Project Gutenberg's Notes and Queries, Number 187, May 28, 1853, by Various This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org Title: Notes and Queries, Number 187, May 28, 1853 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc. Author: Various Editor: George Bell Release Date: January 21, 2007 [EBook #20410] Language: English Character set encoding: ASCII *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES AND QUERIES *** Produced by Charlene Taylor, Jonathan Ingram, Keith Edkins and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Library of Early Journals.) {517} NOTES AND QUERIES: A MEDIUM OF INTER-COMMUNICATION FOR LITERARY MEN, ARTISTS, ANTIQUARIES, GENEALOGISTS, ETC. * * * * * "When found, make a note of."--CAPTAIN CUTTLE. * * * * * No. 187.] Saturday, May 28, 1853. [Price Fourpence. Stamped Edition 5d. * * * * * CONTENTS. NOTES:-- Page On Chaucer's Knowledge of Italian 517 The Rebellion of '45: unpublished Letter 519 Oliver St. John, by James Crossley 520 Notes on several misunderstood Words, by the Rev. W. R. Arrowsmith 520 FOLK LORE:--Weather Rules--Drills presaging Death --Superstition in Devonshire; Valentine's Day 522 A Note on Gulliver's Travels, by C. Forbes 522 Shakspeare Correspondence 523 The Coenaculum of Lionardo da Vinci, by E. Smirke 524 MINOR NOTES:--Scotter Register (County Lincoln)-- "All my Eye:" "Over the Left"--Curious Marriages --Child-mother 525 QUERIES:-- Further Queries respecting Bishop Ken 526 The Rev. John Larson and his Mathematical Manuscripts, by T. T. Wilkinson 526 MINOR QUERIES:--"Wanderings of Memory"-- "Wandering Willie's Tale"--Chapel Sunday--Proud Salopians--George Miller, D.D.--Members of Parliament --Taret--Jeroboam of Claret, &c.--William Williams of Geneva--The First of April and "The Cap awry"--Sir G. Browne, Bart.--Bishop Butler--Oaken Tombs--Alleged Bastardy of Elizabeth--"Pugna Porcorum"--Parviso--Mr. Justice Newton--Mufti --Ryming and Cuculling--Custom at the Savoy Church 527 MINOR QUERIES WITH ANSWERS:--Faithful Teate-- Kelway Family--Regatta--Coket and Cler-mantyn 529 REPLIES:-- Curfew 530 The "Salt-Peter-Man," by C. H. Cooper 530 Forms of Judicial Oaths, by John Thrupp, &c. 532 PHOTOGRAPHIC CORRESPONDENCE:--Washing Collodion Pictures--Test for Lenses--Improvement in Positives--Cheap Portable Tent--Rev. Mr. Sisson's New Developing Fluid 533 REPLIES TO MINOR QUERIES:--Vanes--Loselerius Villerius--Westminster Parishes--Hevristic--Creole --General Monk and the University of Cambridge-- Ecclesia Anglicana--Gibbon's Library--Golden Bees --Passage in Orosius--Names first given to Parishes --Grafts and the Parent Tree--Lord Cliff and Howell's Letters--The Bouillon Bible--Rhymes on Places-- Serpents' Tongues--Consecrated Roses, &c. 534 MISCELLANEOUS:-- Notes on Books, &c. 537 Books and Odd Volumes wanted 538 Notices to Correspondents 538 Advertisements 538 * * * * * Notes. ON CHAUCER'S KNOWLEDGE OF ITALIAN. In the Memoir prefixed to the Aldine edition of the _Poetical Works of Chaucer_, London, 1845, Sir Harris Nicolas expresses an opinion that Dan Geoffrey was not acquainted with the Italian language, and therefore not versed in Italian literature. "Though Chaucer undoubtedly knew Latin and French, it is by no means certain, notwithstanding his supposed obligations to the Decameron, that he was as well acquainted with Italian. There may have been a common Latin original of the main incidents of many, if not of all the tales, for which Chaucer is supposed to have been wholly indebted to Boccaccio, and from which originals Boccaccio himself may have taken them. That Chaucer was not acquainted with Italian may be inferred from his not having introduced any Italian quotation into his works, redundant as they are with Latin and French words and phrases."--_Life of Chaucer_, pp. 24, 25. To which the following note is subjoined: "Though Chaucer's writings have not been examined for the purpose, the remark in the text is not made altogether from recollection, for at the end of Speght's edition of Chaucer's _Works_, translations are given of the Latin and French words in the poems, but not a single Italian word is mentioned." If Sir Harris Nicolas had examined the writings of Chaucer with any care, he would scarcely have formed or expressed so strange an opinion, for he must necessarily have discovered that Chaucer was not only well acquainted with the language, but thoroughly well versed in Italian literature, and that he paraphrased and translated freely from the works of Dante, Petrarca, and Boccaccio. Chaucer would naturally quote Latin and French, as being familiar to his cotemporaries, and would abstain from introducing Italian, as a knowledge of that language must have been confined to a few individuals in his day; and he wrote for the many, and not for the minority. The circumstances of Chaucer's life, his missions to Italy, during which he resided several months in that country, when sent on the king's business to Genoa, and Florence, and Lombardy, afforded {518} him ample opportunities of becoming thoroughly acquainted with the language and literature of Italy; the acquisition of which must have been of easy accomplishment to Chaucer, already familiar with Latin and French. So that it is not necessary to endow Chaucer "with all human attainments as proof of his having spoken Italian." Chaucer's own writings, however, afford the strongest evidence against the opinion entertained by Sir Harris Nicolas, and such evidence as cannot be controverted. Chaucer loves to refer to Dante, and often translates passages from the _Divine Comedy_. The following lines are very closely rendered from the _Paradiso_, xiv. 28.:-- "Thou one, two, and thre, eterne on live, That raignest aie in thre, two, and one, Uncircumscript, and all maist circumscrive." Last stanza of _Troilus and Creseide_. "_Quell' uno e due e tre che sempre vive,_ _E regna sempre in tre e due ed uno_, _Non circonscritto, e tutto circonscrive._" Dante, _Il Paradiso_, xiv. 28. "Wel can _the wise poet of Florence_, That highte _Dant_, speken of this sentence: Lo, in swiche maner rime is _Dantes_ tale. _Ful selde up riseth by his branches smale_ _Prowesse of man, for God of his goodnesse_ _Wol that we claime of him our gentillesse._" _Wif of Bathes Tale_, 6707. "_Rade volte risurge per li rami_ _L' umana probita: e questo vuole_ _Quei che la da, perche da lui si chiami._" _Purgatorio_, vii. 121. After relating the dread story of the Conte Ugolino, Chaucer refers to Dante, from whom perhaps he derived it. (Conf. _Inferno_, xxxiii.) "Who so wol here it in a longer wise, Redeth the grete poete of Itaille, That highte _Dante_, for he can it devise Fro point to point, not o word wol he faille." _The Monkes Tale_, 14,769. "Bet than Vergile, while he was on live, Or _Dant_ also."--_The Freres Tale_, 7101. The following lines refer to the _Inferno_, xiii. 64.: "Envie is lavender of the court alway, For she ne parteth neither night ne day, Out of the house of Cesar, thus saith _Dant_." Prologue to the _Legend of Good Women_, 359. "_Dant_ that it tellen can" is mentioned in the _House of Fame_, book i.; and Chaucer is indebted to him for some lines in that fine poem, as in the description of the "egle, that with feathers shone all of gold" = _un' aquila nel ciel con penne d'oro_; and the following line: "O thought, that wrote all that I met." _House of Fame_, ii. 18. "_O mente, che scrivesti cio ch' io vidi._" _Inferno_, ii. 8. The _Knightes Tale_ exhibits numerous passages, lines, and expressions verbally translated from the _Teseide_ of Boccaccio, upon which it is founded; such as _Idio armipotente_ = Mars armipotent; _Eterno admante_ = Athamant eterne; _Paura palida_ = pale drede; _Le ire rosse come focho_ = the cruel ire red as any glede. Boccaccio describes the wood in which "Mars hath his sovereine mansion" as-- "_Una selva sterile de robusti_ _Cerri,_ _Nodosi aspri e rigidi e vetusti._ _Vi si sentia grandissimo romore,_ _Ne vera bestia anchora ne pastore._" _Teseide_, book vii. There is a purposed grisly ruggedness in the corresponding passage of the _Knightes Tale_, which heightens the horrors of "thilke colde and frosty region:" "First on the wall was peinted _a forest,_ _In which ther wonneth neyther man ne best,_ _With knotty knarry barrein trees old_ _Of stubbes sharpe and hidous to behold_; In which ther ran _a romble and a swough_, As though a storme shuld bresten every bough." _The Knightes Tale_, 1977. The death of Arcite is thus related by Boccaccio: "La morte in ciascun membro era venuta Da piedi in su, venendo verso il petto, Ed ancor nelle braccia era perduta La vital forza; sol nello intelletto E nel cuore era ancora sostenuta La poca vita, ma gia si ristretto Eragli 'l tristo cor del mortal gelo Che agli occhi fe' subitamente velo. "Ma po' ch' egli ebbe perduto il vedere, Con seco comincio a mormorare, Ognor mancando piu del suo podere: Ne troppo fece in cio lungo durare; Ma il mormorare trasportato in vere Parole, con assai basso parlare Addio Emilia; e piu oltre non disse, Che l' anima convenne si partisse." _Teseide_, book x. 112. Chaucer loses nothing of this description in his condensed translation: "For from his feet up to his brest was come The cold of deth, that had him overnome. And yet moreover in his armes two The vital strength is lost, and all ago. Only the intellect, withouten more, That dwelled in his herte sike and sore, Gan feillen, when the herte felte deth; Dusked his eyen two, and failled his breth. But on his ladie yet cast he his eye; His laste word was; Mercy, Emelie!" _The Knightes Tale_, 2301. _Troilus and Creseide_ seems to have been translated from the _Filostrato_ of Boccaccio, when {519} Chaucer was a young man, as we are informed by Dan John Lydgate in the Prologue to his Translation of Boccaccio's _Fall of Princes_, where he speaks of his "Maister Chaucer" as the "chefe poete of Bretayne," and tells us that-- "_In youthe he made a translacion_ Of a boke which called is Trophe, In Lumbard tongue, as men may rede and se, _And in our vulgar, long or that he deyde_ Gave it the name of Troylous and Cresseyde." Chaucer's translation is sometimes very close, sometimes rather free and paraphrastic, as may be seen in the following examples: "But right as floures through the cold of night Yclosed, stoupen in hir stalkes lowe, Redressen hem ayen the Sunne bright, And spreaden in hir kinde course by rowe." _Troilus and Creseide_, b. ii. "_Come fioretto dal notturno gelo_ _Chinato e chiuso, poi che il Sol l' imbianca,_ _S'apre, e si leva dritto sopra il stelo._" Boccaccio, _Il Filostrato_, iii. st. 13. "She was right soche to sene in her visage As is that wight that men on bere ybinde." _Troilus and Creseide_, b. iv. "_Essa era tale, a guardarla nel viso,_ _Qual donna morta alla fossa portata._" _Il Filostrato_, v. st. 83. "As fresh as faucon coming out of mew." _Troilus and Creseide_, b. iii. "_Come falcon ch' uscisse dal cappello._" _Il Filostrato_, iv. st. 83. "The Song of Troilus," in the first book of _Troilus and Creseide_, is a paraphrase from one of the Sonnets of Petrarca: "_S' Amor non e, che dunque e quel ch' i' sento?_ _Ma s' egli e Amor, per Dio che cosa, e quale?_ _Se buona, ond' e l' effetto aspro mortale?_" Petrarca, _Rime in Vita di Laura_, Son. cii. "If no love is, O God, what feele I so? And if love is, what thing and which is he? If love be good, from whence cometh my wo?" _Troilus and Creseide_, b. i. Chaucer evidently had the following lines of the _Paradiso_ in view when writing the invocation to the Virgin in _The Second Nonnes Tale_: "Vergine Madre, figlia del tuo Figlio, Umile e alta piu che creatura, Termine fisso d' eterno consiglio, Tu se' colei, che l' umana Natura, _Nobilitasti_ si, che il suo Fattore Non disdegno di farsi sua fattura." _Paradiso_, xxxiii, I. "Thou maide and mother, doughter of thy Son, Thou well of mercy, sinful soules cure, In whom that God of bountee chees to won; Thou humble and high over every creature, Thou _nobledest_ so fer forth our nature, That no desdaine the maker had of kinde His Son in blood and flesh to clothe and winde." _The Second Nonnes Tale_, 15,504. Traces of Chaucer's proficiency in Italian are discoverable in almost all his poems; but I shall conclude with two citations from _The Assembly of Foules_: "The day gan failen, and the darke night, That reveth beastes from hir businesse, Berafte me my booke for lacke of light." _The Assembly of Foules_, I. 85. "_Lo giorno se n'andava, e l'aer bruno_ _Toglieva gli animai che sono in terra_ _Dalle fatiche loro._"--_Inf._ ii. 1. "With that my hand in his he toke anon, Of which I comfort caught, and went in fast." _The Assembly of Foules_, I. 169. "_E poiche la sua mano alla mia pose_ _Con lieto volto, ond' io mi confortai._" _Inf._ iii. 19. By the way, Chaucer commences _The Assembly of Foules_ with part of the first aphorism of Hippocrates, "[Greek: Ho bios brachus he de techne makre]" (but this, I suppose, had been noticed before): "The lyfe so short, the craft so long to lerne." Chaucer was forty years old, or upwards, in 1372, when he was sent as an envoy to treat with the duke, citizens, and merchants of Genoa; and if, as is probable, he had translated _Troilus and Creseide_ out of the "Lombarde tonge" in his youth (according to the testimony of Lydgate), it is not unreasonable to infer that his knowledge of Italian may have led to his being chosen to fill that office. But, however this may be, abundant proof has been adduced that Chaucer was familiarly acquainted with Italian. I may briefly remark, in conclusion, that the dates and other circumstances favour the supposed interview at Padua, between Fraunceis Petrark the laureate poet, and Dan Chaucer, "Floure of poets throughout all Bretaine." J. M. B. Tunbridge Wells. * * * * * THE REBELLION OF '45.--UNPUBLISHED LETTER. Inverness, 16th Aprile, 1746. Dear Sirs, This day about twelve our army came up with the rebels, about a mile above Lord President's house, in a muir called Drumrossie. They began the engagement first, by firing from a battery of six guns they had erected upon their right; but our cannon played so hott upon them, that they were obliged soon to fly, by which means we gote possession of their artillery, and so drove them before us for three miles of way. The cavalry gave them closs chase to the town of Inverness: {520} upon which the French ambassador (who is not well) sent out an officer, and a drum with him, offering to surrender at discretion; to which the duke made answer, that the French officers should be allowed to go about on their parole, and nothing taken from them. Brigadier Stapleton is among them, and God knows how many more officers; for we have not gote home to count them yet. Its thought the rebels have between four and five hundred killed, and as many taken prisoners already: many more we expect this night, parties having been sent out after them. Lord Kilmarnock I saw prisoner, and Major Stewart, with many more. Secretary Murray is very bad: a party is just now sent for him, intelligence being brought where he is. I don't think we have lost thirty men, and not above five officers killed, amongst which are Lord Robert Ker, Captain Grosset: the rest their names I have forgote. We are now in full possession of this place. Some say the Pretender was in the battle, and wounded; but others say he was not. Such of them as are left are gone to Fort Augustus. The duke, God be praised, is in good health, and all the generalls. His Royal Highness behaved as if he had been inspired, riding up and down giveing orders himself. I am, Gentlemen, Your most obedt. servant, DAVID BRUCE. After writing y^e above, y^e lists of y^e killed and wounded are as follows, so far as is yet known:-- We have of y^e prisoners 700 Killed and wounded on y^e field 1800 Of y^e duke's army:-- Killed, wounded, and amissing 220 * * * * * Gentlemen, I hope you'l pardon y^e confusedness of y^e foregoing line, as I have been in y^e utmost confusion since I came here. 