boston, Mass. HACKNEY AND TOM HOOD (11 S. iii. 29). Hood slightly alters Byron's ' Childe Harold,' canto iii. st. 21 : There was a sound of revelry by night, And Belgium's capital had gather'dthen Her Beauty and her Chivalry, and bright The lamps shone o'er fair women and brave men. WALTER W. SKEAT. [MB. T. BAYNE and DIEGO also refer to Byron.] GOATS AND Cows (11 S. ii. 466, 534). George Eliot was evidently cognizant of this custom. In ' Middlemarch ' (1881 ed. r p. 291), when describing the old farm home- stead called Freeman's End, she says r " There was an aged goat (kept doubtless on interesting superstitious grounds) lying against the open back-kitchen door." See also 9 S. v. 248, 359, 521 ; vi. 132, 196, JOHN T. PAGE. Long Itchingtorj, Warwickshire. " PUCKLED "(US. ii. 526). The ' N.E.D/ records the word " puck-led " s.v. " Puck,' r sb. 1 e, but gives no such early quotation as that produced by MR. PIERPOINT. L. R. M. STRACHAN. Heidelberg. CAP!. WlTHAM AND THE SlEGE OF GIBRAL- TAR (US. iii. 28). The incident referred to is not to be found in Drinkwater's ' History of the late Siege of Gibraltar,' although that writer gives a full account of the sortie made on the night of 26 November, 1781, along with a plan of the operations. He even condescends upon details, as where he ii s. in. JAN. 28, i9iL] NOTES AND QUERIES. 79 narrates that " a volunteer of the 73rd Regiment lost his kelt [sic] in the attack," from which it may be argued that it was a " warm affair " while it lasted. See ' His- tory,' 3rd ed., p. 203 (London, J. Johnson, 1786). T. F. D. A Suffolk Hundred in the Year 1283. Edited by Mr. Edgar Powell. (Cambridge University Press.) MR. POWELL has published a valuable addition to the history of Suffolk, and, we may add, an important contribution to the financial practices of the Edwardian period. The original is pre- served in the Record Office in a manuscript on seventy skins of parchment written on one side only. It is with few exceptions in good con- dition, but the list of parishes is not quite com- plete. The roll is not only important as showing by what method the national finances were raised when Edward I. was king, but also in some cases it indicates how farming was carried on in days when, as many people yet fancy, the cultivators of the soil were but little above the condition of serfs. The money which the King called for was urgently required for the second Welsh war, which broke out on Palm Sunday, 1282, and lasted till the October of the following year, when, as the writer tells us, " the last Celtic Prince of Wales suffered the ignominious death of a traitor." It was for carrying on this contest that the assess- ments were made, and, the royal treasury being empty, the King in the first instance was, it seems, compelled to apply to the merchants of Lucca to help him in discharging his most pressing needs ; but the cash he required was far more than they were willing to supply. No time, how- ever, was to be lost, so Edward in June, 1282, dispatched John de Kirkeby, Archdeacon of Coventry, who afterwards became Bishop of Ely, to borrow money of the towns and religious houses. London contributed 4,OOOZ., and York 693Z. 6s. 8d. Although, with the exception of those for Ipswich, the documents which Mr. Powell has given are the only ones providing full details, a roll remains in which we have the gross sum for each shire. In this it is strange to find that Lincolnshire and Norfolk were regarded as by far the richest counties. Towards the end of the volume there are thirty eight carefully elaborated tables of the tax lists of the Hundred of Blackbourne. These will require much study before it will be possible to understand what were the live and dead stock belonging to the men and women who were occupiers of lands and tenements. We know of no other documents of about the same period which give so fully the average of prices as those before us. An attempt has been made to draw a comparison between the popula- tion of the villages in 1283 and 1908. It has been impossible to make any statement that will be satisfactory, but no reasonable doubt exists that there were far more men, women, and children in the villages 625 years ago than those who follow the older teachers areVilling to imagine. Traherne'8 Poems of Felicity. Edited by H. I- Bell. (Oxford, Clarendon Press.) WE venture to think that too much has been made in some quarters of the poems by the seven- teenth-century poet Thomas Traherne, which were first published by Mr. Dobell in 1903, and are here edited, with additions, by Mr. Bell. There is always a danger that the discoverer of an un- known or forgotten treasure will appraise the value of his find too highly, because it is his own ; and when it is claimed that Traherne belongs to the same brotherhood as Vaughan and Herbert and Crashaw and Henry King, we cannot but dissent. On their weaker side of mystical obscurity and involved quaintness there may be resemblances, but he has little of their brightness of fancy and felicity of expression. His lines do- not arrest and stamp themselves on the memory. Traherne's lyre had but few strings, and on three of these he harps with somewhat tedious- iteration. A favourite theme with him is the superior blessedness of infancy, to which he returns again and again, contrasting its innocence and bliss, the loss of which he never ceases ix> deplore, with the deterioration of adult manhood ,. which is further off from heaven. Here he is at one with Vaughan ; and R. L. Stevenson might have written the poems entitled ' Shadow in the Water ' and ' On Leaping over the Moon.' Another subject on which Traherne loves to dwell is the deeper insight and wider scope of the inward spiritual eye. Here he approximates to W T ords- worth, who might have acknowledged as his own the lines A meditating inward ey Gazing at Quiet did within me ly (p. 14). A third maxim of his mystic philosophy, to which many poems are devoted, is that the world belongs of right and de facto to him who with the seeing eye and thankful heart best appreciates its beauties, far more than to the mere possessor and legal proprietor. Izaak Walton had anti- cipated him in this fine sentiment. The editor includes thirty -nine poems inot given in Mr. Dobell's editio princeps, and tells us the little known of Traherne and his works. He need not have doubted yer (p. 144), a common spelling of ere in seventeenth- century books. The Utopia of Sir Thomas More. Edited by George Sampson. (Bell & Sons.) THE philosophical yarn of that veracious mariner Hythlodaye (" Babbler ") is of perennial interest, and Messrs. Bell have produced an excellent edition of it in their " Bonn's Libraries " under the care of Mr. Sampson. He has appended to the ' Utopia ' the Latin original of 1516, together with Roper's Life of More (in a critically accurate text obtained by the collation of four MSS. in the British Museum), and a selection of his letters. Mr. Sampson falls into the common mistake of over-annotating his text. The reader hardly requires to be told in a note, when More refers to Cicero, that this was " the famous orator and philosopher M (p. 24) ; and no one will thank him for the information that CC in the text means " two hundred " (p. 81). An " algorisme stone " was certainly not a " slate," as explained p. 333 ; and " La Bruayere " (p. 137) needs to be corrected. Per contra, we have to thank him for a full Biblio- graphy, and an excellent engraving of Holbein's. I portrait of More, which forms the frontispiece. 80 NOTES AND QUERIES. [11 s. ra. JAN. 28, 1911. BOOKSELLERS' CATALOGUES. JANUARY. MR. EDWARD BAKER'S Birmingham Catalogue 283 contains among works under Art Solon's ' Ancient Art Stoneware of the Low Countries,' 2 vols., folio, 1892, 21. 5s. In a list under Debrett is ' Dictionary of the Coronation,' 1902. There .are works under Folk-lore, Heraldry, and India. Under Mary, Queen of Scots, are Cowan's ' Who wrote the Casket Letters ? ' 2 vols., 16s., and Cust's ' Authentic Portraits,' based on the re- searches of Scharf, 18s. 6d. Napoleon items include Sergeant's ' The Burlesque Napoleon,' * Lost Voyages ' by Rose, ' Surrender ' by Dick- son, and ' New Letters.' Works under Occult include Paracelsus, 2 vols., 4to, cloth, new, 1894, 11. Is. Under Pottery are Solon's ' Old English Porcelain,' 11. 15s., and his ' Old French Faience,' 11. Is. Regimental Records include Almack's ' Royal Scots Greys,' limited edition on Japanese vellum, new, 1908, 21. 2s. Under Spain will be found ' The Arts and Crafts of Older Spain,' 3 vols., small 4to, 1907, 18s. 6d. ; and Calvert's ' Al- Jiambra,' 15s. Under Tibet is Landon's ' Lhasa,' .2 vols., royal 8vo, 1905, 15s. Mr. Baker has also a short special list of 80 items, Catalogue 284, devoted to Astrological, Occult, and Spiritualistic Subjects. These in- clude Inman's ' Ancient Faiths,' 2 vols. bound in 4, 1868-9, 21. 12s. 6d. ; Wilson's ' Dictionary of Astrology,' 2 vols., 1819-20, 21. 10s. ; ' Incidents in the Life of Madame Blavatsky,' by Sinnett, .21. 2s. ; ' Gypsy Sorcery,' by Leland, 1891, ilimited edition, 11. 10s. ; and Mather's ' Kabbala Denudata,' 1887, 21. 2s. Ellis's Catalogue 132 contains choice and scarce books, such as the first edition of Ogilby's ' xEsop,' 1651, in dark-blue morocco, 9Z. 9s. ; ithe first Spanish edition of Ariosto, 1549, 61. 6s. ; Castillo's ' The Courtyer,' 1561, first edition, unorocco, 111. 10s. ; Cotgrave's ' French-English .Dictionary,' first edition, folio, olive morocco, 1611, 12Z. ; a fine tall copy of Drayton's ' Poems,' 1619, 151. 15s. ; the first edition of Fielding's * Amelia,' 4 vols., 1752, 51. 5s. ; the first collected -edition of Forde's ' Virtus Rediviva,' 1661, Wl. 10s. (this copy contains all the separate title- pages, and has written on the fly -leaf " Thomas Fforde, his booke cost 3s.") ; and the first edition of George Herbert's ' Remains,' 1652, 4Z. 4s. The best edition, black-letter, of Hall's * Union of the two Noble and Illustre Famelies of Lan- castre & Yorke,' 1550, is 12Z. j and a beautiful 'Copy of the first edition of Chapman's ' Homer,' 2 vols. in 1, folio, 25Z. There is one of the most profusely illustrated books issued in France in the early years of the sixteenth century, Petrus de Natalibus, ' Catalogus Sanctorum et Gestorum eorum,' 1508, 12Z. 12s. An excellent copy of the 'Second Folio Shakespeare is priced 180Z., and a fine one of George Wither's collection of ' Em- 'blemes,' first edition, 1635, russia extra, 21Z. A section of the Catalogue is devoted to Law, Trade, and Economics. The first edition of Chambon's ' Le Commerce de 1'Amerique par Marseille,' 2 vols., 4to, 1764, an important work for the Colonial history of America, is 4Z. 4s. Under Intrationes is a fine example of the Pyn- son press, ' Intrationum excellentissimus Liber,' tfolio, black-letter, calf, 22Z. Messrs. Henry March Gilbert & Son send from Winchester their Catalogue 36. The Magazine of Art, 1887-98, is 11. 4s. Under Bohn are 22 vols. of his Classical Library, half-vellum, 3Z. 17s. 6d. ; under Brayley and Britton, ' The Beauties of England and Whales,' 19 vols. in 24, 8vo, full calf, 1801, 1Z. 15s. ; and under Dickens, the first edition of ' Dombey,' 1848, half -calf, 18s. There are many items under Hants, including Duthy's 'Sketches,' 1839, 14s.; and Milner's 'Win- chester,' second and best edition, 2 vols., 4to, half-calf, 1809, 1Z. 2s. 6d. There is a fine set of Hume and Smollett, 17 vols., calf, 1841, 1Z. 5s. Other works include ' The International Library of Famous Literature,' edited by Garnett, 20 vols., 11. 10s. ; with oak stand, 2Z. ; Milman's ' Latin Christianity,' 6 vols., 12s. ; Mommsen's ' Rome,' 4 vols. in 5, 1Z. 2s. 6d. ; and first edition of Rogers's ' Italy,' original boards, 1830, 1Z. 5s. (it will be remembered that Rogers spent 10,OOOZ. in pro- ducing this work). Under Waterloo are six tracts bound in one volume, 1816-19, 10s. 6d. In the Addenda are the Knebworth edition of Lytton ; Wheatley's edition of Evelyn, 4 vols., 1Z. Is. ; Lady Lennox's ' Life and Letters ' ; Siniles's * Lives of the Engineers,' &c. Messrs. Maggs Brothers' Catalogue 263 contains a choice collection of decorative engravings, principally by English and French artists of the eighteenth century, in monochrome and colour. Bartolozzi, Cosway, Morland, Reynolds, Row- landson, Say, J. R. Smith, C. Turner, and Wheatley are all represented ; among those after Rem- brandt are ' Judas casting down the Thirty Pieces of Silver,' ' Tobit protected by the Angel,' and ' The Standard-Bearer,' of which an illus- tration is given. Views of London include Waterloo Bridge, 1817 ; south view of London and Westminster from Denmark Hall, near Camberwell, 1779 ; and Somerset House from the Strand, 1819. Part IV. contains Napoleonic caricatures in colours. The Catalogue has many illustrations, among them being ' Children throwing Snowballs,' by Ward ; ' Children Nutting,' by Morland ; * Merry Wives of Windsor.' by Peters ; and ' Sleeping Nymph,' by Mrs. Opie. tn ON all communications must be written the name and address of the sender, not necessarily for pub- lication, but as a guarantee of good faith. WE cannot undertake to answer queries privately, nor can we advise correspondents as to the value of old books and other objects or as to the means of disposing of them. EDITORIAL communications should be addressed to "The Editor of 'Notes and Queries ' " Adver- tisements and Business Letters to "The Pub- lishers "at the Office, Bream's Buildings, Chancery- Lane, B.C. R. P. and G. W. E. R. Forwarded. CECIL CLARKE ("Swank"). See 10 S. ix. 428 513 ; x. 192. E. S., Melbourne ("Frederic, Prince of Wales"). Thanks, but anticipated by correspondents at home. us. m. FEB. 4, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 81 SIR CHARLES WENTWORTH DILKE. THERE have been many sad notes in dear old ' N. & Q.' since Thorns founded it in 1849, but none more sad than our note to-day of the death of the Right Hon. Sir Charles Wentworth Dilke. Born on the 4th of September, 1843, at 76, Sloane Street, the house in which he died on Thursday, the 26th of January, he came from his earliest years under the influence of his grandfather, whom he much loved, and who lived close at hand in a bright cheerful house in Lower Grosvenor Place, with a view from the drawing-room windows of the gardens of Buckingham Palace. Of the pleasant memories of this he was speak- ing to me quite recently. On the death of his wife Mr. Dilke went to live at Sloane Street, where his son built a library and rooms for him. It was the old man's delight to have his grandson with him among his books and get him to read to him choice selections from his twelve thousand volumes. It was in this way that Sir Charles acquired his large range of knowledge of literature, and his grandfather's influence gave the whole tone to his life in politics and social questions. Many of these topics found a place in The Athenceum, which condemned the employment of children in mines, giving illustrations of their emaciated condition, and favoured parks for the people, public libraries, and other advantages. To carry out the enlarged ideas of his grandfather was Di Ike's aim from his youth, and, as is well known, he worked to secure better conditions for the people to the last day of his life. The affection with which his grandfather regarded The Athenceum Dilke inherited to the full, and his desire was that the same spirit of truth and independence should be maintained as when the paper was under Mr. Dilke' s control that it should be "faithful and just in its criticisms, the earnest seeker after truth, severe when the occasion required, but always more happy when helping to add a name to the roll of fame than when removing an unworthy one from it." It was in 1872 that Sir Charles became proprietor of ' N. & Q.' on the retirement of Thorns, who was succeeded by Doran as editor ; but it was not until soon after Knight became editor that Dilke joined " the happy few, the band of brothers." From that time he read ' N. & Q.' week by week, following closely every discussion in its columns ; and though he did not write such elaborate articles as those by his grandfather on Pope, Junius, and other subjects, his contributions over the signa- ture of D., as will be seen by the last two General Indexes and the earlier half-yearly indexes, were most various and suggestive. He frequently adopted other signatures, made up of the initials of the first words of the heading of the article. The question as to the National Flag greatly interested him, and he was delighted when the dis- cussion was finally settled by the official recognition of the Union Jack. It is curious that it should have been thought that he lacked a sense of humour. To those who knew him his hearty laugh was infectious, and, besides, how could a man have written that amusing brochure ' The Fall of Prince Florestan of Monaco' without an uproarious sense of fun ? The review of ' Papers of a Critic ' which appeared in ' N. & Q.' on the 10th of July, 1875, was by his old friend Thorns. No record of Dilke' s life would be complete without a reference to the second Lady Dilke. Sir Charles as a tribute to her pub- lished 'The Book of the Spiritual Life,' which she had written as complementary to her works * The Shrine of Death ' and ' The Shrine of Love.' This he preceded by a short memoir, and Knight in his review which appeared in ' N. & Q.' on the 3rd of June, 1905, said : ' : Admirably has the feat been accomplished, and though the chivalry and the devotion are everywhere apparent, the reticence of the utterance is not less manifest than its fidelity and truth. It is the record of 'a noble, industrious, and well -spent life, memorable in literature, art, and social progress, and as the final exposition of a spiritual, practical, and in a sense optimistic faith.' JOHN COLLINS FRANCIS. 82 NOTES AND QUERIES. [11 s. in. FEB. 4, mi. LONDON, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY k, 1911. CONTENTS.-NO. 58. SIR CHARLES WENTWORTH DILKE, 81. NOTES : Tottel, Puttenham, and Chaucer, 82 "Terra Susana," 83 Burial-Entries of Strangers, 84 "Pas- senger" in the 'N.E.D.' Sir Thomas Bodley, M.P., 85 Ordinaries of Newgate "The Old Mogul," Drury Lane " Vail" : its Use by Scott, 86. QUERIES :-"Tewke," "Tuke," a kind of Cloth Prickly Pear and Monreale Cathedral Henry, Prince of Wales- Herbert W. Stebbins- William Elmham ' Death of Capt. Cook,' 87 Lea Wilson's Collection of Bibles- Benjamin Garlike Scottish Titles conferred by Cromwell Sir Francis Bathurst Long Barrows and Rectangular Earthworks Parish Formation Fairfax : Sayre : Maun- sell Sudane or Soudan Family' Guide for the Penitent,' 88 Pyrrhus's Toe Warren Family Sir Charles Chalmers Hampshire Map Amphisbsenic Book Hungarian Bib- liography " Rebecca and her Daughters " Pawper or Pauper Bird Subterranean Chamber in Staffordshire, 89. REPLIES .-Thread - Papers Benjamin Bathurst, 90 Archdeacon Fifield Allen Thackeray and the Stage- Thackeray's Last Words Matthew Prior's Birthplace- Bishop FitzGerald, 91 Authors Wanted" Essex " as a Christian Name "Ennomic" Corpse Bleeding, 92 Speaker's Chair, 93 Count of the Holy Roman Empire- Miss Pastrana" Bolt/on ffaire groates " Canova's Busts, 94 Corn and Dishonesty Smiths of Parndon Rev. Sebastian Pitfield's Ghost Church with Wooden Bell- Turret' Flying Dutchman,' 95 Spider's Web and Fever Coroner of the Verge Club Etranger, 96 "Carent" Songs of the Peasantry Inscriptions in Churchyards W. J. Lockwood The Three Wishes Knots in Handker- chiefs, 97 Blackstone's ' Commentaries ' Whyteheer, 98. NOTES ON BOOKS :-' The Oxford English Dictionary.' Booksellers' Catalogues. OBITUARY : Canon Hewitt. TOTTEL' S ' MISCELLANY,' PUTTEN- HAM' S 'ARTE OF ENGLISH POESIE,' AND CHAUCER. ALTHOUGH more than 350 years have passed since Tottel published his ' Miscellany,' the authorship of only four of the 134 anonym- ous poems in his book is claimed to have been traced, and one of these claims is ex- tremely doubtful. I have found three more authors to share in them, Chaucer amongst the number. On the strength of a MS. note-book of verse, partly composed, and partly copied from others, by a William Forrest, and finished by him 27 October, 1572, the authorship of two poems seems to be definitely settled. One of these (Arber, p. 173), I lothe that I did love, Ac. Forrest assigns to Lord Vaux, and his assignment is corroborated by George Gascoigne in the Epistle to young gentlemen prefixed to the 1575 edition of his * Posies ' (" Cambridge English Classics," p. 11). The other is the celebrated song (Arber, p. 163) Geve place you Ladies and begon, &c. assigned by Forrest to John Heywood. In the * Arte of English Poesie,' p. 247, Puttenham unhesitatingly asserts that Lord Vaux also wrote (Arber, p. 172) When Cupid scaled first the fort, &c. Which of the Lords Vaux is meant by Puttenham, Forrest, and Gascoigne is a matter that has not been determined, and is still open to discussion. Next we come to the doubtful ascription. In Tottel (p. 164) there are fourteen lines which seem to be an extract from a poem formed on the plan of the legends in ' The Mirror for Magistrates,' and the first letters of the lines and the final one of the quotation spell the name " Edwarde Somerset." It is extremely unlikely that Somerset wrote these lines, because the conceit of signing a name in verses was commonly practised by writers of those times, who sometimes make the party designated speak in the first person. Up to the present, so far as I can learn, these are the only poems in Tottel's " Un- certain Authors " that have had authors* names subscribed to them since the ' Mis- cellany ' first appeared in June, 1557. Churchyarde, however, in his * Challenge/ 1593, claims that he wrote " many things in the booke of songs and Sonnets " printed in Queen Mary's days, meaning, no doubt, Tottel's work ; but I have sought vainly through his known work for proof of the statement, which I do not challenge, for Churchyarde was a voluminous writer, and evidently a very honest man and a good fellow withal. ' The Gorgeous Gallery of Gallant Inventions,' 1578 a similar anthology to Tottel's, and intimately con- nected with it, for it prints several poems included in the * Miscellany,' though some- times in a varied and not easily recognizable form -contains one of Churchy arde's songs, commencing, The heat is past that did mee fret, &c. Parke's * Heliconia,' pp. 94-5. No signature is given, but the original or amended version of the song, minus two- stanzas and with variations, occurs in ' Churchyardes Charge,' 1580 (Collier's re- print, pp. 51-2). But Tottel yields nothing tike what can be seen hi Churchy arde's mown work. ii s. in. FEB. 4, 1911.] NOTES AND QUERIES. The last writer for whom a claim has been put in is Sir Francis Bryan, who, according to Michael Drayton (' Elegies,' 1627), had a share in the ' Miscellany.' As I had found little difficulty in tracing PuttenhanVs quotations from Tottel and others, it occurred to me that some success might follow from an inquiry into the ante- cedents of some of these charming little gems in the * Miscellany,' for it seemed to me to be a lamentable thing that no progress had been made in unearthing the authors and history of a collection of songs and sonnets which had passed through seven editions by 1587, and which must have exercised very great influence on writers and men and women of culture up to King James's time, if not beyond. I soon found that Sir John Harington the Elder had been a contributor to the collection, and that one of his poems is of high historical interest ; and that another piece in it was composed by Sir Antony St. Leger, who was Lord Deputy of Ireland from 1540 to shortly before his death in 1559. But I was more than surprised to find Chaucer in the ' Miscellany,' although I had noted that there is verse in Tottel which must belong to writers of about 1400, or much earlier than Tottel's time. In the Aldine edition of ' Chaucer's Works ' there are two versions of one of the poet's * Minor Poems,' headed ' Good Counsel 1 of Chaucer,' both commencing, Fie fro the pres, and duell with sothfastnesse, f ' The Complaint of Cresseid ' (see ' Dunbar Anthology,' p. 17], Oxford Universty Press,' 1901). Puttenham found his quotation in he 1532 edition of Chaucer's Works, printed, y Thomas Godfray,* which is really a iscellany, for it contains pieces by Lyd- gate, Occleve, Gower, Scoggin, and others, n prose and verse. CHARLES CRAWFORD. "TERRA SUSANA." THIS is a term of rare occurrence. The only published work in which it seems to- lave been noticed is in an undated list of ;he possessions of St. Augustine's, Canter- 3ury, following the ' Chronica ' of William Thorn in Roger Twysden's ' Decem Scrip- tores,' col. 2202. Thorn wrote about 1397. The principal passages are these, Arabic numerals being used in place of Roman : ' In marisco cum aqua 418 acr. 3 virg. 2 Day- works et de terra Susana 400 acr. dimid. 3 Dayworks. Item de feodo camerse 130 acr. 5 Dayworks et dimid. Item de feodo vesturse- de terra marisci 48 acr. Item ;de feodo vestures- de terra Susana et bosco 42 acr.. 1 rod. 4 Dayworks Item apud Stodmersch de terra. Susana prati et marisci 488 acr. 1 virg. dimid." The word is always printed in italics.. Somner, who compiled a glossary to the * Decem Scrip tores,' says that " terra susana" means worn-out land, the condition of which has been exhausted by over-cultivation,, from the French suranne, " which exceeds a. year." Ducange, quoting passages in the above list where the word occurs anJ Somner' s opinion, adds significantly : " Sed, ut verum fatear, vim vocis non assequor omnino." Kelham in his dictionary of the 'Norman or Old French Language' (1779) has the entry : " Susanne, suranne (terre)^ land worn out with too long ploughing." This corroborates Somner, and proves that the word has been found in its French form. I have not been able to trace any instance- of this, and should be glad to hear of one. What has suggested the present note is that the word occurs in the foundation. 84 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. in. FEB. 4, 1911. charter of the chapel of Northye, Sussex, a copy of which is included in the Register of Bp. Robert Rede of Chichester (1397- 1415), and another at the end of Book Y in. the Chichester Cathedral muniments. This charter is shown by internal evidence to belong to A.D. 1262. The passage is : " Et tres acras terre mee susane in eadem parochia [Bixle, i.e. Bexhill] quas Robertus Bercarius aliquando tenuit de me in Calde- cote " Book Y reads, " Et tres acras mee Lusane," which looks as if the copyist did not understand the term. The Rev. E. Turner in Suss. Arch. Coll., xix. 23-6, gives a very free translation of the charter, and avoids this word altogether. I have only one more probable instance of its occurrence, namely, in " Susan's Farm," Eastbourne. This has been traced on an old map, and seems more likely to be a survival of a piece of terra susana than a personal place-name. If it is assumed that the term came from across the Channel it is natural enough that it should not occur beyond the counties of Kent and Sussex. As to its derivation, Somner's explanation seems unsatisfactory, for land passed over for the year in ploughing operations would be fallow rather than derelict, to become fruitful again after suffi- cient rest. It seems to be coupled with marshland in Kent, and William de Northye's grant shows that it was near five other acres aquis et fossatis circumquaque inclusas." An ingenious guess, therefore, has been made that it may be land soused, or subject to periodical flooding in wet seasons ; but this conjecture could not " hold water " if the term came from Normandy, and its French origin seems to be matter of certainty. Littre gives no help, nor does the word occur in Moisy's ' Glossaire Anglo -Normand,' or * Dictionnaire du Patois Normand ' ; but M. Eusebe de Lauriere in his ' Glossaire du Droit Francois ' (a Paris, 1704, torn. ii. p. 397) explains the term " Susan, Surana- tion," thus : " When a process commenced has not been followed up .... or when a Sentence, a com- mission, a judge's mandamus, or a prince's rescript has not been put into execution within the year. ..." and a note is added : " In France a rescript which any one has obtained from the prince perishes in the ye;-r if it has not b een used, like a Pontifical rescript." Such a process then becomes useless, of no value ; so does over-cultivated land. May this be the clue to the meaning of terra susana, or is it to be sought elsewhere ? The double form sur, sus, gives no difficulty. Both in Normandy were equivalent to the Latin super, says Kelham, sub becoming suz. CECIL DEEDES. Chichester. BURIAL-ENTRIES OF STRANGERS. I HAVE sometimes thought what an excellent thing it would be for genealogical searchers if the numberless entries in parish registers of the burial of strangers (where parishes or places are mentioned) could be made gene- rally accessible. Unquestionably, some of these " foreign " entries, could they be known to interested parties, would supply many a missing pedigree-link ; but they occur where no ordinary searcher would dream of looking for them. Large towns, or even villages situated on important roads, would probably supply many examples. By way of illustration, I append a series of rough notes I recently extracted from the unprinted registers of St. Peter's, Notting- ham, during a recent search over a period of about 'a century. I may add that scores of officers and soldiers occur among burials of the Civil War period, many of whom were doubtless far from their homes : 1573. John, son of Tho. Forman of Strelley, Notts, buried. 1576. " One Michaell, a stranger, who by his own confession came from within a myle of Oxforde, and departed at the house of one Robert Wilkenson in the towne of Nott., bookebynder," buried. 1593. Sir James Abercrumby buried. 1599. Robert, son of William Burbidge, late of Stanton-le-Stones, co. Derby, buried. 1612. Martin Hornesey, gent., prisoner, buried. 1614. Nicholas Neale, gent., traveller, buried. 1624. Mary, d. of Mr. William Tomlinson, minister of Thorpe, near Ashburn, co. Derby, buried. 1628. An, d. of William Couper of Burton Jorse, buried. 1628. Richard Muston of Cropwell Butler, buried. 1636. Gervase W T est, gent., " chiefe cooke to the right honourable Lord Chamberlaine to the Kings Maiesty," buried. 1640. Symon, son of Richard Bullock of Lon- don, deceased, buried. 1655. John, son of Mr. Walter Whalley of Cotgrave, buried. 1656. Ruth, wife to Squire Middleton, buried. 1659. Richard Ryder, gent., buried at Sauley. 1659. Mrs. Mary, widow of Tho. Cooke of Whatton, buried. 1675. Mary, d. to Mr. John Hull, London, baptized. 1680. John, son of Thomas and Dorothy Towle of Bramcoate, baptized. 1681. Sarah, d. of Henery Tealar and Dorothy, of Darley, co. Derby, baptized. ii s. in. FEB. 4, MIL] NOTES AND QUEEIES. 85 1686. Richard, s. of Thomas Levis, of Beeston. and Mary, baptized. 1666. Fortune, d. of John Lawson, of Lenton, buried. 1666. Thomas Sanderson of Shelford, buried. 1668. Anne, wife of William Webb, citizen of London, buried. 1669. Thomas Boylston, gent., and citizen of London, buried. 1671. Jane, wife of Richard Squire of Kinalton, buried. 1672. Luke Killingworth, of Killingworth in Northumberland, Esq., buried " in ye Middle Alley of ye Church." 1675. Susannah, d. of John Speed of Basford, gent., buried. 1675. William Presley of Howbecke, P. Cuckney. buried. 1675. John Baldocke of Widmerpoole buried. 1676. Mary, d. of Thomas Beamon of Blyth, Notts, buried. 1676. Ann, d. of James Coxe, of Outhorpe, buried. 1676. Mary, d. of Thomas Lorrinton of Stones- ley, co. Leicester, buried. 1677. " Henry Smith, of ye County of Yorke," buried. 1678. Martha, d. of William Round of Alfreton co. Derby, buried. 1678. Jonathan, s. of Jqnathan Martin of Duffield, buried. 1678. Francis, son of the late Andrew Clarke, gent., of Yorke, buried. 1679. Mary, d. of Isaac Wollet of Haslewood P. Duffield, co. Derby, buried. 1679. Adam Adcock of London buried. 1679. Susannah, d. of Thomas Newham of Arnold, buried. 1680. Cornelius Launder of Alfreton, co. Derby, buried. 1680. Jane, d. of Thomas Athorpe of [blank], co. Yorke, gent., buried. 1680. Thomas, s. of George Blagg of Gedling, buried. 1681. George, son of Peter Jackson of Mans- field, buried. 1682. John, s. of Andrew Buxton of Great Cropwell, buried. 1682. John, s. of the late Mr. John Ward of London, buried. 1682. Ann, wife of Will. Fletcher of Derby, buried. 1683. Elizabeth, d. of Samuel Spencer of Lenton, gent., buried. 1684. Martha, wife of William Wheateley of Ruddington, buried. 1684. John Whittecar of Leeke, co. Stafford, buried. 1686. Anne, d. of William Raggsdale of Edwal- ton, buried. 1686. Katherine, wife of Robert Warner of Papleweeke, co. Nottm., buried. 1686. Mary, d. of James Bingham of ECigham, co. Derby, buried. 1686. Mr. John Viccars of Loughborrow buried. 1688. Mary Greene of Shelf orde buried. 1689. William, s. of Ed Aster of Beeston, buried. 1689. " A Dutch Souldjer." [Repeated in the same year.] A. STAPLETON. " PASSENGER " IN THE ' N.E.D.' Meaning No. 6 is given by Sir James Murray as follows: " Slang. One of the crew of a racing-boat who adds to the weight without contributing his share to the work ; hence an ineffective member of a football team, etc." The only quotation is one from The Guardian, 25 May, 1892 : "In the ordinary amateur band there are always several ' passengers.' ' The date at which the slang meaning had come into use is indicated by " 1885 [Re- membered at Oxford]." That it was familiar at Cambridge four years earlier than this can be proved by a definitely dated example with the meaning of a useless man in a boat. In the second volume of The Cambridge Review, in the number for 1 June, 1881, appeared " The Naval Contest at Ditton, Thucydides, ix. 1." signed H. R. T(hu- cydides), i.e. H. R. Tottenham, fellow of St. John's. On p. 355 are the words ** nor is it likely that they will carry many supernumeraries (7TpiWa>s, Anglice pas- sengers] " Mr. Tottenham's brilliant parody was reprinted in his ' Cluvienus his Thoughts,' Cambridge, 1895. Canon Ainger in his ' Crabbe ' (" English Men of Letters") seems to have made a singular mistake about the meaning la of the ' N.E.D.,' " A passer by," in dealing with a statement in the Rev. George Crabbe' s life of the poet : "Having left my mother at the inn, he walked into the town alone, and suddenly staggered in the street and fell. He was lifted up by the passengers." -P. 161, 1834 ed. Ainger's comment is " probably from the stage-coach from which they had just alighted" (p. 79, chap. v.). Surely the people passing in the street are here meant. EDWARD BENSLY. SIB THOMAS BODLEY, M.P. The ' D.N.B.' states that " his first attempt to enter into public life seems to have been unsuccess- fully made in 1584, when he was recom- mended by Sir Francis Cobham for election to parliament as M.P. for Hythe." On referring to ' The Barons of the Cinque Ports and the Parliamentary Representa- tion of Hythe,' by the late George Wilks, Esq., Town Clerk, I find a copy of Lord Cobham' s recommendation, dated from Cob- ham Hall 25 October, 1584, and signed W. Cobham ; and at p. 63 the entry in the Corporation Assembly Book is given thus : " Memorandum That the 27th daye of October. 1584, Mr. Mayor, the Juratts, and Comon'ty, being assembled in the Comon Hall there, touch- ing the answering of a letter sent from Mr, Lieutenant of Dover Castle, in the name of the 86 NOTES AND QUERIES. t n s. m. FEB. t, mi. Lord Warden [of the Cinque Ports, Lord Cobham], therein his honor maketh request to have the nomynation and election of one of the Burgesses to the Parliament w ch goe out of Hethe uppon the next Sumons for the same, whereuppon the sayd Mayor, Juratts, and Comon'ty have uppon good consideration granted his honor's request, and 4ihat his honor shalbe answered accordingly. "Memorandum That the first daye of November, 1584, Mr. Mayor, Juratts, and Comon'ty being assembled in the Town Hall there, to choose and appointe Burgesses to the Parliament to be holden the xxiij* 1 day of this instant of Novem- ber at Westm r accordinge to the Sumons in that behalfe directed, as also accordinge to the effect of a 1're sentt to the sayd Mayor, Juratts, and Comons from our Lord Warden in the behalfe of one Mr. Thomas Bodyly, whoe is ellected to be one of the said Burgesses by the Lords of Her Ma*?* Privie Councell, and also p'ferred unto us by y* Lord Warden as a man very meet for the ame, and lykewise allowed to be one by the sayd Assembly. And for the Election of y* other JBurgesse for the sayd towne, the sayd Assembly have no'iated, elected, and chosen, Christopher Honiwood, gent, Mayor there, together with the sayd Mr. Bodyly, to be and appeare at Westm' at the day above sayd." From this it appears, not that Bodley was unsuccessful, but that he was elected. The next election was in September, 1586, when two fresh candidates were elected. R. J. FYNMORE. Sand gate. OBDINABIES OF NEWGATE. (See 10 S. vii. 408, 454; viii. 10, 278; 11 S. ii. 325.) In The Pvblic Advertiser, Wednesday, 20 October, 1773, there is a report of the pro- ceedings at the Court of Aldermen at Guild- hall, when, the resignation of the Rev. John Wood of the office of Ordinary of New- gate being announced, a curious debate took place. The Lord Mayor, James Towns- end, recommended Mr. Silas Told for the vacant post, "because for above 20 years the said Told had repeatedly of his own accord gone in the cart with the condemned prisoners to Tyburn to sing and pray with them and give them spiritual food. This recommendation, however, did not meet with the approval of the Court. Silas Told, whose portrait appears in Hogarth's ' March to Tyburn,' is a familiar name to students of the history of crime, and a full account of him is given in Major Griffiths's * Chronicles of Newgate.' HORACE BLEACKLEY. [See also the references to Told sited by MR. A. L. HUMPHREYS at 10 S. x. 390.] " THE OLD MOGUL," DBUBY LANE. The destruction of this old public-house, with the Middlesex Music -Hall adjoining it, removes another ^.London landmark familiar to all who know Drury Lane. Those who can remember the Drury Lane of the seventies will note how completely and entirely it has altered since that time. In a very little while virtually the whole lane will have been rebuilt, and what was at one time a most disreputable thorough- fare will become as respectable as Gharing Cross Road. " The Old Mogul " occupies the ground formerly covered by " The Mogul's Head," which was a well-known tavern in the reign of Charles II. ; and Nell Gwynne lived on the opposite side of the lane. The music- hall has twice been rebuilt within the last sixty years, and is notable only as the place where many artists who afterwards became famous made their first appearance. George Augustus Sala described a night there some thirty years ago. FBEDEBICK T. HIBGAME. " VAIL " : ITS USE BY SCOTT. Reprints of Scott's poems and novels persistently give " veil " where " vail " was undoubtedly the form intended and duly written by the author. " Vail," to lower, which is distinct from " veil," to cover, is well illustrated in Shakespeare. Typical examples are those in ' Venus and Adonis,' 1. 956, where the amorous goddess is said to have " vail'd her eyelids " ; in * The Merchant of Venice,' I. i. 28, in which passage a noble vessel comes to the mind's eye as " vailing her high-top lower than her ribs " ; and in ' Hamlet,' I. ii. 70, where the Queen of Denmark deprecates the " vailed lids " of her per- plexing son. Scott seems to have liked the word, and he uses it appositely in various circumstances. One well-known example is in ' Marmion,' iii. 234, in the expression "Princes vail their eyes." Reprints after Lockhart's time frequently have the reading " veil " in this passage. In special editions, however, critical experts have restored the original version, and their example is beginning to be followed by those who superintend a com- plete issue of the poetical works. A reading in ' The Lord of the Isles,' which has not been so widely and closely considered as the earlier poem, has not had the same good fortune. This occurs in i. 239, where the Lady Edith is asked to notice how Ronald's galley stoops her mast to the gale, As if she vail'd its banner'd pride, To greet afar her prince's bride. " Veil'd " is the reading presented here in what is virtually an excellent edition of Scott's poems in a single volume. In the us. in. FEB. 4, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 87 same work, however, the ' Marmion ' passage is correctly given. Two instances from a reprint of " The Author's Edition" of 'The Talisman' may suffice meanwhile to show how the case stands in the novels. Near the beginning of chap. xxiv. we read of spiritual dignitaries 4< who in those days veiled not their bonnets to created being." Scott must have written the other word. In the song of ' The Bloody Vest,' which Blondel sings in chap, xxvi., this couplet appears : And say unto my lady, in this dear night-weed dressed, To the best armed champion I will not veil my crest. It is evident what the reading here ought to be. THOMAS BAYNE. WE must request correspondents desiring in- formation on family matters of only private interest to affix their names and addresses to their queries, in order that answers may be sent to them direct. " TEWKE," " TUKE," A KIND OF CLOTH References to this are frequent from c. 1490 to 1553. Rogers, * Agric. and Prices,' has from Oxford, 1494, " 1 piece of Tewke for Tergates," 112 yds. at Is. 3d. ; and from Cambridge, 1496, 12 yds. "Tewke" at Is. Id. A will of 1496 has " gownes lyned with Tuke " ; and Palsgrave, 1530, has " Tewke to make purses of [Fr.] trelis." (Littre explains treillis as " grosse toile dont on fait des sacs.") An inventory of church goods at Stafford, 1552-3, has " one canopy of tewke, ij f rentes of sylke, iij crosse clothes, ij of sarsnet, and the other of tewke." We should be glad to know if anything has been discovered as to the nature of this cloth, and especially as to the derivation of the name tewke. (Connexion with High German tuch is hardly to be thought of at that date ; the Dutch and Flemish was doec, doek.) J. A. H. MURRAY. Oxford. PRICKLY PEAR AND MONREALE CATHEDRAL. Botanists seem to be satisfied that the prickly-pear cactus, now common in southern Mediterranean lands, is not indigenous, and was introduced there from America in, I think, the seventeenth century. In the Cathedral at Monreale, near Palermo, is a well-known series of mosaics, representing Biblical incidents, executed, it is said, in the time of the Normans, by Byzantine artists. When I saw these (now 22 years ago), I thought that I observed several instances in which the artist had depicted common objects which he saw around him. For example, Esau in quest of venison pursues quail, the wild game in the artist's day (as I supposed), and still, I believe, hunted on the slopes of the neighbouring Monte Pelle- grino. Similarly Adam and Eve, after their expulsion from the Garden of Eden, are represented as clothed (rather uncomfortably) with leaves which to my eye were those of the prickly pear. Possibly this mosaic is not now in its original condition ; or I may have been wrong in thinking that the prickly pear was represented as the substitute for the fig leaves. I cannot pay another visit to Mon- reale to verify my impression, nor can I here consult any description or history of the mosaics. I shall therefore be greatly obliged if any of your readers will give me informa- tion on the subject. THOMAS LANGTON. 80, Beverley Street, Toronto. HENRY, PRINCE OP WALES : MARK ON HIS NECK. In literature contemporaneous with him I have discovered what appears to be an allusion to Henry, Prince of Wales (son of James I.), who died in 1612. Among other characteristics, the person alluded to is described as having a mole, or some similar mark, on his neck. Had Prince Henry such a mark on his neck ? If this can be shown to be the case, the allusion will be established, and will prove to be interesting, if not important. P. Philadelphia. HERBERT W. STEBBINS. The address is earnestly desired of Herbert W. Stebbins, who made inquiry in The Genealogist of October, 1900, concerning my ancestor Stephens Thomson, Attorney-General of Virginia 1703-14, and his descendants. (Miss) KATE MASON ROWLAND. C/G Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, Virginia. WILLIAM ELMHAM. I am astonished to see that William Elmham, governor of Bayonne, admiral of the English fleet " versus portes boreales " in 1379, a partisan of Richard II., is not mentioned in the ' Dictionary of National Biography.' What more is known of him ? EDME DE LAURME, Soignies. ' DEATH OF CAPT. COOK/ This piece was performed at Covent Garden in March, 1789. Can any reader oblige me with infor- mation regarding four of the cast, viz., Mr. Blurton, Mr. Cranfield, Mr. Darley, and 88 NOTES AND QUERIES. tu s, m. FEB. 4, 1911. Miss Francis ? I should also be glad of ' PABISH FORMATION. Where may I find any bibliographical information regarding the French piece from which this ballet was adapted. R. H. LEA WILSON'S COLLECTION OF BIBLES. I shall be obliged if any reader can give me information as to the disposal of the collection of Bibles, &c., belonging to Lea Wilson, of which a catalogue was printed in 1845. If the collection was sold by auction, I should be glad to know the date of the sale. I specially desire to discover the present location of the copies of three editions of the Metrical Psalms which appear in the cata- logue, viz. : 39. The Psalms, &c. 16mo, Schilders, Middelburg, 1599. 78. The Psalms, 16mo, Raban, Aberdeen, 1629. 79. The Psalms, 16mo, Hart, Edinburgh, 1630. WILLIAM COWAN. BENJAMIN GABLIKE. Is anything known about the career of Benjamin Garlike, British Minister at Copenhagen 1805-7 ? Is any biographical sketch in existence ? W. R. PBIOB. SCOTTISH TITLES CONFEBBED BY OLIVEB CBOMWELL. Mark Napier states in his life of John Graham of Claverhouse, Vis- count Dundee (1859), vol. i. p. 217, that the Marquess of Argyll and Sir Archibald John- stone, commonly called Lord Warriston, had titles given by Oliver Cromwell. I have never heard of Scotch titles being conferred by the Protector. It is probable, however, that the statement is correct. - Can any- one tell me what the titles were, and if others were given by him to Scotchmen ? L. S. M. SIB FBANCIS BATHUBST. Sir Francis Bathurst went to Georgia about 1734 with his wife Frances and some of his family. About 1737 his wife died in Georgia, and soon after Sir Francis was married by the Rev. John Wesley to Mary Pember, the widow of the Attorney-General of Antigua. It is supposed that Sir Francis and his wife sailed for England after this marriage, possibly with Wesley. Can any reader verify this, and give date and place of death of Sir Francis and his wife Mary ? AGNES. LONG BABBOWS AND RECTANGULAB EABTHWOBKS. I should be glad of refer- ences to papers dealing with long barrows associated with rectangular earthworks. EDITOB ' BBADFOBD ANTIQTJABY.' the fullest and most trustworthy account of the formation of the ancient parishes of England ? GBEGOBY GBUSELIEB. FAIBFAX : SAYBE : MAUNSELL. Mar- garet, daughter of Sir Thomas Fairfax of Silling, co. York, and widow of William Sayre of Worsall, between 1531 and 1535 married a Richard Maunsell (Durham Cur- sitor Records, Deputy Keeper's Reports). 