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“SOUGH " (11 S. ix. 198, 253).—As supplementary to the discussion of this word in 'N. & Q.,' it seems worth while to mention the article Sugh,' 9 S. xii. 223. I failed to find this when preparing my reply the other week, and have now come upon it accidentally. THOMAS BAYNE.

THOMAS BUTLER, WINCHESTER SCHOLAR (9 S. xi. 227, 350; 11 S. viii. 409).-Thomas Butler, U.J.D., was appointed Governor of Pontecorvo by a brief of Gregory XIII., dated 4 March, 1579 (Archivio Vaticano, Arm. xlii., vol. 37, f. 372, n. 150).

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JOHN B. WAINEWRIGHT.

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DUKE OF SUSSEX: MORGANATIC MARRIAGES (11 S. ix. 470). - Both H.R.H.'s marriages were equally null and void in view of the Royal Marriage Act, then and now the law of the land, there being no such contract known to our lawyers as a "morganatic marriage." I am doubtful whether the Duke of Sussex was ever compelled to separate from Lady Augusta Murray," who was granted, by Royal licence in 1806, the name of De Ameland, their two children being known by that of D'Este. The title of Duchess of Inverness conferred on Lady Cecilia Underwood appears, from Charles Greville and other diarists of the period, to have been part of a bargain by which the Duke of Sussex agreed to waive objection to the high precedence which Queen Victoria was anxious to confer on Prince Albert, and no spontaneous mark of affection on the part of Her Majesty towards the lady, whom the Queen is said to have generally alluded to as my Aunt Buggin," Lady Cecilia's husband having been one Sir George Buggin. H.

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No doubt "Queen Victoria looked on the matter in a different light from that in which George III. regarded it." Shortly after the birth of the Duke's son, (Sir) Augustus Frederick (d'Este), on 13 Jan., 1794, news of the second marriage with Lady Augusta Murray, second daughter of the fourth Earl of Dunmore, reached the King, who, in accordance with the regulations of the Royal Marriage Act of 1772 (12 George III. c. 11), declared it void in August, 1794. In 1806 Lady Augusta received Royal licence to assume the name of D'Ameland instead of Murray. In 1840 the Duke's second wife, Lady Cecilia, ninth daughter of the Earl of Arran and widow of Sir George Buggin, was created Duchess of Inverness, one of the Duke's titles being Earl of Inverness. There was no issue by this marriage. A. R. BAYLEY.

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'GUY'S PORRIDGE POT,' LONDON, 1808 (11 S. ix. 471).—This is commonly attributed to the pen of Walter Savage Landor, although the real writer is said to have been Bertie Greathead of Guy's Cliffe, near Warwick. WM. JAGGARD.

Notes on Books.

Memorials of St. Margaret's Church, Westminster. Edited by Arthur Meredyth Burke. (Eyre & Spottiswoode, 21. 28. net.)

MR. BURKE has here recorded the names of all the persons christened, married, and buried at St. Margaret's, Westminster, from 1539 to 1660. There is a prefatory note by the former Hensley Henson (now Dean of rector, Dr. Durham), who refers to the mediæval tradition that the church was coeval with the Abbey, owing its origin to the same royal saint.

The two churches, conventual and parochial, have stood side by side for more than eight centuries-not, of course, the existing fabrics, but older churches of which the existing fabrics are successors on the same sites."

Some people have objected to the proximity of St. Margaret's to the larger building, and have suggested its being removed elsewhere; but, apart from the historical associations which would be thus destroyed, we agree with Dean Henson that "students of Gothic architecture will find in the relatively humble building a twofold advantage. It gives scale Abbey, and in itself it exhibits an excellent example of aristocratic Gothic." example of 'popular' close beside

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Mr. Burke, who has "brought to his task, not only large experience, but a genuine enthusiasm," tells us that the present work, produced and published under the auspices of Dean Henson "stands as the fulfilment of his public-spirited and munificent design." The lists of baptisms, marriages, and burials are given separately, and at the end of the volume is a complete index of names, the total number of entries being 100,896.

The registers of burials abound with references to those appalling visitations of the plague or pestis which devastated this country at intervals in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The first reference to the bubonic plague, as distinct from the sweating sickness and other early pandemics to which the name plague used to be given indiscriminately, occurs on 23 June, 1563, and from that date to the close of the year 1647 no fewer than 5,830 of the burial entriesare deaths from plague or pestilence.