'Tis said, but not quite certain, y^t y^e following rebells are killed, viz.:--Lochiel, Capuch (Keppach), Lord Nairn, Lord Lewis Drummond, D. of Perth, Glengarry, &c. The French have all surrendered prisoners of war. DAVID BRUCE. Addressed to The Governors of The Town of Aberdeen. X. Y. Z. * * * * * OLIVER ST. JOHN. In giving the lives of the Commonwealth chief justices, Lord Campbell observes (_Lives of Chief Justices_, vol. i. p. 447.), "in completing the list with the name of Oliver St. John, I am well pleased with an opportunity of tracing his career and pourtraying his character." Then follows a biography of thirty pages. The subject seems to be a favourite one with his lordship, and he accordingly produces a striking picture, laying on his colours in the approved historical style of the day, so as to make the painting an effective one, whether the resemblance be faithful or not. But how is it that the noble biographer appears to be quite unaware of what really is the only document we have relating to Oliver St. John of his own composition, which does give us much light as to his career or character? I refer to _The Case of Oliver St. John, Esq, concerning his Actions during the late Troubles_, pp. 14., 4to., n.d. It is a privately printed tract, emanating from St. John himself, and was no doubt circulated amongst persons in power at the Restoration, with a view to obtaining indemnity and pardon. My copy is signed by himself, and has some corrections in his autograph. His Defence is full of interesting particulars, some of which are very inconsistent with Lord Campbell's speculations and statements. It would, however, occupy too much of your space were I to go through the various articles objected to by him, and to which he gives his replies and explanations. My object in noticing this tract at present, is to prevent any future biographer of this Commonwealth worthy, whose life may well be an historical study, from neglecting an important source of information. I observe Lord Campbell (p. 473.) doubts whether he favoured the measure of making Cromwell king. But if we are to believe the title-page of _Monarchy asserted_, 1660, 12mo., he was one of the speakers at the conference with Cromwell on the 11th April, 1657, in favour of his assuming the title of king. On the list of the committee which follows, the "Lord Chief Justice" only is mentioned, but in the speeches a difference seems to be made between "Lord Chief Justice" (pp. 6. 7. 15.) and "Lord Chief Justice Glynne" (p. 44.), and they would seem to be two different speakers. The title-page states distinctly, "the arguments of Oliver St. John, Lord Chief Justice, Lord Chief Justice Glyn, &c., members of that committee." JAS. CROSSLEY. * * * * * NOTES ON SEVERAL MISUNDERSTOOD WORDS. (_Continued from_ p. 402.) _No did, no will, no had, &c._-- "_K. John._ . . . I had a mighty cause To wish him dead, but thou hadst none to kill him. _Hubert._ _No had_ (my Lord), why, did you not provoke me?" _King John_, Act IV. Sc. 2. So the first folio edition of Shakspeare. A palpable error, as the commentators of the present would pleasantly observe, and all the world would echo the opinion; but here, as in most other {521} instances, commentators and all the world may be wrong, and the folios right. The passage has accordingly been corrupted by the editors of Shakspeare into what was more familiar to their modern ears: "Had none, my Lord!" Though the mode of speech be very common, yet, to deprive future editors of all excuse for ever again depraving the genuine text of our national Bible, I shall make no apology for accumulating a string of examples: "_Fort._ Oh, had I such a hat, then were I brave! Where's he that made it? _Sol._ Dead: and the whole world Yields not a workman that can frame the like. _Fort._ _No does?_" "Old Fortunatus," _Old English Plays_, vol. iii. p. 140., by Dilke: who alters "No does?" into _None does?_ thinking, I presume, that he had thereby simplified the sentence: "_John._ I am an elde fellowe of fifty wynter and more, And yet in all my lyfe I knewe not this before. _Parson._ _No dyd_, why sayest thou so, upon thyselfe thou lyest, Thou haste euer knowen the sacramente to be the body of Christ." _John Bon and Mast Person._ "_Chedsey._ Christ said 'Take, eat, this is my body;' and not 'Take ye, eat ye.' _Philpot._ _No did_, master doctor? Be not these the words of Christ, 'Accipite, manducate?' And do not these words, in the plural number, signify 'Take ye, eat ye;' and not 'Take thou, eat thou,' as you would suppose?"--Foxe's _Acts and Monuments_, vol. vii. p. 637., Cattley's edition. "_Philpot._ Master Cosins, I have told my lord already, that I will answer to none of these articles he hath objected against me: but if you will with learning answer to that which is in question between my lord and me, I will gladly hear and commune with you. _Cosins._ _No will_ you? Why what is that then, that is in question between my lord and you?"--_Id._, p. 651. "_Philpot._ And as I remember, it is even the saying of St. Bernard [viz. The Holy Ghost is Christ's vicar on earth (_vic-arius_), and a saying that I need not to be ashamed of, neither you to be offended at; as my Lord of Durham and my Lord of Chichester by their learning can discern, and will not reckon it evil said. _London._ _No will?_ Why, take away the first syllable, and it soundeth Arius."--_Id._ p. 658. "_Philpot._ These words of Cyprian do nothing prove your pretensed assertion; which is, that to the Church of Rome there could come no misbelief. _Christopherson._ Good lord, _no doth_? What can be said more plainly?"--_Id._, p. 661. Again, at p. 663. there occur no less than three more instances and at p. 665. another. "_Careless._ No, forsooth: I do not know any such, nor have I heard of him that I wot of. _Martin._ _No have_, forsooth: and it is even he that hath written against thy faith." Then _Martin_ said: "Dost thou not know one Master Chamberlain? _Careless._ No forsooth; I know him not. _Martin._ _No dost!_ and he hath written a book against thy faith also."--_Id._, vol. iii. p. 164. "_Lichfield and Coventry._ We heard of no such order. _Lord Keeper._ _No did?_ Yes, and on the first question ye began willingly. How cometh it to pass that ye will not now do so?"--_Id._, p. 690. "Then said Sir Thomas Moyle: 'Ah! Bland, thou art a stiff-hearted fellow. Thou wilt not obey the law, nor answer when thou art called.' '_Nor will_,' quoth Sir John Baker. 'Master Sheriff, take him to your ward.'"--_Id._, vol. vii. p. 295. Is it needful to state, that the original editions have, as they ought to have, a note of interrogation at "Baker?" I will not tax the reader's patience with more than two other examples, and they shall be fetched from the writings of that admirable papist--the gentle, the merry-hearted More: "Well, quod Caius, thou wylt graunte me thys fyrste, that euery thynge that hath two erys is an asse.--Nay, mary mayster, wyll I not, quod the boy.--_No wylt_ thou? quod Caius. Ah, wyly boy, there thou wentest beyond me."--The Thyrde Boke, the first chapter, fol. 84. of Sir Thomas More's _Dialogues_. "Why, quod he, what coulde I answere ellys, but clerely graunt hym that I believe that thyng for none other cause but only bycause the Scripture so sheweth me?--_No could ye?_ quod I. What yf neuer Scripture had ben wryten in thys world, should there neuer haue bene eny chyrch or congregacyon of faythfull and ryght beyleuyng people?--That wote I nere, quod he. _No do ye?_ quod I."--_Id._, fol. 85. In taking leave of this idiom, it would not perhaps be amiss to remark, that "ye can," in Duke Humphey's rejoinder to the "blyson begger of St. Albonys," is not, as usually understood, "you can?" but "yea can?" * * * * * _To be at point_ = to be at a stay or stop, _i.e._ settled, determined, nothing farther being to be said or done: a very common phrase. Half a dozen examples shall suffice: " . . . . . What I am truly Is thine, and my poore countries to command: Whither indeed before they (thy) heere-approach, Old Seyward with ten thousand warlike men Already _at a point_, was setting forth." _Macbeth_, Act IV. Sc. 3. 1st Fol. No profit to give the commentators' various guesses at the import of the phrase in the above passage, which will be best gathered from the following instances of its use elsewhere. But, before passing further, I beg permission to inform MR. KNIGHT that the original suggester of "sell" for "self," in an earlier part of this play, whose name {522} he is at a loss for, was W. S. Landor, whose footnote to vol. ii. p. 273., Moxon's edit. of his works, is as follows: "And here it may be permitted the editor to profit also by the manuscript, correcting in Shakespeare what is _absolute nonsense_ as now printed: '_Vaulting_ ambition that o'erleaps _itself_, And falls on the _other side_.' Other side of what? It should be _its sell_. _Sell_ is saddle in Spenser and elsewhere, from the Latin and Italian." A correspondent of "N. & Q."., Vol. vii., p. 404., will be delighted to find his very ingenious discovery brought home, and corroborated by Landor's valuable manuscript: but it is an old said saw--"Great wits jump." Now to our examples: "_Pasquin._ Saint Luke also affirmeth the same, saying flatly that he shall not be forgiuen. Beholde, therefore, how well they interprete the Scriptures. _Marforius._ I am alreadie _at a poynt_ with them, but thou shalt doo me great pleasure to expounde also vnto me certayne other places, vppon the which they ground this deceit."--_Pasquine in a Traunce_, turned but lately out of the Italian into this tongue by W. P.: London, 1584. "But look, where malice reigneth in men, there reason can take no place: and, therefore, I see by it, that you are all _at a point_ with me, that no reason or authority can persuade you to favour my name, who never meant evil to you, but both your commodity and profit."--Foxe's _Acts and Monuments_, vol. viii. p. 18. "Not so, my lord," said I, "for I am _at a full point_ with myself in that matter; and am right well able to prove both your transubstantiation with the real presence to be against the Scriptures and the ancient Fathers of the primitive Church."--_Id._, p. 587. "_Winchester._ No, surely, I am fully determined, and fully _at a point_ therein, howsoever my brethren do."--_Id._, p. 691. "_Brad._ Sir, so that you will define me your church, that under it you bring not in a false church, you shall not see but that we shall soon be _at a point_."--_Id._, vol. vii. p. 190. "_Latimer._ Truly, my lord, as for my part I require no respite, for I am _at a point_. You shall give me respite in vain; therefore, I pray you let me not trouble you to-morrow."--_Id._, p. 534. "Unto whom he (Lord Cobham) gave this answer: 'Do as ye shall think best, for I am _at a point_.' Whatsoever he (Archbishop Arundel) or the other bishops did ask him after that, he bade them resort to his bill: for thereby would he stand to the very death."--_Id._, vol. iii. pp. 327-8. "'Et illa et ista vera esse credantur et nulla inter nos contentio remanebit, quia nec illis veris ista, nec istis veris illa impediuntur.' Let bothe those truthes and these truthes be beleued, and we shall be _at appoinct_. For neither these truthes are impaired by the other, neither the other by these."--_A Fortresse of the Faith_, p. 50., by Thomas Stapleton: Antwerp, 1565. "A poore man that shall haue liued at home in the countrie, and neuer tasted of honoure and pompe, is alwayes _at a poynt_ with himselfe, when menne scorne and disdayne him, or shewe any token of contempt towardes his person."--John Calvin's _CVIII. Sermon on the Thirtieth Chap. of Job_, p. 554., translated by Golding: London, 1574. "As for peace, I am _at a point_."--_Leycester Correspondence_, Camd. Soc., p. 261. W. R. ARROWSMITH. (_To be continued._) * * * * * FOLK LORE. _Weather Rules._--The interesting article on "The Shepherd of Banbury's Weather Rules" (Vol. vii., p. 373.) has reminded me of two _sayings_ I heard in Worcestershire a few months back, and upon which my informant placed the greatest reliance. The first is, "If the moon changes on a Sunday, there will be a flood before the month is out." My authority asserted that through a number of years he has never known this fail. The month in which the change on a Sunday has occurred has been fine until the last day, when the flood came. The other saying is, "Look at the weathercock on St. Thomas's day at twelve o'clock, and see which way the wind is, and there it will stick for the next quarter," that is, three months. Can any of your readers confirm the above, and add any similar "weather rules?" J. A., JUN. Birmingham. _Drills presaging Death_ (Vol. vii., p. 353.).--Your correspondent asks if the superstition he here alludes to in Norfolk is believed in other parts. I can give him a case in point in Berkshire:--Some twenty years ago an old gentleman died there, a near relative of my own; and on going down to his place, I was told by a farm overseer of his, that he was certain some of his lordship's family would die that season, as, in the last sowing, he had missed putting the seed in one row, which he showed me! "Who could disbelieve it now?" quoth the old man. I was then taken to the bee-hives, and at the door of every one this man knocked with his knuckles, and informed the occupants that they must now work for a new master, as their old one was gone to heaven. This, I believe, has been queried in your invaluable paper some time since. I only send it by the way. I know the same superstition is still extant in Cheshire, North Wales, and in some parts of Scotland. T. W. N. Malta. A friend supplies me with the information that before drills were invented, the labourers {523} considered it unlucky to miss a "bout" in corn or seed sowing, will sometimes happened when "broadcast" was the only method. The ill-luck did not relate alone to a _death_ in the family of the farmer or his dependents, but to losses of cattle or accidents. It is singular, however, that the superstition should have transferred itself to the drill; but it will be satisfactory to E. G. R. to learn that the process of _tradition_ and _superstition-manufacturing_ is not going on in the nineteenth century. E. S. TAYLOR. _Superstition in Devonshire; Valentine's Day_ (Vol. v., pp. 55. 148.).