information of the best kind. As in former volumes, so in this there is a small body of notes at the end. We have before remarked that these editorial notes might be much extended with advantage. They are so good that we are sorry that we have not more of them. Notes and Queries for Somerset and Dorset. Edited by Hugh Norris and Charles Herbert Mayo, M.A. (Sherborne, Sawtell.) nineteenth century collection of Elzevirs. To the volume, Or Christmas gift-works few are so dainty in conception MESSRS, UNWIN BROTHERS have issued Ephemerides: a London Almanack in the Olde Style for 1889. An ingenious idea is pleasingly carried out. MR. WM. HUTT, of 3, Hyde Street, New Oxford Street, will issue for the new year a catalogue containing many works of interest from the libraries of Mr. Turner and Mr. Gibson Craig. Notices to Correspondents. We must call special attention to the following notices: ON all communications must be written the name and address of the sender, not necessarily for publication, but as a guarantee of good faith. We cannot undertake to answer queries privately. WE had already mentioned in these pages the proximate appearance of a new offshoot of the old tree of N. & Q.,' and we are glad now to be able to speak of it as actually bearing fruit. We always knew that the West Saxon land contained a large substratum of Celtic blood, but we were hardly prepared to find so Hibernian a strain as seems to be indicated by the publication of parts ii. and iii. of Somerset and Dorset Notes and Queries with never a part i. It is true that some Continental learned societies are quite as eccentric in their sequence of parts and volumes; still, we hope to reach part i. some day. Prof. Tylor, of Oxford, is interested in Dolemoors, and wants sketches of the marks stated by Collinson to have been traditionally handed down to distinguish the several doles on Congresbury Common. The placename of these Dolemoors reminds us of the Celtic strain to which we have alluded, St. Congarus being a saint of the Scoto-Celtic church, whose existence was once somewhat rashly denied by an omniscient Saturday Review writer. He is venerated at Turriff, in Aberdeenshire. "Shig-Shag Day," which is asked after on the same page as the "Dolemoors," is an instance in which the General Index to our Fifth Series might have been, but evidently was not, consulted. Local N. & Q.' correspondents should try to spare their editors the repetition of questions long since asked in our pages, save in the W. B. ("The Pope he leads a happy life").-This is few cases where we have ourselves failed to elicit a the title as well as the first line of the song. It appears satisfactory reply. In any such case, of course, we should be grateful to our friends for helping with their in A Thousand and One Gems of Song, selected and local knowledge. The list of Somersetshire and Dorset- arranged by Charles Mackay (Routledge). The original shire contributors to the defence of this country at the is German, and the version is said to be by Charles time of the Armada is carefully annotated by the editors. It would have been better to have called Sir John Harrington's seat (he was then "Armiger") Kelston, rather than Kelweston, an unfamiliar form, American readers may be interested in John Farewell, of Holcombe, probably related to the ancestor of the Farwells in the United States, and in Nicholas Wadham, of Merefield (sic, Merifield), for the same reason as regards American Wadhams. Westminster Abbey. By M. C. and E. T. Bradley. With an Introductory Chapter by the Dean. (Pall Mall Gazette Office.) THIS is a compact book, which contains all the informa- Sartor Resartus. By Thomas Carlyle. (Kegan Paul & To secure insertion of communications correspondents must observe the following rule. Let each note, query, or reply be written on a separate slip of paper, with the signature of the writer and such address as he wishes to appear. Correspondents who repeat queries are requested to head the second communication "Duplicate." Lever. W. ("A Meteor seen on Night of November 16").