1. Who was this Richard ? I think he was brother of William M. of York, or at any rate one of the Yorkshire family, but I want proof. 2. When did Margaret die ? 3. Is there any reference to issue by this marriage, or any other information ? D. MAUNSELL. SUDANE, SOUDAN, OB SOLDANK FAMILY : INSUDANEYE. I should be obliged to any reader of ' N. & Q.' who could give me infor- mation regarding a family named Sudane or Soldank (the latter is Hasted' s spelling). This family was a distinguished one ; a certain Stephen Soudan took part in the Barons' Wars (Henry III.). Hugo Soldank held the manor of Hopland, Westbere, Kent, in that reign, as well as that of East Sutton or Sutton Court. Thorpe several times mentions the name in his ' Chronicle * ('Decem Scriptores') in connexion with charters of St. Augustine's monastery, the abbots of which were lords paramount of most manors in the vicinity. The name iu question is variously spelt by Thorpe, Soldani, Soldan, &c. As early as circa A.D. 940 reference is made to " terram quse continet xliiij manentes, in loco qui dicitur Insudaneye," close to the Isle of Thanet, and " cur tern xij manentes habentem in loco qui dicitur Sturreye." Can any one locate Insudaneye ? This place seems to me to have been near Chislet. Any information will be much valued. J. F. PITMAN. ' GUIDE FOB THE PENITENT.' Who is the author of the ' Guide for the Penitent ' fre- quently, even in Jeremy Taylor's lifetime, bound up with 'The Golden Grove,' and hence often erroneously ascribed to the Bishop ? The author is referred to in the preface of many editions as "of the highest order of the Church." The ' Guide ' has been published separately at least once by the S.P.C.K. in 1852, edited by C. T. B., probably Chas. Black. I can find no clue at the B.M. to the authorship. E. M. Fox. ii s. JIL FEB. 4, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 89 PYRRHUS'S TOE. In Sir Thomas Browne's * Hydriotaphia ' is an allusion to " Pyrrhus his toe," which could not be burnt. Where can I find an explanation of this allusion ? I have searched in vain through every annotated edition that I have found, and in many books of reference. E. M. Fox, WARREN FAMILY. Could any reader furnish particulars of the " Virtus mihi scutum " Warrens of Middlesex, Surrey, Herts, &c., between 1600 and 1698 ? I possess details from 912 to 1600. Gilbert Warren was living at the 1634 Heralds' Visitation at the hamlet of Colney. Thomas Warren (Middlesex 16-), who was from Poynton, Cheshire, used exactly the same arms. Please reply direct. J. R. WARREN WARREN. Little Maplestead, Halstead, Essex. SIR CHARLES CHALMERS, BT. His name appears, as such, in the Army List of 1755, as a lieutenant in the Royal Artillery. He died at Valdore in India on 1 November, 1760. Wanted information as to the baronetcy. When was it conferred, and when did it become extinct ? J. H. LESLIE, Major R.A. (retired). Dykes Hall, Sheffield. HAMPSHIRE MAP. I have the north-west portion of a map (unfortunately badly mutilated) of Hampshire which is adorned with engravings of the principal scenes, my portion containing views of Silchester walls with a plan, Carisbrook Castle, and Portchester Castle. The map is well exe- cuted, and the engravings are good ; it would appear to date from about the period of the late 18th or early 19th century. Can any of your readers inform me where this has been taken from and its exact date ? T. A. OPPE. 51, Moorgate Street, E.C. AMPHISB^NIC BOOK. The Bodleian Library prints a ' Staff-Kalendar ' for the use of those employed there. The first issue was that of 1902 (4 May 31 Dec.), and consisted of 80 printed pages and 16 blank, for notes. With the issue for 1905 began the habit of printing a ' Supplement to the Staff-Kalen- dar,' " meant to be revised and enlarged yearly, until it becomes as far as possible a complete directory to the practice of the library." In order to make reference to either part of the book instantaneous, the Supplement begins at the other end of the book from the Kalendar, with a separate cover-title, title-page, and pagination. The whole of this matter is, by necessary con- sequence, inverted as compared with the Kalendar. Are there any other modern books so printed ? Has MR RALPH THOMAS a " bibliographical term " for such a book ? The one that heads this query seems hardly adequate, though it suggests the facts. Q. V. HUNGARIAN BIBLIOGRAPHY. Where can I get copies of the following ? 1. 'Resurrection of Hungary.' Printed in Ireland in 1904. 2. * Hungarian Protestantism ' (T. Watts-Dunton). Printed in 1906 or 1907. 3. A book on Hungarian gipsies by Walter Crane. I have not been able to find these in the B.M. Catalogue. W. H. SHRUBSOLE. 29, Halons Road, Elthara, Kent. " REBECCA AND HER DAUGHTERS." The Times of 5 January, in noticing a book on the Rebecca Riots in Wales, says that Miss Evans, the editor of it, does not "allow the etymology of 'Rebecca' which traces the term to Gen. xxiv., 60, where her family bless Rebekah and say, * Let thy seed possess the gate of those which hate them.' The rioters, she says, determined to dress Thomas Rees, one of their leaders, in women's garments, and came across a tall stout old maid named Rebecca, whose dress was made to fit him." Is this upsetting of a long-cherished belief justifiable ? May not the encounter with the stalwart spinster have been merely a confirmation of a name previously selected as being of good omen to the cause ? I fancy that Thomas Rees was to be of the petticoated sex in order to represent the Biblical Rebekah. ST. SWITHIN. PAWPER OR PAUPER BIRD. William Harrison in his ' Description of England,' 1577, Book III., chap. ii. ' Of Wild and Tame Foules,' says : " As for egrets, paivpers, and such like, they are dailie brought unto us from beyond the sea, as if all the foule of our countrie could not suffice to satisfie our delicate appetites." This bird, it is stated, is mentioned, in an Act of Parliament relating to grain temp. Queen Elizabeth. Of what description, and whence, is this bird ? L. S. SUBTERRANEAN CHAMBER MENTIONED IN PLOT'S ' HISTORY OF STAFFORDSHIRE.' Hargreave Jennings in his book on the Rosicrucians gives an account of a sub- terranean chamber mentioned by Dr. Plot in 90 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. m. FEB. 4, 1911. his ' History of Staffordshire,' published in the reign of Charles II. Plot also says that the place became afterwards famed as the sepulchre of one of the brotherhood. The Spectator, No. 379, for Thursday, 15 May, 1712, has an account of it. Can any one tell me the exact locality, and is the place still in existence ? C. L. K. THREAD-PAPERS. (11 S. iii. 8.) I HAVE a clear recollection of my mother's thread-papers, as one of them found after her death in 1887 was made from an early plan of the Alexandra Palace estate, and, as I have never seen another copy, is now a much-valued item in my local collection. Thread was bought in skeins, and then cut into pieces of uniform length ; these were passed through flattened tubes made of stout paper to prevent their getting entangled. These flattened tubes were called " thread-papers." GEORGE POTTER. 10, Priestwood Mansions, Highgate, N. A hank or skein of thread was stitched up by the domestic sempstress in a narrow piece of soft paper, about 9 or 12 inches long, leaving the ends free, for convenience of use, and to keep it from being ravelled or tangled. By the time the thread was finished, the paper, known as a " thread-paper," became pinched up, wrinkled, and ragged by much handling, so that " worn to a thread-paper " was a phrase commonly applied to any person or thing in like condition. I suppose the wooden reel, which I was taught to call a bobbin, has superseded the thread-paper. W. C. B. I believe that thread-papers were long strips of paper folded twice longitudinally, in which our grandmothers, or great grand- mothers, kept skeins of thread, so cut that they could draw out a doubled-up needleful at will. I have seen Berlin wools so arranged, and the different shades of one colour arranged in sequence in one bundle of these paper sheaths. When they were merely thread-papers, they would not be very bulky. I remember hearing some tall attenuated women referred to as " thread- papers without the thread." I suppose poor Strephon wished to suggest that the lady of his heart would use the paper on which his verses were inscribed for work-bag purposes ST. SWITHIN. The following passage from Sheridan's Rivals ' (1775) proves that the word was not restricted to journalistic use, nor to the early eighteenth century : Thos Is she rich, hey ? Fag. Rich ! Why, I believe she owns half the stocks ! Zounds ! Thomas, she could pay the national debt as easily as I could my washer- woman ! She has a lapdog that eats out of gold, she feeds her parrot with small pearls, and all tier Ihread-papers are made of bank-notes ! Act I. sc. i. So MR. HOLDEN MACMICHAEL'S quotation trom " poor Strephon's " letter is another instance of the usual diffidence evinced by poets in prefaces, introductions, dedications, and accompanying letters. J. F. BENSE. Arnhem, the Netherlands. In bygone times threads, wools, and sewing silks were universally sold in skeins. To prevent entanglement, the ladies would take a half sheet of letter-paper note-paper was not used in those days and fold it in four. The skein would be opened, and its two sides put under the outer sides of the paper ; the two middle sides would then be doubled together ; and generally the paper was fastened by a bit of thread being tied about an inch from each end of it. The skein was cut at one end ; and when a needleful was required, it was drawn through the paper from the uncut end. As old letters were frequently used for the purpose, it is easy to see how one's letter was put among the thread-papers. S. S. M'DowALL. [MR. TOM JONES and MB. W. NORMAN also thanked for replies.] BENJAMIN BATHURST (11 S. iii. 46). The best account of the " disappearance " of this diplomat with which I am acquainted is in the first series of Mr. Baring-Gould's ' Historic Oddities and Strange Events ' (1889). The article originally appeared in The Cornhill Magazine, vol. Iv. p. 279 et seq. The skeleton described in The Observer is not the first skeleton which has been suggested to be the remains of Bathurst. W. P. COURTNEY. The Morning Post gave a special account of the finding of the supposed skeleton of Benjamin Bathurst at Perleberg, the first two articles, written by their Berlin corre- spondent, appearing in the issues of 13 and 14 December last, and on the 16th there was a further article entitled ' The Mystery of Perleberg.' The connexion of the paper with the Bathurst family suggests that the ii s. in. FEB. 4, ion.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 91 articles were written with special knowledge of the circumstances attending the dis- appearance of Benjamin Bathurst. ROLAND AUSTIN. Public Library, Gloucester. The Morning Post of 13 December, 1910, had at p. 7 two columns on this subject. This article was followed up in succeeding issues, including one on the 16th. The issue for the 24th contained a long and very important letter from the great-niece of the diplomatist, signed Katharine Bathurst, and dated 20 December from 10, Bloomfield Terrace. This letter occupies over two columns. There is also another short letter from a niece by marriage of the Hon. Algernon Percy, the fianct of one of Benjamin Bathurst's daughters, signed Emmeline Drummond, and dated 23 December from Bardon Hill, Leicester. As the skeleton to which L. L. K. alludes was smashed into fragments before the authorities came on the scene, it is unlikely that its discovery will throw any light on the old mystery. JOHN B. WAINEWBIGHT. [W. H. B. B. also thanked for reply.] FIFIELD ALLEN, ARCHDEACON OF MIDDLE- SEX (US. ii. 449, 517). In his will, dated 19 November, 1756, Dr. Allen mentions his wife by name as Frances, she being then alive ; therefore he must have been twice married not once merely, as would be inferred from my communication at the second reference. WILLIAM MCMTJRRAY. THACKERAY AND THE STAGE (11 S. iii. 28). Thackeray contributed ' Jeames's Diary ' to Punch from 16 August, 1845 ; and the last instalment appeared on 31 January, 1846. In this it is stated that Jeames de la Pluche had only one thing in life to complain of that a witless version of his adventures had been produced at the Princess's Theatre, "without your leaf, or by your leaf." I have hitherto failed to trace the date and particulars of this production. Can any one assist me ? S. J. A. F. THACKERAY'S LAST WORDS (11 S. iii. 47). Dickens (see " National Edition " of his works, vol. xxxiv. p. 453) wrote an ' In Memoriam : W. M. Thackeray ' in The Cornhill Magazine of February, 1864. In this paper he speaks of going over " all that he had written of his latest and last story," and the next paragraph begins : "The last line he wrote, and the last propt he corrected, are among the papers through which I have so sorrowfully made my way. The condition of the little pages of manuscript where Death stopped his hand, shows that he had carried them about and often taken them out of his pocket here and there, for patient revision and interlineation. The last words he corrected in print, were, * And my heart throbbed with an exquisite bliss.' " NEL MEZZO. Thackeray was found dead on the morning of 24 December, 1863, not that of Christmas Day. A. N. Q. MATTHEW PRIOR'S BIRTHPLACE (11 S. iii. 47). In 'The Life of Matthew Prior,' prefacing his ' Poetical Works,' printed for and under the direction of G. Cawthorn, British Library, Strand, 1797, it is stated that the poet was the son of Mr. George Prior, joiner and citizen of London, where he was born 21 July, 1664. J. HOLDEN MACMlCHAEL. The following reference to a Matthew Prior is given for what it is worth. John Fawconer of Kingsclere, Hants, Esq., refers in his will (P.C.C. 708 Wootton), dated 21 June, 1658, to " Matthew Prior and his wife." Places mentioned in the will are Thatcham, Berks, Winchester, and Salisbury. F. S. SNELL. The admirable and fully annotated edition of Johnson's ' Lives of the Poets ' by Dr. Birkbeck Hill (Clarendon Press, 1905) might be consulted with advantage. See vol. ii. p. 180. NEL MEZZO. [MR. M. L. R. BBESLAR also thanked for reply.] WILLIAM FITZGERALD, BISHOP OF CLON- FERT (11 S. ii. 489; iii. 53). He was the elder son of John FitzGerald, Dean of Cork (1628), by Catherine, 6th dau. of Richard Boyle, Archbishop of Tuam (1638- 1644) ; was born in Cork in 1641, educated there under Mr. Bate, and matriculated at Trin. Coll, Dublin, 22 June, 1660, aged 19. His degrees are not recorded. He was appointed Dean of Cloyne 13 June, 1671 ; Archdeacon of Ross 24 Nov., 1675 ; and Bishop of Clonfert and Kilmacduagh 1 July, 1691, being consecrated in Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin, 26 July following. He m. 1st, in July, 1684, Letitia, 2nd dau. of Sir John Cole, 1st Bt., of Newlands, co. Dublin ; and 2ndly Salisbury, 2nd dau. of Sir Thomas Taylor, 1st Bt., of Kells, co. Meath ; but left no issue. He d. 7 Aug., 1722. His widow m. 2ndly General James Crofts, and d. at Bath 5 Jan., 1724. G. D. B. 92 NOTES AND QUERIES. in s. ra. FEB. 4, 1911. ATJTHOBS OF QUOTATIONS WANTED (US. iii. 48). The authorship of The kiss of the sun for pardon was mentioned in The Spectator of 14 January. It was ascribed to D. F. Gurney. R. B. Upton. CANONS, MIDDLESEX : " ESSEX " AS CHRISTIAN NAME (US. ii. 328, 374, 394, 437, 534). Sir Thomas Lake (1567 ? 1630), Secretary of State and elder brother of Arthur Lake, Bishop of Bath and Wells, purchased the estate of Canons in 1604. His third son, Lancelot (d. 1646), left a son Lancelot, who was M.P. for Middlesex in the Convention of 1660 and in the Parliament of 1661, was knighted at Whitehall on 6 June, 1660, and died in 1680. Sir Lancelot had two sons, Thomas and Warwick. The elder son, Thomas, who was knighted on 4 December, 1670, married Rebecca, daughter of Sir John Langham of Cotes- brooke, and had a daughter Mary, first wife of James Brydges, first Duke of Chandos, to whom the estate of Canons ultimately passed. The younger son Warwick Lake, married the heiress of Sir Thomas Gerard, Bt., of Flambards, Harrow-on-the-Hill, and was father of Launcelot Charles Lake, and grand- father of Gerard Lake, first Viscount Lake of Delhi and Leswarree, general. Sir Gilbert Gerard, Attorney - General, and ten members of his family ; Warwick and Launcelot Charles Lake ; and both the Dukes of Chandos, were, at various periods, governors of Harrow School. The singular topographical Christian name of Essex may possibly be a surname used as a Christian name. There are five instances in the ' D.N.B.' of Essex as a surname. But a brother of Essex, Lady Drax, was named Warwick Lake. Whom did Sir Lancelot marry ? Thomas Hussey of Edmundsham, Dorset, who died in 1684, aged 54,' married Phila- delphia, daughter of Essex Pawlet, Esq., by Frances, daughter of Sir Nathaniel Napier or Napper. Here Essex is a man's Christian name. I shall be much obliged if any of your readers can tell me what relation this Essex Pawlet was to that truculent Cavalier Sir John Poulett or Pawlet, first Baron Poulett (15861649). I believe they were akin. A. R. BAYLEY. Some years ago an officer in a regiment of Kent Volunteers had Essex for a Christian name possibly a survival of the old custom of a son having the surname of the mother for a Christian name. There was a family named Essex seated at Lambourne, Berks, which claimed pre- Norman descent from a family in the county of Essex (Ashmole, ' Berks,' ii. 237). There is a pedigree of a London family so called in Harl. Soc. Pub., i. 81. A. RHODES. Lady Lettice Lake (mother of Sir Launce- lot Lake) was a Rich of Essex, and in that family Essex was used as a feminine Christian name. The third daughter of Robert Rich, 3rd Earl of Warwick, was christened Essex, I think in memory of her rather notorious great-grandmother Penelope (sister of the Earl of Essex), who married Robert, 3rd Baron Rich, and afterwards 1st Earl of Warwick ; but see ' Mary Rich, Countess of Warwick, 1625-1678,' by Miss Charlotte Fell-Smith. A. T. W. Essex as a Christian name is not very rare ; it occurs, for instance, in the family of Selby Lowndes, and, I think, also in that of Knightley. OLD SABUM. "ENNOMIC" (11 S. iii. 9). A "deed ennomic " is a legal instrument, the adjec- tive being derived from li/vo/xo?, lawful, legal. N. W. HILL. [MB, W. SCOTT makes the same suggestion, and refers to Liddell and Scott.] CORPSE BLEEDING IN PRESENCE OF THE MURDERER (US. ii. 328, 390, 498 ; iii. 35). The Hertfordshire story referred to by MR. GERISH (US. ii. 390) is to be found in ' The Wonders of the Universe ; or, Curiosities of Nature and Art,' 1824, otherwise called ' The New Wonderful and Entertaining Magazine,' p. 599. The account is said to have been found in the papers of Sir John Maynard, one of the Lords Commissioners of the Great Seal of England. The murdered woman is there called Johan Norkett, wife of Arthur Norkett. According to this account, May- nard wrote the evidence as he heard it given at the bar of the King's Bench before Sir Nicholas Hyde, Chief Justice. The first verdict of the coroner's jury was " felo de se," but when it " was not yet drawn into form " they changed their minds, and requested the coroner to have the body taken out of the grave. Then they changed their verdict. There was a trial at Hertford Assizes, resulting in a verdict of acquittal. The child of the murdered woman appealed against his father, grandmother, and aunt, and her husband Okerman. Evidence was us. in. FEB. 4. mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. given by "an ancient and grave person, minister of the parish where the murder was committed." He swore that when the body had been taken out of the grave and laid upon the grass thirty days after death, the four defendants were required to touch the body. " Okerman's wife fell upon her knees, and prayed God to show tokens of her innocence, or to some such purpose her very words I [i.e. Maynard] have forgot. The appellees did touch the body, whereupon the brow of the dead, which before was a livid and carrion colour, (that was the verbal expression iriterminis of the witness,) began to have a dew or gentle sweat arise upon it, which increased by degrees till the sweat ran down in drops upon the face, the brow turned and changed to a lively and fresh colour, and the dead opened one of her eyes and shut it again, and this rning the eye was done three several times ; likewise thrust out the ring or marriage finger three several times, and pulled it in again, and the finger dropped blood on the grass." Sir Nicholas Hyde appeared to doubt this evidence. But the evidence given by the ancient and grave minister was confirmed by his brother, " minister of the parish adjacent," " viz. the sweating of the brow, changing of its colour, opening of the eye, and the thrice motion of the finger, and drawing it in again." Presumably the bleeding was included, as the confirmation was " in every point." " The first witness added, that ' he himself dipped his finger in the blood which came from the dead body, to examine it,' and he swore he believed it was blood." There was some circumstantial evidence against the grandmother of the child and the two Okermans. All excepting Okerman were found guilty. The grandmother and the father (husband of the dead woman) were executed. Mrs. Okerman was spared, being with child. Maynard adds that he inquired whether the other two confessed anything at their execution, but they did not, as he was told. The case happened in the fourth year of Charles I., i.e., 27 March, 1628, to 26 March, 1629. In The. Gentleman's Magazine, 1796, part ii. p. 636, among many questions is this : " What grounds are there to imagine that the wounds of a murdered person will bleed on being touched by the murderer ? " ROBERT PIERPOINT. SPEAKER'S CHAIR OF THE OLD HOUSE OF COMMONS (US. ii. 128, 177, 218, 331 ; iii. 50). The communication from the Librarian of the Parliament of the Commonwealth, Melbourne, adds increased interest to the subject under consideration ; yet it does not prove that the Melbourne chair is the old chair used in the House of Commons previous to the fire of 1834. Viscount Canterbury presented the Melbourne chair 39 years after the destruction of the Houses of Parliament, and 34 years after the Duke of Sussex had visited Sunderland, when he sat in the old chair " which was formerly the Speaker's Chair of the old House of Commons, preserved from the fire which destroyed the two Houses of Parliament in 1834." The evidence I have given in my previous communications to * N. & Q.' is associated with the actual individual workers of the period : the Duke of Sussex, uncle to Queen Victoria ; the Earl of Durham, one of the chief promoters of the Reform Bill of 1832 ; and Sir Cuthbert Sharp, historian and antiquary, also a high official under the Crown. Surely such public reports of this visit to Sunderland as I have reproduced would not have been allowed to go un- challenged by such influential personages had they not been correct, especially as they were given only five years after the destruction of the House of Commons, when the investigations by .the Lords of the Council as to the cause of the fire would be fresh in the minds of the public. It does not follow, however, that Viscount Canterbury, son of the Speaker of the House of Commons, did not present, in 1873, the Speaker's Chair of the temporary House of Commons, used from the time of the fire in 1834 until 4 November, 1852, when the Commons assembled for the[first time in their new House. There would at that time be two Speaker's Chairs : the old one rescued from the fire, and the one used in the temporary building. It is reasonable to suppose that Viscount Canterbury would secure the more modern chair when he decided to make a present to the Common- wealth, for it has great historic interest. I have written to MR. WADSWORTH, asking him to favour me with a copy of his lordship's letter when he made the presentation for the inscription on the chair would be by another hand. From this we shall be better a,ble to judge of the history of the chair his lordship sent to Melbourne, and it will be a valuable addition to the history of our English Parliament. A photograph of the Melbourne chair will enable us to compare the two chairs, and allow them to be examined by experts in old workmanship and designs. One good result of this investigation has been the discovery that two valuable relics of our national Parliament have been preserved. JOHN ROBINSON. Delaval House, Sunderland. NOTES AND QUERIES. [11 s. m. FEB. 4, 1911. By a slip, MB. WADSWOKTH, in his interest- ing and informing communication, says it -was the second Viscount Canterbury who "was once Governor of Victoria. It was John Henry Thomas, the third, his elder brother, Charles John, second Viscount, having died unmarried in 1869, and he him- self passing away eight years later. POLITICIAN. COUNT OP THE HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE <11 S. ii. 509; iii. 54). Surely the Pope claims and exercises the power of creating Counts of the Holy Roman Empire. I know one created by Pio Nono. R. W. P. Miss PASTBANA (11 S. ii. 29). In * Relic- ta,' the volume published shortly before his death by Mr. Arthur Munby, the first poem is entitled . ' Pastrana.' It opens with a description of the striking proceedings of a large baboon, which the observer notes in a suburban garden of a Continental city. Presently, in the dining saloon of his hotel, his attention is arrested by the appearance of a fashionably dressed lady of singular aspect, who partakes copiously of the viands provided, and does not otherwise materially differ from the dining crowd. She sits out all except the narrator, who finds himself fascinated by her presence and held spell- bound by her gaze. At length a man with a net, energetically supported by the waiters, secures the festive personage, who proves to be none other than the strange monkey of the suburban pleasure-ground. Respond- ing to a request for information on his theme, Mr. Munby wrote : " ' Pastrana ' is partly based on fact. I saw her, and told Charles Darwin about her." THOMAS BAYNE. If one may infer plurality of persons from diversity of accounts, there must have been several Miss Pastranas during last century. Writing before 1864, Chambers (' Book of Days,' ii. 255) speaks of. an unfortunate creature, Julia Pastrana by name, who "a few years ago " was exhibited in London. She was sometimes popularly known as " the pig-faced lady," but Chambers describes the lower part of her face as more resembling a dog than a pig. A Spanish-American by birth, she was ex- hibited (nothing is said about dancing) in this country for a time, and then on the Continent, where she died. Her embalmed remains were subsequently exposed to the gaze of the curious at a_charge of so much per head. Somewhere I have read (probably in some modern chap-book) that Julia Pastrana possessed a body exquisitely formed, but surmounted by a face of grotesque and hideous ugliness. As this does not apparently agree with L. L. K.'s recollection of her, it is probable that many similar printed accounts are highly exaggerated. SCOTUS. I have in my scrapbook a portrait of Julia Pastrana. The sheet is 18 inches by 12 inches, the figure on it 9 inches. At the top is Julia Pastrana As she now appears embalmed. On each side is Burlington Gallery 191 Piccadilly. At the bottom is The above is a correct portraiture of this most marvellous specimen of modern embalming. Open daily from HA.M. to 9 P.M. Admission one shilling. The figure is very well done, and exactly as I remember seeing it in, I think, 1860 or 1861. H. A. ST. J. M. " BOLTON FFAIBE GBOATES " (11 S. ii. 467). There is not enough information put forward to enable a satisfactory reply to be given. The groats may be certain fees paid at the fair time, or tolls, to some one claiming them. The vicar of a riverside parish claimed "chaplain's groats" from the King's ships lying in the Thames (' States Papers Dom., Chas. II.,' vol. 283, 27). Does the date of the payment coincide with the date of Bolton Fair ? A. RHODES. CANOVA'S BUSTS OF MABS AND MINEBVA (11 S. ii. 528). In Melchior Missirini's work entitled ' Delia Vita di Antonio Canova Libri Quattro,' 3rd ed., Milano, 1825, there is no mention of any such busts having been executed by this famous sculptor At the end of the volume a ' Chronological Cata- logue ' is given of his acknowledged works, which begins in 1772, and is continued till the year of his death, 1822. This list was put together for the most part during his lifetime because he did not wish to have any works attributed to him which were not his own : " e non fosse indotta in errore la posterita su falsi supposti, resi autorevoli dal suo silenzio " (p 470). One may there- fore conclude that these " colossal marble busts of Mars and Minerva .... hidden away in a country house long before Canova same to fame," are either not his work or that he n s. in. ^EB. i, 1911.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 95 did not choose to acknowledge them. We learn, however, from the ' Catalogue ' that in 1790 he sculptured an * Amorino ' on commission for an Irish gentleman namec La Touche (p. 472). JOHN T. CUBBY. Busts of Mars and Minerva by Canova are I believe, entirely unknown. If MABS wishes to compare other sculptured figures with the busts he names, he might examine the various groups of the Elgin Marbles a1 the British Museum. Perhaps even a visit to the gallery of statuary at the Roya Institution, Edinburgh, and an examination of the various gods and goddesses represented there, might be worth the trouble taken. SCOTUS. COBN AND DISHONESTY : AN HONEST MILLER (11 S. ii. 508; iii. 12, 57). Millers are evidently suspected in many lands. When, a number of years ago, I made several trips on the Danube, I was always amused at the way in which the Slovak raftsmen provoked the young Magyar millers on the floating mills they passed. The chal- lengers' were as a rule the millers, who would greet the raftsmen with a derisive " Jano Kuk" or "Upr6 Jano," in themselves quite innocent calls, but evidently with a tale hanging thereby ; whereupon John would make a gesture imitating the millers pocket- ing their customers' corn. This was always considered a casus belli. L. L. K. A phrase in MB. RATCLIFFE'S reply at the last reference recalls to my memory that in the late seventies a village school-feast game (of the drop-the-handkerchief order) used to be accompanied in East Notts with the following rime : There was a jolly miller, and he lived by himself, And the mill went round, and he earned his pelf : One hand on the hopper, and the other in the bag, And the mill went round, and he earned his swag. I cannot remember that there was any more of it, but perhaps some one else oan. H. K. ST. J. S. [There is but the one verse, we believe. When children use it, the last words are generally changed to "he made his grab," the principal feature of the game being that the child in the centre has to try to " grab " the arm of one of the children in the ring when they are changing partners at the end of the verse.] SMITHS OF PABNDON, HEBTFOBDSHIBE (11 S. ii. 427). William Smith, a London merchant, residing at Parndon House, near Harlow, Essex, represented Sudbury in 1796. In 1802 he was returned for Norwich, but was defeated in 1806. He regained the seat, however, the following year, and was still acting as its representative in 1814. His town address was 5, Park Street, West- minster. In 1818 his daughter Frances married William Edward Shore (born 1794, died 1874), who assumed the name of Nightin- gale under the will of his grand-uncle Peter Nightingale. William Smith of Parndon had other children. One of these, Benjamin, repre- sented Norwich in Parliament 1838-47, and died in 1860. Another, Samuel, younger brother of Benjamin, resided at Embley, Hants, formerly the abode of the Nightin- gales. I am not aware of any pedigree of the Smiths of Parndon. W. S. S. REV. SEBASTIAN PITFIELD'S GHOST (11 S. ii. 367, 510). Mr. Caswell's letter to Dr. Bent-ley, H[art] Hfall, Oxford], 15 Dec., 1695, with Mr. Wilkins's account of the apparition, Oxon., 11 Dec., 1695, from the Trin. Coll. Camb. Collection, will be found in Bentley's ' Correspondence,' 1842, vol. i. pp. 103-9. R. H. EDLESTON, F.S.A. Gainford. CHUBCH WITH WOODEN BELL-TUBBET (11 S. iii. 10). In many respects the small church at Newington, near Folkestone, answers to the description given by W. B. H. I am aware that lately this quaint old turret was threatened with improvements. HABOLD MALET, Col. Churches with detached bell-towers and I presume that by this is meant gabled or turret bells occur at Spalding, Fleet, Berkeley, Torrington, Pembridge, Bosbury, Richard's Castle, Ledbury and Yarpole, Beccles, Walton, Woburn, Mylor, Brynnlys, Hennlan, Llangyfelach, Gunwalloe, East Dereham, Marston - Morteyne, Lap worth, Elstow, Magdalen and New Colleges (Oxford), Dunblane, and Kilkenny. At Talland, says Mr. Mackenzie Walcott, a covered way con- nects it with the church (see Walcott's ' Sacred Archaeology,' 1868, p. 217). J. HOLDEN MACMlCHAEL. ' THE FLYING DUTCHMAN '(US. iii. 48). The Flying Dutchman and other Poems,' was published in 1881, E. M. [? Ellen Mary] Clerke being the author. Part II. of the m, ' The Curse,' appeared in ' Women's Voices,' edited by Mrs. William Sharp, 1887, >p. 350-56. The tale is the old legend of V"anderdecken the Dutchman, compelled to ail the seas till the day of doom. In Part I. the metre does not correspond with the verse quoted in the query, but probably 96 NOTES AND QUERIES. 111 s. m. FEB. 4, 1911. Miss Clerke did not adhere to the same measure throughout the poem. The last stanza given in ' Women's Voices ' is as follows : A wraith along the deep she goes, Till nearing swift and pale, Upon the fated wreck she throws The shadow of her sail. And through the storm with hollow chime A spectral hail they hear, " How goes the world ? Methinks 'twere time That Doomsday should appear ! " W. S. S. SPIDER'S WEB AND FEVER (US. ii. 109, 194). The spider was efficacious as a cure not only for whooping cough, but also for ague. I have in my library a well-marked book which Dr. Johnson said made him get out of bed earlier than usual to read. It has not had that effect upon me, but it has caused me to sit up later than usual to read a portion. Needless to say, I refer to Burton's ' Anatomy of Melancholy.' The author is dealing with amulets : " A ring, made of the hoofe of an asses right forefoot, carried about, &e., I say with Renodeus, they are not altogether to be rejected. Piony doth cure epilepsie; pretious stones most diseases ; a wolfs dung, born with one, helps the colick ; a spider an ague, &c. Being in the country in the vacation time not many years since, at Lindly in Leicestershire, my fathers house, I first observed this amulet of a spider in a nut-shell lapped in silke, &c., so applied for an ague by my mother : whom although I knew to have excellent skill in chirurgery, sore eyes, aches, &c. and such experimental medicines, as all the country where she dwelt can witness, to have done many famous and good cures upon divers poor folks, that were otherwise destitute of help yet, among all other experiments, this, me- thought, was most absurd and ridiculous : I could see no warrant for it. Quid aranecK cum febre? For what antipathy? till at length, rambling amongst authors (as often I do), I found this very medicine in Dioscorides, approved by Matthiolus, repeated by Aldrovandus, cap. de Araned, lib. dc inserhs. I began to have a better opinion of it, and to give more credit to amulets, when I saw it m some parties answer to experience." Part. 2, sec. 5, mem. 1, sub. 5. I am quoting from p. 459 of the seven- teenth edition, which is not in the British Museum Library, but seems only a large - paper copy of the sixteenth. A. RHODES. CORONER OF THE VERGE (11 S. iii. 30). The verge or virge (virgata) was the compass ot the King's Court, comprehending a circuit oi 12 miles round the residence of the King's Courts (13 Ric. II. c. 3). Ancientlv at Common Law the Coroner of the Verge" had an exempt jurisdiction within the verge, to the exclusion of the county coroner (4 Rep. But owing to the King's Court being 3, great delay and failure of justice 46 b.). movable, often arose, and many felonies committed within the verge remained unpunished. The statute Articuli super Cartas (28 Edw. I. c. 3) was therefore passed. It provided that the county coroner should be associated with the Coroner of the Verge. By 33 Hen. VIII. c. 12 deaths within the precincts of the King's palace were to be inquired into by the Coroner of the King's Household alone ; while those without the precincts, but within the verge, were to be held, as before, by the two coroners. By the Coroners Act, 1887 (50 and 51 Viet. c. 71, sch. 3), repealing 28 Edw. I. c. 3, the jurisdic- tion of the verge is entirely abolished, and becomes absorbed in that of the county coroner, while the precincts of the palace remain as before. Sec. 29 provides for the appointment of the Coroner of the King's Household by the Lord Steward, his jurisdic- tion, and the procedure of his courts in nine elaborate subsections. WYNNE E. BAXTER. For information concerning the Coroner of the Verge Britton may be consulted (vol. i. p. 4 of Mr. F. M. Nichols's edition) ; as also the Introductions to vols. ix. and xxiv. of ' the publications of the Selden Society. The office still survives, and J. R. Mellor, Esq., the Senior Master of the Supreme Court, is the present incumbent. W. C. BOLLAND. Lincoln's Inn. Bacon wrote a paper on this subject, printed (if I remember rightly) in a posthum- ous collection entitled ' Resuscitatio.' W. C. B. Helpful N. Bailey supplies : " Verge (of the Court), the compass or extent of the King's Court, formerly of twelve miles extent within the jurisdiction of the Lord High Steward of the King's Houshold, called so from the Verge or staff which the Marshal bears." In Saxon times the privilege of the King's palace extended from its gate to the distance of 3 miles, 3 fur longs 3 acres 9 feet, 9 palms, and 9 barleycorns (Thoms's 'Book of the Court,' p. 302 n., citing Blackstone's * Com- mentaries,' Book III. c. 6, s. iv.). ST. SWITHIN. CLUB ETRANGER AT HANOVER SQUARE (11 S. ii. 407, 477). MR. ALECK ABRAHAMS is, no doubt, correct in connecting " La Salle du Festino " with the Queen's Concert, or (as they were more familiarly known) the Hanover Square, Rooms, so famous for us. m. FEB. 4, Ian.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 97 assemblies, concerts, readings, and lectures (see 9 S. v. 354). My impression is that the name " Cercle des Etrangers," to which MR. ABRAHAMS refers, was at one time linked with that of the St. George's Club which occupied the premises until they were razed for the erection of the inevitable pile of flats. The historic " room " became the dining-room of the Club, and its dis- appearance was regretted by many because of past memories. Some fine mural orna- mentations vanished also, nobody appears to know whither. CECIL CLARKE. Junior Athenaeum Club. "CARENT" (11 S. iii. 9). I would venture to suggest that the word " carent " falls into the category of legal macaronics. It is simply equivalent to the word " rent." The third person plural of the Latin verb careo, " I want," it applies equally to the position of landlord or of tenant. " Rent " is what tenants frequently want, or are destitute of. It is also what landlords some- times anxiously inquire after, but are destined not to receive. Hence " carent "- moneys which they want, but which are not forthcoming. SCOTUS. SONGS OF THE PEASANTRY (11 S. iii. 47) Is MR. GRAHAM acquainted with * Songs and Ballads of the West ' ? There are one hundred and ten of them, collected by the Rev. S. Baring-Gould and the Rev. H. Fleet- wood Sheppard from old people living on and around Dartmoor, and set by them to music. Probably the best known of the ballads is * Widdecombe Fair.' So far as Devon- shire is concerned, there is no other collection equal to this. A. J. DAVY. Torquay. INSCRIPTIONS IN CHURCHES AND CHURCH- YARDS (11 S. ii. 389, 453, 492, 537 ; iii. 57). During the greater part of 1893 my spare time was spent in Woolwich Churchyard copying the inscriptions on the gravestones before their removal so that the old grave- yard might be turned into a public garden, which was eventually done. I had the countenance, and to some extent the help, of the late Dr. Howard (Maltravers Herald) and Mr. Leland Duncan. There were 1,255 numbered gravestones, some of which were fully inscribed on both sides. The work proceeded slowly, and at the end of the year I had transcribed the inscriptions on 922 stones ; and as the work of removing them began early in the following year, my task came to an untimely end. Mr. F. A. Crisp of Denmark Hill was the originator i one presumably a stonemason, 'tainly a wag added the following of the design of preserving the inscriptions, and to him I handed my unfinished work. I believe it was his intention to publish the names among his " Fragmenta," but I do not know if this was done. It is fortunate that so many inscriptions have been preserved, as during the work of removal, although great care was taken, many stones were, I know, destroyed. The legible dates ranged from 1700 to 1855. I have preserved a copy of the schedule of names and dates prepared by the legal authorities before the removal, as well as a copy of their plan showing the relative position of each of the 1,255 graves. One of my discoveries was a forgotten " comic " headstone which had been a source of great annoyance to the then Rector (Greenlaw). It held an inscription to Emmanuel Shipper, who died in 1842, and after his name and date was cut the following distich : As I am now so will you be, Therefore prepare to follow me. Some one i and cert lines : To'follow you I 'm not intent Till first I know which way you went. WM. NORMAN. Plums tead. WILLIAM JOSEPH LOCKWOOD (11 S. iii. 29). It was William Lockwood the father, not William Joseph Lockwood the son, who, according to Burke's ' Landed Gentry,' was " shot blind at Westminster School in a battle against the mob." See 1858 edition, p. 1349. William Joseph Lockwood, who was Verderer of Epping Forest and a captain in the Coldstream Guards, died in 1854. W. SCOTT. THE THREE WISHES (11 S. ii. 506). This story is also told in Brittany. It will be found in Mrs. E. W. Rinder's ' The Shadow of Arvor,' under the title of ' Devil-may- Care.' The hero is a blacksmith who had formerly been a soldier. St. Peter, as in the version recorded by MR. NICHOL- SON, accompanies the Lord. H. I. B. KNOTS IN HANDKERCHIEFS : INDIAN CUSTOM (US. ii. 506 ; iii. 35). At 4 S. xi. 53 I showed that the custom is alluded to in ' The Ancren Riwle,' p. 396, i.e., it is as old as A.D. 1225 in England. This was reprinted in my ' Student's Pastime,' p. 73. WALTER W. SKEAT. 98 NOTES AND QUERIES. en s. m. FEB. 4, IQIL BLACKSTONE'S ' COMMENTARIES,' FIRST EDITION (10 S. xii. 385). I think that MR. W. R. B. PRIDEATJX will find some altera- tion in the treatment of the ^ copyright question, as to which Blackstone's opinion was confirmed by the Courts. Q. V. WHYTEHEER OR WHYTEBEER (US. ii. 228, 318, 378, 511). The ' N.E.D.' has not yet reached W, but under " taw," ix. 117, col. 3, it quotes " Whittawer " of the date 1474. W. C. B. on The Oxford English Dictionary. Sauce-alone Scouring (Vol. VIII.). Edited by Henry Bradley. TTealf. (Vol. IX.) Edited by Sir James A. H. Murray. (Oxford, Clarendon Press.) THE ' NEW ENGLISH DICTIONARY ' has made such steady and continuous advance as to put a heavy tax on the time of the conscientious re- viewer who studies every page of it with care. There should, however, be no fear of ' N. & Q.' being indifferent to the progress of a splendid work to which it is continually devoting the research of its contributors. Last July ' Sauce- alone Scouring ' (Vol VIII.) appeared, edited by Mr. Henry Bradley ; and last October ' T Tealt ' (Vol. IX.), under Sir James Murray's care. These two parts show the admirable skill and patient research which make the ' Dictionary ' a delight to all serious students of English. The elaborate analysis of the various senses of a word will not strike the ordinary reader, perhaps, so much as other features of the scheme ; but all experts in language must recognize the great success attained in this, possibly the most difficult part of lexicography. Johnson's definitions are occasionally utilized as a beginning, but a minute and careful separation of senses follows which must have been the outcome of much time and thought. Foreign and dialectic words are freely included in the scheme, which also extends to words now current only outside England. Nothing is more difficult than to guess at the length of time during which any word has been used, and the ' Dictionary ' by its wealth of dated examples has in this respect sa long outstripped all competitors that it is not necessary to quote the statistics provided at the beginning of each section. The mere fact that a whole section is needed for "sauce-alone" to "scouring" shows the ex- tended scale on which the ' Dictionary ' is planned. Dr. Bradley has no common words to deal with which need treating at great length, " say " occupying the most room. The literature of learning is, however, well exhibited in " science," and " school " with its many cognates. The colloquial " saucebox," of persons, goes back as far as 1588. It is pointed out that " sauciness " and " saucy " have grown milder in their mean- ing of late years. That specially German condi- ment, " Sauerkraut, "^hasVon its way into English, and is followed by " saufey," " saught," and " saulee " terms obscure to the ordinary reader and now obsolete. "Saunter" is described as of obscure origin, and the derivation suggesting " to venture oneself," is regarded as " phono- logically inadmissible." The number of spellings given for " sausage " is remarkable, and still more its actual varieties, which are said to exceed 150. We are glad to find Dickens quoted more than once for the word and its derivatives. The same page gives us words so different as " savant " and " savate." " Save " is a capital instance of idioms well differentiated. "Saw" includes several special combinations from the United States. Under " sawyer " is a third section marked " U.S." ; but the last quotation given therein explains " snags " and " sawyers," which occur in combination in Dickens. " Say-so "=mere word or dictum, is an effect- ive piece of English which is current now only in America, and might be revived, as " ipse dixit " has taken its place here. We believe that in the law " scaffolding " implies the presence of a rope. There are two important words with the same spelling " scale." " Scamper " is of uncertain origin, but " not improbably the word was origin- ally military slang " of foreign origin, we hasten to add. Pope's " presume not God to scan " suggests to us the addition of a further verse quotation, Burns's Then gently scan your brother man ; Still gentler, sister woman, in the ' Address to the Unco Guid.' " Scapegoat'* was " apparently, invented by Tindal (1530) " for use in Leviticus xvi. ; but we learn that it has been turned out of the Revised Version, which . has " Azazel " instead. A " Scarborough warn- ing " =very short notice, or none at all, occurs as early as 1546. " Scavenger " is altered from " scavager " with intrusive n, as in '* passenger " and " messenger " ; the instrument of torture called the "Scavenger's daughter " presents, however, a perverted form of the inventor's name, Skeffing- ton. Of " scenery " of the open-air kind there is, as might be expected, no quotation before the seventeenth century was well advanced. In Johnson's days people preferred, we think, to talk of a " prospect." " Sceptred " offers a good display of that poetical quotation which the ' Dictionary ' seems sometimes unduly to despise, for examples are provided from Shakspeare, Milton, Gray, Landor, and Byron. The heading " sch " has some Important hints as to pronuncia- tion. "Schiedam" and "schnapps" are both allied forms of drink. The slight specialization of meaning which "scholar" and "scholar- ship " have acquired is well treated* It would, however, be easy to add to the quotations from books, which we prefer to journalism or Acts of Parliament. Special attention is directed to the word " scientific," of which the true history is now traced for the first time to a rendering of the word tirivT-fifni in Aristotle. We end our notice of this part with two words of University usage. " Scio " was the formal testimony once given at Oxford to the fitness of a candidate for a degree. "Sconce" is a Uni- versity fine which is illustrated from our own columns in 1885. In its humorous form it has r we believe, been inflicted on dons as well as under- graduates, though the latter only are mentioned! 