--This, according to Forby, vol. ii. p. 403., once formed in Norfolk a part of the superstitious practices on _St. Mark's Eve_, not St. Valentine's, as mentioned by J. S. A., when the sheeted ghosts of those who should die that year (Mrs. Crowe would call them, I suppose, _Doppelgaengers_) march in grisly array to the parish church. The rhyme varies from J. S. A.'s:-- "Hempseed I sow: Hempseed grow; He that is my true love Come after me, and mow." and the Norfolk spectre is seen with a _scythe_, instead of a rake like his Devonshire compeer. E. S. TAYLOR. * * * * * A NOTE ON GULLIVER'S TRAVELS. If I may argue from the silence of the latest edition of _Gulliver's Travels, with Notes_, with which I am acquainted, viz. that by W. C. Taylor, LL.D., Trinity College, Dublin, the Preface to which is dated May 1st, 1840, I may say that all the commentators on Swift--all, at least, down to that late date--have omitted to refer to a work containing incidents closely resembling some of those recorded in the "Voyage to Lilliput." The work to which I allude is a little dramatical composition, the Bambocciata, or puppet-show, by Martelli, entitled _The Sneezing of Hercules_. Goldoni, in his _Memoirs_, has given us the following account of the manner in which he brought it out on the stage: "Count Lantieri was very well satisfied with my father, for he was greatly recovered, and almost completely cured: his kindness was also extended to me, and to procure amusement for me he caused a puppet-show, which was almost abandoned, and which was very rich in figures and decorations, to be refitted. "I profited by this, and amused the company by giving them a piece of a great man, expressly composed for wooden comedians. This was the _Sneezing of Hercules_, by Peter James Martelli, a Bolognese. . . . . . . . . . . "The imagination of the author sent Hercules into the country of the pigmies. Those poor little creatures, frightened at the aspect of an animated mountain with legs and arms, ran and concealed themselves in holes. One day as Hercules had stretched himself out in the open field, and was sleeping tranquilly, the timid inhabitants issued out of their retreats, and, armed with prickles and rushes, mounted on the monstrous man, and covered him from head to foot, like flies when they fall on a piece of rotten meat. Hercules waked, and felt something in his nose, which made him sneeze; on which, his enemies tumbled down in all directions. This ends the piece. "There is a plan, a progression, an intrigue, a catastrophe, and winding up; the style is good and well-supported; the thoughts and sentiments are all proportionate to the size of the personages. The verses even are short, and everything indicates pigmies. "A gigantic puppet was requisite for Hercules; everything was well executed. The entertainment was productive of much pleasure; and I could lay a bet, that I am the only person who ever thought of executing the Bambocciata of Martelli."--_Memoirs of Goldoni_, translated by John Black, 2 vols., duod. vol. i. chap. 6. It is certainly not necessary to point out here in what respects the adventures of Hercules, the _animated mountain_, and those of Quinbus Flestrin, the _man mountain_, differ from, or coincide with, each other, as the only question I wish to raise is, whether a careful analysis of Martelli's puppet-show ought, or ought not, to have been placed among the notes on _Gulliver's Travels_. C. FORBES. Temple. * * * * * SHAKSPEARE CORRESPONDENCE. In reply to J. M. G. of Worcester, who inquires for a MS. volume of English poetry containing some lines attributed to Shakspeare, and which is described in Thorpe's _Catalog_ of MSS. for 1831, I can supply some particulars which may assist him in the research. The MS., which at one period had belonged to Joseph Hazlewood, was purchased from Thorpe by the late Lord Viscount Kingsborough; after whose decease it was sold, in November, 1842, at Charles Sharpe's literary sale room, Anglesea Street, Dublin. It is No. 574. in the auction catalogue of that part of his lordship's library which was then brought to auction. The volume has been noticed by Patrick Fraser Tytler, in his _Life of Sir Walter Raleigh_, Edinburgh, 1833 (in Appendix B, p. 436., of 2nd edit.), where, citing the passage from Collier, which is referred to by J. M. G., he asserts that the lines are not Shakspeare's, but Jonson's. But he does not appear to me to have established his case beyond doubt; as the lines, though found among Jonson's works, may, notwithstanding, be the production of some other writer: and why not of Shakspeare, to whom they are ascribed in the MS.? Some verses by Sir J. C. Hobhouse originally appeared as Lord Byron's: and there are {524} numerous instances, both ancient and modern, of a similar attribution of works to other than their actual authors. ARTERUS. Dublin. _The Island of Prospero._--We cannot assert that Shakspeare, in the _Tempest_, had any particular island in view as the scene of his immortal drama, though by some this has been stoutly maintained. Chalmers prefers one of the Bermudas. The Rev. J. Hunter, in his _Disquisition on the Scene, &c. of the Tempest_, endeavours to confer the honour on the Island of Lampedosa. In reference to this question, a statement of the pseudo-Aristotle is remarkable. In his work "[Greek: peri thaumasion akousmaton]," he mentions Lipara, one of the AEolian Islands, lying to the north of Sicily, and nearly in the course of Shakspeare's Neapolitan fleet from Tunis to Naples. Among the [Greek: polla teratode] found there, he tells us: "[Greek: Exakouesthai gar tumpanon kai kumbalon echon gelota te meta thorubou kai krotalon enargos. legousi de ti teratodesteron gegonenai peri to spelaion.]" If we compare this with the aerial music heard by Ferdinand (_Tempest_, I. 2.), especially as the orchestra is represented by the genial burin of M. Retsch in the fifth plate of his well-known sketches (_Umrisze_), it will appear probable that Shakspeare was acquainted with the Greek writer either in the original or through a translation. As far as I am aware, this has not been observed by any of the commentators.--From _The Navorscher_. J. M. _Coincident Criticisms._--I shall be obliged if you will allow me through your pages to anticipate and rebut two charges of plagiarism. When I wrote my Note on a passage in _The Winter's Tale_ ("N. & Q.," Vol. vii., p. 378.), I had not seen the _Dublin University Magazine_ for March last, containing some remarks on the same passage in some respects much resembling mine. I must also declare that my Note on a passage in _All's Well that ends Well_ ("N. & Q.," Vol. vii., p. 426.) was posted for you some time before the appearance of A. E. B.'s Note on the same passage ("N. & Q.," Vol. vii., p. 403.). The latter coincidence is more remarkable than the former, as the integrity of the amended text was in both notes discussed by means of the same parallel passage. _Apropos_ of A. E. B.'s clever Note, permit me to say, that though at first it appeared to me conclusive, I now incline to think that Shakspeare intended Helen to address the _leaden messengers_ by means of a very hyperbolic figure: "wound the still-piecing air that sings with piercing" is a consistent whole. If, as A. E. B. rightly says, _to wound the air_ is an impossibility, it is equally impossible that the air should utter any sound expressive of sensibility. The fact of course is, that the cannon-balls _cleave_ the air, and that by so cleaving it a shrill noise is produced. The cause and effect may, however, be metaphorically described, by comparing air to Bertram. I believe it is a known fact that every man who is struck with a cannon-ball cries out instinctively. Shakspeare therefore might, I think, have very poetically described the action and effect of a cannon-ball passing through the air by the strong figure of _wounding the air that sings with the piercing which it is enduring_. In concluding this Note, I beg to express what is not merely my own, but a very general feeling of disappointment in respect of MR. COLLIER'S new edition of Shakspeare. To it, with a new force, may be applied the words of A. E. B. in "N. & Q.," Vol. vi., p. 296.: "But the evil of these emendations is not in this instance confined to the mere suggestion of doubt; the text has absolutely been altered in all accessible editions, in many cases _silently_, so that the ordinary reader has no opportunity of judging between _Shakspeare_ and his improvers." That MR. COLLIER should be the greatest of such offenders, is no very cheering sign of the times. C. MANSFIELD INGLEBY. Birmingham. _Dogberry's Losses_ (Vol. vii., p. 377.).--I do not know whether it has ever been suggested, but I feel inclined to read "lawsuits." He has just boasted of himself as "one that knows the _law_;" and it seems natural enough that he should go on to brag of being a rich fellow enough, "and a fellow that hath had _lawsuits_" of his own, and actually figured as plaintiff or defendant. Suppose the words taken down from the mouth of an actor, and the mistake would be easy. JOHN DOE. * * * * * THE COENACULUM OF LIONARDO DA VINCI. I have in my possession a manuscript critique on the celebrated picture of The Last Supper by Lionardo da Vinci, written many years ago by a deceased academician; in which the writer has called in question the _point of time_ usually supposed to have been selected by the celebrated Italian painter. The criticisms are chiefly founded on the copy by Marco Oggioni, now in the possession of the Royal Academy of Arts. Uniform tradition has assumed that the moment of action is that in which the Saviour announces the treachery of one of his disciples "Dico vobis quia unus vestrum me traditurus est." Matth. xxvi. 21., Joan. xiii. 21., Vulgate edit.; and most of the admirers of this great work have not failed to find in it decisive proofs of the intention of the painter to represent that exact point of time. {525} The author of the manuscript enters into a very detailed examination of the several groups of figures which compose the picture, and of the expression of the heads; and he confesses his inability to find in them anything decisively indicating the period supposed to be chosen. He remarks that nine at least of the persons, including the principal one, are evidently engaged in animated conversation; that instead of that concentrated attention which the announcement might be supposed to generate, there appears to be great variety of expressions and of action; and that neither surprise nor indignation are so generally prominent, as might have been expected. He inclines to think that the studied diversity of expression, and the varied attitudes and gestures of the assembled party, are to be regarded as proofs of the artist's efforts to produce a powerful and harmonious composition, rather than a natural and truthful representation of any particular moment of the transaction depicted by him. The work in question is now so generally accessible through the medium of accurate engravings, that any one may easily exercise his own judgment on the matter, and decide for himself whether the criticism be well founded. It must be borne in mind that the subject had long been a familiar decoration of conventual refectories before the time when Lionardo brought his profound knowledge of external human nature, and his unsurpassed powers of executive art, to bear on a subject which had before been treated in the dry, conventional, inanimate manner of the Middle Ages. The leading features of the traditional picture are retained: the long table, the linen cloth, the one-sided arrangement of the figures, the classic drapery, and the general form and design of the apartment, are all to be found in the earlier works; and must have been considered, by observers in general, far more essential to the correct delineation of the scene than any adherence to the exact description of it in any one of the Evangelists. But as the subject was usually introduced into refectories for the edification of the brethren assembled with their superior at their own meals, it does not seem likely that the treachery of Judas should have been intended to be the prominent action of the picture. It was a memorial of the institution of the Eucharist, although the Christ was not represented as dispensing either bread or wine. In such a case, if any particular point of time was ever contemplated by the artist, he might judiciously and appropriately select the moment when the Saviour was announcing, in mysterious words, the close of his mission--as in St. Matthew and St. Mark; or was teaching them a lesson of humility when the spirit of rivalry and strife had disclosed itself among them--as we find in St. Luke and St. John. It is not perhaps generally known that the statutes of Queen's College, Oxford, prescribe the order of sitting at the common table in manner which evidently refers to the _coenaculum_ of the old church painters. E. SMIRKE. * * * * * Minor Notes. _Scotter Register (County Lincoln)._--The following extracts from the register of the parish of Scotter, in the county of Lincoln, are perhaps sufficiently interesting to be worth printing in "N. & Q.": 1. "Eccelesia parochialis de Scotter comitatu Lincolniae dedicata est Beatis Apostolis Sancto Petro et Sancto Paulo ut apparet in Antiquo Scripto viduae Loddington de Scotter, viz. in testamento vltimo Thomae Dalyson, Gen. de Scotter, qui obiit Junii 19^o, anno Domini 1495. "GUL. CARRINGTON, "Rector ecl[=i]a ibid." 2. "_Memorandum_, That on Septuagesima Sunday, being the 19^{th} day of January, 1667, one Francis Drury, an excommunicate person, came into the church in time of divine service in y^e morning, and being admonisht by mee to begon, hee obstinately refused, whereuppon y^e whole congregation departed; and after the same manner in the afternoon, the same day, he came again, and refusing againe to go out, the whole congregation againe went home, soe y^t little or no service pformed. They prevented his further coming in y^t manner, as hee threatned, by order from the Justice, uppon the statute of Queene Elizabeth concerning the molestation and disturbance of publiq preachers. WM. CARRINGTON, Rec." "O tempora, O mores." 3. "Michael Skinner Senex centum et trium annorum sepultus fuit die sancti Johannis, viz. Dec. 27, 1673." EDWARD PEACOCK, Jun. Bottesford Moors, Kirton Lindsey. "_All my Eye._"--"_Over the Left._" "What benefit a Popish successor can reap from lives and fortunes spent in defence of the Protestant religion, he may put in his eye: and what the Protestant religion gets by lives and fortunes spent in the service of a Popish successor, will be over the left shoulder."