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We are given twenty-six portraits of celebrities associated in some way with the church, including Richard Neile, Archbishop of York, whose

father was buried here on the 16th of June, 1574. Sir Philip Warwick was christened 24 Dec., 1609. Christopher Gibbons, christened 22 Aug., 1615, became organist of Westminster Abbey, where he was buried 24 Oct., 1676. Thomas Betterton, christened 11 Aug., 1635, was buried married Mrs. Frances Squibb on 2 May, 1633, in the Abbey 2 May, 1710. Sir John Glynne and was buried in St. Margaret's in November,. 1666; his eldest son was christened in the church.

20 Jan., 1638. There are three Clarendon portraits. Frances, daughter of Sir Thomas Aylesbury, was christened 25 Aug., 1617, and married at St. Margaret's to the first Earl of Clarendon 10 July, 1634; their son the second Earl was christened 11 June, 1638. Samuel Pepys married on 1 Dec., 1655, Elizabeth Marchant De Snt Michell, and portraits of both are given. Sir Walter Rawleigh, Knt., was buried in October, 1618 (the entries for the month are undated).

In the transcript of the registers the dates are altered from the Old Style to the New. The compiler tells us that the foot-notes are confined to such practical information as is likely to be of service to those who consult the registers, no attempt having been made to elucidate purely genealogical questions; and, with a view to economizing space, everything has been done to ensure condensation and brevity, consistent with clearness and utility.

Parish Register of the Holy and Undivided Trinity in the City of Chester, 1532-1837. Transcribed, indexed, and edited by L. M. Farrall. (Chester, G. R. Griffith, 11. 58.)

THIS parish is a large one, and, during the time covered by the registers here printed, included a very various population. It was the port parish of Chester, so that numbers of seafaring men and their families were domiciled within it; and within it also were situated many houses belonging to the gentry of the county. A church under this invocation has stood on the site of the present building for many centuries. The name of one priest, Walter, dating from the twelfth century is known; then, at the end of the thirteenth century with Alexander le Bel, begins the list of rectors, which comes down unbroken to the present day.

The work before us has been very competently carried out. The transcribed Registers of Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials are divided into three parts: from 1598 to 1653; from 1654 to 1812; and from 1813 to 1837. In the first of these are incorporated Odd Notes from the Register Book,' and in the last lists of the clergy officiating. Part IV. gives various notes, additions, and corrections, connected chiefly with early burials; and Part V. contains, what must have cost a greater amount of labour than any other section of the work, the excellent indexesno fewer than nine in number. Five of these are biographical, and give in a minimum of space a surprising amount of information of the kind that workers in this field will recognize as only to be collected with considerable trouble. For the merely curious reader is provided a Calendar of some Incidental References in the Register which sets out all the " plums." These are not specially numerous, but several are of considerable interest. The issue is limited to 300 copies, and the type has been distributed.

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Goode Olde Countree. By Charles A. Mace. (St. Catherine Press, 68. net.)

THIS is the kind of book which is calculated to produce diatribes-a fine occasion for the display of wit, contempt, and power of diction on the part of a reviewer, and for resistance on the part of the author. We will not thus exercise either ourselves or him. The re-collection of the oftcollected; the indulgence in small moralizings; the cheerful repetition of thrice outworn clichés

in an obvious ignorance of their staleness; and the jotting down of odd scraps of private histories, make up a harmless enough pastime. The book produces somewhat the same effect as a bowerbird's nest, and no doubt was equally delightful in the construction; if we add to that delight the fact that some one has been found to print it, and the probability that some one will be found to read it, we seem to have amassed some reasons after all for congratulating the author. Florilegio di Canti Toscani : Folk Songs of the Tuscan Hills. With English Renderings by Grace Warrack. (Moring, 108. 6d. net.) WE congratulate Miss Warrack on this result of her studies, which she describes very modestly in her Introduction as intended for readers" not already familiar with Italian traditional poetry and the literature that has grown up around it.'

Genuinely Tuscan poetry consists almost entirely of Rispetti and Stornelli, little songs of which it may be said that in their thousands they have love, the love of young man and maid, for motive and theme.'

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Amongst the Tuscan Rispetti there are a good many poems that are in construction Ottave, like the ottave rime of Italian literature-that is, octaves composed of six alternately rhyming lines followed by a rhyming couplet."