1 in sense b. ii s. in. FEB. 4, 1911.] NOTES AND QUERIES. Beginning with T, we find some odd phrases in which it figures, as the " T bean ' ' of the seventeenth century, grown or cut in the form of that letter ; the " T cart," an open phaeton ; and various examples of the phenomenon which has given us " Tandry " and the more familiar " tawdry." That simple things are not always easy to define is shown by " tab," which is "A short broad strap, flat loop, or the like, attached by one end to an object, or forming a short projecting part by which a thing can be taken hold of, hung up, fastened, or pulled." The word is, we learn, not in John- son, and still largely dialectic. The third sense of " tabard," the official dress of heralds, was fre- quently in the papers during the announcement of King George's accession to the throne ; but the ' Dictionary ' does not pretend to include the most modern references, and we might have done without the example from journalism (1903) of " tabard-fashion." The list of newspapers that really show some censorship over the wild and inaccurate English of their contributors is so small that we should pause before admitting several usages here recorded, and in other cases prefer, as we have said more than once, easily accessible quotations from books, which at least have a chance of being decently " read " before being submitted to the public. "Tabby" and " tabby-cat " are curious in their origin. The sense of striped silk is named from a quarter of Bagdad, but that of " old maid " is earlier than the sense of " cat," and may be derived from Tabitha. " Taberdar " for a senior scholar of Queen's College, Oxford, is first noted in 1566. Among the many senses of " tabernacle " is an " alleged term for a company of bakers," as to which Mr. John Hodgkin has noted in his learned and amusing book on ' Proper Terms ' (p. 162) that the " tabernacula " in question may be " little shops made of boords." " Table " is a long article, admirably arranged The commonest use of the word lacks verse quotations. The last one in prose (1853) suggests to us a line from Browning's ' Mr. Sludge, " the Medium," ' ' May I sit, sir ? This dear old table, now ! or another, You jogged the table, your foot caused the squeak. There is a long list of special combinations of the word, from " table-allowance " to " table-work." There is no notice from a nineteenth-century book of "Table d'h6te." Oddly enough, we ^are able to supply one from verse. In Clough's ' Mari Magno ' ' The Clergyman's Tale ' has (11.63-4), f 'Twas easier now to face the crowded shore, , And table d'hdte less tedious than before. Under " tablet " the desire of ' Wee Macgregor ' (1900) for toffee has found a place. The last r)tation for a memorial tablet is of 1870. We uld have been glad for the sake of history to see the zeal of the L.C.C. commemorated in a quotation. There is curious information of a commercial and legal character concerning the use of " tabloid." " Taboo " now increasingly spelt, we notice, by anthropologists " tabu," is an important article. " Tabula rasa " has secured admission, and may, we hope, catch the eye of the sub-editor who passed some few years ago in the daily press the phrase " Solvuntur tabula rasa " ! The various words under " tache are confusing, but none of them is to-day much used by the ordinary man. " Tack " is partly mixed up with " Tache," and the many usages it covers are noteworthy. The 'definition of " Tackle " (vi.) in Rugby football, " To seize and" stop an opponent when in possession of the ball,' r will hardly do. Full backs would be only too happy if every time they tackled, they were able to stop. " To seize or try to stop " -would be an improvement in the wording. " Taffy "for Welsh- man appears to begin in 1700. " Tagraggery " is noted as " chiefly Carlylese." " Tail " is a long and excellent article, but it is surpassed in length by " take," one of the most difficult words to analyze and arrange which Sir James can have- encountered. We should have been inclined to associate 7, the transitive use " of an injurious or destructive agency, natural or supernatural,, magical, etc.," with 10, " to captivate, delight, charm " ; and pure pleasure would have impelled us to quote under the latter heading the daffodils, That come before the swallow dares, and take The winds of March with beauty. We are glad to see Tennyson's " So took echo with) delight " included, and altogether the article is a wonderful piece of work. " Talbot " (hound) is " understood to be derived, from the ancient English family name Talbot. ... but evidence is wanting." For " tale," a mere story, a fiction, The London Herald (1867) is the only quotation of the last century. Admirers of Sir W. S. Gilbert will recall the lines Tell a tale of cock and bull, Of convincing details full. ' Mr. Sludge ' could supply a verse quotation for " talent," special aptitude : when you buy The actor's talent, do you dare propose For his soul beside ? " Tamal," " tamasha," and " tambouki " are- among foreign words which would puzzle most people. " Tampion," also " tompion," has, we note, nothing to do with the " Tompion clock " in ' Pickwick ' at the Bath Pump-room, sometimes spelt without the capital letter. This clock, was given by " the father of English watch- making " to the city of Bath in 1709. " Tandem " is, as a quotation from our owir columns in 1850 explains, " a practical pun now naturalized in our language." Words of such origin must be very rare ; we recall only " dicky," which is possibly TO/^, and certainly slang. We have always been a little doubtful about the meaning of the " tang " in Kate's tongue which made her unpopular (' Tempest,' II. ii. 52), and Sir James justifies our doubts. The " Tantalus " which holds spirits has not been traced back further than 1898. " Tariff Reform " begins in ' The Century Dictionary ' (1891) as " in general a movement away from Protection." The introduction of Daudet's ' Tartarin ' into English is duly noted; while Moliere's "Tartufe" has made English nouns and adjectives. " Task," "taste," and " tax" are other articles of great interest ; and " tea," with its derivatives, occupies a good deal of space, being prefaced by an in- teresting note as to pronunciation. Sir James Murray and his staff have of late lost some devoted helpers. It is all the more- credit to them that they are able to make such regular advance in their arduous work. 100 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. m. FEB. 4, 1911. BOOKSELLERS' CATALOGUES. FEBRUARY. MB. B. H. BLACKWELL of Oxford, sends his January Clearance List of Classical, Mathematical, and other School-Books. These lists are issued twice a year ; the next will be published in September. Messrs. Bowes & Bowes include in their Cam- bridge Catalogue 346, under Fiscal Policy, a collection of cuttings, October, 1903 April, 1904, arranged in 13 scrapbooks, 31. 10s. Under Bibliography are " Books about Books," 6 vols., 11. 16s. ; James's ' Manuscripts in the Fitz- william Museum,' and ' Illuminated Manuscripts in the British Museum.' Under Chaucer is Lintot's folio edition, 1721, II. Is. Under Classical Literature is a collection of over 90 theses issued between 1830 and 1886 on Greek And Latin authors, 6 vols., 4to, 31. 3s. There is A list under Economics and Social Questions. Under England and also under France are many historical works. There are in addition works on India, Ireland, and London. Under Alex- ander Macmillan is ' A Night with the Yankees,' -a lecture delivered in the Town Hall, Cambridge, 30 March, 1868, and privately printed, 10s. Qd. ; and under Malcolm Kingsley Macmillan is ' Selected Letters,' also privately printed, 1893, 21. 2s. Lord Vernon's magnificent edition of Dante, 3 vols., folio, Firenze, 1858-65, is 131. 13s. This was printed for presentation only, and con- tains appendixes with a bibliography. Mr. L. C. Braun's Catalogue 67 opens with Art and Illustrated Books. There is a fine clean copy of Bewick's ' Fables,' 1820, 21. ; also ' The Looking Glass for the Mind,' 1821, 10s. Qd. Under Leech is ' Young Troublesome,' folio, original boards, 11. 10s. ; under Napoleon, a collection of prints, 15s. ; under South Africa, 11 coloured views, Ackermann, 1818, 12/6 ; and under Uzanne, ' L'Ombrelle, le Gant, le Manchon,' morocco, 21. 5s. Among Bindings are Aldine Classics, 1540-50, 11 vols., original red morocco, full gilt backs, 4Z. Foreign Literature comprises a hundred items. Works under Occult include Barrett's ' The Magus ; or, Celestial Intelligencer,' 4to, original boards, 1801, 31. There is much of interest under Topography. London includes, Lysons's ' Environs,' 5 vols., 4to, 1810, 21. 10s. ; and Godwin's ' Churches,' 2 vols., half-calf, 1839, 18s. There are many engraved views, including Crosby Hall in 1814 and 1886, and Horwood's 4 Plan,' 1799, 11. 15s. There are also engraved portraits of general interest. In the Addenda are ' The Antiquarian Repertory',' 4 vols., 4to, 1775-84, 11. 5s. ; and Daniel's ' Rural Sports,' 2 vols., 1801-2, with the Supplement, 1813, 3 vols., 4to, 11. 5s. Under India is Malleson's ' History of the Mutiny,' with index by Pincott, 7 vols., 8vo, cloth, 31. 10s. Messrs. Myers's Catalogue 165 contains the rare first edition of Ainsworth's ' Rookwood ' in the original cloth, 1836, 81. Under Alken are * British Proverbs,' 1824, Ql. 15s. ; ' Symptoms of being Amused,' 1822, 81. ; and ' Specimens of Riding near London,' 1823, 11. 10s. Under Balzac is the Saintsbury edition, large paper (one of 50 copies), 40 vols., 12Z. 12s. A tall copy of Hayward's ' Edward the Sixt,' 4to, calf, 1630", is Ql. Qs. ; and a fine copy of Molire's ' (Euvres/ 6 vols., contemporary calf, 1788, Ql. 12s. Qd. Under Stuarts is the Edition de Luxe of Foster, 2 vols., folio, Ql. 10s. There is an extra-illustrated copy of Bleackley's ' Duchess of Hamilton,' 2 vols., green morocco super-extra, 1907, 12Z. 5s. There are works under Africa, Alpine, America, Charles I., Dramatic, and Ireland. Under Dante Ros- setti is his translation of the early Italian poets, first edition, tree calf, 1861, 21. 2s. Under Scottish Market Crosses is Small's work with introduction by Hutcheson, 118 illustrations, folio, 1900, >y tiv I. Is. Among Shakespeare items are Frank Howard's ' Spirit of the Plays.' 483 plates, un- spotted copy, 5 vols., 1833, 21. 5s. r and Hazlitt's reprints of the rare jest-books, 3 vols., 1864, three-quarter levant, 21. 2s. Under Shelley are the letters to Leigh Hunt, edited by Wise, 2 vols. (limited to 30 copies for private circulation), 1894, 11. 5s. (presentation copy to Edward Clodd j from the Editor). Messrs. Myers also send Catalogue 166, which contains Engraved Views of London. These include Ludgate Hill, large folio, 1795, 21. 2s. ; the Strand in 1763, 11. 5s. ; several of St. Paul's ; and Tottenham Court Road, ' March of the Guards to Finchley,' folio, scarce, 4/. 4s. There are views of Piccadilly, Hyde Park (the grand review, 9 July, 1838), Bloornsbury, Chancery Lane, Islington, Westminster Abbey, St. James's, Vauxhall Gardens, and Knightsbridge Chapel, 1789 (exterior with adjacent old houses and coaching scene, and interior, formerly belonging to the Hospital of Lepers, folio, 4s.). [Notices of other Catalogues held over.] CANON HEWITT. On 28 December, at Grahams- town, South Africa, after a long illness, the Rev. James Alexander Hewitt, Canon of Grahamstown. He was educated at St. Augjistine's College, Canterbury, and received the honorary degree of D.C.L. from the University of the South in 1888. He had been in South" Africa since 1870, and was the author of ' English Church History in South Africa,' 1887. He had sent us contribu- tions from 9 S. vi. to 10 S. viii. tn (K0msp0tttottts. We must call special, attention to the following notices: WE cannot undertake to answer queries privately, nor can we advise correspondents as to the value of old books and other objects or as to the means of disposing of them. WE cannot undertake to answer queries privately, nor can we advise correspondents as to the value of old books and other objects or as to the means of disposing of them. EDITORIAL communications should be addressed to "The Editor of ' Notes and Queries '" Adver- tisements and Business Letters to "The Pub- lishers "at the Office, Bream's Buildings, Chancery Lane, E.G. R. B K( " Westminster Chimes "). Anticipated ante, p. 35. CORRIGENDUM. P. 66, col. 1, 1. 20 from foot, for " ISwrebaples" read "Sweetaples." us. in. FEB. ii, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 101 LONDON, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1911. CONTENTS.-No. 59. NOTES : The English Bible, 1611, 101 Crabb Robinson and De Quincey, 102 Pensioners in the Long Parliament, 103 Sheridan and Bishop Hall Chateaubriand and Madame Lieven Michael Bruce, Logan, and 'The Ode to the Cuckoo,' 104 Mew or Mewes Families Temple Bar in 1851, 105 Brechin Lowe Family Conscience- Stricken : Tardy Advertisements, 106. QUERIES : St. William's Day at York Dom Francisco Manuel de Mello Pitt's Letter on Superstition Aristotle on Education Marine Insurance Sir Robert Peel and his Speeches Court Life " Bezant "Mother's Maiden Name as Children's Surname, 107 Leader of the House of Commons Lady O'Looney's Epitaph " Strike of Saunsons " S. G. Sloraan " -de- " : " -ty-" Aislabie Family, 108 Cecil Howard J. Arbuthnot C. Barbour Dr. J. Drake R. Heath Elizabeth Dixon, Quaker " Ware " Potatoes" The Almighty Dollar," 109. REPLIES : Milton Bibles, 109 Newenham Abbey Lady Conyngham, 110 Hoi well Family Thackeray and Pugilism Dickens : " Shallabalah " " Elze "^Already "Puckled," 111 "Die in beauty "Barbara de Bierle Geoffrey Pole 'Tit for Tat,' 112 Early Ships named Victory" Love me, love my dog," 113 Wet Hay Irish Book of Remembrance Belfast Registers Archbishop Cleaver Rogerson Cotter 'A Voice from the Bush,' 114 Jeremy Smith Chertsey Cartularies Sir John Chandos The Black Prince's Language-Sybil, Queen of Scotland "Woodyer" " Terse" Claret, 116 Adders' Fat and Deafness Early Beefsteak Club, 117 Grange Courty- Owls called " Cherubims "Quaker Oats Ship lost in the Fifties Pauper's Badge, 118. NOTES ON BOOKS: 'A Quaker Post-Bag ' Reviews and Magazines. Booksellers' Catalogues. OBITUARY : W. L. Rutton T. Forster. THE ENGLISH BIBLE, 1611. IN the prologue to his English Bible, 1539, Cranmer repeated the rule of St. Gregory Nazianzen, " I forbid not to read, but I forbid to reason " (Strype's ' Cranmer,' 1694, ii. 247). Doubtless he feared for the result when the book should come into the hands of such as disregarded the ancient safeguards. A century later Chillingworth in his ' Religion of Protestants,' 1637, wrote the sentence which has become the watchword of many : " The Bible, I say, the Bible only, is the religion of Protestants " (1846, p. 463). But these memorable words have been unfairly used, for their author again and again guards himself by acknow- ledging the authoritative interpretation of ** the catholic church of all ages " (p. 16), " the consent and testimony of the ancient and primitive church " (p. 105) ; and declares his meaning to be " Scripture inter- preted by catholic written tradition" (p. 362). By the middle of that century a host of sects had arisen which had hardly anything in common with Chillingworth but the word Protestant. We have to keep these things in mind in estimating the importance of the widespread distribution of an authorized version. Whatever effect the book of 1611 had upon the people at large, it is certain that scholars and clergy were not unanimous in the approval or adoption of it. Among those who continued more or less to use the old version were John Denison, chaplain to James I., in his ' Heavenly Banquet,' 1619, 1631 ; Dr. John Donne, Dean of St. Paul's, in ' Six Sermons,' 1634, iii. 1, v. 11, who prefers " our former trans- lation" ; and Dr. William Brough, Dean of Gloucester, in a * Preservative against Schism,' at the end of his ' Manual of Devotions,' 1659, pp. 516, 517. Bishop Pearson often chose to make independent renderings for himself in his book on the ' Creed,' 1659 ; see the ed. by James Nichols, 1844, pref. Moreover the new book did not find its way into all parish churches for more than a century. Bishop Beveridge, writing in 1710, says that the Bishops' Bible "hath been read in several churches instead of the New, ever since, to our days " ; and in defence of the retention of " old words now grown obsolete " he adds : " The vulgar still use those words, or at least understand them as well as any that are in common use. It is among the common people that the language of every nation is best pre- served." ' Works,' viii. 619, 631, " Ang.-Cath. Lib.," 1846. There is an excellent article by Dean Plumptre, afterwards one of the Revisers, in Smith's ' Dictionary of the Bible,' 1863, iii. 1675-83. G. G. Perry, 'History of the Church of England,' 1861, i. 200, contrasts the statements of Hallam and Trench on the language of the A.V. The list in Lowndes's * Bibliographer's Manual,' Bohn, 1857, i. 174-200, is worth consulting. Some of the books mentioned below are well known, but a few of them may not be obvious. Others are noticed by Lowndes and by Plumptre. Leigh, Edward, M.A., Oxon. Annotations imperfections in our Translation discovered. Folio, 1650. Kilburne, William. Dangerous Errors in several late printed Bibles to the great scandal and corruption of sound and true Religion. 4to, pp. 15, Finsbury, 1659. Cell, Robert, D.D. Essay towards the amend- ment of the last English Translation of the Bible ; or, a proof, by many instances, that the last trans- lation of the Bible into English may be improved. Folio, 1659. 102 NOTES AND QUERIES. [n s. m. FEB. n, 1911. John Edwards, Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge, in his ' Perfection of Holy Scripture,' 1695, pp. 531, 543, 565, suggests that Convocation should revise the English Bible, and advises the disuse of " obsolete " words such as " ere," " trow," " wist," " wot." A. Blackwall, 'Sacred Classics' (1725), 2nd ed., 1727, gives instances where our version is faulty, harsh, improper, indecent, low, obscure, pp. 74, 87, 132, 204. In a third part, issued later, he supplies improved translations. B(oss), H(ugh). Essay for a New Translation of the Bible. Wherein is shewn from Reason and the Authority of the Best Commentators, Inter- preters, and Criticks, that there is a Necessity for a New Translation. 2nd ed., 8vo, pp. 338, 1727. Translated from Charles Le Ceiie. Scott, William. The New Testament Illus- trated.... a Correction of our Translation. 4 to, 1775. Symonds, John, Professor of Modern History, Cambridge. Observations on the Expediency of Revising the Present English Version of the Four Gospels and Acts. 4to, Camb., 1789. Lindsey, Theophilus, Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge, Unitarian. List of False Readings and Mistranslations of the English Bible. 1790. Newcome, William, Archbishop of Armagh. Historical View of English Biblical Translations. 8vo, Dublin, 1792. Attempt towards Revising the English Translation of the Greek Scriptures. 2 vols., 8vo, Dublin, 1796. Tomlinson, Robert. Attempt to rescue the Holy Scriptures from the Ridicule they incur with the inconsiderate, occasioned by incorrect Translations. 8vo, 1803. Barrett, Richard A. F., Fellow of King's College, Cambridge. Synopsis of Criticisms upon those Passages of the Old Testament in which Commenta- tors have differed from the Authorized Version. 5 vols., 8vo, 1847. A Plea for a New English Version of the Scrip- tures. By a Licentiate of the Church of Scotland. 8vo, 1864. W. C. B. CRABB ROBINSON AND DE QUINCEY. . THERE are some interesting references to Thomas De Quincey in the * Diary ' of Henry Crabb Robinson. The first mention of the Opium-Eater is dated 17 June, 1812, when Robinson dined in the Middle Temple Hall with De Quincey, who was, as he notes, very civil and gave him a cordial invitation to the Cottage in Cumberland. Crabb Robinson says that De Quincey' 3 " person is small, his complexion fair, and his air and manner are those of a sickly and enfeebled man. From this circumstance his sensibility, which I have no doubt is genuine, is in danger of being mistaken for effeminateness. At least coarser and more robustly healthful persons may fall into this mistake." On 5 September, 1816, Crabb Robinson says : " I took an opportunity of calling on De Quincey, my Temple-hall acquaintance. He has been very much an invalid, and his appearance bespoke ill-health." The visit was mainly to Wordsworth, but after reaching home Robinson notes : " Just as we were going to bed De Quincey called on me. He was in much better spirits than when I saw him in the morning, and expressed a wish to walk with me about the neighbourhood." This shows that De Quincey's nocturnal habits had already started. On the 24th the diarist says : " Wordsworth conducted me over the fell, and left me, near De Quincey's house, a little after one. He was in bed. but rose on my arrival. I was gratified by the sight of a large collection of books, which I lounged over." They had a walk across Grasmere to Easdale Tarn, and returned to dinner, after which De Quincey accompanied him to the gate of Wordsworth's garden terrace. When he returned -he says : " I found De Quincey up, and chatted with him till past twelve/ Of 25 September he says : " This was a day of unexpected enjoyment. I lounged over books till past ten, when De Quincey came down to breakfast. It was not till past twelve we commenced our walk, which had been marked out by Wordsworth. We first passed Grasmere Church, and then, going along the opposite side of the lake, crossed by a mountain road into the vale of Great Langdale." Under date 7 October, 1821, Crabb Robinson- remarks : " My journal mentions (what does not belong io my recollections, but to my obliviscences) an able pamphlet by Mr. De Quincey against Brougham, written during the late election, entitled ' Close Comments on a Straggling Speech/ a capital title at all events." This pamphlet is anonymous. I traced a copy to the Bibliotheca Jacksoniana at Tullie House, Carlisle. An account of this effort of the Opium-Eater as an electioneer appeared in The Manchester Guardian (28 September, 1907). In the following month the Opium-Eater was in London. On 7 November Crabb Robinson writes : " Called on De Quincey to speak about the Classical Journal. I have recommended him to Valpy, who will be glad of his assistance. D& Quincey speaks highly of the liberality of Taylor and Hessey, who gave him forty guineas for his ' Opium-Eater.' " ii s. m. FEB. 11, wit.] NOTES AND QUERIES. It would seem that nothing came of H. C. R.'s kindly intervention. De Quincey's name does not occur in Valpy's Classical Journal, and none of the articles raise a suspicion that he had any share in them. On 6 July, 1824, Oabb Robinson took tea with Lamb. Hessey gave an account of De Quincey's description of his bodily suf- ferings. " He should have employed as his publishers," said Lamb, " Pain and Fuss " (Payne & Foss) not a very brilliant joke. The last reference to De Quincey is dated 29 August, 1836, and expresses the diarist's opinion that it was Cottle's right and duty to make known the generous gift of the Opium-Eater to Coleridge. WILLIAM E. A. AXON. > [See ' Puns on Payne,' 11 S. ii. 409, 453 ; iii. 36.] PENSIONERS IN THE LONG PARLIAMENT. No doubt the following list of pensioners who represented the nation in the Long Parliament, taken from The Universal Maga- zine, January, 1750, will be of interest to readers of 'N. & Q.' : Lenthal, the Speaker, 7,730?. per annum, besides a gratuity of 6,000?. Bulstrode Whitlock, Commissioner of the Great Seal, 1,500?. per annum and a gift of 2,0002. Edmund Prideaux, 1,2001. per annum. Roger Hill, 1,200?. per annum. Francis Rous, 1,200?. per annum. Humphry Salway, 200?. per annum. John Lisle, 800?. per annum. Oliver St. John made over 40,000?. from his places of Attorney and Solicitor for the King, by ordinance of Parliament, and by passing all pardons upon commissions. Sir William Allison, 1,600?. per annum. Thomas Hoyle, 1,200?. per annum. Thomas Pury, sen., 400?. per annum and a gift of 3,000?. Thomas Pury, jun., 200?. per annum. William Ellis, 200?. per annum. Miles Corbet, 1,700?. per annum. John Goodwin, 700?. per annum. Sir Thomas Widdrington, 1,500?. per annum. Edward Bish, 600?. per annum. Walter Strickland, 5,000?. per annum. Sir Gilbert Gerrard, 1,200?. per annum. As Pay- master to the Army at 3e7. per , 12,000?. per annum, besides a gift of 60,000?. Gilbert Gerrard, his son, 500?. per annum. John Seldon, a gift of 2,500?. Sir Benjamin Rudiard, a gift of 5,000?. Sir John Hipsly, a gift of 2,000?., besides places. Sir Thomas Walsingham, rewarded with the greatest part of Lord Dorset's estate, on which he cut 4,000 timber trees. Benjamin Valentine, Sir Henry Heyman, and Dennis Hollis, each a gift of 5,000?. Nathaniel Bacon, a gift of 3,000?. John Stevens, a gift of 1,000?. Henry Smith, 2,000?. per annum. Robert Reynolds, 400?. per annum, a gift of 2,000?., and got 20,000?. by the purchase of bishops lands. Sir John Clotworthy, Treasurer of Ireland, per- mitted to cheat the State of 40,000?. John Ash, a gift of 14,000?., besides places. John Lenthal, the Speaker's son, 2,000?. per annum. John Bond, Master of Trinity Hall, Cambridge. Lucas Hodges, Customer of [sic] Bristol. Francis Allen, Customer for [sic] London. Giles Green, rewarded with Sir Thomas Daw's estate. Francis Pierpoint, rewarded with the Archbishop, of York's lands in Nottinghamshire. William Pierpoint, a gift of 47,000?. John Blackstone, 200?. per annum and a gift of Sea wire, a gift of 2,000?. Isaac Pennington, a gift of 7,000?. and many: bishops' lands. John Palmer, Master of All Souls, Oxon. Thomas Gerry, Recorder of Bridgwater. Samuel Vassel, a gift of 1,000?. Oliver Cromwell, 4,000?. Sir William Brereton, 2,000?. per annum. Thomas Gell, Lieutenant-Colonel, and Recorder- of Derby. Valentine Walton, Colonel, and Governor of" Lynn Regis. Richard Norton, Colonel, and Governor of South- ampton. Edward Harvey, Colonel, and rewarded with the Bishop's manor of Fulham. Sir Michael Livesay, Colonel, and Sequestrator of Kent. Henry Ireton, Colonel, and Commissary General. Thomas Rainsborough, Colonel, Governor of Woodstock, and Vice- Admiral of England. Robert Black, Colonel, and Governor of Taunton. Richard Brown, Major-General, and Governor of Abington. John Ven, Colonel, and Governor of Windsor.. had a gift of 4,000?. Algernon Sydney, Governor of Dover Castle. Richard Ingoldsby, Colonel, and Governor of Oxford. John Hutchinson, Colonel, and Governor of Nottingham. Cornelius Holland, 1,600?. per annum. Philip Skippon, 1,000?. per annum, besides a gift of lands, and the office of Major-General of the Army, and of London. Thomas Westrow, rewarded with the Bishop of Worcester's manor of Hartlerow. Anthony Stapley, Colonel, and Governor of Chichester. Alexander Rigby, Colonel, and Governor of Bolton. Sir Arthur Haslerig, Colonel, and Governor of Newcastle, rewarded with a gift of 6,500?. and the Bishop of Durham's manor of Aukland. Sir Thomas Middleton, Major-General for Denbigh and five more counties. Lord Grey of Grooby, rewarded with the royal manor of Holdenby. Sir William Constable, Governor of Gloucester,. sold his estate to Sir Marmaduke Langdale for 25,000?., and then obtained an order of Parliament to resume it, without returning a penny. 104 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. m. FEB. n, 1911, Sir William Pursey, Colonel, and Governor of j Mr. Teixeira de Mattos has not attempted Coventry, had a gift of 1,5001. the task in his notes to the translation Sir Edward Hungerford, 1,5001. per annum. Walter Long, Colonel, had a gift of 5,OOOJ. was also Michael Oldsworth, 3,OOOZ. per annum Governor of Pembroke and Montgomery, and Keeper of Windsor Park. Thomas Scot, rewarded with certain of the Archbishop's lands, and Lambeth Palace. Benjamin Alhurst, Clerk of the Peace for Lan- cashire, had a gift of 1,0001. Thus pensions amounted to 58,3307. per -annum, while gifts of money reached the sum of 308,500Z., besides places, gifts of land, &c. Each member also was allowed out of the public money 41. per week, which, -at 52 weeks, for 516 members, comes to 107,328?. J. C. RINGHAM. R. B. SHERIDAN AND BISHOP HALL. "There is a resemblance between a familiar passage in ' The Rivals,' Act I. sc. ii., " Yes I always know when Lady Slattern has been before me. She has a most observing thumb ; and, I believe, cherishes her nails for the convenience of making margina notes," and the opening words in Book VT. o: Joseph Hall's ' Virgidemiae ' : Ldbco reserues a long nayle for the nonce To wound my margent tnrough ten leaues at once. ."Sheridan was doubtless capable of hitting on this thought by himself, besides being no great reader ; but it may be rememberec that a reprint a very careless one, it must be owned of Hull's satires was edited, by the Rev. William Thompson of Queen's College, Oxford, in 1753. EDWABD BENSLY. CHATEAUBRIAND AND MADAME LIEVEN. The author of ' Le Genie du Christianisme ' has a long, spiteful passage about the con- versational powers of the lively Russian ambassadress at the Court of George IV. in his ' Memoirs ' (vol. iv. p. 74 of Mr. A. Teixeira de Mattos' s English translation, London, 1902), which I do not purpose to reproduce here. Chateaubriand's second stay in England lasted only a few months (April to Septem- ber, 1822), and he is not very verbose about his doings on that occasion. Consequently any side-lights must be welcome to his future biographer. According to a recent writer, "la, biographic de Chateaubriand je veux dire -sa biographic reelle, et non point celle a demi- poetique qu'il a magnifiquement orchestree dans les ' M^moires d'Outre-Tombe ' est encore a 4crire." Anatole le Braz, ' Au Pays d'Exil de Chateaubriand ' (Paris, 1909). Among the visitors to London in 1822 was the Hungarian Count Stephen Szechenyi, a young hussar officer who has jotted down a few rough notes in the course of his wander- ings. As regards our French ambassador extraordinary we find the following short entry on 18 June : " At York and Boroughbridge [probably visits to some races or racing stables]. Chateaubriand is left here altogether unnoticed." The Hungarian Count soon, returned to London, and on 9 August there is the follow- ing entry in his diary, written in his own tongue : At Madame Lieven's with Chateaubriand, who has behaved in such an awkward and tactless way on English soil that he has placed himself in an altogether false position, and cannot in any way find his place. A good story about [him and] Countess L. He : ' What a horrid country this England is ! The women are devoid of all charms, without any vivacity.' Countess L. : ' Monsieur 1'ambassadeur, you condemn them without knowing them, because there are intellectual women,' &c. He : ' Ah, madame, I dislike intellectual women.' Countess L. : '^Well, in that case I must also leave you, Monsieur 1'ambassadeur,' &c. During the meal the topics were Walter Scott, Lord Byron, &c. Madame L., without having either the insight or knowledge of Chateaubriand, led the conversation with such assurance and superiority as can only be acquired by constantly moving about in the great world. .... There was also some talk about the outing the other day to see the experiments with Congreve rockets [at Woolwich on 5 August], about the clothes worn by Wellington, and about his aide- de-camp, who on that occasion walked about with a lady hand in hand, &c. Madame L. was charmed with this. Chateaubriand : ' Ah well ! One can do these things if one has a Spanish campaign or a battle of Waterloo at one's back. When one knows how well these simple-minded 'ellows can fight. . . .But let the Pope's marechal Dehave like that, and everybody will burst out aughing.' " I have faithfully reproduced the style &c., of the original. One can understand now why Chateaubriand penned the follow- ng remark in his memoirs : All reputations are quickly made on the banks of the Thames, and as quickly lost." L. L. K. MICHAEL BBUCE, LOGAN, AND ' THE ODE TO THE CUCKOO.' At 9 S. viii. 70, 148, 312, 388, 527 ; ix. 95, 209, 309, 414, 469, 512, -here was a lengthy discussion on the well- oiown poem to the cuckoo attributed to Logan. As a supplement to this it may be f interest to record the fortunes of the Doem in Wales. ii s. in. FEB. 11, i9ii.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 105 It was translated into Welsh by " Caled- fryn " (William Williams, 1801-69), and has since been retranslated into English (appa- rently in ignorance of the original) by the Rev. E. O. Jones in his ' Welsh Lyrics of the Nineteenth Century ' (2nd ed., Newport, Mon., 1907). I have not found the Welsh version among Caledfryn's works, but from the English translation it would appear to have been very close. It is interesting to compare the final English version with the original poem : Dear playmate of the verdant spring, We greet thee and rejoice ; Nature with leaves thy pathway decks, The woodlands need thy voice. No sooner come the daisies fair To fleck the meadows green Than thy untrammelled notes are heard Rising the brakes between. Hast thou some star in yonder heights To guide thee on thy way, And warn thee of the changing years And seasons, day by day ? Fair visitant, the time of flowers We welcome now with thee, When all the birds' unnumbered choir Warbles from every tree. The schoolboy on his truant quest For flowers, wandering by, Leaps as he hears thy welcome note, And echoes back thy cry. To visit other lands afar Thou soon wilt flying be ; Thou hast another spring than ours To cheerly welcome thee. For thee the hedgerows aye are green, Thy skies are always clear ; There is no sorrow in thy song, Nor winter in thy year ! H. I. B. MEW OB MEWES FAMILIES. (See 6 S. xii. 369.) Dr. Peter Mew(s), Bishop of Bath and Wells 1673, and of Winchester 1684- 1706, born at Caundle Purse 25 March, 1618- 1619, was the son of Ellis Mew(s) by his marriage with a daughter of John Winniffe of Sherborne, and sister of Dr. Thomas Winniffe, sometime Bishop of Lincoln. His ancestry has not hitherto been traced. The following notes show three earlier genera- tions of Mews occurring in or in connexion with Dorsetshire. I. John Mewis married Alice, daughter of John Buckler by his marriage with Agnes, daughter of John Barber of Maston, Somerset. Peter Mewes married Jane, another daughter of John and Agnes Buckler (" Buckler of Causeway in Radipole," Visitation of Dorsetshire, 1565). II. Peter Mewe of Caundle Purse died before 6 March, 1597/8, having had issue at least four sons. James Mewe of Ditcheat, Somerset, made his nephew James Mewe of Caundle an over- seer of his will, dated 17 February, 1618/19,. proved P.C.C. (10 Soame) 11 February, 1619/20. He left a daughter Mary, married at Ditcheat, 25 July, 1608, to Henry Hannam. William Mewe was an overseer of the will of John Whetcombe of Sherborne, dated 2 May, proved P.C.C. (76 Lewyn) 22 Sep- tember, 1598 ; and of that of Edmund Lane of Lillington, dated 13 August, proved P.C.C. (84 Harte) 26 November, 1604. III. One of the elder sons of Peter Mewe of Caundle Purse was probably father of Ellis Mew(s) and grandfather of the bishop. William Mewe, his fourth son, is men- tioned in the will dated 20 May, proved P.C.C. (62 Cobham) 20 June, 1597 of James Hannam of Hollwell, Somerset, a bencher of the Middle Temple, as "my servant." On 6 March, 1597/8, he was admitted to the Middle Temple ; and on 10 May, 1598, he was admitted, by assign- ment of Sir Francis Hastings and Mary his- wife, widow and executrix of James Hannam, to two chambers in Hannam's Buildings. He surrendered one of these chambers 12 February, 1608. It was resolved, 8 June, 1627, to admit another tenant to the other chamber, then described as "the ground chamber of the late Mr. Mewe, when he kept the office of the Clerk of the Warrants." It seems possible that the word " late " is here used carelessly of a late tenant, and not of one recently deceased, for on 11 June, 1627, and 12 May, 1629, this chamber is described as had by " surrender " of Mr. William Mewe ('Middle Temple Records/ vol. i. pp. 382, 383 ; vol. ii. pp. 488, 723, 748). If so, he may possibly be identified with William Mewe, a London lawyer who settled at Eastington, and was the ancestor of the Gloucestershire Mews, one of whom was appointed to two prebends by Bishop Mew(s). TEMPLAR. TEMPLE BAB IN 1851. The obstruction to traffic caused by this narrow gateway in the middle of London was hardly felt to be serious until the summer of 1851, when all the world came to the Great Exhibition in Hyde Park, for the hitherto comparatively quiet streets of the metropolis then became for the first time inconveniently crowded. I well remember in that year sitting for twenty minutes on the top of an omnibuft 106 NOTES AND QUERIES. [u s. m. FEB. n, 1911. tinder the archway during a block in Fleet Street. It is difficult to realize that London -at that time was not much more than a large country town with few hotels North- umberland House with its huge empty court- yard standing on ground now so differently occupied. At the time when the removal of the Bar was under discussion, some excellent plans for keeping it in the City were unwisely rejected. HENBY TAYLOR. Birklands, Birkdale, Lancashire. " STICK-IN-THE-MUD." This seems to be an old colloquialism, but it is not mentioned, I think, in the ' English Dialect Dictionary.' I remember, about twenty years ago, hearing the expression applied to a person who never made any progress in business or life gene- rally he was addressed as " old stick-in- the-mud " ; and it may be noted that one who is deficient in histrionic talent is known as a " stick." An " old fogey " is an " old stick-in-the-mud," a slowcoach. Hughes in * Tom Brown at Oxford ' says : " This rusty old coloured one is that respectable old stick in the mud, Nicias." But there is an earlier instance of the use of the phrase in The General Evening Post of 15-17 Novem- ber, 1732 : " George Sutton was Yesterday before Justice De Veil, on suspicion of robbing Col. Des Romain's House at Paddington. The Colonel was in the Boom with the Justice, and no sooner had Sutton entered the Boom, but the Colonel said, that is the Man that first came and seized me with his drawn Sword in his Hand. The Justice com- mitted him to Newgate. At the same time James Baker was before Justice De Veil for the same Fact. The Colonel could not swear to him, but the Justice committed him to the same Place with Sutton. George Fluster, alias Stick in the Mud, has made himself an Evidence, and impeached the above two Persons." Again, in The General Evening Post of 13-15 Dec., 1733, 41 John Anderson, James Baker, alias Stick in the Mud, and Francis Ogleby were convicted lor breaking open the House of Thomas Bayner, .a Silversmith, and stealing Plate to' a considerable value. J. HOLDEN MACMlCHAEL. BBECHIN. In ' A Catalogue of Rare and Valuable Books,' recently issued by a pro- minent London house, the following entry appears in the section given to Wales : "Brechin. Black (D. D.). History of Brechin. Crown 8vo, cloth. Brechin, 1839. 3/6." The compiler of the catalogue evidently thought that his volume is concerned with Brecknock or Brecon, and not with the ecclesiastical town of Brechin in For- farshire, which enjoys the distinction of giving his title to a bishop. Between the two names thus incidentally associated there is a possible connexion, which Anderson in ' The Scottish Nation ' discusses as follows : " Its similarity [that of Brechin, to wit] to the British name Breckeinoc or Brycheinog, Anglicised into Brecknock or Brecon (anciently Aberhodni), the chief town of Brecknockshire, which Giraldus Cambrensis (1188) and even earlier authorities derive from Bracken, a regulus or prince of that country, who died about the year 450, renders it probable that it is likewise called after some individual of British or Cambrian origin of that name. Nor is it impossible that, being a town of great ecclesiastical antiquity, its round tower being one of the only two extant in Scotland, and not of later date than the sixth or seventh century, it may have originated in a church dedicated to the family of this Bracken." " Brechin," it may be added, is not pro- nounced " Breechin," as the unwary are prone to think, but belongs to the same guttural family as Ecclefechan and Auch- termuchty, with which the Southern visitor invariably has trouble. THOMAS BAYNE. LOWE FAMILY, 1670-80. The following entries occur in a copy of the Authorized Version, 1611, in the British Museum : "Sarah Lowe was Borne the 13 th of May and Baptized the 15 th of June, 1676. "Andrewe Lowe was Borne the 31 st of March and Baptized the 9 th of May, 1681." HENKY R. PLOMEB. CONSCIENCE-STBICKEN : TABDY ADVEB- TISEMENTS. The following advertisements in comparatively recent newspapers may be worth noting. The first appeared in The Standard of 9 February, 1888, and the reply to it in that of 17 February : " AMELIA AND CLARA SPENCER, at school in 1837, 5, Prospect-place, Peckham-rye, and whose home was in that part. Advertiser DEEPLY REGRETS doing some ACTS for which they were accused and may have been expelled." " AMELIA AND CLARA SPENCER are much gratified to see the advertisement headed as above. They freely forgive the advertiser for the wrong done over 50 years ago. 173, Church Boad, Canonbury, N." A somewhat similar circumstance is recorded in the following paragraph from The Standard of 18 October, 1909 : " A BELATED CONSCIENCE. An ex-under- graduate of Cambridge sends a curious advertise- ment to a Cambridge paper. He states that one day in 1852 an undergraduate came into collision on college premises with a tobacconist's boy, s. in. FEB. 11, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 107 and broke some pipes which he was carrying ' The undergraduate, now advanced in years feels his conscience oppressed by the fact that he never in any way made good the damage done either to the boy or his employer.' If ' the boy ii still alive, he would be glad to hear from him." W. B. H. WE must request correspondents desiring in formation on family matters of only private interest to affix their names and addresses to their queries, in order that answers may be sent to them direct. ST. WILLIAM'S DAY AT YOBK. Can any one kindly refer me to an historical account of the observance of St. William's Day at York, either at the Minster or in the city ? GEORGE AUSTEN. The Residence, York. DOM FBANCISCO MANUEL DE MELLO, the Portuguese writer, was in London on diplo- matic missions in 1641 and in the spring of 1663. I should be glad to know of any references in the newspapers, memoirs, or other writings of the time to his presence among us. He was in Rome for the greater part of 1664, endeavouring to obtain Papal confirmation for the King of Portugal's episcopal nominees, and there printed his * Cartas Familiares ' and * Obras Morales.' Are there any references to him and his negotiations in Italian printed sources of the period ? He sometimes styled himself Chevalier de St. Clement. EDGAR PRESTAGE. Chiltern, Bowdon, Cheshire. WILLIAM PITT'S LETTER ON SUPERSTITION. This letter, quoted by Dr. von Ruville in his ' Life of Chatham,' vol. iii. p. 359 (Engl. ed.), is stated to have first appeared in The London Journal for 1733. Unfortunately, the only copy of The London Journal which I have seen, in the British Museum, has a few pages missing for 1733: the letter is not printed in the remaining pages. The letter first, as far as I know, appears in print in a leaflet which bears no date, but is ticketed in one of the British Museum ecrapbooks as of 1760. In 1819 and 1820 the letter was reprinted as a hawker's broad- sheet. It was finally republished about 1875 by A. Holyoake as a secularist tract. Can any reader inform me 1. What authority there is for attributing this letter to W. Pitt ? 2. Whether any extant copy of The London Journal for 1733 shows this letter ? 