--Preface to _Julian the Apostate_: London, printed for Langley Curtis, on Ludgate Hill. 1682. Is this passage the origin of the above cant phrases? GEORGE DANIEL. Canonbury. _Curious Marriages._--In _Harl. MSS._ 1550, p. 180., is the pedigree of Irby, where Anthony Irby has two daughters: Margaret, who married Henry Death, and Dorothy, who married John Domesday. E. G. BALLARD. {526} _Child-mother._--Four months ago, on board the Brazil packet, the royal mail steam-vessel Severn, there was an instance of a "child-wife," which might be worthy of a place among your curiosities of that description. She was the wedded wife of a Brazilian travelling from the Brazils to Lisbon, and her husband applied for permission to pay the "reduced passage money" for her as being "under twelve years of age!" As the regulation on that head speaks of "_children_ under twelve years of age," this _conscientious_ Brazilian's demand could not be countenanced. His wife's age was under eleven years and a half, and (_credat Judaeus_) _she was a mother_! A. L. * * * * * Queries. FURTHER QUERIES RESPECTING BISHOP KEN. (_Continued from_ Vol. vii., p. 380.) In a _Collection of Poems_, in six volumes, by several Hands (Dodsley, 5th edition, 1758), and in vol. iii. p. 75., is found "An Epistle from Florence to T. A., Esq., Tutor to the Earl of P----. Written in the year 1740. By the Honourable ----." Can any one explain an allusion contained in these three lines of the epistle? "Or with wise Ken judiciously define, When Pius marks the honorary coin Of Caracalla, or of Antonine." It is hardly to be supposed that the Ken here named could mean the bishop, who died so far back as 1711. Was there a coin-collector of that name living about 1740? We learn (from Ken's _Prose Works_, ed. Round, pp. 93, 94.) that the Bishop's sister, "my poor sister Ken," most probably then a widow, lost her only son, who died at Cyprus, in 1707. Was this Mrs. Ken the Rose Vernon, sister of Sir Thomas Vernon, of Coleman Street, London, and the wife of Jon Ken, the bishop's eldest brother, and treasurer of the East India Company? This Jon and Rose Ken are represented, in Mr. Markland's Pedigree of the Ken family, as still living in 1683. Is there no monumental memorial of this Treasurer Ken, or his family, in any of the London churches? In Mr. Macaulay's _History of England_, 5th ed., vol. ii. p. 365., he states that "it was well known that one of the most opulent dissenters of the City had begged that he might have the honour of giving security for Ken," when the seven bishops were bailed, previous to their trial. On what authority (for none is cited) does this statement rest? Can any one give a clue to this passage from a letter written to Mr. Harbin, Lord Weymouth's chaplain, by Bishop Ken, and dated "Winton, Jan 22." [1701]: "I came to Winchester yesterday, where I stay one post more, and then go either to Sir R. U. or L. Newton, where you shall hear from me."--Ken's _Prose Works_, by Round, p. 53. Can "Sir R. U." (the _U_ perhaps being a mistake for _W._) designate Sir Robert Worsley, Bart., of Chilton, in the county of Southampton, married to Lord Weymouth's daughter? and can "L. Newton" be a mistake for Long Sutton, in Hants? or may it be Long Newton, in the hundred of Malmesbury? J. J. J. Temple. * * * * * THE REV. JOHN LAWSON AND HIS MATHEMATICAL MANUSCRIPTS. In the year 1774 the Rev. John Lawson, B.D., Rector of Swanscombe in Kent, published _A Dissertation on the Geometrical Analysis of the Antients, with a Collection of Theorems and Problems without solutions for the Exercise of young Students_. This work was printed anonymously at Canterbury, but the merits of the essay did not permit the author to remain long in obscurity; the real writer was immediately known to most of the geometers of the day, and the elegant character of many of the theorems and problems, led to a general desire that their solutions should be published in a separate work. In accordance with this intention, it was announced on a fly-sheet attached to some copies of the work, that-- "The author of this publication being a man of leisure, and living in a retired situation, remote from any opportunity of conversation with mathematicians, would be extremely glad of a correspondence with any such, who are willing to be at the expense of the same; or if this be thought too much, will pay the postage of his answers to their letters. But no letters, except post-paid, can be received by him; otherwise a door would be opened for frolic, imposition, and impertinence. Any new geometrical propositions, either theorems or problems, would be received with gratitude, and if sent without solutions, he would use his best endeavours to return such as might be satisfactory. Any new solutions of propositions already in print, _especially of those included in the present collection_, would also be very agreeable. If a variety of such demonstrations essentially different from those of the original authors should be communicated, he proposes at some future time to publish them all, with a fresh collection for further exercise; and then each author's name shall be affixt to his own solution, or any other signature which he shall please to direct. Any person who shall favor the publisher with his correspondence shall have speedily conveyed to him the solutions of any propositions contained in this collection, which he may be desirous of seeing. Letters (post-paid) directed for P. Q., to be left at Mr. Nourse's, Bookseller, in the {527} Strand, London, will be carefully transmitted on the first day of each month, and all correspondents may expect answers during the course of that month." In consequence of this appeal, Mr. Lawson was speedily in correspondence with several of the most able geometers then living, and amongst the rest, Messrs. Ainsworth, Clarke, Merrit, Power, &c., appear to have furnished him with original solutions to his collection of theorems and problems. The manuscript containing these solutions must have been of considerable size, since a portion of it was sent down to Manchester about July, 1777, for the purpose of obtaining Mr. Ainsworth's remarks and corrections; and Mr. Lawson is requested, in a letter bearing date "August 22, 1777," to "send the next portion when convenient." Whether Mr. Lawson did so or not, I have not yet been able to ascertain; but this much is certain, the manuscript was never printed, and would most probably either be disposed of at the death of its compiler, or previously transferred to the possession of some geometer of Mr. Lawson's acquaintance. Several of the _original_ letters which passed between the respective parties relating to this manuscript are at present in the hands of two or three of the Lancashire geometers, but no one seems to know anything of the manuscript itself. May I then request that the fortunate holder of this yet valuable collection will make himself known through the medium of the widely circulated pages of "N. & Q." T. T. WILKINSON. Burnley, Lancashire. * * * * * Minor Queries. _"Wanderings of Memory."_--In Brayley's _Graphic and Historical Illustrator_, p. 293., is a quotation from the _Wanderings of Memory_, as a motto to an account of the ancient castle of the Peverils at Castleton, in Derbyshire: can any of your readers tell me who was the author of the poem in question? W. R. Camden Town. _"Wandering Willie's Tale."_--Has the scene that presented itself to the view of Piper Steenie Steenson, when he was ushered by the phantom of his old friend Dougal M^cCallum into the presence of the ghastly revellers carousing in the auld oak parlour of the visionary Redgauntlet Castle, ever been painted? (See _Redgauntlet_, Letter xi.) If it has, is there any engraving of the picture extant or on sale? C. FORBES. Temple. _Chapel Sunday._--I had the pleasure of spending a Sunday in the course of the last summer in the neighbourhood of Keswick, among the delightful lake scenery of England. I there learned that in the village of Thornthwaite it was Chapel Sunday, and on inquiry I was told that there were a few other villages in the neighbourhood where there was also a Chapel Sunday. Upon this day it is the custom of young people to come from neighbouring places to attend worship at the village church or chapel, and the afternoon partakes of a merry-making character at the village inn. There appeared, as far as I could see, no excesses attending the anniversary, all being respectable in their conduct. Can any of your Cambrian readers inform me the origin of this anniversary? PRESTONIENSIS. _Proud Salopians._--I have never heard a satisfactory account of the origin of this title, given to persons belonging to my native county. In the neighbourhood the following story is frequently related, but with what authority I cannot tell, viz. "That upon the king (Query which?) offering to make Shrewsbury a city, the inhabitants replied that they preferred its remaining the largest borough in England, rather than it should be the smallest city; their pride not allowing them to be small among the great." If this history of the term be true, it would appear that the name should only be applied to _burgesses of Shrewsbury_. SALOPIAN. _George Miller, D.D._--In the year 1796, George Miller, subsequently the author of _Modern History Philosophically Illustrated_, and many other well-known works (of which a list appears in a recent Memoir), was appointed Donnelan Lecturer in Trinity College, Dublin; and delivered a course of sermons or lectures on "An Inquiry into the Causes that have impeded the further Progress of Christianity." I should be very glad indeed to know whether these Sermons have appeared in print; and if so, when and where published? I have not been able to procure a copy. With regard to the Donnelan Lectureship, I may add, that a legacy of 1243l. was bequeathed to the College of Dublin by Mrs. Anne Donnelan, of the parish of St. George, Hanover Square, in the county of Middlesex, spinster, "for the encouragement of religion, learning, and good manners." The particular mode of application was entrusted to the Provost and Senior Fellows; and accordingly, amongst other resolutions of the Board, passed Feb. 22, 1794, are to be found the following: "That a Divinity Lecture, to which shall be annexed a salary arising from the interest of 1200l., shall be established for ever, to be called Donnelan's Lecture;" and "That one moiety of the interest of the said 1200l. shall be paid to the Lecturer as soon as he shall have delivered the whole number [six] of the lectures; and the other moiety as soon as he shall have _published_ four of the said Lectures." ABHBA. {528} _Members of Parliament._--Pennant, in _The Journey from Chester to London_, p. 94., says: "The ancient owners of Rudgley were of the same name with the town: some of the family had the honour of being sheriffs of the county in the reign of Edward III. _Another was knight of the shire in the same period._" Can any reader of "N. & Q." verify the _last portion_ of Pennant's statement? J. W. S. R. St. Ives, Hunts. _Taret._--I have lately met with mention of a "small insect called the _Taret_." What may this be? TYRO. _Jeroboam of Claret, &c._--Could any of your correspondents inform me what a Jeroboam of Claret is, and from what it is derived: also a Magnum of Port? WINEBIBBER. _William Williams of Geneva._--In _Livre des Anglois, a Geneve_, with a few biographical notes by J. S. Burn, Esq., pages 5, 6. 12, 13., mention is made of Guillaume--Will[=m] Will[=m]s, and Jane his wife,--Will[=m] Will[=m]s, a senior of the church there in 1555, 1556, 1557, 1558; and some of the years he was a godfather. I shall be glad to have some further account of such William Williams, or references to where to find such? GLWYSIG. _The First of April and "The Cap awry."_--Tom Moore, in his Diary, 1819, says: "April 1st. Made Bessy turn her cap awry in honour of the day." What was the origin of this custom? Was this the way a fool was supposed to show that his head was turned? C. R. Paternoster Row. _Sir G. Browne, Bart._--Sir George Browne, Bart., of West Stafford, Berks, and Wickham, is said to have had nineteen children by his wife Eleanor Blount; and that three of those children were sons, killed in the service of Charles I. Was either of those sons named Richard; and was any of them, and which, married? If so, where, and to whom? NEWBURY. _Bishop Butler._--Will any of our Roman Catholic friends tell us on what authority they assert that Bishop Butler, the author of _The Analogy_, died in their communion? That he was suspected of a tendency that way during his life is acknowledged by all, though the grounds, that of setting up a cross in his chapel, are confessedly unsatisfactory. But, besides this, it is alleged that he died with a Roman Catholic book of devotion in his hand, and that the last person in whose company he was seen was a priest of that persuasion. One would be glad to have this question sifted. X. Y. Z. _Oaken Tombs._--In Dr. Whitaker's noble history of _Loidis and Elmete_, p. 322., is the following passage: "Next in point of time is a very singular memorial, which has evidently been removed from its original position, between the chapel and the high altar, to a situation at the south side and west end of the chapel.... The tomb is a messy frame-work of oak, with quarter-foils and arms on three sides, and on the table above three statues of the same material, namely, of a knight bare-headed, with rather youthful countenance and sharp features, and his two wives. On the filleting is this rude inscription in Old English: 'Bonys emong Stonys, lyes here ful styl, Quilst the sawle wanders wher God wyl. Anno D^{ni} MCCCCCXXIX.' This commemorates Sir John Savile, who married, &c. "Over all has been a canopy, or rather tester, for the whole must have originally resembled an antique and massy bedstead, exhibiting the very incongruous appearance of a husband in bed with two wives at once." The Doctor adds: "Oaken tombs are very rare; that of Aymer de Valence in Westminster Abbey has been and still is in part coated over with copper, gilt, and enamelled, and I have seen another in the church of Tickencote in Rutlandshire. I do not recollect a third specimen." Query, How many have been discovered since the great historian's day? ST. BEES. _Alleged Bastardy of Elizabeth._--In the State Paper Office (_Dom. Pap._, temp. Jac. I.), there is, under date of 1608, a letter from Mr. Chamberlaine to Sir Dudley Carleton, of October 28, in which Chamberlaine says: "I heare of a Bill put into the Exchequer, concerninge much lande that sh^d be alienated on account of the alleged bastardy of Queen Elizabeth." P. C. S. S. is desirous to know whether there be any record in the Court of Exchequer which bears out this singular statement. P. C. S. S. _"Pugna Porcorum."_--Where may be found some account of the author, object, &c. of this facetious production? P. J. F. GANTILLON, B.A. _Parviso._--Can any of your readers inform me as to the meaning of the word _parviso_; it occurs in the usual form of the "Testamur" for Responsions. On reference to Webster's _Dictionary_, I find that _parvis_ is a small porch or gateway; perhaps this may throw some light upon the question. OXONIENSIS. _Mr. Justice Newton._--There is a very stiff Indian-ink copy of a portrait in the _Sutherland Illustrated Clarendon_, in the Bodleian Library, the original of which I should be glad to trace. It is described in the Catalogue to be "by Bulfinch," {529} which is probably a mistake. It bears the following inscription: "This is drawn from the painting in the hands of Mr. Justice Newton of the Middle Temple." Can any one inform me when this learned justice lived; or rather, for it concerns me more, when he died? And farther, if it be not too hopeless an inquiry to make, who his existing representatives (if any) may be? F. KYFFIN LENTHALL. 36. Mount Street, Grosvenor Square. _Mufti._--I hear military men employ this term, "we went in _mufti_:" meaning, out of uniform. Whence is it derived? MARIA. _Ryming and Cuculling._--In that very curious volume of extracts from _The Presbytery Book of Strathbogie_, A.D. 1631-54, which was printed for the Spalding Club in 1843, occurs the following passage: "George Jinkin and John Christie referred from the Session of Abercherder, for _ryming and cuculling_, called, compeird not. Ordained to be summonded _pro_ 2^o."