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home, are no impediment abroad, remain with us through the night, accompany us when we travel, and go with us into the country."

D. E. V.

This is probably only another instance in which the later writer has borrowed the brief thought of the earlier one, and expanded it.

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490.—(3) I think you are in error in saying that Wake" was Hereward's family name. It was, rather, a nickname, meaning "Hereward the Vigilant, or Watchful." Hereward was the son of Leofric, and his surname or family name would be, in accordance with the custom of those times, Leofricsson. See in chapter first of "Hereward," where the hero, waiting at the gate of Peterborough to see his uncle Brand, says, "I am Hereward Leofricsson."

W. R.

You are right-and so were we. If you look at the query in the December number, you will see that we said: "It is doubtful whether he bore it [the name Wake] during his lifetime," and if you look again at Kingsley's novel, you will see that he speaks of the descendants as "the Wakes-as he might say the Smiths or the Browns; he does not say, the Leofricssons.

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$1.00 each.

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It is beau

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