"Of the verse-form which belongs to the Sicilian equivalent of the Rispetto, the Canzona or Strambotto, an octave of lines alternately rhyming, there is said to be only one example amongst the Tuscan poems. There are some tenlined poems, however, which might be held to consist of this Sicilian octave with the addition of a rhyming couplet, not necessarily in ripresa style; and of the few twelve-lined poems, while some are literary octaves with two couplets, others are Sicilian octaves with two couplets." Miss Warrack gives one example of these, the poem Morirò, morirò, sarai contenta = "I'll die, I'll die, thou shalt be pleased at last," which has some similarity to the beautiful octave Morirò,. morirò, che n' averai? Yes, I shall die ;what will it profit thee?"

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As the author explains, only the main part of the book, where the Italian poems are given,. can properly be called a Florilegio or Anthology, and it is "chiefly the First Series that contains the Flowers of Tuscan Folk Song.' In the Second Series many are of noted Sicilian origin, and in the other four Series there are folk songs, 'genuine and interesting," which Miss Warrack considers to be "in their simple way flowers, but some of these, especially the Prayers, have nothing about them peculiarly Tuscan.' We give an example of her translation :The Appeal.

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Alas! I can no longer see my star,

No more behold it rising in its place; Nor find it in the sky, nor earth afar :

O God of heaven, disclose it me of grace! O God of heaven, who art Thyself so blest, From out the storm disclose the star at rest! O God of heaven, of all-availing might, Disclose for me the star that shineth bright.

The pretty small quarto volume contains 17 illus trations. Particularly beautiful are those from pencil drawings by the late Miss Hannah C. Preston Macgoun.

Obituary.

C. A. WARD.

AMONG the correspondents of 'N. & Q.' who have most vividly impressed themselves upon the memories of the staff, not only by the voluminousness of their contributions and the wide range of information these discover, but also be it said without the least intention of unkindness-by their quaint eccentricities and their occasional vehemence, few stand out more clearly than the subject of this notice, who died last month at Walthamstow. For many years he enlivened our pages with suggestions, queries, trouvailles, and occasional settings to rights of all kinds and sorts. His eager mind would attack any question, find room for any interest: but it often refused to endure the checks of fact or of authority, and, as a correspondent has reminded us, his vagaries in the matter of etymology once nearly deprived N. & Q.' of the learning of the late Prof. Skeat, who could not tolerate irresponsibility in that particular field. Accounts of Mr. Ward in the daily press have made much of his "hermit" life at Walthamstow, where he lived in almost complete solitude, surrounded by a huge and miscellaneous collection of books, of which, by his will, the London Library has now possession. These, it appears, were intended to be worked up into some epoch-making book. They include the classics of many literatures, as well as treatises on out-of-the-way subjects, and masses of material on London and other topics. Evidently the pleasures of accumulating had swamped whatever creative power he may once have possessed. In his early years he knew and corresponded with Carlyle, and letters from Carlyle, with notes of his conversation in diaries, are among the most valuable of the MSS. he has left behind him.

BOOKSELLERS' CATALOGUES.-JUNE.

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point of view the most important item is an uncut first edition of Vanity Fair' bound in whole calf, 41.

MESSRS. MAGGS's Catalogue No. 327 contains descriptions of between 400 and 500 Engravings of historical and topographical interest, as well as several oil paintings. Those relating to foreign parts are especially noteworthy-e.g., the pictures by Ogrumoff of the taking of Kasan and the coronation of Michael Romanov (601. the pair); a painting by Butterworth of the fight between the Shannon and the Chesapeake (50 guineas); and a set of seven water-colour drawings of Chinese towns and scenery, by George Chinnery (211.).