3. If so, whether the letter there appears signed by Pitt ? BASIL WILLIAMS. ISavile Club, Piccadilly. ARISTOTLE ON EDUCATION. Aristotle says somewhere that the work of the educator is like that of the sculptor, who finds and dis- engages the statue that is hidden in a block of marble. Addison refers to it in The Spectator, No. 215, 1711. Will some one kindly give me the reference ? A. SMYTHE PALMER. MARINE INSURANCE. I am anxious to know something about the earliest policies for assurance of ships or cargoes. The few facts I was able to find tended towards showing Valencia and the neighbouring parts of South-Eastern Spain to be the most hopeful quarter for further search. I read, however, in Prof. Heinrich Sieve- king's * Studio sulle finanze genovesi nel medioevo ' (Atti della societd ligure di storia patria, xxxv. [1905] Introd.,p. 15) : " La tenuta dei libri di commercio ed il cambio, Passicurazione e la banca furono coltivati, prima che da altri, dai Genovesi." Is this primacy admitted in the particular case of marine insurance ? Where shall I find the best " documented " treatment of the subject ? ROBT. J. WHITWELL. Oxford. SIR ROBERT PEEL AND HIS SPEECHES. Can any correspondent give the authority for the story that Sir Robert Peel, when Prime Minister, used always to lock his study- door before a great speech ? One day an urgent letter, it is said, came from the Queen, and Lady Peel entered the study through the window in order to deliver it without delay, and found the Prime Minister on his knees, praying. W. J. COURT LIFE. Where can one find an account of the various duties of officers of the Court, Ladies-in-waiting, &c. ? X. Y. " BEZANT." The Salisbury Journal, 20 April, 1761, in form of advertisement says : 1 There will be a ball at the George Inn, Shaftes- bury, on tuesday 28 th irist., being the day after a Bezant." What was a Bezant T E. G. MOTHEB'S MAIDEN NAME AS CHILDREN'S SURNAME. Was it formerly a fairly com- mon practice in Fifesliire for children to take as surname their mother's maiden name 108 NOTES AND QUERIES. en s. m. FEB. n, 1911. or the name of a near relative ? If this was the case, I shall be glad of any indication where I can get information regarding the practice. INQUIRER. LEADER OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS. It is formally announced that among the portraits recently acquired by the Trustees of the National Portrait Gallery, and now placed on exhibition, is that of "Thomas Robinson, first Baron Grantham, 1695- 1770. Diplomatist, Ambassador at Vienna, 1730-48. Leader of the House of Commons, 1754-5. Pastel by an unknown artist." The story of Robinson's brief and in- glorious leadership of the House of Commons is well known to all students of the political history of that time ; but when was this position earliest recognized in formal fashion and the title " Leader of the House of Commons " first employed ? POLITICIAN. LADY O'LOONEY'S EPITAPH. In a little book entitled ' English Epigrams and Epitaphs,' selected by Aubrey Stewart, and published by Messrs. Chapman & Hall, 1897, the following epitaph is given (p. 218) with the heading ' In Pewsey Church ' : Here lies the body of Lady O'Looney, Great-niece of Burke, commonly Called the Sublime. She was Bland, passionate, and deeply religious ; Also she painted in water colours, And sent several pictures to the Exhibition. She was first cousin to Lady Jones, And of such is the Kingdom of Heaven. Is this epitaph still in Pewsey Church ? Is it dated, and is anything known of its history ? SENESCENS. [Mr. E. E. Suffling, who prints this epitaph at p 287 of his 'Epitaphia,' 1909, adds: "In the chapel of St. George's Bury i tig-ground, London, facing Hyde Park, was, until its removal a few years ago, a slab with a tremendously long and nauseously adulatory epitaph upon it to Mrs. Jane Maloney (' Lady Looney'), who died in 1839. How the lady could also be buried at Pewsey I cannot say."] " STRIKE OF SAUNSONS." In a Court Roll of the Manor of Duffield, Derby, dated 29 November, 152;), occurs the following sentence : "And also paying to the said John Harewood and his heirs annually one measure of apples called a strike of Saunsons growing upon the land afore- said." The words italicized are in English in the Court Roll, the remainder in Latin. A strike was a measure equal to about two pecks; but what is a "Saunson" ? Was there an apple so named ? It is not given in Gerarde's ' Herbal ' (1595) or Parkinson's ' Paradisus Terrestris ' (1633), nor in any work in the Royal Horticultural Society's library. Was it a local namo ? I shall be much obliged if any correspon- dent can help me. C. W. FIREBRACE. 70, Cadogan Square, S.W. SAMUEL GEOKGE SLOMAN of Exeter died in 1846. Can any one kindly tell me where he was buried, and the name of his. father ? C. K. R. " -DE- " : " -TY-." What is the origin of " de " in such words as " hobbledehoy/* " clapperdeclaw," " fleberdegibet " ? Is it merely the definite article ? What is the meaning of " hobberdidance " ? It looks like "Hob o' the dance" beside "Hob goblin." In North of England place-names we find Pikedebield and Catchedecam (also spelt Catcheety) ; but " -ty-" is more common, e.g. Joppletyhow, Gracetymoor, Lamitysike, Fishertyhow, and Cockledebeck or Cocklety- beck. Probably we cannot explain these either by the article or by the word " tye-" so common in the South. OLD SABTJM. AISLABIE FAMILY. William Aislabie, Deputy Governor of Bombay (brother of John Aislabie, Chancellor of the Exchequer, who was turned out of the House of Commons on account of his connexion with the South Sea Company), had a son William, who is said to have been M.P. for Ripon from 1727 to 1734. I should be glad of further information about him. Was he the William Aislabie who was a captain in the 4th troop of Horse Guards in 1722 ? He married Elizabeth, daughter of John and Arabella Scattergood of Fort St. George, about 1729. Where did the marriage take place ? William Aislabie is said to have been of Ditton, Surrey. There was a son of this marriage, John Aislabie, who also appears to have been a captain in the Army. I should be glad tc know more of him. BERNARD P. SCATTERGOOD. Far Headingley, Leeds. CECIL HOWARD. Is there any biography of this amiable gentleman and dramatic critic, who died in September, 1895 ? In Lewis Melville's 'William Makepeace Thackeray,' it is stated that Thackeray wrote (20 January, 1862) to Cecil Howard in regard to ' Lovel the Widower ' to know if that was the book that Howard was think- ii s. m. FEB. 11, ion.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 109 ing of dramatizing for Miss Sedgwick Did Cecil Howard ever write a play of any kind, or dramatize one for Miss Sedgwick (Amy) or any one else ? S. J. A. F. JOHN ABBUTHNOT (1667-1735), PHYSICIAN AND WIT. Whom and when did he marry ? The ' Diet of Nat. Biog.,' ii. 62, does not mention his marriage, though there is a reference to his children. G. F. R. B. CHABLES BARB OUR was admitted on the foundation at Westminster School in 1674. There is no information about him in * Alum. Westmon.' Can correspondents of * N. & Q.' supply any ? G. F. R. B. JAMES DRAKE, M.D. (1667-1707). When and whom did this political writer marry, and what family had he ? The * Diet. Nat. Biog.,' xv. 446, gives no information on these points. G. F. R. B. RICHARD HEATH, son of Richard Heath of Guildford, Surrey, was educated at West- minster School and Trin. Coll., Camb., where he graduated M.A., 1714. I should be glad to obtain further particulars of his parentage and career. G. F. R. B. ELIZABETH Dixoif , QUAKER. Can any one tell me anything about Mrs. Elizabeth Dixon, a Quaker, and a friend and con- temporary of Elizabeth Fry ? Information as to her family or place of residence in Norfolk would be gratefully received by (Mrs.) M. ELLIOTT. Hethcl Hall, Norwich. " WARE " POTATOES. One of the street cries of a hawker of my acquaintance seems to me to be " Four-wheeled cabbage I " He affirms it to be " All ware new potatoes ! " and explains " all ware " as a trade term for " the best." Can any one explain it ? J. M. ["Ware" is used in Co vent Garden Market to indicate potatoes of the most even size for cooking, both the small (called "chats") and large being sold at lower prices.] " THE ALMIGHTY DOLLAR." This phrase is commonly attributed, and it would seem rightly so, to Washington Irving. It appears in his ' Creole Village,' 1837, and he vindicates it in a foot-note from the charge of irreverence. But it must have come into frequent, if not common, use earlier than that year ; for it occurs in quotation marks in the Philadelphia Public Ledger, 2 December, 1836, where an editorial article Bays : " 'The Almighty Dollar ' is the only object of worship." (The writer is criticizing Governor Isaac Hill of New Hampshire. ) It may be that the * Creole Village ' saw the light in some periodical before this date, in which case the difficulty is solved. Can any correspondent clear the matter up ? RICHARD H. THORNTON. 36, Upper Bedford Place, W.C. JUplus. MILTON BIBLES. (11 S. iii. 1, 70.) IT may perhaps be useful to focus the references to Bibles associated with the name of Milton. These appear to be as follows, in order of date : 1. Breeches Bible (Genevan Bible, 1560), 4to. A copy of this edition is said to have been sold in 1901 to Mr. Herbert Dodd (Dodd, Mead & Co., of New York), and to have subsequently been disposed of by them to Mr. Buckler, then of the American Lega- tion in Madrid, and by him sold by auction in 1907 to Mr. Alfred J. Barton for 1,225 dollars. The purchaser declared Milton's signature to be a forgery, Dr. Aldis Wright being of opinion that it was that of Major John Milton of the City of London Trained Bands. See Daily News, 12 November, 1907, and 10 S. ix. 27. If the article in The Times of 13 December, 1907, be correct (which it probably is), the description of the book as a " Breeches " Bible is incorrect, and the book in question is that next described. 2. Genevan Version, London (Chr. Bar- ker), 1588, 4to. This formerly belonged to Mr. Alexander Howell. At his sale at Sotheby's, February, 1901, it was purchased by Mr. B. F. Stevens for 225?., probably for America ; but it was not included among the Miltoniana at the Grolier Club Tercen- tenary Exhibition. It is a quarto in black- letter. The poet's signature (" John Mil- ton ffeb 24 : 1654 ") is written on a piece o{ rough paper 3J inches by 1^ inches, pasted, inside the front cover. Underneath this are written " William Minshull, Nantwich " said to be a relation of Milton's third wife), and " Thos. Minshull, Middlewich." On he first fly-leaf are " Mary Matthews, Vliddlewich," and " Eliz. Mingham " ; on the second fly-leaf, " J. Mathews." At the ;op of the title of the New Testament is the ugnature "Elizabeth Milton 1664" 110 NOTES AND QUERIES. tns.iii.FKB.in9u. years after Elizabeth Minshull married the poet as his third wife). On the last leaf (imprint) are the names " L. Matthews," "W m Minshull," and " Eliz. Mingam 1730." On the fly-leaves at the end are "Elizabeth Minshull" and the following note : "Deo ye 27 1714 I gave this Book to my mother, the widow Mathews, but if she dyes before me, I desire that it should be Retorn to me againe. W m Matthews.'* There are two other signatures of the Mathews family and a pedigree of several of them (see ' Book-Prices Current, 1901,' pp. 298-9). Milton married Elizabeth Minshull 26 February, 1662/3, and after Milton's death in 1674 his widow retired to Nantwich, where her family lived. She died there in 1727. The signature Elizabeth Minshull on the fly-leaf at the end suggests that the book belonged to her before her marriage with Milton, and that his signature in 1654 (two years after his blindness became com- plete) must have been cut out of some document and inserted. The volume in any case has an interesting connexion with Milton. 3. British Museum Bible, London, Printed by R. Barker, 1612, small 4to. The first 4tp edition of the Authorized Version, printed in Roman letter. The entries in this Bible were published in facsimile with other autographs and documents, by order of the Trustees of the British Museum, on the occasion of the Milton Tercentenary, with a note : "Milton used this version, and not the Geneva Bible, which was the favourite version of the Puritans in general, and contested the supremacy with King James's version for a long time after the first appearance of the latter in 1611." The purchase by the Trustees of the British Museum of this Bible is noted at 6 S. x. 45 ; and the particulars as to Milton's pedigree are recorded at 7 S. vi. 253. 4. Authorized Version, London (? Robert Barker), 1613, small 4to. A copy of this edition with alleged autograph of John Milton was formerly in the possession of George Offor (2 S. xii. 233). This is probably the book next described. 5. Authorized Version, London (Robert Barker), 1614, small 4to. A copy with the autograph of " John Milton " on the back of the title-page of the New Testament was formerly in the possession of George Offor Above the name of Milton is the autograph of Robert Colecraft. Bound with this Bible is a Concordance, 1615, and on the reverse of the title is " Robert Colecraft," and in a very small hand, " John Milton " (2 S. iv. 334-5). Samuel Leigh Sotheby was of opinion that the second signature had all the appearance of having been written by a man at an advanced period of life and when blind, and that the writer was no other than the poet (' Ramblings,' 1861, pp. 128-9). This book formed lot 697 of the Catalogue of the sale of George Offer's books in 1865, and was, I believe, destroyed at Sotheby's fire on the second day of the sale. 6. Bible seen by Dr. Birch, 1749-50, who describes it as "in 8vo, printed by Young in 1636 " (Hunter, 1850, p. 34). There are 8vo editions by Young of Edinburgh dated 1633, 1637, and 1638, but neither Bohn's ' Lowndes,' the B.M. Printed Catalogue of Bibles, nor Cotton mentions one dated 1636. If 1636 be the correct date, Mary Powell would have been ten years old when it was published. The limitation of the family references to the births of Milton's four children by his first wife, its comparatively small size, and its being last seen in the possession of her granddaughter seem to corroborate the entry " I am the book of Mary Milton." 7. Bible mentioned by Thomas Kerslake in The Athenceum of 5 January, 1884, as of no value and as having been sold by him by auction. Kerslake states that it formerly belonged to Bishop Law, and that the name of Milton written in the book had no simi- larity to his known autographs. Now as No. 7 appears unworthy of con- sideration, No. 1 to be identical with No. 2, and No. 5 (destroyed by fire) to be identical with No. 4, only two Bibles associated with Milton are known to exist, viz., his own family Bible in the British Museum (No. 3) and that of his third wife (No. 2) ; while No. 6, seen by Dr. Birch, may still be in existence, although its whereabouts are not known. WYNNE E. BAXTER. NEWENHAM ABBEY, DEVON (11 S. iii. 70). From a note to p. 317 of Oliver's 'Monasti- con Diocesis Exoniensis ' it appears that the register formerly belonging to my grand- father afterwards belonged to Sir Thomas Phillipps, Bt. The book was published in 1846. W. WAVELL. Reform Club, S.W. LADY CONYNGHAM (11 S. ii. 508 ; iii. 37, 71). The ewer to which MB. JOHN LANE alludes at the first reference was included in the sale of the Marchioness Conyngham's collection at Christie's in May, 1908. It was not of crystal, but entirely gilt, and bore the n s. in. FEB. 11, MI.] NOTES AND QUERIES. Ill London hall-mark for 1618; the maker's name was F. Terry. This with the companion dish realized 4,200?., Messrs. Crichton being the purchasers. The ewer and the dish are both illustrated in the sale catalogue. A similar dish is at Windsor Castle, and is illustrated in the sixth edition of Cripps's * Old English Plate ' (frontispiece). There were also in the sale (4-7 May) several articles in rock crystal, notably a standing cup and cover with mounts of French workmanship of the early part of the seventeenth century ; this, which may be the article inquired after by MB. LANE, realized 1,900 guineas. An account of the collection appeared in The Times of 13 April, 1908. The Marchioness died on 28 November, 1907, and an obituary notice of her was published in The Times of the day following. She was the wife of the third Marquess. W. ROBEBTS. HOLWELL FAMILY (US. ii. 528 ; iii. 74). The best account of Governor Holwell (bapt. 23 Sept., 1711 ; died at Pinner, 5 Nov., 1798) will be found in Dr. H. E. Busteed's * Echoes from Old Calcutta,' 4th edition, 1900, pp. 47 sqq. (See also 10 S. ix. 370, 455, 518 ; x. 76). Holwell was a grandson of John Holwell, the mathematician and astronomer (see 'D.N.B.'), whose father and grand- father are said to have given their lives to the Stuart cause, which involved the loss to their descendants of an ample patrimony in Devonshire that had been in the family for generations. I am, however, a little sceptical with regard to these statements. I cannot find any Holwell recorded in Mr. Peacock's ' Civil War Army Lists ' as having held a commission in the King's forces, nor in the ' List of Knights and Gentlemen that have Compounded for their Estates. 1 Holwell was not a Visitation family, and Risdon does not include it in his list of the gentry of the county of Devon. I conclude, therefore, that the Holwells were a family of small yeomen, who may, of course, have suffered losses in the Civil War, but were not people of local importance. Holwell's great - grandson, Major W. A. Holwell, died at Toronto in October, 1890. I should like to learn something further of Edward and Bowes Walcot, both of whom are said by MB. W. JACKSON PIGOTT, and also by Burke in his * Landed Gentry,' to have survived the horrors of the Black Hole. Holwell in his ' Narrative,' in giving the list of survivors, mentions only an 41 Ens. Walcott," who was afterwards sent with Holwell and two others by Meer Muddun to Murshidabad, where they were put in chains and endured much misery. No one of the name of Pigott is mentioned by Holwell in his lists either of those who perished or of those who survived. W. F. PBIDEAUX. THACKEBAY AND PUGILISM (11 S. iii. 28). The article, in Temple Bar headed ' The Millers and their Men,' and signed " P.," may perhaps have been written by Robert Kemp Philp. My reasons for thinking so are, I fear, not very convincing. Philp, who was, at different periods, Chartist, journalist, editor, and author, sometimes wrote under the initial "P." His known works include such titles as * Walks Abroad and Evenings at Home,' * Natural History,' ' Physical Geography and Geology,' &c., and show him to have been a keen and intelligent observer ; but I am not aware of his ever having written anything on pugilism. He is best remembered by his ' Enquire within upon Everything. 1 W. SCOTT. DICKENS: " SHALLABALAH " (11 S. iii. 68). As a child (in the early sixties), I remember an old Indian who used to come round the houses in Thurloe Square beating a sort of tom-tom, which was hung round his neck, and crooning out some such word as the above. We always called him the " Shallabalah man." But I fancy he was a Hindoo, and not a Moslem. E. STUABT SHEBSON. "ELZE"=ALBEADY (11 S. iii. 25, 72). My note on this word was written, primarily, to register the fact that it still has currency, and is not a fossilized form resuscitated from ancient authors by the lexicographer. Secondly, it seemed apposite to show that the term in a specific meaning is not ade- quately considered in what is a generally approved edition of a standard poet. MB. WABBACK'S contribution has substantial supplementary value ; and PBOF. SKEAT'S etymological explanations are, as always, as welcome as they are satisfactory. THOMAS BAYNE. "PUCKLED" (11 S. ii. 526; iii. 78). Most readers at a first glance would probably understand this word as puckl-ed, the preterite of an unknown verb to puckle (like buckled from to buckle), akin to puckle (Old Eng. pucel), a diminutive of puck, in the sense of being possessed by a little puck. It is really, of course, puck-led, mazed or led astray by that mischievous imp Puck. The word survives in some of the Midland dia- lects. 112 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. m. F BB . n, mi. It is peculiarly interesting to me as helping to substantiate the explanation which 1 advanced in The Oxford and Cambridge Re- view (1910, pp. 86-93) of the difficult phrase " the mobled queen " (' Hamlet,' II. ii. 526). I there contended that mobled, or mdbled, is to be analyzed as mob-led or mab-led, led wandering by Mab, bewildered or bewitched, infatuated. There is as little reason to infer a verb moble from mobled as a verb puckle from puckled. A. SMYTHE PALMER. " DIE IN BEAUTY " (11 S. iii. 7, 74). The phrase will be found in Ibsen's ' Hedda Gabler ' ; see III. x. ; IV. v. in particular. It forms, as it were, a " Leitmotiv " of the action. I have no doubt that the present vogue of the expression is due to this play ; but whether Ibsen invented it or took it from some other source, I am unable to say. HEINBICH MUTSCHMANN. University College, Nottingham. It is, of course, true that in the third and fourth acts of ' Hedda Gabler,' Hedda is full of the idea of dying beautifully or gracefully ; but I do not find the exact 'English phrase in either the version of Mr. William Archer or in that of Mr. Edmund Gosse. Is its equiva- lent in the original Norwegian ? And if BO, what are the precise words ? JOHN B. WAINEWBIGHT. GAMNECOURT IN PICARDY : BARBARA DE BIERLE (11 S. ii. 429, 512; iii. 50). After J. B. P.'s convincing demonstration to the contrary, I can no longer maintain that John Erskine of Dun, the Reformer, was married to Margaret Keith My authority for the marriage was a foot-note in M'Crie's ' Life of Andrew Melville,' Edinburgh, 1819. M'Crie asserts that John Erskine of Dun, the Super- intendent of Angus, died "on the 16th of October, 1592, and in the eighty-second year of his age." In a foot-note he names his authority: "Act Buik of the Com- missariot of St. Andrews, Oct. 25, 1593, and Apr. 19, 1594." I transcribe the remainder of M'Crie's note : . , fixes his d eath, by mistake, on the 12th of March, 1591/2. He also represents him as ' leaving behind him a numerous posterity ' (' Hist.' 384). But his will mentions only ' his son and air and Margaret Erskine his dochter,' who were minors, and whose ' tuitioun, gydinjr & keeping ' he left to ' his weilbelovit spous Mar- garet Kaith thair mother.' 'The noble and potent Lord Robert Lord Altrie ' (probably Mrs. Rrskme s brother) was one of their ' tutouris testftmenUris/" M'Crie's 'Life of Melville,' vol. n. pp. 22-3. In the light of J. B. P.'s reply it will be observed that M'Crie was in error. He con- founded John Erskine, the great-grandson (known also apparently as " Erskine of Dun"), with John Erskine, the Superin- tendent of Angus. We may gather from the somewhat complicated details that John Erskine the Superintendent died in 1589/90 ; his son Robert in 1590 ; his grandson, John of Logie, in 1591 ; and his great-grandson John in 1592. Father, son, grandson, and great-grandson died within a period of four years. It may also be noted as curious that father, son, grandson, and great-grand- son, within about eighty -four years, were all of them married and had children by the time they had respectively reached their twentieth year. My thanks are also due to W. C. J., whose citations clearly show that Barbara do Bierle was the Superintendent's second wife. ScoTtrs. [Reply from MR. ERSKIICE WEST shortly.] GEOFFREY POLE (11 S. iii. 45). As the writer of the lines at 9 S. ix. 468, I am interested in MR. J. B. WAINEWRTGHT'S note. Geoffrey or Jeffrey Pole, fourth son of Sir Geoffrey Pole (d. 1558), is stated to have married Catherine, daughter of a Dutton of Dutton in the county of Chester, and to have had five daughters Jane, Catherine, Constance, Martha, and Mary and two sons, Arthur (slain s p. at Rome) and Geoffry (or Geoffrey), the latter still living in 1606, and then possessed of Wirehall in Cheshire. Sir James Pole, a descendant of Geoffrey Pole (living in 1606), is said to have forfeited Wirehall to King William. Sir James Pole had a brother Richard, whose son Richard was the father of three daughters Mary (wife of " Giles Taylor of Lvon's Inn, Gent."), Elizabeth (wife of Paul Green, a vinter of London), and Hannah (wife of Roger Maddock or Mannock, a shoemaker in Chester). My authority for these details regarding Geoffrey, the son of Sir Geoffrey Pole (d. 1558), is (p. 131) 'A Companion and Key ;o the History of England,' by George Fisher (London, Simpkin & Marshall, 1832). RONALD DIXON. 1 TIT FOR TAT ' (11 S. ii. 489 ; iii. 56, 76). The authoress of ' Tit for Tat ' was Jane Grace Smith (Mrs. Michael Edward Smith), as may be seen by the British Museum Catalogue. She is an entirely different Derson from the authoress of * Moscha Lamberti.' WILLIAM E. A. AXON. ii s. m. FEB. 11, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 113 THE VICTORY : EARLY SHIPS OF THE NAME (US. iii. 68). I quote the following note from the foot of p. 328, vol. ii., 'Eco- nomical History of the Hebrides,' by John Walker, D.D., Professor of Natural History in Edinburgh University, Edinburgh, 1808. The note occurs under the heading * Preserva- tion of Timber ' : " The Victory man-of-war was built in a hurry, after the battle of Blenheim, of unseasoned timber ; she therefore passed in the Navy by the name of the Green Bough ; and, though a most magnificent, was never accounted a trusty ship. Her loss proved a national disaster, which was ascribed by the most skilful seamen to this original defect." w. s. I have before me a few leaves of an old Britannic Magazine, on which is printed a list (taken from the Royal Library) of the English fleet, with the names of the ships and captains serving under Charles, Lord Howard of Effingham, Lord High Admiral against the Spaniards in 1588. No. 9 in the list is the Victory, a ship of 800 tons, and a crew of 400 marines, her captain being Sir John Hawkins. Possibly she was the first vessel known by that name. In an excellent series of articles entitled ' Ships of the Royal Navy,' pub- lished in The Hampshire Telegraph a year or two ago, and now in book form, AITCHO will find a very interesting account. The Victory wrecked off the Casquets, 4 October, 1744, is said to have been built in 1675, and rebuilt at Portsmouth in 1731 not 1721, as cited from Charnock by the querist. F. K. P. If AITCHO does not know of an earlier Victory than the one mentioned in 1703, he will be interested to learn that this fine old family name was one of honour in the Royal Navy so long ago as 1582. Many familiar names will be found in the short catalogue of the predecessors of the Dreadnought, Swiftsure, Triumph, Revenge, and others, given by Harrison in his ' Elizabethan England ' (Furnivall's edition, " Scott Library," p. 231). P. A. MCELWAINE. Dublin. " LOVE ME, LOVE MY DOG " (11 S. ii. 522 ; iii. 51). I am not surprised that objection is made to what I said at the first reference as to Aristotle's statement concerning the ages of dogs. WERNERINA (ante, p. 52) has been led astray by trusting to a poor translation of the Greek original. The whole passage is quoted by Samuel Clarke in his ' Homeri Odyssea, Grsece et Latine ' (6th ed., vol. ii., p. 126), under 11. 326-7 of the seventeenth book of that poem, which describe the death of Argos. The first sentence, to which a simple allusion was made, is important, and should have been given in full. " The male of the Laconian dogs lives ten years, and the female about twelve," says the philosopher. It will be noticed that he attributes greater longevity to the female. He then continues : " But most females [at TrAetcrrai] of other dogs live about 14 or 15 years, a few [cvtcu note the gender] even 20 ; wherefore some persons [rtves] think that Homer was correct when he made the dog of Ulysses [rbv Kvva TOV 'OoWcrews] die in his 20th year " (Aristot., ' De Hist. Animal.,' lib. vi. cap. 20). Being a dog, Argos could not have attained to such an age ; therefore Aristotle, according to his own teaching, could not have come to such a lame and impotent conclusion as the one he mentions. In Clarke's * Homeri Odyssea,' at the same reference as given above, is quoted the opinion of ^lian, who roundly declares that " the Argos of Ulysses and the story about him [the dog] seem to be one of Homer's puerilities." The same writer states that " the greatest age of a dog is 14 years " (' De Animal,' lib. vi. cap. 40). This must have been one of the instances Horace had in mind when he wrote Indignor, quandoque bonus dormitat Homerus. * De Arte Poetica, 1 359. JOHN T. CURRY. " Le Livre des Proverbes Frangais, pr6- ced6 de recherches historiques .... parJM. Le Roux de Lincy, seconde edition," fc _1859, has the following : Tome i. p. 170, in Serie No. IV. : Qui m'aime il aime mon chien. (Anc. prov., Ms.) XIII* siecle. (Prov. communs.) XV* siecle. " On dit qui m'aime aime mon chien." (Trlsor de Jeh. de Meung, vers 1,667.) XIII* siecle. Tome ii. p. 481 : Qi me eyme erne mon chen. The last is in " Appendice No. III. Pro- verbes de Fraunce, d'apres un manuscrlt de Cambridge du Corpus Christi College. (Extraits communiques par M. Francisque Michel.)" LZ1 The Latin " Qui amat me, amat & canem meum," is given in the ' Adagia ' of Erasmus and others, 1599, col. 1984. ROBERT PIERPOINT. 114 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. m. FEB. n, 1911. Is it St. Bernard of Clairvaux who sa,id, " Dicitur certe vulgar! quodam proverbio : Qui me amat, amat et canem meum " ? (St. Bernard, ' In Festo S. Michaelis, Sermo Primus, sect. iii. p. 102 b, vol. i., Parisiis, 1719, fol.) J. HOLDEN MACMlCHAEL. For MB. BBESLAB'S information (ante, p. 62) I make the following extracts from Chambers' s Encyclopaedia ' : " Wolves can readily be tamed when taken young, and then exhibit all the characteristics of domestic dogs " ; also : " The wolf's natural voice is a loud howl, but when confined with dogs it will learn to bark." N. W. HILL. WET HAY (US. ii. 469, 535 ; iii. 53). At the last reference a valued contributor to * N. & Q.' waxes facetious over the idea of wet hay being ever found in a dog-kennel. He fails to remember that ladies' lapdogs and shepherds' collies form but a small portion of the canine family ; that kennels such as those of the Beaufort and Quorn hunts were unknown at the time when Webster wrote his drama ; and that the saying " to live a dog's life anu die a dog's death " has become a kind of proverb expressive of the acme of human misery. SCOTUS. Hay is often damped for horses which have bad wind, to lay the dust present in almost all hay. Many people also sprinkle water on the oats or crushed beans. GALFBID K. CONGBEVE. Vermilion, Alberta. [MB. M. L. R. BBESLAB also thanked for reply.] IBISH BOOK OF REMEMBBANCE (11 S. iii. 70). "In 1783 Mr. J. Fitzgerald published the first 4 Cork Remembrancer'; in 1792 Mr. A. Edwards published the second ; the present attempt is the third. We believe our city has furnished the only examples of such compilations." [ take this extract from the preface to ' The Cork Remembrancer,' by Francis H. Tuckey, 8vo, pp. ex. + 352,' Cork, 1837, which has " a list of subscribers printed at the beginning." Could any of these be the work sought for by MB. ROBEBTS CBOW ? EDITOB ' IBISH BOOK LOVEB.' BELFAST REGISTEBS (US. iii. 70). I am afraid there are no registers of Belfast going back as far as 1677. The first Presby- terian Church was founded in 1672, but the first volume of its baptismal register has been missing since 1790, and has been advertised for several times without result. The second volume, commencing in 1757, is in existence, and has been printed in ' Historic Memorials of the First Presbyterian Church ' (Belfast, 1877, 4to), by Principal Gordon, now of Manchester. The parish church dates only from 1774. In R. M.^Young's ' Town Book ' (Belfast, 1892, 8vo) the names are given of the leading citizens in 1677, and they may perhaps be of assistance to your correspondent. EDITOB * IBISH BOOK LOVEB.' Kensal Lodge, N.W. EUSEBY CLEAVEB, ABCHBISHOP OF DUBLIN (US. ii. 489; iii. 53). See Misc. Gen. et HeraL, vol. ii. pp. 304-5, where the Arch- bishop's mother is given as Martha Lettice of Lushden, Northants no doubt a daughter of the Rev. John Lettice, who was Rector of Rushden in 1719. H. HOUSTON BALL. ROGEBSON COTTEB (11 S. ii. 489 ; iii. 53) was admitted to Lincoln's Inn, 2 August, 1766. His name appears in the ' Dublin Directory ' for 1794, but not afterwards, as of Grattan Street, Dublin, and Mallow, co. Cork. He married in 1794 Jane, widow of William Grady, and daughter of Richard Harrold of Limerick. H. HOUSTON BALL. ' A VOICE FBOM THE BUSH '(US. iii. 48). This piece was included in the "Miscel- laneous " section of ' Poems by the late Adam Lindsay Gordon,' which was published by A. H. Massina & Co. of Melbourne in 1884. There is some doubt whether all the pieces in this " Miscellaneous " section were from the pen of Gordon. The poem was not printed by him in the slim volume of ' Bush Ballads and Galloping Rhymes ' which was published at Melbourne in 1870. It un- doubtedly seems to reflect the unfortunate attitude of mind into which Gordon fell during his later years. The London pub- lisher of the book was Samuel Mullen, 48, Paternoster Row, and it frequently appears in second-hand booksellers' catalogues. The poem consists of fifteen stanzas, of which the first runs as follows : High noon, and not a cloud in the sky To break this blinding sun. Well, I've half the day before me still, And most of my journey done. There's little enough of shade to be got, But I'll take what I can get, For I'm not so hearty as once I was, Although I'm a young man yet. W. F. PBIDEAUX. ii s. in. FEB. ii, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 115 This poem is printed on p. 25 et seq. in 4 Australian Poets, 1788-1888,' edited by Douglas B. W. Sladen, and published in 1888 by Griffith, Farran & Co. Prefixed to the poem is a note explaining the incorrect attribution of it to A. Lindsay Gordon, and further stating that " its real authorship is well known among students of Australian literature ; and though the author wishes his name not to appear again, the poem is given as finally revised by him for ' Australian Ballads and Rhymes.' " L. A. W, Dublin. * A Voice from the Bush ' will be found in The Temple Bar Magazine, No. 150, for May, 1873 (vol. xxxviii.'p. 186). R. B. Upton. The poem * A Voice from the Bush ' was written by Mr. Douglas B. W. Sladen, though it has been printed among Adam Lindsay Oordon's poems. In 1888 it appeared in a corrected form, revised by the author, in the " Canterbury Poets " series, * Australian Ballads and Rhymes,' London, Walter Scott, pp. 1-5. The Table of Contents in that volume attributes the authorship to Mr. Sladen, who, though the editor of the collection, had not chosen to reveal himself. W. SCOTT. [In the fourth edition of * Australian Ballads and Rhymes,' edited by Mr. Sladen, the authority cited in the Contents for the poem is Temple Bar. In ' A Century of Australian Song,' also edited by Mr. Sladen and published by Walter Scott, the poem is entered in the Contents as " Anonymous, South Australia," and the South Australian Register is given as the authority. MR. PERCY ADDLESHAW, S. J. A. F., J. H. K., OLD SARUM, and C. L. S. also thanked for replies.] JEREMY SMITH, 1666 (US. iii. 70). In the 4 Calendar of State Papers, Domestic, June, 1660,' is a grant to Jeremiah Smith of the office of Keeper of Battles Walk, Windsor Forest. This Walk does not appear in Norden's map of the Forest. I have not at hand the works of either Hughes or Menzies on the Forest ; they might give some in- formation. FREDERIC TURNER. CHERTSEY CARTULARIES (US. iii. 70). G. A. K. will find that neither the Lansdowne MSS. 434-5 at the B.M. nor the "Ex- chequer Leiger" at the P.R.O. have been printed. Here is a good opportunity for one of those people who have a difficulty in dis- posing of their millions to do, or cause to be done, some useful and interesting work. At the beginning of Lansdowne MS. 435 is a portion of a fourteenth-century survey of Egham undertaken by John de Rutherwyk, Abbot of Chertsey ; it is a portion of a com- plete survey of the possessions of the abbey. This fragment I hope to publish myself before long. FREDERIC TURNER. Egham. SIR JOHN CHANDOS (US. iii. 25). In ' Le Prince Noir Po6me du Herault d'Armes Chandos,' edited by Francisque-Michel, London and Paris, 1883, is a note, p. 304, which says that Sir John Chandos, " son of Sir Edward Chandos, in the words of Du Guesclin * the most illustrious knight in the world,' served in the campaigns of 1339, was present at Crecy, Poitiers, Najera, and fell at the bridge of Lussac, 31 December, 1369 He was one of the founders of the Garter, and his plate is still remaining in the stall he formerly occupied in St George's Chapel." There is the following foot-note t "See Luce's Froissart, t. iv. p. 91. 324, and p. 322 ; and t. v. p. 28, 381. In Rymer's * Fojdera,' vol. iii. p. 343, is a deed of gift of two parts of the manor of Kirkeld in Lindsay to Sir John Chandos, for his good service at the Battle of Poitiers. " There is a paper by Sir Samuel Rush Meyrick in the Archceologia, vol. xv. pp. 484-495, and a more valuable one by Benjamin Fillon (Londres et Fontenay, 1856, 8vo. magno, 35 pages), which is illustrated by the signature and handwriting of Chandos, the signet of the Black Prince and James Audley, the seals of John de Creswell, Hugh de Calviley, Hugh and Geffrey Worresley, Robert Knolles and Thomas Percy, whose signature is given as that of John de Harpeden. " At the beginning of this century, the name of Chandos was recalled on the occasion of a law suit, which made a great noise and gave rise to Sir Egerton Brydges's papers (1822 fol.), and 'Chandos Family' (30 pages, 4to, no title. Reprinted from the ' introduction to Sudeley Castle *) ; to George Frederick Beltz's ' Chandos Peerage Case ' (London, 1834, 8vo) ; and to ' A Letter in a statement relative to the Barony of Chandos,' in the * Synopsis of the Peerage of England,' by Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas, London, 1841, pp. 14, 12mo." The stall plate of Sir John Chandos appears on plate iv. in ' The Stall Plates of the Knights of the Order of the Garter, 1348-1485,' by W. H. St. John Hope, 1901. It is " now in the twenty-first stall, on the south side of the quire. A cut-out plate, in admirable preserva- tion, representing the shield of arms, gold a pile aides, with silver helm, garnished gold, and covered by a red mantling with gold branches on the slittered ends and lined ermine. The crest, which rises directly from the helm without any torse, is a man's head silver icith sable hair and beard and a fillet vert. On a gilt scroll attached to the lower margin is inscribed : Mons' . John . Chandos : primer fondeur (Inscription in old English.) " 116 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. m. FEB. n, 1911. Chandos Herald thus records the death of Sir John : Et puis gaires ne demora Que Chaundos auxi trespassa Au pont de Lussac, bien savez. Line 3944. Without correction according to the errata, the reference is line 3974. According to the ' Dictionary of National Biography,' Sir John Chandos, wounded at the bridge of Lussac 31 December, 1369, died at Mortemar on the day following. ROBERT PIERPOINT. THE BLACK PRINCE'S LANGUAGE (11 S. iii. 7). There can surely be little doubt that the Black Prince spoke the language of Provence the language of Froissart and the troubadours. The French territory over which he ruled lay within the Provengal district, to the south of the Loire. Langue- doc, another name for the Provencal speech, la langue d'oc, was employed to distinguish it from la langue d'oil, or the dialect of Northern France. According to Prof. Saint sbury, Provencal was the language not oaly of Southern France, but also of Savoy beyond the Alps and Catalonia beyond the Pyrenees. " It altered less from the Latin [than the northern tongue], and was on the whole more like Spanish or Italian than French." I do not pretend to say what particular dialect is represented by the sentences quoted by MB. ALBAN DORAN, but would venture to submit that too much importance ought not to be attached to words which a modern writer of history puts into the mouth of his characters. SCOTTJS. SYBIL, QUEEN OF SCOTLAND : HER PARENTAGE (11 S. iii. 44). The new ' Scots Peerage,' which ought to be an authority on such matters, calls her Sybille Corbet. Are there any charters in Scotland which authorize this name ? SHERBORNE. Sherborne House, Northleach. In Table XVIII., headed ' Genealogy of the Kings of Great Britain surnamed Stuart,' in that curious work ' A Companion and Key to the History of England,' by George Fisher (London, 1832), the wife of Alexander I. of Scotland is given as " Sibylla, granddaughter of William the Conqueror " ; but in the body of the work (p. 232) it is stated that Alexander I., " surnamed the Fierce," died 1124, " leaving no issue by his wife Elizabeth, natural daughter of Henry I ^ EngJand " RONALD DIXON. 46, Maryborough Avenue, Hull. "WOODYER" (11 S. ii. 529). This word is not wholly obsolete in Sussex. I have heard it pronounced " woody -er." It i& equivalent to " woodman," and, as I know it, designates the man who looks after the undergrowth in a copse or wood mainly used for the cultivation of it. When the undergrowth is sold " standing," he sees that the woodcutters sent by the purchaser keep to their lot, do not infringe on the other less mature lots, do no damage to trees, &c. I am sorry it never occurred to me to send the word to Prof. Wright for the ' E.D.D.,' but it will now be rescued from oblivion. E. E. STREET. Chichester. I have heard men who worked regularly in the wood, " loppin', choppin', an' trim- min'," called both " wodyers " and " wood- yers," just as other workers with the saw in wood or saw-pit are sawyers. A man I knew who was a noted " thak-peg " maker was often called " a pegyer." There are folk in country places who naturally turn the terminal " er " into ** yer." THOS. RATCLIFFE. Woodyer is a family name, a form, says Bardsley, of the old " le Woodere," one who lives under the shade of a wood. C. C. B. [ScoTUS also thanked for reply.] " TERSE " CLARET (US. iii. 7). Does not this mean "neat," unadulterated claret from the imported wine-tun ? Many were the instances, at the time alluded to and long before, of the adulteration and mixing of wine, in which water played an important part. Cowel in his ' Interpreter ' (s.v. not "terse," but " terre tenant") says that " terse is a certain Measure of liquid things, as Wine, Oyl, &c., containing the sixth part of a Tun, 32 H. 8. 14, or the third part of a Pipe." And a tierce or terce is described by N. Bailey in his * Dictionary,' 1740, as a liquid measure containing 24 gallons. When we refer to Prof. Skeat (' Etym. Diet.,' 1901), we are informed that the word is from the Latin tersus, meaning " clean, neat, pure* nice, terse." J. HOLDEN MACMICHAEL. In Thomas Shadwell's comedy of ' The Humourists,' Act I. sc. i., Crazy says : " We that drink Burgundy, like Bay-trees, are green, and nourish all the year." In III. i. Friske says : " Drink a bottle of Rhenish and Sugar." But in IV. i., where Bricke requests Raymund to " stay a little and ii s. in. FEB. 11, ion.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 117 debate the business over a bottle of wine first," Raymund replies, somewhat taunt- ingly : " Must I stay, till the strength of Terse claret have wet yourself into courage ? " " Terse claret " was no doubt the red wine known by the name of claret, as it is stated by a wine merchant that it was not before 1750 that the first-growth claret, properly prepared and of proper age came to England from France ; so the term " terse " does denote a good quality of wine. TOM JONES. May I presume to suggest that SIR JAMES MURRAY has supplied the answer to his own query ? Terse is simply " tierce " (< (often simply " ti< spelt " terce " in old books, as, for example, in Boyer's ' French-English Dictionary,' ed. 1729), meaning a cask, of claret or any other wine, containing 42 gallons. If we substitute for terse the word " cask " in the three quotations cited by SIR JAMES, the sense of the different passages will be quite apparent. Thus in * Bellamira,' Act. II. sc. i., Merryman had imbibed so many gallons of wine that they amounted in the aggregate to several casks, consequently any jolt would have spilt a cask at a time, and not merely a gallon. W. S. 8. ADDERS' FAT AS A CURE FOR DEAFNESS <11 S. iii. 69). SCRUTATOR'S query puts me in mind that my mother had in her medicine cupboard possibly some sixty years ago a small phial of pinkish oil, which she said was viper oil for the cure of vipers' bites. It was extracted and pre- pared from the dead snakes by a man who plied the trade of ratcatcher and viper- killer in the neighbourhood. We were then living in Kent, about six miles from Dover. My mother could not say if the oil was efficacious, as she had never had experience of its use. EGERTON GARDINER. Adders' or any other fat may relieve temporary deafness due to an accumulation of hardened wax in the ear, and possibly the fat of adders may possess peculiar pene- trating and solvent properties. Certainly it has long had, and among country people still has, this reputation. I have often had dead adders brought to me in Lincolnshire under the impression that they still are, as they once were, included in our Materia Medica ; and I have seen them, preserved in spirits, in country chemists' shops, where they serve the same purpose as the " stuff 'd -alligators " of the old apothecaries. I do not know that their fat was ever recom- mended specifically for deafness, but it was much used in many cutaneous affections, and for dropping into the eyes to clear the sight. It is, says Alleyne (1733), "more penetrative and active than other oily sub- stances." For the subject of the viper in medicine see Wootton's ' Chronicles of Pharmacy.' C. C. B. The application of oil to the ear is some- times advisable in cases of deafness due to stoppage of the meatus. Adders' fat, being the produce of a reptile which is, proverbially, wilfully d.eaf, would be specially curative on the similia similibus curantur system, that was known by the folk-leech before Hahne- mann. ST. SWITHIN. The peasantry of the Home Counties (Berkshire, for example, where adders are more plentiful than in the Midlands) regard this fat as a safe cure for the poison of an adder's bite. I do not remember it in connexion with deafness. WM. JAGGARD. Avonthwaite, Stratford-on-Avon. EARLY BEEFSTEAK CLUB (11 S. ii. 445, 497). On referring to ' The Life and Death of the Sublime Society of Beefsteaks,' by Bro. Walter Arnold (1871), I find that the anonymous writer quoted by MR. HOLDEN MACMICHAEL is correct in assigning the date of the foundation of the Society to 1735. The book contains a list of " the original 24 members of the Sublime Society of Beefsteaks founded in the year 1735 by John Rich, harlequin and machinist at Covent Garden." This is confirmed by " Thormanby " in an article in Temple Bar for March, 1906, in which he repeats the date, but calls Rich " Henry " instead of John. The article is entitled ' The Laureate of the " Beef- steaks," ' and refers to Capt. Charles Morris of " the sweet shady side of Pall Mall " fame. I have other references to the Sublime Society (which must not be confused with the Beefsteak Club, or other sporadic societies), but can find none earlier than the foregoing. There was a Beefsteak Club in the reign of Queen Anne (Spectator, No. 9, 10 March, 1710/11): Dr. King dedicated his 'Art of Cookery ' to it. John Timbs in his ' History of Clubs and Club Life ' refers to several other Beefsteak Clubs. FRANK SCHLOESSER. 