— No meteors have individual names; but most of those seen about the middle of November belong to a large group called Leonids, because they appear to radiate from a point in the heavens in the constellation Leo. But it is impossible to say whether the meteor you saw is one of these, or to make any scientific use of your observation unless you can tell the exact time and the names of the stars which it seemed to pass as it moved, less know, the motto of Baron Forbes, a Scotch repreN. HAY FORBES.-"Grâce me guide" is, as you doubtSome correspondent may be able to supply information sentative peer: It is necessarily of French origin. theological sense, from the Low Latin use of Gratia. as to the origin. The word grace is apparently used in a See Ducange's Glossary." W. W. WOODS ("Work on French Revolution").— Mignet's History of the French Revolution,' included in "Bohn's Standard Library," Bell & Sons, will probably serve your purpose. E. VENABLES (" Trinkets").-The passage from Defoe which you send originated the discussion. Southampton-buildings, Chancery-lane. THREE per CENT. INTEREST allowed on DEPOSITS, repay LIVES OF THE SAINTS. By the Rev. S. BARING-GOULD, M.A. A New Edition, with several Hundred Illustrations. EMBLEMS OF SAINTS. BY WHICH THEY ARE DISTINGUISHED IN WORKS By the late Very Rev. F. C. HUSENBETH, D.D. A New Edition, With numerous Corrections and Additions, By the Rev. AUGUSTUS JESSOPP, D.D. 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BRAND and CO.'S A1 SAUCE, SOUPS, PRESERVED PROVISIONS, and YORK and GAME PIES; also ESSENCE of BEEF, BEEF TEA, TURTLE SOUP, and JELLY, and other SPECIALTIES for INVALIDS. Caution.-Beware of Imitations. Sole Address APOCRYPHAL SCRIPTURES. Being the Additions to the Old Testament Canon which were included in the Ancient Greek and Latin Versions; the English Text of the Authorized Version, together with the Additional Matter found in the Vulgate and other Ancient Versions; Introductions to the several Books and Fragments; Marginal Notes and References; and a General Introduction to the Apocrypha. By the Rev. W. R. CHURTON, B.D., Fellow of King's College, Cambridge, Canon of the Cathedral of Large post 8vo. pp. 608, cloth, 7s. 6d. THE GOSPEL STORY. 11, LITTLE STANHOPE-STREET, MAYFAIR, W. A PLAIN COMMENTARY ON THE FOUR HOLY GOSPELS, HOLLOWAY'S PILLS and OINTMENT. Give health to the sick at very little cost of cash, time, or trouble; purifying and renovating properties are the characteristic of these admirable vegetable remedies. The poor sufferer, well-nigh worn out by the lengthened disease, may still be strengthened and restored by the tonic influence of these medicaments. In dyspepsia, loss of appetite, flatulency, and liver complaints, while the Pills are aken the Ointment should be rubbed over the digestive organs. In heart and chest complaints it should be rubbed on the back and chest as assiduously as salt is rubbed into meat. By steadily persevering with this treatment, the blood is purged of all impurities and the whole animal system thoroughly regulated. Containing the Narrative of Our Blessed Lord's By the Rev. W. MICHELL, M.A., Diocesan Inspector of Schools in the Diocese of Bath and Wells. Londen: J. WHITAKER, 12, Warwick-lane. LADY BABY. Chaps. 4-6. CHRISTMAS EVE on a HAUNTED HULK. HERO and LEANDER. 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Library Edition. Imperial 8vo. handsomely bound 10 half-morocco, 318. 6d. WILLIAM BLACKWOOD & SONS, Edinburgh and London. Printed by JOHN C. FRANCIS, Athenæum Press, Took's-court, Cursitor street, Chancery-lane, E.C.; and Published by the said JOHN C. FRANCIS, at No. 29, Took's-court, Cursitor-street, Chancery-lane, E.0.-Saturday, December 29, 1888. Queries, with No. 160, Jan. 19, 1889. J INDEX. SEVENTH SERIES.