--P. 242. Accordingly, on-- "The said day, George Jinkin in Abercherder, being summonded for his _ryming and cuculling_, being called, compeired; and being accused of the foresaid fault, confessed he only spoke three words of _that ryme_. Being sharpely rebuked, and instructed of the grosnes of that sin, was ordained to satisfie in sackcloth, which he promised to do."--P. 245. What was the "fault" here alluded to, and visited with a species of discipline with which the presbytery, and those under its jurisdiction, appear to have been very familiar? D. _Custom at the Savoy Church._--At the Savoy Church (London), the Sunday following Christmas Day, there was a chair placed near the door, covered with a cloth: on the chair was an orange, in a plate. Can any of the readers of "N. & Q." inform me the meaning of this? CERIDWEN. * * * * * Minor Queries with Answers. _Faithfull Teate._--I lately fell in with a small work by this divine, entitled _Ter Tria_, and on the fly-leaf is a MS. note, stating that some years ago a copy of the same book was priced, in a bookseller's catalogue in London, at 1l. 7s. 6d. I wish to learn some particulars relative to the author, and if the work is valuable, or scarce, or both. J. S. [Neither Calamy nor Brook has furnished any biographical notices of Dr. Faithfull Teate. When he wrote _Ter Tria_, in 1658, he was a "Preacher of the Word at Sudbury in Suffolk." A second edition of it was published in 1669. In 1665 appeared his _Scripture Map of the Wildernesse of Sin_," 4to. In a discourse on _Right Thoughts, the Righteous Man's Evidence_, he has the following passage, accommodated to his own destitute state after his ejectment: "The righteous man, in thinking of his present condition of life, thinks it his relief, that the less money he has he may go the more upon trust; the less he finds in his purse, seeks the more in the promise of Him that has said, 'I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee;' so that he thinks no man can take away his livelihood, unless he can first take away God's truth." Lowndes has given the following prices of _Ter Tria_: Sir M. M. Sykes, part iii. 626., 5s.; Nassau, part ii. 682., 8s.; White Knights, 4068., 1l.; _Bibl. Ang. Poet._, 764., 1l. 11s. 6d.] _Kelway Family._--Can any of the readers of "N. & Q." guide me to anything like a pedigree of the family of _Kelloway_, _Kaloway_, or _Kelway_; which I find from Lysons' _Devonshire_ possessed the manor of Mokesbean in that county from the time of Henry II.? In the first year of Edward III., when the property of those who suffered after the battle of Boroughbridge was restored, John de Keilewaye was found "haeres de integro sanguine" to Lord Gifford of Brimesfield. The last of the family appears to have been John Kelloway of Collampton in Devon, who married Joan Tregarthian; and dying in 1530, left co-heiresses married to Greville of Penheale, Codrington of Codrington, Harwood, and Cooke. The arms of the family are singular, being, Argent within a bordure engrailed sable, two groving irons in saltire sable, between four pears Or. R. H. C. [The pedigree of this family will be found in two copies by Munday of the "Visitation of Devonshire," A.D. 1564, in the Harleian MSS. 1091. p. 90., and 1538, p. 2166. The only difference in the arms is, in both copies, that there is _no bordure engrailed_; but this has probably been added since as a _difference_, as was often done to distinguish families. The name is here spelt _Kelloway_, and the pedigree begins with "Thomas Kelloway of Stowford in County Devon, who married Anne, daughter of ---- Copleston, of ----, in county Somerset," and ends with "John Kelloway, who married Margery, daughter of John Arscott of Dunsland, and left issue Robert, who married ----, and Richard."] _Regatta._--What is the etymology of the word _regatta_? From whence is it derived, and when was it first used in English to mean a boat-race? C. B. N. C. J. S. [Baretti says, "Regatta, _palio che si corre sull' acqua_; a race run on water in boats. The word I take to be corrupted from _Remigata_, the art of rowing." Florio, in his _Worlde of Wordes_, has "_Regattare_, Ital. to wrangle, to cope or fight for the mastery." The term, as denoting a showy species of boat-race, was first used in this {530} country towards the close of the last century; for the papers of that time inform us, that on June 23, 1775, a regatta, a _novel_ entertainment, and the first of the kind, was exhibited in the river Thames, in imitation of some of those splendid shows exhibited at Venice on their grand festivals. The whole river, from London Bridge to the Ship Tavern, Millbank, was covered with boats. About 1200 flags were flying before four o'clock in the afternoon, and vessels were moored in the river for the sale of liquors and other refreshments. Before six o'clock it was a perfect fair on both sides the water, and bad liquor, with short measure, was plentifully retailed. Plans of the regatta were sold from a shilling to a penny each, and songs on the occasion sung, in which "regatta" was the rhyme for "Ranelagh," and "royal family" echoed to "liberty."] _Coket and Cler-mantyn._--Piers Plowman says that when new corn began to be sold-- "Waulde no beggar eat bread that in it beanes were, But of _coket_ and _cler-mantyn_, or else of cleane wheate." What are _coket_ and _cler-mantyn_? Also, what are _coronation flowers_, and _sops in wine_? CERIDWEN. [Both _coket_ and _cler-mantyn_ mean a kind of fine bread. _Coronation_ is the name given by some of our old writers to a species of flower, the modern appellation of which is not clear. _Sops-in-wine_ were a species of flowers among the smaller kind of single gilliflowers or pinks. Both these flowers are noticed by Spenser, in his _Shepherd's Calendar_ for April, as follows: "Bring coronations and sops-in-wine Worn of paramours."] * * * * * Replies. CURFEW. (Vol. vi., pp. 53. 112.) It will be remembered that when Mr. Webster, one of the greatest of American statesmen, was on his death-bed, in October last, he requested his son to read to him that far-famed "Elegy" of Gray: "The curfew tolls the knell of parting day." The editor of the _Boston Journal_, after referring to this circumstance, which he says has caused an unexampled demand for the works of Gray in the United States, goes on to give the result of his researches in many old English works, respecting the origin and meaning of the word _curfew_, which I trust will interest not only your correspondents who have written on the subject, but also many of your readers. I glean from the clever article now before me the following brief notices, which I have not yet met with in "N. & Q." In King Alfred's time the curfew was rung at eight o'clock, and called the "cover fire bell," because the inhabitants, on hearing its peals, were obliged to cover their fires, and go to bed. Thomson evidently refers, in the following lines, to this tyrannical law, which was abolished in England about the year 1100: "The shiv'ring wretches at the curfew sound, Dejected sunk into their sordid beds, And through the mournful gloom of ancient time, Mused sad, or dreamt of better." On the people finding that they could put out their fires and go to bed when they pleased, it would appear, from being recorded in many places, that the time of ringing the curfew bell was first changed from eight to nine o'clock, then from nine to ten, and afterwards to the early hours of the morning. Thus we find in _Romeo and Juliet_: "The curfew bell hath rung: 'Tis _three o'clock_." In Shakspeare's works frequent mention is made of the curfew. In the _Tempest_ he gives the following: "You whose pastime Is to make midnight mushrooms--that rejoice To hear the solemn curfew." In _Measure for Measure_: "_Duke._ Who call'd here of late? _Provost._ None since the curfew rung." In _King Lear_: "This is the foul fiend Flibertigibbet; He begins at curfew, and walks to the first cock." This old English custom of ringing the curfew bell was carried by the Puritan fathers to New England; and where is the Bostonian of middle age who does not well recollect the ringing of the church bell at nine o'clock, which was the willing signal for labourers to retire to bed, and for shopmen to close their shops? Before closing this Note, may I be allowed to inform MR. SANSOM, that _Charlestown_ is in Massachusetts, and only separated from Boston by Charles River, which runs between the two cities. The place to which he refers is _Charleston_, and in South Carolina. W. W. Malta. * * * * * THE "SALT-PETER-MAN." (Vol. vii., pp. 377. 433. 460.) The statute against monopolies (21 Jac. I. c. 3.) contains a clause (sec. 10.) that its provisions should not extend to any commission grant or letters patent theretofore made, or thereafter to be made, of, for, or concerning the digging, making, or compounding of saltpetre or gunpowder, which were to be of the like force and effect, _and no other_, as if that act had never been made. In the famous "Remonstrance of the State of the Kingdom" agreed upon by the House of Commons in November, 1641, there is special allusion to the vexation and oppression of the {531} subject by purveyors, clerks of the market, and saltpetre men. (_Parliamentary History_, x. 67.) Shortly afterwards was passed an act (which obtained the royal assent) giving liberty for importing gunpowder and saltpetre, and for making of gunpowder. The preamble asserts that the importation of gunpowder from foreign parts had of late times been against law prohibited, and the making thereof within this realm ingrossed; whereby the price of gunpowder had been excessively raised, many powder works decayed, this kingdom very much weakened and endangered, the merchants thereof much damnified, many mariners and others taken prisoners and brought into miserable captivity and slavery, many ships taken by Turkish and other pirates, and many other inconveniences had from thence ensued, and more were likely to ensue, if not timely prevented. (17 _Car. I._ c. 21.) Lord Clarendon, in reviewing the various "important laws" of the Long Parliament to which the king assented, makes the following observations with reference to this particular act: "'An Act for the free making Saltpetre and Gunpowder within the Kingdom:' which was a part of the prerogative; and not only considerable, as it restrained that precious and dangerous commodity from vulgar hands; but, as in truth it brought a considerable revenue to the crown, and more to those whom the crown gratified and obliged by that license. The pretence for this exemption was, 'the unjustifiable proceeding of those (or of inferior persons qualified by them) who had been trusted in that employment,' by whom, it cannot be denied, many men suffered: but the true reason was, that thereby they might be sure to have in readiness a good stock in that commodity, against the time their occasions should call upon them."--_History of Rebellion_, book iii. On the 3rd April, 1644, the Lords and Commons passed an ordinance for the making of saltpetre, &c. This was grounded on the following allegations: "1. The great expence of gunpowder, occasioned by the then war within his Majesty's dominions, had well near consumed the old store, and did exhaust the magazines so fast, that without a larger supply, the navy forts and the land armies could not be furnished. "2. Foreign saltpetre was not in equal goodness with that of our own country, and the foreign gunpowder far worse conditioned and less forcible than that which is made in England. "3. Divers foreign estates had of date prohibited the exportation of salt-peter and gunpowder out of their own dominions and countries, so that there could be but little hope or future expectation of any peter or powder to be brought into this kingdom, as in former times, which would enforce us to make use of our own materials." From these circumstances, it was held most necessary that the digging of saltpetre and making of gunpowder should by all fit means be encouraged, at that time when it so much concerned the public safety; nevertheless, to prevent the reviving of those _oppressions and exactions_ exercised upon the people, under the colourable authority of commissions granted to _salt-peter-men_; which burden had been eased since the sitting of that Parliament. To the end there might not be any pretence to interrupt the work, it was ordained that the committee of safety, their factors, workmen, and servants, should have power and authority, (within prescribed hours) to search and dig for saltpetre in all pigeon-houses, stables, cellars, vaults, empty warehouses, and other outhouses, yards, and places likely to afford that earth. The _salt-peter-men_ were to level the ground and repair damage done by them; or might be compelled to do so by the deputy-lieutenants, justices of the peace, or committees of parliament. The _salt-peter-men_ were also empowered to take carts, by the known officers, for carriage of the liquor, vessels, and other utensils, from place to place, at specified prices, and under limitations as to weight and distance; and they were freed from taxes and tolls for carriages used about their works, and empowered to take outhouses, &c., for their workhouses, making satisfaction to the owners. This ordinance was to continue for two years, from 25th March, 1644. An ordinance of a similar character was passed 9th February, 1652, to be in force till 25th March, 1656 (_Scobell_, 231.). By an act of the Lord Protector and Parliament, made in 1656, it was enacted that no person or persons should dig within the houses or lands of any person or persons of the commonwealth for the finding of saltpetre, nor take the carriages of any person or persons for the carrying of their materials or vessels, without their leave first obtained or had. (_Scobell_, 377.) This is the act referred to by BROCTUNA ("N. & Q.," Vol. vii., p. 434.), and by my friend MR. ISAIAH DECK ("N. & Q.," Vol. vii., p. 460.), though I am not certain that MR. DECK'S inference be correct, that this act was passed in consequence of the new and uncertain process for obtaining the constituents of nitre having failed; and it is quite clear that Lord Coke could not have referred to this act. The enactment referred to is introduced by way of proviso in an act allowing the exportation of goods of English manufacture (_inter alia_, of gunpowder, when the price did not exceed 5l. per cwt.). Allow me, in connexion, with this subject, to refer to Cullum's _History of Hawsted_, 1st edition, pp. 150. and 151., also to the statute 1 Jac. II. c. 8. s. 3., by which persons obtaining any letters patent for the sole making or importing gunpowder are subjected to the pains and penalties of praemunire. C. H. COOPER. Cambridge. {532} * * * * * FORMS OF JUDICIAL OATHS. (Vol. vii., p. 458.) Will you permit me to make a few observations in reply to the Queries of MR. H. H. BREEN on this subject? There is hardly any custom more ancient than for a person imposing a promise on another to call on him to bind himself by an oath to the due performance of it. In this oath the person swearing calls on God, the king, his father, or some person or thing to whom he attaches authority or value, to inflict on him punishment or loss in case he breaks his oath. The mode of swearing is, in one particular, almost everywhere and in every age the same. When a father, a friend, a sword, or any corporeal object is sworn by, _the swearer places his hand upon it_, and then swears. When a man, however, swore by the Deity, on whom he cannot place his hand, he raised his hand to heaven towards the God by whom he swore. When Abraham made Abimelech swear to obey him, he caused him to place his hand under his thigh, and then imposed the oath; and when Jacob, by his authority as a father, compelled his son Joseph to swear to perform his promise, he ordered him to go through a similar ceremony. (Genesis, ch. xxiv. v. 5., and ch. xlvii. v. 29.) In the prophet Daniel we read that-- "The man clothed in linen which was upon the waters, held up his right hand and his left hand unto heaven, and sware by Him that liveth for ever and ever," &c.