118 NOTES AND QUERIES. tn s. in. FEB. n, 1911. GRANGE COURT, ST. CLEMENT DANES (11 S. iii. 28). Mr. Canning, attorney, who lived next door to " The Grange Inn " in Carey Court, " facing Lincoln's Inn Play- house," offered in 1742 a reward of thirty shillings for the recovery of " a new superfine cloth Coat, of a light Colour, made Frock - Fashion, with little Stiffening, had a Roll Sleeve, a very narrow fall-down Velvet Collar, a Plait-behind, lin'd with Shalloon, and Silver Plate Buttons on when lost." Daily Advertiser, 25 March. Was not this Mr. Canning probably the un- fortunate father of the distinguished George Canning, who, when he came to London, entered himself of the Middle Temple, and was called to the Bar ? J. HOLDEN MACMlCHAEL. OWLS CALLED " CHERUBIMS " (11 S. ii. 505 , iii. 15). The likeness of the bird to the cherub is indicated by the fact that a well- known Oxford don secured nicknames from both. From Jowett's ' Life and Letters,' by Campbell and Abbott (1897), I gather (p. 66) that Mrs. Grote called Jowett " the cherub," and Mrs. Ferrier of St. Andrews " the little downy owl." HIPPOCLTDES. QUAKER OATS (U.S. ii. 528; iii. 75). I may be wrong, but I have always taken it for granted that the name owed its origin to the fact that the gentleman who introduced Quaker Oats to the public is a member of the Society of Friends. EGERTON GARDINER. SHIP LOST AT SEA IN THE FIFTIES (11 S. ii. 528 ; iii. 76). The vessel in which Thomas Hall, brother of the late Sir John Hall, Premier of New Zealand, left this country in 1852 was burnt to the water's edge and its passengers transferred to another boat. S. D. C. PAUPER'S BADGE (US. ii. 487 ; iii. 55). In Scotland the beggar's badge appears to have been enforced at an earlier date than the pauper's badge (referred to at the first reference) in England. Mr. Ingleby Wood in his ' Scottish Pewter- Ware and Pewterers ' says, p. 4, that in 1574 " an Act was passed requiring all deserving beggars to wear a pewter or leaden badge for the purpose of distinguishing them from the ' sorners and vagabonds,' as the undeserving were termed," and that the Scottish gipsies " did not hesi- tate to forge these badges for sale to other rogues and as a means of obtaining alms for themselves from the charitably disposed." A special chapter of Mr. Wood's book r pp. 115-21, is devoted to the subject of ' Beggars' Badges.' No. XXXI. of the very fine plates which adorn the book shows ten examples of the collection of beggars' badges- (many of them of pewter) which is to be found in the National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland, Edinburgh. Another collection may be seen in the Smith Institute, Stirling. G. L. APPERSON. A Quaker Post-Bag : Letters to Sir John Eodcs of Barlbrough Hall and to John Gratton of Many ash, 1693-1742. Selected and edited by Mrs. Godfrey Locker-Lampson. (Longmans &Co.) THE book before us is of unusual interest. Though the literature of the Society of Friends published in the seventeenth and " eighteenth centuries has long attracted attention, these letters are widely different from any of the others which are generally known. They reveal the ordinary domestic life of the Quakers in a manner not found elsewhere, and give the reader a clearly denned impression of the gentle and kindly characters of Sir John Rodes of Barlbrough Hall and his circle of friends. Ideas are, perhaps, too often repeated, for his correspondents were not invariably on an equal level of intellectual development with himself, some of them being, simple people who valued not only his sterling, goodness, but also his position as a baronet the only Quaker baronet in England, so far as. we know. Their admiration did not prevent them from speaking freely, however, when they considered that it was a duty ; and none of them was afraid of giving unasked advice. Living in an age when the tie of marriage was considered almost a necessity for every man of good repute r they constantly offered suggestions which in these days would be stigmatized as highly impertinent. Thomas Lawson, although he did not know Sir John by sight, evidently took great interest in his character and pursuits. He had heard 1 that the baronet was fond of plants, and seems to have credited him with a sympathy for botan- ists, since he draws attention to the fact that he himself has wandered in all directions in search of specimens, and further avows that he takes interest in antiquarian matters also, though botany is his chief study. The ardent desire he had to spread knowledge is proved by the fact that when George Fox, William Penn, and others became anxious to buy land near London for a " Garden School House " where all kinds of English plants and many foreign varieties were to be cultivated, Lawson determined to have a hand in the work. His project was to write a book in Latin for the use of the students, so that they might study the ancient language which they were intended to acquire, and at the same time learn something of the botanical specimens around them. Unhappily, this undertaking,. us. ni.FKB.li, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 119 which might have produced excellent results, was never carried out, though the Master of Christ's College, Cambridge, spoke of it as likely to "fill the nation with philosophers." It was probably hindered by some person or persons in authority, whose powers of thwarting the development of natural science are not dwelt upon. Among the letters of Henry Gouldney to Sir John Bodes is a most interesting document which is reproduced in facsimile, but is, we believe, on a smaller scale than the original. Its title is ' The Humble Address of the People called Quakers from their yearly meeting in London, the 26th Day of the Third Month called May, 1716.' It is well composed, but, we must confess, more flattering in the passages relating to what they called "unnatural rebellion" than we should have anticipated. We believe it to be a docu- ment of the greatest rarity, unknown to almost the whole of the Quakers of the present day. John Tomkins, who wrote many of the letters, had a wider range of thought than the majority of the correspondents. His account of the great storm of November, 1703, which must have been of tropical violence, should be consulted by modern meteorologists. It is not improbable that some passages in it give a better description of that tremendous gale than can be found elsewhere. IN The Fortnightly Mr. J. L. Garvin's political article bears the title ' From Reval to Potsdam,' and is largely concerned with the building and control of the Bagdad Bailway. Mr. Swift MacNeill in ' Foreign Policy and Parliamentary Control ' points once more to the predominance of the Cabinet in these latter days which is beginning to attract general attention. Mr. William Archer has an interesting account of ' The Portuguese Bepublic,' more favourable than some we have recently read, and very properly including some of the history which led to the Revolution. ' The Kaiser's Conquest,' by Bri- tannicus, points out that the German Emperor has returned to that style of speech which at the end of 1908 led to a period of discretion and reserve, and that the consequent campaign against him has failed this time to reveal a " determined popular opinion." ' Tolstoy's Last Days,' by Zinaida Vengerowa, is an exaggerated article which does not impress us in the least. Mrs. Woods adds here to her Cornhill articles one on ' Round Table Mountain ' ; and " G." gives an alarming account of the prevalence of ' Anarchist Propaganda in England.' At the end of the number we find two articles concerned with ancient Greece, for Mr. C. G. D. Roberts's ' Heliodore of the Myrtles ' gives a pretty picture of the lady as the chief love of Meleager, and Walter Lennard's fifth section ' In Search of Egeria ' introduces the amorist talking Sappho with a French lady. This section is obviously the work of an expert scholar, and, looking through the advertisements in this number, we notice that these clever studies are now revealed as by TMr. W. L. Courtney. IN The Cornhill for February Mr. Stephen Gwynn, M.P., has a lively article on ' Electioneer- ing in Ireland,' and Mrs. Woods's " Pastel " is ' By the East Coast,' beginning with Beira, and ending with Zanzibar. As usual, Mrs. Woods gives us a good deal of information in a pleasant style: Prof. G. H. Bryan in ' The Wastage of Men, Aeroplanes, and Brains ' points out that- flying in the air " has been developed in a one- sided way, and this on the most dangerous side." The conditions of stability have not been suffi- ciently considered by aviators largely innocent of mathematics. Mr. Marmaduke Pickthall has an excellent short story, ' The Tale of a Camp/ in which the servants of a party touring in Palestine take advantage of the conceit of the missionary who leads it, and make him do much of their work. The talk of the servants is par- ticularly vivid, but we should be glad to know what a " khawajah " is. Mr. F. E. Dugdale writes on ' Blue Jimmy : the Horse Stealer,* who was once famous in the West of England. Nineteen times he was brought before a judge, and the eighteenth trial, in 1822, was so lucky an escape for him that the wonder is he pursued his thieving after it. Unfortunately for him, he had the same judge on his last two appearances in court, and recognized in 1825 that his fate was sealed. Mr. A. C. Benson's study of ' Bishop Wilkinson ' retains the remarkable level of interest which his series of people who have in- fluenced him has had from the beginning. His subject in this case is a fine example of spirituality with whom *' personal relation with God " was wonderfully vivid. The new chapters of ' The Lost Iphigenia ' are both lively and arresting. We are rather disappointed with the literary competitions, which seem so far to afford little scope for critical power and much for mere industry. The Nineteenth Century has abundance of politics, with which we do not care to deal. Sir R. Anderson tackles ' The Problem of the Criminal Alien,' and suggests as an expert what common sense no doubt suggested to a good many persons lately that an alien anarchist living by crime ought to be allowed to go free only in virtue of a permis de sejour. He also thinks that the posses- sion of a revolver without a magisterial licence should be made a criminal offence, in order to put a stop to armed burglars. Dr. T. B. Hyslop writes with ample experience of lunatics on- 1 Post-Illusionism and Art in the Insane,' hinting obliquely at the Post-Impressionists. While his over-use of scientific words endorses his ex- rrience as a doctor, we do not gather that he inclined to admire symbolism or anything beyond photographic representation (which is hardly art) in the sane, and there are several " question -begging " adjectives in his clever dis- course. Canon Beeching on ' The Revision of the Prayer Book ' explains a question on which some misconception exists. Mr. Stephen Gwynn has a striking paper on ' The Writings and Opinions of General Sir W T illiam Butler,' a man who was admirable alike as soldier and writer. Of the remaining articles, that by the Abbe" Ernest Dimnet is by far the most interesting. He writes English with remarkable force and point, and explains the curious position held by the very able group who bring out the daily paper, Action FranQaise. Royalist, but not at one with official Royalism, this paper has a great influence on anti-Republic journalists outside Paris. The Abb<* contrasts this lively source of abuse, protest, and insolence with the inertness of the Radical majority in France. But, after all, it is always the defeated and dissatisfied minority that makes most of the epigrams and complaints. 120 NOTES AND QUERIES. [11 s. m. FEB. 11, 1911. BOOKSELLERS' CATALOGUES. FEBRUARY. MB. RICHARD CAMERON'S Edinburgh Catalogue 234 is again full of items of Scottish interest. We note Couper's ' Bibliography of Edinburgh Periodical Literature,' 1908, 10s. ; facsimile issue of the Kilmarnock Burns, 11. 5s. ; Drummond's 4 Old Edinburgh,' large folio, 18s. Qd. ; ' Edin- burgh in the Olden Time,' large folio, 15s. ; W. H. Murray's addresses at the Adelphi and Theatre Royal, Edinburgh, with memoir, 1851. 6s. Qd. ; Grant's ' Old and New Edinburgh,' 3 vols., 15s. ; Hogg's ' Jacobite Relics,' first edition, 2 vols., 1819-21, 11. 2s. ; Dunn-Pattinson's ' Ninety- First Highlanders,' 1910, 21. 2s. ; and a complete set of Wodrow Society Publications, 24 vols., 11. 4s. In the general portion are Baxter Colour- prints of ' The Ninth Hour,' after Dtirer, 1Z. 5s., and ' Copper, your Honour,' 16s. Qd. Under Phiz is an original chalk drawing of ' Little Em'ly,' 8J in. by 6 in., in frame, 11. Is. The first portion of Mr. Robert McCaskie's Catalogue 34 consists of books in general lite- rature. Under Portugal is Vertot's ' History of the Revolutions of Portugal.' Among Trials is that of Lord Cardigan for the duel on Wimbledon Common with Capt. Tuckett, 16 February, 1841. The second portion contains autographs, old deeds, and MSS. Among the autographs are those of Perry of The Morning Chronicle, Tadema, Lytton, Frith, the Young Pretender, Queen Adelaide, Henry Fawcett, and Allan Cunning- ham. Among documents are the regulations of the Common Council, 1801, for the " Nightly Watch and Beadles within the City of London." There is a broadside of the Whig Club, declaring the right of the English people to free public meeting, 1796. Under Old Engraved Portraits are 157 items. There are also a number of mis- cellaneous engravings. Mr. W. M. Murphy's Liverpool Catalogue 161 contains a complete set, 1842-1904, of the Pro- ceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, 167 vols., 221. 10s. ; and ' Harleian Miscellany,' 12 vols., red morocco, 1808-11, 81. 10s. Under Architecture is Fergusson's ' Handbook,' 3 vols., 11. 6s. Of railway interest is Bradshatc's Paihcay Companion, 32mo, original cloth, 3rd mo. 2nd, 1840, 11. 10s. Under Caricatures is Heath's Sketches,' early impressions, oblong folio, 21. 5s.; under Edward FitzGerald, the first edition of * Polonius,' Pickering, 1852, 31. 5s. ; under Illu- minations, Westwood's illustrations of the ancient versions of the Bible, 4to, half-morocco, 1863-5, 7Z. 10s. ; under Morland, Williamson's ' Life,' illustrations on Japanese paper, 1904, 21. 5s. ; under Scotland, Billings's ' Antiquities,' 4 vols., 1845-52, 31. 10s. ; under Addington Symonds, * Wine, Woman, and Song,' first edition, 1884, 21. 5s. ; and under Tennyson, the first collected edition, 2 vols in 1, Moxon, 1842, 31. Other entries include Wheatley's ' Cries of London,' 31. 10s. ; Whittier, 7 vols., 14s. Qd. ; and ' The Wilkie Gallery,' royal 4to, 19s. Qd. Under Cole- ridge are first editions of ' Biographia,' 1817 11. 15s., and ' Sibylline Leaves,' 1817, 11. 10s. both fine copies. Disney's ' Specimens of Ancient Bronze,' royal 4to, half-morocco, 1849, is 11. 10s. There are works under Liverpool and under United States Geological Survey. Mr. Charles J. Sawyer's Catalogue 24 contains under Campanology ' Tintinnalogia,' 12mo, crimson morocco, 1668, 31. 15s. The scarce first edition of ' Through the Looking-Glass,' 1872, is 21. 15s. Under Coloured Plates are the fifth edition of ' Dr. Syntax,' 1813, 4Z. 10s. ; the first edition of ' Life in London,' blue morocco, in the finest state, 1821, 10Z. 7s. Qd. ; ' The Tour of Dr. Prosody,' red levant, 1821, 4Z. 10s. ; and Pierce Egan, the original edition, red levant, 1825, 81. 10s. Under Dickens is the chair he used at his office in Wellington Street, 10Z. 10s. ; a snuff-box with coloured scene of Pickwick in bed at Dingley Dell, 11. 10s. ; and a set of first editions of the Christmas Books, 1843-8, 81. 10s. (the ' Carol ' and ' Battle of Life ' are second issues). Under ' Don Quixote ' is the facsimile of the rare first edition, 1605-15 (Barcelona, 1872-4), 3 vols., 4to, vellum, 31. 15s. Under Early Music is Neale's ' Pocket Companion,' Vol. I., containing 152 engraved pages of music and words of the songs, small square 8vo, 1725, 21. 2s. (according to the Museum authorities, this is the first issue of the first edition of this rare musical item). A brilliantly illuminated edition of ' Imitation de Jesus Christ,' Paris, 1856, is 12Z. 12s. La Fontaine is represented by the privately issued edition of the Society of Biblio- philists, this being one of ten copies in which the plates have been delicately coloured by hand, 2 vols., royal 8vo, 1906, 51. 12s. Qd. Under Lever is the first edition of ' That Boy of Norcott's,' 1869, 51. 5s. There are also handsome sets of Le Sage, Rousseau, Ruskin, Scott, and others. [Notices of other Catalogues held over.] WILLIAM LOFTIE RUTTON. Just as we go to press we learn with regret of the death, at 80, of Mr. William Loftie Rutton, a frequent and diligent contributor to our columns. The Tenth Series contains a number of contributions by him to London topography. THOMAS FORSTER. By the death of Mr. Thomas Forster, which took place at his residence, 68, Edinburgh Road, Walthamstow, on the 29th ult., aged nearly 71, ' N. & Q.' loses a reader of some 40 years, and an occasional contributor. Mr. Forster was the eldest son of Mr. John Forster, of Colchester, and afterwards of Islington. His great-grandfather was John Forster of Winteringham, a local poet of some repute, who died in 1809, and whose poems were published in two booklets in 1797. He also wrote a narrative of his own life. Thomas Forster was a life member of the Essex Archaeological Society, and more recently a member of the North London Anti- quarian Society. He was formerly a well-known bookseller in Colchester, and, apart from a brief period when he lived in Kennington, passed the last 10 or 12 years of his life in Walthamstow. CHAS. HALL CROUCH. in it is called a "grand serious pantomime,' r and he adds that "the scenery seems to have been unusually good." Williamson took the part of Capt. Cook in the Edin- burgh cast, but the names of the other players are not mentioned. Row TAY. MONTAGU G. DRAKE (US. iii. 29, 72). Montague Garrard Drake, Esq., of Sharde- loes, co. Buckingham, M.P. for Agmondes- ham in 1713, 1715, and 1727, and for the county of Buckingham in 1722, was son of Montague Drake and Jane, dau. and heiress of Sir John Garrard, Bt., of Lamer. He died 1728. See Burke's * Landed Gentry/ 4th ed. R. J. FYNMORE. GATAKER (U.S. ii. 409). No person of this name seems to have graduated in Dublin University at the close of the eigh- teenth century. The name does not appear in the catalogue of graduates of the Uni- versity from 1591 to 1868. The nearest approach to the name which I can find in the catalogue is Gattager, William, B.A. Vern. 1809. P. A. MCELWAINE. PRICKLY PEAR AND MONREALE CATHE- DRAL (11 S. iii. 87). MR. LANGTON will find this question discussed in Yule-Burnell's ' Hobson-Jobson,' 2nd ed., 1903, p. 732 ; and at 8 S. viii. 254. Another contributor (9 S. iii. 469) quotes a statement of E. A. Freeman, the historian, who identified the plant in the mosaics (Dean Stephens, * Life and Letters of Freeman,' vol. ii. p. 361). EMERITUS. In Prof. J. B. Bury's ' History of Greece r (published 1902), p. 21, there is figured a fragment of a richly decorated silver vessel found at Mycenae. On it is the representa- tion of a siege scene, in which the most conspicuous vegetation is a plant bearing a striking resemblance to the prickly pear. It has large, and apparently fleshy, leaves similar in shape to the prickly pear, sparsely covered with spines. Whatever the plant may be, it is very probably identical with that which MR. LANGTON saw depicted in the Biblical scenes in Monreale Cathedral. Per- haps some botanical reader familiar with the vegetation of lands bordering on the Mediter- ranean can tell us what it is. JOHN T. KEMP. ii s. in. FEB. is, MIL] NOTES AND QUERIES. 133 MB. LANGTON'S query may be explained plausibly by knowledge of the fact that what in English we call " prickly pears " are known in Italy as " prickly figs." They abound in the island of Capri, and often, on the voyage of 20 miles separating Capri from Naples, have I seen the Neapolitan sailors steep them in buckets of sea-water, and cautiously draw them out, to extract the thorns with a clasp knife, when the fig is cooling and refreshing. WILLIAM MERCER. JOHN DE COSINGTON (11 S. iii. 67). In a reply s.v. Guichard d' Angle (ante, p. 73) I referred twice, incidentally, to Stephen de Cosinton. His name appears three times (possibly oftener) in the book to which I there referred, viz., ' Le Prince Noir Poeme du Heraut d'armes Chandos,' Lon- don & Paris, 1883 : Apres furent li mareschaulx, Qui furent prodhomme et loiaulx. L'uns fut Stephen de Cosinton, Qui moult estoit noble person ; Et 1'autre le bon Guychard d'Angle. Line 2279. Sur la main destre fut Chaundos, Qui celi jour acquist grant los ; Estephenes de Cossyngtone, Johan Devereux, noble persone ; Et 1 fut li bon Guychard d'Angle. Line 3229. Monsieur Gwichard d'Angle fut mareschal, Et Estephen de Cosinton, qui ot coer loial. Line 4193. As to these three extracts see my reply, ante, p. 73. Without correction, according to "Errata" the last two references are 3259, 4223. Concerning the first extract there is an editorial note (p. 357) in the book referred to : " Stephen de Cosington we find first mentioned in the retinue of Henry, Earl of Derby, afterwards Duke of Lancaster, in the expedition of 1345. In 1349, he was appointed with Richard Talbot and John de Carleton to renew the oath of fealty in the towns of Flanders. In 1351, he was again appointed with Sir Frank van Hale, knight of the Garter, to treat with Louis, count of Flanders. In 1355, letters of protection were granted him, then in the retinue of the Prince of Wales. Letters of safe-conduct are again addressed to him, in paries transmarinas profecturits, dated the 16th April, 1364, and again on his going into Gascony, the 26th of June, in the same year. He appears to have been at Cre"cy, Poitiers and N&jera." I think that M. DE LATJRME is in error in saying that the village of Cosington is in Lincolnshire. There is, or was, no village of that name in Lincolnshire, according to J. Adams's ' Index Villaris,' 1680 ; Stephen Whatley's ' England's Gazetteer,' 1751 ; or Samuel Lewis's * Topographical Dic- tionary of England,' 1835. In Leicestershire there are, or were, Cossington, 2| miles S.E. by E. from Mountsorrel, and Coston, 7 miles N.E. by E. from Melton Mowbray. Also there is, or was, a Cossington or Cos- ton in Somerset, 4J miles N.E. by E. from Bridgwater, as well as Coston in Norfolk, 4 miles N.W. from Wymondham ; also Cossenton in Kent, N.W. from Maidstone ; also Coston in Salop. William Berry in his ' Encyclopaedia Heraldica ' (no date, circa 1830), vol. ii., con- cerning armorial bearings of families, gives Cossington, Az., a rose or ; Cosington (Hampshire), Az., three roses or. ROBERT PIERPOINT. Cossington is a local name both in Leices- tershire and Somerset, but I do not remember hearing of it in Lincolnshire. ST. SWITHIN. There is a manor of Cosington in Kent. Hasted (vol. iv. p. 434) says it gave both residence and surname to the family of Cosenton or Cosington. There was a John de Cosington, 5 Edw. II., of this family. R. J. FYNMORE. A family of this name was of some standing in Kent during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. Among them were John, John his son, and Sir Stephen de Cosington, all living in 1345. There were also Costin- tons in Notts. OLD SARUM. GUICHARD D'ANGLE (11 S. ii. 427, 472, 493 ; iii. 73). In the first reply on p. 472 Guichard is styled " d'Angle or d'Angolesme." It was long supposed that his name was derived from Angouleme, but Beltz, who investigated the family history, found that it was really derived from Angle, a small town near Charenton in Poitou. Guillaume d'Angle, great-grandfather of Guichard, was seigneur of Angle in 1220 (' Memorials of the Order of the Garter,' p. 182). Although Guichard died without surviving male issue, he was not the last male of the family, as he had a nephew, William d'Angle, to whom he left the lands which he had acquired or might acquire in France, and all his lands in England (ibid., p. 187). G. H. WHITE. St. Cross, Harleston, Norfolk. 134 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. m. FEB. is, 1911. BENJAMIN D'!SRAELI OF DUBLIN (11 S. iii. 28). The following extract from a list of the corps of yeomanry known as the Stephen's Green Cavalry, published, in Cox's Irish Magazine for November, 1814, may be of some use to J. T. : " Ben. Disrael, a Jew, a Lottery-monger, who made a fortune at the same period, that any man who could muster a quire of paper and an ink- horn, might become a Lottery-office keeper or a Gambling-house proprietor under that cover. He was cotemporary with Lefevre, the livery servant, Cash, the parish schoolmaster, Andrews, the primer merchant, Burton, the quill man, Williams, the stationer, who hanged himself, and M'llwrath, the bootboy, who all made fortunes by the same species of gambling. Ben turned Christian, was made a Justice of the Peace for the County of Carlow, and died about four months since." SEAMUS UA CASAIDE. Dublin. Benjamin Disraeli (not Disraeli) of Beachy Park, Carlow, was a rich moneylender and notary of Dublin (1788-96). He was also a prominent member of the Dublin Stock Exchange, held the office of Sheriff for County Carlow in 1810, and died in 1814. He was probably a member of a Huguenot family named Disraeli, resident in London during the eighteenth century, which was related to the Lefevres, Chaigneaus, and Col- villes, and therefore in no way connected with Lord Beaconsfield. ISRAEL SOLOMONS. 118, Sutherland Avenue, W. There are some municipal lottery tickets in the Science and Art Museum, Dublin, which appear to be signed by this gentleman. H. G. ARCHER. See 5 S. vi. 47 ; 7 S. iii., iv., v. Apparently the conclusion arrived at in 1887 (7 S. iii. 371) was that " the Dublin notary bearing these names cannot at present be affiliated to Lord Beaconsfield' s family." By his will, proved 3 October, 1814, he left 7,000?. to charitable purposes. R. J. FYNMORE. Sand gate. " CORBIE - STEPS " : " CORBEL - STEPS " : " CORBALSAILYE " (11 S. ii. 426). Jamie- son's ' Diet.' (Donaldson, 1887) has : " Corbalsailye, s. prob. parapets or other pro- jections corbelled out beyond the face of a fortified wall. V. Saillie. ' Licentiam edificandi castra, turres et for- tahcia cum januis ferreis, le battelling, corbal- sailye, barmkynnis et carceribus' (' Retr. Mas Sig., 1424-1513,' No. 1639). " Fr. corbeille, a corbel, andsaitfte, a projection ; like sa^ll^e de maison, an outjutting room (Cotgrave). Jamieson also has : " Saillie, Sailye, S filly, s. A projection ; out- jutting ; applied to a room, gallery, or other building projecting beyond the face of a house or wall. The saillie or sailye was a device to enlarge the rooms of hoxises built in the narrow streets and lanes of olden times ; specimens of which may still be seen in many of our large towns. It was adopted also as a means of defence in fortified castles, city walls, &c. ; and gave a massive, frowning appearance to the battlements. When so used, it was called a c.orbalsailye, O. Fr. saillie, a projection ; ' an eminence, jutting or bearing out beyond others,' Cotgrave. Fr. saillir, to go out, issue forth, project." TOM JONES. Where the edges of a gable-end, as in some Dutch-built houses, are not mere slanting right lines, but ascend by degrees to the apex, having the appearance of flights of steps in silhouette, the birds often perch upon them, and this was the explana- tion offered me of the term " corbie-steps " when I first heard it used in Scotland (Fr. corbeau ; O.F. corbel ; Lat. corvellus, dim. of corvus, a raven). I wonder whether, for an analogous reason, each separate upstanding block of a crenellated parapet is termed a " merlon " (merle = blackbird ) . The ' E.tXD.,' I see, has " crow-bawks," the projections of a gable-roof ; " crow- steps," see " crow's rest," a brick projecting from a chimney and cut to a slightly tapering cylinder. ETHEL LEGA-WEEKES. SWEETAPPLE SURNAME (11 S. iii. 66). Anne, eldest dau. of John Baddeley of Eller- ton Grange, co. Stafford, married " Mr. John Sweetaple," c. 1671, probably of London, where the lady had three uncles living, one of them an officer in the Regiment of Guards. They had several children surviving in 1713. ST. CLAIR BADDELEY. ANNE BOLEYN OR BTJLLEN : BULLEY FAMILY (11 S. iii. 8). The following excerpt from a ' Pedigree of the Bullen Family,' made by the late Rev. W. Croft? Bullen, and printed for private circulation, may be of interest to H. A. B. : " The first of the family came to England with William the Conqueror, and was known as ' De Boullan ' ; in a short time the ' De ' was dropped, and we find the name spelt ' Boulen,' and a little later ' Boleyn ' ; it was written on the wall of the Tower of London and spelt ' Bullien,' and is supposed to be so written about the time of Anna Bullen's death. In the year 1591 we find it spelt ' Bollen,' and in 1602 we find it spelt as at present ' Bullen ' (see Milla's ' Catalogue of Honor,' article on Boleyn), which is the same name as the original 'Boleyn 'of Henry VIII.'s reign, as is proved by the mention of the historic members n s. m. FEB. is, 1911.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 135 r>f the family being described in Shakespeare's play of ' Henry VIII.,' Act III. sc. ii. (Steven- son's edition, published 1803) ' I'll no Anne Bullens for him ' ; also in Lord Macaulay's History of England ' it is spelt Bullen." For the use of this pamphlet I am in- debted to my brother-in-law Mr. T. F. Bullen of Liverpool, a son of its compiler. The reverend gentleman claimed that he could trace his descent from the Earl of Wiltshire, father of the ill-fated Queen. In the pro- gramme of ' King Henry VIII.,' now playing at His Majesty's Theatre, the name is spelt Bullen. As the ' Patronymica Britannica ' regards the surname Boleyn as derived from the place-name Boulogne rather than from that of Bolein, Normandy (see 7 S. ii. 457), the form De Boullan is easily accounted for ; while in Stow's 'Annals' (1631) the ortho- graphy is " Boloigne "(IS. viii. 510). It has been suggested that Godefroi de Bouillon, son of Eustace II. Count of Boulogne and leader of the First Crusade, was a connexion of this family ; but on investigation I find this idea to be erroneous, inasmuch as the etymologies of " Bouillon " and " Boulogne " are distinct. The ety- mology of the former can be arrived at by examining that of the place-name Bouillon- ville (Meurthe), Which in 857 was called in mediaeval Latin. Baldofo villa, i.e., " the estate of Baudulf " (Bold Wolf) ; hence Bouillon is derived from Baudoin or Baldwin (Brave Friend),* which in turn is from the Teutonic band or bald, daring, courageous ; see ' Dic- tionnaire des Noms Frangais,' by L. Larchey, Paris, 1880. Moreover, the estate of Bouillon is situated in the eastern part of Brabant. On the other hand, Canon Taylor considered Boulogne (Bononia) a variant of Bolognia, derived from a Celtic word bona, which signified " town," as in the place-names Bonn, Ratisbon, Vindobona (Vienna), and Juliobona, later Illebona {Lillebonne, the article having been prefixed). As to the orthography of the surname of the physician and writer William Bulleyn of Elizabeth's reign, the ' D.N.B.' spalls it Bullein, and states that his medical work the ' Bulwarke of Defence ' was dedicated to Henry Carey, Lord Hunsdon, a kinsman of Queen Anne Boleyn ; so that he was in all probability a member of the Bullen gens, though this notion is scouted at 3 S. iv. 164. What appears to have misled philologists in regard to the origin of the surname is the * This derivation of the name seems preferable to that given by Miss Yonge in 'English Christian Names,' viz., "Prince Friend." fact that the Bullen arms are Argent, a chevron gules between three bulls' heads couped sable (see Appendix I. to ' The Grammar of Heraldry,' by Samuel Kent, London, 1716). This naturally gave rise to the assumption that the founder of the family was in early days called Bull. N. W. HILL. WATSON FAMILY AT MILNHORN AND BLACKLAW (11 S. ii. 527). As far as I can learn, there is in Scotland only one Milnhorn or Millhorn (in present-day spelling) a farm of that name being in the Perthshire district of Coupar-Angus. Blacklaw, how- ever, is a much more common name. There are Blacklaws in Banffshire, Forfarshire, Perthshire, Ayrshire, Lanarkshire, and Dumfriesshire. Blacklaw tower in the last- named county was formerly the property of the Douglases of Fingland. The Lanark- shire Blacklaw is notable as having been the residence of the famous Jenny Cameron, one of the heroines of the '45 rebellion. None of these Blacklaws, so far as I know, connects itself with the family of Watson. If, however, as seems possible, Millhorn was once their home, they may have migrated from it to some adjacent Blacklaw. On the whole, therefore, I am inclined to consider the Forfarshire Blacklaw, in the parish of Kinnell, to be the place inquired after. During the eighteenth century there were many Watsons in Forfarshire. Prof. David Watson, the translator of Horace, was a native of Brechin. There were other Watsons, possessing a voting qualification in the county, towards the end of the century. Blacklaw in Kinnell was not too remote from Millhorn in Coupar-Angus. W. SCOTT. There is a Blacklaw in Bendochy parish, East Perth, five miles N.N.E. of Cupar- Angus ; and also a village thus named in the parish of Linton, N.E. Roxburgh, four miles south-east of Kelso. J. HOLDEN MACMlOHAEL. Blacklaw is the name of a village close to Aberchirder in Banffshire. N. W. HILL. BATTLE IN LINCOLNSHIRE, 1655 (US. ii. 468). The note on the Ordnance Survey map about a battle in Lincolnshire in 1655 is in all likelihood a mistake. There were no disturbances in Lincolnshire in 1655, so far as ordinary histories record ; neither is there mention made at any time of a battle of Red Hill. May not 1655 be a misprint for 1643 ? During the latter year Cromwell 136 NOTES AND QUERIES. m a m. FEB. is, 1911. gained two victories in Lincolnshire. One of these, within about two miles of Grantham, forms the subject of the first of Cromwell's letters to appear in the newspapers. He chased the enemy for two or three miles, but no mention is made of a hill in the conflict. The other engagement, within two miles of Gainsborough, was fought on a hill, and one of the fields is said still to bear the name of " Redcoats Field." May not the latter, wrongly placed on the map, be the Red hill where the battle took place ? W SCOTT. There was a battle at Grantham during the Civil War, but the year was 1643, and not 1655. It was Cromwell's first victory, and was fought on 13 May, 1643. Informa- tion respecting it will be found in Carlyle's ' Cromwell,' letter No. 5 ; Kingston's ' East Anglia and the Civil War,' p. 112 ; Gardiner's ' History of the Civil War ' ; and Horton's ' Life of Cromwell,' p. 28, and other Lives. In 1655 Cromwell was Lord Protector, and though there were Royalist risings in that year, I fail to find any trace of another action at Grantham. Possibly the date on the ordnance map may not be correct. G. H. W. " GOULANDS " IN BEN JONSON (11 S. ii. 429, 532). I am afraid the Provencal gauch will not help us at all. There is no difficulty in accounting for the ow. As the ' N.E.D.' shows, the original form was gollan, whence goulan and gouland. Gowan resulted from the loss of I in goulan or gowlan ; this I is easily lost in Scottish, which has /a' for fall, and the like. I point out, in my ' Ety- mological Dictionary,' that the word is certainly Scandinavian, as so many Scotcl words are. I derive it from the Norse gul-r, yellow, Swed. gul, Dan. guul, Norw gul, gaul Observe the last of these forms But I have no objection to connecting it as the ' N.E.D.' suggests, with the word gold which is closely related to O.N. gul-r. The Norse for " gold " was gull, oldest forn goll, which io nothing but gold (or an older *golth) with the assimilation of Id (or Ith) into II. Hence was formed the adj. gullin golden, which is, practically, all we want The change from gullin to gollan raises no great difficulty. Gowan is parallel to the English golden, with ow for oil, and oil for old. That this is the easiest and most likely solution will appear to any one who will take the trouble to investigate the large number of flower-names with which the Icol. gulr is associated. Swedish has gul- sippa, yellow wood-anemone ; gul-torne, urze or gor.se, lit. yellow thorn ; gull-pudra, golden saxifrage ; gull-regn, laburnum ? ull-ris, golden-rod ; gull-traf, evening- )rimrose ; gull-vifva, yellow primrose ; and here are plenty more in Norwegian and Danish. WALTER W. SKEAT. The suggestion that gowan is derived rom the same root as Scotch gowd, gold, ill, I believe, have to be given up. The E.D.D.' regards the word as sprung from rael. gugan, a bud, flower, daisy ; though Jamieson is inclined to suspect -this as merely ,aken over from the Scotch vernacular. I ind, however, in Norman Macleod's ' Gaelic Dictionary ' the words gucag, a bell, bubble y drop ; sprout, bud, corolla of a flower ; and gucagach, bud-bearing, sprouting, clustered ; e in O'Reilly's ' Irish Dictionary ' occur gugan, bud ; gucog, sprout, bud, bell ; and gucogac, clustering, gowaned, which seems to justify the etymology advanced the ' E.D.D.,' the pronunciation of and g in Celtic being often very much alike. N. W. HILL. The children with me when we went " May blobbin " called the flowers " gowden gow- Lans," and when we made flowers into gar- lands these were " gowlans." On many a cottage " best room " there were " gowlans ". of birds' eggs hanging on the walls. Seldom was the word " garland " pronounced except " gowlan " that is, in the Derbyshire village where I was born. THOS. RATCLIFFE. AUTHORS OF QUOTATIONS WANTED (11 S. ii. 229). The words " Beatitudo non est divinorum cognitio, sed vita divina," about which L. S. M. inquires, are the heading of the second section from Porphyry's ' De Ab- stinentia Animalium,' given in Marsilius Ficinus's Latin translation on p. 296 of a volume printed at Geneva in 1607 that con- tains his version of lamblichus, ' De Mys- teriis,' his ' Excerpta ex Graecis Procli Com- mentariis in Alcibiadem Platonis primum,' &c. EDWARD BENSLY. LACY AS A PLACE-NAME (11 S. iii. 8). The suffix Lacy clearly has reference to a former owner, and may be compared with the suffix Lucy, found at Hampton-Lucy in Warwickshire. Hampton being a common place-name, this particular Hampton i& distinguished from other Hamptons by having the owner's name tacked to it. MR. SCHLOSSER will probably find that Polesden and Wilton were formerly part of the possessions of the Lacy family, though Camilla seems an* uncommon name, and ii s. in. FEB. is, ion.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 137 therefore the reason for the suffix in this instance is not obvious. Walter de Laci, one of the companions of the Conqueror, had possessions in Worces- tershire. Roger de Laci, his son, owned five manors in Worcestershire, as recorded in Domesday Book. Ilbert and Roger de Laci both held land in capite in England. But in Worcestershire the Lacy manors are not differentiated, though in Herefordshire we still have Holm-, Stoke-, and Mansel-. One of the best examples of this kind of place-name is to be found in Warwickshire, not far from Hampton-Lucy, where there are two Wellesbournes Wellesbourne Hast- ings and Wellesbourne Mountford parted by a small stream, the Wellesbourne brook. After the Conquest Henry de Newburgh, Earl of Warwick, owned both places, and he or his successors gave the one to Robert le Hastings, and the other to Thurston de Mountford, and since that time the two Wellesbournes have been distinguished by the names of their Norman owners. W. S. BBASSINGTON. Stratford-upon-Avon. Most of the many names of places (if not all of them) including Lacy such as Stanton-Lacy, Holm-Lacy, Ewyas-Laci owe their peculiarity to former ownership (1) on the part of Walter de Laci (d. 1085) and Hugh his son, or (2) of their collaterals in Yorkshire ; and (3) of the respective descendants of both branches of this illus- trious Norman family. Their name was taken from Lasci, a fief of the Bishops of Bayeux (cf. Lib. Rubeus, p. 646, R.S.). ST. CLAIB BADDELEY. If the annals of the various places having Lacy as the second part of their name are looked into it will be found that the lords of the manors at some period belonged to some branch of the Lacy family. Thus Hutchins, the historian of Dorset, says of the manor of Kingston Lacy in that county that "' it takes its additional name from Lacy, Earl of Lincoln, once lord of it." This mode of identificatior is frequently employed in Devonshire, more than 40 parishes being named on this principle. Thus we have Aveton Giffard, Compton Giffard, and Were Giffard ; Bere Ferrers anc Bere Alston ; Berry Narbert or Narbor and Berry Pomeroy ; Stoke Rivers, Stoke Fleming, Stoke Damarel and Sydenham Damarel ; Bovey Tracey and Newton Tracey ; Colaton Raleigh and Withycombe Raleigh, &c. THOS. WAINWBIGHT. Barristaple. The title of the query should have been ' Lacy in a Place-Name " ; for Lacy is not a place-name at all, but the name of a amily. In double names of this character Vilton Lacy means that a place called /Vilton was distinguished from other Wiltons >y connexion with the family of Lacy or ^acey. Nearly all such family names are Gorman. WALTER W. SKEAT. [MR. N. W. HILL, MB. TOM JONES, MB. HOLDEN VlAcMicHAEL, OLD SABUM, and ST. SWITHIN also hanked for replies.] OUNDLE (US. iii. 9). Speltf Undale in Birch, ' Cart. Saxon.,' i. 36, iii. 579, both imes in late copies of doubtful charters ; mt the spelling appears to be correct. The suffix seems to be the modern E. " dale." The prefix can hardly be English, and is more ikely Norse ; cf. Ouneby in ' Inquis. post Mortem,' vol. i. I guess Un- (or Oune-) :o represent Una, gen. of Uni, a. Norse name n Egilsson. If so. it means " Uni's dale." WALTEB W. SKEAT. The early form was Uridela. It occurs, as far back as anno 664, in a Peterborough harter (' Cart. Sax.,' 22). Mr. M'Clure, in his new book of * British Place-Names,' p. 23, suggests that it is " a worn form " of Avondael, situated near the confluence of the little river Avon with the Nene. EDWABD SMITH. Putney. Oundle appears originally to have been, according to Domesday Book, Undele, and over the door of the Grammar School House was formerly the following inscription : Uudellse natus, Londini parta labore Laxtonus posuit, senibus puerisq ; levaraen, which is thus rendered by Fuller : At Oundle born, what he did get In London with great pain, Laxton to old and young hath set, A comfort to remain. Sir William Laxton was the founder of the school. J. HOLDEN MACMICHAEL. [MB. TOM JONES, O., and MK. T. SHEI-HEBD also thanked for replies.] DBYDEN AS A PLACE-NAME (US. iii. 68). Dryden is a farm five miles south from Selkirk, on the main road between Edin- burgh and Carlisle. There is a dry dean, or small deep valley, on the farm, devoid of water, which probably accounts for the name, as in ancient times, when the district was all forest, and even at a somewhat later period when cattle-lifting went on exten- sively by raiders from both sides of the 138 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. in. FEB. is, 1911. English and Scottish border, this dry valley would be a useful place for hiding stock, besides being perhaps the most distinctive feature of the ground. The prefix also occurs in the district in such names as Dryloch, Dryhope, Dry- grange, Dryburgh, and Drycleuchlee ; but these names indicating a dry situation are few in number compared with the place- names in the South of Scotland indicative of mires and marshes, many of which have now disappeared by drainage operations. T. H. S. Edinburgh. The suggestion in the query that Dryden as a place-name was derived from the Drydanes who came across the border into Scotland is plausible, but not altogether con- vincing. As a family name, Dryden is by no means common in Scotland. As a place- name it is still more seldom to be met with. In 1868 there was a farm named Dryden in Roxburghshire, which has since been attached to Selkirkshire. Another farm of the same name was in Aberdeenshire. There was a Dryden House, unoccupied in 1868, and Dryden Mains, a farm at Roslin, evidently former possessions of the powerful family of Sinclair or St. Glair of Roslin. Drydenbank was nearer Edinburgh, and " Dryden' s groves of oak " are mentioned in Scott's ballad of ' Rosabelle.' Is it in the least probable that places so far apart should have derived their name from a somewhat obscure family settled in Scot- land in the fifteenth century ? Surely it is much more likely that Dryden is a local designation, signifying, as certain philologists affirm, " the dry valley." W. SCOTT. {MB. W. E. WILSOX also thanked for reply.] "STENCIL": ITS DERIVATION" (11 S. ii. 302). This word is probably from the Provencal ustensilho, ustensiho, estansiho, gear, tools, tinware, the perforated metal strainer of a pump. The last form of the word, from which the e would drop on passing out of Southern France, was probably due to the influence of estam, tin. The dresser on which the tin cups and plates of a farmhouse were displayed was the estagnie. A stencil-plate, being usually cut from tin plate, would be an estansilho rather than ustensilho. I have no record of the word, but will search for it. To " stencil " is to print a design with such a utensil, instead of doing it by hand alone. The term must have come direct from the South of France, as estensil or estencil, for ustensil, soon lost its first s in French, Spanish, and Italian (though keeping it in Portuguese), passing to EnglLh without it. But, curiously enough, " utensil " has, in spoken English, acquired a substitute for the lost s. Just as the original Provenyal word was modified by the influence of estam, so in barrack-English (its Indian variety at least) " utensil " has, probably under the influence of " uniform," become " unitensil." Forty years ago in India I frequently heard this word in barracks. The quartermaster of my brigade always spoke of the cook-house " unitensils." ' EDWARD NICHOLSON. Paris. HIGH STEWARDS AT THE RESTORATION : ROGER GOLLOP, M.P. FOR SOUTHAMPTON (11 S. ii. 488 ; iii. 17). I have before me a copy of a list of the Parliaments from 1640 to 1661, published 1661 by Robert Pawley, and "to be sold at his shop at the Bible in Chancery Lane." He gives (p. 65) as M.P.s for Southampton (borough) in 1659 " Thomas Knollys, Esq., and Roger Gallop [sic], Esq." Browne Willis ('Notitia Parliamentarian vol. iii. p. 293) gives the same names. ALFRED B. BEAVEN, QUEEN'S REGIMENT, SHEFFIELD PLATE DISH (11 S. iii. 70). "In Deo spero " is the motto of the De Saumarez family, but their crest is not a griffin. MATILDA POLLARD. Belle Vue, Bengeo. 0n The Bacchants of Euripides, and other Essays- By A. W. Verrall, Litt.D. (Cambridge Uni- versity Press. ) CLASSICAL scholars from the circumstances of their training ought to write better than the average man. This advantage in style is, however, not so common as might be expected, though one or two of our foremost scholars present their results with a charm and grace of language which should be obvious to readers. Dr. Verrall is one of this select body of specialists whom weiwould choose to read for mere pleasure. His work is always admirably lucid, irradiated with a fine sense of humour and character, and, in a word, eminently persuasive. To the present writer his Euripidean studies are more than brilliant theory, but, even if they were not, they would be delightful. In the essay on ' The Bacchants ' he approaches that fine and curious play from the point of view of Prof. Norwood, who has published a book on ' The Kiddle of the Bacchse.' The summary of the religion Euripides described in the play and his purpose in so describing it, is an admirable and eloquent piece of writing. Incidentally, we- ii s. m. FEB. is, ion.