MESSRS. E. PARSONS have sent us their Catalogue No. 32, describing a small collection of old engraved portraits, which includes a series of engravings from Van Dyck in early states. From among these latter we may mention one example each of Pontius's and of Vorsterman's engraving of Van Dyck's portrait of John, Count of Nassau-both offered at 31. 38. ; De Baillue's engraving of the portrait of Lady Carlisle, 41. 10s.; Gulielmus Hondius's rendering of the Hondius portrait, 51. 5s.; the portraits of Rockox (Vorsterman) and Maharkysus (Sebastian Barris), each 51. 5s.; Snyers's Prince Rupert,' 121. 12s.; and McArdell's Lady Southampton,' 21. They have the whole-length mezzotint printed in colours of Mrs. Musters as 'Hebe,' by Hodges after Sir Joshua Reynolds, for which they ask 1001.; Earlom's portrait of Rembrandt by himself, and another engraving of the same by an unknown hand, 1767 and 1780 respectively, priced at 25 guineas; and Bartolozzi's 'Miss Farren,' in its first published state, offered at 70 guineas. There are examples of Cousins, C. Turner (in particular the Lady Louisa Manners,' 85 guineas), J. R. Smith, Watson, and many other well-known men'; and a rather attractive item-for which 38 guineas is asked-is Nutter's George Washington,' after C. G. Stuart, printed in colours. [Notices of other Catalogues held over.]

Notices to Correspondents.

CORRESPONDENTS who send letters to be forwarded to other contributors should put on the top left-hand corner of their envelopes the number of the page of "N. & Q.' to which their letters refer, so that the contributor may be readily identified.

MR. L. C. BRAUN'S Catalogue No. 88 gives a list of books offered at unusually low prices for the purpose of a clearance sale previous to alterations. It is worth looking through, for it offers sundry bargains, of which the few mentioned here may be taken as specimens. There is a first edition of Speed to be had for 5., lacking the portrait, but containing all the maps, and in particular the map of the Bermudas, which shows the name and EDITORIAL Communications should be addressed holding of each colonist. There are Cooke's to "The Editor of 'Notes and Queries ""-AdverVoyage to the South Sea and Round the World,' tisements and Business Letters to "The Pub1712, 20s., and, at the same price, an extra-illus-lishers"-at the Office, Bream's Buildings, Chancery trated copy of Hawkesworth's translation of Lane, E.C. Télémaque,' 1768. For 58. one may become possessed of 'L'Oncle de l'Europe devant l'objectif caricatural, being a collection of the caricatures of Edward VII. which have appeared in different countries. Three books of rather uncanny interest are Pierre de Lancre's work on Mauvais Anges et Démons,' 1612, 20s.; Langlois's Essai Historique......sur les Danses des Morts,' with 54 plates and numerous cuts, 1852, 158.; and Hermippus Redivivus,' or 'The Sage's Triumph over Old Age and the Grave,' Campbell's translation from the work of the German physician John Henry Cohausen, 1749, 17. 58. From a literary

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A CORRESPONDENT writes: "HAMPSHIRE FIELD CLUB.-The Rev. G. W. Minns has never been abroad. He was editor three years, resigning 1913, when the editorship was accepted by John Hautenville Cope, who is co-editor with the Rev. P. H. Ditchfield (of the Berks Arch. Journal).

"The H. F. C. volume reviewed ante, p. 479, is Vol. VII., but Vol. VI., which was undertaken by the Rev. G. W. Minns, did not make its appearance till a fortnight after Vol. VII. was issued." CORRIGENDUM.

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ELEVENTH SERIES.-VOL. IX.

SUBJECT

INDEX

[For classified articles see ANONYMOUS WORKS, BIBLIOGRAPHY, BOOKS RECENTLY PUBLISHED,
EPITAPHS, FOLKLORE, HERALDRY, MOTTOES, OBITUARY, PLACE NAMES, PROVERBS AND
PHRASES, QUOTATIONS, SHAKESPEARIANA, SONGS AND BALLADS, and SURNAMES.]

A

Abuna, means of communication with, 51, 93
Abyssinia, Biblical Sabbath observed in, 51, 93
Acland (Hugh), Etonian, 1765, 350
Actors taking women's parts, 1630, 346
Addison (Joseph), his unpublished letters, 449
Adelphi," completed by means of a lottery," 345,
477, 516

Adjectives from French place-names, 21, 94, 171,

358

Admonition, as female name, 27

Adolphus (Sir Jacob), Inspector of Army Hos-
pitals, c. 1770, 268, 397
Albanian title, Mpret," 247

86

Alcock (John), Etonian, 1762, 350

Aldersgate, parish registers of St. Botolph, 84, 176
Aldgate, boy's body found erect in St. Botolph's,
1742, 246

Aldgate Pump, changes at, 1913,

Alkin (T. Verrier), Etonian, 1760, 350, 434
Allsop Place, origin of the name, 305