--Daniel, ch. xii. v. 7. In the Revelation we also find-- "And the angel, which I saw stand upon the sea and the earth, lifted up his hand to heaven and sware by Him that liveth for ever and ever," &c.--Revelation, ch. x. v. 5, 6. Your correspondent inquires how oaths were taken prior to their being taken on the Gospel. Among the nations who overthrew the Roman empire, the most common mode of swearing was on the relics of the saints. In England, I think, the most common mode was to swear on the corporalia or eucharistic elements, whence we still have the common phrase "upon your corporal oath." In each case the hand was placed on the thing sworn by. The laws of the Alamanni as to conjurators, direct that the sacrament shall be so arranged that all the conjurators shall place their hands upon the coffer (containing the relics), and that the principal party shall place his hand on all theirs, and then they are to swear on the relics. (_Ll. Alam._ cap. 657.) The custom of swearing on the Gospels is repeatedly mentioned in the laws of the Lombards. (_Ll. Longo._ 1 tit. 21. c. 25.; _Ll. Longo._ 2. tit. 55. c. 2., and c. 2. tit. 34. _et al._) In the _Formularies of Marculphus_, two forms of oaths are given, one says that-- "In palatio nostro super capella domini Martini ubi reliqua sacramenta percurrunt debeat conjurare." In the other we read-- "Posita manu supra sacrosanctium altare sancti ... sic juratus dixit. Juro per hunc locum sanctum et Deum altissimum et virtutis sancti ... quod," &c. In the laws of Cnut of England, two forms of oath are given. They both begin with "By the Lord before whom this relic is holy." (_Ancient Laws and Justice of England_, p. 179.) Your correspondent asks "what form of Judicial oath was first sanctioned by Christians as a body?" In the history of the Council of Constantinople, it is stated that-- "George, the well beloved of God, a deacon and keeper of the records, having touched the Holy Gospels of God, swore in this manner, 'By these Holy Scriptures, and by the God who by them has spoken,'" &c. At the Council of Nice it is said that-- "Prayer having been offered up, every one saluted the Holy Gospels, the venerated cross and image of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, and of our Lady the mother of God, and placed his hands upon them in confirmation of what he had said." From these I infer that the custom of swearing on the Gospels received the sanction of the church at a very early period. In reply to the question as to other modes of swearing, it may be said briefly, that men swore by anything to which they attached any importance, and generally by that to which they attached most importance. By the laws of the Alamanni, a wife could claim her _Morgen-gabe_ (or the gift of the morning after the wedding night) by swearing to its amount on her breast; and by the Droits d'Augsbourg, by swearing to it on her two breasts and two tresses. Nothing was more common than for a man to swear by his beard. This custom is alluded to by one of Shakspeare's fools, who suggests that if a certain knight swore by his honour, and his mistress by her beard, neither of them _could_ be forsworn. In the canons of the Fourth Council of Orleans, we read-- "Le Roi lui-meme, ou le plus renomme des chevaliers presents, ayant decoupe le paon, se leva, et mettant la main sur l'oiseau, fit un voeu hardi; Ensuite il passa le plat, et chacun de ceux qui le recurent fit un voeu semblable." In the year 1306, Edward I. of England swore an oath on two swans. It was also very common from an early period, both in England and abroad, to swear by one, two, seven, or twelve churches. The deponent went {533} to the appointed number of churches, and at each, taking the ring of the church door in his hand, repeated the oath. One of the most curious specimens of the practice of swearing men by that to which they attached most importance, is to be found in an Hindoo law. It says, let a judge swear a Brahmin by his veracity; a soldier by his horses, his elephants, or his arms; an agriculturist by his cows, his grain, or his money; and a Soudra by all his crimes. JOHN THRUPP. Surbiton. I know nothing about judicial oaths: but the origin of the form MR. BREEN states to be used by the Roman Catholics of the Continent, and the Scotch Presbyterians, may be seen in Dan. xii. 7.: "When he held up his right hand and his left hand unto heaven, and sware by him that liveth for ever." And in Revelation x. 5, 6.: "And the angel ... lifted up his hand to heaven, and sware by him," &c. See also Genesis xiv. 22. MARIA. * * * * * PHOTOGRAPHIC CORRESPONDENCE. _Washing Collodion Pictures--Test for Lens._--As I was indebted to the kindness of DR. DIAMOND, amongst other friends, for my original initiation into the mysteries of photography, it may appear somewhat presumptuous in me to differ from one who has had so much more experience in a point of practice. I allude to that of _washing_ the collodion negative after developing, previously to fixing with the hyposulphite of soda; but, probably, the reasons I urge may have some weight. As the hyposulphite solution is intended to be used repeatedly, it appears to me not advisable to introduce into it _any free acid_ (which must occur if the negative be not washed, although the quantity at each operation may be small), because it causes a decomposition of the salt, setting free _sulphurous_ acid, and also sulphur; which last is slightly soluble in the hyposulphite of soda, and thus the sulphur is brought in contact with the reduced silver, and forms a sulphuret of that metal. But the change does not stop here: for, by the lapse of time, oxygen is absorbed, and thus a _sulphate of silver_ is formed, and the colour changed from black to white. That sulphur is set free by the addition of an acid to the solution of hyposulphite of soda, is fact so easily demonstrable both to the eyes and nose of the operator, that no one need remain long in doubt who is desirous of trying the experiment. A correspondent desires to know how to test the coincidence or otherwise of the visual and actinic foci of a combination: this is very readily accomplished by the aid of a _focimeter_, which can be easily made thus: Procure a piece of stout card-board, or thin wood covered with white paper, on which draw a considerable number of fine black lines, or cover it with some fine black net (what I believe the ladies call _blond_), which may be pasted on. Cut up the whole into a dozen good-sized pieces of any convenient form, so that about four square inches of surface at least be allowed to each piece. Paste over the _net_ a circular or square label about the size of a shilling, bearing a distinctly printed number one on each piece, from 1 upwards; and arrange the pieces in any convenient manner by means of wires inserted into a slip of wood; but they must be so placed that the _whole_ can be seen from one point of view, although each piece must be placed so that it is _one inch_ farther from the operator than the next lowest number. Having placed the camera eight or ten feet from the cards, carefully focus to any one of the numbers, 4 or 5 for instance and observe, not that the _number_ is distinct, but that the minute lines or threads of the net are visible: then take a picture, exposing it a very short time, and the threads of the card bearing the number that was most perfectly in focus visually _ought_ to be most distinct; but, if otherwise, that which is most distinct will not only show whether the lens is over or under corrected, but will indicate the _amount_ of error. If under corrected, a lower number will be most distinct; if over corrected, a higher. GEO. SHADBOLT. _Test for Lenses._--I beg to submit to a COUNTRY PRACTITIONER the following very simple test for the coincidence of the chemical and visual foci of an achromatic lens: Take a common hand-bill or other sheet of printed paper, and having stretched it on a board, place it before the lens in an oblique position, so that the plane of the board may make an angle with a vertical plane of about thirty or forty degrees. Bring any line of type about the middle of the sheet into the true visual focus, and take a copy of the sheet by collodion or otherwise. Then, if the line of type focussed upon be reproduced clearly and sharply on the plate, the lens is correct; but if any other line be found sharper than the test one, the foci disagree; and the amount of error will depend on the distance of the two lines of type one from the other on the hand-bill. J. A. MILES. Fakenham, Norfolk. _Improvement in Positives._--I have great pleasure in communicating to you an improvement in the process of taking positives, which may not be uninteresting to some of your readers, and which ensures by far the most beautiful tints I have yet seen. I take three ounces of the hyposulphite of soda, and dissolve it in one pint of distilled or rain water; and to this I add about one or one and a half grains of pyrogallic acid, and seventy grains {534} of chloride of silver; which must be squeezed up between the finders facilitate its solution and separate the lumps, which, in their dry state, are tough, and not easily pulverised. The whole is then to be set aside for a week or two in a warm place. The solution, at first colourless, becomes brown, and ultimately quite opaque; in this state it is fit for use, and the longer kept the better it becomes. I generally use French paper for this process, and, according to the time of immersion, obtain fine sepia or black tints; the latter requiring long over-exposure to the light, and proportionately long exposure to the action of the liquid; which however will be found, particularly when old, to have a more rapid action than most other setting liquids, and has the merit of always affording fine tints, whatever the paper used. I imagine the pyrogallic acid to possess a reducing influence on the salts of silver employed; but this effect is only produced by its combination with the hyposulphite of soda and chloride of silver. I may add, that in any case the pictures should be much overdone before immersion, as the liquid exerts a rapid bleaching action on them; and when the liquid becomes saturated, a few crystals of fresh hyposulphite will renew its action. F. MAXWELL LYTE. Florian, Torquay. P. S.--In answer to a COUNTRY PRACTITIONER, he will find great assistance in choosing his lens by laying it on a sheet of blue wove post paper, when he will immediately perceive the slightest yellow tinge in the glass, this being the fault which frequently affects many well-ground and well-made lenses. Of course, for sharpness of outline he must be guided entirely by experiment in the camera; but where weakness of action exists, it most frequently arises from this yellow colouration, and which the manufacturers say is very difficult to avoid. [MR. LYTE having sent with his communication a positive prepared in the manner described, we are enabled to corroborate all he says as to the richness and beauty of its tints.] _Cheap Portable Tent._--M. F. M. inquires for a cheap and portable tent for working collodion out of doors. I have been using one lately constructed on the principle of Francis's camera stand. It has a good size table, made like the rolling patent shutters; and it is not necessary to stoop, or sit down at your work, which is a great consideration on a hot day: you may get them of any respectable dealer in photographic apparatus; it is called Francis's Collodion Tent. H. D. FRANCIS. _Rev. Mr. Sisson's New Developing Fluid_ (Vol. vii., p. 462.).--The REV. MR. SISSON's developing fluid for collodion positives, the formula for which was published in the last Number of "N. & Q.," is merely a weak solution of the protonitrate and protosulphate of iron. It does not, as he seems to think, contain any lead; for the whole of the latter is precipitated as sulphate, which the acetic acid does not dissolve even to the smallest extent: and MR. SISSON will find that an equivalent proportion of the nitrate of baryta will answer equally as well as the nitrate of lead. I have myself for a long time been in the habit of using a weak solution of the protonitrate of iron in conjunction with acetic acid for positive pictures; for, although I do not consider it so good a developer as that made according to the formula of DR. DIAMOND, it produces very good pictures; occupies very little time in preparing, and will moreover keep good for a much longer time than a more concentrated solution would. J. LEACHMAN. 20. Compton Terrace, Islington. * * * * * Replies to Minor Queries. _Vanes_ (Vol. v., p. 490.).--Taking up by accident the other day your fifth volume, I saw what I believe is a still unanswered Query respecting the earliest notice of vanes as indicators of the wind; and turning to my notes I found the following extract from Beckman's _Inventions, &c._: "In Ughelli Italia Sacra, Romae 1652, fol. iv., p 735., we find the following inscription on a weathercock then existing at Brixen; '_Dominus Rampertus Episc. gallum hunc fieri praecepit an. 820._'" L. A. M. _Loselerius Villerius_ (Vol. vii., p. 454.).--I beg to inform S. A. S. that his copy of the New Testament, which wants the title-page, was printed by Henry Stephens the second, at Geneva, in the year 1580. As to it being "valuable," I should not consider him unfortunate if he could exchange it for a shilling. Loselerius Villerius was Pierre l'Oyseleur de Villiers, a professor of Genevan divinity, who came over to London, and there published Beza's Latin version of the New Testament, in 1574. He was not, however, as your correspondent supposed him to be, the editor of the decapitated volume in question; but Beza transferred his notes to an impression completed by himself. S. A. S. has, in the next place, inquired for any satisfactory "list of editions of the Bible." It appears that, so far as he is concerned, Le Long, Boerner, Masch, and Cotton have lived and laboured in vain. The folio Bible lastly described by your correspondent is _not_ "so great a curiosity" as family tradition maintained. The annotations "placed in due order" are merely the Genevan notes.--See {535} the Archdeacon of Cashel's very accurate and excellent work, _Editions of the Bible, and Parts thereof, in English_, p. 75.: Oxford, 1852. R. G. _Westminster Parishes_ (Vol. vii., p. 454.).