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 139 find some useful comment on the colouring which Prof. Gilbert Murray has skilfully attached to his verse rendering. The next article, ' The First Homer,' is re- printed from The Quarterly with modifications, and will be found an excellent brief view of a puzzling question. ' The Mutiny of Idomeneus ' is another Homeric study. Of the remaining articles the most striking are ' Rhyme and Reason in Attic Tragedy ' and ' Christ before Herod,' a study of the story as given by St. Luke, suggesting " that the case against the narrative is itself entirely mistaken, and rests, so far as it has any basis at all, upon a traditional misapprehension and misinterpretation of the statement impeached." This shows that Dr. Verrall, when he pleases, can make as strong a case for traditional views as he does as an innovator. The ' Rhyme and Reason in Attic Tragedy ' is a most ingenious inquiry, and, so far as we know, entirely novel. There is, it is contended, some purpose in such rhymes as xP &v and de&v, or such assonances as the use of verbs with similar endings. In such a composer as Euripides this phenomenon is deliberate, purposely uncouth, for rhyme and assonance in Greek are grotesque, and so abund- antly used by Aristophanes. Medea, " dis- tinguished in this (I think) from all other speakers in tragedy, thrice closes a speech upon a couplet with double assonance " ; and this fact alone would show that the assonance was intentional, and meant to represent, not the harmony of English linked sweetness, but a scream. So at the opening of the ' Philoctetes ' Sophocles is said to be suggesting the horrid noise of the agonized hero by dry/nous at the end of one line, and 8vas journey- ing northwards from London on one of the main railways, and as I was to have several hours of it, I had provided myself with an interesting novel, then in its zenith of popularity ' Vanity Fair.' My only com- panions in a first-class compartment were two nice old ladies, sisters, and during some hours together we had become mutually friendly. The acquaintance began by one of the ladies noticing the title of the volume I was reading : " You seem much engrossed with your book ; so were we when it came out first, for we knew the author well, and in his boyhood, when at Charterhouse, he often visited us in his vacations. He was a most charming boy, not only by nature, but also remarkably handsome, and, in those early days, noticeable by his beautiful aquiline features. We missed seeing him for a time, and then had him again for our visitor. But his features were so altered, we scarcely knew the handsome lad of former visits. We did not like to vex the boy, for his whole nature seemed changed, and we attributed it to mortification at the cruel injury to the main feature of his "One day he told us how it had happened. Being one of the youngest pupils, he was chosen by one of the older lads, a rather proud aristocrat in his way, to act as his fag. Thackeray bore it as well as he could, but demurred to some more arbitrary command than usual, and flatly refused to obey. Whereupon the young ' aristocrat ' caught Thackeray up, held his head under his arm, and, with the heel of his boot used as a hammer, beat the beautiful aquiline nose quite flat with his face ; in fact, breaking and injuring its structure completely the excuse being ' You '11 clean my boots next time, sir.' " The lad was completely cowed ; he had only been in the school a short time, and had no friends ; so he bore the punishment, but it seemed to change his nature, and the ladies said that the cynical, satirical spirit so remarkable in his writings of later years, they always attributed to this horrible treatment in his childhood. Thackeray in later years made much fun of his broken nose, comparing his to Michael Angelo's, whose beauty had been spoilt by Torrigiano's mallet ; but that was a more dignified tool than the heel of a snob's boot. JOHN WABD. [The usual account says that Venables broke Thackeray's nose in fair fight.] JOHN BOXALL. BOXAI/L'S life in the ' D.N.B.' (like that in Mr. Gillow's ' Bibliographical Dictionary ' > does not seem to be quite accurate : "He took orders, but abstained from exercising the functions of his ministry during the reign of Edward VI." As to this, it appears from Dr. Frere's- ' Marian Reaction,' p. 255, that he received all orders up to the priesthood in June, 1554,. in London. " On Queen Mary's accession he was appointed her majesty's secretary of state, dean of Ely,, prebendary of Winchester, and warden of Win- chester College (1554)." He did not become a Secretary of State before March, 1557, and was not sole Secretary of State before April, 1558 ; and he was never Dean of Ely, nor, so far as would appear, Prebendary of Winchester. Again, the ' D.N.B.' states that he was " appointed prebendary of York " in 1558. This also appears to be an error. He resigned the Wardenship of Winchester College in 1556, and the deanery of Norwich in 1558. These resignations are not recorded in the ' D.N.B.' On Queen Elizabeth's accession Boxall wa deprived of all his offices, including (it would seem) nine ecclesiastical preferments, viz., the deanery of Peterborough (to which he was appointed in 1557), the deanery of Windsor (1557), a canonry at Windsor (1558), the prebend of Newington in St. Paul's Cathedra] (1558), the prebend of Grantham in Salisbury Cathedral (1558), the archdeaconry of Ely (1556), the first stall in Ely Cathedral (1554), the rectory of Hatfield, Hertford- shire (1554), and the prebend of Ilton in the diocese of Bath and Wells (the date of his appointment to which is unknown). Some of these preferments find no mention in the ' D.N.B.,' which also omits to record that he was committed to the custody of Archbishop Parker, 2 November, 1559 1 . Thence he was transferred a close prisoner to the Tower, 18 June, 1560. His imprison- ment there was relaxed 6 September, 1560, to the extent of his being allowed to meet three of the other prisoners at meals. It would seem that he fell ill, and was offered ii s. in. MAR. 4, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 163 the choice of going into the custody of Arch- bishop Parker again or into that of Bishop Grinlal, and that he preferred to remain in the Tower. On 15 September, 1563, the plague then being prevalent in London, and it being thought well to remove the prisoners for religion from the Tower, Boxall was com- mitted to the custody of Archbishop Parker at Bekesbourne in Kent, being made to pay for his board and lodging. He was there a prisoner 3 June, 1564. In October, 1 567, he was still in the Archbishop's custody, although it had been in some ways relaxed. In a letter to Bullinger dated 10 August, 1571, Parkhurst writes that he " died at Lambeth, where also Thirlby. . . .died before him " ; but Parker says that he had allowed him to go in his illness to a friend's house in London, where he died. The date of his death is variously given as the 3rd or 4th of March, 1570/71. JOHN B. WAINE WRIGHT. SIR CHARLES HANBURY WILLIAMS, SIR WOODBINE PARISH, AND THOMAS CARLYLE. The recent publication of ' A Life of Sir Woodbine Parish ' by his grand-daughter, the Hon. Nina Kay Shuttleworth, reminds me that I have in my possession an interest- ing volume that was formerly in the library of that distinguished diplomatist, and bears his book-plate. This volume is made up of extracts from the third volume of ' The Works of Sir Charles Hanbury Williams,' 1822 (pp. 61-109, 208-40, and i-lxxxi), together with a MS. account of the Court of Vienna contained in a letter from Sir Charles Hanbury Williams to the Duke of Newcastle, which extends to 55 octavo pages. This letter is undated, but as Sir Charles was in Vienna in 1752, it was ascribed by Sir W. Parish to that year. The volume is prefaced by the following note : " This volume contains some Memorials written by Sir C. H. W ms relative to the foreign Courts and Countries where he was employed on H. M y ' 8 Diplomatic Service Saxony, Poland, Russia. " The poems which formed the remainder of the publication are only remarkable for their in- decency, and have been cut out. " The MS. account of the Court of Vienna has never been published. W.P." Before the MS., which is not in the hand- writing of Sir Woodbine Parish, is the follow- ing note by him : " The following Despatch is copied from one furnished to Sir .George (afterwards Earl) Macart- ney on his proceeding on his Special Mission to Russia in 1766 in my possession. W. Parish." At the end of the volume the following letter is inserted : St. Leonard's, April, 1865. DEAR BLAKISTOX, I have long intended send- ing yo>j this Volume, w h contains an unpub- lished despatch of Sir Chas. Hanbury Williams to the Secy of State the Duke of Newcastle in 1752, giving a very interesting account of the Court of Vienna at that time, thinking it would be of interest to your friend Carlyle ; but I fear now it will arrive too late to be of any use to him,, seeing that he has completed his great Work, but you may send it to him, and he is quite at liberty to take a copy of it, if he wishes for it. Yrs- sincerely, WOODBINE PARISH. Carlyle wrote the following remarks on the blank page of this letter : " I have not taken any copy: but feel greatly obliged to Sir Woodbine Parish for his goodness. "It is pity the letter were not dated ; the real year of it must be 1753 (not '2) ; and to German readers the chief novelty in it is Hanbury's complete mistake as to the real purposes notions and position of Kaunitz in regard to the matters handled between them. Sharp political spectacles on Hanbury's part, on Kaunitz's a perfect cloak of darkness ! T. C. (Chelsea, 11 May)." W. F. PRIDEATJX. THE GREEN PARK LODGE. So little seems to be known about the Deputy Ranger's Lodge in the Green Park that the following unpublished facts about it, from the Pitt Papers (P.R.O. bundle 139), may be useful to London topographers. They were written by Lord William Gordon, who was the brother of Lord George, and who had made the town talk by bolting with Lady Sarah Bunbury a few years before. Dating from " Green Park Lodge," 20 April, 1789, he wrote : " Lord William Gordon presents his compli- ments to Mr. Pitt, and sends enclosed a statement of his situation as Deputy Ranger of the Parks, and wishes very much that Mr. Pitt would take the first opportunity of mentioning it to his Majesty. Lord William begs Mr. Pitt to recol- lect that his Majesty was graciously pleased to give him a grant of the premises upwards of ten years ago, and Lord William would wish to obtain a permanent grant of the same, including the House, for such term of years as might be thought reasonable, instead of holding it on the present precarious terms. As Lord and Lady William are extremely anxious on this subject, they wish to know as soon as possible the result of the application which they flatter themselves Mr. Pitt will make to his Majesty on their behalf. " [The application :] Lord William Gordon is bound to pay to the Hon. Mr. Shirley 400 per annum during the life of Mr. Shirley. In consequence of the above agreement Mr. Shirley resigned his appointment of Deputy Ranger to Lord William Gordon. The above arrangement was previously laid before his Majesty, who was graciously pleased to approve it. Lord Oxford, as Ranger, also approved it, and appointed Lord William Deputy Ranger in consequence. 164 NOTES AND QUERIES. en s. in. MAR. 4, 1911, " In addition to the 400 per annum paid to Mr. Shirley since the agreement was made (now upwards of ten years), and which in any event must be continued to be paid during his life, Lord William has expended upwards of 8,000 upon the premises. The reason for so doing and lor granting the annuity of 400 to Mr. Shirley was on the faith of Mr. Shirley's assurances that the Deputy Banger was never moved from his house and office, but which assurances Lord William had lately reason to think would not have iDeen of much avail. Under these circumstances Lord and Lady William Gordon natter them- selves Mr. Pitt will not think them unreasonable when they request him to state their hopes to his Majesty that they may receive a grant of the house and premises for such term of years as his Majesty under all circumstances may think reasonable. ' Lady William had meantime also written about the case on 1 April to Dundas, who was a great friend of her husband's sister-in- law the witty Jane Maxwell, Duchess of Gordon. I may add that a steel engraving of the Lodge appeared in The Lady's Maga- zine of the period. J. M. BULLOCH. 118, Pall Mall, S.W. BERKSHIRE CHURCHWARDENS' ACCOUNTS, c. 1800. The following particulars are taken from the churchwardens' account- book, 1796-1847, of the parish of South Moreton, Berks. The most noticeable ex- penditure was for the destruction of sparrows and vermin, which in one year came to 31. 19s. Qd. In May, 1798 (e.g.), 429 sparrows, or sparrow-heads, were paid for at the rate of 2d. a dozen ; polecats and hedgehogs brought 4d. each ; weasels, 3d. or 4d. ; stoats, 3d. ; and one " wheratt," 3d. Per- haps the last was a ferret, but the word only occurs once. (The spelling has all the pleasing variety of untrammelled genius.) No rats are mentioned. Probably these payments ceased when compulsory church- rates were abolished. The Holy Communion was celebrated four times a year, at Easter, Whitsuntide, Michaelmas, and Christmas, for which the bread and wine cost II. 2s. doubtless 4 bottles and 4 loaves. There are entries of '" washing the cloths for the altar," showing that the last word was regarded as usual and proper. Sometimes " up " is written '" op," which is the local pronunciation to this day. W. C. B. ANNA HOWE AND CHARLOTTE GRANDISON. The similarity between the character of Anna Howe in Richardson's ' Clarissa Har- lowe ' and of Charlotte Grandison in his * Sir Charles Grandison ' has often been referred to by his biographers (Austin Dobson, 'Samuel Richardson,' p. 158, and C. L. Thomson, ' Samuel Richardson,' p. 205). Both Anna Howe and Charlotte Grandison treat their not very manly lovers, Charles Hickman and Lord G , in much the same free and rude way. It has, how- ever, not been pointed but that Richardson himself has called attention in an interesting passage to the close similarity between the two characters ('Sir Charles Grandison,' i. 341, ed. 1902). Harriet Byron writes on this subject to Lucy Selby : " Lord G appeared to advantage, as Sir Charles managed it, under the awful eye of Miss Grandi- son. Upon my word, Lucy, she makes very free with him. I whispered her, that she did. A very Miss Howe, said I. To a very Mr. Hickman, rewhispered she. But here 's the difference. I am not determined to have Lord G . Miss Howe yielded to her mother's recommendation, and intended to marry Mr. Hickman even when she used him worst." This is the only passage in the body of his novels in which Richardson refers to his own works. The difference noted by Char- lotte Grandison between Anna Howe and herself does not afterwards exist, as she later on accepts Lord G . The first one to point out the similarity between Anna Howe and Charlotte Grandi- son was Lady Mary Wortley Montagu in a letter dated 20 October, N.S., 1755. She had read the first two "tomes" of 'Sir Charles Grandison ' before 22 September in the same year. It seems that Lady Mary discovered for herself the similarity between the two characters, and was not thinking of the passage in Richardson quoted above. Anna Howe and Charlotte Grandison are severely condemned by Lady Mary ('Letters,' ii. 290, ed. 1893) : " His Anna How [sic] and Charlotte Grandison are recommended as patterns of charming pleasantry .... Charlotte acts with an ingratitude that I think too black for human nature, with such coarse jokes and low expressions as are only to be heard among the lowest class of people." The only expressions used by Charlotte Grandison which Lady Mary could have considered " low " are the following : " I '11 be hanged if Miss Byron thinks so, re- whispered she." ' Sir Charles Grandison,' i. 285. "Come, come, get us some breakfast....! don't choose to eat my gloves .... Hang ceremony, said she, sitting down first, let slower souls com- pliment : and taking some muffin, I '11 have breakfasted before these pray, madams, and pray, my dears, are seated." lh., i. 301. The various bibliographies in the works on Richardson do not mention Lessing's account of his novels, which may be read in Karl Lachmann's edition. Lessing did not object to Charlotte Grandison, for he refers ii s. in. MAR. 4, MIL] NOTES AND QUERIES. 165 to her and Harriet Byron as " junge Frauen- zimmer von guter Erziehung, und munterer Gemiitsart " (vol. vii. p. 399). Some excellent remarks on the influence of the characters of Anna Howe and of Charlotte Grandison on the English novel are to be found in a work by Wilhelm Dibelius entitled * Englische Romankunst.' H. G. WARD. Aachen. CAPT. COOK MEMORIAL. Now that the long outstanding debt of Britain to its great sailor is about to be paid by the erection of his statue in the Metropolis, I may call to mind, as a possible stimulus to subscribers, the way his achievement and death impressed the imagination of his con- temporaries in England and on the Continent, as shown by one or two of the monuments, less individual than a statue, which were raised in England and France to comme- morate his voyages. That these should have sometimes taken the form of tombs, tablets, and memorials in gardens was in the taste of the time, which had lately brought to the highest pitch of poignancy the Sentimental Farm of Southcote at Woburn and the Jardin Larmoyant of Shenstone at the Leasowes. In Lord Temple's gardens at Stowe, for instance (where Nelson was later com- memorated by a seat and a walk), a monu- ment to the memory of Cook was erected on one of the small islands, in what was called the Grotto River. The pedestal supported a terrestrial globe, upon which are delineated the equatorial, tropical, and other lines, with the following inscription : Te maris et terrse numeroque carentis arena; Mensorem. 'Twas thine to track the Ocean's endless round, Each distant shore and Earth's extremest bound. And in the die at the pedestal was inserted a medallion of Captain Cook in marble and under it a tablet Jacobo Cook MDCCLXXVIII. In the Garden at Mereville (erected by La Borde, and engraved in his ' Nouveaux Jardins de la France') was raised " Le Tombeau de Cook " (in macabre rivalry to the real tomb of Rousseau on the Isle of Poplars at Ermenonville), with bas-reliefs of savages, broken columns, and funerary urns ; but the monument was less truly a tribute to Cook than to La Borde' s two sailor sons, shipmates with La Perouse, the great French circumnavigator, who perished in the South Seas in 1788, but whose fate was only definitely ascertained in 1828. At Chalfont St. Giles, Admiral Sir Hugh Palliser, Lord of the Vache, erected a brick building with a pedestal in front of it to Captain James Cook, " the ablest and most renowned navigator this or any other country hath produced." It is right that Cook's statue should be? set up immediately after that of General Wolfe ; for Cook, when Master of the "Mercury" and not yet a Naval Lieutenant r took the soundings in the St. Lawrence, and made a chart of the river below Quebec, which must have materially contributed to the success of Wolfe's landing at the Cove named after him and of his victory on the Heights of Abraham. An obelisk, 100ft. high, stands upon a hill in the Park at Stowe, inscribed to Major-General Wolfe: Ostendunt terris hunc tantum Fata. The Fates but shew him to the world. February 14, St. Valentine's Day, is the anniversary of Cook's death in 1779. A. FORBES SIEVEKING. 12, Seymour Street, W. BAPTISMAL SCARF. At the baptism of Earl Fitz William's son and heir at Went- worth Woodhouse on llth February we are told that " the babe was borne to the chapel wrapped in the famous Norman scarf presented to an ancestor by William the Conqueror. This scarf has played an important part in the christening of Fitzwilliam heirs for centuries. It has a, romantic history. An ancestor of the Fitz- williams was Ambassador at the Court of William of Normandy, and attended the Conqueror on his expedition to England in the year 1060. Sir William Fitzwilliam displayed such conspicuous bravery at the battle of Hastings that the Con- queror unfastened a scarf from his arm and pre- sented it to him in recognition of his valour." Eastern Morning News, 13 Feb. When Sir Robert Southwell was at Milton in 1684 Lord Fitzwilliam showed him " the antiquities of his family, amour: whom the last twelve have been called Williams. They have affected this name from William Fitzwilliams, who entered with the Conqueror, and being Marshal of the Lamp [an error for Camp] in the famous fight of Battle Abbey, the Conqueror gave him his own scarf in reward of his prowess- that day. This scarf they preserve sacred, and by custom lay it over the face of all the male children when christened." ' Calendar of Or- monde MSS.,' N.S. iv. 594 (1906). W. C. B. SNEAK. The * Century Dictionary ' gives a quotation from * Rode- rick Random ' in illustration of the meaning of scout as a spy, a sneak, but it would seem to have t been of decidedly earlier use. In the * Acts of the Privy Council of England, 166 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. m. MAB. 4, 1911 Colonial Series,' vol. ii., 1680-1720, p. 607, is given a petition dated 25 July, 1709, of John Sober of Barbados, " forced to leave the island, his business and family, by an unjust prosecution forced againsMiim by the Governor," Mitford Crowe. In an affidavit Sober said that " he was so exasperated by the indecent and unbecoming manner in which the Governor behaved to his wife and sister that he declared that, though he must respect her Majesty's Oovernor, if Mr. Crowe had been a Private Man, lie would then have said he was a scout and a ficoundrell." ALFRED F. BOBBINS. SIXTEENTH - CENTURY RULES FOR SER- VANTS. In The Repository, a weekly review of literature, science, and belles lettres, published by F. Virtue, at 26, Bath Street, Bristol, during 1827 (18 issues only, appar- ently), I find a set of rules for servants in a sixteenth- century country house. The rules are stated to have been framed by John Harington in 1566, and renewed by his son John Harington in 1592, the year in which he was High Sheriff of Somerset. He was the Elizabethan poet and wit of whom an account is given in 'D.1ST.B.,' and Kelston, near Bath, was his home : Imprimis, That no servant bee absent from praier, at morning or evening without a lawfull excuse, to be alleged within one day after, vppon paine to forfeit for euery tyme Id. II. Item, That none swear any othe, vppon paine for euery othe, Id. III. Item, That none of the men be in bed, from our Lady-day to Michaelmas, after 6 of the clock in the morning ; nor out of his bed after 10 of the clock at night ; nor from Michaelmas till our La,dy-day, in bed after 7 in the morning, nor out after 9 at night, without reasonable cause, on paine of 2d. V. That no man's bed be vnmade, nor fire or candle-box vnclean, after 8 of the clock in the morning, on paine of Id. VII. Item, That no man teach any of the children any vnhonest speeche, or evil word, or othe, on paine of 4d. VIII. Item, That no man waite at the table without a trencher in his hand, except it be vppon some good cause, on paine of Id. IX. Item, That no man appointed to waite at jny table be absent that meale, without reasonabel cause, on paine of Id. X. Item, If any man break a glasse, hec shall aunswer the price thereof out of his wages ; and if it bee not known who breake it, the butler shall pay for it, on paine of 12d. XI. Item, The table rmist be couered halfe an houer before 11 at dinner, and 6 at supper, or before, on paine of 2d. XII. Item, That meate be readie at 11, or XIII. Item, That none be absent, without leaue or good cause, the whole day, or any part of it, on paine of 4tf. XIV. Item, That no man strike his fellow, on paine of loss of seruice ; nor reuile or threaten, or prouoke another to strike, on paine of I2d. XV. Item, That no man come to the kitchen without reasonable cause, on paine of Id. XVI. Item, That none toy with the maids, on paine of 4d. XVII. That no man weare foule shirt on Sunday, nor broken hose or shooes, or dublett without buttons, on paine of If7. XVIII. Item, That when any stranger goeth hence, the chamber be drest vp againe within 4 howrs after, on paine of Id. XIX. Item, That the hall be made cleane euery day, by eight in the winter and seauen in the summer, on paine of him that should do it to forfeit Id. XX. That the cowrt-gate bee shutt each meale, and not opened during dinner and supper, without just cause, on paine the porter to forfeit for euery time Id. XXI. Item, that all stayrs in the house, and other rooms that neede shall require, bee made cleane on Fryday after dinner, on paine of forfeyture of euery one whome it shall belong vnto, 3rf. All which sommes shall be duly paide each quarter-day out of their wages, and bestowed on the poore, or other godly vse. CHARLES WELLS. 134, Cromwell Road, Bristol. STICKLAC. The following appears to be an early instance of the use of this substance, as well as of the word itself. Lac, it is well known, is the resinous substance produced mainly upon the Ficus Indica, or Banyan tree, by the Coccus Ficus or Coccus Lacca, sticklac being the substance in its natural state. The earliest mention I find of its use in this country, apart from the newspaper quotation given below, is in Rees's ' Cyclo- paedia ' : " The price (of lac) in Dacca, in 1781, says Mr. Kerr, was about 12*. the hundred pounds weight, although brought from the distant country of Assam." But among other commodities to be sold by auction in 1742 (Daily Advertiser, 23 Jan. of that year), was " six hundred weight of Sticklack." J. HOLDEN MACMICHAEL. YEWS IN CHURCHYARDS. Some little time ago the subject of churchyard yews was discussed in ' N. & Q.' The following information is taken from ' Le Folk-Lore de France,' by P. Sebillot, iii. 406. The yew is the consecrated tree (Farbre consacre) in Breton graveyards, where ordinarily there is only one ; it is said that it shoots out a root into the mouth of each of the dead. In Poitou the grave-yards are in general before, at dinner ; and 6, or before, at supper, on in - *;*<* '"* paine of Gd. I planted with walnut-trees, some of those of ii s. in. MAR. 4, MIL] NOTES AND QUERIES. 167 Cotentin with thorns. Not long ago apple- trees were still to be seen in certain grave- yards of High Brittany which lay round churches ; it was the same in Normandy, .and the authors of the vaux-de-vire make allusion to the antiquity of the custom. P. W. G. M. floras. WE must request correspondents desiring in- formation on family matters of only private interest to affix their names and addresses to their queries, in order that answers may be sent to them direct. BETHLEM ROYAL HOSPITAL. I am com- pleting my ' History of Bedlam,' and should be glad of information from any readers of ' N. & Q.' I have been unable to trace the whereabouts of a picture by Hogarth, who painted the exterior of Bethlehem Hospital in Moorfields ; and I cannot find in the Museum Print-Room caricatures by Gillray of Fox and Burke in Bedlam (1784 and 1789). E. G. O'DoNOGHUE, Chaplain. " GENTLEMAN " : " ARMIGER " : " PRIVI- LEGIATUS." - In Foster's 'Alumni Oxoni- enses ' the fathers of some of the alumni are described as gent., of others as arm. What distinction of meaning is here intended between gentleman and armiger ? And what does privileciiatus mean in such entries as the following ? " Adee, Ed- mund, toiisor ; privilegiatus 18 July, 1740." BLADUD. . JFor armiger see the references cited in the torial note at 10 S. vii. 109.] HONORARY DEGREES AT CAMBRIDGE. I am informed that until some not very distant date there was a practice at Cambridge of conferring honorary degrees on all applicants who could prove a connexion or relation- ship, direct or collateral, with the Royal Family. I should be glad to learn if this was so in fact ; and, if so, how long the custom lasted, the nature of the degree, whether there was any special name by which such degrees were known, and whether any list of the recipients is accessible. ALAN STEWART. TENNYSON'S 'FLOWER IN THE CRANNIED WALL.' Where was Tennyson's poem, * Flower in the crannied wall,' &c., pub- lished ? It is quoted in Sir Norman Lock- yer's ' Tennyson as a Student,' &c., with an apparent reference to ' Amphion,' but it is not there. It is not mentioned in Brightwell's Concordance. It is quoted in 'N.E.D.' s.v. " Crannied," but without the reference -a very unusual thing with the ' N.E.D.' H. N. ELLACOMBE. Bitton Vicarage, Bristol. [The " Eversley Edition " of Tennyson (1908), ' Poems,' vol. ii. p. 376, has a note saying : " [First published in 1869. ED.] The flower was plucked out of a wall at ' Waggoners Wells ' near Haslemere." On the other hand, according to Mr. T. J. Wise's ' Bibliography of Tennyson,' privately printed, 1908, vol. i. p. 214, the little poem first appeared in ' The Holy Grail, and other Poems ' (1870). It now appears just before the ' Experi- ments ' in metre. The reference in Sir N. Lockyer's book, " p. 240," clearly refers to the one- volume edition of Tennyson, and on that page the poem will be found.] ALIEN PRIORIES : THEIR CHARTTJLARIES. Many alien priories and similar institutions possessed estates in England. Presumably the chartularies of some, it not of all, of these institutions have survived and their present location is known. Which of these chartul- aries have been printed, and where in England may these publications be seen ? In regard to the English estates, they must contain much material for the local historian otherwise unattainable. J. HAMBLEY ROWE. M.B. GOODBETER : ITS LOCALITY. In a re- cently published Danish MS., the diary of a young man of science, Holger Jacobseus, during his European travels and studies, 1671-92, he alludes to his visits to London and Oxford. From the latter he made a trip to Bristol, a two days' journey, through Farringdon and " Mecksfyld " (Marshfield ?), where he mentions stopping for the night at Goodbeter," some village, evidently, in Berkshire or Wiltshire. What place-name is hidden under this form ? W. R. PRIOR. SMALLPOX AND THE STARS. A seventeenth- century poet wrote a poem to one suffering Tom smallpox, comparing the pock-marks stars and constellations. What is the reference ? A. S. P. SHERSONS OF ELLEL CRAIG AND LAN- ASTER. Can any correspondent of 'N. & Q.' refer me to books (such as county histories or other antiquarian works) in which there is mention of this family ? They were at one ime hereditary constables of the Castle of Lancaster, I believe. They intermarried with the Nowells of Read. I want informa- ion before the eighteenth century. I know 168 NOTES AND QUERIES. en s. m. MAR. 4, 1911. the 4 History of Whalley.' Are there anj Shersons living in Lancaster now or in anj part of the County Palatine ? I shall be grateful for any notes on the family, as ! have not the opportunity to make persona investigations on the spot. E. STUABT SHERSON. 39, Victoria Street, Westminster, S.W. " CACKLING CLOUTS " occurs in Ford's 'Vagabond Songs and Ballads,' Second Series, p. 175 : Forth spake the mither when she saw The bride and maidens a' sae braw, " Wi' cackling clouts, black be their fa', They've made a bonnie cast o't." " CARPILLIONS " occurs in ' Poems in English, Scotch, and Gaelic on Various Subjects,' by John Walker, farmer, Luss, 1817, p. 89: Whan storms come rattlin' frae the east, An' wife an' wee things apt to dozen, We're oft obliged to stop a lozen, An'carefully collect some rullions. Like hose, or breeks, or auld carpillions, Without regard to mode or form, But just to screen us frae the storm. "GAINSHOT" occurs in Sir T. Dick Lauder's ' Moray Floods of 1829,' 3rd ed , pp. 316-7 : i!, The north Esk . overspread the large bleach field at Craigie Mills, which was covered with cloths and yarn, rose to the height of 3 feet in the mill, and, if it had not been for a rampart raised by the people at the gainshot, by risking their lives, the whole works might have been swept n.\xrniT T^Vn-k >-w /- v * J ,-.4-,-, j J_T T ^ . away The proprietor measured* "the^height ; the gainshot of the mills, and found of the water at cue ^UJIISHUL 01 i/ne mnis, an jt 7 feet 2 inches above the ordinary level." " HUNNIN' PIN " occurs in Lauder, on. cit , p. 100: " I then teuk for the grun', an' drappit down on a wee bit spat [i.e. spot], where I fand an auld cupple log, which Hugh had bought for fire. I heezed it up. There was a hunnin' pin in't, and that was like a stap, an' sae I gat a' doon, praised be the Lord ! " " KINCHIE " occurs in James Ogg's Glints i' the Gloamin ' (1891), p. 41: " Hi ! Bodkin, what cheer ? " Said the Kinchie wee man Wi' a comical kin' o' leer.. " SUFFLEE " occurs in Isaac Brown's Renfrewshire Characters and Scenery,' reprinted in Motherwell's ' Poetical Works'' 1881, p. 3 : ''Mr. Brown was a manufacturer of Lappets, Suffices, and Foundations or. as ordinarv people would call him, a Muslin Manufacturer." May I ask information as to the meaning of the above words ? ALEX. WABRACK Oxford. PHYSICIAN'S CANE. I understand that down to about the beginning of the last century physicians, when visiting patients, suffering from infectious diseases, carried with them, as a safeguard against con- tagion, walking-sticks in the hollow heads of which was cotton wool saturated with Marseilles vinegar or other antiseptic. Can, any of your readers, therefore, say whether the stick in my possession is a genuine " physician's cane " ? It is a hazel with a natural round head. This is hollowed out, and at the bottom are several perforations. Over these holes (in the inside of the cavity) is a piece of gauze, and also inside near the- top are two perforated brass discs. The lid or plug is a well-fitting circular piece of wood, with a round hole in the centre. JOHN LINN. Kirkliston, West Lothian. SAMUEL BYROM was the author of ' An Irrefragable Argument, fully proving that to discharge Great Debts 5^ less injury and more reasonable than to discharge Small Debts,' 1729. Is anything known of him besides what can be gleaned from this pamphlet ? G. F. R. B. LATIN HEXAMETERS BY MACHINERY. From a volume of American essays published in 1867 I extract the following extraordinary passage : " Twenty years ago [1847] there was exhibited in London a machine which made excellent Latin hexameters. The unfortunate inventor had spent thirteen years in perfecting 'The Eureka,' as he called it. It actually ground out hexameters lik* hose of Virgil." I remember as a boy watching the famous '* Automaton " at the Crystal Palace playing ;hess against all comers. Was this verse- making machine constructed on similar ines ? Are there any records of its doings extant ? M. L. R. BRESLAR. RICKETTS : GOODWIN : JOHNSON. Capt. William Ricketts of Bluefields Fort, Jamaica, m. Mary, dau. of Goodwin, and grand- daughter of Sir Francis Goodwin of Winchen- don, Bucks, by his wife Elizabeth, dau. of Sir Arthur, 14th Baron Grey de Wilton, K.G. Mrs. William Ricketts, nee Goodwin, d. 16 April, 1750 (not 1758, as stated in Burke's Commoners ' and ' Landed Gentry '), being hen aged 96. Her dau. Rachel m. Thomas Johnson, ^/ieut. R.N., and had issue an only surviving on Jacob Johnson of Springfield, Jamaica. These Johnsons of Springfield used the armorial bearings of the family of Johnson ii s. m. MAR. 4, ion.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 169 of London and Walthamstow, but had tradition that they were of the same family as Sir William Johnson, Bt., created 1755 The latter family, however, is known to hav< sprung from a branch of the O'Neills o Ulster. I shall be glad if any of your readers can help me to substantiate the alleged Good win descent of Mrs. William Ricketts, anc also aid me in tracing the ancestry o Thomas Johnson, R.N. ERSKINE E. WEST. Cowper Gardens, Dublin. FREEMAN : BEAUCHAMP : LAWRENCE. In the reign of Charles I. were living two conspicuous members of the Freeman family, bearing the same Christian name and title : 1. Sir Ralph Freeman of Aspeden, co Hertford, Clothworker, was Lord Mayor oj London 1633. His elder brother William had been chosen Sheriff at the same time with himself, but, excused for ill-health, died 1623, aged 68. Ralph's only child and heir. Jane, married Sir George Sands of Lees Court, Throwley, Kent. 2. Sir Ralph Freeman, Master of the Court of Requests, and Master of the Mint, was seised in 1619 (as I learn from a deed in the Brooking-Rowe Bequest to Exeter Public Library), together with William Freeman and Ralph Freeman, all of London, Esquires, in a fulling mill (i.e., cloth factory), messuage, and land, in Buckfastleigh, Devon. A " Sir Ralph Freeman of London," according to Risdon, " lately had a lease " of the manor of Ashburton in the same county. In 1600 Martin Freeman, citizen and Fish- monger of London, and Christopher Freeman, of Heigham Ferrers, co. Northants, sold the manor or mansion-house of Flaunchford in the parishes of Reigate and Buckland, Surrey, with lands, messuages, &c., lying in the parishes and hamlets of Reigate, Buck- land, Horley, Leigh, and Betchworth. " Shortly after " 1631, Samuel Freeman 11 of Mailing " (near Maidstone, Kent) went to New England. He is supposed to have been a brother of Edmund Freeman, born about 1590, who, leaving his mother resident in Reigate, went over in 1635, was co-founder of Plymouth Colony, of which he became assistant governor in 1641, and a large land- owner in Sandwich, Cape Cod. He was " a man of consideration in England," "brought with him much valuable plate," and "presented the colony with twenty corselets or pieces of plate -armour." He acted, it is said, as confidential agent of the Merchant Adventurers, and corresponded with Mr. John Beauchamp, a London merchant who had married Edmund's sister, and who lived (at any rate for a time) with the motiher in Reigate. In 1649 Beauchamp wrote to Edmund's son-in-law in New England notifying him that he was " sending out Cloth and Bibles" to him, and mention- ing "my brother Coddington " and "my brother William Freeman." While not wishing to trouble any one for references to standard printed works, I should be glad to learn of any modern com- pilations or private records that might yield connecting links between the above-named persons, or between them and the Lawrence family, through whom one of the Sir Ralphs is found to be descended from progenitors of the George Washington. ETHEL LEGA-WEEKES. G. RUMNEY, OR ROMNEY, RECUSANT. Wanted the parents, wife, and children of George Rumney or Romney, recusant, mentioned in Westmorland and Cumber- land (Queen Eliz.), and of St. Clement Danes parish, London (James I.), when an order was made for his property to be estreated into the Exchequer, 1611. What property ? Was Lancelot Romney of Yanwath, West- morland, his brother ? George Romney' s cousin was Andrew Hilton, recusant and martyr, of Burton in Warcop, whose mother was Anne, dau. of Gilbert Wharton, or Isabel Barton of Orms- head (Ormside), Appleby. A cousin of Hilton's was the Rev. James Warcop, and an uncle Rev. Nich. Pulleine. MRS. LAW. SIR W. ROMNEY, LORD MAYOR. Are any descendants living of Sir William Romney, Haberdasher, Lord Mayor of London, who died 1611 ? His son William (also knighted, [ think) married Margaret Bo water, and lad a son William, a little boy in 1633. The Lord Mayor's grandfather Robert Romney was of Tetbury, Gloucestershire. Who were lis parents ? MRS. LAW. ROMNEY FAMILY AND LORD LIFFORD. 'n 17 a Romney is said to have been brother to Lord Lifford. How was this ? MRS. LAW. THOMAS BARROW, ARTIST. Are any descendants living of Thomas Barrow, artist ? He lived last at Southall, Middle- sex, and died, I think, about 1820. His daughters were Mrs. Kennal and Mrs. Ann Walker. MRS. LAW. 44, Upper Mall, Hammersmith, W. 170 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. m. MAR. 4, 1911. SlMON PlNCEBNA AND WESTMINSTER. Hals in his ' History of Cornwall ' states that Henry III. granted Lanherne in Cornwall to Simon Pincerna " in consideration that he, the said Simon, had enfeoffed the. said King Henry with the lordship and manor of St. James at Westminster." Is anything more known of this trans- action, and if so, where can I find an account of it ? Where may I find genealogical particulars of this Simon Pincerna and his forbears ? J. HAMBLEY ROWE, M.B. [Much information concerning the Pincernas is supplied at 10 S. ii. 90-92.] " B E Z A N T." (11 S. iii. 107.) THE Bezant was a popular festival formerly held on Monday in Rogation week in the town of Shaftesbury, so ancient that no authentic record of its origin exists. It was a formal acknowledgment on the part of the mayor, aldermen, and burgesses of the borough to the lord of the manor of Mit- combe, of which Enmore Green forms part, for the permission to use the water of that hamlet. No charter or deed exists among the archives of the town as to the com- mencement of the custom, neither are there any records of interest connected with its observances beyond the details of the expenses incurred from year to year. On the. morning of Rogation Monday, the mayor and aldermen, accompanied by a lord and lady appointed for the occasion, and by their mace bearers carrying the Bezant, went in procession to Enmore Green. The lord and lady performed at intervals as they passed plong a traditional kind of dance to the sound of violins ; the steward of the manor meeting them at the green, the mayor offered for his acceptance, as the representative of his lord, the Bezant, a calf's head uncooked, a gallon of ale, and two penny loaves, with a -pair of gloves edged with gold lace, and gave permission to use the wells for another year. The steward, having accepted the gifts, retaining all for his own use except the Bezant, which he graciously gave back, accorded the privilege, and the ceremony ended in a dinner given by the Corporation to their friends. The Bezant itself said by Hutchins to be worth as much as 1,500Z. consisted of a decorated trophy, round which were hung ribbons, flowers, &c., fastened to a frame about 4 ft. high, ornamented with jewels, coins, c., lent by persons interested. By the town and the manor passing into the same hands in 1830 the practice ceased. The ancient borough, through the liberality of the Marquis of Westminster, is now sup- plied with water taken from an artesian well sunk for the purpose. (See ' The Book of Days,' vol. i. p. 585 ; Hutchins, ' History of Dorset,' 1803, vol. ii. p. 425 ; ' Brit. Popular Customs, Past and Present,' T. F. Tbiselton Dyer, 1876 Bonn's Lib.) As to the origin of the word 'Bezant there seems much doubt. It is thought that possibly an ancient gold coin of that name may originally have been tendered to the lord of the manor. Could it have any con- nexion with the offering by the kings of England at the Sacrament, or at festivals so called? See * Oxford Eng. Diet.,' under " Bezant." Bezaunce is an obsolete form of beisance or obeisance. An alternative account can be found in Brand's ' Popular Antiquities' (Bolin, 1853), quoting 'Travels of Tom Thumb,' p. 16, in which the garland is described as a " prize besom," and the manor to which the acknowledgment is made is referred to as " Gillingham." Perhaps the original form of the word was besom, in which case its derivation would need no explanation. F. W. BAXTEB. The * E.D.D.' describes this as follows : " The name of a ' trophy,' and of a festival held in the town of Shaftesbury, or Shaston, on Monday in Rogation week. The Bezant was an acknowledgment on the part of the Borough to the Lord of the Manor of Mitcombe for the permission to bring up water for use from the hamlet of Enmore Green. The festival sadly degenerated, and in the year 1830 ceased al- together. The ' Bezant ' which gave its name to the festival consisted of a sort of trophy constructed of ribbons, flowers and peacock's feathers, fastened to a frame, about four feet high, round which were hung jewels, coins, medals, &c., lent for the purpose." It refers to the 'Book of Days,' i. 585. It also adds : " This use of ' bezant ' for an offering may be compared with its use for the name of a certain offering made by the Kings of England at the Sacrament or at festivals, and by French Kings at their Coronation." The ' N.E.D.' derives it from Byzantium, where it was first struck as a gold coin " seemingly identical with the Roman solidus, or aureus" It was current in Europe from the ninth century, but was n s. in. MAR. 4, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 171 superseded in England by the noble, a coin of Edward III. It was used by Wyclif to translate both the Latin words talentum and drachma. A quotation from E. Cham- berlayne (1667) is : " The gold offered by the King at the Altar, when he receives the Sacrament, is still called the Byzant." ERNEST B. SAVAGE, F.S.A. St. Thomas', Douglas. [Replies also from W. B. H., J. H. M., L. S., C. C., H. J. B. C., W. C. B., E. A. F., and M. C. L.j WALTER HADDON (11 S. iii. 128). Walter Haddon (1516-1572) was a fairly well- known personage in the reigns of Ed- ward VI., Mary, and Elizabeth. By the last- named he was appointed Master of Requests, an Ecclesiastical Commissioner, and Judge of the Prerogative Court. In his earlier days he had been Regius Professor of Civil Law at Cambridge, and had held in succession the Mastership of Trinity Hall and the Presidency of Magdalen College, Oxford. His life by the late Mr. Thompson Cooper fills nearly six columns in the ' D.N.B.,' and there is a long list of his works and of the authorities for his life in ' Athenae Cantabri- gienses,' where will be found the inscription on his monument in Christchurch, Newgate Street, as it existed before the great fire. His * Lucubrationes ' and * Poemata ' were collected and edited by Thomas Hatcher in 1567. On p. 46 of the present volume of ' N. & Q.,' I identified a Latin line written in a Cambridge MS. as being taken from a poem of Haddon's. EDWARD BENSLY. " Gualterus Haddonus " is, of course, " Dr. Walter Haddon, one of the finest Learning, and of the most Ciceronian stile in England," as Strype says in his * Life of Sir Thomas Smith,' p. 200 in the edition published in 1698. Haddon was the friend of Sir John Cheke, Sir Thomas Smith, Roger Ascham, and other famous men of Tudor times. To Ascham' s ' Toxophilus,' printed in 1545, ' Gualterus Haddonus Cantabrigiensis ' contributes a Latin poem of ten lines in which he praises the author and his book. A list of his works, mostly written in the then " universal lan- guage," is given in Lowndes's * Biblio- grapher's Manual of English Literature ' (Pickering's ed., 1834). JOHN T. CURRY. For a full account of the above see * Dictionary of National Biography ' (original edition), vol. xxiii. p. 429. A. R. BAYLEY. ADDERS' FAT AS A CURE FOR DEAFXESS (US. iii. 69, 117). Whether this specific for deafness has the support of antiquity or not, there is no doubt that the belief, mentioned at the last reference, in prepara- tions from the viper as remedies for snake- bite is a very old one. See Pliny's ' Natural History,' Bk. xxix., ch. 4, 69, foil., where he mentions a method of boiling down vipers' fat in oil. Jeremy Taylor reminds us of the change of " theriacum " into a homely English word when, in his sermon on ' The Christian's Conquest over the Body of Sin,' he writes : " Non solum viperam terirmLS, sed ex ea antidotum conficimus ; we kill the viper, and make treacle of him ; that is, not only escape from, but get advantages by temptations." Readers of ' Lavengro ' will remember the old viper-hunter in chapter iv. who tells Borrow : "I hunt them mostly for the fat which they contain, out of which I make unguents which are good for various sore troubles, especially for the rheumatism." EDWARD BENSLY. At the first reference the man killing adders is spoken of in the present tense as still carrying on operations on the line from Tunbridge Wells to Brighton. In the second reference a correspondent relates how a man was similarly employed near the same locality about sixty years ago. Jesse's ' Gleanings in Natural History,' first published about 1835, corroborates the second statement. The author says : " When I was lately at Brighton, I met with a man who employed himself in summer in catching adders, the fat of which he preserved and sold as a sovereign remedy for hurts and swellings." Is there anything hereditary in this employ- ment ? SCRUTATOR'S adder-killer cannot possibly be the same person that Jesse speaks of. O. EAR- PIERCING (11 S. iii. 149). As to ear-piercing in boys for initiatory rites I know nothing, but from long experience in hospital work I can state that many cases have come before me in which the ears have been pierced for the cure of chronic eye disorders especially phlyctenular ophthal- mia and blepharitis. The procedure may not be wholly superstitious, because the slow healing of the wounded ears, likely to occur in such patients, might conceivably benefit the eyes or eyelids by acting as does a seton or blister. More scientific remedies have quite discredited setons, but fifty or sixty years ago these \\ere commonly used. A well-known ophthalmic surgeon 172 NOTES AND QUERIES. tn s. m. MAR. 4, 1911. was in the habit of putting a silk seton behind the ears in the cases above men- tioned, and with the watching and attention required made large fees by this treatment so much so that he said " his life was hang- ing on a thread " ! GEORGE WHERRY. Cambridge. I believe it is still a custom among men and women in the South of Europe (Italy and Spain) to wear ear-rings and to have the ears pierced for the purpose. In Hungary, I remember it was the jeweller who performed the operation on baby girls when supplying the first earrings. L. L. K. MURDERERS REPRIEVED FOR MARRIAGE (11 S. iii. 129). I have never heard of any particular town where murderers were reprieved for marriage, but when a boy I remember hearing these lines : A murderer mounted in a cart Was going to be hanged ; Reprieve to him was granted And the crowd and cart did stand. He was asked if he would marry a wife, Or otherwise choose to die. " O why should I torment my life ? " The culprit did reply ; " The bargain's bad in every part, But a wife's the worst, drive on the cart ! " JOHN BAVINGTON JONES. Was this supposed custom confined to any particular town, and was it not essential that the woman should be a virgin ? MichaeU. Susan, being a maide May begge me from the gallows of the shriefe. Alice* Trust not to that, Michaell. MichaelL You cannot tell me, I have seen it. ' Arden of Faversham,' I. i. 167-70. Here the custom was evidently known at Faversham in Kent. And in Marston's ' Insatiate Countess,' iii. 3 (scene Italy) : Abigail. Well, we will bring them to the gallows, and then, like kind virgins, beg their lives. Bullen has a note at p. 190 of the third volume of his edition of Marston in which he refers to Plutarch's life of ' Numa.' I am not aware that English law was ever cognizant of such customs. P. A. McELWAINE. AMERICAN WORDS AND PHRASES (11 S. iii. 48). The unterrified. Though I am unable to answer MR. THORNTON'S question as to who first applied this term to the demo- cratic party, I can at least show that it was in use in 1840. In The Atlas, a Boston paper, of 4 Sept., 1840, a paragraph about the election in Vermont is headed " The Unterrified Green Mountain Boys' Respond- ing " (p. 2/2). And in the same paper of 12 Nov., 1840, p. 2/3, a letter ends as follows : ** And if any of the ' unterrified democrats * can answer this question it would confer a particular favor on a Real Hard Ciderite." ALBERT MATTHEWS. Boston, U.S. "GEORGE INN" AT WOBURN (11 S. iii. 147). Woburn, Bedfordshire, was my home. It consists of four streets, which meet at the Market Place. At the angle of Park Street and George Street, there stands a large inn, which was famous in posting days, and was called immemorially " The George.'