Altar frontals from Lanherne Convent, c. 1619, 344
Altar in St. Paul's by Grinling Gibbons, 248, 295,
316

Altars, Christian and pagan, references to, 187,
238, 275, 314, 336, 415

Ambassador, Swedish, in London, 1764–70, 51, 95
Ambrose (John), Etonian, 1757, 350, 395

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Amener de ffeyns," meaning of the term, 350
American pony express, an incident of, 325
American seventeenth-century history, 190
Ampthill, painting of St. Christopher at, 37
Anchor and "the broad arrow,'

481

Anderton (Isabel) = Robert Plumpton, c. 1710, 388
Andrewes (Richard), c. 1500, his ancestry, 56
Andrews (John), Etonian, 1764, 350

Anecdotes of some Distinguished Persons,' 1795,
450, 493

Anglesey House, Drury Lane, 1673-82,229,277,493
Annesley (Samuel), d. 1732, and the Wesley
family, 305

Anno Domini, earliest instance of, 69, 133, 172, 372
Anonymous Works:-

Aut Diabolus aut Nihil, story, 270

Free Enquirer in the Rights....of Several
Companies, 71

Gems of Literature, by a Lady, 1836, 328
Guy's Porridge Pot, poem, 1808, 471, 518

Anonymous Works:-

My Own Green Isle, poem, 269

Puritan, or the Widow of Watling Street,
play, c. 1607, 89, 156

Stranger, published 1806, 170

Visions of the Western Railways, 349

Young Englishman's First Residence in
Jamaica, by a Widow, 1836, 328

Aprice (John), Winchester scholar, 1542, 369
Archæologia,' xxix. 33, 209

Arche family, c. 1420, 270, 318
Argent, as female name, 27

Armorial salver, 1694, and Welham family, 108
Arms. See Heraldry.

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Arrow, the broad arrow," the King's mark, 481
Artigou," origin of the word, 207, 277

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"Baaran," a tree of some kind, 1601, 105
Backwell (Henry), Etonian, 1760, 389

Bacon (John), 1738-1816, receiver of the First
Fruits Office, 470

Badge, regimental, of the 6th Foot, 8, 58, 117
Badge shaped like a leg of mutton, 229

Bagnio in Chancery Lane, 408
Bailey (John), Etonian, 1755, 389
Baker (Charles), Etonian, 1761, 389
Baker (George), Etonian, 1765, 389
Baker (Jacob), Etonian, 1757, 389
Baker (John), Etonian, 1760, 389
Baker (John), Etonian, 1762, 389
Baker (Richard), Etonian, 1754, 389
Baker (Samuel), Etonian, 1757, 389
Baker (Thomas), Etonian, 1758, 389
Baker (William), Winchester scholar, 1520, 369
Baker-legged," 1607, meaning of the term, 287

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Balaclava, numbers of the Light Brigade, 186, 253, Bibliography :—

334, 373

"Balloni," name of a game, 1768, 18, 373
Balnes, identification of place-name, 508
Bangor, or St. Asaph, episcopal registers, 1320-50,
93, 356

Bankers of Lombard Street, c. 1690-93, 230, 272,
298, 373, 453, 494

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Barberize "to shave, 1680, 387

Barbers, their use of yellow in France, 148, 316
Barbour (John), 1571, and Patrick Gordon, 123
Barker (H.), of the Six Clerks' Office, c. 1790, 129
Barmaid, when first employed, 148, 197, 238
Barnet, origin of place-name, 265

Baron (Robert), b. 1630, author of 'Mirza, a
Tragedie,' 1, 22, 43, 61, 206; and Shakespeare,
467

Baronets, the Roll of, 347, 398

Baronskill or Boranskill family, 270
Barratt (Thomas J.), antiquary, 1841-1914, 405
Barrell (Savage) and Humphrey Cotes, 438
'Barring-out," account of a typical, 55
Barrington (John), Etonian, 1761, 389, 454
Barry family, 469

46

Basil (George), Etonian, 1755, 389
Basil (Thomas), Eto ian, 1755, 389
"Basilez," French, 1606, 105
"Bat," variant of "pat," 1629, 287
Bath, Roman, in the Strand, 5, 93
Battledore and shuttlecock, game, 308
Battles: Balaclava, 397, 455, 516;
410, 474

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Bay and "tray," of a stag, 67, 113

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Notes and Queries, July 25, 1914.