--In 1630 the City and Liberties of Westminster contained the churches of St. Margaret, St. Martin-in-the-Fields, St. Clement Danes, and St. John Baptist Savoy. The registers of burials, marriages, and christenings, of St. Margaret's Church, began January 1, 1538. The Fire of London did not destroy any church in Westminster. MACKENZIE WALCOTT, M.A. _Hevristic_ (Vol. vii., p. 237.).--The term _hevristisch_, in the first edition of the translation of Kant's _Critik_, is not given in the vocabulary appended to the translation; but under the word _ostensiv_ it is stated that in its meaning it stands opposed to the word _euristic_ (_hevristisch_ in German). But in the second edition, published in 1818, it is remarked, under the words _evristic_, _euristic_, _hevristisch_, that the term should, in Sir Wm. Hamilton's opinion, be _euretic_ or _heuretic_; the word _hevristisch_ being an error of long standing in German philosophy. The derivation of _euretic_ would be from [Greek: heuretikos]. In Tissot's translation, _hevristisch_ is rendered by _heuristique_; in Mantovani's, by _evristico_; in Born's, by _heuristicus_. In Krug's _Lexicon_, _hevristik_ is given as derived from [Greek: heurisko, heurein]. The _hevristic_ method, Krug remarks, is also called the _analytical_. It may be added, that in the first edition of the _Critik_ (Riga, 1781), the word is _hevristisch_. In the fourth edition (Riga, 1794), published also in Kant's lifetime, it is _hevristisch_. In Rosenkranz's edition (Leipzig, 1838), the word is changed into _heuristisch_; and also, in another edition of the same year, published also at Leipzig, it is written _heuristisch_, and not _hevristisch_. In respect to the Leipzig edition of 1818, which is that now before me, the term _hevristisch_, in speaking of _hevristich_ principles, is particularly alluded to. (See page 512. line 10.) I do not find, after a hasty inspection, this word changed, in any of the editions I possess, to _empirisch_. FRANCIS HAYWOOD. Liverpool. _Creole_ (Vol. vii., p. 381.).--The word appears to be a French form of the Spanish _criollo_, which in the dictionary of Nunez de Taboada is defined, "El hijo de padres Europeos nacido en America;" whilst in the old dictionary of Stevens (1726) it is translated, "Son of a Spaniard and a West India woman." In Brande's _Dictionary of Science_, &c. Creole is said to mean the descendants of whites born in Mexico, South America, or the West Indies, the blood remaining unmixed with that of other races, &c. Von Tschudi says, that in South America the Spaniards apply the term _Creole_ not only to the human race, but also to horses, bullocks, and even to poultry. A. C. M. Exeter. _General Monk and the University of Cambridge_ (Vol. vii., pp. 427. 486.).--LEICESTRIENSIS begs to thank MR. C. H. COOPER and MR. J. P. ORD for their replies to his Query on this subject. He avails himself of this, the earliest opportunity, of assuring MR. ORD of his readiness to afford him what slight information is in his power respecting the MS. in question (which only came into his possession within the last two or three months), if he will communicate with him as below. WILLIAM KELLY. Town Hall, Leicester. _Ecclesia Anglicana_ (Vol. ii., pp. 12. 440.).--I am much obliged to your correspondent W. FRASER for his answer to my Query, and the references with which he supplies me. I shall be glad to ask a still more extensive question, which will probably explain the object of the former more limited one. Is it _usual_, in any of the unreformed branches of the church on the continent, to find a similar appellation (implying distinct nationality) employed in authoritative documents, _e.g._ would it be possible to find in the title-pages of any Missal, &c., such words as "in usum Ecclesiae Hispanicae, Lusitanae, Gallicanae?" If not now, was it more customary in mediaeval times, and when did it cease? Should we be justified in saying, that at _every_ period of her existence, with rare exceptions, the _Anglican church_, consciously or unconsciously, maintained the theory of her nationality with greater distinctness than any of the continental churches? I fancy I have heard, though I cannot state on what authority, that this assertion might be made most truly of the Portuguese church, and should be very glad to have any light thrown on the subject by your able correspondent. Certain it is, that amongst the various complaints made against Cardinal Wiseman and the Papal aggressors, it has never been laid to their charge, that they arrogated to themselves the title of members of the _Anglican church_. G. R. M. _Gibbon's Library_ (Vol. vii., p. 485.).--In 1838 I purchased some of Gibbon's books at Lausanne, out of a basketful on sale at a small shop, the depot of the Religious Tract Society! Edward Gibbon, printed on a small slip of paper, was pasted in them. A. HOLT WHITE. _Golden Bees_ (Vol. vii., p. 478.).--When the tomb of Childeric, father of Clovis, was opened in 1653, there were found, besides the skeletons of his horse and page, his arms, crystal orb, &c., {536} "more than three hundred little bees of the purest gold, their wings being inlaid with a red stone like cornelian." CERIDWEN. _Passage in Orosius_ (Vol. vii., p. 399.).--May not the "twam tyncenum," between which Cyrus the Great's officer attempted to cross a river, be the inflated skins which the Arabs still use, as the ancient inhabitants of Assyria did, for crossing the Tigris and Euphrates, and of which the Nimroud sculptures give so many illustrations? CERIDWEN. _Names first given to Parishes_ (Vol. iv., p. 153.).--I wish to repeat this Query in another form, and particularly in reference to the termination _-by_. I suspect that wherever a cluster of villages, like that given by F. B., occurs with this Danish suffix, it is a proof that the district was originally a colony of Danes. The one in which I reside (the hundreds of Flegg), from its situation is particularly likely to have been so. Its original form was evidently that of a large island in the estuary of the Yare, which formed numerous inlets in its shores; and this was flanked on each aisle by a Roman garrison, one the celebrated fortress of Garianonum, now Burgh Castle, and the other Caistor-next-Yarmouth, in which a camp, burying-ground, &c., besides its name, sufficiently attest its Roman origin. The two hundreds of Flegg, (or Fleyg, as appears on its common seal) comprise twenty villages, thirteen of which terminate in _-by_. These are Ormesby, Hemesby, Filby, Mauteby, Stokesby, Herringby, Thrigby, Billockby, Ashby or Askeby, Clippesby, Rollesby, Oby, and Scratby or Scroteby. Professor WORSAAE, I believe, considers Ormesby to have been originally Gormsby, _i.e._ Gorm's or Guthrum's village, but I have not his work at hand to refer to. Thrigby, or Trigby as it is vernacularly pronounced, and Rollesby, may take their names from Trigge or Tricga, and Rollo, names occurring in Scandinavian history. I should feel obliged if Professors WORSAAE and STEPHENS, or other Scandinavian antiquaries and scholars, would kindly inform me if my surmises are correct, and if the rest of the names may be similarly derived. I should add that Stokesby fully hears out the suggestion of C. (Vol. v., p. 161.), as there is even now a ferry over the Bure at that point. The district is entirely surrounded by rivers and extensive tracts of marshes, and intersected by large inland lakes, locally termed "Broads," which undoubtedly were all comprised in the estuary, and which would form safe anchorages for the long galleys of the Northmen. E. S. TAYLOR. Ormesby, St. Margaret, Norfolk. _Grafts and the Parent Tree_ (Vol. vii., p. 436.).--In order to insure the success of grafts, it is material that they be inserted on congenial stocks: delicate-growing fruits require dwarf-growing stocks; and free luxuriant-growing trees require strong stocks. To graft scions of delicate wooded trees on strong stocks, occasions an over-supply of sap to the grafts; and though at first they seem to flourish, yet they do not endure. A few examples of this sort may lead to an opinion, that "grafts, after some fifteen years, wear themselves out;" but the opinion is not (generally speaking) well founded. I have for many years grafted the old _Golden Pippin_ on the _Paradise_ or _Doucin_ stock, and found it to answer very well, and produce excellent fruit. Taunton has long been famous for its _Nonpareils_, which are there produced in great excellence and abundance. The Cornish _Gilliflower_, one of our very best apples, was well known in the time of King Charles I.; and, as yet, shows no symptoms of decay: that fruit requires a strong stock. The ancient _Ribston Pippin_ was a seedling: "It has been doubted by some, whether the tree at Ribston Hall was an original from the seed: the fact of its not being a grafted tree has been satisfactorily ascertained by Sir Henry Goodricke, the present proprietor, by causing suckers from its root to be planted out--which have set the matter at rest that it was not a grafted tree. One of these suckers has produced fruit in the Horticultural Garden at Chiswick."--Lindley's _Guide to the Orchard and Kitchen Garden_, 1831, p. 81. J. G. Exon. _Lord Cliff and Howell's Letters_ (Vol. vii., p. 455.).--The Lord Cliff, as to whom your correspondent inquires, and to whom James Howell addresses some of his letters, is intended for Henry Lord Clifford, and afterwards, on the decease of his father, fifth and last Earl of Cumberland. He died in December, 1643. Amongst the many republications of modern times, I regret that we have no new edition, with illustrative notes, of Howell's _Letters_. It is the more necessary, as one at least of the later editions of this most entertaining book is very much abridged and mutilated. JAMES CROSSLEY. Y. S. M. asks "Who was Lord Cliff?" He might as well have added, "Who was Lord Viscount Col, Sir Thomas Sa, or End. Por?" who also figure in _Epistolae Ho-Elianiae_. Had he looked over that entertaining book more attentively, Y. S. M. would have seen that all these were mere contractions of Howell's correspondents, Lord Clifford, Lord Colchester, Sir Thomas Savage, and Endymion Porter. J. O. _The Bouillon Bible_ (Vol. vii., p. 296.).--H. W., who was good enough to answer my Query respecting Philip D'Auvergne, has probably seen that the Bible of which he inquires has turned up. {537} It seems to have been pawned (if I rightly understand the report in the newspapers) to a Mr. Broughton of the Foreign Office, who had advanced money to the prince to enable him to prosecute his claim to the dukedom. It has now been ordered by Vice-Chancellor Sir W. P. Wood to be offered for sale as part of Mr. Broughton's estate, for the benefit of that gentleman's creditors. It was stated in court, that on a former occasion, when the late Archbishop of Canterbury wished to purchase it, 1500l. was asked for it. I was much obliged to H. W. for the information he gave me, as I took some little interest in Philip D'Auvergne from having heard that he was a friend of my grandfather. They were, I find, both of them officers in the Racehorse during Lord Mulgrave's discovery voyage to the North Pole. E. H. A. _Rhymes on Places_ (Vol. vii., p. 143.).--Northamptonshire: "Armston on the hill, Polebrook in the hole, Ashton turns the mill, Oundle burns the coal." Repeated to me by poor old drunken Jem White the sexton, many years since, when on the "battlements" of Oundle Church; Oundle being the market town for the three villages in the rhymes quoted. BRICK. _Serpents' Tongues_ (Vol. vi., p. 340.; Vol. vii., p. 316.).--May I be allowed to inform MR. PINKERTON that the sharks' teeth (fossils), now so frequently found imbedded in this tufa rock, and cheaply sold, are not known as "the tongues of vipers," but, on the contrary, from time immemorial, as the "tongues of St. Paul." In proof of this, I would refer MR. PINKERTON to the following extract, which I have taken from an Italian letter now in the Maltese Library; which was published on August 28, 1668, by Dr. Francis Buonamico, a native of this island, and addressed to Agostino Scilla of Messina. Page 5., the writer remarks: "Che avanti de partire da questa isolde dovesse farle una raccolta di glossopietre, _O lingue come que le chiamiamo di S. Paolo_." W. W. Malta. _Consecrated Roses, &c._ (Vol. vii., pp. 407. 480.).--An instance of the _Golden Rose_ being conferred on an English baron, will be found related in Davidson's _History of Newenham Abbey in the County of Devon_, p. 208. J. D. S. * * * * * Miscellaneous. NOTES ON BOOKS, ETC. That well-worn quotation, "who shall decide when doctors disagree," must, we should think, invariably suggest itself to the reader of every new book upon the subject of Shakspeare's text. A few months since MR. COLLIER gave to the world a volume of _Notes and Emendations from Early Manuscript Corrections in a Copy of the Folio 1632_[1], which was hailed by many, ourselves among the number, as a most valuable contribution to Shakspearian literature. From this favourable view of these manuscript emendations, many whose opinions upon such matters deserve the highest respect at once avowed their dissent; and we now find that we have to add to this number MR. SINGER, who has given us the result of his examination of them in a volume entitled _The Text of Shakspeare vindicated from the Interpolations and Corruptions advocated by John Payne Collier, Esq., in his Notes and Emendations_. No one can put forth higher claims to speak with authority on any points connected with Shakspeare than MR. SINGER, who has devoted a life to the study of his writings; and none can rise from a perusal of his book without recognising in it evidence of MR. SINGER'S fitness for editing the works of our great dramatist, and feeling anxious for his revised edition of them. But we think many will regret that, while pointing out the Notes and Emendations from which he dissents, MR. SINGER should not have noticed those which he regards with favour; and that, in his anxiety to vindicate the purity of Shakspeare's text from the anonymous emendator, he should have embodied that vindication in language, which, though we are quite sure it is unintentional on his part, gives his book almost a personal character, instead of one purely critical. BOOKS RECEIVED.--_Records of the Roman Inquisition, Case of a Minorite Friar who was sentenced by S. Charles Borromeo to be walled up, and who, having escaped, was burned in effigy: edited, with an English Translation, Notes, &c., by_ Rev. Richard Gibbings. Published from one of the MSS. conveyed from Rome to Paris by order of Napoleon, at the close of the last century, as a challenge to the defenders of the papacy to acknowledge its truth, or to controvert it.--_The History of England from the Peace of Utrecht to the Peace of Versailles_, by Lord Mahon, Vol. III. The third volume of this new and cheaper edition of Lord Mahon's valuable history comprehends the period from 1740 to 1748.--_English Forests and Forest Trees; Historical, Legendary, and Descriptive, with numerous Illustrations._ This volume, one of the _Illustrated London Library_, is a pleasant chatty compilation on a subject which will interest many of our readers and correspondents by furnishing them with a series of notices of old forests, remarkable trees, &c., which have never before been gathered together.