* The name was changed to " The Bedford Arms " before 1853, when I was born ; but I remember that, when I was a child, the old inhabitants still called it "The George." G. W. E. R. "HAD I WIST" (11 S. iii. 129). This phrase cannot possibly have been the name of an Anglo-Saxon bogy, since fchere is nothing Anglo-Saxon about any of its three component parts. It is true that the O.E. adjective gewiss survived in M.E. as iwis sometimes erroneously spelt / wiss, as if it were the pronoun I with a verb wiss, but wist or iwist as a past participle does not occur before the M.E. period, the O.E. past participle being witen. The use of this phrase, which means "if I had known," as a noun not as a proper name seems to have been introduced by Gower in his * Confessio Amantis ' for it is from this poem (i. 105) that the ' N.E.D.' quotes the earliest instance. I do not remember and cannot very well ascertain whether the phrase occurs as a proper name in ' Piers the Plowman,' a most likely place for such an expressive name ; if it does, Gower may have been indebted for it to Langland or whoever else may have been the author of the poem popular in Gower's days. The fact that the ' N.E.D.' does not mention ' Piers ' as the source, makes it very unlikely, though. To the ' N.E.D.' quotations, which show some variety of spelling had I wist, hadde-y- wyste, had I wyst, hadiwist, may be added the title of a poem in the ' Paradise of Dainty Devices,' Beware of Had-I-Wyst and the following line from the well-known passage describing a " suters state " in Spenser's 'Mother Hubberd's Tale,' "to sue for had ywist, that few have found, and manie one hath mist ! " J- F. BENSE. n s. m. MAR. 4, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 173 CANONS, MIDDLESEX : " ESSEX " AS CHRISTIAN NAME (US. ii. 328, 374, 394, 437, 534 ; iii. 92). In the ' London Marriage Licenses ' (Foster's edition) are at least four instances of " Essex " used as a female Christian name: Col. 130, "Richard Bynns and Ef.sex Ingram (Spinster), 1687." Col. 420, " James Drax and Essex Lake (Spinster), 1662/3." Col. 948, " Sir Roger Mostyn and Lady Essex Finch (Spinster), 1703," Col. 1085, " Hon. John Poulett and Essex Pop- ham (Spinster), 1663." DIEGO. Lodge's ' Peerage ' gives, under the title of Baron Mostyn, " Hon. Essex, born 22 Oct., 1833." E. L. H. TEW. Upham Rectory. ALEXANDER HOLMES, 1848 (US. iii. 70). A copy of The Times for 1848 can be seen, I believe, at the Advocate's Library, Edin- burgh. The Catalogue of the Library would lead one to infer as much. Another copy may be seen at Glasgow in the " Stirling's and Glasgow Public Library." Files of the journal are no doubt preserved at the British Museum, but in a building, I understand, apart from the Library. SCOTTJS. " LOVE ME, LOVE MY DOG " (11 S. ii. 522 ; iii. 51, 113). The St. Bernard about whom MR. MACMICHAEL asks is St. Bernard of Clairvaux. The words immediately follow- ing those quoted are his Country for Men spent with Age or other Decays, so as they could not hope for above a Year or two of Life, to ship themselves away in a Brazil Fleet, and after their Arrival there to go on a great Length, sometime of twenty or thirty Years, or more, by the Force of that Vigour they recovered with that Remove."' Of Health and Long Lite/ in ' Miscellanea,' part iii. vol. i. p. 273 in 1750 edition- of Temple's Works. Lamb used this passage in his essay on c The Genteel Style in Writing.' EDWABD BENSLY. "-DE-" : " -TY- "(US. iii. 108). I cannot answer this query, but I am much interested in it as it refers to a name which has puzzled me for some time. There is a pit or pond on the west side of the Isle of Waliiey,. Lancashire, which is called the Lamitysike Pit, and the adjoining fields are known as Lamity Closes. In the deeds relating to these the name is variously spelt Lamity, Lamentea, Lamenty, Lamentia, and Lam- berty. What is the meaning of this name ? A sike is a marshy stream, but further I cannot get. At the same place (and in others in the north of England) is a field called Toad Pot, sometimes written Yoad Pot or T'yoad Pot. What does that mean ? iis.ni.M^.4,1911.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 179 A curious instance of the result of phonetic spelling arises in the name of a field adjoin- ing Toad Pot. It is called on the plans Taper Close and called locally Tappa Cleas. Being a rectangular enclosure, inquiries led to its being found to have been originally Toad Pot Close, i.e., T'yoad Pot Cleas, and so to T'yd-pt-cleas, and'finally Tappa Cleas, which the plan drawer got finally to Taper Close. H. G. P. "WARE" POTATOES (11 S. iii. 109). The ' E.D.D.' gives the following definition under " Ware " : " (6). Potatoes are usually classed in three sizes, the largest being called ' ware,' the next ' middlings,' and the smallest ' chats.' " This use of the \\ord is recorded from West Middlesex and Kent. ERNEST B. SAVAGE, F.S.A. S. Thomas', Douglas. Ware potatoes mean the best or large size. When potatoes are properly graded they are divided into three sorts ware, middlings, chats. At times in a fruitful season a few monstrous ones ere thrown on one side, and termed bakers. These ere the ones that &ro baked and sold in the street at night " all hot." We also hear of ware or large asparagus ; the small in that case is called sprue. An old form of invoice used in 1847 shows the use of the terms. W. W. GLENNY. Barking, Essex. " THE ALMIGHTY DOLLAR "(US. iii. 109). Washington Irving was not quite original in the use of this phrase. Farquhar in his ' Recruiting Officer,' acted at the Theatre Royal, 1705, uses the similar phrase " Almighty gold " (Act III. sc. ii.). J. HOLDEN MACMlCHAEL. JULIA PASTRANA (11 S. iii. 29, 94). An interesting account of this person in life, and after death, is given in Frank Buck- land's 'Curiosities of Natural History' Fourth Series, pp. 40 et seq. R. B. Upton. JAMES JANEWAY (11 S. iii. 129). The following may afford a clue, James Jane way was curate of Great Mongeham, Kent, in 1705, and was succeeded by Edward Lloyd, 1706. (' Arch. Cant.,' vol. xv. p. 358). James Janeway, A.M., rector of Wootton, Kent, 4 Feb., 1712, obt. July, 1739. In the chancel is a memorial to him. He was also by dispensation rector of Aldington, Kent, June, 1708-39 (Hasted's 'Hist. Kent,' vols. viii. and ix.). At 3 S. vi. 41 there is a- Mr. Jeunaway mentioned in a diary of Sir John Knatchbull 14 Dec., 1688/9, in con- nexion with James II. and Faversham. R. J. FYNMORE. Sandgate. 0tt A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage- and Baronetage, <$cc. By Sir Bernard Burke and Ashworth P. Burke. (Harrison & Son. ) IN his introduction to this year's ' Peerage ' Mr. Ashworth Burke lays stress on the three principal features affecting his subject during the past year : (i.) the demise of the Crown ; (ii.) the proposed reform of the House of Lords ; (iii.) the proper safeguarding of the status of the Baronet- age. He adds a fitting eulogy on the late King, and a tribute to our reigning Monarch, also a word of sympathy with our Queen on the death. of her brother, and an anticipation of the glories of the coming Coronation. Most of this matter is, of course, public property, but the recom- mendations as regards the future of the baronetage are not generally known, and should be of special interest to those concerned. The Royal Warrant for an authorized Roll of the Baronetage is printed in full on page 2467. The obituary list of Peers for 1911 numbers 16 titles, and of these two become extinct (viz., Avonmore and Borthwick). Of Baronets, 40 have died and 6 titles become extinct. We pass to a few criticisms of this excellent book of reference, which we find on the whole the most ample and accurate of its species. We think the guide to Relative Precedence both useless and unintelligible. It must cost somebody a great deal of time and labour to prepare it year by year ; after half -an -hour's study we failed to understand why the Arch- bishop of Canterbury is 993, Mr. Asquith 995A, Sir Samuel Walker, Bart., 996, and the Duke of Norfolk 1,000, while the Duchess of Fife is 3, the Duchess of Argyll 10, and the Duke of Connaught has no number to his name at all. Jerbai, the son of an Indian magnate, has 62,675 affixed to his name, without taking into consideration sisters or brothers, uncles or aunts of the same rank. W T e should like to see this section of the book replaced by an ordinary Index containing each name and a page reference. It would be more useful and less complicated. The services of the expert concerned with Relative Rank might, we think, be usefully devoted to the checking of the coats of arms with their blazons, as we notice several slips in this respect upon a casual survey. Mr. Burke does not yet give us his authority for the creation of the Viscounty of Suirdale in the Donoughmore family, to which we called his attention last year. This is, we presume, due to the principle of accepting what is regarded by families themselves as trustworthy a principle, perhaps, inevitable in the circum- stances. Here our grumbles must cease, and it only remains to congratulate Mr. Burke upon the great labour he must have bestowed on this valuable book of reference and upon the results he has achieved. 180 NOTES AND QUERIES. [n s. m. MA K . 4, 1911. Primitive Psycho- Therapy and Quackery., By Robert M. Lawrence. (Constable & Co.) T.e monde n'a jamais manque des charlatans, And the chronicles of charlatanry will always liave an interest as illustrating a curious phase of human nature, the willingness to be deceived (vitlt decipi) which has ever been characteristic of the populace. Mr. Lawrence is able to show by abundant proofs that healing by suggestion has at all times played an important part in therapeutics, and has brought together some curious instances of similar mental epidemics. He points out, too, the sad truth that it is by no means amongst the lowest and least cultured classes of the community that quackery finds its victims. 'There is no place where the quack thrives and battens more vigorously than in New York. Mr. Lawrence makes no pretensions to original research, but has been industrious in consulting cyclopaedias and special treatises from which he has compiled many curious facts. As to the origiu of the name quack-salver, the full form of the word, he gives some improbable conjectures. By :all analogy this ought to mean one who salves -(or cures) a quack, which is an old synonym for .a catarrh or a cold ; but it is commonly inter- preted to mean, in defiance of its formation, one -who quacks (as if puffs) his salves. We cannot endorse all the author's view on the derivations of words. If laudanum is "a contraction of laudandum, something to be praised " (p. 218), -what becomes of the Greek ledanon 1 It is tempting, of course, to understand " carmina- tive," from carminare, as meaning to cure by charms (carmina) or incantations (p. 122). But those who know say that carminare here is from carmen, a wool- carder, with the idea, of smoothing out or extenuating gross humours. On the whole, it is a sincere book and good for the times. THE CLARENDON PRESS has puoiisned A Good Fight : the Original Version of ' The Cloister and the Hearth,' with a witty introduction by Mr. Lang. It is an interesting member of a specially interesting " Library of Prose and Poetry " half forgotten in many cases, but in no case deserving oblivion. The modern, and, we fear, hurried reader has been known to turn up his nose at this book, but we have no sympathy with him if he fails to see the great and moving qualities of Reade's work. Whether it is good scholarship or not is another point, on which Mr. Lang dwells, perhaps, somewhat too lightly. But, after all, one does not need to be an authority on Erasmus, or even to have read his ' Colloquia,' to enjoy ' A Good Fight.' The book is immortal, and does not belong to the special library -of learning. The Newspaper Press Directory (C. Mitchell & Co.) is as usual full of the latest information relating to the Press. Apart from the complete and accurate list of papers and publications issued throughout the world, there are statistics of the trade of our various Colonies and Depen- dencies, most of these showing considerable increase of trade with the United Kingdom. Accounts of British productions in India are not so favourable. Printed books in 1908 amounted to 226,1 1QL, but in 1909 amounted to only 214,965*., while many other articles showed a far more serious diminution, notably woollens and worsteds, which in 1908 amounted to 1,009, 1121. t and in 1909 fell to 760,9402. It is remarkable how level beer and ale remained ; in 1908 the amount was 279,459*., in 1909 279,698*. The classified list of publications is interesting as indicating the tastes of the people. Anti-tobacco only supports one organ, but it is a ' Beacon Light,' 'while that " naughty foreign weed " supports six journals. The love for the comic does not diminish, for the list shows an increase of one ; our Colonial interests have also one more organ ; motoring requires one more paper, and needlework has one less. The growing interest in philately is shown by an increase of three journals ; theosophy shows an increase of one ; brass band journals have increased by two, and literature is represented by three less than in 1910. There are articles by Mr. Alfred F. Robbinson ' Newspaper Ideals and Individualities : a Retro- spective Review ' ; J. R. Charter writes on ' The Advertising Field To-day,' and Dr. Hugh Fraser on ' The Legal Year in its Relation to the Press.' The obituary record includes Mr. Arthur Fraser W'alter of The Times, Sir William Agnew of Punch, and Frederick Greenwood, founder of The Pall Mall Gazette, and others, of whom excellent portraits are given. The Writers' and Artists' Year-Book, 1911 (Black), explains clearly and briefly what editors want. We wish it the widest circulation, and cannot conceive why freelances on the press con- tinue to worry papers with unsuitable articles when this little book, which costs ouly a shilling, would save them their futile effort in the sending of unsuitable matter. Stupidity of this sort is still common^and editors have so much of their time wasted that they all owe a word of thanks to- Messrs. Black for this publication. tn aronets. It seems that many of those who escaped ut of the Black Hole prison were Irish. We vant a complete annotated list of the 3 survivors, and it is to be hoped that the many correspondents of ' N. & Q.' will be able in time to supply this deficiency. WM. JACKSON TIGOTT. Has COL. PBIDEAUX seen the pamphlet by Mr. S. C. Hill containing a list of all the Europeans in the English factories in Bengal n June, 1756 ? Beside J. Z. Holwell there was possibly a Richard Holwell, but Mr. ilill is not certain. There was no Bowes Walcot ; only Edward. I think Mr. Hill's nvestigatioii is the latest. FBANK PENNY. Mr. Phillimore mentions that the arms of Holwell are marshalled by the family of Money-Kyrle. R. J. FYNMOBE. KNOTS IN HANDKEBCHIEFS : INDIAN CUSTOM (11 S. ii. 506; iii. 35, 97). I pre- sume the " knotting " was to assist memory. If so, many very pious Hebrews abroad and in this country practise it. In this way, "nefas est," to carry anything on the Sabbath (otherwise than subconsciously of course, like one's clothing, for example), such as an umbrella : so handkerchiefs or bandannas" are converted into girdles, the loose ends of which would come in handy for " knotting " into " memory-reminders." I have seen pious scholars do it in order to remind them to look up some " knotty " point. M. L. R. BBESLAB. WILLIAM ELMHAM (11 S. iii. 87). It appears from Blomefield's * History of Norfolk,' passim, that Sir William Elmham, knight, justice of peace for the counties of Norfolk and Suffolk, was the son of Henry Elmham of Elmham and Frenge, Norfolk, and Elizabeth his wife, that he was patron of the rectories of Bowthorpe and Coltishall, both in Norfolk, and lord of the manors of Ingoldsthorpe and Frenge, Norfolk, and of the Manor of Westhorpe, Suffolk ; that his town house in Norwich was afterwards known as Skipwith's Place from its owner in the reigns of Henry VI. and Edward IV. ; that he took part with Henry Despenser, Bishop of Norwich, in the campaign against the adherents of the Anti-Pope Clement VII., ii s. in. MAR. 11, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 193 landing at Calais, 23 April, 1582 ; that later he was imprisoned in the Tower on suspicion of having betrayed Gravelines to the French ; that he was again imprisoned with the Bishop of Norwich in 1398 ; that he died in 1403 (will dated 2 April) without male issue, leaving a widow Elizabeth ; and that both he and his widow who died in 1419, were buried in a chapel of the Abbey of Bury St. Edmunds. JOHN B. WAINEWRIGHT. See Sir N. Harris Nicolas' s History of the Royal Navy, vol. ii., text, and appendix. R. B. UptOD. SCOTTISH TITLES CONFERRED BY OLIVER CROMWELL (11 S. iii. 88). Archibald John- stone of Warriston was one of those appointed by Cromwell to his Upper House, and re- ceived the title of Lord Warriston. Argyll had been craated Marquess by Charles I. He received no title from Cromwell. His status as Sheriff of Argyllshire was confirmed by the Commonwealth. I may say that though he did not sit in any of Oliver's parliaments, he was Member for Aberdeen- shire in the Parliament of Richard Crom- well. JOHN WILLCOCK. Lerwick. Sir Archibald Johnston, Lord Warriston, was called by Cromwell to his House of Peers (January, 1658), and was also sum- moned to Richard Cromwell's House of Lords. I cannot find that Argyll was ever one of Cromwell's Peers. A. R. BAYLEY. VANISHING LONDON : PROPRIETARY CHAPELS (US. ii. 202, 254, 293, 334; iii. 149). At the last reference, under "Chapels pulled down or diverted," MR. FRANCIS mentions St. Etheldreda, Ely Place. Ac- cording to ' The Catholic Directory,' this chapel was built in 1297, and reopened as a place of Roman Catholic worship in 1876. It belongs to the Fathers of Charity, other- wise known as Rosminians. Ward, Lock & Co.'s ' London,' 1910, at pp. 228-9, says: " Hatton Garden . . . .and Ely Place . . . . , stand on the site of the famous palace of the Bishop of Ely, where John of Gaunt died in 1399. Says Gloucester in ' Richard III.' : ' My lord of Ely, when I was last in Holborn, I saw good strawberries in your garden there ; I do beseech you send for some of them.' " Later the palace was occupied by Sir Christo- pher Hatton, Lord Keeper to Queen Elizabeth .... The only portion of the palace which escaped the Fire has recently been restored, and now forms St. Etheldreda's Church, Ely Place, the only pre-Reformation church in London that has been restored to the Roman Catholic worship. The tracery of the east and west windows, the former filled with fine stained glass, the oak roof, the crypt, and the cloister in which fig-trees still flourish, make this quiet nook, in the heart of the great city, a place of exceptional interest." So we may be thankful that " Vanishing London " is a misleading heading, so far as St. Etheldreda's is concerned. JOHN B. WAINEWRIGHT. COURT LIFE (11 S. iii. 107, 156). A very useful work on this subject was published by William Strange of 21, Paternoster Row in 1848. Its title is fully indicative of the contents : " Sketches of Her Majesty's Household : Interspersed with Historical Notes, Political Comments, and Critical Remarks, showing at one view, the salaries attached to the various appoint- ments, the nature and extent of the duties to be performed, the amount of Pensions upon Retire- ment or Superannuation, with descriptive particulars of each Department : Forming a Guide to Situations in the Sovereign's Domestic Establishment. By pointing out in whom the Patronage is vested, &c., and containing informa- tion relative to the English Court, interesting to all classes, derived from Private and High official Sources." It is less historical than Thorn's ' Book of the Court ' and more critical, but certainly not scandalous. ALECK ABRAHAMS. HENRY GATAKER (11 S. ii. 409 ; iii. 132). I have found, since sending my last reply to a query about one Gataker that Henry Gataker got third place at entrance in Trinity College, Dublin, on 6 July, 1796. He entered as a pensioner ; had been edu- cated at Westminster School, and took as his tutor Mr. Magee, F.T.C.D. (1766-1831), afterwards Archbishop of Dublin. His father's name was Thomas, and he was probably a clergyman (there is a blot on the entrance register), who belonged to the County Louth. Henry Gataker did not proceed to his degree. P. A. MCELWAINE. Dublin. WARWICK LANE AND ITS HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIONS (11 S. iii. 121). Possibly COL. PRIDEAUX may be glad to know on high authority that, when Warwick the King- maker died on the field of battle at Barnet, he errs in saying that " all the honours and possessions of the Nevills fell into the hands of the ill-fated Clarence." As a matter of fact there still exists a deed of partition of the copyholders of the Marquis Montague and Isabella Ingaldethorp 194 NOTES AND QUERIES. tn s. in. MAE. n, 1911 his wife dated 9 July, 17 Henry VII., daughter of Sir Edmund Ingaldethorp, and coheir of John, Earl Worcester. By this deed over forty manors in various parts of England devolved on Lady Isabella Nevill, a daughter of Montague, who married the ancestor of the present owner of one of these manors in 2 Henry VII. This Mon- tague was the brother of Richard, Earl of Warwick, called the Kingmaker, and both were killed in the battle of Barnet, where a high stone pillar records the memory of the fatal event. WILLIAM MERGER. PHYSICIAN'S CANE (11 S. iii. 168). The following is from Jeaffreson's v A Book about Doctors,' 1861, p. 2 : " The physician's cane is a very ancient part of his insignia. It is now disused, but up to very recent times no doctor of medicine presumed to pay a professional visit, or even to be seen in public, without this mystic wand. Long as a footman's stick, smooth and varnished, with a heavy gold knob or cross-bar at the top a physician's wand ought to have a knob at the top. This knob in the olden times was hollow, and contained a vinaigrette, which the man of science ahvays held to his nose, when he approached a sick person, so that its fumes might protect him from the noxious exhalations of 'his patient." R. J. FYNMORE. Sandgate. "TEAPOY": " CELLARETTE " (11 S. iii. 149). Referring to the Editorial note, may I say that Yule does not state that " teapoy " is a corruption of the Persian sipai, tripos, but a Hindustani, or perhaps rather an Anglo- Hindustani word of hybrid etymology, from Hind, tin, three, and Pers. pde, a foot. Hs adds that the legitimate word from the Persian is sipdl (properly slhpdya] and the legitimate Hindi word tirpad or tripad, but tipai or tepoy was probably originated by some European in analogy with the familiar " charpoy " (Pers. chitar-pai, four feet), a bedstead, possibly from a desire to avoid confusion with another very familiar word, sepoy. W. 'F. PRIDEAUX. . The word " tea-poy " is 'the Sanscrit tin-paya colloquially pronounced by an English tongue (compare " sepoy " for sipahi). The meaning of the word is '* tripod." By dint of use it became especi- ally associated with a three-legged stand to carry a tea equipage in India, where tea was drunk by the English residents long before it became domesticated in England. The date of its first appearance in this country is uncertain, but it was probably introduced by Anglo-Indians prior to 1650, and with it came the fashion of the " tea- poy." The earliest public notice of tea, I think, appeared in the Mercurius Politicus in 1658 as follows : "That excellent, and by all Physitians, approved, China Drink, called by the Chineans, Teba, by other Nations, Tay alias Tee, is sold at the Sultaness-Head a Cophee-house in Sweet- ing's Rents by the Royal Exchange, London." H. D. ELLIS. 7, Roland Gardens, S.W. MOVING PICTURES TO CINEMATOGRAPHS (11 S. ii. 502, 537 ; iii. 56, 155). The follow- ing notices of panoramic views are suffi- ciently noteworthy to be added to those already given. In or about 1794 Thomas Girton, a painter, produced a semicircular view of London, taken from the top of the Albion Mills, near Blackfriars Bridge, south side. In 1830 L. Mazzara exhibited a panoramic view of Alexandria. He also executed fifty splendid views forming a continued line from the castle of Dover to the point of Reculver, showing the coast of the county of Kent, as well as the inland of the island of Thanet. After this he illus- trated ' ' the most splendid town in the world," in one continued line of views from the mouth of the Thames to Richmond Hill. These were executed on a new system of perspective founded on circular lines as set forth in a pamphlet published by him, entitled Perspective, explained upon the System of Tangenteography, and the Effect as produced in the Tangenteorama,' 1834. TOM JONES. ROEITES or CALVERTON (11 S. iii. 9). Throsby, in his additions to Thoro ton's ' History of Nottinghamshire,' says that in 1793 there were two dissenting meeting- houses in Calverton, " one of 'which has a famous pastor John Roe, who it is said bid defiance to the discipline of the established church, respecting matrknony. Two of his female followers have suffered a long im- prisonment in Nottingham jail in consequence. One I believe was his wife in his own way ! " J. HOLDEN MACMlCHAEL. COUNT OF THE HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE (11 S. ii. 509 ; iii. 54, 94)A-The late F r William Humphrey, S.J., in his ' Urbs et Or bis,' at p. 167, writes as follows : " Bishops Assistant at the Pontifical Throne receive at the time of their nomination the title of Count. This title is also given to laymen in reward of their services to the Church. These Counts are properly Counts Palatine, and not Roman Counts, as they are very often, but in- accurately, called. They were in ancient times n s. in. MAR. 11, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 195 Companions (Comites) of the Pope, when h lived at St. John Lateran, and they composec his Court. The insignia consist of a gold cros and chain, and a mantle with embroidered cross The official title of this dignity is ' Count of th Apostolic Palace, and of the Court of the Lateran.' " It is doubtless either a Count of this kind or else an hereditary Count of the States o the Church, who is known to R. W. P. JOHN B. WAINE WRIGHT. REBECCA AND HER DAUGHTERS (11 S. iii 89). May I be permitted to express my entire concurrence with ST. SWITHIN in thinking the explanation advanced by Miss Evans, as to the origin of the " Rebecca ' of the Welsh riots, wholly inadequate Her explanation brings a comic element into the narrative, and suggests gatherings of good-humoured, but mischievous schoo! boys. Had the riots been grounded on force, as Miss Evans seems to imply, it is safe to say that the disturbances would no1 have lasted a week, instead of being continued over a period of some four years. The Welsh people were undoubtedly in grim earnest from the very first outbreak. They felt themselves wronged, and found in Scripture, as they believed, an adequate authority warranting resistance of the wrong. They had, in fact, a real grievance, which the Government took care to remedy with as little delay as possible. But in any case, there seems no reason why we should reject such accounts of the genesis of the Welsh riots as are given in Miss Marti neau's ' History of the Peace ' or in Mr. McCarthy's ' Short History of Our Own Times ' in favour of the theory advanced by Miss Evans as to their origin. SCOTUS. MURDERERS REPRIEVED FOR MARRIAGE (US. iii. 129, 172). I cannot find that this was ever a legal right in England, but the idea is widespread in the folk-lore of many countries. Numerous references will be found in F. Liebrecht's ' Zur Volkskunde ' alte und neue Aufsatze, Heilbronn, 1879, pp. 433-4, to similar beliefs in France, Germany, Italy, Hungary, Spain. In some of these it is not a virgin, but a woman of loose conduct, who is the medium of saving the man' s life by marriage under the gallows. Two instances are given in H. Estienne's ' Apologie pour Herodote ' (edited by Ristel- huber, 1879), vol. i, p. 253-4, and from a note quoted from Maury,' L'Ancienne Legis- lation CriminelJe ' (no more exact reference), it is implied that the custom or right only applied in the case of " le ravisseur con- damne a mort et que la fille enlevee con- sentait a accepter pour mari." In most of the stories the point of the story consists in the man refusing thus to save his life because the woman is ugly or lame, &c. ; see also 9 S. viii. 419, where reference in made to the infamous '' Noyades " of the French Revolution. I cannot find, however, any reference to this custom in Allison's ' History of Europe ' in his long account of such " Noyades." A. COLLINGWOOD LEE. Waltham Abbey, Essex. Perhaps this was a " guid Scots " custom. I cannot connect it with any particular town, but I bethink me of Meg of Elibank and cite the following passage from chap. xi. of Lockhart's ' Life of Sir Walter Scott.' The poet wrote thus : " I have some thought of attempting a Border Ballad in the comic manner but I almost despair of bringing it out well. A certain Sir William Scott from whom I am descended was ill-advised enough to plunder the estate of Sir Gideon Murray of Elibank, ancestor to the present Lord Elibank. The marauder was defeated, seized, and brought in fetters to the castle of Elibank upon the Tweed. The Lady Murray (agreeably to the custom of all ladies in ancient tales) was seated on the battle- ments, and descried the return of her husband with his prisoner. She immediately inquired what he meant to do with the young Knight of Harden, which was the petit litre of Sir William Scott. ' Hang the robber assuredly,' was the answer of Sir Gideon. ' What ! ' answered the ady,' hang the handsome young knight of Harden, when I have three ill-favoured daughters un- married ! No, no, Sir Gideon, we'll force him to narry our Meg.' Now tradition says that Meg Vlurray was the ugliest woman in the four counties, and that she was called in the homely dialect of -he time meikle-mouthed J/ey the celebrated painter David. Napoleon was 28 years old in 1796. W. S. S. JOHN HUDSON (11 S. iii. 9). In the ' Post Office Directory ' of 1820 the name of ' John Hudson, Paper-hanger & Print - eller," appears at 85, Cheapside. 198 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. in. MAR. n, ion. Dumfries and Galloway Notes and Queries, Part I., Series I. (Dumfries, Courier and Herald Office.) IN September, 1909, the editor of the Dumfries and Galloway Courier and Herald arranged for a discussion of local matters in the form of notes and queries, and his scheme straightway de- veloped into a very popular and substantial feature of his journal. After a year's experience, the publishers are justified in their conclusion that the contributions thus secured constitute an agreeable miscellany which fully merits separate publication. The working plan is practically that of ' N. & Q.,' although occasionally what is substantially a lecture on a native theme takes the place of the standard "note." Political and literary history, genealogy, place-names, folk-lore, and so forth, are treated luminously and well, many of the discussions having not only local value, but also general importance. The writers are not always exhaustive in stating references. One, for instance, has a note on Burns's ' Lines Written on the Back of a Bank- No te,' and quotes the verses as if he gave them for the first time. He should have said that they appeared in The Morning Chronicle and The Edin- burgh Magazine in 1814, and were afterwards in- cluded in complete editions of the author's works. Another contributor writes on Helen Walker, the prototype of " Jeanie Deans," and, while admitting that the significant part of his com- munication " has been published before," omits to state that it is a slightly revised version of the narrative prefixed by Scott in 1830 to ' The Heart of Mid-Lothian.' A Book of Light Verse. Edited with Notes by B. M. Leonard. (Frowde.) WE noticed with pleasure the author's ' Pageant of English Poetry.' The present collection, which is available in several elegant bindings and in each case at a moderate price, is similarly com- prehensive, and we share the verdict of a judicious friend, who is also an old reviewer, that it is likely to prove a source of perpetual pleasure. The " musa jocosa " of the past has not been overdone of late years, and Locker-Lampson's ' Lyra Elegantiarum,' on which this volume largely relies, is the best of foundations. Al- together, there is abundance of matter both familiar and known to but few. No living writers are included, but the harvest of the past is rich enough to occupy many a fireside evening. The .notes explain obscurities, and supply some lite- rary judgments of interest, though these are in some cases rather examples of prejudice than fair criticism. A list of authors and an Index of First Lines are given conveniences that ought to be always added to such collections as this. Fragrance Among Old Volumes. By Basil Anderton. (Kegan Paul, Trench & Co.) THE papers which Mr. Anderton has here re- printed from some of the minor magazines in which they first appeared are of slight texture, and we cannot take them so seriously as the author does. Indeed, we find it difficult to dis- cover their raison d'etre, as they hardly possess the charm of style which would atone for the flimsi- ness of their matter ; and we doubt if they will be of interest to many outside the circle of the author's friends. There are some good reproduc- tions of old cuts, by Bewick and others, but otherwise the illustrations are amateurish. The example of " early Church poetry " quoted from St. Bernard (p. 85) is really derived from the Vulgate of Ecclesiasticus xxiv. 29. The West Riding of Yorkshire has been added to the " Little Guides " of Messrs. Methuen. All wise travellers know the value of these guides with their compact and easily accessible information ; and for ourselves, we thank Mr. Joseph E. Morris for his well-illustrated descriptions 'of, and com- ments on, a country which is full of the beauties both of art and nature. The Yorkshire dales should not be missed by any lover of England. IN The Cornhill for March Canon Vaughan, whose writing we always read with pleasure, has an excellent article on* ' The Authorized Version of the Bible.' He quotes Dr. Scrivener's remark that " never perhaps has a great enterprise of a like nature been carried out with less knowledge handed down to posterity of the labourers, their method, and manner of working." The revision occupied two years and nine months, but the exact date of publication in 1911 is not known. The Version, especially in the New Testament, bears " the impress of the genius of Tyndale," and it is just this greatness of rhythm which, we may add, the Revised Version utterly misses. Canon Vaughan reproduces various tributes to the in- comparable book and quotes from Prof. Cook, without giving the source of the passage, the ' Cambridge History of English Literature,' usages which have become part of the ordinary speech of the people, and are not generally recog- nized as biblical. Mr. A. C. Benson has an admirable subject in ' Professor Newton,' who was described by a friend of his as having " all the characteristics of John Bull." The Professor wore the oldest clothes ; insisted on verifying his references ; would not have a single lady in the College Chapel ; objected strongly to the intro- duction of an organ ; and left strict injunctions that there was to be no music at his own funeral. He loved to have his way, and generally got it, dominating the small society of Magdalene College. He was useful, Mr. Benson indicates, as a drag on hasty changes and sentimental theories. ' The Subaltern ' has a lively account of life in the Persian Gulf and Busra, and Mr. G. M. Trevelyan affords new light on Garibaldi as com- mander of the forces of Montevideo in South America. This information comes from the papers of Sir William Gore Ouseley, a diplomat who was sent on a special mission to Montevideo. This authority says that a brave, worthy, and upright man has been misrepresented by contin- ental enemies. Garibaldi came to see him late at night in a Poncho, for he was busy all day pre- paring orders, maps, &c., and could not afford to purchase lights for his own use. The Poncho con- cealed the dilapidated state of his clothes, for he did not get his proper pay, and declined the title of General and the rewards offered by the Montevidean Government, as Mazzini explains in a letter here quoted, probably of 1846. Mazzirii's hopes of future eminence for Garibaldi were fully realized. n s. m. MA*. 11, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 199 The Literary Paper this month is on Lewis Carroll. The previous one of Browning has, it appears, been answered correctly by six people. We are not surprised, and think it would be well to have a certain amount of questions which demand critical ability rather than the mere knowledge of facts and references which assiduous search can secure. IN The Nineteenth Century, as in many other of the magazines, there are articles ' For and Against the Declaration of London.' Mr. Noel liuxton has an interesting account of ' Young Turkey after Two Years,' and is able to find solid advance in civilization of various kinds as the result of the new rule. An important point for the foreigner is that " freedom of travel is immensely enlarged." The Vice -Provost of Eton, considering ' The Position of the Laity in the Church of England,' would have them hold a stronger position in parishes as a check on autocratic clergy. But we doubt very much if the ordinary layman of the English Church is keen enough to belong to a board or select vestry which holds frequent meetings. It is this apathy which renders desirable plans inoperative. ' The Censor, and other Tales,' by Dr. Max Meyerfeld, exposes once more, from a foreign point of view, the futility and stupidity of the present Practice of licensing pieces for the stage. Dr. oseph Jastrow writes interestingly on ' The Will to believe in the Supernatural,' and Sir Bay Lankester as militantly as usual on ' Compulsory Science versus Compulsory Greek.' This last article would gain by a more moderate tone. It is full of " question -begging " epithets and phrases. ' Yeoman Hopkins : One Asset in our Armour,' by Major-General Sir W. G. Knox, gives an account of the sort of thing expected from a raw young farmer turned Territorial, and inci- dentally touches on the dangers of invasion of this country. An elegant article in French on ' Charles Baudelaire et FEsth^tique de la Deca- dence ' is by M. Andre Beaunier. IN The Fortnightly, after some political articles, we come on ' Christina Rossetti,' by Mr. F. M. Hueffer, who writes with just appreciation of the powers of that remarkable poetess. He says that he told her of a very strong feeling that after Tennyson's death she should become Laureate. Mr. Hueffer abuses Ruskin roundly, and we trace here, as elsewhere in his writing, a bitter- ness which is unpleasing. Mr. Filson Young has an elaborate article on ' The Musician as Com- poser,' which should attract attention. We cannot, however, accept his division of music into "vertical" and " horizontal," which seems to us fanciful, and also to ignore the scientific principles of sound as developed, for instance, by Helmholtz. His summary of the sorts of modern music as musical translations of literary ideas, " absolute " music, and musical hypnotics, seems much more effective. ' Some Criticisms on the < 'ollection of Income Tax ' is well worth study, for Mr. A. M. Latter shows that officials deliberately claim more than they have a right to by law, and arc otherwise prejudiced against the taxpayer who has not a chance of being heard and judged by an impartial authority. Mr. G. C. Nuttall on ' Eugenics and Genetics ' writes very good sense : unfortunately, it is sense that has not yet reached tin? ear of the general public, which is hardly encouraged by seeing the excesses of those who should know better. Doctors and teachers of science, men of light and learning, are not de- terred from forming unsuitable unions. Mr. T. A. Cook has an interesting account of ' The Develop- ment of Swordsmanship ' among Englishmen, while Miss Elizabeth Robins is enthusiastic in ' A New Art of Travel ' about two books by Miss Gertrude'JL. Bell. We share the enthusiasm, though we see no advantage in Miss Robins 's fantastic staccato style. Mr. Francis Gribble is very enter- taining in his account of ' The Theatre Franc,ais in the 'Fifties,' run by ArseneHoussaye, appointed by his friend Rachel in spite of the protests of comedians. Further interesting articles in a well- varied number are ' Bjornstjerne Bjornson,' by Mr. Robert Machray ; ' How Primitive Round Houses became Square and Oblong,' by Mr. W. Shaw Sparrow, and ' Memories of Fort Chabrol,' by Mr. J. F. Macdonald, to whom the Sidney Street affray has suggested a record of the defence by Jules Gu^rin of his massive house as an Anti- Semite protest. The siege actually lasted thirty- seven days in 1899. IN * The National Review, ' Episodes of the Month ' are treated with the usual vigour of expression, and a " Unionist Free Trader " pro- ceeds to find holes in ' A Democratic House of Commons, 1906-1910.' Mr. Austin Dobson, has one of his elegant and informative articles on ' Eighteenth-Century Stowe,' and Miss H. Rein- herz discovers that ' The Girl Graduate in Fiction ' has been inadequately pictured. So has the man graduate, and the reasons are not far to seek. Mr. H. C. Biron has a commendation of ' The Genius of Mr. Thackeray,' in which he deprecates the views of some modern critics. His article is well phrased, but we should hardly call it critical. It is rather the pleasant exposi- tion of an old admirer who does not care to analyze his faith. Mr. D. C. Lathbury in ' Ele- mentary Education ' puts some questions which seem to us much to the point. Ix The Burlington Magazine the Editorial articles deal with ' Recent Appointments ' and the announcement of the authorities of the Bedford General Library that they intend to sell, for purely pecuniary reasons, Bunyan's copy, in three volumes, of Foxe's ' Martyrs,' used by him in Bedford Gaol. It is pointed out that these volumes were purchased in 1841 by public subscription and presented to the Bedford Library, and we agree in thinking it " astounding " that public property of the sort should be put on the market. Mr. Roger Fry ' On a Profile Portrait of Baldo- vinetti,' shows his admirable powers of connoisseur- ship, while Sir Martin Con way has an interesting and well illustrated article on ' Diirer and the Housebook Master.' The drawings considered are of special moment as belonging to the period of Diirer's Wandcrjahre. Mr. F. W. Hasluck's ' Genoese Lintel-Reliefs in Chios ' and Dr. C. H. Read's 'Plato's "Atlantis" Rediscovered' are both also well illustrated. The latter refers to the discoveries of a German traveller, Dr. Frobenius, in Ife, the sacred capital of the Yoruba country, in the English colony of Southern Nigeria. The sacred heads figured are of interest, and seem to indicate a technique beyond the negro ; but the article offers little to justify its title, which is due, apparently, to the German explorer. Herr Perzynski continues his noteworthy articles 200 NOTES AND QUEEIES. m s. m. MAR. n, wn. ' Towards a Grouping of Chinese Porcelain,' and there is a fascinating page of illustrations of ' Old Marcasite Jewellery ' discussed by Mr. Dudley Falcke. The name indicates a mineral which is really pyrite. The reviews in the number, as usual, are well worth attention. BOOKSELLERS' CATALOGUES. MARCH. MR. P. M. BARNARD'S new Tunbridge Wells Catalogue contains autographs, manuscripts, and documents, and includes a long. list of require- ments for the stable of Charles I. when Prince of Wales, 4Z. 4s. ; an interesting document by Sir Philip Sidney, 15L 15s. ; and a collection of MSS. of the Marquis Wellesley, 101. 