-VOL. VI. [For classified articles, see ANONYMOUS WORKS, BIBLIOGRAPHY, BOOKS RECENTLY PUBLISHED, EPIGRAMS, EPITAPHS A. (A.) on tenemental bridges, 72 Zodiac, ancient views of, 53 A. (S.) on a poem, 68 Abbotsbury Church, arms in, 388, 457 5 Abbott (J. T.) on Abbott family, 5 Abdiel, the archangel, 507 Abhba on Ball family, 474 Abney (Sir Thomas), his epitaph, 104 Accurate on the execution of deeds, 509 Achilles, merchantman privateer, 367, 471 Actor longest in same theatre, 88 Adalbert (Prince) of Prussia, his biography, 449 Advent, muffling bells during, 484 Agincourt, battle of, 444 Ainsworth (W. H.), his 'Tower of London,' 133 Aldersgate Ward, its aldermen, 287 Aldis (H. G.) on church bells, 181 Alice on Bishop Latimer, 127 Alinement alignement, 206, 315 Alington (F. W.) on the Plague of London, 453 Alison (Sir A.), mistranslation in his 'Europe,' 386 Allibone's 'Dictionary,' notes on, 184 Allison (J. W.) on a Belgian custom, 456 Church steeples, 78 Cromwelliana, 204 Dickens (Charles) and Sir Theodore Martin, 176 Diddle, its meanings, 217 Eagle Court, 396 Fanny (Lord), 134 Funeral custom, 356 Lightning let out, 96 Milton (John), 324 Perjury, punishment for, 296 Proverb defined, 449 Rose, thistle, and shamrock, 430 Alliteration in the 'Rolliad,' 226 Allnutt (W. H.) on John Shakspeare, 344 Herrick (Robert), 436 Alpha on Anne Trelawny, 68 Alpue, its meaning, 39, 96 Altar flowers, 115 Alton Castle, co. Stafford, 48, 137 America, England and Scotland reproduced in, 212, 330; slate gravestones in, 307, 414, 492; two ballads Amsterdam Bourse open to children, 447 Amsterdam Coffee-house, its locality, 167, 291, 496 Anderson (P. J.) on academic heraldry, 478 Andrewes family, co. Gloucester, 28 Andrewes (H. E.) on Andrewes family, 28 Anglesey, springs at, 367, 489, 518 Angus (D.) on quotation by Budæus, 497 Annas, a woman's Christian name, 54 Anon. on Acts ii. 9-11, 230 Arms of cities and towns, 149 Cata wimple, its meaning, 128 Church festivals, 306 Courts, open-air, 487 Digby (Kenelm Henry), 507 Goose building in trees, 287 Leyden, its foundation, 349 Anonymous Works :- Abrégé de l'Histoire d'Angleterre, 324, 456 Arcana Aulica, 446 Art of Dressing the Hair, 315 Book of Jasher, 468 Commissioner, The, 27, 111, 234 Cross Roads, 447 Curious Dance round a Curious Tree, 428, 471 Apprentice, his dress temp. Elizabeth, 467 Aprons, blue, worn by waiters, 48 Arbuthnot (Dr. John), his residence, 427 Archer (W.) on Macready, 7 Argentine Confederation, changes in the language, 156 Arithmetic, novelist's, 105, 213 Armigeri: Generosi, their difference, 167 Arms, manual in use in British army, 1770-5, 507 Arnold (Sir Nicholas), his biography, 287, 394 Artist, his name, 29, 77 Arundell family, 29, 213 Ascham (Antony), his writings, 284 Ashmole (Elias), his tomb and residence, 28 Astarte on aerolite, 325 Budæus, lines quoted by, 289 Holy bread, 246 Ice, foreign, 366 L. (L. E.), her epitaph, 86 Lucan, his Pharsalia,' 224 Rockall, in the Atlantic, 9 Surnames, Swedish, 444 "Whet is no let," 106 Austria, "if not windy is pestilent," 389 Authors, their difficulties in the 17th century, 186 Venables (Robert), 134 Axon (W. E. A.) on Forster and Shelley, 161 B. (A.) on the Birkenhead, 194 B. (C. C.) on Alcestis and the daisy, 309 Balk, its meanings, 35 Birth hour recorded, 237 Golden Horn, 492 Goose building in trees, 431 Gordon's 'Grammar of Geography,' 307 H, its mispronunciation, 110 66 Roodselken," 437 Rose, thistle, and shamrock, 311 Rowlandson (Thomas), 10, 472 Russia, Black, White, and Red, 475 Shakspeariana, 263 Shelley (P. B.), his 'Adonais,' 431 Sny, its meaning, 249 Thomson (James) and 'Winter,' 393 Tooth brushes, 293 Ware spend, 293 Worsen and worsened, 331 B. (F. E.) on riddles on trees, 28 B. (G. F. R.) on Alumni Westmonasterienses,' 475 Bayly baronetcy, 211 Best (Judge), 493 Boswell (James), 473 Brooke (Lord), 417 Coleraine (fourth Baron), 47, 294 Dunbart (Robert), 187 George I., his burial-place, 51 Glover's History of Derby,' 294 Gordon (P.), his 'Geography,' 395 Gulliver's Travels,' 252 Hackman (James), 87 Hamilton (Lord Archibald), 187 Harcourt (Lord Chancellor), 188, 478 Jackson and Lloyd (Bishops), 136 'Library of Fiction,' 398 'Medusa, The,' 193 Monsey (Dr. Messenger), 30 |