--_The Shakspeare Repository, edited by_ J. H. Fennell, No. II. The second part of this periodical, the only one exclusively devoted to the Elizabethan writers, contains, among other interesting articles, a long one on the medical practice of Shakspeare's son-in-law, Dr. John Hall. [Footnote 1: Since this was written we have heard that MR. COLLIER has traced back the history of his Folio 1632 for upwards of a century.--ED.] {538} * * * * * BOOKS AND ODD VOLUMES WANTED TO PURCHASE. SCOTT, REMARKS ON THE BEST WRITINGS OF THE BEST AUTHORS (or some such title) SERMONS BY THE REV. ROBERT WAKE, M.A. 1704, 1712, &c. HISTORY OF ANCIENT WILTS, by SIR R. C. HOARE. The last three Parts. REV. A. DYCE'S EDITION OF DR. RICHARD BENTLEY'S WORKS. Vol. III. Published by Francis Macpherson, Middle Row, Holborn. 1836. DISSERTATION ON ISAIAH XVIII., IN A LETTER TO EDWARD KING, ESQ., by SAMUEL LORD BISHOP OF ROCHESTER (HORSLEY). The Quarto Edition, printed for Robson. 1779. BEN JOHNSON'S WORKS. 9 Vols. 8vo. Vols. II., III., IV. Bds. SIR WALTER SCOTT'S NOVELS. 41 Vols. 8vo. The last nine Vols. Boards. JACOB'S ENGLISH PEERAGE. Folio Edition, 1766. Vols. II., III., and IV. GAMMER GURTON'S NEEDLE. ALISON'S EUROPE. (20 Vols.) Vols. XIII., XX. ABBOTSFORD EDITION OF THE WAVERLEY NOVELS. Odd Vols. THE TRUTH TELLER. A Periodical. *** _Correspondents sending Lists of Books Wanted are requested to send their names._ *** Letters, stating particulars and lowest price, _carriage free_, to be sent to MR. BELL, Publisher of "NOTES AND QUERIES," 186. Fleet Street. * * * * * Notices to Correspondents. _We are compelled to omit several interesting papers respecting Shakspeare which are in type, among which we may mention a notice of some drawings which are great interest._ W. T. WATTS (St. Ives), _who inquires respecting the literary history of_ Baron Munchausen, _is referred to our_ 2nd Vol., p. 519., _and our_ 3rd Vol., pp. 117. 305. 453. G. P. (Offenburg) _Potatoes were most probably introduced into England by Sir W. Raleigh. Gerarde mentions them in his_ Herbal, _published in 1597_. ANTIQUARIAN _had better send a rubbing from the oak cover in question. His copy cannot be deciphered._ S. S. S.'s _Query on the passage in St. James in our next._ BROOKTHORPE _will find, in the Notices to Correspondents, in_ No. 179. (2nd April), _a reply to his former Query respecting the Epitaph:_ "If Heaven be pleased." URSULA. _We shall be glad of the "succinct refutation" proposed._ J. W. _There is a folio edition of Godwin_ De Praesulibus, _Canterbury, 1743, in which the original work is continued by Richardson._ J. R. (Sunderland) _is referred to Brockett's_ Glossary, _where he will find the etymology of_ stang, _from the Danish_ stang, _a pole or bar--or the Saxon_ steng; _and a full description of the ceremonies connected with_ Riding the stang. FLORENCE _is thanked for her hint._ J. B. _will find full particulars of Sir T. Herbert's_ Threnodia Carolina _in our_ 3rd Vol., p. 259. _Other references in our_ 2nd Vol., pp. 140. 220. 476. _A few complete sets of_ "NOTES AND QUERIES," Vols. i. _to_ vi., _price Three Guineas, may now be had; for which early application is desirable._ "NOTES AND QUERIES" _is published at noon on Friday, so that the Country Booksellers may receive Copies in that night's parcels, and deliver them to their Subscribers on the Saturday._ * * * * * PREPARING FOR THE PRESS, IN OCTAVO, A SUPPLEMENT TO MR. HALLIWELL'S OCTAVO LIFE OF SHAKSPEARE; Consisting of Observations on Modern Shakspearian Forgeries. JOHN RUSSELL SMITH, 36. SOHO SQUARE, LONDON. * * * * * SPECTACLES.--WM. ACKLAND applies his medical knowledge as a Licentiate of the Apothecaries' Company, London, his theory as a Mathematician, and his practice as a Working Optician, aided by Since's Optometer, in the selection of Spectacles suitable to every derangement of vision, so as to preserve the sight to extreme old age. ACHROMATIC TELESCOPES, with the New Vetzlar Eye-pieces, as exhibited at the Academy of Sciences in Paris. The Lenses of these Eye-pieces are so constructed that the rays of light fall nearly perpendicular to the surface of the various lenses, by which the aberration is completely removed: and a telescope so fitted gives one-third more magnifying power and light than could be obtained by the old Eye-pieces. Prices of the various sizes on application to WM. ACKLAND, Optician, 93. Hatton Garden, London. * * * * * PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY, Price 6d. THE CIVIL SERVICE GAZETTE, a Journal devoted to the interests of all Government Officials in every department of the State, contains, besides other official information, a list of the Recent Promotions and PRESENT VACANCIES in the gift of the Government, both in England, the East Indies, and the Colonies; a Summary of the News of the Week: Original Literary Articles; Obituary of men of eminence or desert in the public serve; Parliamentary, Legal, Foreign, Domestic and Theatrical Notices; with Fashionable, Naval and Military Intelligence. To be had of all Booksellers and Newsvenders; or at the Office, 5. Catherine Street, Strand. * * * * * The Twenty-eighth Edition. NEUROTONICS, or the Art of Strengthening the Nerves, containing Remarks on the influence of the Nerves upon the Health of Body and Mind, and the means of Cure for Nervousness, Debility, Melancholy, and all Chronic Diseases, by DR. NAPIER, M.D. London: HOULSTON & STONEMAN. Price 4d., or Post Free from the Author for Five Penny Stamps. "We can conscientiously recommend 'Neurotonics,' by Dr. Napier, to the careful perusal of our invalid readers."--_John Bull Newspaper, June 5, 1852._ * * * * * DAGUERREOTYPE MATERIALS.--Plates, Cases, Passepartoutes, best and cheapest, to be had in great variety at M^cMILLAN'S Wholesale Depot, 132. Fleet Street. Price List gratis. * * * * * WINSLOW HALL, BUCKS. DR. LOVELL'S SCHOLASTIC ESTABLISHMENT (exclusively for the Sons of Gentlemen) was founded at Mannheim in 1836, under the Patronage of H.R.H. the GRANDE DUCHESSE STEPHANIE of Baden, and removed to Winslow in 1848. The Course of Tuition includes the French and German Languages, and all other Studies which are Preparatory to the Universities, the Military Colleges and the Army Examination. The number of Pupils is limited to Thirty. The Principal is always in the Schoolroom, and superintends the Classes. There are also French, German, and English resident Masters. Prospectus and References can be had on application to the Principal. * * * * * WILLIAMS & NORGATE will carry on Business at 15. BEDFORD STREET, COVENT GARDEN, opposite the end of Henrietta Street during the alterations and enlargement of their old Premises. _June, 1853._ * * * * * PHOTOGRAPHIC APPARATUS AND MATERIALS, for the Processes on Glass, Paper, and Silver. An illustrated priced Catalogue 3d., Post Free. JOHN JOSEPH GRIFFIN, F.C.S., Chemical and Philosophical Instrument Maker, 10. Finsbury Square. Manufactory, 119. and 120. Bunhill Row. Removed from 53. Baker Street, Portman Square. * * * * * OFFICERS' BEDSTEADS AND BEDDING. HEAL & SON beg to call the Attention of Gentlemen requiring Outfits to their large stock of Portable Bedsteads, Bedding, and Furniture, including Drawers, Washstands, Chairs, Glasses, and every requisite for Home and Foreign Service. HEAL & SON. Bedstead and Bedding Manufacturers, 196. 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Translated from the French. Sole Agents in the United Kingdom for VOIGHTLANDER & SON'S celebrated Lenses for Portraits and Views. General Depot for Turner's, Whatman's, Canson Freres', La Croix, and other Talbotype Papers. Pure Photographic Chemicals. Instructions and Specimens in every Branch of the Art. GEORGE KNIGHT & SONS, Foster Lane, London. * * * * * PHOTOGRAPHIC PAPER.--Negative and Positive Papers of Whatman's, Turner's, Sanford's, and Canson Freres' make, Waxed-Paper for Le Gray's Process. Iodized and Sensitive Paper for every kind of Photography. Sold by JOHN SANFORD, Photographic Stationer, Aldine Chambers, 13. Paternoster Row, London. * * * * * PHOTOGRAPHY.--Collodion (Iodized with the Ammonio-Iodide of Silver).--J. B. HOCKIN & CO., Chemists, 289. Strand, were the first in England who published the application of this agent (see _Athenaeum_, Aug. 14th). Their Collodion (price 9d. per oz.) retains its extraordinary sensitiveness, tenacity, and colour unimpaired for months; it may be exported to any climate, and the Iodizing Compound mixed as required. J. B. HOCKIN & CO. manufacture PURE CHEMICALS and all APPARATUS with the latest Improvements adapted for all the Photographic and Daguerreotype processes. Cameras for Developing in the open Country. GLASS BATHS adapted to any Camera. Lenses from the best Makers. Waxed and Iodized Papers, &c. * * * * * PHOTOGRAPHIC PICTURES.--A Selection of the above beautiful Productions (comprising Views in VENICE, PARIS, RUSSIA, NUBIA, &c.) may be seen at BLAND & LONG'S, 153. Fleet Street, where may also be procured Apparatus of every Description, and pure Chemicals for the practice of Photography in all its Branches. Calotype, Daguerreotype, and Glass Pictures for the Stereoscope. BLAND & LONG, Opticians, Philosophical and Photographical Instrument Makers, and Operative Chemists, 153. Fleet Street. * * * * * PHOTOGRAPHY.--HORNE & CO.'S Iodized Collodion, for obtaining Instantaneous Views, and Portraits in from three to thirty seconds, according to light. Portraits obtained by the above, for the delicacy of detail rival the choicest Daguerreotypes, specimens of which may be seen at their Establishment. Also every description of Apparatus, Chemicals, &c. &c. used in this beautiful Art.--123. and 121. Newgate Street. * * * * * PHOTOGRAPHIC SCHOOL.--ROYAL POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTION. The SCHOOL is NOW OPEN for instruction in all branches of Photography, to Ladies and Gentlemen, on alternate days, from Eleven till Four o'clock, under the joint direction of T. A. MALONE, Esq., who has long been connected with Photography, and J. H. PEPPER, Esq., the Chemist to the Institution. A Prospectus, with terms, may be had at the Institution. * * * * * CLERICAL, MEDICAL, AND GENERAL LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY. * * * * * Established 1824. * * * * * FIVE BONUSES have been declared: at the last in January, 1852, the sum of 131,125l. was added to the Policies, producing a Bonus varying with the different ages from 24-1/2 to 55 per cent. on the Premiums paid during the five years, or from 5l. to 12l. 10s. per cent. on the Sum Assured. The small share of Profit divisible in future among the Shareholders being now provided for, the ASSURED will hereafter derive all the benefits obtainable from a Mutual Office, WITHOUT ANY LIABILITY OR RISK OF PARTNERSHIP. POLICIES effected before the 30th of June next, will be entitled, at the next Division, to one year's additional share of Profits over later Assurers. On Assurances for the whole of Life only one half of the Premiums need be paid for the first five years. INVALID LIVES may be Assured at rates proportioned to the risk. Claims paid _thirty_ days after proof of death, and all Policies are _Indisputable_ except in cases of fraud. Tables of Rates and forms of Proposal can be obtained of any of the Society's Agents, or of GEORGE H. PINCKARD, Resident Secretary. _99. Great Russell Street, Bloomsbury, London._ * * * * * WESTERN LIFE ASSURANCE AND ANNUITY SOCIETY, 3. PARLIAMENT STREET, LONDON. Founded A.D. 1842. _Directors._ H. E. Bicknell, Esq. W. Cabell, Esq. T. S. Cocks, Jun. Esq. M.P. G. H. Drew, Esq. W. Evans, Esq. W. Freeman, Esq. F. Fuller, Esq. J. H. Goodhart, Esq. T. Grissell, Esq. J. Hunt, Esq. J. A. Lethbridge, Esq. E. Lucas, Esq. J. Lys Seager, Esq. J. B. White, Esq. J. Carter Wood, Esq. _Trustees._ W. Whateley, Esq., Q.C.; L. C. Humfrey, Esq., Q.C.; George Drew, Esq. _Physician._--William Rich. Basham, M.D. _Bankers._--Messrs. Cocks, Biddulph, and Co., Charing Cross. VALUABLE PRIVILEGE. POLICIES effected in this Office do not become void through temporary difficulty in paying a Premium, as permission is given upon application to suspend the payment at interest, according to the conditions detailed on the Prospectus. Specimens of Rates of Premium for Assuring 100l., with a Share in three-fourths of the Profits:-- Age _L s. d._ 17 1 14 4 22 1 18 8 27 2 4 5 32 2 10 8 37 2 18 6 42 3 8 2 ARTHUR SCRATCHLEY, M.A., F.R.A.S., Actuary. Now ready, price 10s. 6d., Second Edition, with material additions, INDUSTRIAL INVESTMENT and EMIGRATION: being a TREATISE on BENEFIT BUILDING SOCIETIES, and on the General Principles of Land Investment, exemplified in the Cases of Freehold Land Societies, Building Companies, &c. With a Mathematical Appendix on Compound Interest and Life Assurance. By ARTHUR SCRATCHLEY, M.A., Actuary to the Western Life Assurance Society, 3. Parliament Street, London. * * * * * ROYAL ASYLUM OF ST. ANN'S SOCIETY.--Waiting not for the Child of those once in prosperity to become an Orphan, but by Voluntary Contributions affording at once a Home, Clothing, Maintenance, and Education. The Half-yearly Election will take place at the London Tavern of Friday, August 12th, next. Forms of Nomination may be procured at the Office, where Subscriptions will be thankfully received. Executors of Benefactors by Will become Life Governors according to the amount of the Bequest. E. F. LEEKS, Secretary. 2. Charlotte Row, Mansion House. * * * * * UNITED KINGDOM LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY: established by Act of Parliament in 1834.--8. Waterloo Place, Pall Mall, London. HONORARY PRESIDENTS. Earl of Courtown Earl Leven and Melville Earl of Norbury Earl of Stair Viscount Falkland Lord Elphinstone Lord Belhaven and Stenton Wm. Campbell, Esq., of Tillichewan LONDON BOARD. _Chairman._--Charles Graham, Esq. _Deputy-Chairman._--Charles Downes, Esq. H. Blair Avarne, Esq. E. Lennox Boyd, Esq., F.S.A., _Resident_. C. Berwick Curtis, Esq. William Fairlie, Esq. D. Q. Henriques, Esq. J. G. Henriques, Esq. F. C. Maitland, Esq. William Railton, Esq. F. H. Thomson, Esq. Thomas Thorby, Esq. MEDICAL OFFICERS. _Physician._--Arthur H. Hassall, Esq., M.D., 8. Bennett Street, St. James's. _Surgeon._--F. H. Tomson, Esq., 48. Berners Street. The Bonus added to Policies from March, 1834, to December 31, 1847, is as follows:-- Sum | Time | Sum added to | Sum Assured. | Assured. | Policy | Payable | +--------------------+ at Death. | | In 1841. In 1848. | ---------+----------+---------+----------+---------- L | | L s.d.| L s.d.| L s.d. 5000 | 14 years | 683 6 8 | 787 10 0 | 6470 16 8 * 1000 | 7 years | - - | 157 10 0 | 1157 10 0 500 | 1 year | - - | 11 5 0 | 511 5 0 * EXAMPLE.--At the commencement of the year 1841, a person aged thirty took out a Policy for 1000l., the annual payment for which is 24l. 1s. 8d.; in 1847 he had paid in premiums 168l. 11s. 8d.; but the profits being 2-1/4 per cent. per annum on the sum insured (which is 22l. 10s. per annum for each 1000l.) he had 157l. 10s. added to the Policy, almost as much as the premiums paid. The Premiums, nevertheless, are on the most moderate scale, and only one-half need be paid for the first five years, when the Insurance is for Life. 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