10s. Under Words- worth is an unpublished sonnet, also 101. 10s. A division of the Catalogue is devoted to documents arranged topographically. Under Staffordshire is a Psalter, with a Kalendar (some leaves wanting), bound in modern black morocco, 281. Under John Evelyn is a collection of autographs of people mentioned in the Diary, 61. 10*. A list of the names will be sent on application. Under Louis XIV. is an apparently contemporary MS. account of the reign, 1643 to 1650, 31. 3s. There is a copy of ' Epicteti Stoici Philosophi Enchiridion,' 1670, which belonged to Isaac Watts, with notes by him, 2,1. 2s. The items in the Catalogue number 344, and are all fully described. Mr. Bertram Dobell has in his Catalogue 193 some choice autograph letters, including those of Dickens, Hood, Mrs. Fitzherbert (" Perdita "), Sheridan, Tennyson, and Horace Walpole. Among first editions are * Peregrine Pickle,' 5Z. 10s. ; Lamb's Album verses, 31. 3s. ; Massin- ger's ' Fatal Dowry,' 61. 10s. ; Walton's Life of George Herbert, 4L 4*. ; Washbourne's ' Divine Poems,' 51. 5*. ; ' Poems by Ellis and Acton Bell,' Smith & Elder, 1846, 11. 5s. ; ' Tristram Shandy ' (Vols. I. and II., second edition ; Vols. III. to IX. first edition, with the author's signature in Vols. V., VII., and IX.); 'A Sentimental Journey,' second edition ; and Letters, first edition, to- gether 14 vols., 45Z. The general portion contains works under America, Cruikshank, Drama, and Folk-lore. Under Juvenile are books with quaint woodcuts, 1806-32 ; and under Shelley is the first edition of ' A Six Weeks' Tour,' Hookham, 1817, 21. 5s. The Catalogue closes with Foreign Books. Messrs. Andrew Iredale & Son's Torquay Catalogue 79 contains the first edition of ' Shirley,' 3 vols., original cloth, 51. 5s. Under Charles I. is ' Eikon E'piste,' printed in 1649, in answer to 4 Eikon Alethine ' ; there are also in the same volume ' Lingua Testium,' 1651, and other pieces, small 4to, 51. 5s. There are first editions under Coleridge. A choice copy of Dibdin's ' Bibliotheca Spenceriana,' 4 vols., 1814-23, green morocco, is 61. 6s. ; his ' Tour in France,' is also 61. 6s. A presentation copy of Dugdale's ' Warwickshire,' russia by Riviere, is 10Z. Under Grangerized is Granger's ' Biographical History,' extended to 13 vols. by the insertion of a thousand portraits, 121. 10s. The first edition of ' Wood- stock ' may be had for a sovereign. A large-paper copy of Nash's ' Worcestershire,' 2 vols., folio, 1781-99, calf, is 10Z. There is a considerable section devoted to Religion and History of Religion. Mr. Alexander W. Macphail's Edinburgh Catalogue 106 contains Austin Dobson's edition of Hogarth, 2 vols., imp. 4to., 4Z. 10s. ; Leigh Hunt's W 7 orks, 7 vols., half-calf, 11. Is. ; Lanier's ' Shakspere and his Forerunners,' 2 vols., large royal 8vo, with portfolio, 21. 2s. (Edition de Luxe, only 102 printed, of which 10 were for England, the remainder for the United States) ; and Scott's novels, 25 vols., new half-calf, A. & C. Black, 1897, 4Z. 4s. A " Breeches " Bible, 1611, Barker's Concordance, a Prayer Book circa 1640, and the Psalms in metre, the whole in one volume, small 4to, are priced 11. 10s. There is a list under Glasgow. A presentation copy of Ruskin's lecture on war, privately printed, 1866, is a guinea, and a relic of the past in the shape of an antique tea-caddy, mahogany inlaid, with horn cup for measuring, circa 1750-75, is 11. 15s. Mr. W. M. Murphy's Liverpool Catalogue 102 contains Drayton s ' Polyolbion,' a fine clean copy, 1622, 121. 12s. Lists will be found under America, Art, Chap-books, Coloured Plates, and Costumes. Under Dickens is the first edition of ' Nickleby,' 21. 10s. Under Drama is Doran's ' Their Majesties' Servants,' 2 vols., half -calf, 1864, 11. 8s. Under French Illustrations is D'Aussy's ' Fables et Romans,' extra illustrated, 5 vols., 21. 10s. Under Leigh Hunt is The London Journal, 2 vols. in 1, 10s. 6d. There are works under Lancashire. The Edition de Luxe of Menpes's ' The World's Children,' in addition to the beautifully coloured plates, has a signed water-colour, 1903, 31. 3s. The Somers Tracts, 13 vols., 4to, 1809-15, are 31. 10s. Under Surrey is Brayley and Britton's work, 5 vols. in 10, 1850, 2/. 10s. Under Yorkshire will be found Whittaker, Halfpenny, and other well-known names. [Notices of other Catalogues held over.] to ON all communications must be written the name and address of the sender, not necessarily for pub- lication, but as a guarantee of good faith. WE beg leave to state that we decline to return communications which, for any reason, we do not pritit, and to this rule we can make no exception. WE cannot undertake to answer queries privately, nor can we advise correspondents as to the value of old books and other objects or as to the means of disposing of them. To secure insertion of communications corre- spondents must observe the following rules. Let each note, query, or reply be written on a separate slip of paper, with the signature of the writer arid such address as he wishes to appear. When answer- ing queries, or making notes with regard to previous entries in the paper, contributors are requested to Eut in parentheses, immediately after the exact eading, the series, volume, and page or pages to which they refer. Correspondents who repeat queries are requested to head the second com- munication " Duplicate." CORRIGENDA P. 173, col. 1, 1. 34, for "sapientes" read cupientes. P. 179, col. 1, 1. 8, for "T'yd-pt- cleas " read T'y-p'-deas. ii s. in. MAK. is, ion.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 201 LONDON, SATURDAY, MARCH IS, 1911. CONTENTS. No. 64. NOTES : Totell, Sir Antony St. Leger, and John Harington, 201 The Arrest of Louis XVI., 203 Gray's ' Elegy,' 204 Reform of the Calendar, 205 Flood Superstitions"! f eg s _ White Meats : Wigs : Af ternooning In Black and White Cadie=Caddie, 206. QUERIES : Terrace " Secular trees " " Sedulous ape " "Seekers" Macaulay's Allusions Bedfordshire Epitaphs : Rev. Robert Smyth Geffery le Bakester de Loffithe Book Inscriptions' Waverley ' : Departed Hero and the Sun's Lingering Light, 207 Plaistow and its Products Sonnets by Rafael Miles Gale Murder on Gad's Hill in 1661 Early English Bookbindings Battle of Barnet Dogs on Brasses and Stone Effigies, 208 Double Dedications Emperor and Painter Thomas Jenner The Lords Smeaton and Smeaton Family Sir John Toinlinson Hibbert Sandy Mackaye in ' Alton Locke ' Hertford Street Historic Fires in Ancient Rome H.M.S. Pactolus Meg Dods and 'The Cook and Housewife's Manual,' 209. REPLIES : London Gunsmiths, 210 " Almighty Dollar" Smallpox and the Stars, 211 Gratious Street=Grace- church Street Bar " Sinister " Crevequer of Bereford Lamb, Burton, and Spiera, 212 " Cackling clouts": " Carpillions " : " Gainshot" : " Suffice " Sweetapple Surname "Owns" : " Blithering,* 213' A Voice from the Bush 'Canons, Middlesex, 214-Mansel Family- Thomas James Thackeray Baptismal Scarf, 215 Pawper or Pauper Bird, 216 William Mears Arnol- fini Family' Les Arrivants' Litany : Spitting and Stamping the Feet, 217 Thomas Morris-JonesMother's Maiden Name as Children's Surname Pitt's Letter on Superstition, 218. NOTES ON BOOKS: 'The Complete Poems of Emily Bronte.' Booksellers' Catalogues. Notices to Correspondents. TOTTEL' S 'MISCELLANY,' SIR ANTONY ST. LEGER, AND SIR JOHN HARINGTON THE ELDER. THE reason why so little progress has been made in discovering the authors and history of many of the unclaimed poems in Tottel is not the difficulty of research or want of material, but lack of interest in the matter. It seems almost shameful that a piece by Chaucer should have lain undiscovered in this collection of songs and sonnets for more than 350 years, despite the fact that the book is in almost everybody's hands and that Chaucer's work is so well known. And as regards material, there is no lack of it, for in those old days most people of culture, especially those about Court, used verse as a common medium to circulate their thoughts and opinions of things amongst each other, with the result that to-day we possess an enormous mass of the poetry they wrote, much in print, but still more in manuscript. It ought not, therefore, to be impossible to name the authors of poems in Tottel and in similar miscellanies, especially as names are sometimes appended to the fugitive pieces that passed privately from hand to hand, and that the originals of other posms are to be found at times in the works of well-known writers. I will try to show now that the search for such authors is sometimes only a surface matter, as in the case of Chaucer's poem, and that Tottel is no more to be trusted than other miscellanies of the same charac- ter. Tottel' s ascriptions to Surrey are accepted for gospel, and he would be a hardy man who would dispute them without over- whelming evidence of a contrary character. The strange thing about it all is that the evidence against Tottel has been available for more than a hundred years, and has been passed by because a meddling editor, who did not know the value of evidence, chose deliberately to put it in the background as much as possible, and to substitute for it matter which he had picked up in odd corners. But I am anticipating, and will return to this side of my subject a little later. There is no doubt whatever as to the pert played by Sir Antony St. Leger in Tottel. He it was who wrote the epitaph on Sir Thomas Wyatt the Elder, Tottel, p. 228 : Lo dead he lives, that whilome lived here, &c. The only strange thing about the matter is that Dr. Nott and others should print the epitaph as the composition of Sir Antony St. Leger, and fail to notice that it appears amongst the " Uncertain Authors " in Tottel. There are two versions of this epitaph, the one printed in the ' Works of Wyatt,' Aldine Poets, p. 236, reading as under: Sir Antonie Sentleger of Sir T. Wyatt. Thus lieth the dead, that whilome lived here Among the dead that quick go to the ground ; Though he be dead, yet doth he quick appear By immortal fame that death cannot confound His life for aye, his fame in trump shall sound. Though he be dead, yet is he thus alive : No death that life from Wyatt can deprive. Dr. Nott's version corresponds word for word with the epitaph printed in Tottel, his heading only being different : An Epitaph on Sir Thomas Wyatt the Elder, the Wise, the Learned, and the Good, By Sir Anthony St. Lieger. Sir Antony St. Leger, then, takes his place by the side of Chaucer as one of the authors 202 NOTES AND QUERIES. rn s. in. M AR . i 8 , in. who had a hand in Tottel. It is interesting to find that it was to another " Anthony Sentleger, of Oakham, in Kent, Esq.," that Massinger dedicated ' The Unnatural Combat.' Massinger states that this Anthony's father, Sir Warham Sentleger, was " a master, for his pleasure, in poetry," and that father and son were generous patrons of men of his profession. I turn back now to where I cut myself short, to deal with the claims of Sir John Harington the Elder. In 1804 Thomas Parke edited a new version of ' Nugse Antiquae,' which had been compiled from family MSS. by the Rev. Henry Harington, some twenty years or more previously. Parke thought he could improve upon Harington by adding fresh matter to ' Nugae Antiquae,' and no doubt he did so ; but his improvements went too far, for he left out of his edition of the work several interesting pieces of ancient prose as well as all poems printed by Harington which he had traced to Tottel's ' Miscellany.' With- out staying to examine the headings of some of these poems, and ignoring altogether the circumstance that the readings of the Harington poems differed in many points, and are in several instances more correct than those in Tottel, he bundled them out and took credit to himself for having performed a very smart piece of work. Parke' s act was nothing less than a piece of vandalism, for it turns out that not only was the old ' Nugae Antiquse ' compiled from MSS. in the handwriting of the two Sir John Haringtons, but that these MSS. put Tottel and ' The Paradise of Daintie Devices ' right where they are wrong ; and, moreover, they prove that the older Haring- ton was a poet of no mean order, and the author of at lea it four of the Tottel poems, one of which has been given wrongly to the Earl of Surrey, besides being the writer of a piece which is paraded in * The Paradise of Daintie Devices ' above the signature of Lord Vaux. When I saw the value of the Harington evidence, I asked myself, Why has not this been made use of before ? Why has not Sir John Harington been added to the ustof Tottel's authors ? And how do editors of Surrey's poems reconcile their author's claim to a poem which Sir John Harington expressly declared to be his own and written by him at a certain time and in peculiar circumstances ? It would seem that Parke' s ignorant meddling had been but too successful, and that his edition of * Nugae Antiquae ' had swamped the Harington version of the work, for editors of Surrey and Wyatt ignore ^ the existence of the latter, or only consult it when it suits their purpose to do so. There is a piece in ' The Paradise of Daintie Devices ' which commences The life is long, which loathsomely doth last, &c. The compiler has signed this poem " D. S.," and it has been assumed that the initials belong to Dr. Sands, or Sandys, who afterwards became Archbishop of York. I have never seen any proof advanced that Dr. Sands had written or was capable of writing verse, and the younger Sir John Harington, in his ' Additions ' to Bishop Godwin's ' Catalogue of Bishops,' does not give the least hint of such a thing, although he seems to have been intimately acquainted with his life and with the doings of members of Dr. Sands's family. He may, however, have dabbled in poetry in his early days, though it seems very strange that the young Sir John Harington does not say so : the point is that the poem referred to just previously was not written by anybody owning the initials "D. S.," but was by Sir John Harington the Elder. The paternity of the poem is not open to the least doubt, for Sir John Harington tells us when he wrote it, and where. In 'Nugae Antiquse' it is printed thus : Elegy wrote in the Tower by John Haryngton, confined with the Princess Elizabeth, 1554. The lyfe is long, which lothsomely clothe last, &c. Parke did not know that this poem was also in Tottel, among the "Uncertain Authors," and therefore he copied it from Harington' s book, and enabled me to see at once that he had been bungling all through. The Tottel poem occurs in Arber, pp. 129- 130, and contains three stanzas not in ' Nugae Antiquae ' ; and the version of it in ' The Paradise of Daintie Devices ' has the same number of stanzas as Tottel, although Tottel and ' Nugae Antiquae ' agree in parts where both differ from ' The Paradise of Daintie Devices.' An instance of this is to be found in the following stanza, which ' England's Parnassus ' copied from Tottel and ranged under "Death" : Death is a port, whereby we passe to joy. Life is a lake, that drowneth all in pain. Death is so dere, it ceaseth all annoy. Life is so leude, that all it yeld.es is vayn. And as by life to bondage man is braught : Even so likewise by death was fredome wraught. There are only small differences in the last two lines of the * Nugae Antiquae ' poem, ii s. m. MAR. is, 1911.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 203 whereas ' The Paradise of Daintie Devices ' has several verbal changes : Death is the doore whereby we drawe to joye, Life is a lake that drowneth all in paine : Death is so dole it seaseth all awaie. &c. 'England's Parnassus' makes matters worse by ascribing its quotation to the Earl of Surrey, thus proving once again how un- reliable are some of the signatures in these old anthologies. This evidence establishes the elder Harmg- ton's claim to one poem in Tottel's " Un- certain Authors." CHARLES CRAWFORD. (To be continued.) THE ARREST OF LOUIS XVI. WHEN Louis XVI. was recognized, at Varennes, in his abortive attempt to escape into Belgium, Sauce, Attorney of the Commune (or Maire), drew up a proces verbal of the arrest, which has been carefully preserved in the municipal archives, and previous to 1855 it had been transcribed by Lamartine only. But in that year the Rev. G. M. Musgrave was allowed to take a copy, of which he has given the condensed substance, "without a single alteration," in the following translation: The 23rd of June, 1791, Varennes. The first Proces Verbal of the arrest of the King and of the Royal Family at Varennes. There are scenes in life which the feelings of men can far more accurately realize than their thoughts, and the impressions left by which ex- haust all the conceptions of the most lively imagination. Of such a nature was the scene of which this town has just been rendered the theatre. On Tuesday, 21st of June, at 11 P.M., the Attorney-General of the Commune was suddenly informed by a courier [Drouet] from St. Mene- hould, that two carriages, which it was found i i npracticable to detain at Clermont, would shortly arrive at Varennes, and it was believed that they contained a charge in trust very precious to overy French heart. Upon the arrival of these (.images almost immediately afterwards, the Attorney-General of the Commune demanded of the party inside their passports. A passport \vas handed over to him bearing the signature of Montmorin, and granted to the Baroness de Kroff and family, en route to Franckfort. The night was dark, and the townspeople were astir ; and the Attorney-General took occasion to observe to these yet unknown parties in the two carriages, that the disturbance thus arisen, the darkness of the night, and consideration for their safety dictated the course of not pursuing their journey at this hour, and he suggested their accom- panying him to his own residence. They were eleven in all : five in one carriage two in another, and four on horseback, as escorts Having alighted at the Attorney-General's louse, they stated that it was their intention ;o go to Montmedy, not to Franckfort ; and as ;hough French hearts, ever wont to hold in dear regard the person of their king, were certain to recognize his presence, directly the demonstra- ions of love and respect we so earnestly mani- 'ested were offered, he exclaimed : " Yes, I am the King : There is the Queen and ;he Royal Family ! I am come to reside among you, in the bosom of my children : I am not abandoning them." The tender sympathy and emotion of all jarties present blending with that expressed by ;he King, the monarch and his august family condescended to embrace all the citizens who were in the apartment, and to receive from them, n turn, the same manifestations of their lively and heartfelt affectionateness. At this moment an individual arrived, stating himself to be an aide-de-camp of Monsieur de Bouill6 [Marquis, governor of Metz and Alsace], and demanding x> speak to the King. Being introduced by the Attorney-General of the Commune, and asked the King what his name was, he replied : " 1 am Coquillard." [Goguelot.] " Well and good," said the King. " When are we going ? " " I await your orders, Sire." And the orders were given with concurrence of the Attorney-General and this officer. The King, nevertheless, manifested anxiety :,o set off, and at several intervals asked if his horses were ready. A mob of townspeople, and of the inhabitants of the immediately adjoining villages, had, meanwhile, begun to crowd the streets of Varennea ; and the intelligence of the King's arrival had been conveyed even to distant localities. There was a general rush, akin to all those impulses of joy and tender anxiety with which, in the midst of loud expressions of eager- ness, a large family would make such feelings known, upon finding a father who had been long missing, and whom they dreaded losing again ! The municipal officers of the town felt that they had only to direct the King's attention to such a spectacle such a scene of moving sympathies and disquietude to awaken the kindly feelings of his heart. They urged that, loved as he was by his people, his throne was in all their hearts his name in all their mouths ; but that the place of his abode was Paris, to which capital the anxious and urgent prayers of the provinces, at the present period of discord and alarm, were calling back their chief, and all the citizens their sire ; that the safety of the State depended on the completion of the scheme of the Constitution, and the safety of the Constitution itself was vitally connected with his return ; that blest as they were in the existence of his personal virtues, the French people felt their individual happiness derivable from his own personal well-being ; and that their acutely feeling and affectionate hearts would never recognize the pledge and assurance of such felicity, but in the inseparable participation of its enjoyment with him. Meanwhile a detachment of the Hussars of Lauzun arrived, thrown with all precipitation into Varennes. Another, a German regiment, that had been in garrison at Stenay, and a troop from the neighbourhood, were reported to be on their way. The first-named evinced the most 204 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. m. MA*, is, 1911. Amicable feelings towards their fellow-citizens. After repeated demands on the part of the King [as to pursuing his journey], the municipal officers held a general council, when, just as they were assembling, an aide-de-camp from Monsieur de La Fayette [colonel of the National Guards of Paris] arrived in the town, bringing a decree of the Assembly, or rather, it might be said, of the prayers and wishes of all France, that the King should return. The townspeople urgently be- sought the King to consider what bloodshed and misery might result from his departure, and what happiness would ensue on his return that all Paris, the National Assembly, and France at large, would greet with the most enviable welcome this fresh assurance of the love he bore to his people. Yielding, at length, to these passionate and urgent expressions of public feeling, the King and royal family consented to set off ; and towards half-past ten o'clock in the forenoon [? 6 A.M.], and amidst those exclamations of the multitude which it is so affecting to hear when they issue from combined feelings of liberty and loyal attachment, the party drove off, surrounded by a, considerable number of the townspeople on horseback, and by the National Guard, muster- ing, on this occasion, for the purpose rather of gracing such a triumph of deep feelings, than of constituting a mere personal protection. The municipal officers who accompanied them as far as Clermont were .... [Here follow several names.] Musgrave, 'A Pilgrimage into Dauphin^,' 1857, vol. 1, pp. 206-12. A second proces verbal was drawn up, which contains some variations from the first, having been ordered by the National Assembly. F. H. GRAY'S ' ELEGY ' : TRANSLATIONS AND PARODIES. See 2 S. xii. 128; 3 S. i. 112, 197, 220, 255, 339, 355, 398, 43-2 ; ii. 17, 55, 199 ; 6 S. viii. 107; ix. 509; x. 37, 112, 239 ; 8 S. iii. 44 ; 9 S. vii. 8 ; 10 S. ii, 175 ; v. 406. II. PARODIES AND IMITATIONS. (Concluded from p. 145.) English. J. B. Fisher. ' The Pettiffogger.' In Town- Talk, in 1819 or earlier. Reprinted by Hamilton, op tit., pp. 25-6. ' The Foundlings.' 4to, London, 1763. ' The Gambler.' In Bgan's ' Book of Sports,' 1832. Reprinted by Hamilton, op. tit., pp. 27-8. Geoffrey Gimcrack, pseud. * Dry Goods : an Elegy.' In ' Gimcrackiana, or Fugitive Pieces on Manchester Men and Manners,' Manchester, 1833. Reprinted by Hamilton, op. cit., p. 28. ' Gray's Elegy [a Parody].' (Written in the Rooms of the Geographical Society, in the Presence of Du Chaillu's Collections.) In Punch, 1861, xli. 7. ' Gray's Elegy. (In an Irish Prison.) ' In Punch, 2 September, 1882. Reprinted by Hamil- ton, op. cit., p. 38. H. See above under Corporal Trim. M. W. H. ' Elegy written in a City Church- yard.' In Hood's Magazine, 1848, pp. 555-8. Edward Hamley. ' Reflections in Netley Abbey.' In his * Poems of Various Kinds.' London, 1796. Sir George Hayes. ' A Temple Elegy.' Lon- don, [1870 ?]. The British Museum Catalogue, until corrected by the writer, ascribed this to William Hayes. Reprinted in ' Hayesiana,' London, [1891]. H. Headley. ' A Parody of Gray's Elegy written in a Country Church-Yard ; the Author Leaving Trinity College, Oxford, [1786].' In his ' Poetical Works,' London, 1808, pp.- 24-9. When and where was this first published ? Hortensius. ' Elegy written 'in a Lingering Illness.' In The European Magazine, 1791, xx. 305-6. Hotspur. ' Elegy in a London Theatre, not by Gray.' In Bentley's Miscellany, 1843, xiii, 554-5. Cf. 3 S. i. 398. H. P. Hough ton. ' An Evening Contemplation in a French Prison.' London, 1809. Reprinted by Hamilton, op. cit., p. 43. ~' An Imitation of Gray's Elegy. . . .Intended to Cheer and Animate the Spirits, instead of De- pressing Them,',, &c. [London ? 1860 ?] The British Museum copy|is marked 11643. g. 35. ' An Imitation of Mr. Grey's Ode,' &c. In The Gentleman's Magazine, 1775, xlv. 491. J. ' Elegy. Written in Drury-lane Theatre.' In The Poetical Register, 1808-9, vii. 361-5. O. Jaques. ' The Funeral. An Elegy.' In The London Chronicle, 12-15 April, 1766, p. 356. Edward Jerningham. ' An Elegy written among the Ruins of an Abbey.' London, 1765. Same. ' The Magdalens.' 2nd ed. London, 1763. Same. ' The Nunnery.' In The Repository, 1777, ii. 65-70. ' Lament of the Eminent One.' In The Figaro, 6 October, 1875. Reprinted by Hamilton, op. cit., p. 34. ' Legs in Tattersall's Yard.' In The Spirit of the Age, 1828. Reprinted by Hamilton, op. cit., pp. 46-7. ' Lord Mayor's Day. A Mock Elegy.' In The Neiv Foundling Hospital for Wit, vol. v. 1786. Reprinted by Hamilton, op. cit., pp. 43-4. ' Love Elegy. Written at College, Ox- ford.' In 'The Poetical Calendar,' 2nd ed., 1763, v. 119-21. Robert Lovell. ' The Decayed Farm-House. ' In his ' Poetical Works,' London, 1808, pp. 31-4. ' Lucubrations in an Apothecary's Shop.' In The Mirror, iv. 459. ' A Lunatic Parody.' In Fun, 1 April, 1865. Reprinted by Hamilton, op. cit., p. 33. A. W. Mackenzie. ' Elegy written in a Country Rink.' In ' Idyls of the Rink,' 2nd ed., London, 1877. Reprinted by Hamilton, op. cit., pp. 35-6. Marcus. ' Epitaph.' In The London Chro- nicle, 27-29 July, 1769 ; reprinted in Ackermann's ' History of the University of Cambridge,' i. 75. W. Mason. ' An Elegy in a Churchyard in South Wales.' At the moment of writing this is not accessible to me. ' Meditations on Mr. Barry's New Houses of Parliament.' In Punch, 1844, vii. 150. Edward Moore. ' An Elegy written among the Ruins of a Nobleman's Seat in Cornwall.' In The Poetical Calendar,' 2nd ed., 1763, riii. 88-90. ii s. in. MAR. is, i9iL] NOTES AND QUERIES. 205 William H. Murray. In his ' Occasional and Farewell Addresses,' Edinburgh, 1851, pp. 69-70. Cf. 3 S. i. 255. N. ' Elegy written in a Grub-street Garret.' In The Trifler, 1788, i. 65-8. S. N. ' An Elegy written in Kensington Garden, August, 1787.' In The Gentleman's Magazine, December, 1787, Ivii. 1107-8. Loosely imitative, ' Newall's Buildings.' In The Free Lance, Manchester. Date desired. Reprinted by Hamil- ton, op. cit., p. 42. ' Night Thoughts.' In The Man in the Moon, vol. ii., c. 1848. Reprinted by Hamilton, op. cit., p. 30. O micron. ' Imitation of Gray. Epitaph on Pic Nic, written in a Newsman's Shop.' In The Morning Post (date?); reprinted in The Spirit of the Public Journals, 1803, vii. 142. An Oxonian. See above under Duncombe. W. P. ' Elegy written at Florence.' Geneva, 1785. Stephen Panting. ' Four Elegies.' In ' The Poetical Calendar,' 2nd ed., 1763, viii. 20-34. ' A Paraphrase on Gray's Elegy, written on the Unfortunate Catastrophe of the late Mr. Henry Weston, who was Executed for Forgery, July, 1796.' London, 1796, 4to. ' Parnell-egy written in a Westminster Palace- Yard.' In Moonshine, 30 April, 1887. Reprinted by Hamilton, op cit., pp. 38-9. ' Parody of Gray's Elegy in a Country Church- yard.' In The British Press, 14 September, 1812. Cf. 3 S. i. 356. ' Passage from Lord Grey's Elegy.' In Punch, 10 September, 1881. Thomas Penrose. ' The Curate. A Fragment.' In The Gentleman's Magazine, February, 1782, lii. 86-7. ' A Perversion.' In Hamilton, op. cit., p. 42. ' A Political Parody.' In The British Press, 14 September, 1812. Reprinted by Hamilton, op. cit.. pp. 39-40. ' The Political Passing Bell : an Elegy written in a Country Meeting House, 1789.' Boston, 1789. Abr. Portal. ' A Morning Elegy.' In ' The Poetical Calendar,' 2nd ed., 1763,' xii. 65-8. ' An Evening Elegy.' In same, pp. 60-72. J. T. R. ' Nightly Thoughts in the Temple.' Printed with L. D.'s translation, Chatham, 1806. Did it appear earlier ? W. R. ' The Long Vacation.' In part in ' Doing, in London,' 1828. Also in The Mirror, 28 May, 1831, and in Hamilton, op. cit., pp. 23-4. W. Hamilton Reid. ' Elegy on the Waste near the Charter-House.' In The European Magazine, 1701. xx. 306-7. ' Ruined Halls.' In Punch, 1852, xxii. 255. S. ' An Elegy written in St. Stephen's Chapel.' In The European Magazine, 1798, xxxiii. 189-91. J. S. ' An Elegy. Written at the Approach <>f Spring.' In ' The Poetical Calendar,' 2nd ed., 17(H (sic), iii. 5-8. ' Tho Scales.' In Quads (date ?). Two stanzas quoted by Hamilton, op. cit., p. 42. ' The S.K. King's Requiem.' In Truth, 11 November, 1886. Reprinted by Hamilton, p. 38. ' Supplement to Gray's EK'gy in n Church Yard.' First appeared anonymously in an American newspaper ; quoted by Stephen Collett ( = Thomas Byerly) in ' Relics of Literature,' London, 1823. Theoderit. ' Elegy on a Quid of Tobacco.' In ' The Annual Anthology,' 1799, pp. 19-21. William T. Thomas (pseud. W r . T. Moncrieff). ' Prison Thoughts. Elegy written in the King's Bench,' &c. London, 1821. C. E. Tisdall. ' Elegy on a Favourite Washer- woman. Mrs. Bridget Mulligan.' In The Elocu- tionist, 15 July, 1882. Reprinted by Hamilton, p. 48. Togatus, pseud. ' An Elegy written in the Long Vacation.' In The Goionsman, 1 January, 1831. Also in Hamilton, p. 26. Horace Twiss. ' Elegiac Stanzas on Returning at Daybreak from a Ball at Lady 's.' In his ' Posthumous Parodies and other Pieces,' London 1814, pp. 49-58. Y. ' Elegy on Mr. Maurice Evans.' In The European Magazine, 1782, i. 66-7. Sir William Young. 'The Camp.' In 3 S. i. 432-3. French. Louis de Fontanes. ' Le jour des morts dans une campagne.' In Le Magasin Encyclopedique, 1796, and reprinted in book form. One passage imitates a stanza of the c Elegy.' Latin. Quidam. ' Fragments of Not a Translation* but a Loose Distant Imitation of Gray's Elegy. In The Gentleman's Magazine, January, 1822, xcii. i. 72. I have given in each case the earliest edition known to me, and shall be glad to learn of any earlier editions ; also of any other parodies or imitations. CLARK: S. NOBTHUP. Munich. REFOBM OF THE CALENDAK. ' N. & Q.' has contained many notes on changes and reforms in the calendar, therefore it may be well to put on record the following, which appeared in The Daily Telegraph of 24 Febru- ary : REFORM OF THE CALENDAR. A NEW BANK HOLIDAY. Mr. R. Pearce's bill for the reform of the calendar, the text of which was issued yesterday, has for its object the regularising of the quarters of the year, the adjustment of the days of the week and of the month, and the fixing of Easter Day and other Bank Holidays and dates depending upon Easter. To this end the first day of the year will be a Bank Holiday, called New Year's Day, but it is not to be reckoned as a day of the week or of the month or quarter. In other words, it will dis- appear from the calendar, and Jan. 2 will become Jan. 1. The effect of this arrangement will be that the year will consist of 364 days, and hence will be divisible into four equal quarters of ninety-one days each, and into fifty-two weeks of seven days each. Each quarter will contain exactly thirteen weeks, divided into two months of thirty days each and one of thirty-one. Each day of the month will always fall on the same day of the week.j 206 NOTES AND QUERIES. [ii s. in. MAR. is, iwi. Ordinary quarter days will not be interfered with, and special provisions, as in the Calendar Act, 1750, will preserve days of payment, delivery of goods, expiration of leases, &c., and coining of age. To preserve the symmetry of the new system, February will be docked of its extra day in leap years, and another new Bank Holiday, to be known as Leap Year Day, will be inserted between the last day of June and the first day of July. It also will not count as a day of the week, month, or quarter. NO MOVEABLE FEASTS. Beginning in 1912, Easter Sunday and all the moveable fasts, feasts, and dates dependent upon it will be fixed so as to fall in every year on the same day of the same month, as well as on the same day of the week. The proposed dates are as follows : Ash Wednesday . Feb. 29. Good Friday . . . April 12. Easter Sunday . April 14. Easter Monday . April 15. WhitSunday . June 3. Whit Monday . . . . June 4. Christmas Day, Dec. 25, will always be on a Monday. Under the new system, March, June, Sep- tember, and December will consist of thirty-one days, and each of the other eight months of thirty. It is proposed that the reformed calendar shall a Pply n t only to the United Kingdom, but to all his Majesty's Dominions. The bill is backed by Sir William Bull, Mr. R. Harcourt, Sir J. H. Dalziel, and Sir Albert Spicer. BABRULE. FLOOD SUPERSTITIONS. An odd belief still lingers among the Warwickshire peasantry that a flood follows when swans wander along the highway. A brood of nearly full-grown cygnets recently acquired the habit of leaving the upper part of the Avon and walking down the Warwick Road, here to join the river at a lower point. This act is said to have caused a high flood a few months ago. Another local theory is that the death of the sovereign brings on a flood, as witness the highest flood recorded in 1901, and the last serious one in 1910. WM. JAGGABD. "I FEGS." Translating 'Pegasus in Harness,' in his version of Schiller's ' Poems and Ballads,' Lord Lytton makes Hodge on the mountain top express himself thus : " I fegs," the farmer cries, " what next ? This helter-skelter sport will never do, But break him in yet I '11 endeavour to." Such is the reading of the " Knebworth Edition," 1875, and of the reprint issued in " The Universal Library " of 1887 under the editorship of Prof. Henry Morley. " I fegs " as thus given has all the appear- ance of being an assertion made in the first person, whereas it is an asseveration equi- valent to " In faith," and should take the form " I' fegs." In the ' Archaic Diction- ary ' Halliwell duly enters " Fegs. In faith ! South " ; and Jamieson includes the word, with definition and illustrations, in the ' Scottish Dictionary.' Jamieson likewise gives the variants " faik," " faiks," and " faikins," and writes : " I' fake (provinc. E.) is evidently the same ; thus expl. by Thoresby, ' Faith (an oath) ' ; Bay's Lett., p. 327. A . Bor. ' i' /a/cins, in faith ; an asseveration ' ; Grose." It may be added that, if the pronunciation of the phrase now current in parts of the Scottish Lowlands were phonetically tran- scribed, the expression would take the form used by Lord Lytton' s Hodge. THOMAS BAYNE. WHITE MEATS : WIGS : AFTEBNOONING. These words occur in the Rev. J. Gother's sermon for Quinquagesima Sunday (ed. 1718): " In this Nation it is not permitted, at Collation to eat any kind of Fish or Whit-meats ; that is, Eggs, Cheese, Milk or Butter : Cakes and Wigs are customary, tho' not made without some Butter.... As for the Quantity....! think the most general Rule may be, of eating as much as comes to -the Quantity of an Afternooning at other times of the Year [than Lent]." J. B. IN BLACK AND WHITE. The ' N.E.D.' furnishes no early instance of this exact phrase, though "under white and black" is cited from 'Much Ado,' V. i. 314 (1599). It is, therefore, probable that Ben Jonson first uses the expression in 1598 : " Cob. O, he has basted me rarely, sumptu- ously ! but I have it here in black and white, [pulls out the ivarrant] for his black and blue, shall pay him." ' Every Man in his Humour,' iv. 3 (Gifford's Edition, p. 20). RICHABD H. THORNTON. 36, Upper Bedford Place, W.C. CADIE == CADDIE. The ' N.E.D.' gives cawdy in 1730 for what is now called a caddie, and a quotation of about 1774 for the equivalent cadie. An earlier instance than the latter is to be found in The London Morning Penny Post of 22-24 July, 1751, which recorded, under the heading * Scot- land,' that " Last week one Duncan Grant, a discharged soldier, who has passed here sometime as a Street Cadie, was sentenced by the Magistrates (for imposing on a Gentleman who sent him to Market to buy Half a Dozen Herrings, who cost Sixpence, but he averred they cost a Shilling, which he caused the Gentleman to pay) to be us. 111. MAR. is, mi.] NOTES AND QUERIES. 207 iprisoned in the Tolbooth till Wednesday next' id that Day to be taken from thence, and put jn the Pillory, to stand for the Space of an Hour, rith half a Dozen Herrings about his Neck, and lereafter to be banished the City and Liberties >r ever." ALFRED F. BOBBINS. WE must request correspondents desiring in- formation on family matters of only private interest to affix their names and addresses to their queries, in order that answers may be sent to them direct. TERRACE. When was this name first applied to a row of houses, on a site more or less elevated above the level of the street or road, or on the face of a slope ? When were such " terraces " first introduced in London, Bath, Edinburgh, and other cities or towns ? A correspondent thinks that they date to a little later than the Napoleonic wars. I should be glad of. examples, with reference before 1839. This I think is the latest of the many senses of the word, which in the sense of the ambulatory or gallery round a cloister open on the inner side, as at Magdalen and New Colleges, Oxford, is found in 15 . J. A. H. MURRAY. Oxford. " SECULAR TREES." The new edition of Webster's dictionary gives " secular oaks " as an example of the use of the adjective in the sense " aged, centuried." I have a quotation dated 1876 from Sir Richard Burton for " secular trees," and several of the same kind from later writers. Can any earlier instances of this use be found in English, or is it a recent Gallicism ? The closely related sense " lasting through ages" has, of course, long been common. HENRY BRADLEY. " SEDULOUS APE." Where does this ex- ?ression occur ? I have an impression that have met with it either in Milton's prose or in Sir Thomas Browne, but cannot recall the context. HENRY BRADLEY. Oxford. [Used by Stevenson in * A College Magazine. '] "SEEKERS," RELIGIOUS SECT. I wish to know where I can find the fullest and clearest account of the religious sect known as, or calling themselves, " the Seekers " a set to which Sir H. Vane the younger belonged. Is there any book which under- takes to give an account of the various reli- gious sects which sprang up in the time of the Commonwealth ? J. WILLCOCK. MACAULAY'S ALLUSIONS. Macaulay, in the essay on Ranke's ' History of the Popes,' has this paragraph on the vagaries of super- stition : " We have seen men, not of mean intellect or neglected education, but qualified by their talents and acquirements to attain eminence either in active or speculative pursuits well-read scholars, expert logicians, keen observers of life and manners prophesying, interpreting, talking unknown tongues, working miraculous cures, coming down with messages from God to the House of Commons." I shall be glad of suggestions as to what persons Macaulay had in his mind. The "cures," I presume, were those of Prince Hohenlohe. GEORGE SAMPSON. [" Prophesying, interpreting, talking unknown tongues," allusions to the scenes connected with Edward Irving's ministry at the Scotch Church, Regent Square, circa 1829-30.] BEDFORDSHIRE EPITAPHS : REV. ROBERT SMYTH. In a foot-note on p. 132 of/ Fuller's Worthies,' vol. i. (4to Edition, published in 1812), the editor, John Nichols, F.A.S., says:^- " I have also a good collection of the Epitaphs in this County, taken before the year 1750, in the handwriting of that industrious antiquary, the Rev. Robert Smyth of Woodston. N." Can any of your readers say whether this collection is still in existence, and, if so, where it is to be found ? S. M. EGGANS. GEFFERY LE BAKESTER DE LOFFITHE. This baron, according to information given me by Sir George Baxter, did homage to Edward I. in 1296. Is anything known of his ancestry or of his descendants ? Or any other details about himself ? Loffithe is now Lochfeithie, near Forfar. RONALD DIXON. 46, Maryborough Avenue, Hull. BOOK INSCRIPTIONS. Will some reader kindly give me the author of the following : Goe, little booke ; God send thee good passage, And specially let this be thy prayere Unto them all that thee will read or hear : Where thou art wrong, after their help to call, Thee to correct in any part or all. I have seen it attributed to Chaucer, but am unable to trace it. EGERTON GARDINER. ' WAVERLEY ' : DEPARTED HERO AND THE SUN'S LINGERING LIGHT. Can any one help me to recover a passage in Scott's ' Waverley ' which compares the memory of a departed hero (Dundee, I think) to the lingering light of the sun after it has sunk below the horizon ? A. S. P. 208 NOTES AND QUERIES. [11 s. in. MA*, is, mi. PLAISTOW AND ITS PRODUCTS. Walter White in ' Eastern England,' 1862, refers to a poem written a hundred years ago by an anonymous rimer in praise of Plaistow, Essex : Upon a fertile spot of land Does Plaistow, thriving Plaistow stand. Later the poet says : Potatoes, now, are Plaistow's pride, Whole markets are from hence supply'd. No finer mutton can you spend Than what our fat'ning marshes send ; And in our farmers' yards you find Delicious fowls of divers kind : Whose cellars rarely ever fail To keep a cask of nappy ale. Who thus celebrated Plaistow ? W. W. GLENNY. Barking, Essex. SONNETS BY RAFAEL. In ' One Word More,' Browning says that " Rafael made a century of sonnets." Is this the fact ? Is there good authority for the statement that Rafael wrote a large number of sonnets? E. [Unsupported by evidence.] MILES GALE, M.A., rector of Keighley 1712, married Margaret, daughter of Chris- topher Stowes, D.D., Chancellor St. Peter's, York. Can any of your contributors give particulars of the children and grandchildren of this marriage, or indicate sources of infor- mation ? j. c. H. MURDER ON GAD'S HILL IN 1661. W. B. Rye has the following note (No. 63) in his * England as Seen by Foreigners ' (London, 1865) : " In 1661, Gad's Hill was the scene of an atrocious murder committed on a Transylvanian Prince, named Cossuma Alhertus. He was buried with great solemnity in Rochester Cathedral." No reference is given. I should be much obliged for any information bearing upon this subject. The Prince is totally unknown in Transylvanian history. Is there an epi- taph in Rochester Cathedral ? L. L. K. EARLY ENGLISH BOOKBINDINGS. In the portfolio of rubbings from tjiese, which is preserved at the National Art Library, South Kensington, are two numbered 10 A and HA, which are said to have been taken, from the sides of a certain ' Histoiia Egesippi de excidio Judeorum.' The stamps are of twelfth-century character. No record of the whereabouts of this book seems to have been preserved when the rubbings were taken Can any reader tell me where it is to be found ? I may add that I am engaged in collecting particulars of old English bindings of the twelfth, thirteenth, or fourteenth centuries, and shall be glad to have advice j of any which your readers may know of, ' other, of couise, than those mentioned in Mr. Weale's South Kensington Catalogue. Any photographs or rubbings that can be lent me for the purpose of reproduction, I should be very pleased to have the use of. R. M. BURCH. 79A, Woodbridge Road, Guildford. BATTLE OF BARNET : ITS SITE. In ' Battles and Battle-fields in England,' by C. R. B. Barrett, a plan is given on p. 192 showing Warwick's army drawn up on the west of the high road at Monken Hadley, and Edward's army on the slopes below the east side of the road the two armies thus facing east and west, beyond Hadley Green, with the high road (presumably the Great North Road) lying between. In ' Edward IV.,' by Lawrence Stratford, it is stated on p. 189 : " Contemporary accounts of the Battle of Barnet give us no clear indication of its exact site. To the north of Barnet is an open space known now as Hadley Green, part of the original unenclosed common called Gladsmoor Heath. According to one modern authority [see Plan, Oman, ' Political History,' vol. iv.], it was across this Heath that Warwick had drawn up his men, his right wing under the Earl of Oxford and the Marquis of Montagu, to the west of the High Road ; the centre, under Somerset, with its right across the road ; the left, where Warwick and Exeter had the command, further to the east, having the village of Monken Hadley in their rear." According to this account, the armies were drawn up on Hadley Green, across the high road, facing north and south. Can any further authorities be quoted, or references given in favour of either view ? G. A. DOGS AND OTHER ANIMALS ON BRASSES AND STONE EFFIGIES. I shall be very much obliged if any one can mention where this accessory subject is dealt wit