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Shaftesbury, his Judgment of Hercules,' 307
Shakespeare plays, Second Folio, 11, 73, 114,
172, 217, 237, 257, 294, 353

Taylor (Ann and Jane), authors of children's
books, 225, 297, 317, 354, 411
Widener-Stevenson collection, 301

Wilkes (John) and The Essay on Woman,'
121, 143, 162, 183, 203, 222

Bid base to "to defy, 1593, 227

Bigland (Edward), Etonian, 1760, 408

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Bill," Wordsworth's use of the word, 129, 178
Billion," the number used c. 1450, 228, 278, 315,
453

Bingham (H.), Etonian, 1756, 408

Bird name, "etotoli," its meaning, 348, 372, 395
Birkenhead, last survivor of the wreck, 468

Lohfeldt, Birmingham statues and memorials, 202, 243, 257,

Bayley (A. Yates), Etonian, 1758, 389, 451
Beaconsfield. See Disraeli.

278, 282, 322, 363, 377, 411, 437

Birnie (Sir Richard), d. 1832, 369, 454

Bishop, wages of household of, temp. Henry VIII.,
84; as boxer, 1796, 215

Beatson (General) and the Crimean War, 397, Bishop (James), Etonian, 1764, 408
455, 516

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Bell of H.M.S. Bounty, its history, 489
"Bellomy "blustering person, c. 1500, 387
Belt (Thomas or Robert ?), Etonian, 1762, 408
Bence, distribution of surname, 508

Bengal Horse Artillery, coloured print of, 37, 56,
114

Benson (George), Etonian, 1759, 408
Bernie (Sir Richard). See Birnie.

Besnowball," word used 1611, 227

Best (James), Etonian, 1763, 408
Bibliography:-

Bewickiana, 210, 289

Blackfriars, 229, 332, 416

British regimental history, 89, 174

Browne (W.), his Britannia's Pastorals,' 3
Bury (Bishop Richard of), his library, 17
Cameron (Col. J.), his memoirs, 186, 234
County maps, the history of, 5, 97

Defoe (D.), his Weekly Review, 95

Disraeli (Benjamin), juvenilia, 125

Ferrier (Susan), her Marriage,' 169
Harvard College broadsides, 228

Helmont (F. M. van), the younger, 86, 128,
169, 207, 347, 367

Bishop (John), Etonian, 1764, 408

Bishops and Deans in Cathedrals, lists of, 7, 78, 117
Blackfriars, bibliography of, 229, 332, 416
Blackfriars Road in 1796, 185, 254

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Blackmore (R. D.), phrases in his Lorna Doone,'
"mum,' 15; stooled," 15; shepherds'
chess," 15, 76; "John the Baptist and his
cousins," 15, 137; allusion to Dryden in, 75;
"stinging soap," 75; capias," 75, 116
Blackwall, Cold Harbour at, 261
Blake (Arthur), Etonian, 1760, 408
Blake (Benjamin), Etonian, 1757, 408
Blake (Nicholas), Etonian, 1759, 408

Blandandered," meaning of the word, 487

Bligh (Capt.), the voyage of the Providence, 489
Blind members of Parliament and advocates, 430,
475, 498

Blizard or Blizzard as surname, 290, 396, 437, 456
Blois (-), Westminster scholar, 1809, 30

Bloody-bones," character in Irish tale, 30
Blount (C. H.), Westminster scholar, 1803, 30
Bloxam (C. H.), Westminster scholar, 1824, 30
Bloxam (F. Houstoun), Westminster scholar,
1819, 30

Bloxam (G. F.), Westminster scholar, 1824, 30

66

Blue kitten a girl, 1611, 227

Böckmann (Von) family, 249

Bogg (Robert), Etonian, 1756, 449
Bohemia, Douglas epitaph in, 56

Bolton (Catherine, Duchess of), her marriage, 374
Bolton (Richard), Westminster scholar, 1786, 30
Bon Gaultier Ballads,' Kenny Meadows and,
450

Bonaparte (Napoleon): at St. Helena, 188; and
a sea captain at St. Helena, 266; Napoléon,
daus l'autre Monde,' 269, 316; "Upside
down" from advertisement, 1814, 368, 438

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